City of Angles
From City Hall to the City Council, from the County Board of Supervisors to the L.A. Unified School District, from elections to ballot measures to budgets to scandals. Local political and civic affairs shape our lives in Los Angeles in ways that aren't always apparent. Brian Doherty's City of Angles will help you understand and appreciate all the angles of L.A.'s always lively and often perplexing political scene.
Our new/old Governor Jerry Brown is inaugurated into a job that promises to be more trouble than even this old pol can skillfully navigate.
Why Does it Take 20 Years to Build A Shopping Center in South Central?
December 30, 2010 11:43 AM
The 20-year struggle to get a shopping center built at Slauson and Central reveals long-standing problems with the politics of development in L.A.
Good Year End News for L.A.: Murder Numbers Back to 1967 Level
December 27, 2010 9:47 AM
Despite a staggering economy, the number of murders in L.A. has fallen to 1967 levels--which given our 30 percent population rise since then, a murder rate even lower than that.
Deputy Mayor Austin Beutner wants to streamline L.A.'s planning process through "simultaneous processing," developers still complain that getting something built in L.A. can take twice as long as in other cities, and will even if Beutner gets his way.
County DCFS Head Lands At Other County Job After Removal
December 16, 2010 11:08 AM
Trish Ploehn loses her job as head of L.A. County's Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) because of the agency's troubles--but settles into another county job at over a quarter million a year salary.
Downtown giant AEG plans to either get a downtown football stadium moving, or give up, within months. But experts doubt whether that plan will guarantee anything good for downtown's economic health as a whole.
Federal Government Preparing a Crackdown on State Medical Marijuana
December 6, 2010 1:48 PM
Since Prop. 19 failed to fully legalize adult possession, use, and small growth, Obama's Department of Justice is showing an increased desire to interfere with the state medical system.
Do Inspectors and Lawyers Need to Pack Heat?
December 2, 2010 9:08 PM
A state Senate investigation finds over 100 members of the state Office of Inspector General, charged with investigating state prisons, armed and perked as full-fledged "peace officers" for no apparent good reason.
After Much Confusion, 10 Ballot Measures Approved by L.A. City Council
November 29, 2010 10:59 AM
The City Council after much repetition and last-minute changes approves 10 ballot measures for L.A. voter approval in March.
While votes remain to be counted, after weeks of uncertainty our County D.A. Steve Cooley has conceded the victory in the statewide Attorney General race to San Francisco's Kamala Harris.
City Planning Process to Get Further From Citizens
November 22, 2010 8:53 PM
A new plan pushed through the City Council could end citizen and Neighborhood Councils ability to speak up during the city planning process.
Party All Night on The Beach, Says Coastal Commission
November 19, 2010 4:30 PM
L.A. imposes a midnight-5 a.m. curfew on its beaches, but the state Coastal Commission has told the city they can't do that.
Seven city council seats--the most valuable city wide public office in America!--are up for grabs in March (one with no incumbent), and L.A Unified School District and L.A. Community College District seats are in contention as well. The full candidate slates are now official.
UC System Contemplates Tuition Hikes, Faces Shocking Pension Obligations
November 15, 2010 8:53 AM
Students rebel against a 8 percent tuition hike to overcome some short-time budget shortfalls; meanwhile, the University of California system faces a truly daunting nearly $30 billion in unfunded pension and health care liabilities.
In a little more than month, the state of California lost over $6 billion in ground on its latest budget. With the deficit now thought to be $25.4 billion, Gov. Schwarzenegger calls a special session of the legislature.
As control of state government switches hands, some old problems continue to haunt: for one, a likely $16 billion in debt to the federal government by 2012, from whom California is borrowing to make unemployment benefit payouts.
California Stays the Course, Post Election
November 5, 2010 11:05 AM
California is still the same place, if unseasonably hot; but pot is still illegal for non-patients, our greenhouse gas legislation is still in place, Barbara Boxer is still our senator, and Jerry Brown is still our governor (after that nearly 20 year gap in which he wasn't...) and someone will be our new Attorney General as current one Brown returns to his old job, but we're not sure who yet.
Californians bring a blessed end to this year's election season today, and voters get a chance to surprise in what the Los Angeles Times calls "the closest California campaigns in decades."
Proposition 19 Losing Support Down to the Wire, Plans Last Ad Blitz
October 29, 2010 9:32 AM
Pro- and anti-Proposition 19 forces plan a final ad blitz for Tuesday's election, though polls show the formerly strong adult marijuana legalization measure (which will allow localities to tax and regulate it as they please) losing support.
In the wake of a new indictment of a Vernon city official, the tiny (pop. 90), corruption-prone city south of downtown L.A. is facing an attack from L.A. County D.A. (and Republican state Attorney General candidate) Steve Cooley on its very existence as a city.
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