Whistleblower hotline: (213) 785-6098
mayorsam@mayorsam.org

Monday, August 22, 2005

Open Thread - Happy Monday

A quote From Office Space: "Let me ask you something. When you come in on Monday, and you're not feelin' real well, does anyone ever say to you, 'Sounds like someone has a case of the Mondays'?"

We'll soon find out. Blog Away!

17 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said:

CITY HALL WHODUNIT
MAYOR, COUNCIL GO AWOL RATHER THEN EXPLAIN DWP UNION'S SWEETHEART DEAL...When the going gets tough, the tough get going. That's what the mayor and City Council did last week when they went on vacation without answering the hard questions about who is responsible for cutting a sweetheart deal with Department of Water and Power workers that could dash hopes for a better Los Angeles.

August 22, 2005 9:32 AM  

Anonymous Anonymous said:

Don't forget ... we're putting covers on all the TPS reports.

August 22, 2005 10:02 AM  

Anonymous Anonymous said:

Did you get the memo?

August 22, 2005 10:14 AM  

Anonymous Anonymous said:

Have you seen my stapler?

August 22, 2005 10:17 AM  

Anonymous Anonymous said:

Win or Lose in Next Race, Delgadillo Fixes on Future
L.A.'s city attorney will face Jerry Brown for attorney general next year, but his eyes may be on a bigger prize.
By Michael Finnegan
Times Staff Writer

August 22, 2005

Los Angeles City Atty. Rocky Delgadillo is a man of ambition. His top aide has suggested that Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois would make a fine running mate when Delgadillo runs for president. "Team 1600" — as in Pennsylvania Avenue — has taken hold as a nickname for Delgadillo's political advisors. City Hall wisecrackers have hummed "Hail to the Chief" as Delgadillo walked by.

His low-profile job offers scant hope of vaulting Delgadillo straight to the White House. But the 45-year-old Democrat is plotting his political ascent, starting with the June primary for state attorney general that pits him against one of California's best-known politicians, former Gov. Jerry Brown.

Delgadillo, a former deputy mayor, Century City entertainment lawyer and Harvard University football defensive back, has sized up the Brown family legacy, which spans nearly eight decades of California politics. His conclusion: "Political dynasties seem to be fading away."

"I want to thank Jerry Brown for his years of service, but I think that the future beckons," Delgadillo said of his 67-year-old rival.

If the Democratic race indeed shapes up as a contest between California's past and its future, as Delgadillo hopes, oddsmakers are betting on the past.

"You'd have to say, starting out, that Rocky Delgadillo is probably at a disadvantage," said Jack Citrin, a political science professor at UC Berkeley.

Brown's celebrity offers the ex-governor an edge, along with his strength among liberal voters who dominate Democratic primaries. Delgadillo, a stranger to most Californians outside the Los Angeles area, must spend millions on TV ads to compete seriously with Brown. A newcomer to statewide politics, Delgadillo is also facing one of California's most seasoned candidates. Brown, who is now Oakland's mayor, ran three times for president, once for the U.S. Senate, twice for governor and once for secretary of state.

In an interview, Brown dismissed Delgadillo's future-vs.-the-past theme as "vacuous" and "grandiose."

"You have to have some parameters to that claim, or it's pretty empty," Brown said. "You could put that on a bumper sticker, but you couldn't run the attorney general's office based on a bumper sticker."

Yet although Delgadillo's campaign may be a long shot, analysts see him as a strong contender for higher office and say there is good reason not to write off his candidacy.

He is relatively well known in the state's most populous region, his Mexican American heritage carries appeal among Latinos statewide, and his job title "sounds pretty good" to voters, said Democratic strategist Darry Sragow, who is unaligned in the race.

"He has to be taken seriously by Jerry Brown for sure," Sragow said.

Brown faces his own challenges. Some voters — particularly in a general election — could hold misgivings about putting a liberal maverick such as Brown in the state's top law-enforcement job. Brown's recent marriage, his first, and his crime-fighting in Oakland have remade his image a bit. But veteran Republican consultant Ken Khachigian said the loft-dwelling mayor still suffers from a "flaky" reputation and a "squishy" record on court appointments, most memorably Rose Bird, the Supreme Court chief justice ousted by voters in 1986.

"Among the old generation, I think he's got some serious baggage," said Khachigian, a strategist for Republican attorney general hopeful Chuck Poochigian, a Fresno state senator.

Although Brown's political life is part of California lore — the blue Plymouth, a relationship with Linda Ronstadt, his work with Mother Teresa to serve the poor in Calcutta — he is less familiar to the state's newer voters, many of them Latino.

Nonetheless, the broad consensus is that the campaign is Brown's to lose. At the end of June, he was more than $1 million ahead of Delgadillo in the race for money. Brown reported $2.4 million in the bank; Delgadillo had $1.3 million.

To build support among political insiders, Delgadillo has quietly dashed around the state since his reelection in March as city attorney, his first elected office. He has taken trips to San Francisco, Sacramento, San Jose, Monterey, San Diego, Palm Springs, the Inland Empire and Orange County.

In Los Angeles, Delgadillo has tried to raise his public profile, most recently by spotlighting his legal steps against gang violence. The Los Angeles Police Protective League and the California Assn. of Highway Patrolmen are backing his campaign.

Delgadillo has stressed consumer protection and environmental cases — large facets of the attorney general's job. His latest targets of choice: towing companies that swindle motorists and slumlords who flout lead-paint and vermin laws.

In some areas, Delgadillo has won over critics. His stationing of "neighborhood prosecutors" at police stations around the city has been popular. His negotiating skills are also widely praised. He touts a sharp drop in city liability payments on his watch. Payouts in cases stemming from the Rampart police corruption scandal so far have fallen well short of the initial $125-million projection.

Yet there are bumps in Delgadillo's record. More than a dozen top lawyers and press advisors have resigned amid widespread grumbling that buffing his image has become a central goal of the city attorney's office. The agency employs more than 500 lawyers, many of them responsible for such uncelebrated work as drunk driving and speeding ticket cases with no political bang.

The style-over-substance charge surfaced at a recent Delgadillo news conference at a South Los Angeles police station. With 10 television crews taping the event for local news shows, Delgadillo pledged to crack down on gun violence by sending letters to anyone who buys a gun in parts of the San Fernando Valley and South L.A. The letters will remind each gun buyer to get a criminal background check on anyone who later seeks to buy the weapon secondhand.

Some community leaders invited to the event — billed as "taking guns off the street" — were baffled by what they saw as its insignificance. "This wasn't worth my time," said Ruby Maillian, who serves on the local precinct's community advisory board.

Bishop Edward Turner, pastor of the nearby Power of Love Christian Fellowship church, called the event "as worthwhile as a grain of salt."

"You don't fix the problem by having lights, cameras and action, and you're smiling and waving at the camera," he said. "We have children dying in the street. This is a war zone."

Delgadillo said the letters to gun owners — signed by him, state Atty. Gen. Bill Lockyer and Los Angeles Police Chief William J. Bratton — were part of a useful "marketing program" to keep criminals from acquiring guns.

In a separate interview, Delgadillo denied ignoring the unglamorous side of his job. He brushed off the resignations from his office, saying it was natural that longtime employees were upset by changes that he made after 16 years under Jim Hahn, his predecessor as city attorney.

"You're changing a whole culture, and to do that, it's not comfortable," Delgadillo said. "But I can tell you it's good."

Potentially troublesome for Delgadillo's campaign is his sparring with Controller Laura Chick, who chose none other than Jerry Brown to swear her in for a second term at Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa's inauguration.

"That wasn't lost on anybody," said Julie Butcher, who heads the union local for much of the city attorney's workforce. "It was kind of a slap in the face."

Chick, whose pursuit of contracting misdeeds dogged Hahn in his failed run for a second mayoral term, has sought to audit Delgadillo's hiring of outside law firms, including many campaign donors. Delgadillo irked Chick by resisting a comprehensive review, saying it was barred by the City Charter. State auditors, prompted by Chick, have taken over the audit.

In framing his campaign, Delgadillo — whose given name is Rockard — describes himself as someone who beats the odds, starting with his admission to Harvard after growing up in the Highland Park area of northeast Los Angeles.

"A lot of the kids I grew up with didn't make it, and I was lucky," said Delgadillo, who now lives in Windsor Village with his wife, Michelle, and their two sons, Christian, 4, and Preston, 1.

After earning a law degree at Columbia University, Delgadillo went to work in the Century City entertainment unit of O'Melveny & Myers, where he handled legal matters for Burt Reynolds, Morgan Fairchild and Shirley Temple.

In one case, he assisted in Temple's fight to stop bottlers from marketing a version of the drink that is named after her.

Former Secretary of State Warren Christopher, a senior partner at the firm, became a mentor. Christopher, who swore in Delgadillo for his second term, co-chairs Delgadillo's campaign for attorney general.

At Christopher's urging, Delgadillo left the firm after the 1992 riots, triggered by the acquittal of four LAPD officers in the Rodney King beating, to oversee business development at Rebuild L.A., the organization set up to marshal the city's recovery.

Mayor Richard Riordan later hired Delgadillo as deputy mayor in charge of economic development. Riordan, who also backs Delgadillo for attorney general, described him as a charismatic leader who has turned the city attorney's office into "a very professional operation."

"I must admit, at first I wasn't overly impressed with him, but he kept growing and growing and growing," Riordan said.

Delgadillo hopes his come-from-behind victory in the 2001 race for city attorney over the favorite, City Councilman Mike Feuer, will serve as a template for his race against Brown.

Even if Delgadillo loses, the media exposure could prove valuable in his next campaign, since Brown's candidacy is apt to put spark into a race that could otherwise be lost in the shadow of the gubernatorial contest. (Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger is weighing whether to seek a second term.)

"I don't see what you have to lose here, politically," said Mark Petracca, who heads the political science department at UC Irvine. "Because even if you lose, you win."

August 22, 2005 10:22 AM  

Anonymous Anonymous said:

When is the state suppose to release its audit of Rocky's contracts????

August 22, 2005 10:38 AM  

Anonymous Anonymous said:

Hey Mayor Frank, tell Chief Faker "Happy Monday" too.

It's the start of a new Start of a new week what's it gonna be, Faker Full Disclosure, or the same kind of ongoing BS that PROVES to the blogosphere from here on out that ALL your blog topics are partisan SHINOLA (like you know the difference).

How about you meet the enquiring minds HALF WAY (that's in line with your idol Antonio's way of "reaching consensus"), supposedly. Just cough up your diligent, multi-promised research from last April/May on HALF of the 100+ neighborhood watches you said you uncovered, apart from AV's handlers spin cycles. Make it an even 50 (that should also cover HALF of AV's fake "80.")

That should make it SO easy, and since someone on the blog posted the ID and meeting locations for the (one) neighborhood watch organization in each of the largest communities of CD14 under Northeast Division (Eagle Rock and Highland Park -- WOW, imagine, one-third of the population of CD14 covered by TWO pre-existing watches), then you can just focus on Hollenbeck division -- that gives you another "break."

Go for it -- it's your last chance to reclaim some minute portion of credibility here, as anything other than an AV shill. AND, I hear CAPTAIN FIERRO really wants to know, too. (He thinks maybe some of his SLOs are slackers, and missing dozens of critical neighborhood watch meetings each month).

So, STOP trying to shoot the messenger that isn't even there. Robert U. don't care about the "80 neighborhood watches" AV lied about and you covered for -- he ain't busting his chops to get Hertzberg in anymore, and the "big 80" means nothing to THIS CD14 race. I'm pretty sure BIG BAD John Edwards don't care either, and we KNOW Hacopian don't give a flying fig. Even your so-called "ethically challenged" least favorite candidate, Pacheco, know that your huge ethical lapse in telling whoppers to cover for AV's lack of accomplishments is OLD news so far as who wins in November. That was the BIG LIE from the last election, and Nick wasn't event a candidate then.

NAH, this is ALL just about whether the blog readers here should have ANY reason to think you know anything at all that's TRUE in L.A. politics -- or if you're still just pulling spin out of Skelton's backside. We KNOW you got an ego, even an anonymous one. . .

Your silly dodge about these publicly recognized organizations needing to be "top secret" gave up the ghost the week you suggested it, so that's out for continuing cover from other blog celebs here. The "no one cares" OBVIOUSLY isn't true since this is following you to EVERY thread.

Time to come clean. . .

AND, whatever you do, if you DO try and salvage this somehow, don't try and ID individual block captains in El Sereno or Boyle Heights as each being a WHOLE "neighborhood watch ORGANIZATION" themselves. All the campaign spin last Spring was very clear... "organizations" and that DON'T mean one person watching from the attic window and calling the cops, after attending some startup meeting with a 3rd level AV staffer (unfortunately, that's where Parke got the fake numbers to begin with).

August 22, 2005 11:29 AM  

Anonymous Anonymous said:

I am a Republican, but listen here Mayor Sam with a politician as Obama----I will change my party ticket today.

He is awesome!

August 22, 2005 11:32 AM  

Anonymous Anonymous said:

Now the real debate can begin
Assembly Speaker Fabian Nunez chose instead to impugn the integrity of the court by calling its ruling a “political decision.” He compared Chief Justice Ronald George and his colleagues to the U.S. Supreme Court justices who ended the recounting of votes in the disputed Florida 2000 presidential election — about the lowest slur a Democratic officeholder can hurl at a judge.

“It shows why a small group of unaccountable, politically appointed judges should not be given the sole power to determine who represents Californians,” Nunez said.

August 22, 2005 12:03 PM  

Anonymous Anonymous said:

Fabian Nunez es BASURA, BASTARDO, NARCOTRAFICANTE DE GENTE y IDEAS COMUNISTAS

August 22, 2005 12:05 PM  

Anonymous Anonymous said:

Mayor favors Westsiders for L.A. commissions
Review finds that almost a third of Mayor Villaraigosa's commission and board appointees reside in two well-to-do districts.
By David Zahniser
Copley News Service

Los Angeles' two affluent Westside council districts -- including one that runs from Los Angeles International Airport to Pacific Palisades -- have become fertile ground for Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa as he looks to fill the city's boards and commissions.

Twenty-three of the mayor's 71 commission nominees -- or nearly one out of every three selected by Villaraigosa so far -- have come from the two City Council districts that take in Westchester, West Los Angeles and the canyons above Beverly Hills.

http://www.dailybreeze.com/news/articles/1786202.html

August 22, 2005 12:06 PM  

Anonymous Anonymous said:

The Los Angeles Unified School Board voted unanimously Tuesday to oppose the
state's requirement that students pass an exit exam before graduating from
high school, a move that some educators hope will influence the state to
postpone or drop the test.

"We should be working with the State Board of Education so that this whole
thing gets stopped," said board member Genethia Hudley-Hayes, who
co-sponsored the motion with board member Jose Huizar.

"If we use the California Exit Exam to determine whether or not a student
receives a diploma, and yet we're not giving youngsters what they need to
pass, then we're holding students accountable for something that we're not
holding the institution accountable for," she said.

More than 100,000 teenagers have failed the California High School Exit Exam
at least twice and must retake it.

Students across the state have held rallies and protests in recent months to
urge to state to delay or drop the graduation requirement, which takes

August 22, 2005 12:14 PM  

Anonymous Anonymous said:

Alumni group pushes right
New association hopes to air conservative voice in guiding UCLA’s direction
http://www.dailybruin.ucla.edu/news/articles.asp?id=34052

August 22, 2005 3:03 PM  

Anonymous Anonymous said:

Huizar I live in District 14, will you work hard to put a bookstore (Borders)in the area? We do not have a bookstore locally, we have to go out to Pasadena to buy a book, what's up with that?

Are there bookstores in Highland Park, EagleRock, Mt. Washington, Boyle Heights, and I mean big named companies not little mom and pop ones.

August 22, 2005 3:46 PM  

Anonymous Anonymous said:

cyberlady is the skimply dressed, overly made up woman who works in the CLA's office.

August 22, 2005 6:35 PM  

Anonymous Anonymous said:

3:46 -- why are you so insistent that Borders or Barnes & Noble invade your neighborhood? I don't live in CD 14, but I'd be willing to bet that there are bookstores in Highland Park, Eagle Rock, Mt. Washington, and Boyle Heights...perfectly good "mom and pop" ones where you can find interesting books to read. It's important to support your local businesses because the money you spend at them gets reinvested in the community...not added to the profit margin of some national corporation that isn't even based in L.A.

By driving to chain bookstores in Pasadena while ignoring the "mom and pop" ones in your own community, you are doing more harm than good. If you feel the need to ask your next Councilperson to push hard for Borders or Barnes & Noble, will you also push hard for a Wal-Mart Supercenter? I doubt it.

I'm sure there are many more pressing needs for your next Councilperson to pursue than bringing in predatory retail chains that will hurt local businesses. A lack of chain stores does not really hurt your community...think about it.

August 22, 2005 7:24 PM  

Anonymous Anonymous said:

6:35 PM
How did you know? I also have two heads, three legs and 30 fingers. Amazing.

August 22, 2005 9:34 PM  

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home

Advertisement

Advertisement