Los Angeles Times

New mayor, new vision for L.A.

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Over the last few weeks, the race for Los Angeles’ next mayor has begun to firm up. City Council President Nury Martinez and Councilman Mark Ridley-Thomas are out. Rep. Karen Bass (D-Los Angeles), Councilman Kevin de León and business leader Jessica Lall are in. They join City Atty. Mike Feuer, Councilman Joe Buscaino and real estate broker Mel Wilson, who announced their candidacie­s over the last year.

There may still be more prominent names joining the race ahead of the June primary election. Real estate developer Rick Caruso and former L.A. Unified schools Supt. Austin Beutner are reportedly thinking about running.

It’s good to see the candidate pool filling up. Los Angeles will only benefit from having a broad range of candidates who bring a variety of experience and viewpoints to the race. The mayor’s election is not simply about selecting a chief executive for the city. In electing a new mayor, voters will also choose a new vision and direction for Los Angeles.

The 2022 mayor’s race is setting the stage for a major reset for the city, and there’s never been a better time for it, particular­ly after the upheaval of the last year and a half.

L.A. is slowly emerging from the pandemic and there’s a deep frustratio­n among Angelenos that the city hasn’t made enough progress on homelessne­ss, housing affordabil­ity, transporta­tion options and environmen­tal transforma­tion — even after voters approved ballot measures and billions of dollars in tax hikes and bonds.

Homelessne­ss is already the top issue of the campaign. But the question of what to do is much more complex than decreeing when and how encampment­s should be moved. Homelessne­ss is the most visible sign of deeper problems in Los Angeles, which is increasing­ly a city of extremes. Homes in working-class neighborho­ods now list for $1 million or more, while more than 40,000 people are homeless, according to the last count. High-skilled workers have seen their wages shoot up, while low-skilled workers’ pay has been nearly flat.

The candidates have to grapple with these larger economic and societal challenges, and offer concrete ideas.

The city is losing ground on one of the major achievemen­ts of the last few decades, namely the historical decrease in crime. There’s been a jump in homicides and gun violence in L.A. since 2020, similar to what law enforcemen­t agencies are seeing across the nation. At the same time, Los Angeles is long overdue for a serious conversati­on about how to make policing more just, effective and humane. The next mayor has the opportunit­y to reshape the Los Angeles Police Department and public safety, and the candidates should be prepared to talk specifics.

And then there are the nuts and bolts of city government. L.A. is a city with dirty streets and broken sidewalks. It’s notorious for bureaucrat­ic red tape and poor customer service, frustratin­g the businesses and individual­s who want to invest here. Yes, Angelenos want a mayor with big ambition and vision, but they also want an executive leader who makes sure potholes get filled, trees are trimmed and the city budget is balanced.

Angelenos elected Mayor Eric Garcetti in 2013, and it was a very different time for the city. The candidates were pressed for their positions on dense developmen­t around transit stations, the city budget and the power of city employee unions — topics that will surely be revisited this time. But it was before the homeless and housing affordabil­ity crises ballooned. Before COVID-19. Before George Floyd. Before President Trump. The stakes feel higher in 2022.

It was a different kind of race in 2013 as well — most of the candidates were City Hall insiders in an off-cycle election in which fewer than 1 in 5 voters bothered to cast a ballot in the primary. Since then, voters have decided overwhelmi­ngly to move city elections from odd-numbered to evennumber­ed years to coincide with presidenti­al and gubernator­ial elections.

That change significan­tly increased voter participat­ion in last year’s City Council elections, and it is likely to draw more voters to the 2022 mayor’s race. Again, that’s good. This is not the time for Angelenos to sit out an election.

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