The Valley: April 2008 Archives

Free at last!

That's how I feel about starting a new chapter of my life and leaving the Los Angeles Daily News behind after the happiest 23 years in my life personally and professionally.

My last day on the job as editor of the Daily News was April 4 and every day since has been amazing, filled with a lot of love and support from friends, colleagues, acquaintances and even people I didn't know.

The newspaper business has been tough for a long while and getting worse day by day so the stress level has been high and I can't put into words just how good it feels to be free of it, to be free to participate in civic life just as me without a formal role, to speak publicly purely in my own voice and work directly for the things I believe in.

My only regret is the colleagues I've left behind at the Daily News, journalists most especially, since we had a great newsroom and had become a real newspaper with people finding their own voice, having fun telling stories and working hard to reinvent newspapering.

But there are also hundreds of other great people who make up the Daily News I loved so dearly, from telephone sales to the printing plant, from advertising, circulation and all the other business offices -- dedicated people who gave the paper character and identity. I wish them all the best as they struggle to find the keys to keeping alive a nearly 100-year-old tradition of community service to the San Fernando Valley.

I want to talk more about that later, the paper, the Valley, the city, the things I believe in, and the vision that drives me to fight for a better, a greater Los Angeles. I want to write from my heart and I want others to post their stories at ronkayela.com, to engage in a public conversation about who we are and what we could become if we pull together and work together for the common good.

We'll never know what that is or how to achieve it unless we talk about our experiences, our values, our needs and our aspirations. I believe with all my heart that that kind of public conversation will cut through the fog of political, media and corporate double talk and lead us to the common ground where we can start solving the problems of our community and make life better for us all.

I certainly don't pretend to know the answers; I only know what I see and I'm probably wrong about most of all of it. My newsroom knew that, and had a saying, "You can't spell wrong without R-O-N."

So let's tell the truth as we see it and learn from each other. Let the games begin. 

 

 

Saving L.A. Project (S.L.A.P)



Thousands of people have responded positively to the movement to save L.A. and put the people in power in Los Angeles. Now, it's time for those who see the possibility of what a citizens coalition can achieve to go to work. Your mission is to go back to your organizations and get them to partner with the Saving L.A. Project, to tell your friends and associates what you really think about how the city's is being run. We've had public meetings, we've given speeches, we've blogged and emailed about SLAP and the failure of our city leaders to serve the people. It's not a mystery; most people get it right away because they know it's true but think they can't do anything about it. SLAP is doing something about. It has definied its mission: Ending corruption in city government, get city government to obey the law, demand honesty instead of lies from out city government. Good government in a great city -- that's our goal. To achieve that, communities have to be empowered. We're mobilizing community leaders in every part of L.A. and we're registering as a non-profit organization to raise money to shake the foundations of City Hall. SLAP belongs to everyone who wants to be involved in saving LA.

In September, SLAP plans to hold community meetings in various parts of the city. We will work with your local group or groups to arrange the meetings and provide people who can talk about what we're doing and listen to the issues that matter to you.


If you're fed up with the failure of the schools and city government to serve your needs, get involved. We're developing a website to bring our communities together. In the meantime, feel free to contact me ron@ronkayela.com or visit savingla.com

About Ron

Ron Kaye is the former editor of the Los Angeles Daily News where he spent 23 years helping to make the newspaper the voice of the San Fernando Valley and fighting for a city government that serves the people and not special interests. Twice in recent years, Los Angeles Magazine listed Kaye among the city’s most influential people, specifically in the area of politics. Kaye has been variously described in the media as the “accidental anarchist,” “the Patrick Henry of the San Fernando Valley” and a “passionate populist.” He is now committed to carrying on his crusade for a greater Los Angeles as an ordinary citizen. Previously, Ron worked at the Los Angeles Herald Examiner, Associated Press, Cleveland Plain Dealer and The Australian as well as papers in Fairbanks, Alaska and Yakima, Wash. He also wrote for Newsweek magazine, The Guardian in London and the Naitonal Enquirer.
You can email me at ron@ronkayela.com

About this Archive

This page is a archive of entries in the The Valley category from April 2008.

The Valley: May 2008 is the next archive.

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