Los Angeles Times

Leaders in L. A. relieved mayor to stay

Garcetti’s decision ensures continuity during COVID- 19 crisis, they say.

- BY DAKOTA SMITH

El Sereno resident Ray Rios has lost three close friends to COVID- 19 and watched as the lines at a local coronaviru­s testing site grew longer this week, a sign of the unending pandemic.

The prospect of Mayor Eric Garcetti leaving to join President- elect Joe Biden during the health crisis was disconcert­ing to Rios, who said Friday that he was relieved Garcetti is staying in Los Angeles.

“Right now is no time for transition,” said Rios, who heads a homeowners associatio­n. “He needs to hold the reins to everything that’s going on.”

In a year marked by massive upheaval and anxiety brought about by the pandemic, some community leaders and activists suggested Friday there was little appetite for a change at the top of City Hall at this particular moment.

“There’s a case to be made for continuity right now,” said Jon Deutsch, a

neighborho­od council member in Los Feliz.

Garcetti said Thursday during a news briefing that he was staying put, despite his longtime relationsh­ip with Biden.

“Joe Biden told me for the last few years that he was very interested in me coming to Washington, D. C., and there were things on the table for me,” Garcetti said, adding that he told the Biden team this week that he was staying put in Los Angeles.

A Biden transition spokesman declined to comment Friday on Garcetti’s remarks.

Thursday’s news event felt reminiscen­t at points of another Garcetti announceme­nt, about two years earlier, when the mayor gathered reporters at L. A. City Hall to say that he wouldn’t be pursuing a presidenti­al campaign.

At that time, Garcetti cited the resolution of the Los Angeles school strike as being the “kick in the pants” that told him he needed to remain L. A.’ s leader. This year, it was the pandemic, he said.

“I don’t think that you leave a city at its toughest moment when you’re its chief executive,” Garcetti said Thursday.

Whether Garcetti faces blowback for repeatedly appearing to leave his options open for other jobs remains to be seen.

Vicki Halliday, a Venice resident who serves on the neighborho­od council, said there have been many problems with the Garcetti-backed homeless shelter in her neighborho­od.

She would have liked to see Garcetti move on.

“We need someone stronger in Los Angeles,” Halliday said. “It would have been great to have new leadership.”

Others pointed to the possible disruption if Garcetti had exited.

South L. A. activist Najee Ali cited community leaders’ confusion following the departure of then- Los Angeles City Councilman Jose Huizar from a district stretching from downtown to Eagle Rock amid a federal investigat­ion.

Local leaders expressed concern over who was running the district and said they didn’t know whom to contact about issues such as policing.

“Without a leader, there’s going to be more chaos,” Ali said, envisionin­g a scenario in which Garcetti had left. “COVID- 19 is still running rampant in our city and crime is getting worse.”

Health officials said Friday that Los Angeles County is on the verge of becoming the nation’s epicenter for the pandemic as local hospitals become critically overcrowde­d.

Garcetti’s 9- year- old daughter, Maya, tested positive for the coronaviru­s, he announced at Thursday’s briefing. Garcetti and his wife, Amy Wakeland, tested negative, he said.

Michael Benedetto, who serves on a neighborho­od council in Granada Hills, has been thankful for the mayor’s media briefings on the pandemic. Benedetto said he was surprised by Garcetti’s announceme­nt because he assumed he would leave.

“He’s ambitious,” Benedetto said. “I think it would be a steppingst­one for him.”

In some Los Angeles political circles, there is the perception that allegation­s of harassment made against a former Garcetti aide, and weeks of protests outside Garcetti’s home, hurt the mayor’s ability to land a prominent position with Biden.

Activist groups including Black Lives Matter rallied outside Getty House to protest any Garcetti appointmen­t to a Biden administra­tion.

Black Lives Matter cofounder Melina Abdullah said the f inal protest was held Wednesday, one day after former South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg was selected to become secretary of Transporta­tion.

As vaccines roll out in Los Angeles County next year, Garcetti and other city officials could play a role in helping oversee distributi­on.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States