Los Angeles Times

A bid to deter homeless with traffic median redo

One plan for Los Feliz site would add big planters

- By Dakota Smith

Nearly a decade ago, Los Angeles city officials, including then-City Councilman Eric Garcetti, cut the ribbon on a street beautifica­tion project in Los Feliz.

Landscaper­s added sycamore trees, honey-colored grass and seating areas at Vermont Triangle, a traffic median off Hollywood Boulevard. The $850,000 redesign transforme­d the spot into a new gateway to Los Feliz’s boutiques and restaurant­s and provided a resting place for locals waiting for the bus.

“People say that no one walks in Los Angeles,” Garcetti told the crowd at the ribbon-cutting. “But when we improve the streetscap­e, we get people out of their cars.”

Today, Vermont Triangle is a grim-looking concrete island that draws tents and transients.

Homeless for a decade, Michael Kelly, 48, hung out at Vermont Triangle on a recent afternoon and showed a reporter his collection of marijuana seeds, which he hoped to sell to buy a guitar. Kelly comes to the traffic median because he grew up nearby and “it’s a place I feel comfortabl­e,” he said.

Now, officials are weighing another redesign of the 7,000-square-foot site. Under one proposal, large planters would be added to make it difficult for homeless people to put up tents. If it goes forward, the redesign would mark the third redo of

the median in 10 years.

Even community members who support another redesign are frustrated that the city traffic median has taken up so much time and money.

“It should have stayed the way it was,” said Jeff Zarrinnam, a member of the board of governors of the East Hollywood Business Improvemen­t District, which maintains the median. “But everyone has all these different, wild ideas. People think it’s a park, and it’s not park. It’s a median, that’s a traffic median, that’s all it is.”

The 2008 makeover, which took place when thenCity Councilman Tom LaBonge represente­d Los Feliz and Garcetti oversaw nearby Hollywood, was a transit project led by Los Angeles’ now-abolished Community Redevelopm­ent Agency. The improvemen­ts were intended to help the pedestrian environmen­t north of the Red Line station at Sunset Boulevard and Vermont Avenue.

The redevelopm­ent agency said in a 2007 resolution that the upgrades would help eliminate blight in nearby East Hollywood by “improving the pedestrian amenities” and “encouragin­g use of the area and other commercial establishm­ents.”

Federal funds paid for most of the redesign, with the rest of the money coming from the redevelopm­ent agency, said Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Authority spokesman Dave Sotero.

Permeable pavers were added to allow groundwate­r to seep into the soil. New lampposts, designed to match those at nearby Barnsdall Park, were installed.

Today, the pavers have to be removed because dirt kicks up when they are power-washed, Zarrinnam said. On a recent visit with a reporter, he pointed out a broken lamppost and trash strewn in the dirt.

A Bureau of Engineerin­g spokeswoma­n said last month that there had been five incidents of either damage or lamppost lights not working at Vermont Triangle in the last year.

Homeless outreach workers have made 18 visits to Vermont Triangle in the last year, said Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority spokesman Tom Waldman.

Berenice Cruz, who works across the street at Starbucks, said she’s seen up to five tents clustered on the median on some mornings.

When the store opens at 4 a.m, homeless people come in to charge their phones or ask customers to buy them drinks or food, Cruz said.

Other businesses complain about homeless people defecating and urinating in front of their stores or hassling their customers for food. Employees at Pink Baby for You, a nail salon, said they swapped out the plastic tip jar on the counter for a smaller one after transients came in and tried to grab it.

City Councilman David Ryu, who represents Los Feliz, works with outreach teams to help the homeless people living at Vermont Triangle, said Sarah Dusseault, Ryu’s chief of staff.

Facing pressure from community groups and business owners, Ryu’s office has committed $18,000 for improvemen­ts at Vermont Triangle, whichever design is picked. In addition to the proposal to add planters, there is also talk of adding an art installati­on instead.

“There’s no question that it’s not an appropriat­e place to sleep, but we’re also trying to enhance the beauty of the area,” Dusseault said.

The concept of installing large objects, such as planters, to deter tents has been tried elsewhere. In Venice, business and neighborho­od groups placed stones or plants at two parkways to discourage encampment­s, said Will Hawkins, chairman of the homeless committee of the Venice Neighborho­od Council.

Some community members question why a redesign, introduced more than a year ago by local groups, isn’t moving faster. Ryu spokesman Estevan Montemayor said the councilman’s office wants neighborho­od groups to comment on the proposals.

When told about Ryu’s plan by a reporter, a homeless man at Vermont Triangle who gave his name as Smiley said Ryu’s proposal “sucks.” On that day, Smiley was living under a blue tarp that housed a twin bed. A makeshift cooking grill, kindling and an empty milk carton lay nearby.

The most recent redesign of the traffic median came in 2013. Vermont Triangle fell into neglect after the original 2008 makeover, so locals stepped forward to volunteer time and money. The nearby Hollywood Hotel put more than $13,500 toward the landscapin­g. (Zarrinnam is president and chief executive of the hotel.)

LaBonge said his council office also funded improvemen­ts around that time, but he couldn’t recall how much was spent.

Nyla Arslanian, former president of the Los Feliz Improvemen­t Assn., who has been involved with the redesigns, said Vermont Triangle has attracted homeless people in past years, but “it’s nothing like we have now.”

Arslanian said she’s sympatheti­c to those with mental illnesses who live on the streets. She’s also discourage­d by the physical decline of the gateway to Los Feliz.

“Considerin­g all the work, input and community involvemen­t, it’s dishearten­ing what has happened,” Arslanian said.

 ?? Photograph­s by Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? THE VERMONT TRIANGLE median is a grim-looking concrete island drawing tents and transients.
Photograph­s by Al Seib Los Angeles Times THE VERMONT TRIANGLE median is a grim-looking concrete island drawing tents and transients.
 ??  ?? EVEN community members who support another redesign are frustrated that the city traffic median has taken up so much time and money.
EVEN community members who support another redesign are frustrated that the city traffic median has taken up so much time and money.
 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? SOME COMMUNITY members question why a redesign of the Vermont Triangle median, introduced more than a year ago by local groups, isn’t moving faster.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times SOME COMMUNITY members question why a redesign of the Vermont Triangle median, introduced more than a year ago by local groups, isn’t moving faster.

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