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Eric Garcetti: The L.A. City Councilmember on fighting graffiti ...

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  • Eric Garcetti: The L.A. City Councilmember on fighting graffiti ...

    LA City Beat, CA
    Aug 18 2005

    Eric Garcetti
    The L.A. City Councilmember on fighting graffiti, listening to
    bloggers, and his upcoming road trip with Howard Dean

    Illustration by Scott Gandell


    A. City Councilmember Eric Garcetti is a fourth-generation Angeleno..
    He grew up in the San Fernando Valley, is a professor at USC, and
    recently ran unopposed for reelection for the City Council's 13th
    District (which includes Silver Lake, Echo Park, Hollywood, and
    Atwater Village). But that didn't stop Garcetti from pounding the
    pavement on the campaign trail, inspired by the words of the French
    writer Renan: "Democracy is a daily plebiscite."

    He was recently fined $5,000 by the city's Ethics Commission for
    failing to file some 2001 campaign mailers - a fine he says was
    caused by a bureaucratic snafu that will soon ensnare other local
    politicians in much bigger ways. Garcetti was merely one of the first
    to settle. Meanwhile, he continues pushing an agenda of neighborhood
    revitalization, traffic reduction, citizen equality, and
    environmental protection. A central focus for him seems to be
    bridging the gap between government and its constituents so that the
    two work together. He holds neighborhood coffees and walks, blogs
    regularly, and offers residents a chance to schedule sit-down
    meetings through his website. And, most progressive of all, he's
    getting stuff done.

    -Perry Crowe

    *****

    CityBeat: Your district's Uniting Neighborhoods to Abolish Graffiti
    (UNTAG) program, which appoints "block captains" to spot graffiti in
    their neighborhoods, set a goal of 50 percent graffiti reduction
    within two years. After just one year, there has already been a 62
    percent reduction. Does that come from the program's community
    involvement angle rather than simply being a government operation?

    Eric Garcetti: The success of [UNTAG] is that it's a community
    program. We're the facilitator, but the heart and soul of this
    program are the people who actually see their block long before we
    could, call [the graffiti] in, and take care of it. I've got 20
    people in my own office. We've got 260,000 people we represent. So,
    our goal is ultimately to have one person on every single block in
    this district, and there are literally hundreds of blocks.

    When UNTAG becomes a citywide program, will you be involved?

    I'd like to be the UNTAG cheerleader and help really champion it in
    the City Council and continue to get the funding. If we have this in
    all 15 districts, it'll cost us half-a-million dollars more.

    Outside of the gang tagging, do you see graffiti as an expression of
    social, political, and economic frustration?

    A lot of young people in Los Angeles often feel that they're not
    noticed, feel that they're lost. But just as we would take
    shoplifting as a crime that's less serious than murder, it still
    should be addressed. I don't want to throw kids who aren't affiliated
    with gangs in jail over this, but I do want them to do community
    service. For instance, painting out graffiti and realizing how much
    time and money is spent on that. And then we'll get them hooked up
    with other programs where they can express themselves, but in a
    better place.

    What are some of those programs?

    LACER [Literacy, Arts, Culture, Education, & Recreation] is a great
    program. It's in all the middle schools of Council District 13, where
    we bring in some of the best jazz musicians, muralists, and most
    creative professionals in Los Angeles for after-school programs that
    these kids can get involved with. Similarly, we just last year
    finally got an after-school program in every school in the district,
    which was a goal of mine.

    You recently updated your district's blog to feed directly to
    subscribers. How important a tool is your website in communicating
    with constituents?

    It's amazing. We have conversations back and forth with some other
    blogs. Blogging.la, for instance, had a constituent concern, and I
    was able to answer it online and it got national attention because
    people said, "Wow. A councilmember is reading blogs." It's the same
    work we do on the phone. It's the same work we do with letters every
    day. But a lot of people know [blogging] is a quicker and a louder
    way to communicate. We've just tried to do [our website] in a way
    that will keep things fresh every couple of days. New news. Lots of
    times, government sites change themselves once every month. We want
    to be squarely in the cyber age and have as dynamic a website and
    government as you can find.

    Blogging.la even defended you after your recent $5,000 fine for the
    city's Ethics Commission regarding some unapproved campaign mailers
    from 2001.

    Yeah, that's funny. That fake little thing they made [blogging.la
    posted a mailer marked "EVIDENCE" that read: Vote for Eric Garcetti
    for City Council because his opponent so sucks! And he doesn't know
    how to dance ... and other shit like that"].

    Oh, that was fake?

    It was totally fake. It was a joke. A couple of people have asked me
    about that. They didn't realize that it was just a joke. Our
    literature was better than that.

    So what was the deal with the Ethics Commission fine?

    The fine was for 10 mailers out of about 40 that we did that [the
    Ethics Commission] says we never turned in to them. I am certain that
    we did. We actually took down a record of it. Then [the Commission]
    moved from City Hall East to City Hall and their file says we're
    missing 10. There's 18 different candidates who are having the same
    thing. I'm one of the first to settle it. But some campaigns didn't
    turn any of [their mailers] in, and they know they didn't turn in
    any, but they're getting fined $500 per mailer. So if you did 40
    mailers, it's a $20,000 fine instead of you screwed up once. But for
    me it was a very small [fine]. We cooperated from the beginning. [But
    the] rule bears some reinvestigation. For some of my colleagues who
    might face a $10,000 or $20,000 fine, or the candidates who didn't
    get elected who face the same fine, that really discourages people
    from running.

    Are you excited for the upcoming Sunset Junction festival, right
    there in your district?

    Absolutely. We want to make sure that it's well-managed, that the
    impact on the community isn't too great, but it's one of the most
    eclectic and energizing collections of Angelenos I think you can find
    in a given year. And we want to make sure, too, that people know that
    we really enforce it as a voluntary donation. The donations help
    support the organization, and that's great. But families who might
    come there with four or five kids, working class from the community,
    don't have to be paying 30 bucks to get in. They can go in for free.

    What's the trip you've got coming up?

    I represent Little Armenia. So, for four years, the Armenian
    community has been saying, "We'd really like you to take a trip to
    Armenia and perhaps develop a sister-city relationship with Yerevan,
    the capital." And so we're going to Armenia. We're going to sign a
    sister-city agreement between the two cities because we're the
    second-biggest Armenian city in the world. And Governor [Howard]
    Dean, coincidentally, who is a friend, is going to come along for a
    few days as the chair of the DNC [Democratic National Committee], so
    he'll be there for a little bit. We're going to check out their
    struggle to establish a democracy in Armenia.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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