Metal Recycling Facilities / Metal Shredding Facilities / Vulnerable Populations / Health and Environmental Concerns / Code Enforcement Violation Allegations

CF 20-0826      AT CITY COUNCIL 09/30/2020

PLANNING AND LAND USE MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE REPORT relative to instructing the Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety (LADBS), with assistance from the Department of City Planning (DCP), to report on metal recycling or metal shredding facilities housed in the City.

Recommendation for Council action, pursuant to Motion (Wesson – O’Farrell):

DIRECT the LADBS, with assistance from the DCP, to report back in 30 days on the following:

Identify any/all metal recycling or metal shredding facilities which are housed inside the City of Los Angeles and are next to any of the following:

Schools
Residential uses
Child care facilities
Recreational facilities
Hospital and medical facilities
Parks and Open Space

Report on any/all complaint histories and/or public records of violations against these facilities.

Rank each of these facilities by number of code enforcement complaints and gravity of code enforcement violation allegations.
List corrective actions taken by the LADBS or any other City department for each facility on the roster (Chronological Case History)

Identify any sites from this roster which are recommended as incompatible with existing or proposed residential uses and other land uses and an action plan to advance the complete remediation of any sites found to be incompatible.

Identify locations where schools and adjacent industry should be considered for rezoning to protect children and families from potentially harmful air, water, or other pollutants.

Fiscal Impact Statement: Neither the City Administrative Officer nor the Chief Legislative Analyst has completed a financial analysis of this report.

Community Impact Statement: None submitted.


Click on the BLUE HIGHLIGHT to view official documents and reports.

  • City Clerk scheduled item for Council on September 30, 2020  Report from PLUM (September 17, 2010)
  • 09/17/2020 Planning and Land Use Management Committee approved item(s) . Motion (June 24, 2020)

Motion (Wesson – O’Farrell) relative to directing the Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety with assistance from the Department of City Planning to report on the location of any metal recycling facilities inside the City and any complaints and their gravity and corrective actions taken by the City; and identify facility sites incompatible with residential uses and locations where schools and adjacent industry should be considered for rezoning to protect children and families from potentially harmful air, water, or other pollutants.

Community Impact Statement: None submitted.

  • 09/11/2020 Planning and Land Use Management Committee scheduled item for committee meeting on September 17, 2020.  Motion (June 6, 2020)
  • 06/24/2020 Motion document(s) referred to Planning and Land Use Management Committee  Motion (June 6, 2020 )

 

Local Hire Requirement / Development Agreements / Unemployment / COVID-19 Pandemic

CF 20-0949    AT CITY COUNCIL 09/30/2020

PLANNING AND LAND USE MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE REPORT relative to incorporating a local hire requirement into Development Agreements for projects in the City.

Recommendations for Council action, pursuant to Motion (Cedillo – Rodriguez):

INSTRUCT the Department of City Planning (DCP), with the assistance of the City Attorney, to prepare and present an amendment to the City’s Development Agreement Guidelines (pursuant to CPC No. 86-404 MSC) and a report with recommendations on options for requiring that every Development Agreement for the construction of any project in the City, include a provision requiring project applicants to enter into an agreement with the City, or whomever is the most appropriate agency, to incorporate a local hire requirement into all development projects, thereby ensuring the hiring of local residents, particularly but not limited to those in service sector occupations, living in close proximity to the proposed project site.

INSTRUCT that the report include information on the following:

Prevailing Wage Project.
The JJJ Projects
The Development Agreement Projects that have been approved by the City and provide an analysis of how many projects in the City have a mandated State-approved skilled and trained workforce requirement.

Fiscal Impact Statement: Neither the City Administrative Officer nor the Chief Legislative Analyst has completed a financial analysis of this report.

Community Impact Statement: None submitted.


09/25/2020 City Clerk scheduled item for Council on September 30, 2020.  Report from PLUM (September 30, 2020)
09/03/2020 Planning and Land Use Management Committee approved as amended .  Motion (July 29, 2020)
08/31/2020 Planning and Land Use Management Committee scheduled item for committee meeting on September 3, 2020.  Motion (July 29, 2020)
07/29/2020 Motion document(s) referred to Planning and Land Use Management Committee. Motion (July 29, 2020)

Council Motions (September 22, 2020) San Fernando Valley

View City Council Motions (September 22, 2020) (Land Use Policy:  Master Plan for Sepulveda Basin, Protection for residents near Valley Generating Station, Potential evacuation routes in Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones)

The following Council Motions were introduced during today’s City Council meeting. The listed motions govern ALL SUBJECT MATTERS OF COUNCIL not only land use. Council file numbers have not been assigned at this time and are currently being processed.

 

 

AB-168 Planning and zoning: annual report: housing development: streamlined approvals

Read:  AB 168    09/25/2020

Read:  AB 168 Closes the loophole of SB 35

Requires a pre-consultation process with a California Native American tribe prior to the submission of an SB 35 (Wiener), Chapter 366, Statutes of 2017, permit, which entitles a developer to a streamlined housing approval process, in order to identify and protect tribal cultural resources (TCRs).

(Shellmound, 09/22/2020)

AB 168 ensures that any project site that contains a tribal cultural resource listed on a national, state, tribal, or local historic register—such as the West Berkeley Shellmound—will be automatically disqualified for SB 35 fast-tracked approval.

Furthermore, under AB 168, developers are now required to conduct a consultation process with a California Native American tribe prior to submitting any application for SB 35 fast-tracked approval. That consultation process will identify whether there are any significant tribal cultural resources or tribal sacred landscapes that could be impacted by the proposed project. If cultural resources could be affected by a proposed development, a mutually agreeable and enforceable agreement between the developer and the tribe must be documented that avoids or addresses impacts to tribal cultural resources. If such an agreement cannot be reached, the project is not eligible for SB 35 fast-tracking.

Thus, AB 168 actually exceeds the standards put in place for tribal consultation under AB 52, California’s landmark law requiring consultations with tribes in regard to tribal cultural resources. It goes further by requiring the consent and approval of tribes in regard to the treatment of cultural resources and sacred sites, before a project is eligible for a permit under SB 35.

As the Senate Committee on Housing’s analysis states, “this delegation of decision-making power would be unprecedented and would grant California Native American tribes municipal decision-making power over housing projects.” The California Building Industry Association, California Business Properties Association, California Association of Realtors and other industry groups also cited this delegation of power to tribes as the principle reason that they lobbied against the passage of AB 168, demanding it be amended so that tribes are not allowed “an unchallengeable veto over whether a housing project is eligible for SB 35’s entitlement process.”

In our view, AB 168 represents a vitally important step in the direction of affirming the rights of California tribes to protect their sacred sites and cultural resources, recognizing that the tribes should be lead decision makers in regard to their sacred sites. The value of tribal consultation processes as prescribed by AB 52 is very limited if tribes have no ability to say “no” to a project that threatens an unacceptable level of impact to cultural resources. The sponsor of AB 168, Assemblywoman Cecilia Aguiar-Curry, wrote in a statement recommending passage of the bill:

“Without this bill, tribal cultural resources may be subject to avoidable destruction and desecration. We have lost much of our State’s Native history, and once a religious or cultural artifact, site, or burial ground is lost, it cannot be replaced. To honor California’s history and diversity, it is important that we continue to honor the consultation process with Native American tribes and protect tribal cultural resources. Early identification and consultation with California tribes will ensure that generations of Californians will play a role in honoring the culture and sovereignty of Native American tribes and communities, and facilitate necessary housing development by avoiding litigation.”

Council and Committee Referrals – Tuesday, September 22, 2020

 

20-1209
CD 5
Anti-Gridlock signs on the eastbound side of Ventura Boulevard, between Balboa and Sepulveda Boulevards.
To Council
Motion (Koretz – Lee) relative to authorizing Los Angeles Department of Transportation to invoice the Encino Neighborhood Council for a portion of the cost of changing the existing Anti-Gridlock signs on the eastbound side of Ventura Boulevard, between Balboa and Sepulveda Boulevards.

 

20-1207 Ordinance to create a Valley Generating Station Community Amenities Trust Fund
To Budget and Finance Committee
To Energy, Climate Change, and Environmental Justice Committee

Motion (Rodriguez – et al. – Price) relative to requesting the City Attorney, with assistance of the Chief Legislative Analyst, to prepare and present an ordinance to create a Valley Generating Station Community Amenities Trust Fund for receipt of funds to be expended for residents who live within a three-mile radius of the facility.

 

20-1205 Master plan for the Sepulveda Basin.
To Health, Education, Neighborhoods, Parks, Arts, and River Committee
Motion (Martinez – O’Farrell) relative to instructing the Department of Recreation and Parks, in coordination with the Army Corp of Engineers and the County of Los Angeles, to report on developing a master plan for the Sepulveda Basin.

 

20-1213 Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones
To Planning and Land Use Management Committee
To Public Safety Committee

Motion (Bonin – Koretz) relative to instructing the Department of City Planning, with assistance from relevant City departments, to report on the capacity, safety, and viability of existing and potential evacuation routes in Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones, and identify the policies and development standards necessary to support these evacuation routes.

 

20-1203 Adult Residential Facilities and Residential Care Facilities for the Elderly citywide
To Homelessness and Poverty Committee
Motion (O’Farrell – et al. – Wesson – et al.) relative to directing the Los Angeles Housing and Community Investment Department, with the assistance of the Los Angeles Homelessness Service Authority, to report on the state of Adult Residential Facilities and Residential Care Facilities for the Elderly citywide.

New In-Street Dining Permits on Hold in L.A.

But Wollman said Phase 1, which expedites the permit process for restaurants to set up tables and serve diners on sidewalks and in private parking lots, has no external cost to the city and won’t stop anytime soon.

“We have continued to offer permits,” he said. “That has not stopped.”

Mayor Eric Garcetti activated Phase 1 in May in an effort to help local restaurants survive the coronavirus pandemic by creating new outdoor dining options as indoor dining rooms remained closed. He expanded the program in late June to allow for the creation of in-street Al Fresco zones in Phase 2.

Wollman said the “vast majority” of Al Fresco applications are for sidewalk and parking lot permits, not in-street ones. Only 50 in-street applications have been approved, and installing the necessary infrastructure for those 50 restaurants to serve patrons in the street exhausted the initial $750,000 allotment in the budget.

He confirmed restaurants that have already been approved for in-street dining can continue to serve customers there while the city looks for more funding.

The only Valley neighborhood to establish an in-street Al Fresco zone is North Hollywood, which did so last month along a densely populated stretch of Magnolia Boulevard. Existing Al Fresco permits for both Phase 1 and Phase 2 are set to expire Dec. 31.

Council and Committee Referral – Wednesday, September 16, 2020

 

20-1184 Density Bonus and Transit Oriented Communities programs.
To Planning and Land Use Management Committee
Motion (Ryu – Koretz) relative to the Department of City Planning and the Chief Legislative Analyst be instructed to report back on whether new hotel uses in conjunction with incentives based on residential uses have the potential to negatively impact the overall goals of housing promoting incentive programs and policies such as the Density Bonus and Transit Oriented Communities programs.

 

Council Motions (September 15, 2020)

View City Council Motions (September 15, 2020) (Land Use Policy:  Nuisance Abatement Program, Unfinished Buildings or Structures)     

The following Council Motions were introduced during today’s City Council meeting. The listed motions govern ALL SUBJECT MATTERS OF COUNCIL not only land use. Council file numbers have not been assigned at this time and are currently being processed.View City Council.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Council and Committee Referrals – Friday, September 11, 2020

 

20-1162 City Attorney’s Administrative Citation Enforcement (ACE) program
To Public Works and Gang Reduction Committee
Board of Public Works report BPW-2020-0055, dated February 5, 2020, relative to amending the Los Angeles Municipal Code to allow violations under Section 56.08 to be adjudicated through the City Attorney’s Administrative Citation Enforcement (ACE) program and remove the Board of Public Works as the adjudication body.

 

20-0948 Revenue shortfall estimated for Fiscal Year 2020-21.
To Budget and Finance Committee
City Administrative Officer report 0220-05775-0000, dated September 11, 2020, relative to coordinating the development of spending reduction proposals in all City departments, as included in the Mayor’s Instructions for Fiscal Restraint memorandum, and in upcoming financial status reports; that are required to reduce City expenditures to address the revenue shortfall estimated for Fiscal Year 2020-21.

 

14-0141 Deputy Director of Planning, Class Code 9444
To Personnel and Animal Welfare Committee
Mayor report, dated September 9, 2020, relative to the re-exemption request of one position of Deputy Director of Planning, Class Code 9444, in accordance with Charter Section 1001(b), from civil service as a management, professional, scientific, or expert services exemption.

 

New LADBS Submittal and Verifications Procedures

 

Header Image - Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety
September 2020      
The Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety (LADBS) has modified its procedures and implemented new practices to provide our customers with the best possible service during these challenging times, while safeguarding the health and safety of both LADBS customers and staff members.

In March 2020, LADBS established designated “Drop-off/Pickup” areas for new submittal and verification plans. To further improve this process, LADBS will now offer limited in-person appointments to facilitate quicker resolution and improve the efficiency of the plan check process. The following submittal and verification procedures will be implemented effective Monday, September 21, 2020:

Drop-off/Pickup Areas in Metro, Marvin Braude, and
West Los Angeles are as follows:

Monday-Friday from 7:30 am – 4:00 pm
(Except Wednesday, which is 9:00 am – 4:00 pm)

Metro Drop-off/Pickup Area
201 N. Figueroa St, 90012

 Van Nuys Drop-off/Pickup Area
Marvin Braude Building
6262 Van Nuys Blvd, 91401

 West LA Drop-off/Pickup Area
1828 Sawtelle Blvd, 90025

NEW PLAN CHECK SUBMITTALS

  • A completed permit application will be required as part of the submittal package.
  • Applicants will be given a “screening” appointment at the time of submittal package drop-off. The applicant will be given two printouts of the “screening” appointment confirmation, one for reference and one to wrap around the submittal package for identification. An LADBS staff will contact the applicant by phone on the scheduled “screening” appointment time to review the submittal package for completeness. It is important for the applicant to be available during the “screening” appointment.
  • Incomplete plans will not be accepted. Another “screening” appointment will be scheduled upon receipt of missing documents.
  • If the applicant cannot be reached during the scheduled “screening” appointment, the submittal package will not be processed. The plans will be placed back in queue for another “screening” appointment.
  • Once plans are accepted for plan check, LADBS staff will create the permit application and send the applicant a link for online payment of the plan check fees.


VERIFICATION DROP-OFFS FOR OVER-THE-COUNTER AND EXPANDED COUNTER PLAN CHECK

  • The verification package must be dropped off at the designated “Drop-Off” areas. No appointment is required when dropping off verification packages for Over-The-Counter (OTC), Appointment Plan Check (APC), or Expanded Counter Plan Check (ECPC) projects.
  • OTC verification packages must contain the following:

    1. An LADBS “Drop-off” transmittal cover sheet, wrapped around the plans, with the project information clearly visible
    2. Original marked plans
    3. Revised plans
    4. Original correction sheets with a written response addressing each pending correction
    5. Any other required documents per the plan check engineer’s instruction


VERIFICATION DROP-OFFS FOR REGULAR PLAN CHECK

  • The applicant must contact the plan check engineer to schedule a phone/virtual verification appointment. Subsequently, an appointment email will be sent to the applicant. Applicants must show the appointment email at the time of drop-off of the verification package.
  • The verification package must contain the following:

    1. Original marked plans
    2. Revised plans
    3. Original correction sheets with a written response addressing each pending correction
    4. Any other required documents per the plan check engineer’s instruction

  • The verification package must be dropped off at the designated “Drop-off” areas at least 48 hours prior to the appointment date for quarantine.
  • An LADBS “Drop-off” transmittal cover sheet and the appointment email must be wrapped around the submittal package, clearly visible.
  • The plan check engineer will review the revised plans with you during the appointment either by phone or online via google meet.

READY-TO-ISSUE (RTI) PERMIT DROP-OFFS
Drop-off packages must contain the following items:

1. Completed RTI form, wrapped  around the plans, with the permit address clearly visible.
2. The original RTI-stamped set of plans. The number of sets is indicated on the RTI form.
3. All documents required on the RTI form.
4. Relevant Contractor information. See the RTI form for further information.

Home-Sharing Administrative Guidelines / Home Sharing Guest Code of Conduct / Interim Control Ordinance (ICO) / Guest Limitation / COVID-19 Pandemic

CF 20-1012  CD 5   AT PLUM 09/17/2020

Motion (Koretz – Ryu – Krekorian) relative to instructing the Department of City Planning (DCP), with the assistance of the City Attorney, to prepare and present an Interim Control Ordinance, with an urgency clause, to prohibit home-sharing Citywide for more than ten guests per home sharing listing transaction during the COVID-19 pandemic, and until the Safer at Home orders are lifted in order to protect the public safety, health and welfare of the community; and, related matters.

Community Impact Statement: None submitted


Click on the BLUE HIGHLIGHT to view official documents and reports.

  • 09/17/2020 Planning and Land Use Management Committee approved as amended . Motio9n (August 12, 2020)
  • 09/11/2020 Planning and Land Use Management Committee scheduled item for committee meeting on September 17, 2020.  Motion (August 8, 2020)
  • 08/12/2020 Motion document(s) referred to Planning and Land Use Management Committee.  Motion (August 8, 2020)

Council and Committee Referrals – Tuesday, September 15, 2020

 

20-1175 LADBS issues an Order to Abate Vacant Structure for violations of Los Angeles Municipal Code Sections 91.8904 et seq, etc.
To Planning and Land Use Management Committee
Motion (Koretz – Buscaino – O’Farrell) relative to requesting the City Attorney, with the assistance of the Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety (LADBS), to notify property owners and financial institutions that carry a mortgage on the property via written correspondence when LADBS issues an Order to Abate Vacant Structure for violations of Los Angeles Municipal Code Sections 91.8904 et seq, etc.

 

0-1174 LADBS enforcement of Municipal Code Section 91.106.4.4.3, Unfinished Buildings or Structures
To Planning and Land Use Management Committee
Motion (Koretz – Ryu) relative to instructing the Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety (LADBS), in consultation with the City Attorney, to prepare a report with recommendations, relative to the LADBS enforcement of Municipal Code Section 91.106.4.4.3, Unfinished Buildings or Structures, inasmuch as there are numerous unfinished development projects citywide

 

20-1170 Interim Control Ordinance (ICO), to suspend all ongoing construction as detailed in the Motion within both the Hillside and Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones until November 30, 2020.
To Planning and Land Use Management Committee
Motion (Ryu – Koretz) relative to instructing the Department of City Planning, in consultation with the Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety and City Attorney, to prepare and present an Interim Control Ordinance (ICO), to suspend all ongoing construction as detailed in the Motion within both the Hillside and Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones until November 30, 2020.

Council and Committee Referral – Wednesday, September 09, 2020

 

20-1139 Environmental and administrative changes to create cool roof and cool surface requirements.
To Planning and Land Use Management Committee
Department of Building and Safety report, dated September 8, 2020, relative to an Ordinance amending or adding sections and subsection tables of the Los Angeles Municipal Code to make local, environmental and administrative changes to create cool roof and cool surface requirements.

Local Hire Requirement / Development Agreements / Unemployment / COVID-19 Pandemic

CF 20-0949     PLUM  09/03/2020 

Motion (Cedillo – Rodriguez) relative to instructing the Department of City Planning, with the assistance of the City Attorney, to prepare and present an Ordinance that requires that every Development Agreement for the construction of any project in the City, include a provision requiring project applicants to enter into an agreement with the City, or appropriate agency, to incorporate a local hire requirement into all development projects, thus ensuring the hiring of local residents, particularly but not limited to those in service-sector occupations, living in close proximity to the proposed project site.

Community Impact Statement: None submitted.


Click on the BLUE highlight to view official documents and reports.

  • 09/03/2020 Planning and Land Use Management Committee approved as amended .    Motion (July 29, 2020)
  • 08/31/2020 Planning and Land Use Management Committee scheduled item for committee meeting on September 3, 2020   Motion (July 29, 2020)
  • 07/29/2020 Motion document(s) referred to Planning and Land Use Management Committee.   Motion (July 29, 2020)

 

Citing Fiscal Emergency, Mayor Garcetti Orders Furloughs For LA City Employees

Source:  The Planning Report

Citing the City of LA’s dire fiscal circumstances, the absence of certainty regarding future expenditures to combat COVID-19, and with no guarantee of federal or state reimbursement, Mayor Garcetti quietly declared a state of fiscal emergency for the City of Los Angeles on Friday imposing 18 furlough days on city employees. TPR shares the Mayor’s order here, introduced by LA city advocate, Jack Humphreville, who outlines the city’s budget woes, which he argues are the result of fiscal mismanagement. 

Council President Nury Martinez on Addressing the Cloud of Corruption over LA City Hall

Source: The Planning Report 

In this exclusive TPR interview, LA City Council President Nury Martinez, responding to the deep-pocketed pay-to-play corruption scandal encircling Los Angeles City Hall and disgraced Councilmembers Jose Huizar and Mitchell Englander, elaborates on the three motions she just introduced—just months before this November’s Council elections—to increase transparency of the city’s entitlement and development review process. Her intent, she asserts, is to begin to address the considerable erosion of public trust in City Hall. President Martinez further shares her commitment both to keeping Angelenos housed during the COVID public health and economic crises and to opposing one-size-fits all housing solutions currently under consideration by the California Assembly.

Council and Committee Referrals – Wednesday, September 02, 2020

 

20-1116 Hollywood Burbank Airport terminal project, to allow all stakeholders, including the City, ample time to analyze the DEIS
To Trade, Travel, and Tourism Committee
Motion (Krekorian – O’Farrell for Ryu – Martinez – Koretz) relative to requesting the City Attorney to draft a letter calling upon the Federal Aviation Administration to extend the comment period on a Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) related to the Hollywood Burbank Airport terminal project, to allow all stakeholders, including the City, ample time to analyze the DEIS and submit their concerns.

 

20-0470 Third-party delivery services on retail food establishments when they are not operating at full capacity due the COVID-19 pandemic
To Economic Development Committee
City Attorney report R20-0259, dated September 1, 2020, relative to a draft Ordinance adding Article 6 to Chapter XX of the Los Angeles Municipal Code to establish a temporary limit on charges imposed by third-party delivery services on retail food establishments when they are not operating at full capacity due the COVID-19 pandemic.

 

 

Council and Committee Referrals – Tuesday, September 01, 2020

 

20-1106 City’s Housing Element to establish a Affordable Equitable Housing Protection Overlay Program and Zone
To Planning and Land Use Management Committee
Motion (Ryu – Koretz) relative to instructing the Department of City Planning to prepare and present an ordinance in line with the work on updating the City’s Housing Element to establish a Affordable Equitable Housing Protection Overlay Program and Zone.

 

20-1098 Prepare an update to the Baseline Hillside Ordinance and the Baseline Mansionization Ordinance
To Planning and Land Use Management Committee
Motion (Ryu – Bonin) relative to instructing the Department of City Planning to close the loopholes allowing McMansions in multifamily zones, and prepare an update to the Baseline Hillside Ordinance and the Baseline Mansionization Ordinance to apply the same restrictions, and as further detailed in this Motion.

 

20-1104 Prepare a report that identifies beneficial amendments to the Density Bonus Ordinance.
To Planning and Land Use Management Committee
Motion (Ryu – Bonin) relative to instructing the Department of City Planning, with the assistance of the Housing and Community Investment Department (HCID) City Administrative Officer (CAO), and the Chief Legislative Analyst (CLA), to prepare a report that identifies beneficial amendments to the Density Bonus Ordinance.

 

20-1101
CD 4
Standardize the definition and comprehensively map all recommended locations Citywide, include an overlay in all Council District Four hillsides with certain features,
To Planning and Land Use Management Committee
Motion (Ryu – Koretz) relative to instructing the Planning Department to prepare and present an amendment to the Hillside Construction Regulation Supplemental Use District to standardize the definition and comprehensively map all recommended locations Citywide, include an overlay in all Council District Four hillsides with certain features, and add to all hillsides and Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone parcels as part of the Hollywood Community Plan Update.

Council and Committee Referrals – Wednesday, September 30, 2020

 

20-1263 LA Al Fresco Program.
To Ad Hoc Committee on COVID-19 Recovery and Neighborhood Investment
Motion (Krekorian – O’Farrell – Martinez) relative to instructing the City Administrative Officer to allocate Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Services (CARES) Act funds for the continuation, support, and expansion of the LA Al Fresco Program.

 

20-1260
CD 14
Fill the vacancy in the office of Councilmember, District 14.
To Council
Motion (Martinez – Price) relative to the appointment of Councilmember-Elect Kevin de Leon to fill the vacancy in the office of Councilmember, District 14.

Council Motions (September 1, 2020)

View City Council Motions (September 1, 2020) (Land Use Policy:  Definition of Kennel, Maximum size of new single family residences in multiple family zones, Density Bonus Ordinance Update, Equitable Affordable Housing Overlay Zone , Hillside Construction Regulation Supplemental Use District,) 

The following Council Motions were introduced during today’s City Council meeting. The listed motions govern ALL SUBJECT MATTERS OF COUNCIL not only land use. Council file numbers have not been assigned at this time and are currently being processed.View City Council.