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From YouTube: 10-29-19 City Of Inglewood Council Meeting
Description
10-29-19 City Of Inglewood Council Meeting
A
B
B
C
A
C
C
Okay?
So
it's
with
great
pride
and
pleasure
that
the
mayor
and
council
members
recognize
still
I
rise
from
cancer
incorporated
for
its
outstanding
service.
We
commend
you
on
your
commitment
and
dedication
to
make
a
positive
impact
in
the
lives
of
cancer
patients,
while
going
through
chemotherapy
to
provide
hope
with
the
smiles
of
survivors
who
endure
such
an
arduous
journey
is
not
only
to
be
commended
but
acknowledged
and
honored.
Your
contribution
is
worthy
of
a
great
praise.
Now,
therefore,
be
it
known
to
the
mayor
and
council
members
of
the
city
of
English.
E
Very
very
humbled
and
honored
by
this
considering
the
fact
that
I
graduated
from
Mary's
Academy
right
here
in
Englewood
I
lived
in
Carleton
Square
for
several
years,
so
Englewood
is
very
near
and
dear
to
me
so
from
for
the
have
this
come
from.
The
city
of
Englewood
is
definitely
an
honor
and
what
my
organization
does
is
we
help
women
be
able
to
save
their
hair
during
chemo?
If
any
of
you
have
listened
to
kjh
Tammy
Mac
has
been
discussing
it.
So
it's
just
you
know.
G
So
we
are
really
pleased
to
be
here
today
to
acknowledge
the
graduates
of
our
career
online
program.
Sometimes
life's
provides
challenges
and
your
path
may
not
go
where
you
wanted
to
initially
such
as
high
school
graduation,
but
we
are
pleased
to
be
able
to
say
that
our
program
that
we're
offering
at
a
library
provides
individuals
an
opportunity
to
complete
their
high
school
education
and
getting
a
GED.
So
today,
I
have
with
me
our
one
of
our
library
board
members,
Pat
Douglas,
our
library
manager,
Fran
track.
G
C
H
Thank
you
very
much.
It's
my
honor
to
stand
here
before
you
today
in
congratulating
or
2019
graduates
for
their
outstanding
academic
achievement
and
dedication
to
successfully
completing
an
18-month
program.
We
wish
you
continued
success
in
all
your
future
endeavors.
Please
come
up
and
accept
your
certificate.
A
C
I
Thank
You
mr.
mayor
and
members
of
the
council
I'm
here
before
you
today,
just
to
provide
provide
you
with
a
brief
legislative
update
for
those
of
you
not
familiar.
Our
legislative
year
runs
from
January
to
September.
We
ended
on
September
13th
and
those
following
30
days
up
until
midnight
on
October
13th,
the
governor
had
those
30
days
to
sign
all
those
outstanding
measures
that
were
on
his
desk
I'm,
just
going
to
give
you
a
brief
overview
of
the
year
and
then
highlight
the
bills
that
I,
authored
and
introduced
well
introduced.
I
I
should
say
and
made
it
to
the
governor's
desk
for
his
signature,
I
hope
to
not
belabor
you,
but
we
had
a
great
year
as
a
state
with
much
of
our
legislative
accomplishments.
One
of
our
major
successes
overall
was
addressing
an
issue
of
housing
and
homeless
homelessness,
which
is
a
major
topic
here.
I
One
of
the
issues
of
great
concern
also
is
wildfire
prevention
as
we're
witnessing
right
now
the
fires
that
are
going
on
right
in
in
Ellicott,
LA,
City
and
just
north
of
us
and
Sonoma
a
wildfire
Protection
Act
to
make
sure
that
residents
are
not
unduly
charged
and
ratepayers
pay
for
those
fires,
which
was
Connell
the
way
the
system
was
set
up.
So
we're
gonna
make
sure
that
if
the
utilities
that
fall,
they
bear
the
costs
and
not
past
those
costs
on
the
repairs
that
hasn't
been
done
for
years.
At
a
time
also,
we
prioritized
education.
I
We
funded
education
at
the
highest
level
of
any
type
period
in
the
state
of
California,
especially
K
through
12
and
college
and
universities.
We
also
secured
50
million
for
mental
health
services
and
schools
in
place,
15
billion
bond
on
the
ballot
that
will
allow
for
new
classrooms
laboratories
and
libraries
for
K
through
12,
as
well
as
universities,
safe
and
clean
drinking
water.
I
And
it's
a
major
investment
issue
that
was
of
great
controversy,
use
of
deadly
force
by
law
enforcement,
a
piece
of
a
measure
that
had
been
in
place
here
in
California
since
1872
California
reformed
that
measure
to
say
that
now,
law
enforcement
must
use
all
due
diligence
and
and
use
every
technique
available
to
at
deescalate
before
use
of
deadly
force
is
being
used.
It
was
a
monumental
piece
of
legislation
and
we
were
able
to
come
together
with
all
sides,
both
law
enforcement
and
activists,
to
achieve
that
gold,
preventing
ratio.
I
Discrimination
in
the
workplace
in
schools
was
another
issue
that
the
Senate
expanded
upon
and
we're
happy
to
get
it
passed
in
the
governor,
reducing
food
insecurities
for
students.
We
might
not
know
it,
but
many
kids
go
to
school
hungry
here
in
the
state
of
California,
even
college
students
to
go
school
hungry.
We
see
now
at
Cal,
State,
Dominguez,
Hills,
Southwest,
College
and
El
Camino.
They
have
some
food
pantries,
so
students
can
access
that.
I
So
it's
a
great
issue
of
concern,
so
we
provided
funding
for
that
and
just
protecting
our
senior
citizens
planning
for
the
aging
community
and
making
sure
we
have
the
resources
available
for
them
and
was
a
quick
overview
of
some
of
the
stuff
overall
in
the
state.
But
I
introduced
20
measures
this
year,
13
of
which
made
it
to
the
governor's
desk
and
of
those
13.
C
I
As
I
stated,
I
introduced,
13
I
mean
20
measures,
13
made
it
to
the
governor's
desk
and
10
he
signed
and
passed
and
I
will
quickly
go
over
those
13
SB
155,
which
clarifies
existing
requirements
to
help
the
state
achieve
our
existing
renewable
and
zero-carbon
goals.
Energy
goes.
We
want
to
always
talk
about
renewable
energy.
We
want
to
make
sure
that
it's
an
adequate
supply
because
we've
transformed
the
utility
industry,
especially
investor-owned
utilities,
over
the
last
thirty
years.
I
They
no
longer
generates
so
they
purchase
on
the
open
market
through
independent
power
producers,
and
we
want
to
make
sure
that
those
power
producers
are
providing
adequate
power
when
needed.
We're
seeing
what's
happening
right
now,
with
the
rolling
blackouts
and
addressing
the
fires,
and
we
just
want
to
make
sure
there's
adequate
source
of
power
when
needed.
Sb
206
measure
that
I
was
able
to
talk
to
this
council
with
a
little
over
three
weeks
ago,
the
fair
pay-to-play
Act
and,
as
was
announced
this
morning,
the
NCUA
has
embraced
the
fair
pay-to-play
Act.
I
It's
a
nationwide
game-changer
as
it
relates
to
young
men
and
women
who
go
to
college
and
universities
who
play
sports,
who
are
now
able
to
monetize
their
name
likeness
and
image,
and
it's
a
time
long
overdue.
These
athletes
have
been
treated
like
chattel,
NC
2a
is
a
billion-dollar
industry
and
many
times,
despite
the
fact
that
these
students
were
on
scholarship,
many
of
them
went
home
or
went
to
bed
hungry
at
night.
Didn't
have
adequate
clothes,
didn't
have
money
for
gas
in
their
car
and
I.
I
Think
people
see
at
the
nc2
a
was
connoisseurs,
as
the
mayor
was
mentioning
a
three
weeks
ago
when
we
were
talking
about
it
and
but
it's
it's
time
is
coming
this
morning.
If
you
haven't
heard
the
NC
2a
voted
unanimously
to
support
what
we
passed
here
in
California
now,
as
we
often
say
so,
goes
California
so
goes
the
nation.
So
we're
excited
about
that.
I
Until
this
measure,
you
had
two
years
from
the
time
that
you
released
to
seek
compensation
for
your
incarceration
compensation
that
amounted
to
one
hundred
and
forty
dollars
a
day
for
every
day
you
were
incarcerated.
Now
you
have
up
to
ten
years
to
file
for
that
competition
because,
as
we
all
know,
really
being
released
from
prison,
you're
so
caught
up
with
trying
to
act,
to
make
yourself
back
to
the
real
world
and
find
housing
and
all
those
things.
Those
two
years
go
by
like
this.
I
Sp
three
to
two
allows
workers
to
speak
freely
and
privately
with
state
hospital
and
health
facility
inspectors
during
inspections
prior
to
this
bill,
a
nurse
or
a
medical
and
could
not
speak
about
a
violation
in
a
hospital
without
somebody
from
the
state
being
present,
it
was
almost
like
a
whistleblower
protection.
So
now,
if
a
violation
is
seen
a
nurse,
a
medical
assistant,
any
staff
can
report
it.
I
It's
vitally
important,
especially
when
you
have
a
great
facility
like
Centinela
here
in
your
neighborhood,
that
we
make
sure
that
nurses
and
I
know
those
employees
have
the
opportunity
to
report
violations
if
they
do
exist,
SP,
4
or
5
5
creates
and
financial
empowerment.
As
we
drive
throughout
LA
and
all
across
the
state.
We
see
what
check
cashing
facilities,
payday
loans,
things
of
that
nature
and
I'm
not
here
to
knock
them
because
they're
they
exist
because
many
of
our
traditional
banks
have
walked
away
from
this
cos
of
that
customer.
I
We
have
over
three
million
unbanked
Californians
alone,
but
what
we
realized
there
are
some
bad
actors
out
there
and
the
state
collects
millions
of
dollars
a
year
and
find
from
these
bad
actors,
and
it
just
sits
in
an
account
and
we
weren't
doing
anything.
This
piece
of
legislation
now
says
that
that
money,
that's
collected
by
the
Department
of
Business
oversight,
must
now
provide
grants
and
loans
to
nonprofits
in
the
community
to
provide
financial
literacy
and
micro
loans
to
individuals
and
businesses.
I
4
5
5,
SB,
519
I,
know
you're
paying
attention
I
appreciate
it
authorize
of
the
State
Water
Resources
Board
to
grant
money
to
help
also
in
cleanup
of
water
agencies,
especially
our
replenishment,
dense
district.
We
have
a
lot
of
contaminated
areas
around
there,
so
this
allows
that
money
to
be
used
directly
by
these
agencies
to
make
quickly
and
effective
cleanups
cleanup
projects.
Part
of
this.
It
would
take
years
at
a
time
to
just
be
able
to
allocate
those
resources.
I
Now
those
resources
can
go
directly
to
those
agencies
as
2
B,
3
SB
534
reinstates
their
insurance
supplier,
diversity
survey
and
diversity
board.
Again,
it
encourages
businesses,
insurance
agencies
that
do
$100,000,000
work
here
in
this
business,
in
state
of
California
to
again
contract
with
women-owned
minority-owned
and
disabled
owned
businesses
here
in
the
state
of
California.
So
it
creates
a
tremendous
opportunity
for
small
business
growth
and
sustainability
SB.
Five
nine
five
requires
the
state.
I
I
It
promised
billions
of
dollars
to
the
state
of
California
and,
as
you
saw
very
few
people
in
this
space,
look
like
folks
in
this
room,
so
this
measure
provides
fee
waivers
and
license
assistance
for
those
who
choose
to
enter
this
space
and
many
times
as
you
saw
in
sixty
minutes,
the
majority
of
the
concentration
has
been
focused
on
growing.
We
have
more
than
enough
growers
and
it
also
focused
on
all
the
some
of
the
legal
shops
that
exists
all
throughout
the
state
of
California.
I
What
I'm
trying
to
get
folks
to
understand
throughout
the
state
of
California
that
there
are
17
licenses
outside
the
growing
and
distribution
that's
available
for
folks,
for
the
municipal
side
has
been
to
discuss
the
report
just
came
out
today.
Israel
has
done
extensive
research
on
the
disabled,
use
of
cannabis.
You
have
to
manufacture
that
product
somewhere
for
the
edible
products
you
have
to
produce
it.
I
I
Everything
that
is
sold,
whether
it's
for
medicinal
use
or
don't
use,
has
to
be
tested,
tested
so
I'm
encouraging
folks
who
are
looking
to
get
into
space,
and
many
people
have
approached
me
over
the
last
four
years
on
how
do
we
get
into
the
space
I
said,
quit
looking
at
being
a
grower
and
a
dispensary
and
look
at
those
other
spaces
from
marketing
packaging
again
commercial
kitchen.
So
this
makes
the
pathway
to
that
industry
little
bit
easier.
I
Sp
676
lowers
to
overall
costs
associated
with
California
growing
number
of
electric
vehicles,
as
I
was
with
the
mayor
and
council
a
little
or
a
month
ago,
there's
two
new
four
new
charging
stations
right
outside
City
Hall.
We
want
to
make
sure
that,
as
we
expand
these
charging
stations
that
we
also
have
the
capacity
to
serve
these
cars
and
residents
in
business
so
make
sure
there's
adequate
power
supply,
it's
not
enough
to
put
the
charging
station
in
there,
but
we
have
to
understand
what
that
impact
means
to
the
grid.
I
So
this
bill
helps
address
that
those
were
the
10
measures.
Real
quick
and
I
just
want
to
also
mention
that
I
was
able
to
secure
thirty
million
dollars
again
with
the
expansion
of
people
of
color
and
women
and
our
disabled
veterans
to
facilitate
facilitate
their
entry
into
the
cannabis
market
space.
I
We
also
secured
it
7.5
million
dollars
for
Charles
Joo
University,
which
is
right
down
the
road
from
here
that
produces
more
doctors
and
nurses
of
color
than
any
medical
school
in
the
nation
Souls,
and
what
that
will
help
them
recruit
from
communities
such
as
this
as
well,
and
also
five
million
ongoing
funding
for
community-based
organizations
to
establish
and
sustain,
improved
and
transform
or
transformative.
I
should
say,
rehabilitation
programs
for
our
folks
who
are
released
to
help
them
secure
education
and
certification
and
mental
health
services.
I
Mental
health
service
provider.
As
you
can
see,
that
was
a
lot
of
information
and
a
very
compressed
issue.
I
mean
a
time.
I
should
say
it
was
a
full
year
of
a
lot
of
activity,
its
first
year
of
a
two
years
session.
So
I
look
forward
to
continuing
to
work
with
the
city
and
the
other
six
cities
of
the
3050
Senate
District.
There
are
seven
independent
cities
as
well
as
portions
of
LA
that
make
up
to
30%
of
district,
which
is
comprised
of
$1,000,000,
so
I
appreciate
this
time.
I
I
F
C
J
C
K
K
You
know,
good
compromise
I'm
a
little
bit
shocked
today
that
we're
talking
about
instituting
the
rent
control
board
because
six
months
ago,
that
was
something
that
wasn't
on
the
table
and
I
and
I
very
much
appreciated
your
your
research
on
that.
In
your
decision
on
that
too,
you
know
I
thought
understood
at
that
point
that
that's
something
that
we
want
to
avoid
right
now.
I
get
the
sense
that
we're
potentially
looking
at
moving
towards
a
city
of
Los,
Angeles
style,
rent
control
method,
one
of
the
shining
lights
for
us
and
Inglewood.
K
Is
that
we're
not
City
of
LA?
A
lot
of
City
LA
has
done,
has
failed.
You
know
wasn't,
but
a
few
months
ago,
feds
were
over
in
LADWP,
there's
all
kinds
of
problems
going
on
with
them,
and
we
really
want
to
avoid
that.
I
have
concern
as
a
citizen
here
of
Inglewood,
also
as
a
property
owner
also
as
a
broker.
K
I
have
a
very
good
management
experience
in
dealing
with
city
of
LA
I'm
concerned
about
some
of
the
labor
fees
that
would
be
taken
on
by
the
city,
to
open
this
rent
control
board
and
to
staff.
It
I
feel
that
those
are
funds
that
should
be
sent
directly
to
help
tenants
that
are
in
need.
The
reality
is,
we
are
here
in
every
city
statewide.
We
just
got
statewide
rent
control
signed
last
week
by
the
governor.
Many
tenants
can't
afford
any
rent
increase
okay,
but
that's
not
feasible,
for
anybody
tenants
need
help.
K
C
C
K
I'm
very
concerned
with
slippery
slopes,
as
we
are
also
with
the
state,
rent
control
and
changes
that
they're
likely
gonna
make
in
a
couple
of
more
years,
and
they
realize
that
it's
not
getting
what
they
want.
If
we're
talking
about
registration
fees
on
the
units
I'm
very
concerned
about
what
City
of
LA
does
right
now,
they
allow
some
pass
throughs
and
recapture
fare
to
the
landlord,
still
extra
stress
to
a
tenant.
You
know
if
we
can
avoid
these
things
being
created
by
this
rent
control
board.
That
would
be
great.
K
We,
as
you've
probably
stated
since
it's
unpaid.
We
already
have
great
infrastructure
in
place.
We
have
an
excellent
CBO.
We
have
a
building
a
safety
department.
That's
really
great!
We
have
a
housing
department,
that's
ran
really
well,
they
need
more
money
and
more
resources
to
help
these
tenants.
I
just
wanted
to
say
that
wow
that
went
fast.
K
You
know
once
again,
it's
probably
a
little
ironic
next
week,
I
think
we
have
a
hearing
on
the
water
increase.
You
know
fees
are
always
going
up
for
the
landlord.
So
we
really
want
to
ask
you
to
keep
that
in
mind
and
really
try
to
stick
with
the
moratorium
guidelines
that
we,
you
know
I
think
was
a
good
compromise.
Thank
you.
So
much
your
time.
L
Honorable
mayor
councilmembers,
my
name
is
Fred
Sutton
I'm
here
on
behalf
of
the
California
Apartment
Association,
as
Senator
Bradford
pointed
out
earlier,
the
state
implemented
or
is
going
to
implement
1482
a
statewide
price-gouging
in
four
cause
eviction
regulation
statewide,
although
not
perfect,
it
protects
financial
flexibility
of
the
owner
and
mitigates
many
of
the
concerns
we
had
and
relates
to
Just
Cause
evictions.
It
has
a
rent,
rollback
period
to
March
15th
and
see
a
statewide
has
been
working
on
compliance
and
educating
owners
throughout
the
state.
L
The
HPI,
which
is
which
is
before
you
today,
has
had
several
iterations,
since
it
was
first
come
up
with.
Actually
the
earlier
version
seemed
pretty
slightly
similar
to
a
B
1482
and
it's
been
come
increasingly
more
stringent
as
it's
gone
along.
There
has
not
been
community
feedback
as
it
relates
to
it.
Nor
has
there
been
a
financial
analysis
done.
L
I
know
that
this
is
supposed
to
be
a
volunteer
board,
but
there
is
going
to
be
a
financial
impact,
whether
it's
a
decrease
in
property
values
which
will
affect
taxes,
taxes
coming
to
the
city,
and
we
do
think
that
I
that,
along
with
a
study
of
1482,
should
be
done
prior
to
making
a
fair
request.
We
can
avoid
a
bifurcated
system.
L
If
1482
is
adopted,
we
can
possibly
save
the
city,
tens
of
thousands,
possibly
millions
of
dollars
if
you're,
comparing
it
to
the
cities
of
like
size
and
smaller,
and
we
can
ensure
compliance
throughout
the
entire
area
and
stop
this
slippery
slope
of
an
ever-expanding
bureaucracy
in
the
city
of
Los
Angeles.
They
are
still
talking
about
the
run
run
stabilization
weekly.
Ninety
percent
of
the
buildings
in
Los
Angeles
are
covered
by
our
the
RSO.
L
There
are
still
calls
that
three
percent
is
to
too
much
and
there
are
constantly
tweaks
going
on
these
kind
of
these
kinds
of
conversations
do
not
end.
We
encourage
the
city
to
maintain
the
moratorium.
You
were
out
in
front
of
what
the
state
was
doing
earlier
this
year,
maintain
the
moratorium
till
January
first,
when
a
be
1482
takes
effect.
Thank
you.
M
M
You
I'm
gonna
read
this
from
my
phone
hello.
My
name
is
Phoebe
Crenshaw
and
I'm
here
on
behalf
of
Englewood
residents,
who
were
affected
by
high
rent
increases
prior
to
March
5th
and
still
have
not
received
remedy
during
this
housing
crisis.
Since
January
I've
been
in
direct
communication
with
the
council,
specifically
you
mayor,
councilman,
Morales
and
Jaime
Gonzalez,
and
the
city
attorney
about
how
rental
provisions,
or
the
lack
thereof
have
affected
my
apartment.
M
Lastly,
I'm
proposing
that,
at
the
very
least,
in
addition
to
a
three
to
five
percent,
increased
limit
on
rents,
that
residents
who
have
received
increases
over
25
percent
receive
reimbursement
for
overpayment,
and
this
be
applicable
to
increases
that
occurred
on
or
after
January.
1St
2019
I
believe
that
that
is
an
ethical
solution
and
remedies
the
seal.
The
city's
failure
to
regulate
its
landlord's
housing
practices
prior
to
instituting
the
emergency
ordinance.
My
rent
was
increased
56
percent
four
days
prior
to
the
emergency
ordinance
56
percent
is
not
only
exorbitant.
M
56
percent
is
well
over
the
25
percent
deemed
unreasonable
by
the
city,
while
waiting
for
City
provisions
nearly
every
resident
and
my
building
was
forced
to
move,
including
families
with
children.
I,
however,
still
have
faith
that
the
city
will
do.
What
is
right
in
a
timely
manner
to
ensure
that
the
well-being
and
stability
of
its
renters
remain,
who
make
up
more
than
60%
of
Englewood
population
and
rent
is
due
in
two
days
so.
C
C
F
O
Afternoon,
City
Council
and
mayor
of
Englewood
I'm,
highly
encouraged
I
just
met
Snoop
Dogg
downstairs
that
was
so
cool
I
know,
so
my
name
is
Yvonne
I'm
an
organizer
with
la
voice
and
I'm
here
representing
leaders
from
for
congregations,
the
Saint
John
christened
holy
faith,
Episcopal
Church,
Inglewood,
First,
United,
Methodist,
Church
and
First
Presbyterian
Church
of
Inglewood,
and
we
are
highly
encouraged
by
this.
You
know:
rent
control
ordinance,
that's
you
know,
going
from
5%
to
3%
is
highly
encouraging,
because
some
of
the
church
members
have
experienced
rent
increases.
O
O
O
N
P
Good
afternoon
my
name
is
Jonathan
Jager
I'm,
a
staff
attorney
with
the
legal
aid
foundation
of
Los
Angeles.
The
legal
aid
foundation
represents
the
poorest
and
most
vulnerable
residents
of
LA
County,
including
many
right
here
in
Inglewood
many
right
across
the
street
at
the
Inglewood
courthouse
I'm
here
to
thank
the
mayor
and
the
City
Council
for
bringing
this
motion
back
up.
We
are
very
encouraged
and
thankful
that
you're
passing
these
much-needed
protections
that
we
have
you
know
seen
a
need
for
over
the
past.
You
know
decade
or
so.
P
I
wanted
to
point
out,
though,
some
unintended
consequences
of
the
way
the
ordinance
is
drafted
and
that
may
have
some
consequences,
particularly
for
our
client
population.
The
first
is
the
enforcement
section
without
explicit
language
stating
this.
It
may
be
hard
for
tenants
to
assert
this
ordinance
as
a
defense
during
their
eviction
proceedings.
Some
judges
take
a
very
narrow
reading
of
the
law
and
without
explicit
language
allowing
for
it.
It
will
not
let
a
tenant
raise
this
ordinance
as
a
defense.
We
know
without
language
that
explicitly
allows
a
tenant
to
assert.
P
You
know
the
protections
in
this
ordinance
as
a
defense
to
an
action
to
recover
possession.
Some
of
the
language
appears
in
the
you
know,
section
8.13
to
about
retaliation,
but
does
not
appear
in
the
section
133
enforcement
procedures.
So
if
that
language
was
added,
it
would
ensure
that
you
know
judges
in
addition
comply
with
this
law.
The
second
thing
that
I
wanted
to
bring
to
the
council's
attention
is
the
exemptions.
P
P
The
memo
that's
attached
to
the
ordinance
suggests
that
this
exemption
only
applies
if
the
owner
is
not
a
natural
person.
If
it's
a
you
know
real
estate
investment
trust
or
has
some
kind
of
corporate
ownership,
there's
a
reference
to
that
in
the
memo,
but
I
could
not
find
that
language
in
the
ordinance
itself.
So
it's
it's
unclear
if
it's
supposed
to,
if
the
exemption
for
2
to
4
units
is
only
supposed
to
exempt
no
buildings
that
are
owned
by
natural
persons
or
all
two
to
four
unit
buildings.
P
P
It's
not
written
to
explicitly
allow
a
tenant
to
raise
this
ordinance
as
a
defense
in
an
action
to
recover
possession,
so
it
does
say
that
a
tenant
can
pursue
civil
action
to
bring
enforcement
of
this
ordinance.
What
I,
what
I
was?
What
I
wanted
to
share
with
the
council
is
that
some
judges
would
would
view
that
as
a
tenant
can
only
bring
an
affirmative
lawsuit
against
their
landlord,
but
if
they're
brought
into
eviction
court,
they
can't
defend
themselves.
By
saying
my
landlord
illegally
raised
my
right.
C
P
C
C
C
C
R
Afternoon,
mayor
and
city
council,
my
name
is
Katherine
Burnett
and
I'm.
A
realtor
I'm,
also
a
board
member
on
the
Inglewood
Board
of
Realtors
and
the
state
director,
and
that
this
coming
year,
I'll
be
the
issues
chair
for
Fair,
Housing
and
equal
opportunity
for
investment.
Housing
for
California
Association
of
Realtors.
R
So
housing
and
affordability
are
very
important
to
me
as
a
business
person,
a
realtor
and
as
a
member
of
this
community
and
the
main
thing
that
I
find
that
we
have
is
a
shortage
of
affordable
housing,
which
is
the
critical
issue
why
rents
are
going
up
so
drastically
in
our
area.
There
is
a
a
B
1482,
as
you
know,
is
coming
into
effect
in
January,
and
it
was
a
very
comprehensive
rent
control
measure
that
was
looked
at.
R
So
I'd
like
for
you
to
consider
1482
and
all
the
tenants
that
it
that
it
completely
has
in
it.
That
would
be
fair
to
both
homeowners
property
owners,
as
well
as
tenants.
I
feel
that
we
need
more
housing
in
Englewood,
not
less.
We
don't
want
to
have
restrictions
that
will
cause
people
not
to
want
to
do
business
in
our
city
and
for
us
not
to
have
more
affordable
housing.
S
Hello,
my
name
is
Tiffany
Wallace
and
I'm
with
the
Englewood
tenants,
Union
and
I'm.
Just
really
grateful
of
the
progress
that
we've
made
to
get
to
this
point
to
be
discussing
three
percent,
because
landlords
and
property
owners
had
been
gouging
people,
so
ridiculously
that
it
was
that
people
were
facing
homelessness
and-
and
it
is
frustrating
to
me
to
hear
people
talk
about
the
kind
of
profits
that
they're
making,
which
I
understand
is
a
business.
But
people
are
facing
homelessness
as
a
result
of
it,
and
that
really
needs
to
be
explicitly
stated.
S
S
Affordable
housing
is
something
that
we
discuss
a
lot,
but
in
the
definition
of
affordable,
housing
actually
includes
people
who
make
up
to
$60,000
a
year
and
Englewood
residents
make
about
$40,000
a
year.
So,
of
course,
landlords
are
going
to
be
looking
at
people
who
are
making
more
money
because
they
believe
that
they
can
charge
more
rent
to
them.
S
That
is
something
that
has
concerned
me
and
it's
concerned
me
throughout
the
moratoriums
of
it
is
yes,
there
is
this
law
that
exists
that
has
been
put
on
the
books,
but
if
there's
no
agency
for
people
to
go
to
to
be
able
to
resolve
these
kinds
of
conflicts,
one
person
talked
about
bureaucracy.
People
are
going
to
be
going
to
the
county
to
the
state.
S
N
T
Good
afternoon
mayor
city
council,
my
name
is
Jorge
Vetter
I'm,
the
Southern
California
Regional
Coordinator,
with
tenants
together
we're
California's
statewide
organization
for
renters
rights.
We
want
to
applaud
you
for
bringing
this
forward
and
for
dedicating
yourselves
to
the
Inglewood
renters
I
also
want
to
thank
you,
mayor,
butts
for
coming
out
and
supporting
la
folks,
alongside
of
some
of
your
other
other
colleagues
from
Culver
City,
who
they
themselves
elected,
to
put
rent
control
or
a
rent
freeze
in
place.
T
We
want
to
stand
by
the
the
Inglewood
renters
here
and
say
that
we
do
appreciate
the
lowering
of
the
rent
cap
to
3%
I,
don't
know
how
many
of
the
working
people
here
get
an
income
increase
of
3%
annually,
but
we
understand
that
that's
sort
of
like
the
the
average
going
around
the
state.
So
we
do
appreciate
the
3%
of
rent
cap.
We
want
to
encourage
you
and
in
favor
of
what
the
attorney
from
laughs
law
was
saying.
If
and
I
want
to
invite
the
the
city
attorney
to
consider
putting
in
this
affirmative
language.
T
We
also
would
like
to
encourage
you
all
to
have
representatives
of
the
community
on
the
rental
board.
I,
don't
know
if
we
have
an
opinion,
whether
elected
or
appointed,
but
they
should
definitely
be
some
renters
on
that
board
to
reflect
the
makeup
of
the
community
and
we
just
want
to
again
I
just
wanted
to
spell
a
couple
of
things
that
were
said
earlier
and
there's
numerous
studies
that
have
been
done
on
places
that
have
rent
control
and
rent
control
and
rent
rental
stabilization
ordinances
do
not
lower
property
values.
T
In
many
cases
they
actually
stay
the
same
or
they
increase
and
as
far
as
the
need
for
more
affordable
housing.
Yes,
we
do
need
more
affordable
housing
and
the
housing
that
is
affordable
to
the
community
members,
but
we're
not
going
to
build
our
way
out
of
this
or
out
of
this
crisis.
This
disaster,
if
you
will-
and
so
we
again
want
to
just
convey
our
gratitude
and
our
applause
to
the
City
Council
and
the
mayor
for
for
bringing
this
forward
I
want.
C
Additionally,
upon
is
showing
that
the
landlord
has
acted
willfully
or
with
oppression,
fraud
or
malice.
The
tenant
shall
be
awarded
treble
damages.
No
administrative
remedy
need
be
exhausted
prior
to
filing
a
civil
suit.
Pursuant
to
this
section,
the
Nexus
section,
8
133,
the
city
of
its
sole
discretion,
may
choose
to
enforce
the
provisions
of
chapter
eight
articles,
9
and
10
to
its
administrative
citations
procedure
set
forth
in
chapter
11,
article
11
point
for
the
municipal
code:
and/or
pursue
any
other
civil
or
criminal
enforcement
action.
C
C
U
Enjoy
your
Jordan
and
I'm
just
an
Inglewood
rental
property
owner.
That's
here
on
behalf
of
small
mom-and-pop
rental
properties.
We
were
just
here
a
few
months
ago
talking
about
the
5%
rent
cap
and
so,
like
many
of
the
other
speakers
have
said
before.
We
thought
that
it
was
a
couple
compromise
for
both
the
tenant
and
the
landlord.
U
We
all
pay
prices
in
different
ways.
I
know
I've
heard
a
lot
of
speakers
here
and
I've
read
a
lot
of
articles
and
we
hear
a
lot
of
media
about
rent,
gouging
and
I.
Hear
it
a
lot
here
today.
Well
I'm,
here,
to
tell
you
I,
don't
rent
couch
other
property
owners
that
I
spoke
with
or
meet
with,
or
do
business
with,
regardless.
U
That
has
never
been
a
topic.
So
those
of
us
who
are
trying
to
do
right
by
tenants,
meaning
that
our
rents
were
below
market,
which
I
think
is
one
of
the
things
that
was
attractive
to
Inglewood.
Why
so
many
tenants
were
attracted
to
the
city
of
Inglewood
was
because
the
rent
was
lower
than
other
surrounding
areas
and
as
a
result
of
that
now
we're
kind
of
being
forced
into
a
situation
where
we
may
not
be
able
to
meet
our
budget.
U
We
might
not
be
able
to
pay
our
bills
because
you're
right,
we
are
facing
possible
water
increases,
which
are
extremely
high.
We've
added
on
recyclable
been
caused
to
the
mandated
recyclable
program.
Our
insurances
have
increased
just
because
we
live
in
California,
so
there
are
a
number
of
things
that
we
have
already
taken
taken
on
our
backs,
and
we've
done
that.
We
certainly
recognize
and
respect
tenants
and
we
want
all
people
to
have
reasonable
housing.
U
C
F
U
P
U
C
So
that
I'm
doing
this
for
a
purpose
and
and
I'm
using
your
time,
but
I'll
give
it
back
to
you.
Here's
the
point.
When
we
had
the
first
hearing,
we
had
a
couple
hearings,
first
about
the
moratorium
and
then
about
the
first
housing
protection
ordinance
and
one
thing
I
heard
Universal
from
every
landlord
that
came
up
here.
They
said
they
don't
raise
her
in
every
year
and
they
never
do
more
than
3%.
That's
what
I
heard
universally
and
the
reason
that
I
made
a
recommendation
to
the
council.
C
This
is
just
a
recommendation
to
go
to
3%,
because
what
we're
trying
to
do
here
in
the
city,
we
are
in
the
midst
of
an
economic
Renaissance
that
we
want
our
residents
to
participate
in
in
all
of
our
development
agreements.
We
have
a
35
percent
local
higher
goal
so
that
we
hire
residents
at
5%
a
year
and
what
happens
when
you
Institute
some
type
of
control?
Then
what
happens?
C
Even
good
people
like
yourself,
say
well,
I
need
to
do
five
percent
every
year,
and
what
would
happen
is
in
five
years
the
rent
would
have
increased
25
percent.
We
expect
these
jobs
to
come
online
fully
in
the
next
five
to
six
years,
and
what
would
that
mean?
That
would
mean
that
the
people
that
have
been
here
through
the
worst
of
times
would
have
had
to
leave
the
city,
and
so
that's
where
this
3%
cap
came
in,
because
we
felt
that
people
could
make
it
through
and
get
these
better
jobs.
C
Now,
over
the
last
eight
years,
the
unemployment
rate
in
the
city
has
dropped
from
seventeen
and
a
half
percent
to
four
point:
seven
percent.
We
have
the
lowest
unemployment
rate
of
a
minority
majority
city,
probably
in
the
state
of
California-
we're
proud
of
that.
But
we
want
to
do
much
better,
so
this
three
percent
cap
actually
was
based
on
the
actual
testimony
of
some
universally
every
landlord
came
up
here.
I
asked
him:
how
much
do
you
raise
the
rent?
C
So
people
that
moved
in
here
two
three
years
ago
aren't
the
ones
reaping
the
benefits
of
this
harvest
that
is
Inglewood
so
I
want
you
to
understand
that,
but
I'm
gonna
tell
you
I,
hear
you,
and,
and
as
we
deliberate
this,
you
know
there
probably
will
be
adjustments,
probably
here,
because
this
is
the
time
it
has
to
happen.
So
thank
you
very
much.
C
V
Of
Jelani
hinges
with
the
uplifting
global
coalition.
First
and
foremost,
I
just
want
to
say
I'm
glad
that
we
have
a
permanent
ordinance
here
in
the
city
of
Inglewood
is
definitely
going
to
keep
a
lot
of
long-term
residents
in
the
city
and
I'm.
Grateful
for
that
I
do
personally
feel
that
it
should
be
a
hard
cap
at
3%.
I
know
there
are
some
exceptions
that
are
currently
in
the
ordinance
as
drafted
now,
but
I
think
it
should
be
at
a
hard
cap
at
3%.
C
V
C
V
Okay,
also
I'm,
just
like
someone
else
said
earlier:
I
think
the
rent
tobor
should
be
an
elected
rental
board.
We
have
examples
of
this,
for
instance,
and
Berkeley.
They
have
an
elected
rental
board
and
then
also
on
the
ordinance
I
noticed
that
for
folks
that
you
all
potential
are
gonna
choose
for
this
rental
board,
it
said
citizen
and
not
resident
and
I,
think
I
should
say
resident,
because
everyone
in
the
city
of
Inglewood
may
not
be
a
citizen,
and
they
should
be
able
to
potentially
be
on
this
with
this
board
capital
improvements.
V
I
looked
at
that
area
as
well.
I
think
that's
good.
If
it's
like
a
rule
for
a
water
heater,
something
that's
a
major
something
that
you
actually
need
to
to
be
in
a
suitable
dwelling,
but
not
things
like
carpet.
Drapes
things
of
that
nature.
So
I
think
that
we
should
really
figure
out
what
the
requirements
or
what,
what
exactly
a
capital
improvement
is
for
landlords
and
then
also
with
the
temporary
ordinance.
C
Instead,
you
could
have
called
the
the
counsel
person
who
was
in
charge
of
that
district
and
the
City
Attorney's
Office
would
have
called
the
landlord,
and
we
have
had
instances
like
that
and
yeah
and
in
every
instance
they
rescinded.
The
increase.
All
I'm
saying
is
that
when
you,
when
you
come
here
at
the
eleventh
hour
and
say
things
like
that,
it's
hard
for
us
to
give
it
credence,
because
the
city
had
or
has
a
moratorium
in
effect,
and
we
have
the
capacity
to
contact
people.
C
Now
we
will
have
a
much
more
vigorous
enforcement
arm
because
we
will
probably
have
to
hire
staff
to
oversee
this
program.
But
all
I
want
to
say
is
that
when
you
get
told
that
it's
hard
for
us
to
give
it
credence,
when
you
come
here
now
we're
about
to
pass
a
permanent
ordinance
and
say
I
know
people
who
have
12
15%.
V
And
I
have
told
them
that
they
can.
They
need
to
go
to
the
city.
I
told
them
that
personally
and
I
also
emailed
them
a
digital
copy
of
the
ordinance.
Okay,
so
I
understand
what
you're,
saying
and
I've
and
I've
done
that
and
then
also
I
do
think
we
need
to
consider
doing
something
for
folks
that
have
been
written
gal's
prior
to
March
5th,
so
folks
that
have
received
huge
increases.
V
20
to
25%
and
up
I
have
talked
to
lawyers,
and
it
is
doable
because
for
some
of
those
folks
that
have
been
rent
gals
already,
the
3
percent
might
evict
them
or
put
them
in
homelessness.
So
I
think
that's
something
we
really
need
to
consider.
Those
are
some
of
the
most
vulnerable
residents
in
the
city.
Thank
you
for
your
time.
W
W
Really
unfair
I
know
it
says
in
like
the
first
page
of
this
new
draft
that
this
is
to
be
fair
to
both
renter
and
owners
alike.
I,
don't
see
anything
fair
in
here
to
the
owners
of
the
property.
It
is
decreasing.
The
property
values
I
have
a
an
elderly
couple
with
a
triplex
in
the
city
of
Inglewood
they've
owned
for
almost
50
years.
W
They
almost
never
raise
the
rents
it's
time
for
them
to
sell
to
move
where
their
children
have
moved
out
of
state,
and
we
served
a
very
reasonable
rent
increase
on
the
other
two
tenants
because
we
were
having
a
problem
getting
them
a
fair
offer
on
their
property
because
the
rents
were
so
low.
We
served
them
a
rent
increase
that
took
them
only
to
one
of
them
slightly
less
than
eighty
percent
and
one
slightly
more
than
eighty
percent
of
what
you
have
listed
here,
our
buyer,
on
the
last
iteration
of
this
ordinance.
W
W
C
W
N
C
J
One
where
we
heard
it
it
was
introduced
and
never
came
back
for
passing,
which
also
exempted
the
the
two
to
four
units
right
and
we
were
we
that
is
correct,
and
so
that's
why
it
fell
into
the
category
that
it
did
exempt
those
units.
Now,
after
today,
they
will
be
existing
if
it
passes.
If
it
passes
it
will
be
exempt
as
written
into.
What's
the
section
write
off
at
night,
I
think
it's
the
definition
section
where.
C
Okay,
so
here's
the
only
thing
that's
been
in
effect,
the
only
thing
that
was,
in
effect,
all
this
time
was
the
moratorium,
which
was
5
percent.
That's
the
only
thing
that's
been
in
effect,
because
what
happened
was
there
was
a
first
reading.
There
was
no
second
reading
and
so
there's
been
a
change,
so
this
is
the
first
reading
of
this
iteration
and
if
this
is
voted
in
then
in
30
days,
there'll
be
an
affirmation
vote
and
then
this
will
become
the
law
and
units
of
4
units
or
less
will
be
exempt.
C
C
W
C
X
Waiting
for
to
see
is
fair,
go
ahead,
hello.
My
name
is
Kirk
Tennessee
and
I'm
just
here
to
basically
echo
a
lot
of
them.
Just
echo
a
lot
of
things
I
feel
like
what
kind
of
dismisses
the
one
thing
is,
like
one
person
said
in
my
building
as
well,
I
seen
people
come
in
and
now
just
in
this
last
year
alone,
when
the
Mauryan
was
there,
so
the
reality
is
I
was
happening
inside
California
as
a
whole
is
the
realization
that
people
are
struggling
to
pay
their
rent
right.
X
That's
why
the
state
happy,
that's
why
the
state
law
was
enacted,
and
that's
that's,
why
a
lot
of
rent
controls
and
doing
that?
That's
why
a
lot
of
tenant
unions
are
building
up
power
because
of
these
things.
This
is
not
it's
not
because
we're
you
know
lazy.
This
is
not
because
we
can't
afford
job,
you
know
who
don't
have
a
job.
This
is
because,
right
now
we're
feeling
like
we're
we've
been,
but
on
current
levels,
especially
inside
Inglewood,
immensely
been
under
attack,
so
I
don't
want
to
dismiss
that
inside.
X
That
I
also
want
to
talk
about
the
language
that
they
told
you
about
inside
they're.
Talking
about
using
inside
eviction,
conviction,
courts,
I,
don't
think
any
of
you
are
experienced,
eviction,
courts
and
I
feel
like
we
should
go
by
what
people
actually
have
experienced
and
have
spent
their
like
life.
X
Doing
right
and
saying
this
to
you
and
I'm,
assuming
that
you
all
haven't
spent
your
life
in
a
victim
court
helping
and
doing
casework
with
actual
tenants,
so
I
would
say
that
and
listen
to
the
people
that
actually
have
done
this
and
saying
that
this
is
not
useful
for
them
right
and
it
might
not
be
useful
because
I
actually
I
sort
I
do
case.
Work
as
well,
and
I've
had
sort
of
heard
stories
of
similar
things
as
well.
So
I
just
want
to
keep
that
in
mind.
X
I
also
want
to
echo
the
thing
about
elected
boards.
Appointed
boards,
for
me,
is
just
ridiculous.
I,
don't
understand
the
point
of
having
a
pointed
board.
I
think
we
put
a
lot
of
trust.
That's
a
lot
of
trust
in
you
all
that
I
personally
do
not
have
and
I
think
a
lot
of
other
residents,
don't
because
right
now
we're
we're
at
the
state
right
now
where
it
hasn't
been.
This
is
defensive,
right,
we're
not
being
offensive
with
this
whole
rent
control.
X
A
lot
of
people
already
have
been
kicked
out
of
Inglewood
and
on
immense
levels,
and
also
are
currently
still
going
to
be
kicked
out
because
of
this
as
well
because
of
the
rate
increases
that
happen
before
January,
1st
and
they're
still
trying
to
build
and
pay
up
for
that.
So
I
think
that
we
have
to
understand
right
now.
It's
it's
not
a
state
of
thing.
We
were
doing
preventative
care.
X
We're
actually
trying
to
amend
all
the
band-aids
are
actually
currently
happening
right
now
and
hoping
that
most
people
won't
go
through
the
leaks
and
won't
bleed
out,
but
the
reality
is
that
a
lot
of
people
are
still
gonna.
Do
that
and
this
is,
and
so
we
got
to
figure
out
the
balance
between
that
so
I
just
want
to
echo.
X
N
D
My
name
is
Willie
Agee
and
I
live
in
the
beautiful
city
of
Englewood,
but
53
years
and
I'm
speaking
to
this
number
one
council
in
the
United
States,
who
have
built
the
number
one
city
in
the
United
States
of
America
right
here,
the
way
they
did
that
was
they
passed
approximately
12
or
13
hard
bills
that
everybody
didn't
like.
That's
why
the
city
is
no
one
in
the
country
now
I
moved
here,
54
years
ago,
I've
been
paying
taxes
ever
since
I
moved
here.
D
D
Don't
I
can't
call
somebody
at
two
o'clock
in
the
morning
and
said
my
water
heater's
out.
You
need
to
come
overhead
and
fix
it
now,
who's
gonna
pay
for
that
the
landlord's
gotta
pay
for
it.
You
know
I
I
had
quite
a
bit
of
property
here.
I
got
rid
of
it
because
I
got
tired
of
the
rentals.
Taking
advantage
of
me,
you
know
I,
don't
think
anybody's
guaranteed
to
play
sustaining
in
Englewood.
You
know
number
one
city
in
the
United
States
everybody
in
the
country
want
to
come
here
because
of
what
you
guys
did.
D
Pastors
are
strong
laws
that
you
guys
been
passing
that
made
this
city
number
one
in
the
United
States.
Don't
let
outside
people
come
here
that
moved
from
one
place
to
another?
Just
because
you
know
sometimes
we
have
to
do
for
ourselves.
The
more
you
do
for
a
person,
the
more
they're
gonna
expect
from
you.
I
got
confidence
in
this
council
to
appear
all
I'm
gonna.
D
N
N
A
Mayor
the
next
scheduled
matter
is
a
public
hearing
to
consider
an
ordinance
approving
zoning
code,
amendment
2
0
1
9
0
0
1,
to
talk
to
chapter
12
of
England
missable
code
to
allow
towing
services
within
Soleri
vehicle
with
ancillary
vehicle
storage
and
ancillary
vehicle
inspection
in
the
cs
zone
citywide.
As.
Z
Mayor
and
councilmembers
the
code
amendments
before
you
today
is
an
applicant
initiated
code
amendments
request
to
allow
vehicle,
towing
and
ancillary
vehicle
storage
and
inspection
in
the
CS
or
commercial
service
zone.
Currently
new
towing
service
and
an
Florrie
uses
are
not
allowed
in
the
cs
own.
The
CS
stone
is
located
on
La
Brea
Avenue
from
the
city's
southern
boundary
at
one
hundred
and
fourth
streets
up
to
spruce
so
up
to
the
southern
edge
of
downtown
englewood.
Z
Own
service
is,
as
I
mentioned,
not
currently
a
permitted
use
in
any
Zone
in
the
in
the
city,
but
it
has
been
historic
interpreted
to
be
allowed
in
the
em1
industrial
zone
of
the
city.
Under
the
category
of
vehicle
storage,
the
staff
analyzed
this
request
and
determined
the
proposed
use
is
compatible
with
other
uses
allowed
in
the
cs
tone,
including
Auto,
Sales,
auto
rental
car
washes,
auto
repair
and
other
car
oriented
uses.
Z
Staff
also
determined
that
there's
likely
to
be
a
growing
need
for
towing
capacity
in
Englewood.
Given
the
visitor
surveying
developments
proposed
and
underway
in
the
city,
so
based
on
this
staff
recommended
to
the
Planning
Commission
to
allow
a
towing
service
and
ancillary
activities
in
the
cs
owned,
subject
to
requiring
a
special
use
permit
and
development
standards,
which
include
a
1,000
foot,
separation
from
other
existing
towing
businesses,
a
minimum
sight
size
of
330
thousand
square
feet
and
a
lot
frontage
requirement
of
a
hundred
feets.
Z
In
addition,
a
tow
service
office,
what
needs
to
be
maintained,
on-site
parking
lot,
improvements
would
need
to
be
made
to
the
sites
as
well
any
ancillary
vehicle,
storage
or
vehicle
inspection
that
is
proposed.
What
needs
to
be
screened
appropriately
and
it
would
be
prohibited
to
store
trucks,
buses
and
trailers.
C
J
A
C
A
Y
Y
Marin
City
Council
planning
for
the
2020
dr.
Martin
Luther
King
jr.
celebration
is
underway.
The
event
will
be
held
on
Saturday
January,
18th
2020
from
9
a.m.
to
5
p.m.
and
include
a
commemorative
program
parade
and
family
festival
new
this
year.
The
event
will
also
include
a
queen
and
court.
The
competition
is
open
to
junior
and
senior
high
school
girls
who
live
in
or
attend
high
school
in
Inglewood
cash
prizes
will
also
be
awarded.
Applications
are
now
available
online
only
and
will
be
accepted
through
November
18th
2019.
Thank
you.
AA
Thank
You
mayor
just
like
to
report
that
I
this
morning,
I
did
purchase
a
$250,000
CD
at
1.75
interest
rate
from
Raymond
James
since
excellent
buy,
because
rates
are
declining
and
I've
had
nearly
20
million
20
million
investment
vehicles
that
have
been
called
to
the
declining
interest
rates.
Also,
I
would
like
to
mention
that
the
city
treasurer's
do
an
academy
program
again
starts
on
November.
The
6th
applications
are
available
in
the
library,
also
in
my
office,
also
online,
and
also
at
the
City
Clerk's
office.
AA
Again,
this
is
a
four
week
program
start
of
November
the
6th,
and
it
ends
on
November
23rd
today
before
Thanksgiving,
and
also
I
would
like
to
be
just
to
make
a
comment
regarding
the
the
breast
cancer
or
done
a
little
bit
earlier
and,
of
course,
the
annual
exam.
Then
my
grandma's
certainty
is
definitely
recommended.
AA
As
long
as
the
self
exam
is
best,
you
know
to
preserve
and
support
good
health
there's
been
an
interesting
article
that
that
appeared
in
The,
Wall,
Street
Journal,
stating
that
basically,
we
still
have
a
long
way
to
go
regarding
to
finding
a
cure
to
cancer
and
keep
in
mind.
Although
there
has
been
research
stating
that
you
should
do
the
exam,
the
mammogram
in
every
two
years
keep
in
mind
it's
your
health
that
would
be
in
jeopardy
by
waiting
two
years.
AA
C
A
P
A
A
C
C
There
needs
to
be
a
change
in
the
language
for
the
composition
of
the
rent
control
board.
I,
don't
remember
the
section
right
now,
mr.
City
Attorney,
but
we
want
to
strike
elected
by
the
rent
control
board
for
the
chair
and
the
chair
will
be
chosen
by
the
mayor
and
the
other
members
be
chosen
by
the
individual
councilmembers.
That's.
B
C
Control
board.
Yes,
this
adds
a
fee
for
the
registration
of
units
so
that
we
realized
from
the
moratorium
that
it's
not
going
to
be
possible
to
administer
this
without
some
staff
person
or
persons
that
are
available
to
be
contacted
so
that
everything
doesn't
go
to
an
enforcement
action
or
or
to
court,
and
so
we're
gonna
have
to
have
fees
to
administer
this
every
every
rent
control
program
and
in
ours.
We
call
this
housing
protection
requires
someone
on
staff
to
monitor
and
administer
the
rent.
C
Control
board
is
unelected
and
they
are
unpaid
appointed
by
the
council
and
and
we
I
recommend
that
it
stays
that
way
and,
finally,
to
reiterate
what
I
was
trying
to
get
across
to
the
landlords
who
spoke,
the
3%
was
landed
on
for
two
for
two
reasons:
one
all
the
landlords
came
up
and
talked
and
all
the
times
of
this
process
have
always
said
they
never
did
more
than
3%
and
they
never
did
it.
Every
year
we
gave
the
5%
because
it
was
a
temporary
moratorium
and
we
didn't
know
you
know
where
to
land.
C
Secondly,
I
realized
that
5%
of
you,
because
it's
likely
the
landlord's,
will
do
the
full
max
every
year.
They
can
will
eliminate
the
ability
of
some
people
to
pay
within
five
years.
We
want
people
to
be
here
when
these
jobs
come
online,
and
so
this
would
limit
increases
to
three
percent
of
the
CPI,
whichever
is
greater
for
five
years,
and
we
hope
that
would
be
a
max
of
15%
and
with
a
35%
local
hire
provision
for
these
projects
that
are
forthcoming.
C
J
Just
for
clarity
and
I
want
a
second,
your
motion,
because
I
think
that
that
motion
that
you
just
made
kind
of
completes
the
goal
that
originally
founded
this
effort,
which
means
to
give
the
opportunity
to
the
current
residents
of
Englewood
I
want
a
second
that
motion
and
just
for
clarity.
After
the
five
years
we
line
up
with
the
states
goals,
because
there's
terminates
in
10
years,
so
ultimately
that
will
stay
in
line
for
an
additional
5
years.
Absolutely.
C
J
C
B
AB
AB
AB
C
AB
AC
AC
Q
Q
Q
J
J
C
N
A
N
B
N
AB
AB
You
know
it
depends
on
where
you're
at
whether
you're
for
you,
like
the
Fords,
are
you
like
Chevy's,
but
we
as
a
council
have
to
make
a
decision
that's
best
for
our
community,
and
we
do
that
by
accepting
input
and
we
listen
to
staff
to
get
there
and
put
they
go
out
and
do
all
the
research
so
with
that
I
want
to
thank
the
mayor.
I
want
to
thank
staff
for
putting
together,
along
with
the
city
manager,
city
attorney
all
these
folks.
You
know
to
put
together
a
comprehensive
rent
initiative
here.
AB
Ordinance-
and
you
know
you
know
some
folks.
You
know
very
everybody's,
very
passionate,
and
we
understand
that.
But
that
being
said,
you
know,
I
think
this
is
probably
going
to
be
looked
at
as
one
of
the
best
rent
ordinances
around
I
think
other
cities
are
going
to
look
at
this
and
they're
gonna,
say
wow
Inglewood
had
the
thought
process
early
on
to
think
about
these
different
avenues
to
try
to
address
these
rent
control
issues
that
are
going
on
in
their
community.
AB
N
N
B
Recognizing
I
clearly
want
to
identify
that
this
City
Council
on
more
than
one
occasion,
have
made
some
tough
love
decisions.
We're
the
ones
that
embarked
in
this
issue
for
rental
housing,
protection
ordinance
way
before
the
state
got
involved
and
other
cities
got
involved
and
we
understand
the
compassion
of
the
number
of
landlords
have
come
before
us,
as
well
as
renters
I.
Think
it's
a
clear
message
that
when
you
identify
as
the
renters
have
embedded
their
remarks
to
me
about
I,
don't
get
a
three
percent
raise
every
year,
let
alone
a
5%.
B
So
how
am
I
going
to
be
able
to
stabilize
my
ability
to
continue
to
stay
here
when
the
economic
wolf
continues
to
come
after
me,
with
other
issues
of
concern,
whether
its
vehicles,
gas
at
four
dollars,
plus
a
gallon,
and
then
the
retail
merchandise
I
wish
to
buy,
continues
to
go
up
up
up
the
economic
office?
Taking
my
paycheck
and
then
you're
talking
about
the
rent
for
me
to
keep
a
roof
over.
B
The
other
concern
that
I
raised
had
to
do
with
the
fact
that,
as
soon
as
the
word
rent
production
took
place,
some
of
the
greedy
landlords
made
the
papers
at
the
expense
of
so
many
others
that
have
always
stayed
within
the
realm
of
embracing
those
renters,
and
so
because
of
that
it
has
kind
of
caused.
The
economic
wolf
to
rise
to
the
occasion
for
us
to
address
and
I
just
want
to
come
in
this
council
on
their
due
diligence.
Their
commitment
instead
of
kicking
the
can
down
the
road.
B
J
J
Action
that
that
makes
you
feel
like
you
have
to
say
something
because
we've
all
gone
through
such
a
big
process
in
ourselves
right
to
come
to
what
we
believe
is
good
today
actually
began
with
us
all
sitting
up
here,
a
while
back
and
saying
we
were
all
against
rent
control.
That's
how
it
all
began,
then
what
ended
up
happening
is
that
certain
residents
were
receiving
serious
increases,
increases
that
were
life-changing.
J
There
was
nowhere
did
they
had
to
leave,
and
so
that
required
us
to
respond
in
a
different
way,
but
it
started
again
with
us
being
completely
against
it.
We
needed
to
address
that
for
the
residents
our
goal
became.
The
mayor
did
a
good
job
of
explaining
that
we
are
seeing
this,
this
positive
evolution
of
our
city
and
all
of
the
benefits
that
come
with
it
and
we
would
be
making
it
extremely
difficult
for
our
current
renting
residents
to
benefit
from
the
growth
that
they
were
part
of,
and
that
was
something
that
we
just
couldn't
accept.
J
That's
that
was
a
big
social
cost.
So,
with
the
mayor
brought
forward
the
the
introduction
of
the
rent
ordinance,
we
took
a
look
at
it.
We
started
to
evolve
with
it.
We
all
got
hundreds
of
calls,
hundreds
of
folks
approaching
us
with
it,
and
it's
no
secret
owners
on
one
side
renters
on
the
other
ones.
You
know
zero
versus
unlimited
that
was
kind
of
everything
and
everything
in
between,
but
we
are
doing
something
today.
J
That
I
believe
keeps
our
residents
here
to
be
able
to
give
them
an
opportunity
and
does
so
in
a
way
that
says
this
is
who
we're
looking
out
for
and
that
I
commend
with
the
final
amendment
of
the
five-year
sunset,
because
that
addresses
that
that
says:
that's
exactly
why
we
did
it,
we
did
it
for
the
residents
that
exists
here.
We
understand
our
role
is
not
to
create
housing
for
the
entire
world.
J
Our
goal
is
to
give
an
opportunity
for
the
owners
to
develop
themselves
as
a
business
and
give
an
opportunity
for
the
residents
to
succeed
in
our
city.
The
the
owners
I
congratulate
them
for
always
being
great
owners
and
seldomly
raising
rents
and
keeping
their
residents
I
congratulate
them.
The
3%
is
something
that
they
will
have
to
accept
for
the
next
five
years,
but
other
than
that
remember.
J
C
J
Into
that
kind
of
program,
so
this
is
something
that's
happening
in
our
city,
Alex,
just
the
better
ones
around
I
believe
so
I
believe
so
I
know
it
was
well
thought
out
now.
Is
it
perfect?
No,
there
is
no
perfect
ordinance
such
as
this,
but
the
one
thing
we
know
is
that
we
cannot
stop
growth,
we
cannot
stop
growth
and
we
cannot
stop
the
economy.
What
we
can
do
here
is
establish
Smart
Growth
in
our
city
and
that's
what
we're
taking
a
step
towards
today,
which
is
something
that
I'm
actually
very
proud
of.
J
It
has
not
been
easy
for
me
to
come
to
terms
with
everything
on
here,
and
we
know
that
the
landlord's
deserve
to
grow
as
a
business,
but
we
also
know
that
the
renters
deserve
an
opportunity.
So
I
just
congratulations
mayor
for
bringing
that
forward
and
the
council
itself
for
kind
of
giving
input
throughout
the
days.
I
know
we
all
went
through
it.
Thank
you.
Well,.
C
You
know
I
hate
to
speak
glass,
because
these
guys
are
so
darn
intelligent
and
I
really
hate
to
speak
after
Eloy,
but
one
of
the
things
that
he
said
that
is
so
cogent.
He
said
it's
not
perfect.
You
know
why
it's
not
perfect,
because
capitalism
isn't
perfect
perfect
and
so
what
we're
trying
to
do
we're
trying
to
modify
the
hand
of
the
way
the
economy
works
in
this
country
so
that
we
give
people
the
most
opportunity
to
participate
in
the
construction
of
their
own
destiny.
C
That's
why?
Whenever
I
hear
people
complain
about
all
the
Clippers
are
coming,
there's
too
much
traffic,
then
you
might
as
well
say
there
are
too
many
jobs
because
there's
never
enough
job.
There's,
never
enough
opportunity.
I
I
want
to
thank
the
staff.
People
that
worked
on
this.
Not
only
my
date,
you
came,
a
Decatur
became,
has
done
a
fantastic
job.
C
We
didn't
want
to
stifle
growth
to
realizing
that
there
were
people
that
really
were
buying,
building
and
and
raising
them
the
rents
to
meet
their
new
mortgages
Plus,
and
that
just
wasn't
going
to
work,
and
so
you
know,
I
think
that
the
council's
done
a
very
balance,
made
a
balanced
approach
and
been
very
courageous
and
I
really
want
to
thank
my
college
and
thank
all
the
staff.
I
want
to
thank
the
city
manager,
everyone
that
had
a
hand
in
this,
because
this
is
not
perfect,
but
it's
fair
CSA
to.
A
N
N
C
N
N
C
AD
AD
C
C
C
AE
AE
Mitchell
and
I'm
here
to
request
that
public
works
synchronize
the
lights
from
the
freeway
to
the
forum,
so
that
the
senior
citizens
at
Hillcrest
and
Locust
at
Manchester
have
more
time
to
cross
the
streets
going
north-south.
The
cars
flied
through
on
the
way
from
that
freeway,
the
lights
are
never
synchronized.
Cars
are
in
between
you
have
to
walk
in
between.
We
know
what
light
does
work
for
the
pedestrians
to
go.
AE
They
walking
in
between
cars
I
have
to
hold
my
hand
up
to
mix
cars,
stop
so
I'm
asking
that
they
look
at
synchronizing
those
lights
that
they
take
into
account.
The
hearing
impaired
the
visually
impaired,
mobility,
impaired
and
the
agent,
and
also
the
youth
at
the
Englewood
High
School
that
crosswalk
crossing
over
to
the
library
to
the
City
Hall
only
allows
them
a
very
short
number
of
seconds
to
cross
that
Street
I,
don't
know
who's
doing
it.
AE
C
AE
Those
poor
seniors
have
to
cross
and
I've
actually
acted
like
a
school
crossing
guard,
to
hold
my
hand
up
to
make
the
people
stop
to.
Let
those
seniors
also
I,
ask
that
you
put
a
drop
down
light
so
that
the
cars
that
are
crossing
North
going
on
there
are
not
allowed
to
turn
until
they
are
given
permission
because
as
soon
as
they
see
that
green
light
go,
they
don't
care
about
a
walking
sign
being
up
so
that
you
have
to
make
them
stop.
AE
AF
It's
a
safety
concern
for
me
because,
when
it's
wintertime,
the
trees
have
fell
on
my
property
twice
and
they've
they've
shaved
them
down
somewhat,
but
their
trees
are
still
on
the
electrical
wires,
so
I've
contacted
Public.
Works
I've
also
count
contacted
the
county
because
the
County
of
Los
Angeles
also
came
out
and
cleaned
out
some
sores
other
things
that
are
along
that
area
right
there,
but
I,
not
sure
and
I,
don't
know
if
they're
unsure,
also
because
it
hasn't
been
done.
AF
AF
V
C
Q
AF
C
C
D
Know
I'm
very
proud
of
the
form,
but
I'm
not
proud
of
what
Madison
Square
Garden
wants
to
do
to
this
city.
In
my
opinion,
Madison
Square
Garden
wants
to
run
the
city,
they
might
run
New,
York
City,
but
I.
Don't
think
with
this
council
you'll
ever
be
able
to
do
it.
I
just
want
to
say
this:
I
love
the
Clippers.
What
other
city
get
a
hundred
million
dollars
to
help
its
citizens?
Where
no,
please?
No
nowhere
in
the
country
wrong
million
dollars
to
to
help
people
that
need
it.
D
D
This
is
America
and
that's
what
we're
about
you
know.
I
I've
been
here
54
years
and
I've,
never
seen
a
council
like
we
got
here
and
I'm
sure
you
guys
gonna,
take
care
business
and
bring
the
Clippers
to
Englewood
and
if
Madison's,
where
God
says
in
defeating
it,
every
citizen
in
city
of
Englewood
need
to
march
around
the
forum
and
never
let
them
have
another
play
that
as
long
as
they're.
Here
until
they
move
out,
we
can
close
down
Kareem
court.
We
can
crawl
down
19th
Street,
they
bought
the
farm,
they
didn't
buy.
AG
Thank
you,
gentlemen,
hello
and
I
hope
everybody
and
their
families
are
doing
well.
Thank
You,
mr.
mayor
council
and
city
staff,
this
afternoon,
I
will
be
talking
about
the
100
million
dollars
that
mr.
Ballmer
has
committed
to
our
city,
not
a
not
a
part,
not
foreseeable
yet,
but
we
will
be
getting
it
as
soon
as
we
get
all
this
red
tape
out
of
his
way
as
soon
as
you
guys
get
out
of
anyway.
So
the
construction
is
that
really
do
to
start
to
2021.
If
I
am
correct,.
C
AG
And
the
hundred
million
dollars
I
hope
we
will
be
getting,
but
what
I
want
to
basically
say
about
this
whole
thing
is
we
need,
as
a
city,
to
stay
very
patient.
Our
governor
said
he's
not
gonna
interfere
with
the
process
of
the
Gir
or
the
Air
Quality
Management
District,
two
step,
that's
fine!
He
want
to
play
that
game.
We
can
play
it
soon,
we're
very
patient
people.
We
can
wait
till
2021
to
get
200
million
no
problem.
We
you
already
know
how
you're
going
to
spend
it.
AG
C
Stuart,
let
me
just
make
it
very
clear
right
now
we're
we're
not
at
any
point
of
finality
for
this
project.
The
the
er
has
to
be
posted.
The
comment
period
has
to
end,
then
that
would
invoke
the
Assembly
Bill
1987,
which
allows
only
nine
months
for
challenges
to
the
e
IR
and
an
adjudication
by
a
court.
But
before
that
section
comes
to
effect,
the
California
Air
Resources
Board
findings
have
to
be
finalized
and
then
we
go
into
that
process.
So
this
is
not
a
done
deal
yet
we're
not
gonna
get
any
money
in
2020
2021.
C
AB
B
Point
of
clarity,
mayor
I,
just
want
to
give
credit
where
credit
is
due.
It
was
council
Madea
that
product
that
we
were
digressing
regarding
the
ordinance
that
resurrected
the
they
duplicate,
the
difference
between
the
appointment
by
the
mayor
versus
the
election
within
the
board
itself.
So
if
I
just
won't
get
that
clarified
and
then
finally,
I
just
want
to
acknowledge
that
this
past
Saturday
there
was
a
Metro
workshop
and
it
was
great
attendance
that
was
in
attendance
at
the
Lenox
Public
Library.
B
There's
a
number
of
bus
lines
that
we're
weighing
in
changing
the
headway
are
a
time
that
they
arrive
in
the
frequencies,
rerouted
them,
and
so
we
wanted
public
comment,
particularly
if
you're
a
public
writer,
and
so
we
had
a
great
audience
that
came
before
us
and
address
their
concerns,
of
which
we
will
then
take
back
and
present
it
to
the
Metro
Board,
which
is
our
mayor,
who's.
The
chair
on
our
recommendations
and
in
concurrence
with
the
comments
we
received
from
the
writers
in
the
South
Bay
area.
That
concludes
my
remarks.
Thank.
J
C
On
Saturday
November,
2nd
between
10
a.m.
and
1
p.m.
the
a
line
is
going
to
be
brought
back
into
service.
It's
the
old
blue
line.
It
goes
from
downtown
7th
and
flower,
which
is
known
as
7th
in
Metro
to
Long
Beach.
There
gonna
be
three
different
venues
for
the
celebration.
There
also
be
free
rides
for
three
days
on
the
resurrected,
Blue
Line,
and
it's
going
to
be
an
event.
The
mayor
Garcetti
will
be
at
the
hundred
and
third
and
Watts
the
watchtower
station
Council
in
busca.