‘Tis the season for flu shots

October 20, 2011

Flu season has officially begun in Los Angeles County, and the county’s Department of Public Health is urging that you get vaccinated as soon as possible.

Four cases have already been treated for strains covered by this year’s vaccine, all from West Los Angeles and the San Fernando Valley. These officially mark the start of a flu season that is likely to last until May. says public health director Dr. Jonathan E. Fielding.

“Even healthy people can get very sick from the flu and spread it to others,” he says, recommending that everyone six months of age or older receive a flu vaccine every year.

Fielding urges residents to contact their doctors for a vaccine. Alternatively, low-cost vaccines also are available throughout the county at supermarkets and pharmacies. (Click here and then look for the blue “Flu Care” box along the right margin.)

Starting next week, the county also will offer free vaccines to people who do not have health insurance. Click here to search for a county flu clinic by ZIP Code and click here for a list of upcoming flu clinics throughout the county, or call the county Information Line at 2-1-1. And for a lot more information, click here.

Posted 10/20/11

Oct. 24 is Food Day—Bon Appetit!

October 20, 2011

The sustainability movement has been around for some time now, but on October 24, it will reach a new milestone—its own holiday.

On Monday, America will celebrate the first annual Food Day with a cornucopia of events across the country intended to raise awareness of the importance of safe, affordable and healthy food, produced responsibly.

Sponsored by the Center for Science in the Public Interest with no corporate or governmental funding, the event is modeled on Earth Day, and is being guided by an advisory board that includes Los Angeles County Director of Public Health Jonathan E. Fielding, restaurateur Alice Waters, author Michael Pollan, preventive medicine expert Dr. Dean Ornish and a number of other esteemed activists, politicians and physicians.

L.A.-area events range from a weekend fruit pick in Granada Hills and a Westwood screening sponsored by the UCLA Maternal and Child Nutrition Leadership Training Program to a fundraising luncheon in Downtown Los Angeles sponsored by the California Center for Public Health Advocacy.

Click here for a more complete listing of Food Day events in Southern California and here for some great ideas for getting involved in the celebration.

And if you just want to celebrate with some delicious and healthy meals courtesy of celebrity chefs from around the country, click here for some great Food Day recipes.

Posted 10/20/11

 

New program keeps junked boats at bay

October 20, 2011

As the economy flounders, a new Los Angeles County program will soon be sending a message to boaters: Please don’t abandon ship.

Abandoned boats have become a vexing problem in the past several years as owners unable to sell or maintain their vessels give up and walk away from them, sinking them in local harbors, ignoring them until they break from their moorings or allowing them to rot in their slips.

“People get into boating thinking it’s going to be inexpensive,” says Deputy Bryan White of the Los Angeles County Sheriff Department’s marine operations division. “But nothing about boating is inexpensive.”

And abandoning a boat just passes on the costs to the public at large.

“We have to move it out of harm’s way so that it’s not a public nuisance, then we have to store it, then we have to go through a long process to find the owner and do a lien sale auction if the owner doesn’t’ show up,” says county Director of Beaches and Harbors Santos H. Kreimann.

If the boat has been sunk, as many are—usually after being stripped of identification—there’s the cost of retrieval and environmental mitigation. Most of the time, he says, the boats are in such bad shape by the time they’re found that they’re simply stripped and crushed, again at public expense.

Meanwhile, each boat represents four to six months or more of work for public employees. The typical abandoned boat costs taxpayers about $5,000 in staff work and another $2,000 to process the lien sale, Kreimann says.

“It’s become a worsening problem,” he says. Last year, according to the Sheriff’s Department, the county disposed of 24 abandoned boats that had been left in the marina, sunk in local waters or allowed to wash up on county beaches, but authorities expect that number to rise to 30 or more this year.

For some time, the county has underwritten the cost of the problem with grants from a state fund earmarked for the abatement of abandoned recreational watercraft. This year, however, the county is also tapping into a second state program to encourage owners to voluntarily turn in their vessels before they reach the point of abandonment.

The pilot Vessel Turn-In Program, or “VTIP”, allows owners to surrender unwanted boats without any penalty if they’re thinking of walking away, says Denise Peterson, boating law enforcement manager for the state Department of Boating and Waterways, which administers both programs.

The idea, she says, is to save money on the boat disposal by retrieving more boats from slips, rather than from underwater or public beaches, where the retrieval and storage can be up to ten times more costly and much more complex.

“The marinas usually know who’s delinquent on slip fees, or soon-to-be delinquent,” she says. “This program allows them to reach out to these owners and say, ‘Don’t worry, you’re free and clear, let us take care of it. It saves a lot in administrative costs.”

This week, the Board of Supervisors approved a $1,700 county match requirement for a $17,000 grant that will allow Los Angeles County to launch a VTIP program this year. A second vote enabled the county to access some $50,000 in state funds for the disposal of at least ten boats that have already been abandoned, a substantial increase from the county’s state grant last year.

White, who administers the abandoned watercraft grants out of the sheriff’s Marina Del Rey station, says the department plans to contact dock masters to “to see who’s in distress and trying to get rid of their boats”.

Members of the public who are considering boat abandonment also are invited to contact the department about the program at (310) 482-6033.

Posted 10/20/11

Clean beach, clear mind

October 20, 2011

Want to start the weekend on a positive note? Join a beach cleanup in Venice and you’ll be rewarded—not only with the satisfaction of environmental stewardship but with free yoga and tai chi lessons, too.

The lessons will be provided by Heal One World, a nonprofit group that offers non-traditional and preventative healthcare at low or no cost. For this cleanup the organization will team up with Heal the Bay, which will handle the beach clean-up logistics, and Venice Family Clinic, which partners with Heal One World in providing health services.

If you want to participate, show up at the Rose Avenue entrance to Venice Beach this Saturday, October 22, at 9 a.m., and register for the clean-up. Bags and gloves will be provided, but you can help cut down on waste by bringing your own gloves, and a bag or bucket from home. In addition, you should bring a yoga mat, appropriate clothing and ample drinking water. The yoga and tai chi instruction begins at 10 a.m.

Posted 10/20/1

Experts onboard with Westside Subway

October 19, 2011

A key stretch of the Westside Subway could safely be built under the Beverly Hills High School campus, a high-profile panel of experts told a Metro committee Wednesday after reviewing the results of extensive testing for earthquake hazards, vibration and noise, subterranean methane gas and abandoned oil wells.

On all counts, the experts said, subway tunneling under the school could be accomplished without endangering students or others, without undermining the school’s role as an emergency evacuation center and without interfering with plans to one day remodel the campus to include an underground parking garage or other buildings.

Significantly, the experts also concluded that it would be dangerous to build the Century City subway station on Santa Monica Boulevard, one of two locations under consideration, because of the presence of two active earthquake faults, one running parallel to Santa Monica Boulevard. The other potential Century City station site—at Constellation Boulevard and Avenue of the Stars—is not on an active fault and thus remains a viable option for a station, the experts said.

The experts’ testimony before the Metro board’s Planning and Programming Committee could play a pivotal role in the subway’s planning. While the committee members took no positions Wednesday on what they heard during the briefing, the question of where to place the Century City station has been a matter of heated debate, with many in Beverly Hills vigorously opposing the Constellation station because the route to get there would pass under their city’s high school campus.

Those testifying included not just experts from project’s tunneling advisory panel but also members of a specially-convened group of prominent independent reviewers brought in to assess the soundness of the research.

One of the independent experts, seismologist Lucy Jones of the U.S. Geological Survey and Caltech, said her group “completely agreed with” the conclusion that “the Santa Monica Boulevard station sites would be dangerous to build on.”

At the same time, she emphasized that it is possible to safely to build tunnels through earthquake zones by having the tunnels cross the faults at a sharply perpendicular angle. That would be the case in the route involving the Constellation station.

“To build a subway in Los Angeles, you can’t avoid earthquakes,” Jones said. “They’re going to be here. And you cannot avoid faults. You can, however, build effectively around faults and it’s been done in a lot of locations: in Los Angeles, in San Francisco, Mexico City…What you’ve got to try to do is to put your tunnels at a high angle, close to perpendicular to the faults, and avoid ever putting a station in a fault.”

Also testifying was consulting earthquake geologist James Dolan, a professor of earth sciences at USC who is among the project’s fault experts. (For a full list of the experts, click here; their full reports are now posted here, along with a letter on their findings.)

Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky, a member of the Metro committee, said bringing in an independent expert peer review panel made up of “people that the public knows and recognizes” was important and, “given the rhetoric that’s been freely flowing out of Beverly Hills,” could help alleviate concerns about the impartiality of the scientific research.

And he stressed the significance of what’s at stake.

“This has to be a decision, when we make it, that has to be based on science and facts, not based on what we feel or think based on our gut,” Yaroslavsky said. “This is a very expensive decision that we’re going to make. It’s a profound decision both in terms of planning and in terms of finances. If we build a station in the wrong place and three months after we build the station we have an earthquake and the station is destroyed and people are killed, we have an issue.”

Beverly Hills Mayor Barry Brucker attended the committee meeting and said afterward that he found the presentation impressive. Still, he said it is important to have the city’s own experts review the scientific reports, particularly when it comes to the finding of no active faults at the Constellation Boulevard site.

“I’m not skeptical of the science but we are going to have our consultants get all that data,” Brucker said. “It’s just good prudent governance to have a second independent peer review that we commission.”

In a statement, Beverly Hills Unified School District president Lisa Korbatov said Metro had opened a “veritable Pandora’s box” with the seismic data presentation, and said the agency had held on to the data for too long without sharing it with the public.

Metro CEO Art Leahy responded with his own statement Thursday morning, saying that key information was made public soon after it was first analyzed. “Within just the past few months,” Leahy said, “our technical experts have located precisely long-suspected fault features. Their work was reviewed and confirmed yesterday by independent reviewers I engaged six weeks ago.”

Supervisor Michael D. Antonovich, also a member of the Metro committee, asked during the meeting how much the experts were being paid. Metro officials said they were unable to immediately provide the figure but said it was part of the project’s overall budget. After the meeting, Jones said that, as a U.S. government employee, she was not being compensated for her work but was doing it as part of her job.

The Metro board last year approved the subway project’s draft environmental impact statement/report, with a proposed route that included the two possible locations for the subway’s Century City station.

At the same time, the board approved a motion by Yaroslavsky calling for a thorough review of all the potential risks around the high school and throughout West Beverly Hills, Century City and Westwood.

Wednesday’s oral report to the board committee represents the first public accounting of what the experts found. Their assessment will be included in the project’s final environmental impact statement/report, expected to be released this winter.

After a final round of public comments, Metro’s board is expected to vote on the project early next year. As currently envisioned, the Westside Subway would be a 9-mile extension of Metro’s Purple Line, with seven new stations ending at the Westwood V.A. Hospital.

Some construction could begin as early as 2013.  If completed by 2022, the project could cost an estimated $5.3 billion. Funding will come in part from Measure R, the ½-cent sales tax approved by county voters in 2008, but federal money will also be required.

Here, based on testimony and executive summaries posted Wednesday, are some of the experts’ conclusions:

There is “no reasonable tunnel alignment” that could avoid passing under any structures on the Beverly Hills High School campus. (A presentation during the meeting showed that the tunnel would only run under Building B of the high school’s south wing, not the gym/pool building.) The depth of the tunnel—55 to 70 feet below the surface—would allow space for a future structure such as an underground parking lot to be built above it, the summary said.

Vibration from subway trains traveling under the campus would be 64 decibels or less—below the federal threshold of 72 to 75 decibels. The noise level would be no greater than 33 decibels, less than the federal standard of 35-40 decibels.

Advances in tunneling—notably through the use of pressurized closed-face tunnel boring machines—will minimize the risk of ground settlement during the project and were successfully used in building the Metro Gold Line’s Eastside Extension, the summary said.

Tunnels would be built to “maximum design earthquake” standards using the closed-face tunnel boring machines and special water-tight and gas-tight liners.  “Since the tunnels will be designed to not collapse during an earthquake, the tunnels will affect neither the threat to buildings above active faults during an earthquake nor the severity of the shaking,” the executive summary said. Thus, there would be no effect on the high school’s role as an emergency evacuation center.

As for abandoned oil wells on the campus, magnetic testing found “one anomaly” on the west edge of the school’s lacrosse field that may or may not be the metal casing from an abandoned well. Hi-tech advance testing would enable construction to safely work around the obstruction if it turns out to be an inactive well, the report said. It also noted that an abandoned oil well that appears on maps of the area is located under a parking structure on Century Park East, not under the high school.

Almost the entire project is located within the city of Los Angeles’ “methane zone,” and testing for methane and hydrogen sulfide gas around Constellation Boulevard found concentrations that “could be explosive under unfavorable conditions.”

However, advances in machinery, technology and regulation—and decades of tunneling industry experience—have made it possible to tunnel safely through gassy ground. The report also noted that higher levels had been found, and successfully overcome, during construction of the Red Line in downtown Los Angeles.

Overall, the summary said, “The project is not expected to pose new threats to the students, faculty or community as a result of its construction and operation.”

Posted 10/19/11

Want an early Halloween scare? Go fish

October 17, 2011

Halloween and Dia de los Muertos start a bit early at the Santa Monica Pier Aquarium, where something fishy will be going on this weekend.

The Fishy Fest combines spooky entertainment and conservation-minded education. There will be a marine animal graveyard, Dia de los Muertos crafts and altars, face painting and more. Learn about bioluminescence (light production by living creatures) from marine experts, or take a look at parasites of the sea with “Invasion of the Body Snatchers.” If you’re there at 3:30 p.m. Sunday, you’ll be able to catch the always-popular shark feeding.

Regular aquarium exhibits also will be open for the event. There are tanks with live specimens to feel and observe, presentations by naturalists and displays containing more than 100 different marine species. The aquarium performs public education for the local conservation group Heal the Bay.

The Fishy Fest will take place from 12:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. this Saturday and Sunday, October 22 and 23. The Aquarium is located at the beach level of the Santa Monica Pier, 1600 Ocean Front Walk. Children under 13 are free with an adult, and all others are admitted for a suggested donation of $5, or a $3 minimum entry fee. Costumes are welcome and encouraged, so put on your axe-wielding octopus outfit and get in the, er, swim of things.

Posted 10/17/11

Surfing with the stars

October 14, 2011

Channel surfers, here’s your chance to see some real action in the Santa Monica Bay.

Stars and surfers will paddle out this weekend for the Fourth Annual SOS (Save Our Surf) Celebrity Surfathon. Twelve teams of 24 surfers will take turns riding waves, with a goal of raising money for Santa Monica Baykeeper, Waves for Water, Inside the Outdoors and Tumelo Home. Teams and individuals that raise the most money win prizes.

Celebrities listed as attending include John Slattery (Mad Men), Jesse Spencer (House), Galen Gering (Days of Our Lives) and Kathy Zuckerman (Gidget). They will join pro surfing notables including Jon Rose, Mary Osborne, Don Bigelow and Buttons Kaluhiokalani.

Gawkers won’t be left out of the fun, either. Attendees of all ages can enjoy live music, mural painting, yoga, guest speakers, eco-friendly exhibits and autograph sessions with the pirate cast from the “Pirates of the Caribbean” movies.

The surfathon takes place Saturday and Sunday, October 15 and 16, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day. It all happens south of the Santa Monica Pier at Lifeguard Tower 28, adjacent to Ocean Park & Barnard Way. On both days, pro surfers take to the water from 9:30 a.m. to 10:15 a.m. and celebrities surf from 10:15 a.m. to 11 a.m. The event is free to watch, or you can join in by donating to the nonprofit group Save Our Surf, which organizes the event.

Posted 10/14/11

Waxing poetic at the museum

October 14, 2011

Writers celebrate California literary culture and pay homage to their poetic predecessors tonight at UCLA’s Hammer Museum. The Festival of California Poets features Maxine Hong Kingston, Suzanne Lummis and James Ragan, who will read their works and the works of luminaries Lucille Clifton, Nora May French and Denise Levertov. A question-and-answer period will follow the readings, and three more poets will perform a second installment on Sunday in Pasadena.

In addition to her poetry, Kingston has written several novels and nonfiction books on Chinese immigrant life and feminism, among other topics. Lummis is director of the Los Angeles Poetry Festival and has contributed to the development of “poem noir,” an urban fusion of poetry and film noir. James Ragan has recited his socially conscious verse in front of heads of state and at the United Nations.

The Festival of California Poets is produced by the PEN Center USA, which supports literary communities around the world with everything from anti-censorship advocacy to mentorship programs.

The Hammer Museum is located at 10899 Wilshire Boulevard in Westwood. Admission is free, and the show starts at 7 p.m. on Friday, October 14. Parking under the museum is $3. Arrive early to ensure a good seat.

Posted 10/14/11

A look behind the bars

October 13, 2011

In recent weeks, we’ve seen a steady and serious stream of allegations involving excessive force inside Los Angeles County’s jail system, allegations that are undermining public confidence in our commitment to the constitutional protections afforded inmates.

Media and advocacy organizations have detailed numerous cases of alleged inmate mistreatment that, if true, suggest a breakdown of accountability and discipline within the agency that runs the jails, the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department. These incidents are notable not only because of the alleged ferocity of the beatings but because some of them were reported by civilian observers who say they were shocked and scared by what they witnessed.

Allegations of brutality in the nation’s largest jail system are not new, and the Sheriff’s Department itself can rightly point to a history of firing and disciplining deputies who’ve been accused of excessive force. I feel confident that the vast majority of deputies are conducting themselves appropriately in the stressful environment of our overcrowded lock-up. But there appears to be a certain brazenness in these recent cases that raises questions about whether a culture of disregard for the constitutional rights of inmates is taking root among some deputies.

Currently, the FBI is investigating this alleged mistreatment of prisoners, and Sheriff Lee Baca has assembled an in-house task force to examine, or reexamine, a number of alleged incidents compiled by the ACLU and others. I’m confident that these will lead to disciplinary action and criminal prosecutions if warranted.

Still, more is needed. The Board of Supervisors is responsible to the taxpayers and to the broader community for the safe, efficient and constitutional operation of our jail system. To that end, Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas and I will introduce a motion at the board’s Tuesday meeting urging our colleagues to create a Citizen’s Commission of five distinguished county residents to “conduct a review of the nature, depth and cause of the problem of inappropriate deputy use of force in the jails, and to recommend corrective action as necessary.”

It also would be the responsibility of the commission’s five members, each one appointed by a member of the Board of Supervisors, to hold the sheriff and the board accountable for the “speedy and effective implementation” of potential solutions.

As Supervisor Ridley-Thomas and I write in our motion: “It is the Sheriff himself, as head of the department, and the members of the Board of Supervisors as the ultimate decision-makers for the County, who will be held accountable for the quality and constitutionality of law enforcement services to the county.”

Posted 10/13/11

 

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