PicFair Village

Not just neighbors, but a community

 

Register Now Graffiti Boulevard without Borders

Register Now!

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Picfair Village residents and businesses are invited to register on the
NEW Picfair Village website for access to all of the latest neighborhood information, to receive critical alerts and our e-newsletter.

Remove Graffiti Fast!

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The most effective way to combat graffiti is to remove it IMMEDIATELY, before the vandal's 'message' can be seen. Report any graffiti on public property or your own private property using the on-line Anti-Graffiti Request System, or call the graffiti hotline at 3-1-1. The graffiti will be removed for FREE within 4 business days.

Boulevard Without Borders

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Three artists who live near Pico have initiated the Boulevard Without Borders project to document the people and places along this culturally diverse corridor. The project brings teenagers together from Pico's ethnic and religious communities in a collaborative process of photographing their own and other neighborhoods along the boulevard.

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The News
LET'S BUILD A COMMUNITY PARK ! PDF Print E-mail
Written by Scott McNeely   
Thursday, 02 September 2010 08:19

VOLUNTEERS NEEDED to help with the VONS eScrip Campaign!

Program Description:

Persons who register their Vons card with eScrip and designate their support of the Rings of Saturn (Group ID 6598071) will be helping to create a Community Park at Saturn. Once active, everytime you shop VONS will be donating between 1%-4% of every dollar spent to the Saturn Elementary Community School Park Project (see the Master Plan at the Rings of Saturn Website).

Next Step - Getting Registrations!

We will be having a booth in front of Vons on multiple days for the next 7 weeks. Dates are still being worked out. However, I'm hoping to get VONS permission today or tomorrow to have a booth in front of the store this weekend (Sat & Sun).

We need to have 15+ Volunteers to help get subscribers in front of Vons at different times of the day ranging from 9a.m. to 7p.m.

The goal is to get 3,000 subscribers and we have 7 weeks to do it!! This is very doable! Over 20,000 families shop at our local Vons!

TO VOLUNTEER OR ENROLL IN THE PROGRAM, This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it ! Let me know your available times!

Contact me if you can help out! Let me know your available times!

-Scott

Last Updated ( Thursday, 02 September 2010 08:37 )
 
New Watering Schedule Now in Effect for LADWP Customers PDF Print E-mail
Written by Michelle Rickman   
Wednesday, 25 August 2010 11:50


Watering Days Expanded, Schedule Based on Customer Street Address

LOS ANGELES — Changes to the City of Los Angeles' Water Conservation Ordinance went into effect today for Los Angeles City residents and businesses, allowing LADWP customers to water with sprinklers up to three days per week. Customers whose street addresses end with an odd number – 1, 3, 5, 7 or 9 – are permitted to use their sprinkler systems on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Customers whose addresses end in even numbers – 0, 2, 4, 6, or 8 are permitted to do so on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sundays.  Addresses ending in fractions are treated as whole numbers and observe the same day restrictions as others on their same side of the street, (ie: 4321 ½ is regarded as 4321, an odd-numbered address.)

Sprinkler time limits are based on the type of nozzle used.  Spray head sprinklers and bubblers, which are non-conserving models and are common in most landscapes, are allowed up to 8 minutes per watering station per day. Rotors and multi-stream rotary heads are allowed 15 minutes per cycle and up to two cycles per day per watering station. Watering with sprinklers is restricted to hours before 9:00 a.m. and after 4:00 p.m., regardless of the watering day.

All other prohibited uses of water, which include prohibiting hosing down driveways and sidewalks and water runoff, requiring all leaks be fixed and only using hoses fitted with shut-off nozzles, remain in effect.   Hand-watering using garden hoses fitted with shut-off nozzle devices is permissible any day of the week before 9:00 a.m. and after 4:00 p.m.

The changes to the Ordinance were approved by the Board of Water and Power Commissioners on July 22.  The Los Angeles City Council approved the revisions on August 18 and the Mayor signed them into law on Monday.

Educational awareness efforts, and enforcement where applicable, will continue to be conducted by the LADWP Water Conservation Team, whose members actively patrol Los Angeles communities to help inform customers of water waste they observe in progress and learn about through tips from neighbors and concerned residents who call 1-800-DIAL DWP or send e-mails to This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .  

In an effort to help our customers save water and money, LADWP offers a rebate on water conserving sprinkler nozzles of up to $8 per nozzle.  The Department offers numerous other rebate programs and incentives for switching to water efficient devices and tips for easy ways to reduce water use. This information, as well as comprehensive information on the new watering schedules and the prohibited uses of water, is all available at www.ladwp.com.

Customers may apply for a Hardship Variance from specific Ordinance requirements, including customers in designated High Fire Severity Zones. Variance Instructions and Forms are available online at www.ladwp.com/waterconservation and at all LADWP Service Center locations. For more information, call 213-367-0771.

The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, the nation's largest municipal utility, provides reliable, low-cost water and power services to Los Angeles residents and businesses in an environmentally responsible manner. LADWP serves about 1.4 million electric customers and 680,000 water customers in Los Angeles.
 

Last Updated ( Thursday, 02 September 2010 08:39 )
 
Pico Medians PDF Print E-mail
Written by Michelle Rickman   
Tuesday, 17 August 2010 20:28

Please join Councilmember Wesson as he breaks ground on the PICO MEDIANS

WHEN:  this Thursday August 19, 2010 at 10 a.m.

WHERE:  on Pico Blvd at Meadowbrook (nearest address is 5151 Pico Blvd, just one block east of the Tom Bradley Youth & Community Center)

Please pass this invitation on to your neighbors.

Please RSVP to Liz Carlin via email to:   This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 18 August 2010 15:36 )
 
MidTown Asks for ANOTHER $19.2M! PDF Print E-mail
Written by David Zahniser   
Saturday, 22 May 2010 13:27

Developer asks city for another loan, of $19.2 million!

CIM Group says it needs more money to complete Midtown Crossing, a long-delayed shopping center anchored by Lowe's. The loan would be repaid from various taxes generated by the project.

Stung by the recession, one of the most prominent developers in Los Angeles is turning to the city for an additional $19.2 million to bring a long-delayed Lowe's Home Improvement store to Mid-City.

MidTown Project SiteCIM Group — owner of the Hollywood & Highland mall, investors in renewable energy and a prospective bidder on 10 city-owned parking garages — has asked officials for a new 20-year loan to help it complete Midtown Crossing, a shopping center at the junction of Pico and San Vicente boulevards.

Under the proposed agreement, CIM Group would be allowed to pay off the loan by tapping property, sales, utility and business taxes that would be generated by the project once it opens.

The proposal would allow the city to keep at least 51% of the sales, utility and business taxes generated by the shopping center. Up to 49% of the remaining proceeds could be used by CIM Group to repay its loan.

That arrangement drew fire from one neighborhood activist who pointed out that sales, utility and business taxes normally go into the city's general fund, which pays for basic services such as police, parks and libraries. For months, city officials have been coping with a projected $485-million budget crisis by paring back both the workforce and city services that are supported by that fund.

Last Updated ( Thursday, 02 September 2010 08:41 )
Read more: MidTown Asks for ANOTHER $19.2M!
 
Downtown Central Park? PDF Print E-mail
Written by Ryan Vaillancourt   
Saturday, 22 May 2010 13:27

Dreaming of Downtown’s Central Park

Another Go-Round in the Effort to Cap the 101 Freeway in the Civic Center
by Ryan Vaillancourt

DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES - New York has Central Park. In Chicago, there’s Millennium Park. San Francisco boastsPark Site Golden Gate Park and the Presidio.

Then there’s greater Los Angeles, and while the region has some 75 miles of coastline and beloved open spaces such as Griffith Park, the city’s center lacks the kind of iconic green space that urban dwellers flock to and visitors come to associate with their stay.

A coalition of planners, urban designers and government agencies are hoping that changes with the latest revival of a proposal that seems audacious in scope: a plan to cap a segment of the Hollywood (101) Freeway that runs through Downtown, and build a park over the area where thousands of cars speed by every hour.

It is clearly a mammoth undertaking.

“The last time we’ve done something as grand as this was building Bunker Hill,” said Vaughan Davies, director of urban design with AECOM, a planning and engineering firm working on the project.

A 101 park plan dates back to the mid-1990s, when Nick Patsaouras pushed the proposal. The current version, dubbed Park 101, was formulated in 2008 by a group of international student interns working with AECOM staff. Their vision, which will get a public airing at a Downtown meeting this week, addresses the eight-lane road that slashes through Downtown, severing the Civic Center from Chinatown, El Pueblo and Union Station.

The proposed park would stretch from Grand Avenue to the Los Angeles River; its heart would cover the quarter-mile trench that sits roughly between Grand Avenue and Alameda Street. Capping the freeway, officials say, would create pedestrian friendly linkages among various government buildings. It would also convert some 100 acres currently covered in freeways or parking lots into green space, Davies said.

Last Updated ( Saturday, 22 May 2010 13:30 )
Read more: Downtown Central Park?
 
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