The Signal

Supes OK motions related to COVID-19

Board approves disposable foodware change, plan to find options for mitigating PSPS

- By Emily Alvarenga

Santa Clarita Valley restaurant­s and other food-service providers will soon be required to ask residents if they’d like disposable foodware with their orders after the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s unanimousl­y approved a motion during Tuesday’s regular meeting aimed at reducing waste.

After considerin­g feedback from relevant business representa­tives and advocates for the environmen­t, the motion called for ordinance language to be drafted requiring restaurant­s to furnish disposable foodware only upon request, while also requiring third-party, app-based delivery companies to include an option to affirmativ­ely request plates and utensils.

County Supervisor Kathryn Barger, whose 5th District includes the SCV, expressed her support for the motion during the meeting, adding not only do disposable utensils create waste, but they also create an

additional overhead cost for restaurant­s, who are “barely able to make ends meet during these times.”

The Board of Supervisor­s also unanimousl­y approved a motion to allow L.A. County to be ready for its share of funds when the Federal Emergency Management Agency reimburses $2 billion in COVID-19-related funeral expenses for families, per the most recent $900 billion stimulus bill, with funding expected to become available for costs incurred through Dec. 31, 2020, according to the legislatio­n.

While FEMA has yet to clarify program guidelines, this move puts into motion plans for county officials to assess the feasibilit­y of implementi­ng the FEMA burial cost program, focusing on how it will be implemente­d in California to provide reimbursem­ent of burial costs for county residents.

Another motion passed unanimousl­y is set to allow county officials to coordinate with local and regional transit operators, authoritie­s and companies to allow residents transporta­tion and direct access to the various COVID-19 vaccinatio­n sites.

Around the SCV

The Board of Supervisor­s also continued to work toward mitigating Southern California Edison’s Public Safety Power Shutoffs, or PSPS, an ongoing concern for SCV residents who have been affected for the past couple of years.

The board unanimousl­y approved a motion to allow relevant county department­s, led by the Office of Emergency Management, to look at options for an accountabi­lity framework to lessen the negative outcomes of PSPS events for Edison customers.

In addition, the board approved the transfer of funds to the L.A. County Developmen­t Authority on behalf of the Tesoro Del Valle project, which was approved in June 2020 to develop an additional 1,279 acres of vacant property in the community.

The project is set to develop a new residentia­l community, including nearly 700 detached single-family residences and more than 100 condominiu­m units for families and seniors, totaling 820 dwelling units, as well as community amenities, such as a senior recreation center, a linear park and open space, north of the current Tesoro Del Valle community.

The motion is expected to allow the developer, BLC Tesoro LLC, to deposit a $1.64 million payment as part of the new phase of the project, to the LACDA to serve homeless families and individual­s, with the allocation of these funds prioritize­d first to Santa Clarita, then within the SCV and then to the rest of the 5th District, which includes the SCV.

Two more motions for projects in the unincorpor­ated communitie­s of Acton and Val Verde were also unanimousl­y approved by the supervisor­s.

The first revises the budget for safety improvemen­ts to Fire Camp 11, also known as the Acton Conservati­on Camp, located on the 8800 block of Soledad Canyon Road. The budget for the improvemen­ts to the camp, which houses some of the inmate camp crews, is to be reduced from $6.2 million to $3.4 million.

The second motion was to approve a water main on Del Valle Road in Val Verde at an estimated constructi­on cost of $2.1-$3.1 million.

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