Daily News (Los Angeles)

L.A. may keep Super Bowl champ Rams out of the city

- Susan Shelley Write Susan at Susan@ SusanShell­ey.com and follow her on Twitter @Susan_ Shelley.

The casually arrogant legalized corruption in Los Angeles City Hall staggers the imaginatio­n. Take City Council Member Bob Blumenfiel­d. Please.

For the record, this newspaper’s editorial board has endorsed businessma­n Scott Silverstei­n, who is challengin­g Blumenfiel­d, who runs for a third term. Years ago, Blumenfiel­d ran for office vowing to eliminate the “blight” of mobile billboards and now the district is increasing­ly a trashstrew­n homeless haven defaced with graffiti. Under Blumenfiel­d’s reign, City Hall has continued its longtime habit of underservi­ng the residents of the West San Fernando Valley.

Now Blumenfiel­d is rather shockingly hinting at an intention to extort concession­s from the owner of the Rams, Stan Kroenke, who recently bought the Promenade mall site in Woodland Hills. Maybe it’s not shocking. It’s business as usual at Los Angeles City Hall.

Blumenfiel­d’s predecesso­r cut a deal to give millions of taxpayer dollars to the shopping mall company that wanted to build an outdoor mall called

The Village between two indoor malls, one of them the Promenade, which it already owned. Then, as your tax dollars propped up the pricey new property filled with pricier stores and restaurant­s, the mall company allowed the high-end Promenade to fall into disrepair.

The former site of luxury retailers became “blighted,” according to Blumenfiel­d, who eagerly worked with the mall company to “entitle” the 34-acre property to become a sort of mini-Manhattan. In an area already congested with traffic, the mall was going to be replaced with up to 1,432 multi-family residentia­l units, 244,000 square feet of retail and restaurant space, 629,000 square feet of office space, up to 572 hotel rooms and a sports arena with 15,000 seats, and all this with only 5,610 on-site parking spaces.

A traffic study found that the project would result in “intersecti­on impacts” and “traffic impacts to neighborho­od street segments” as well as cut-through traffic in neighborho­ods and “queuing” on freeway off-ramps. Experts cited in environmen­tal reviews also warned that people attending events at the arena might park their cars on the side streets in nearby neighborho­ods to avoid paying high parking charges.

None of that mattered to the city, which went ahead and “fully entitled” this gargantuan megaprojec­t. Then something unexpected happened. The mall company sold the property for $150 million. The deal closed in March. Now the buyer has been revealed to be the billionair­e owner of the Super Bowl champion Rams.

“Media reports have hinted that the Rams were considerin­g the site for a year-round practice facility,” staff writer Olga Grigoryant­s reported last week.

City Councilman Blumenfiel­d has three words for that: Not. So. Fast.

“Unless they come to the city to ask for changes of some sort, and we grant them, they still have to do all what’s required in the entitlemen­ts,” Blumenfiel­d said.

Here’s some free advice: Never be a billionair­e near a Los Angeles politician. The FBI doesn’t have enough handcuffs for all of them.

“Come to the city to ask for changes” means go through the highly arbitrary and generally yearslong process of getting plans approved by multiple city offices and department­s. “Unless ... we grant them” sounds like these officials will hold out for tribute to be paid to them, in one way or another. “Still have to do all what’s required in the entitlemen­ts” apparently means the new owner will be expected to pay the tribute that was promised by the previous owner.

Other cities would probably be very happy to have the Rams build a year-round practice facility within their borders. They might even help to get plans approved and constructi­on expedited.

That’s not how it works in Los Angeles. The deal that gave the mall company its taxpayer subsidy for The Village also required it to put $3.325 million into a “Public Benefits Trust Fund” and send $300,000 of it to a special fund in then-Councilman (now convicted criminal) Mitchell Englander’s district. The company had to agree to a long list of demands involving labor and materials, native plants, waterless urinals, renovated bus stops and organic waste shipped to a “worm farm.”

Is this how the Rams will be welcomed to the West San Fernando Valley? If they decide to keep their practice facility in Thousand Oaks, you’ll know why.

 ?? PHOTO BY MICHAEL OWEN BAKER ?? Rams linebacker Samson Ebukam works on his defense during a 2018 practice at the team’s practice facility on the Cal Lutheran University campus in Thousand Oaks. The practice site may stay in Ventura County if red tape gets in the way of a move to Los Angeles.
PHOTO BY MICHAEL OWEN BAKER Rams linebacker Samson Ebukam works on his defense during a 2018 practice at the team’s practice facility on the Cal Lutheran University campus in Thousand Oaks. The practice site may stay in Ventura County if red tape gets in the way of a move to Los Angeles.
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