lc 07 2020

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Larchmont Chronicle

VOL. 58, NO. 7

• DELIVERED TO 76,439 READERS IN HANCOCK PARK • WINDSOR SQUARE • FREMONT PLACE • MIRACLE MILE • PARK LA BREA • LARCHMONT •

IN THIS ISSUE

Lawmakers push housing legislation as session ends

Bridge Home to open in Los Feliz n Includes 100 beds

PETS OF LARCHMONT.

10

RAPPING Around the Town. 4

VACATIONING past and future.

2-4

By Suzan Filipek A giant, open structure with 100 beds to temporarily house people experiencing homelessness is poised to open behind the Mulholland Fountain at the corner of Riverside Drive and Los Feliz Bouelvard. The $5.6 million Los Feliz Bridge Home project will be operated by the nonprofit People Assisting the Homeless (PATH). Adjacent to the 10,800square-foot structure will be a hygiene trailer, an administrative-intake trailer, storage, waste and recycling areas, an elevated deck and an outdoor pet area. It will be the third Bridge Home plus an emergency shelter to open in David Ryu’s Council District Four in a little more than one year. Tentative opening is July 28.

Front yard regains its former glory

n With masks, of course

REOPENINGS on the Boulevard. 2-7 For Information on Advertising Rates, Please Call Pam Rudy 323-462-2241, x 11 Mailing permit:

By Suzan Filipek Ah, the great outdoors. Nothing like a pandemic to make you crave some fresh air and time in nature. And friends. All of these forces combined have elev a t e d the oftneglected front yard to its earlier prominence. Laura Dine Mil- PLAYING IT SAFE lion and on Wilton Drive. See Front yard, p 8

Women of Larchmont

Our annual section, which has honored local women since 1965, will be published in the August issue. Advertising deadline is Mon., July 13. For more information contact Pam Rudy, 323-4622241, ext. 11.

JULY 2020

n Impacts single-family

NATIONAL GUARD ON LARCHMONT JUNE 3. See our coverage of recent Black Lives Matter demonstrations and more in the special center section starting on page 8A. Photo by Billy Taylor

Hair salons, barbershop are on cutting, color edge

n Sites open, eventually, after getting okay from City By Suzan Filipek Slowly, bit by bit, businesses are re-opening. Among them are the hair salons and a barbershop on Larchmont Boulevard — which got the okay from the city to open at the end of May. Manicurists were given a green light effective June 19. The excitement of salons opening was thwarted at first in the wake of protests that took place around the world, and on Larchmont, following the killing of George Floyd. And while the social and pandemic issues of the era continue — and hopefully pos-

itive changes will result — the salons (and barbershop) have, indeed, laid out their welcome See Salons, p 12

By Billy Taylor As Angelenos simultaneously deal with the coronavirus pandemic and nationwide protests, California lawmakers are busy in Sacramento pushing forward housing legislation that has the potential to forever change our historic neighborhoods. With Aug. 31 the last day for each chamber to pass bills, state lawmakers are working fast, perhaps even hastily, to wrap up the current legislative session. Here’s what you should know. SB 902 This bill, which passed the state Senate by a 33-3 vote June 22, would allow cities to grant by-right zoning approval for up to ten units in transit- and job-rich areas. The bill is now headed to the Assembly for review. In short, SB 902 would See Legislature, p 6

Summer camp: This year, it’s not about the campsite n Performances, plays and shows go on... online By Talia Abrahamson This summer, “camp” is not about the campsite. Traditions, like camp songs, arts and crafts, dress-up days or bonding with counselors, help to bring campers closer together, and it is activities like

those that camps this summer are holding onto during this time of COVID-19 social-distancing regulations. Los Angeles County announced that, effective June 12, day camps were allowed to See Summer camps, p 14

Residents come together to save ducks n ‘It was instantly clear the mom was in distress’

In the lonely days of the pandemic quarantine, June Street resident Ed Redlich last month discovered some surprising new company in the neighborhood. A mother duck and four of her ducklings had become hopelessly lost, wandering north on the west side of June Street between Rosewood and Clinton. “It was instantly clear that the mom was in distress,” Redlich says. “It looked like they were trying to find a way east somewhere but were being blocked by the homes along June.” Redlich was soon joined by neighbors, as they all struggled to come up with a solution. “We considered trying to get them to a pool or fountain,” Redlich says, “But we were not at all sure how to move them there.” And to make matters worse, one of the young JUNE STREET resident Mindy Schulducklings, unable to climb over higher walls and curbs, theis watches in surprise as a family of See Ducks, p 12 ducks marches by.

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lc 07 2020 by Larchmont Chronicle - Issuu