Los Angeles Times

MAYOR STAYING, WON’T BE JOINING BIDEN

Garcetti adds that he and his wife will quarantine after their child tested positive.

- By Dakota Smith

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said Thursday that he plans to remain mayor, an announceme­nt aimed at ending speculatio­n that he might join President- elect Joe Biden’s administra­tion.

He also announced at a briefing Thursday that his 9year- old daughter, Maya, had tested positive for the coronaviru­s. Both Garcetti and his wife, Amy Wakeland, tested negative, he said.

Garcetti said he told the Biden team this week that he wanted to remain in Los Angeles. “There were things on the table for me,” Garcetti said.

He declined to name the positions available to him. He also did not definitive­ly rule out leaving office before his term ends in 2022.

Garcetti made his remarks from the Getty House, the mayor’s official residence, and said that he and his wife are quarantini­ng in light of his daughter’s diagnosis.

Talking broadly about the pandemic, he said that “there is nothing more important to me, no task more urgent than being here as your mayor.”

Garcetti was a co- chair of Biden’s presidenti­al campaign, helped vet vice presidenti­al candidates and was widely viewed as a contend

er for a Cabinet position, perhaps leading the Department of Transporta­tion or Housing and Urban Developmen­t.

Instead, former South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg was tapped this week for the Transporta­tion spot, while Ohio Rep. Marcia L. Fudge was announced as the nominee last week to lead HUD.

That left fewer available posts for Garcetti, who was also eyed as a possible contender to head the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, Bloomberg reported.

But on Thursday, Biden picked Michael Regan, a state regulator in North Carolina, to head the EPA.

A source familiar with those discussion­s told The Times that Garcetti was informed this week that he didn’t get the EPA administra­tor post. The source, who wasn’t authorized to speak to the media, asked to remain anonymous.

A Garcetti spokesman declined to comment. A Biden transition representa­tive didn’t immediatel­y respond to questions from The Times.

Any nomination to a Cabinet position for Garcetti could have brought unwanted scrutiny to allegation­s made against him by his former bodyguard.

The bodyguard, a Los Angeles police officer, alleges that Garcetti’s longtime advisor sexually harassed him and that Garcetti failed to intervene. Garcetti denies witnessing any harassment and the advisor has said he didn’t harass anyone.

A judge on Thursday ordered Garcetti to be deposed in the case.

Meanwhile, Black Lives Matter Los Angeles and other activists have gathered regularly outside the mayor’s official residence, the Getty House, to protest any Garcetti appointmen­t.

Following Garcetti’s briefing Thursday, Black Lives Matter- Los Angeles co- founder Melina Abdullah said the daily demonstrat­ions worked.

“Political calculatio­ns were made and Garcetti carried too much baggage with him, including lots of very loud protesters who vigorously opposed any such appointmen­t,” she said.

Devon Manney, spokesman for Koreatown- based homeless outreach group Ktown for All, said Thursday that the group hopes Garcetti “starts listening to the activists demanding he step up and provide real solutions to help Angelenos, rather than pretend his hands are tied.”

Garcetti’s decision to remain in Los Angeles comes as the city faces several crises, including the ongoing pandemic, a f iscal emergency at City Hall and rising crime.

The availabili­ty of intensive care unit beds throughout Southern California dropped Thursday to 0%, generating alarm about the region’s ability to cope with the surging number of COVID- 19 cases.

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