Category Archives: CD14

Rockdale’s Day in the Park

Rockdale Elementary Press Release

The students of Rockdale Elementary School will participate in a school wide event at Eagle Rock Community Center called “Rockdale’s Day in the Park”. This opportunity on Thursday  morning, May 30, 2013, at 9:00 a.m  has been provided for the Rockdale students by  generous donations from the Target Corporation and the Zoo to You Animal Conservation Ambassadors.

The Conservation Ambassadors is more than just a non-profit rescue zoo. It’s a place where permanently injured, abandoned, and abused wild and exotic animals get a second chance at life as ambassadors for their species through conservation education. They will be providing two animal assemblies for our students.

Kindergarten through third grades  will take an imaginary trip around the world to discover the habitats and niches that some animals call home and learn what they eat and how they survive in our ever-changing world. The upper grades 4th-5th will learn about  the physical characteristics of animals and the connection to  where they live, how and what they eat, and how they survive in their own unique environment.

CONGRESSMAN XAVIER BECERRA ON MEMORIAL DAY

CONGRESSMAN XAVIER BECERRA ON MEMORIAL DAY

 

WASHINGTON, DC – Today, Congressman Xavier Becerra (CA-34), Chairman of the House Democratic Caucus, issued the following statement marking Memorial Day, which will be observed on

Monday, May 27:

 

“Today, we remember America’s fallen heroes – our men and women who made the ultimate sacrifice defending our country and our values. We are forever grateful to them knowing we are indebted to them in ways impossible to repay. Yet every day we can honor these patriots and their families by furthering the cause of freedom and democracy for which they fought and serving our veterans who returned safely home.”

 

Arroyo Seco Foundation’s Annual Gathering Celebrates the Arroyo

NORTHBOUND SR-110 FULL FREEWAY CLOSURE PLANNED

NORTHBOUND SR-110 FULL FREEWAY CLOSURE PLANNED

 

LOS ANGELES – The California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) will close the northbound Pasadena Freeway (SR-110) from midnight to 8 a.m. on Friday, May 17 and Saturday, May 18 between the Golden State Freeway (I-5) connector and Orange Grove Avenue.

 

Detours will be in place.

 

The closures are in relation to a slab replacement project.

Eagle Rock Eagles to Hold Memorial Day Event May 25-27

Eagle Rock Eagles to Hold Memorial Day Event May 25-27

May 14, 2013

Los Angeles, Calif. – Glendale-Eagle Rock Fraternal Order of Eagles #2188 invites the community to be part of a special Memorial Day weekend to benefit disabled veterans and welcome home all Vietnam veterans May 25-27 at the Glendale-Eagle Rock Aerie, located at 1596 Yosemite Dr.

Festivities begin Saturday, May 25 at 3 p.m. with the opening of a Vietnam War Photo Gallery. Dinner will follow from 6:30-8 p.m. with entertainment after dinner. The event is open to the public for a $20 donation and includes admission to the gallery, dinner, entertainment and admission to the Aerie on Sunday.

Doors open at 1 p.m. Sunday, May 26, for an Open House event with complimentary appetizers and a coupon for a complimentary glass of wine or beer. Festivities conclude at 5 p.m.

Monday, May 27, the Eagles will host a champagne breakfast from 7:30-11:30 a.m. for $7. A Memorial Day ceremony will follow at Noon. The Vietnam War Photo Gallery will be open from 7:30 a.m.-5 p.m.

The Glendale-Eagle Rock Eagles has maintained a presence in the community since 1935 and currently hosts more than 350 combined Aerie and Auxiliary members. Annually, they donate approximately $10,000 to various charities and hold events for City of Hope, St. Jude and award scholarships to students of Eagle Rock High School.

For information contact Albert Chavez at 213-503-1535 or call the Glendale-Eagle Rock Eagles at 323-257-8869.

About the Fraternal Order of Eagles
The Fraternal Order of Eagles, an international non-profit organization, unites fraternally in the spirit of liberty, truth, justice, and equality, to make human life more desirable by lessening its ills, and by promoting peace, prosperity, gladness and hope. Founded in 1898, the Eagles fund research in areas such as diabetes, heart disease, kidney disease and cancer, and raise money for neglected and abused children and the aged, as well as work for social and civic change.

Daydream Fest This Sunday, May 19th

Daydream Fest This Sunday, May 19th
For the last three years hundreds of Eagle Rockers have enjoyed an afternoon of music and outdoor fun at the Daydream Fest which is held right at the base of one of Southern California’s most iconic land marks, our famous Eagle Rock. Local grass roots organization, Cannabis Clubs United With the Community, sponsors the event to show support for our local medical marijuana collectives and for our community members who choose to medicate with this natural organic medicine.
The annual event, held at the base of our Eagle Rock in Alatorre Park (top of North Figueroa St.) hosts a variety of local bands as well as food and fun for the whole family. Local bands performing this year are Cosmic Squirrels, Morning Glory, The Steves, Super Group, Fawks-One and special appearance from Legion Underworld.
All proceeds from the event go to benefit the Collaborative Eagle Rock Beautiful (CERB) who bought and helped save the area below the Eagle Rock from commercial development. While you enjoy the music you can also walk the easy 40 minute Eagle Rock Canyon Trail up to the scenic view near the top of the Eagle Rock where you can almost see the Pacific Ocean on a clear day.
This year’s theme seeks to have the Federal government respect the State’s medical marijuana laws and stop raiding dispensaries. Although federal agents shut down all medical marijuana collectives in Eagle Rock last year, we still support the right to medicate with this natural herbal remedyas well as the right of the State to implement its own regulations without the meddling of the Federal government.
The majority of Californians want the Federal government to stay out of our State’s medical marijuana laws because a whopping 77% of all Americans support medical marijuana and a majority (52%) of Americans favor outright Legalization of marijuana in order to regulate and tax this commodity, something that is impossible under federal Prohibition.
The Daydream Fest is open to the entire community and goes from noon to 8 pm. Bring your own chair or blanket to lounge on and come and enjoy the music and the fresh air. There will be restroom facilities available and everyone is invited to bring their kids and their dogs for a day of enjoyment and fun in the park. Please ‘like’ us on our Facebook page ‘Eagle Rock Daydream Fest.’ For further information and directions we invite you to visit www.CCUWC.org

Youth Summer Sports at Glassell Rec

Opinion! New rules regarding “Factual Basis” stakeholders.

Dear Commission, Your motion is fine, but only addresses half the problem.

The history of factual basis stakeholders is longer than most imagine. It started a few years back in Glassell Park, when a local church wanted to put up a large video pole sign and was rebuffed by the GPNC. That church put together their own candidate slate and brought in all their congregation from outside the area to vote and successfully engineered a takeover of that Glassell Park Neighborhood council.

At that time, no one wanted to risk the political incorrectness of going after a local church, but last summer Jose Huizar and the Eagle Rock Neighborhood Council felt safe disenfranchising employees and owners of medical marijuana dispensaries, even though there was no city or state law prohibiting them at that time.

They said at that time these folks were not disenfranchised because they could still vote under the factual basis rules.

Eliminating factual basis stakeholders is a good thing, but your work is only half done, if the powerful and well connected can conspire to disenfranchise legitimate stakeholders they don’t like. Last year it was medical marijuana dispensary owners and their employees. Next year will it be massage parlor owners and their employees? After that, will it be auto body and mechanic shop owners and their employees? After that fast food joints that sell trans-fat cooked food, or sellers of sugary sodas over 16 ounces?

The ride down the slippery slope has started. Will anyone stand up for frowned upon, yet legitimate stakeholders? Or will it be you who is the next to be barred from voting in your neighborhood council because the powerful don’t like you or the group you associate with?

If you want to eliminate factual basis voters and candidates, fine. HOWEVER… you should also create new rules to protect legitimate voters from last minute “interpretations” by deputy city attorneys that disenfranchise legitimate stakeholders who are in opposition to their neighborhood council and City Councilperson… which is exactly what happened in Eagle Rock last October.

We citizens should not have to resort to expensive legal action to prevent this from happening next time. Please continue your work and correct this all-the-way.

Kudos! Eagle Rock Fire Company

LAFD Engine House 42 of Eagle Rock lent valuable assistance to the combined efforts of local fire departments as they quickly squashed a fire which could have been a major disaster for the homes of the San Rafael neighborhood of Pasadena, as well as threatening the Arroyo, one of our local treasures. Friday afternoon at about 12:45, as trees burned, a column of smoke rose like a beacon in the still afternoon air. Within minutes the sirens were screaming from Eagle Rock, Glendale, Pasadena and Verdugo Fire Departments. The one acre fire, behind 160 San Rafael Ave, the site where an historic Tudor Style mansion was destroyed by a devastating fire in 2005  (http://www.preservela.com/archives/000656.html ), and over looking the Arroyo, was quickly brought under control. It was officially extinguished at 1:21 pm, and the investigation was closed at 1:40 pm. No cause of the fire was made public as of this post. Kudos to our firefighters, thank you for keeping our homes (and  our casting pond and archery range) safe, and thank you for preserving the beauty and serenity of the Arroyo. 

Vons Reveals Its Plans

Vons Reveals Its Plans

Will Meet with Community Next Tuesday, April 30 at 6:00 PM

If you’ve ever shopped at the Vons in Eagle Rock, you know that (1) the parking lot is crazy, and (2) the building has been surrounded by empty lots for what seems like forever. Formerly the site of bungalows that were bulldozed years ago, and lately the province of construction fences and homeless encampments, the area is now finally being developed by Vons/Safeway.

Before the recession, Vons promised all kinds of wonderful developments, but now we’re getting something more pragmatic: a row of mini-mall-type stores attached to the main Vons building, and a couple of other stores at the “point” where La Loma meets Figueroa. (Plus a new parking lot.)

Vons is building everything “by right,” which means they are requesting no exceptions to city codes that the public can weigh in on — in other words, they don’t have to meet with the community. But due to the hard work of TERA, CD-14, the ERNC and the Chamber of Commerce — and the goodwill of Vons/Safeway — Vons reps are coming to the Center for the Arts in Eagle Rock to show us what they have in mind, and to listen to our suggestions. They’ve promised to work with us, especially on things that will make the development “more Eagle Rock” — from landscaping and design to traffic flow in and out of the development.

Please attend the meeting, welcome the folks from Vons, and let’s have a great discussion that will hopefully make this part of town something to be proud of! The Center for the Arts is at 2225 Colorado, and overflow parking is usually allowed in the Bank of America lot.

Boulevard Sentinel Outranks Eagle Rock Association Poll on Colorado Bike Lanes.

The NELA community has spoken regarding removing auto lanes to make way for bike lanes.

OVERWHELMING SUPPORT TO SAVE THE AUTO LANES!

Results so far:

568 people who voted or signed petitions regarding removing boulevard auto lanes to make way for bike lanes.
565 voted or signed to SAVE the boulevard lanes, about double the number the Eagle Rock Association recently bragged about collecting.
(They claimed victory for “281 respondents” HA!)
Here are some other interesting numbers:
275 out of 277 respondents who live in 90041 expressed their wishes to SAVE THE AUTO LANES.
143 of 146 who turned in ballots from April Boulevard Sentinel voted to SAVE THE AUTO LANES.
313 of 316 NELA residents expressed their desire to SAVE THE AUTO LANES on Colorado Blvd.
214 of NELA residents expressed their desire to SAVE THE AUTO LANES on North Figueroa St.

April Issue of Boulevard Sentinel is on the Street

Click Here for the Latest Print Edition of the Boulevard Sentinel
http://www.jejprint.com/blvdsentinel/

Jose Huizar: Give us a demonstration of removing auto lanes.

Open Letter to Councilman Huizar and LADOT

It appears the the bike lanes might just come to Colorado, but I have a small request.

As you have experienced DOT planners working on this, would you request they make a quick assessment on the feasibility of temporarily closing the one lane each way on Colorado Boulevard for a week, or possibly just 48 hours during the week so we all can see first hand what the impact would be?

The fears and protests of a large part of the community would be assuaged if they can see for themselves the impact on traffic before any permanent or semi-permanent changes are made.

It would be a great chance to prove that your forecasts  (the city, council office and consultants) are right as to what impact the bike lanes changes will actually have on Colorado Boulevard auto traffic.

Common sense dictates that if would not take many resources to send a truck load of cones, a dozen “lane closed” signs and a small crew of street services employees to show up at around 11 pm on a wednesday night, close the two lanes from Townsend to Eagle Rock Blvd. and then remove them a week or so later after the community gets a good demonstration of how good or bad it will be.

Thanks for your consideration.

$35,000 Grant to Digitize Old Eagle Rock and Highland Park Newspapers

Haynes Grant press release

Digitizing Local History

A $35,000 grant from the John Randolph Haynes and Dora Haynes Foundation to an innovative partnership between the Occidental College Library and two local historical societies will help preserve a unique historic resource: 20th-century newspapers of northeast Los Angeles.

Developing a plan to create a repository for more than a dozen community newspapers that chronicle local history is part of an ongoing collaboration between the Eagle Rock Valley Historical Society, the Highland Park Heritage Trust, and the Library to promote the preservation and awareness of local historical materials.

“For a century, the newspapers of Eagle Rock, Highland Park, Mt. Washington and other local communities chronicled a vibrant, culturally and socially diverse region of Los Angeles,” said Dale Stieber, Occidental’s special collections librarian/college archivist. “A repository for print, microfilm, and digitized issues of the papers make an important contribution to northeast L.A.’s historical identity by preserving a resource that isn’t available anywhere else and making it more accessible.”

Over the years, the Society and the Trust have played a leading role in preserving backfiles of newspapers like the Eagle Rock Sentinel and Highland Park News Herald. Joined by the Library in 2010, the partners have gathered, housed, and inventoried significant holdings in microfilm and physical copies of more than a dozen local papers from 1906 to 1996.

The grant will fund an archivist/project manager to lead the planning effort to preserve the papers and making them more accessible. The project includes the identification of missing publications and/or issues and the costs of making a representative number of issues available online through the statewide California Digital Newspaper Collection at UC Riverside (http://cdnc.ucr.edu/cdnc).

The grant also will make it possible for Library staff, Society and Trust members, Occidental students, and community members to develop a pilot project and then move forward to raise resources to sustain the repository and digitization program. The grant proposal was supported by city councilmembers Eric Garcetti, Jose Huizar, and Ed Reyes, whose districts include the newspapers’ old circulation areas.

The repository will provide an important new resource for K-12 students, local historians and genealogists, civic groups, and student and faculty scholars.  “The existing resources available from UCR have been instrumental in furthering our understanding of the early development of our community. We look forward to the revelations that a searchable database of our local papers will provide,” said Society president Eric Warren.

“This grant is a tribute to the partnership that has been developing over the last couple of years with the Society and the Trust to better preserve and document the history of Northeast Los Angeles,” said Bob Kieft, College Librarian. “Occidental grew up with this quadrant of the city, and the College Library is happy to be working with our neighbors on a variety of projects, of which this one is the largest to date.”

ERNC Bike Lane Vote April 2

ERNC Bike Lane Vote April 2

Last month, the ERNC heard a presentation from DOT engineers about proposed bike lanes on Colorado. But they didn’t take a vote on whether to support the project or not, mainly because the DOT and CD-14 were holding their big Colorado Bike Lane meeting on March 27, and they wanted more public input.

They’ll be at the March 27 meeting, and promise to listen to both the speakers and to the audience. On April 2, the ERNC will vote on whether to send a letter to DOT about the bike lanes, and what the content of that letter will be. The ERNC has no power to decide whether there will actually be bike lanes on Colorado, but the City listens to Neighborhood Councils on issues like this. If Eagle Rock wants bike lanes, then their letter could bump Colorado up the list of projects; and if the decide against them, then they can delay the project until DOT gets it right.

If you want to be heard on this issue, come to their April 2 meeting and fill out a speaker’s card. Or send them an email: info@eaglerockcouncil.org

TAKE BACK Colorado Boulevard from Cyclists

600 cyclists from all over the city have petitioned to take away our Boulevards and give them to cyclists. Click Here, and sign the petition to TAKE Back the Boulevards from Cyclists, and give them back to Northeast L.A. residents.

 

Is this the future of Northeast L.A.? Long lines of autos stacked up bumper to bumper right next to newly installed empty bike lanes?