Smith Spins Attack on NCs; Should Go Back to Sleep
"Those damn blogs! If it wasn't for those damn blogs I could sleep more in Clowncil meetings and bamboozle a whole lot more folks much easier!"
- Clowncilman Greig Smith
= SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT =
May 8, 2009
In Response to Recent Mischaracterizations About Neighborhood Council Funds
Dear Neighborhood Council Members and Friends:
Over the past few days, many emails and calls have come to my office full of emotion and, sometimes, misinformation regarding various proposals affecting Neighborhood Council funding.
Ironically, just last week (Friday, May 1) I communicated directly with every Neighborhood Council President in my District outlining my concerns for their unspent funds. I also offered some ways to protect these funds, and strongly voiced my support for the good work each Neighborhood Council in my District has been doing.
Despite some of the mischaracterizations that appeared in blogs and emails in recent days, I strongly support Neighborhood Councils and have overwhelmingly positive, close constructive working relationships with the Neighborhood Councils in my District. Members of our staff are in constant communication with all of our Neighborhood Councils, and they regularly attend the meetings of all of the Neighborhood Councils to ensure continuous communication between us.
I have seen a real effort made by the board members of these councils to be prudent with their funds and find useful projects that improve the quality of life in our community. These range from partnering with us and other Neighborhood Councils and community groups on community events, to beautification projects and clean-up events, to a collaborative District-wide emergency preparedness event.
We have worked very closely with Neighborhood Councils in our District on a great number of community improvement projects. One Neighborhood Council contributed funds to help us make a land acquisition to increase the size of Stoney Point Park and save a horse-keeping property from development.
Neighborhood Councils have used their funds to purchase signs that display the speed cars are driving to improve street safety. They have contributed money and sweat equity to countless neighborhood clean-ups, graffiti removal, and weed abatement projects that we have done together. We have worked together to find solutions and funding to clean up the half-completed projects and overgrown medians left behind when a local Business Improvement District dissolved.
One Neighborhood Council used its funds to stock a shipping container with emergency supplies, first aid materials, and food and place it in park property. They developed plans to make these emergency supplies available to the community in case of a large-scale disaster, and their project has been lauded across the City as a highly innovative and valuable use of Neighborhood Council funding.
They have also brought forward a number of great ideas that we have turned into legislation.
The Neighborhood Councils provide an essential advisory function and have used their funds to complete a great number of projects and activities that improve the quality of life in our community. These are valuable services and projects that the City doesn’t provide. They can and should continue to do these good works, but under the current conditions, they will have to make do with less money, at least temporarily.
As we grapple with a potentially devastating City budget, the financial choices the City Council has to make in approving the proposed budget are not easy. We must look both at the near and long-term impacts of decisions we make. We can't look at that quick fix to balance the budget today without considering the complicated and long-term impacts.
During the Budget Hearings of Tuesday, May 5, I entered the discussion only with respect to the proposal to eliminate the $1.5 million rollover of unspent Neighborhood Council funds, not the proposal to deeply cut their annual budgets.
I am not sure if councils can be funded at the full $45,000 per year as proposed in the Mayor’s budget. But I will work hard to find the best-case scenario to support the good efforts of our volunteer community members who serve on the advisory boards in my District.
The Daily News and the blogs would have you believe that eliminating jobs is preferable to reducing the funds that Neighborhood Councils have available for neighborhood projects. They are vilifying the very same people that provide the services that no one wants to see reduced. The great majority of City employees are regular, hard-working people who are supporting families and contributing to the economy.
None of these are easy decisions. We must strike a balance between preserving essential City services, preserving jobs, and preserving funds such as the Neighborhood Council funds. My position is to put more emphasis on preserving necessary City services – these are services that we can’t do without. They include hauling trash, maintaining streets and sidewalks and sewers, keeping parks and libraries open and preserving Police and Fire services.
I will continue to work to preserve as much of the Neighborhood Council funds as we can under the current crisis conditions. I will also work closely with each of the Neighborhood Councils in my District to find ways to support their projects and maintain positive, constructive relationships.
Council Member Grieg Smith
Related:
Greig Smith Hates Neighborhood Councils
- Clowncilman Greig Smith
= SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT =
May 8, 2009
In Response to Recent Mischaracterizations About Neighborhood Council Funds
Dear Neighborhood Council Members and Friends:
Over the past few days, many emails and calls have come to my office full of emotion and, sometimes, misinformation regarding various proposals affecting Neighborhood Council funding.
Ironically, just last week (Friday, May 1) I communicated directly with every Neighborhood Council President in my District outlining my concerns for their unspent funds. I also offered some ways to protect these funds, and strongly voiced my support for the good work each Neighborhood Council in my District has been doing.
Despite some of the mischaracterizations that appeared in blogs and emails in recent days, I strongly support Neighborhood Councils and have overwhelmingly positive, close constructive working relationships with the Neighborhood Councils in my District. Members of our staff are in constant communication with all of our Neighborhood Councils, and they regularly attend the meetings of all of the Neighborhood Councils to ensure continuous communication between us.
I have seen a real effort made by the board members of these councils to be prudent with their funds and find useful projects that improve the quality of life in our community. These range from partnering with us and other Neighborhood Councils and community groups on community events, to beautification projects and clean-up events, to a collaborative District-wide emergency preparedness event.
We have worked very closely with Neighborhood Councils in our District on a great number of community improvement projects. One Neighborhood Council contributed funds to help us make a land acquisition to increase the size of Stoney Point Park and save a horse-keeping property from development.
Neighborhood Councils have used their funds to purchase signs that display the speed cars are driving to improve street safety. They have contributed money and sweat equity to countless neighborhood clean-ups, graffiti removal, and weed abatement projects that we have done together. We have worked together to find solutions and funding to clean up the half-completed projects and overgrown medians left behind when a local Business Improvement District dissolved.
One Neighborhood Council used its funds to stock a shipping container with emergency supplies, first aid materials, and food and place it in park property. They developed plans to make these emergency supplies available to the community in case of a large-scale disaster, and their project has been lauded across the City as a highly innovative and valuable use of Neighborhood Council funding.
They have also brought forward a number of great ideas that we have turned into legislation.
The Neighborhood Councils provide an essential advisory function and have used their funds to complete a great number of projects and activities that improve the quality of life in our community. These are valuable services and projects that the City doesn’t provide. They can and should continue to do these good works, but under the current conditions, they will have to make do with less money, at least temporarily.
As we grapple with a potentially devastating City budget, the financial choices the City Council has to make in approving the proposed budget are not easy. We must look both at the near and long-term impacts of decisions we make. We can't look at that quick fix to balance the budget today without considering the complicated and long-term impacts.
During the Budget Hearings of Tuesday, May 5, I entered the discussion only with respect to the proposal to eliminate the $1.5 million rollover of unspent Neighborhood Council funds, not the proposal to deeply cut their annual budgets.
I am not sure if councils can be funded at the full $45,000 per year as proposed in the Mayor’s budget. But I will work hard to find the best-case scenario to support the good efforts of our volunteer community members who serve on the advisory boards in my District.
The Daily News and the blogs would have you believe that eliminating jobs is preferable to reducing the funds that Neighborhood Councils have available for neighborhood projects. They are vilifying the very same people that provide the services that no one wants to see reduced. The great majority of City employees are regular, hard-working people who are supporting families and contributing to the economy.
None of these are easy decisions. We must strike a balance between preserving essential City services, preserving jobs, and preserving funds such as the Neighborhood Council funds. My position is to put more emphasis on preserving necessary City services – these are services that we can’t do without. They include hauling trash, maintaining streets and sidewalks and sewers, keeping parks and libraries open and preserving Police and Fire services.
I will continue to work to preserve as much of the Neighborhood Council funds as we can under the current crisis conditions. I will also work closely with each of the Neighborhood Councils in my District to find ways to support their projects and maintain positive, constructive relationships.
Council Member Grieg Smith
Related:
Greig Smith Hates Neighborhood Councils
Labels: greig smith, neighborhood councils
21 Comments:
Anonymous said:
Insiders at City Hall are saying Antonio was so pissed you fucked up his Measure B plan that this is payback time. He wants to put all NC's in their place and make them go away. It's back firing and words like RECALL RECALL RECALL RECALL RECALL RECALL are being heard all over the city.
Anonymous said:
1-too long
2-nobody cares
3-u suck
Unknown said:
That's funny. That's not what I heard
on the Channel 35 broadcast of the B & F committee meeting. Looks like Mr. Smith is doing some serious backtracking.
Michael Higby said:
4:19 is______________.
Any guesses?
Anonymous said:
"Catnap" Smith?
Anonymous said:
419 is very observant, fatso.
Michael Higby said:
Let me help our wack-job reader so the rest of you guys can get back to commenting
screw you Higby
no one cares
you're fat
get back to work
put down the donut
Michael Higby said:
Whoever 419 is and his friend both have a lot of anger. One wonders what happened to them to cause so much anger in them.
alcoholism?
incest?
latent homosexuality?
curious.
Michael Higby said:
Indeed they may have the very same daddy issues that they accuse Sarah of.
Is your daddy dead or does he still diddle you?
Anonymous said:
Michael I think 4:19pm is commenting on Smith's long drawn out explanation not you.
Anonymous said:
Jellyroll are you hiccuping or something that you couldn't get your thoughts together in a single post? You must be burning to do it at 533, 535, and 536.
It wasn't me who tried to find love or daddy's respect in a footlong meatball sub and two bags of chips. It was the one who tips the scales at 300. The greasy, 45 year old blogger who writes to a woman he never met that he is cute. That was a good one. Made me laugh. You protest too MUNCH.
Anonymous said:
EXACTLY. Shit, Mayor Sam, you came unwound because you THOUGHT I was referring to you? You can really dish it out. At least ACT like you can take it. And try to learn that not every comment refers to you. That is ZD's territory. And why aren't you watching the dodgers or lakers?
Anonymous said:
Higby, please don't feed the trolls.
Anonymous said:
better that higby feed the trolls instead of feeding himself. he is definitely off the hook with his posting 3x like that. must be between bites
Anonymous said:
Everyone knock off the garbage, we have important business to take care of. All that bickering is useless and makes me sick!! Grow up!
Anonymous said:
No doubt those hater posts are from the Smith camp. Anyone who posts such immature, bully, mean spirited comments about Michael or his weight is an ashhole. Grow up and go play on someone else's blog you jerks.
We support you Michael and thank you for your work putting out information to us. There is going to be a huge revolt in city council on Tuesday.
Anonymous said:
higby's love-withholding daddy is 716am. you do not speak for WE. you speak only for yourself.
if higby can dish out the insults, he has to be able to take them. see higby's 525pm comments.
oh i forgot, the rules only apply to us, not him. right? WE do not support him. YOU do. If he doesn't want to publish comments, and play mister censor, he is free to do that. but he can't expect to put his views on the internet without people responding to him in kind. it might surprise him that all of these comments were not made by one person. i made two of them. some one else and maybe more than one other person agrees.
Anonymous said:
I am not certain it's Smith but maybe now it is. Most of the posts about Michael are from a former blogger who confessed it to me on a late night phone call whilst under the influence.
I would posit the posts about Zuma Dogg are by a former candidate. Care to hazard a guess? That one I don't have an official admission on but would not surprise me.
g said:
THE NEIGHBORHOOD COUNCILS AREN'T THAT GREAT OR CLEAN EITHER. THE STACKHOLDERS ARE THE ONES WHO NEED EMPOWERMENT AND INCLUSION NOT THESE COUNCILS WHO DON'T CARE ABOUT THERE COMMUNITY.
g said:
UNTIL THE STACKHOLDERS HAVE INPUT AND CONTROL OVER NEIGHBORHOOD COUNCIL VOTES AND POLICIES. I FOR ONE WON'T WORRY TOO MUCH ABOUT WHAT HAPPENS TOO THEM. WE NEED COMMUNITY CONTROL AND INVOLVEMENT NOT THIS EXCUSE FOR EMPOWERMENT. THESE COUNCILS HAVE A RECORD OF CORRUPTION THEMSELVES. WE NEED INDIVIDUAL VOICE AND VOICES TO HAVE REAL DEMOCRACY. THE ONLY GOOD THING THEY DO IS HAVE MEETINGS WE NEED TO PUT THE LAW AND THE GOVERNMENT IN THE POSITION WHERE OUR OPINION MATTERS. BY VOTE OR PROXY. WE WILL ALWAYS HAVE TO FIGHT DEVELOPMENT, RATE INCREASES, PAY RAISES, CUTS IN POLICE AND FIRE AND LOSS OF SERVICES TIL WE CHIP AWAY AT THIS POWER BASE. PEOPLE WILL HAVE INCENTIVE TO BE INVOLVED WHEN THEY BEGIN TO HAVE CONTROL OVER THIS SYSTEM. IT'S NOT A DREAM AND COULD BE A REALITY. THE NET AND MEDIA COULD BE USED TO START THIS FIGHT. AS FAR AS THE MEDIA: LAWS COULD BE CHANGED TO REQUIRE FREE AIRTIME TO CANDIDATES AND ISSUES SO PEOPLE GET A MORE FAIR COMMUNICATION. THE SEEDS ARE THERE LETS USE THEM.
Anonymous said:
The LACK of leadership from the mayor and City Council who have created this budget deficit with their wasteful spending, pet projects and funneling money to non profits organizations, $24 million of taxpayers, general fund, money toward gang prevention/intervention, non profit, organizations, which retired L.A. County Sergeant Valdemar and gang specialist says it will not work and assists gang members in furthering their organized crime.
With their fiscal responsibility attitude, the mayor and City Council have raised Angelenos trash fees, phone tax, DWP rates, and parking meter fees. These increases do not include L.A. County and State voter approved ballot measures or recent sales tax increases. Also, the mayor implemented the TIGER TEAM enforcement, where 37,000 citations had been issued and 13,000 cars towed since the inception of the TIGER TEAM. The cost for each citation is $140.00 that generated over $5 million dollars as of September 2008. The city receives a towing fee from the 13,000 cars towed, not included in the $5 million.
Where is the fiscal prudence from the mayor or City Council? The mayor should NOT allocate any slush funds, $1,500,000.00 or $100,000.00 per Council district, until the mayor and City Council disclose all their wasteful spending. Yet, the Budget Chair, Council member Bernard Parks, and Council member Greg Smith are placing the lack of fiscal prudence on the backs of the 89 neighborhood councils.
Will LA’s Gang Be Redeemed with $24million Mayor’s Plan
http://www.youtube.com/FullDisclosureNetwrk
Let’s hope the youtube link does not disappear from website.
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