Los Angeles Times

Helping to clean up their town

Long Beach sees an outpouring of volunteers pitching in after night of looting.

- By Faith E. Pinho

People wearing masks flocked to Long Beach’s Harvey Milk Promenade Park on Monday with brooms, buckets and dustpans in hand to clean up after looting in downtown Long Beach during an otherwise peaceful protest against the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s.

More than 100 volunteers gathered beneath a Milk mural with the quote, “Rights are won only by those who make their voices heard. Hope will never be silent.”

“Everybody feel good? Let’s get out there!” said Broc Coward, chief operating officer of Downtown Long Beach Alliance. Volunteers cheered and dispersed to nearby parking garages, storefront­s and sidewalks. Downtown Long Beach Alliance, a group representi­ng property owners and businesses downtown, manned a table surrounded by cases of water and paint cans.

Long Beach public works crews handed out brooms, rakes, gloves, buckets and masks. Two workers blasted a graffitied wall. Kraig Kojian, president and chief executive of Downtown Long Beach Alliance, said he didn’t sleep last night. After leaving downtown about 2 a.m., he stayed up messaging business owners and “helping people commiserat­e.” He returned at 5:30 a.m. to join at least 20 people who had already gathered to clean up. “This is what Long Beach is all about. This is really the spirit and the heart of our community,” Kojian said. “While it was tough to see and tough to understand the destructio­n, this is our first step into recovery and I think it’s doing a good thing for a lot of people. It is heartening. It’s also therapeuti­c for a lot of people.”

Joaquin and Jennifer Perez brought their two children to participat­e in the downtown Long Beach protest Sunday because they wanted to show the children that they can have a voice in the face of injustice, Jennifer Perez said. Her family returned Monday morning to help with the clean-up efforts.

“I want them to know that the flip side is they have to come out and help when the bad happens too,” Jennifer Perez said. “Community’s important.”

But by noon, most stores there had already been cleaned up, too.

“We’ve had an overwhelmi­ng number of volunteers,” said one organizer.

Many Long Beach businesses had just removed wooden boards, weathered from weeks of coronaviru­s quarantine, to reopen. On Monday morning, new wood was erected in its place, with some boards containing graffiti such as, “Black lives matter” or “ACAB,” for “all cops are bastards.”

Others were plastered with signs from the business owners. “Minority family owned” read a sign on the door of the Social List, a bar and restaurant. “We stand with you! No justice, no peace!” read another sign posted at Lil Devils children’s clothing store.

‘I want them to know that the flip side is they have to come out and help when the bad happens too.’ — Jennifer Perez, on why she brought her children to help clean up businesses

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? VOLUNTEERS clean up debris left after Legacy Beauty & Barber Salon in downtown Long Beach was ransacked Sunday night. Business and community leaders praised the people who came to lend a hand, calling them the “spirit and the heart of our community.”
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times VOLUNTEERS clean up debris left after Legacy Beauty & Barber Salon in downtown Long Beach was ransacked Sunday night. Business and community leaders praised the people who came to lend a hand, calling them the “spirit and the heart of our community.”

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