Resident calls for Job Center revote
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Alicia Robinson
The decision to close the Job Center could be revisited yet again by
the City Council.
Westside resident Mike Berry, a frequent speaker at council
meetings, filed a request with the city Tuesday that the council
rehear its April 6 decision to keep the center open through
September.
The city-run Job Center was opened in 1988 as a place for day
laborers to meet employers so they wouldn’t loiter in city parks and
on streets looking for work. Since then, it’s been a flashpoint in
debates over the city budget, illegal immigration and the future of
the city’s largely industrial Westside.
The council on March 15 voted, 3-2, to close the Job Center at the
end of June. After Councilwoman Katrina Foley -- who cast one of the
dissenting votes -- requested a rehearing of the issue, the council
on April 6 voted to keep the center open for three more months and
set up a task force to look at options for funding, other locations
and an operator other than the city.
Berry’s request asks for a rehearing of the most recent decision
for nine reasons, including that a lack of adequate public notice
that “the agenda item ‘request for rehearing’ would, in fact, become
the rehearing.” The filing also claims the motion the council
approved on April 6 was unclear, and the discussion at that meeting
violated several city ordinances.
“It’s my feeling that many of the council members, if they took a
closer look at that motion, would never have voted the way they did,”
Berry said.
When reached Wednesday, Mayor Allan Mansoor declined to draw any
conclusions about the rehearing request because he hadn’t yet read
it, but he said he was satisfied with the council’s April 6 vote to
keep the Job Center open through September.
“I was happy with the motion I made -- that’s why I voted for my
motion,” Mansoor said.
Even though the council never voted on Foley’s request for
rehearing, she said the discussion and action at the last meeting
assuaged most of the concerns that prompted her request.
“One of the main concerns was that the center was closed without
any community input and without a plan for the consequences of
closing the center,” Foley said. “I just thought it was a positive
outcome that really addressed a lot of the concerns from people on
both sides of the issue, so I’m not sure what the purpose of
requesting a rehearing is.”
It’s likely to be on the council’s May 3 agenda, City Manager
Allan Roeder said. If the council agrees to a rehearing, no one need
fear it will set off an endless chain of more rehearing requests, he
said.
If the April 6 decision had been to set a rehearing at a future
meeting, whatever decision came from that meeting would have been
final and unappealable.
“The council never approved [Foley’s] request for rehearing but
instead modified its decision from March 15,” Roeder said. “In
essence you had a new decision, if you will, that Mike Berry is
requesting a rehearing of.”
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers government and politics. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4626 or by e-mail at alicia.robinson
@latimes.com.
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