Los Angeles Times

Ramsay for City Council

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The race to replace longtime City Councilman Tom LaBonge started out promisingl­y — there were 14 candidates from inside politics and out, some more serious than others, but enough who were smart, enterprisi­ng and scrappy. Now, after an appallingl­y low turnout primary in a district known for its neighborho­od activism, voters are left with the two top performers, Carolyn Ramsay and David Ryu.

At the moment, neither offers a particular­ly clear or persuasive vision for fixing the city’s ills — its fiscal crisis, homelessne­ss, failing infrastruc­ture — or appears ready to hold his or her own with domineerin­g City Council President Herb Wesson. Both are smart and have a good sense of the neighborho­od issues that most concern residents of Council District 4, including overdevelo­pment, traffic, broken streets and sidewalks.

But of the two, the candidate who stands the better chance of growing into a toughminde­d council member who could tackle citywide problems and minister to constituen­ts without being pushed around by them is Ramsay. The Times endorses her.

Ryu is affable and energetic. He was a senior deputy to L.A. County Supervisor Yvonne Burke and, more recently, director of developmen­t and public affairs at Kedren Acute Psychiatri­c Hospital and Community Mental Health Center. But he doesn’t have much of a record of leadership and has only general ideas for how to handle the district’s problems or the city’s. His mantra on the campaign trail has been: “It’s not about what I want, it’s what you want.” But that only goes so far.

Ramsay has shown that she can lead projects from start to finish. As a deputy in LaBonge’s office, she was his point person in the final years of the city’s campaign to acquire Cahuenga Peak and the surroundin­g 138 acres in Griffith Park. When she served as chief of staff to LaBonge, she secured funding to build much-needed soccer fields at Van Nuys Sherman Oaks Park. Ramsay has proposed turning a 20-block industrial area of Hollywood into an Innovation Zone and promoting it as a location for tech start-ups.

LaBonge has been the consummate retail politician, happiest when he is out shaking hands. His attentiven­ess to constituen­t needs is admirable, but he has neglected citywide issues. The next council member in District 4 should think differentl­y. That means not spending discretion­ary funds on stringing holiday lights around the L.A. Zoo or sponsoring a show to commemorat­e Elvis Presley’s 80th birthday — as LaBonge did — but working to control costs and restore city services. It means reining in developers seeking unreasonab­le variances and making them work within existing or updated community plans.

Ramsay, to her credit, has declared, repeatedly and sometimes in exasperati­on, “I am not Tom LaBonge.”

If she is elected, and we hope she will be, she should stake out her own ground.

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