Results tagged “Home Depot” from Ron Kaye L.A.

Home Depot Signs Off on Sunland-Tujunga

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My apologies to Home Depot. The company doesn't actually own the old K-Mart site in Sunland-Tujunga. It has a lease for more than 20 years and is looking to sub-lease if anyone is interested:

Here's Home Depot's media letter and community letter:

Greetings Ron,

We wanted to share with you our position in this matter, as well as a letter we sent to our supporters in regards to the Sunland Tujunga site and our lawsuit against the city of Los Angeles (letter attached).

The Home Depot no longer plans to pursue its proposed store in Sunland Tujunga.  In conjunction with this decision, we have informed the City of Los Angeles that we are dropping our lawsuit against the City related to this project.  Throughout this process, we complied with all laws and regulations in relation to the site and believe that lawsuit was just.  However, given the steps the City is requiring for us to move forward, coupled with the current economic landscape, it simply no longer makes business sense for us to pursue this project.

We wish the community the very best.

Please let us know if you have any questions -

Respectfully,

The Home Depot

The company also sent out this letter to the community:

Dear Los Angeles-Area Community Leaders and Sunland-Tujunga Community Members:

As you know, The Home Depot has been attempting to remodel and open a store in the Sunland-Tujunga-area of Los Angeles since 2004. As I have done in recent years, I wanted to keep you updated on developments in this process. I am writing today to regretfully inform you that The Home Depot no longer plans to pursue this proposed store. As a result of this decision, the company is not pursuing our pending permit application and has also dropped its lawsuit against the City of Los Angeles related to this project.

Throughout the process, the company has complied with all laws and regulations in relation to the site and we still believe the lawsuit was just.

MIDNIGHT UPDATE: A Home Depot official confirmed late Tuesday that the property is up for sale.

Can it really be true?

Sunland-Tujunga activists after years of struggle that has made them one of the most effectively organized communities in Los Angeles appears to have won an outright victory against one of the largest and most successful corporations in America, its team of high-prices lobbyists and influence peddlers and city officials who wanted to sell them out.

Can It be true?

The evidence as strong, according to the No Home Depot website which provides the company's motion for dismissal and reports it canceled its webside promoting its cause in Sunland-Tujunga.

I'm just guessing but the economic recession has a lot to do with the company's surrender. It wouldn't make sense to keep on squandering money on lawyers, lobbyists and PR types in the face of organized resistance when consumers aren't spending.

What's amazing about this is that even the most ardent activists in this semi-rural corner of L.A. never thought they had a chance but they never gave up.

The lesson for all of us trying to make our neighborhoods healthier and our city greater are clear: You've got to organize, you've got to fight and you've got to never quit. You never know what's going to happen.

Hopefully, things are what the seem to be, in which case the people of Sunland-Tujunga deserve a hearty congratulations. I do have a question though: What do you want to do with that old K-Mart property that would enhance the quality of life in your community?
Score another victory for community activists: The City Planning Department has rejected Home Depot's request for an exemption from conducting a full environmental assessment about the impact of converting a closed K-Mart store in Sunland-Tujunga into another giant home improvement center.

Here's the ruling issued today homedepoteir.pdf  What city planners decided is that an exemption from the environmental study process is not appropriate because quite simply the store conversion is not "negligible'' as Home Depot -- a decision that will require a lengthy study and public debate.

The company has spent millions of dollars and used all its clout and gotten a lot of help from some city officials to ram this down the community's throat.

It has sued the city and the City Attorney's Dispute Resolution Program has lost its credibility trying to run roughshod over opposition.

Yet, all that's happened is that Sunland-Tujunga has become a model of what residents can achieve when they organize.

Hundreds of people have gotten involved, taken action and raised their consciousness about the issues they face throughout the Sunland-Tujunga area. They have won battles to protect the historical nature of some neighborhoods and gotten special protections against mansionization among other victories.

But none is sweeter than than the long fight to make Home Depot comply with the law.

Home Depot got a building permit with no questions being asked three years ago, with no input from the community. A long and often vicious campaign followed as the community mobilized, set up When local residents found a websute and created enough political pressure to force the City Council to call the Planning Department to review the situation

Home Depot sued and then put it on hold while the city's mediators trying to get around opponents and the planner went about the process of analyzing the company's claims that the store conversion was just a simple remodel with new signs and security lights.

The "No Home Depot" campaign focused on traffic impacts, toxic chemicals near schools,  local businesses that would be harmed and many other issues. What they really wanted was a general merchandise store and a community center that would meet their needs.

Home Depot's response was to accuse the community of being racist and opposing day laborers hanging around the store as they do at most of the company's home improvement centsrs.

  .


 
Lucille Saunders discusses LaBrea-Willoughby Coalition's infrastructure lawsuit

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Editor's Note: The Saving L.A. Project will hold another Town Hall meeting on Saturday Oct. 4 at the Charo Community Development Center at 4301 E. Valley Blvd. in the El Sereno neighborhood. The time will be announced soon.

 
 
During a town hall meeting Saturday in East L.A., Saving L.A. Project (SLAP) members voted to take positions on eight hot topic issues and is now looking for volunteers to mobilize the community activists across the city to help make a difference:
 

SLAP OPPOSES THE TAKEOVER OF THE SOUTHWEST MUSEUM BY THE AUTRY NATIONAL CENTER

City Hall is rushing to shut off public debate and close the deal to loot the Southwest Museum of its valuable collection and turn this historic facility -- the city's oldest museum -- into community college classrooms using bond money from the November ballot measure put up by the LACCD.The Autry National Center in Griffith Park is lookiing to rebuild and expand its lackluster museum dramatically and has cut a back room deals with LACCD to get $12 million to convert the Southwest into class space -- an action that will rob the Mt. Washiington-Highland Park area of its most notable landmark. The deal betrays the commitment made by Jackie Autry, widow of the western movie star Gene Autry, to maintain the Southwest as a museum.

Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa has broken his promise to protect the Southwest as a museum. Councilman Jose Huizar has done nothing to stand up for his constituents. Councilman Tom LaBonge has spearheaded the Autry's campaign which has spent large sums of money to get heavyweight lobbying support from City Hall insiders Bill Delvac and George Mihlsten of Latham & Watkins and PR man Steve Sugerman, the admitted felon. Please contact Heinrich Keifer <hkeifer101@sbcglobal.net> who is helping to put together a team that will drum up support from community groups, conduct email and phone campaigns and develop other strategies to force the Autry to live up to its commitments. 

SLAP  OPPOSES THE  LOS ANGELES COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT BOND ISSUE

Because of the LACCD's complicity in this back room deal, instigated by Community College Board member Mona Field, SLAP also decided to oppose the $3.5 billion bond issue, the district's third in recent years. 
 
SLAP  SUPPORTS THE CULTURAL HISTORICAL DISIGNATION OF GRIFFITH PARK

Kris Sabo won the full support of SLAP for a motion to support the efforts of Save Griffith Park and the heirs of Griffith Jenkins Griffith who donated the land for L.A.'s "Central Park" to get the city to declare the park a cultural-historical preservation zone which will give it badly needed protections from the city's intention to turn it into an amusement park and tourist trap. Councilmember LaBonge also took heavy criticism from SLAP activists for his role in pushing for other developments in Griffith Park even as he postures as its guardian. Contact ksabo@wildwildwest.org who will help coordinate with other groups. 
 
SLAP JOINS  THE LA BREA-WILLOUGHBY COALITION  

Headed by Lucille Saunders, the lawsuit  is aimed at forcing the city to carry out required studies of traffic and other infrastructure needs before approving new developments. Every neighborhood in the city is being negatively impacted by developments approved in ignorance -- the city hasn't made these required studies for a decade. Lucille Saunders  laid out the issues involved in the lawsuit and won support Saturday from the L.A. Neighborhood Council Coalition as well as SLAP. More than a dozen community groups have now joined the suit and the support of as many as possible will help strengthen the campaign to bring sanity and good information to the city's future development. Forms to join as Plaintiff's for the lawsuite are on the website.  They must be completed and faxed the September 11.   Contact Lucille Saunders and the website  at labreacoalition@gmail.com


UPDATE: Home Depot cancels June 24 meeting at Sunland-Tujunga meeting at school.

n following up the controversy over LAUSD issuing a permit to Home Depot to hold an "open house" in Sunland-Tujunga next week, I asked officials a series of questions and got a written response.

I also spoke with School Board Member Julie Korenstein who represents the area who said the officials in the district's Beyond The Bell program which manages civic center permits and other non-school issues were "just doing their job...as if it were an everyday permit."

She added: "I'm sure Home Depot would be far better off doing it in a neutral place...They're setting up what could be a problem."

Her reference was to the fact the No Home Depot activists are as welcome as anybody else at the Mt. Gleason Middle School event.

As for LAUSD, here's the bottom line: "The permit has been issued and the permit applicant will be permitted to use the facility in accordance with the rules and guidelines."

Here's the full statement from LAUSD's Beyond The Bell officials:

Question: According to the LAUSD website, school sites are available to nonprofits and by extension to community groups for what are pretty benign purposes, which are also spelled out in the state law on public school sites . Why was Home Depot, a highly profitablecompany, given a permit when it hopes to use the meeting to profit indirectly by winning public support for its story?

Answer: The civic center permit was given to Mr. Abraham Mercado who requested use of the facility to conduct a meeting open to the public.  Mr. Mercado submitted an application for a "public meeting re: Home Depot."  A meeting to discuss matters of general or public interest qualifies for a civic center permit.  The District's civic center permit application process is intended to be fair and neutral to all applicants.  We do not judge whether a proposed use is worthy of the use of a school facility because such a subjective determination could result in discrimination.  Mr. Mercado also checked the box indicating that no fees or charges or contributions would be collected at the public meeting.  If Mr. Mercado had indicated that he was going to collect fees, charges or contributions at the meeting, his application would have been denied.

The issuance or denial of an application for a civic center permit is not an indication or LAUSD's support or disapproval of a proposed use or activity.  Permits are granted to individuals, groups, and organizations (non-profit and for profit) based on the activity.  Examples of private and commercial venture groups/companies/associations, etc. that have been granted civic center permits in the past are: 20th Century Fox, Northrop Grumman/Litton, Tribune/KTLA, Ticketmaster, Fidelity National Title Company, Galpin Ford, and Cedar-Sinai Medical Center Group.  Education Code section 38130-38139 and the Rules adopted by the Board of Education for LAUSD apply to the issuance of civic center permits.  Education Code section 38130 and LAUSD Board Rules 1301 and 1302 do not restrict the issuance of civic center permits to solely non-profits or not-for-profit organizations.
 
I have long mocked the idea that all the campaign money and favors bestowed on politicians brought special interests what has been euphemistically called "access."

Developers, contractors, anyone wanting to profit from government get to meet privately (i.e. secretly) with elected officials, their staffs and the bureaucracy and gather information not publicly available and to set the terms of the discussion by conveying what is in their self-interest before anyone else has a say.

This is usually done for these special interests by lobbyists, lawyers, public relations experts, consultants and political strategists who have long relationships with the government officials, relationships that are both personal and professional, and enriched by the flow of political money and advice, both free and paid for.

Most of these contacts and the business transactions they involve never even bubble to the surface, never even become public knowledge. And when they do, it is far down the road. At the point ordinary citizens become aware of what's going on, the game is up. With limited  knowledge of the fine details, relatively inexperienced at such games, the public is easily dismissed as NIMBYs, easily beaten

I knew this was a great injustice. But until I got down on the ground as a community activist myself in the last two months I didn't know just how great an injustice it is.

In hearing first-hand the frustration of community groups who just want a legitimate voice in the political process, a seat at the table of power, I got angry, angry enough to decide something dramatic had to be done to change the situation.

That's why I called for the Saving L.A. Protest at noon on July 14 at City Hall, to take the first step in creating a citywide coalition of concerned citizens who would be able to mobilize to change the rules of engagement at City Hall, to change the way the process works, to make government accountable to the people.

It's a tall order I know. But the system has grown so arrogant and abusive that we need what my friend Teddy says is a Boston Tea Party to ignite the public's emotions and get something going.

Just look at how Steve Sugerman, a onetime deputy mayor, and Richard Alatorre, a longtime elected official  -- admitted felons who were convicted for crimes involving public corruption -- are getting rich operating deep inside City Hall \. They have total access to the mayor and everyone else while the public comes with hat hand to be ignoredThumbnail image for alatorre.gif during their two-minutes before the City Council or double-talked when they try to get information.

Former Fleishman-Hillard p.r. executive Sugerman pleaded guilty to a federal wire fraud charge, saying he thought his boss Doug Dowie wanted him to overbill the Department of Water and Power yet he's the point man earning a fortune peddling his influence for the massive Playa Vista development, the Southwest Museum and other clients with city busiiness.

He's registered as a lobbyist but claims most of his income doesn't come from actually peddling influence directly to the pols; it comes from helping clients manipulate the political process so you, the people, aren't entitled to know that.

And Jack Weiss -- the wannabe top city law enforcement officer as City Attorney -- thinks nothing of having Sugerman host a recent fund-raiser for him. We'll never really know how much was raised at the event because the biannual reports don't show anything but the date the check was written, not who attended the event and when the deal was cut.


Reader Stan Sugarman's letter responding to LAUSD board member Julie Korenstein's statement::

Ms. Korenstein,

Thank you for your response.  I must inform you that the information given to you by the School Superintendent is incomplete and incorrect.  The Civic Center Act within California's Education Code does not permit businesses, or their representatives, usage of public school facilities as Home Depot wishes to do.  If the permit specifically states that Home Depot, as a business, is the entity making the facility request then the permit is illegal.  Therefore, the permit given to them is illegal and must be revoked.  I ask that you proceed with this immediately.

For your information, the Civic Center Act is available for viewing on the Internet, as EDUCATION CODE SECTION 38130-38139 .  It's web address is:

http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/cgi-bin/displaycode?section=edc&group=38001-39000&file=38130-38139

As you read in Section 38131, you will note that it does not provide for a for-profit business to utilize public school facilities for it's own business motives.  It indicates that these groups can use the facilities: citizens, parent
teacher associations, Camp Fire girls, Boy Scout troops, veterans'
organizations, farmers' organizations, school-community advisory
councils, senior citizens' organizations, clubs, and associations.

Here's the latest twist in why LAUSD changed the policy on its website with regards to school facilities only being available to non-profits (see story below). Sunland-Tujunga community activists got this statement emailed  late Friday afternoon from local school board member Julie Korenstein:
 
This is in response to your mail, objecting to the issuance of a civic center permit and expressing concern and dismay that we are supporting and promoting Home Depot's business.  This is not true.
 
I received the following information from the Superintendent's Office:
 
"The Civic Center Act mandated by the California Education Code provides that each and every public school is a civic center of the community in which the school resides. As a civic center, the members of the public and other organizations may meet and discuss any subjects pertaining to the educational, political, economic, artistic, and moral interests of the citizens of the communities.  
 
Therefore, Los Angeles Unified School District is mandated to uphold the civic center permit policy in a fair, neutral, and transparent process.  The issuance or denial of an application for a civic center permit is not an indication of LAUSD's support or disapproval of a proposed use or activity.  Whether a civic center permit can be issued is based on the intended use of or the activity. We cannot discriminate against applicants and we cannot make judgment determinations as to whether the applicant's purpose is worthy of the use of a school facility."
 
As you may know, the District was very concerned about the original report and wanted a much more in-depth study done of the impact on the schools and the community.
 
I wish there would have been something else we could have done.  I share your frustration.  Please make sure you are well represented so that your concerns can be heard.

Respectfully,
Board Member Julie Korenstein
Board District 6

LAUSD wins the Chutzpah Award

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UPDATE: I haven't been able to connect with LAUSD on the subject but I'm told that despite what the website says about non-profits only, the district has permitted developers and other commercial interests to use school sites in the past. And that's my point public rules for the public and private rules for special interests is the hallmark of LAUSD and City Hall for that matter.

It has been a long-standing policy of the LAUSD to allow the use of public school facilities after hours only to non-profit organizations.

That's why the Sunland-Tujanga community got so aroused when it found out Mt. Gleason school was being turned over to Home Depot for a community meeting June 24 to win support for its effort to convert a closed K-Mart into one of their stores.

They started an email campaign that inundated school officials this week with complaints that giving a permit to one of America's most profitable companies violated the district's own rule.

Whatever you might think about the community's years long fight to keep Home Depot out of Sunland-Tujunga, you should be concerned about how LAUSD solved the controversy.

This is what they put up on district's website today:

Civic Center Permits

 
The major function of the Civic Center Permit Office is the issuance of the appropriate permit to allow for the use of school facilities in conformance with the California Education Code mandate and the Board of Education rules, which require that each and every public school facility be made available as a civic center to members of the community and non-profit organizations for supervised recreational activities, meetings and public discussions, when regular school activities are not disrupted.

To qualify for a permit:
A group must be non-profit.(Incorrect)
Updated 6/12/08: The activity requested must be not for profit.

Poof, the problem is gone. Just change the rules. And for that I think the district with an unbroken record of failing millions of students for 30 years deserves the Chutzpah Award for pure blatant utter contempt for the public.

You got to give the bloated, overpaid and incompetent bureaucracy credit for nakedly showing exactly how they deal with all kinds of problems. Cross out the wrong answer and put in the right one. In a word, cheat.

That's exactly why the district fails. It gets the answers to problems wrong every day but instead of learning from its mistakes and getting better, it simply crosses out failure and writes in success That way there's no accountability, no growth.

And that's exactly why the people of Sunland-Tujunga feel that no matter what happens, the Home Depot store will be shoved down their throats Their experience with the city is no different than with the schools and that's what I'm hearing from people all over the city.

For my money, there is only one answer and that's to change tactics and to stop playing by the rules of a rigged game.

So if you care about the schools or the quality of life in your neighborhood or any other issues that affect your life because of local policies, join me and other community activists in a protest at City Hall on July 14, Bastille Day, the day the French Revolution began.


The Home Depot Challenge

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By Ellen Vukovich

Reader and Sherman Oaks activist

Here's my prediction -- a full-scale EIR will be ordered as a compromise. What's another year to Home Depot?

By this time, Wendy Greuel will probably be our next Laura Chick - City Controller. That means the new Council Member will declare that there is nothing he/she can do to "stop" the project because Home Depot has worked with the (Sunland-Tujunga) community and mitigated its impacts to an "insignificant" level as per the EIR.

And, the last thing this City will jeopardize is its working relationship (read that as collecting more sales taxes, etc.) from Home Depot when facing its record bugetary shortfalls coupled with losing a multi-million dollar lawsuit.

My suggestion is that all residents of Council District 2 unite and find a candidate for Wendy's seat that will do their bidding. That's the only solution to all of the "Home Depots."

"WHERE'S RON"

Catch Ron on the Kevin James wShow on KRLA 870 at 9:30 p.m. this Wednesday night and as a regular commentator on NBC's innovative news sho "The Filter with Fred Roggin." "The Filter" is broadcast on NBC's Raw Channel 225 at 7:30 p.m. Monday-Thursday.

Here's links to the latest appearances on The Filter http://tinyurl.com/25b79k2 and http://tinyurl.com/2bk2kan and http://tinyurl.com/27esc63 and http://tinyurl.com/23b4h4v and http://tinyurl.com/25latgt http://tinyurl.com/28jn4l3 http://tinyurl.com/38zyylc http://tinyurl.com/33ffpv4 and . Here's links to the last appearances on Kevin James show http://tinyurl.com/334kejy and http://tinyurl.com/y2d4tew and the link to Councilman Zine's response to Ron's criticism http://tinyurl.com/yyac5oa.  

CLEAN UP CITY HALL

Support the "LA Clean Sweep" campaign to end corruption at City Hall by electing candidates who will serve the public interest -- not special interests. For too long, concerned residents throughout Los Angeles have fought their own separate battles against the powerful forces that run City Hall and control our elected officials. The city's financial crisis, cuts in core services, layoffs of city workers, selling valuable assets, massive subsidies to insiders -- we have reached the point of no return. Only you can save LA. Join the Clean Sweep campaign and come together with people from all over the city to make a difference. Get more information on volunteering your time or contributing to at lacleansweep.com http://lacleansweep.com or contact me at ron@ronkayela.com..

Clean Sweep Trainng for Acitvists & Candidates

This Sunday, Aug. 29, LA Clean Sweep will provide training sessions from professional politicial consultants to help you become a more effective activist and help candidates mount successful campaigns in the March 2011 or future elections. The sessions will be held at the Mayflower Club, 11110 Victory Blvd., North Hollywood. The morning session from 9 a.m. to noon is for activists; the afternoon session from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. is for potential candidates. Lunch will be provided to all participants at noon. For more information or to register for this invaluable training gohttp://lacleansweep.com/#/events/

About Ron

Ron Kaye

is the former editor of the Los Angeles Daily News who has become a community activist, helping to found the Saving LA Project. He writes on city issues in Los Angeles and is a frequent speaker at community groups on the need to get informed and involved in the effort to make LA a city of great schools and neighborhoods, a city with a healthy business climate and good jobs, a city where the people are respected and have a seat at the table of power.

Email Ron at ron@ronkayela.com

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