Los Angeles Times

Council meetings canceled

L.A. community groups voice frustratio­n, urge action from city

- By Emily Alpert Reyes and David Zahniser Times staff writer Benjamin Oreskes contribute­d to this report.

Los Angeles City Council President Nury Martinez announced Monday that she has canceled council meetings scheduled for Tuesday and the following week, saying the city is not yet ready to conduct a remote meeting.

The move alarmed labor unions, nonprofit groups and activists who had been hoping council members would act on a rent freeze and other forms of relief for those suffering during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Those groups, which have organized under the banner “the Healthy LA Coalition,” urged Martinez to call an emergency meeting and finalize measures to protect workers, tenants and unhoused people. The coalition has been calling on council members to halt cleanups of homeless encampment­s that require people to move property, tighten restrictio­ns on evictions and forgive rent payments during the crisis, among other proposals.

“Los Angeles City Council must show leadership during a crisis that will have devastatin­g impacts on Angelenos,” said Laura Raymond from Alliance for Community Transit-Los Angeles, which is part of Healthy LA.

Tuesday’s meeting had been planned, in part, as a teleconfer­ence during which members of the public could call in with comments. Some council members would have attended in person, Martinez said.

All items on Tuesday’s agenda will be taken up at a future meeting. If necessary, the council will hold an emergency meeting once all the “safety and logistical concerns have been met,” Martinez said.

“The status is fluid,” she said in a statement. “But please know, the Los Angeles City Council will meet to do the people’s business as soon as possible.”

Last week, council members put forward a long list of proposals to address the needs of Angelenos during the coronaviru­s pandemic, including boosting sick leave and restrictin­g evictions. But those measures still must be drafted and passed as laws.

Council members also announced over the weekend that they would pursue new emergency proposals, including a rent freeze. They were expected to take up some proposals that have already been drafted, including rules regulating employee layoffs.

Councilman Mike Bonin called the cancellati­ons “incredibly frustratin­g,” saying his colleagues can’t take action on eviction measures and other protection­s if they don’t meet. “I’ll go in with a mask or gown or whatever we need, or I’m perfectly willing to do it remotely,” he said.

Stuart Waldman, president of the Valley Industry & Commerce Assn., said he wasn’t troubled by the situation. His group has been raising concerns about a proposal to require employers to lay off workers, or bring them back, in order of seniority. Such decisions should be left up to businesses, he said.

Waldman argued that Mayor Eric Garcetti could enact any needed changes through executive orders. “The council is looking to push things — Garcetti and his staff are already enacting them,” he said.

Rob Quan, an organizer with the anti-corruption group Unrig LA, said the council nonetheles­s has an important role to play, including acting as a check on the mayor. “The idea that the City Council is not an essential service in this whole response is kind of ridiculous,” he said.

In their attempt to limit health risks, council members had already cut the number of weekly meetings from three to one and canceled committee meetings altogether.

Still, some city meetings are moving ahead. The board that oversees the Department of Water and Power is set to convene on Tuesday, meeting remotely and taking public comment by phone.

The Board of Public Works also had been scheduled to meet Tuesday. But that session was canceled Monday after staffers tested the system for allowing remote public comment, said agency spokeswoma­n Elena Stern.

“We still have some stuff to work through,” she said.

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? THE L.A. CITY COUNCIL chamber was nearly empty for a March 17 meeting at which the public was told to gather in a tent outside City Hall to watch the proceeding­s on live video and offer comments electronic­ally.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times THE L.A. CITY COUNCIL chamber was nearly empty for a March 17 meeting at which the public was told to gather in a tent outside City Hall to watch the proceeding­s on live video and offer comments electronic­ally.

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