Bill Boyarsky
 
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December 20, 2016

Helping hand for immigrants

bill-300.jpgThe new proposal by local government and charitable institutions for a $10 million legal defense fund for immigrants threatened with deportation by President-elect Donald Trump offers them a helping hand as they enter the labyrinth of arrests, detention and hearings that await them.

Congratulations to Mayor Eric Garcetti, City Atty. Michael Feuer and Los Angeles County Supervisor Hilda Solis, along with the California Endowment and other philanthropic groups, for putting together the money.

Dakota Smith and Cindy Carcamo reported in the Los Angeles Times that city and county governments would contribute at least $5 million to an L.A Justice Fund. Among the charities, the California Endowment, the state’s largest healthcare foundation, plans to give $2 million. The county supervisors voted 4 to 1 Tuesday to earmark $3 million over two years. Republican Kathryn Barger, a newly elected supervisor, was the lone dissenter. City Council approval is expected.

Public radio station KPCC noted on its website the money is unlikely to be enough to help all of the undocumented immigrants living in the county, a number estimated by the Public Policy Institute to be nearly 815,000 people. But supporters hope it will slow attempts to send immigrants out of the country, many of whom have lived in the state for much of their lives. Garcetti said the funds would help the most vulnerable, including minors, refugees and military families.

Whether intentionally or not, the donors picked a symbolic day to announce their plan—the day electors in every state cast their votes for president. For if Trump keeps his campaign promises, he’ll encourage the anti-immigrant feelings of his attorney general, hire many more immigration cops and increase the number of courts through which immigrants are sent as they begin their forced departure for the countries they fled.

The task that will face the L.A. Justice Fund lawyers is immense. Their work begins when immigrants are stopped and asked for papers. A traffic violation could trigger that. Or, and more likely, it would be a raid on a workplace. First there is a “master calendar” immigration court hearing, sort of an introduction to the system, followed by a hearing on the merits of the case. These are often subject to delays because of bureaucratic failures or overcrowded immigration courts. Sometimes, major criminals are caught up in the web, but mostly these are people with no violations or minor ones—or people who have been picked up by mistake. A lawyer is needed at every step and most of the immigrants can’t afford them. Sometimes, they are put in detention as long as a year.

The justice fund is part of a resistance movement developing against Trump in big cities—New York, Chicago, San Francisco and many others. Garcetti and the others are also standing up for underdog constituents who could be lost in the Trump revolution.

December 1, 2016

A hero moves on from City Hall

bill-300.jpgThey say anyone can be replaced, but it will be most difficult for the city of Los Angeles to fill the job of Miguel A. Santana, the city administrative officer who accomplished the impossible task of taming a stubborn bureaucracy and egotistic elected officials.

Santana quit to head the Los Angeles County Fair Assn., which runs the county fair and other enterprises on the fairgrounds in Pomona. If you think Los Angeles city finances were a mess when Santana became the city’s chief fiscal officer seven years ago, Google L.A. County Fair and read about its toxic combination of bad administration and high administrative salaries.

He was appointed to his job by then Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa. He had been a top aide to Los Angeles County Supervisor Gloria Molina. At city hall, he guided Villaraigosa, the city council and the bureaucracy through the tough steps that helped sharply reduce a $485 million budget deficit.

In addition to being in charge of the budget, he also supervises city departments. Rather than being a quiet numbers guy, Santana has been an activist, not content with old hidebound practices. As Jon Regardie wrote in the Downtown News, “he redefined the CAO’s job, regularly inserting himself into matters of public importance, with reports on issues such as the city’s worsening homelessness crisis.”

That’s when I got to know Santana. I was writing about homelessness and could make no sense of the maze of city and county agencies trying vainly to deal with the growing number on the streets.

I interviewed him in his office. He saw homelessness in human terms.

“Homelessness is a problem that involves thousands of people and requires a massive response, but it’s really about one person at a time,” he said. And at the heart of it was finding housing for the homeless and making treatment available with those afflicted with substance abuse and mental illness.

He knew the players in the county hall of administration and city hall from working in both places, He constantly brought them together in phone calls and meetings, making sure everybody got credit for their hard work. He took charge in a way that offended no one, and made the participants feel good about their efforts. He told me, “for the longest time, our homeless strategy has been one looking at the other and saying ‘you’re in charge. And at the end of the day, nobody was really in charge.”

County and city officials began cooperating in an unprecedented way. Their attitude was credited with overwhelming voter approval of the city bond measure HHH on the November ballot, raising $1.2 billion for housing for the homeless, with county-run treatment facilities readily available. Now the city must replace this unsung hero.

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