Good morning and welcome to Records LA – City Hall newsletter. It is Julia Wick and David Zanizer, providing city and county government updates.
A minute has passed since then HugoSoto-Martínez and Colter Carlyle They bumped into each other in the laundry room of their apartment for the last time.
Not in front of Carlisle, serving like the East Hollywood Neighborhood Council.
“I wonder if it’s the most troublesome moment of my life,” Carlisle said of his inevitable laundry room break-in with his new opponent. “But we’ll see what it will turn out.”
Members of the incumbent council, who are being challenged by members of the neighborhood council, are far from extraordinary events. However, this is the first time that, as far as we know, a councillor has faced off against his upstairs neighbor.
“I want to make it clear that my running has nothing to do with the fact that he is my downstairs neighbor,” Carlisle said.
Carlisle, who works in legal sales for freelance and has been working for the Neighborhood Council since 2021, will face a vertically steep path in his quest to release Soto Martinez.
Soto-Martínez expels incumbents in 2022 and expands the left flank of the council to represent a dense neighborhood collection that includes Silver Lake, Echo Park, Atwater Village and Hollywood.
Former union organizer, Soto-Martínez has gained deep support from the city’s powerful unions and local branches of democratic socialists in America. He was one of the few tenants on the council, until Carlisle entered the race.
It was a “large coincidence,” Carlisle said that members of the Neighborhood Council (who won the 2023 election) and members of the City Council (who won the 2022 election) lived in the same East Hollywood complex in the first place.
“After he won, we were both like, ‘Wait, are we like coworkers now?”,” Carlisle recalls. “When it happened, it was kind of like that, I don’t want to bother him at home. I don’t want him to go home and he’ll come across me. We both need to go home and decompression.”
He said Carlisle voted for Soto Martinez in 2022, but housing issues catalyzed his decision to challenge his neighbors in 2026.
Carlisle argues that the city’s push to build more homes is driving away long-term residents. He believes the city needs to pay insufficiently for tenants being pushed out by the new construction.
“I don’t think knocking down rent-controlled apartments will lead to affordable prices in Los Angeles,” Carlisle said.
He has a particularly problematic response to Soto-Martínez. This is Gavin Newsom’s desk housing bill that overrides local zoning and increases much more density near the outage.
Carlisle is vehemently opposed to the bill, claiming new construction will be carried out at the expense of existing rent stabilization units. (The bill exempts most rent-stabilized buildings, but not double-chain.)
He also thinks Soto-Martínez should have been fighting. This development requires the destruction of many small rent-stabilized apartments to build 131 new apartment units. Of these, 17 are reserved for low-income or very low-income residents.
Soto-Martínez spokesman Nick Burns Batista The councillor’s office said it was working closely with Carlton Way tenants and that the project was following affordable guidelines. The remaining 114 units in the building will be at market rates, but all of them fall under the city’s rent stabilization ordinance, Burns Batista said.
Burns Batista also revealed that his boss did not win an official position at SB 79. He doesn’t vote to support it, he simply
(We apologise for having to read the previous sentence slowly to understand what it means. The semantic distinction lies there, but that’s narrow.)
“Renters make up more than 60% of the city, but have historically been excluded from decisions at city hall. We’ve changed with a full-time team that helps tenants facing eviction stays at home, increasing the rent increase of 3% on the committee for each tenant in Los Angeles, said Soto Martinez.
And for those who track at home, councillors Tim Makosker Now he is the only incumbent and has not been opposed.
The state of play
– Will you pay the plaintiff? Seven said they were past sexual abuse in the boys hall. The claim is part of a $4 billion payment, and is the largest sexual abuse settlement in US history. A Times investigation found that a vague network of vendors led desperate people to seek cash towards law firms that could benefit significantly from their business.
– SB 79 scrutiny: government Gavin Newsom The fate of Senate Bill 79 has not yet been decided. Senate Bill 79 is the aforementioned landmark housing bill that will become a citywide city, paving the way for higher, more denser buildings near public transport. However, scrambling is already a task that has been made difficult by homeowners, renter rights advocates and even politicians by various exemptions and postponements of the bill to get a grasp of where it is covered by SB 79.
– Housing Slump: The construction of apartments in Los Angeles has been around for the past three years as property developers fight unprofitable economics and continue uncertainty about urban and state housing laws. “LA is being deficit by a large portion of the investment community,” he said. Ali KahanPrincipal of a California Landmark Group.
– Increase wages: Speaking of new regulations, six city council members are considering private sector construction workers with laws that provide a minimum wage of $32.35 an hour and a healthcare credit of $7.65 an hour. Under their proposal, the council must first approve the study of the idea.
– Automatic approval: One of the mayors Karen Base“The police commission appointee is not because he was approved by the city council, but the mayor’s re-appointment. Errol Suthersa former FBI agent became USC security officer and appeared on several council agendas. However, the council, facing protesters at several meetings, did not actually act and allowed Southers’ approval to be automatically.
– Break up, Zack! Bass has lost her top press vice. Deputy Mayor Zack Seidl He took up a job as managing director at Click Strategies. Nathan Click. Seidl, departing October 17th, has been a base aide for the past decade, working for the US Congress, campaign trails and city hall. The base is named Samuel Jeancommunication strategist as her interim communication director.
(Fun fact: Back in December, he proposed marriage to his current fiancee and former deputy mayor of base, Seidl’s then co-worker Joey Freeman, At the city hall observation deck. )
– RV resistance: The proposed RV park in the Harbor City area of LA met with fierce opposition from local residents both inside and outside the city hall.
– Find a bed: The Los Angeles Department of Homeless Services’ new tracking system is supposed to modernize an outdated process of filling beds in LA County homeless shelters, ensuring more people get off the streets. But the nonprofit organizations that run the shelter say that the data generated by the system is.
– Police Blotter: On Friday, LAPD officials drove onto the stairs on City Hall Spring Street and didn’t leave the car for about two hours.
Quick Hit
- Where is the inside? The mayor’s signature program to deal with homelessness did not launch a new camp operation this week.
- About Dockets next week: City Council will vote Tuesday on whether to finalize for single-family homes and small apartments. Meetings will be cancelled on Wednesday and Friday, so members can attend California’s annual league meetings.
Let’s stay in touch
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