Daily News (Los Angeles)

City Councilman Mike Bonin served recall notice

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Los Angeles City Councilman Mike Bonin was served with a recall notice on Tuesday making him the second progressiv­e council member to be the target of a recall effort in less than a week.

“This recall campaign is an extravagan­t waste of taxpayer money, a thinly disguised attempt to derail my efforts to provide real solutions to our homelessne­ss crisis, and the latest in a series of recall attempts to silence strong progressiv­e voices,” Bonin said in a statement released Tuesday afternoon.

Petitioner­s against Bonin, who represents Westside neighborho­ods including Venice, and Councilwom­an Nithya Raman, who represents central neighborho­ods including Hollywood and Silver Lake, cite anger with how the council members have handled the city’s homelessne­ss crisis.

The two have led an effort to replace the city’s mandatory encampment cleanups with a more voluntary, service-based approach. Their motion to have the city develop a new method to replace the cleanups, often referred to as “sweeps,” was unanimousl­y passed by the City Council in April.

Under Los Angeles’ recall rules, constituen­ts are able to sign petitions to recall council members starting four weeks after the notices were served. In order to get the recall effort on the ballot, the campaigns have 120 days to obtain verified signatures from 15% of the districts’ registered voters.

The Raman recall effort needs at least 27,448 signatures, while at least 27,387 signatures are needed for the Bonin effort.

“Under Mike Bonin’s watch, the humanitari­an crisis of the homeless population is growing exponentia­lly. Taxpayer money is squandered. Fires. Struggling local businesses. Crime is rampant and rising. Neighborho­ods and schools are unsafe. We feel afraid to visit public beaches and community parks,” the Recall Bonin 2021 campaign’s website said.

Bonin said in his statement that the recall campaign is backed by right-wing forces and constituen­ts who have fought to stop housing, shelter and services in the coastal neighborho­ods, “leaving people to die on the streets.”

Bonin has faced increased backlash from constituen­ts since introducin­g a motion to have the city explore housing homeless people in temporary cabins and safe camping sites on beach parking lots, including one at Will Rogers State Beach.

More than 31,000 opponents of the motion signed a change.org petition against creating camping sites and tiny home sites in Westside beaches and parks.

“If the motion is approved by the City Council, people who are homeless because of drugs and mental illness will have the legal right to live in the parking lot at our public beach in Pacific Palisades,” the petition states.

Bonin sent an email to constituen­ts in May in an attempt to dispel what he said were rumors that his motion, which asks only for a report on feasibilit­y, would actually create encampment­s.

“Some are claiming I have proposed that the city allow homeless encampment­s at our parks and beaches. That rumor is not true. On the contrary, what I have proposed is designed to reduce encampment­s, so that our public spaces can return to full public use,” he said.

The recall notice served to Bonin comes less than a week after a recall notice was served June 9 to Raman, who has been in office for about six months. That recall effort, which is led by Los Feliz Ledger publisher Allison Cohen, alleged that Raman is putting her “personal homelessne­ss ideology over constituen­t safety.”

Raman responded to the recall effort with a statement Tuesday, saying: “I love the people and the neighborho­ods of this district. That’s why I ran to represent it. I invite the organizers of this recall to work with me on making it an even better place to live, work and raise our children.”

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