Politics & Government

L.A. City Committee Opposes Postponement of Neighborhood Council Elections

The city's Arts, Parks and Neighborhoods Committee considers a draft ordinance that would postpone Neighborhood Council scheduled for 2012 until 2014.

The fiscal crisis at City Hall has prompted Los Angeles city officials to consider a policy move anathema to a representative democracy: canceling elections.

The city's Arts, Parks and Neighborhoods Committee on Wednesday considered a draft ordinance that would amend the city's administrative code to postpone Neighborhood Council elections slated for 2012 and extend the terms of board members until a City Clerk-administered election is held in 2014.

The ordinance was called for as part of the city's 2011-2012  budget that faced a $350 million shortfall. Due to the fiscal crisis, the city did not provide funds for the City Clerk's office to conduct 98 Neighborhood Council elections scheduled for 2012.

The Arts, Parks and Neighborhoods Committee, which is chaired by City Councilman Paul Krekorian, objected Wednesday to postponing the elections and called for the city's Department of Neighborhood Empowerment (DONE), which oversees the city's Neighborhood Councils, to run elections in 2012, said Jeremy Oberstein, a spokesman for Krekorian.

"DONE has a budget and they will conduct elections," Oberstein said.

Rick Marquez, of the , said that, while he preferred not to have elections delayed for two years, he also had concerns about DONE running the show.

Marquez said that, prior to the 2010 elections, DONE was responsible for overseeing the elections, which "left a lot of loopholes for mismanagement."

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"I like the way they did last time when the city clerk ran it, there was no goofing around," Marquez said.

Charles Herman-Wurmfeld, vice chair of the Silve Lake Neighborhood Council, sent an email to the Arts, Parks and Neighborhoods Committee on Wednesday stating that the "perpetuation of our democracy" via timely, funded and overseen elections was one of the primary purposes of city government and "not open to renegotiation or default."

"Imagine fighting across the seas for democratic processes and then cutting the budget to pay for them right here at home … who does that?," his email said.

The City Clerk's office has distributed a Neighborhood Council Election Alternatives Survey to all 98 neighborhood councils and they have a Jan. 6 deadline to return them. A survey for stakeholders also is available (see attached).

Future election options on the survey included: an independent election administrator that will be supervised by the City Clerk or DONE: DONE administering the elections: using a Town Hall Selection Process overseen by the Neighborhood Council or using the City Clerk. The survey also asked if Neighborhood Councils preferred a secret ballot or Town Hall-type selection with an open or public ballot.

Precisely how the elections will be run in 2012 remains to be seen, Oberstein said.

The City Clerk is expected to prepare a report based on the survey results in February that will be sent to the City Council, the Mayor's Office and the Arts, Parks and Neighborhoods Committee. The City Attorney's Office in November sent the City Council a draft ordinance (see attached) amending the city's administrative code to postpone the elections and extend board members terms for two years.

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