Los Angeles Times

Joe Bray-Ali for District 1 council seat

The grass-roots activist can help steer the city toward a more sustainabl­e type of growth.

- Os Angeles is at

La developmen­tal crossroads, growing out of its callow youth as the capital of car culture and suburban sprawl and coming into its maturity as — well, as something else. What exactly that will be depends in large part on who guides its developmen­t. Will it be a place with more crippling congestion, or will it have fewer cars, cleaner air and safer streets? Will its densifying neighborho­ods retain their economic and cultural diversity, or will the city continue down the road of ad hoc developmen­t until it resembles an urban nightmare with miles of high rises surrounded by traffic-clogged roads and shantytown­s?

It’s impossible to know for sure, of course. But there’s a way to hedge our bets by electing city leaders who believe wholeheart­edly in a more sustainabl­e type of growth. For Council District 1 voters, that means picking Joe Bray-Ali for City Council on March 7. Developers and investment are already transformi­ng some of the district’s river- and downtown-adjacent neighborho­ods (Highland Park has become something of a poster child for gentrifica­tion), and to a lesser extent the communitie­s of MacArthur Park and Pico-Union. Of the four candidates, including incumbent Councilman Gil Cedillo, we think Bray-Ali, a small-business owner and community activist who lives in Lincoln Heights, would best lead this district and the city into a better future.

Many people in the district think of BrayAli, 37, as just a bike-shop owner and bike activist. Frustratio­n over Cedillo’s part in stalling bike lanes on Figueroa Street propelled Bray-Ali into this race. But though he may be campaignin­g atop two wheels, he has educated himself way beyond bike and transit issues. In fact, his understand­ing of landuse policy is impressive for someone who has never worked in City Hall, and his experience running a small business in the city will make him a rare and important voice on the council.

It is no small thing to depose a sitting councilman, and Cedillo has a big fundraisin­g advantage due in part to support from developers. But the personable Bray-Ali, whose father was an aide to a number of local Latino officials, is not a neophyte to City Hall or local politics. He has been involved in community issues for more than a decade since serving on the Arroyo Seco Neighborho­od Council in 2005 and 2006. Indeed, Bray-Ali’s first job out of college was as a field deputy for a Latino state legislator, then-Assemblyma­n Rudy Bermudez (D-Norwalk).

Cedillo has a reputation among community activists as someone hell-bent on helping developers build market-rate housing while paying little regard for the more prosaic concerns of the neighborho­ods. This disinteres­t in the community is troubling; even more so is his indifferen­ce to the displaceme­nt of low-income constituen­ts. (He called displaceme­nt in his district an “urban myth” in a meeting with the editorial board. The city’s own data show it is not.) Building more housing is a virtue — the city is in a housing crunch, and more market-rate housing means more housing, period. But it shouldn’t come at the expense of a neighborho­od’s affordabil­ity and quality of life. A councilman’s job is to balance the interests of neighborho­ods with those of the population as a whole, and Cedillo doesn’t seem to be interested in that task.

Cedillo hasn’t been a bad councilman, nor a particular­ly good one. Had he done more on the council’s housing and land-use committees to build affordable housing, expedite new community plans and close loopholes used to evict low-income tenants, it’s possible that anger over developmen­t in Los Angeles wouldn’t have boiled over and produced Measure S, an initiative on the March ballot to slow the pace of growth. (Bray-Ali opposes the measure.) There’s a deep-seated frustratio­n in this city about how developmen­t decisions are made, and Cedillo’s attitude toward his constituen­ts only bolsters that discontent.

The winner of this race will have an extra long term (the recent change in city elections means the winner will hold office for 5½ years) during a building boom that could fundamenta­lly change the district. It is imperative that the person making the decisions focus on the needs of the community, not just a personal vision. The candidate who is best prepared to do that for Council District 1 is Bray-Ali.

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