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Ports Briefs: Container Dwell Fee’s Delayed/ Seroka Gives Year-End Assessment

Decision on ‘Container Dwell Fee’ On Hold Until Dec. 27

The Port of Long Beach and the Port of Los Angeles announced Dec. 20, further consideration of the “Container Dwell Fee” will be postponed until Dec. 27.

Since the fee was announced on Oct. 25, the twin ports have seen a combined decline of 46% in aging cargo on the docks. The executive directors of both ports will reassess fee implementation after monitoring data over the next week.

Under the temporary policy approved Oct. 29 by the Harbor Commissions of both ports, ocean carriers can be charged for each import container that falls into one of two categories: In the case of containers scheduled to move by truck, ocean carriers could be charged for every container dwelling nine days or more. For containers moving by rail, ocean carriers could be charged if a container has dwelled for six days or more. Currently, no date has been set to start the count with respect to container dwell time.

The ports plan to charge ocean carriers in these two categories $100 per container, increasing in $100 increments per container per day until the container leaves the terminal.


Port of Los Angeles Executive Director Offers Year-End Assessment

SAN PEDRO — Port of Los Angeles Executive Director Gene Seroka Dec. 15, held a wide-ranging briefing with journalists to close out 2021. Seroka discussed year-end cargo volumes, the new vessel queuing system and improvements in rail and truck dwell times on Port of Los Angeles container terminals.

Seroka, who has been hosting the briefings monthly since March 2020, also addressed questions from the media.

Details: www.youtube.com/watch/year-end-assessment

 

 

 

Long Beach Mayor Robert Garcia Announces He Is Running For Congress

LONG BEACH – Long Beach Mayor Robert Garcia announced Dec. 19, he is running for California’s Long Beach-based congressional seat in 2022. In a video announcement on Twitter, he dedicated his campaign to his late mother who brought him to America when he was five and passed away from COVID-19 early in the pandemic.

Youtube link: https://youtu.be/-mfvIVhB1hY

“My mom brought me to this country and risked everything so that I could become an American,” Robert says in the video. “She came here never doubting that America was a place where her immigrant son could succeed. That’s why today, I am fighting for every kid to get the same shot that this country gave me.”

Garcia is most widely known for his tenure as Long Beach mayor and his leadership of the city during the darkest days of the pandemic.

After losing both his mother, a health care worker, and stepfather to COVID-19, Garcia vowed to work as hard as he could to ensure other families wouldn’t experience the same pain. He threw himself into expanding Long Beach’s mobile testing and vaccination efforts lifesaving programs which went on to receive national recognition from health experts and praise from the White House and Governor Newsom. Long Beach was the first city in California to vaccinate educators allowing Long Beach Unified to reopen schools before most other districts and the first city to vaccinate 99% of its senior population. The New York Times profiled the city’s vaccination efforts, calling it “a model for vaccine rollout” in the state.

As Mayor, Garcia has overseen a period of unprecedented economic growth and expansion of opportunity for city residents. He launched initiatives like tuition free community college, a universal basic income pilot and a pandemic recovery package to ensure every Long Beach resident could share in the city’s success. Under his leadership, the city passed an aggressive climate action plan to end the city’s reliance on fossil fuel while protecting and expanding good paying jobs. He was the first Mayor of Long Beach to have appointed a majority of women to city commissions and boards.

As Donald Trump entered the White House, Garcia moved aggressively to ensure Long Beach protected its immigrant, Muslim and LGBTQ residents. He believes cities like Long Beach where neighbors from every conceivable background live side by side and look out for each other represent the best of America.

Garcia grew up in Southern California, and he is married to Matthew Mendez Garcia, a professor of political science at California State University, Long Beach. He was featured as a “rising star” in the 2020 Democratic National Convention.

Upon his election, Garcia became the first Latino, immigrant and LGBTQ elected mayor in the city’s history, and he would be the first LGBTQ immigrant to serve in Congress.

California’s Nation-Leading Mortgage Relief Program Receives Federal Approval

SACRAMENTO – Gov. Gavin Newsom Dec. 20, announced that California’s plan to provide $1 billion in mortgage relief grants to tens of thousands of homeowners who have fallen behind on housing payments or reverse mortgage arrearages during the COVID-19 pandemic has been approved by the U.S. Department of the Treasury, clearing the way for a full program launch in the coming weeks.

The California Mortgage Relief Program will help an estimated 20,000 to 40,000 struggling homeowners, with funds reserved for homeowners in socially disadvantaged and underserved communities often hit hardest by the pandemic.

Through the mortgage relief program, past due housing payments will be covered in full – up to a maximum of $80,000 per household – with a direct payment to qualified homeowners’ mortgage servicers. The financial support is provided as a one-time grant that qualified homeowners will not have to repay, so that they can get caught up and have a fresh start. Funding for the program is allocated through President Biden’s American Rescue Plan Act’s Homeowner Assistance Fund.

The California Mortgage Relief Program will be a part of California’s Housing is Key program and is designed to work in tandem with several existing state and federal initiatives and programs to support residents facing difficulties as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Californians at or below 100 percent of their county’s Area Median Income, who own a single-family home, condo or manufactured home (permanently affixed) and faced a pandemic-related financial hardship after Jan. 21, 2020, may be eligible.

The California Mortgage Relief Program will begin accepting applications in the coming weeks through an online portal at CaMortgageRelief.org. Interested applicants can visit the website to review program and eligibility information leading up to the launch of the application portal.

A detailed description of California’s program, as approved by the U.S. Department of the Treasury, can be viewed here.

The Pentagon’s 20-Year Killing Spree Has Always Treated Civilians as Expendable

Top U.S. officials want us to believe that the Pentagon carefully spares civilian lives while making war overseas. The notion is pleasant. And with high-tech killing far from home, the physical and psychological distances have made it even easier to believe recent claims that American warfare has become “humane.”

Such pretenses should be grimly laughable to anyone who has read high-quality journalism from eyewitness reporters like Anand Gopal and Nick Turse. For instance, Gopal’s article for The New Yorker in September, “The Other Afghan Women,” is an in-depth, devastating piece that exposes the slaughter and terror systematically inflicted on rural residents of Afghanistan by the U.S. Air Force.

Turse, an incisive author and managing editor at TomDispatch, wrote this fall: “Over the last 20 years, the United States has conducted more than 93,300 airstrikes in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Pakistan, Somalia, Syria and Yemen that killed between 22,679 and 48,308 civilians, according to figures recently released by Airwars, a U.K.-based airstrike monitoring group. The total number of civilians who have died from direct violence in America’s wars since 9/11 tops out at 364,000 to 387,000, according to Brown University’s Costs of War Project.”

Those deaths have been completely predictable results of U.S. government policies. And in fact, evidence of widespread civilian casualties emerged soon after the “war on terror” started two decades ago. Leaks with extensive documentation began to surface more than 10 years ago, thanks to stark revelations from courageous whistleblowers and the independent media outlet WikiLeaks.

The retribution for their truth-telling has been fierce and unrelenting. WikiLeaks publisher Julian Assange is in a British prison, facing imminent extradition to the United States, where the chances of a fair trial are essentially zero. Former U.S. Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning spent seven years in a military prison. Former U.S. Air Force analyst Daniel Hale, who revealed murderous effects of U.S. drone warfare, is currently serving a 45-month prison sentence. They had the clarity of mind and heart to share vital information with the public, disclosing not just “mistakes” but patterns of war crimes.

Such realities should be kept in mind when considering how the New York Times framed its blockbuster scoop last weekend, drawing on more than 1,300 confidential documents. Under the big headline “Hidden Pentagon Records Reveal Patterns of Failure in Deadly Airstrikes,” the Times assessed U.S. bombing in Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan and reported that “since 2014, the American air war has been plagued by deeply flawed intelligence, rushed and imprecise targeting and the deaths of thousands of civilians, many of them children.”

What should not get lost in all the bold-type words like “failure,” “flawed intelligence” and “imprecise targeting” is that virtually none of it was unforeseeable. The killings have resulted from policies that gave very low priority to prevention of civilian deaths.

The gist of those policies continues. And so does the funding that fuels the nation’s nonstop militarism, most recently in the $768 billion National Defense Authorization Act that spun through Congress this month and landed on President Biden’s desk.

Dollar figures are apt to look abstract on a screen, but they indicate the extent of the mania. Biden had “only” asked for $12 billion more than President Trump’s last NDAA, but that wasn’t enough for the bipartisan hawkery in the House and Senate, which provided a boost of $37 billion instead.

Actually, factoring in other outlays for so-called “defense,” annual U.S. military spending is in the vicinity of $1 trillion. Efforts at restraint have hit a wall. This fall, in a vote on a bill to cut 10 percent of the Pentagon budget, support came from only one-fifth of the House, and not one Republican.

In the opposite direction, House support for jacking up the military budget was overwhelming, with a vote of 363-70. Last week, when it was the Senate’s turn to act on the measure, the vote was 88-11.

Overall, military spending accounts for about half of the federal government’s total discretionary spending while programs for helping instead of killing are on short rations for local, state and national government agencies. It’s a destructive trend of warped priorities that serves the long-term agendas of neoliberalism, aptly defined as policies that “enhance the workings of free market capitalism and attempt to place limits on government spending, government regulation, and public ownership.”

While the two parties on Capitol Hill have major differences on domestic issues, relations are lethally placid beyond the water’s edge. When the NDAA cleared the Senate last week, the leaders of the Armed Services Committee were both quick to rejoice. “I am pleased that the Senate has voted in an overwhelming, bipartisan fashion to pass this year’s defense bill,” said the committee’s chair, Sen. Jack Reed, a Democrat from Rhode Island. The ranking Republican on the panel, Jim Inhofe from Oklahoma, chimed in: “This bill sends a clear message to our allies that the United States remains a reliable, credible partner and to our adversaries that the U.S. military is prepared and fully able to defend our interests around the world.”

The bill also sends a clear message to Pentagon contractors as they drool over a new meal in the ongoing feast of war profiteering.

It’s a long way from their glassed-in office suites to the places where the bombs fall.

_____________________

Norman Solomon is the national director of RootsAction.org and the author of many books including War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death. He was a Bernie Sanders delegate from California to the 2016 and 2020 Democratic National Conventions. Solomon is the founder and executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy.

LAPD Appoints Its First Filipino-American Deputy Chief

LOS ANGELES Los Angeles Police Department Chief Michel Moore has announced the upcoming promotion of Commander Donald Graham to the rank of Deputy Chief. Cmdr. Graham will become the first Filipino-American Deputy Chief in the Los Angeles Police Department’s history.

Cmdr. Graham has worked in all four bureaus of the Department and has taken on numerous assignments. After completing his probation in Pacific Area, he transferred to Devonshire Area, where he worked as a patrol officer and senior lead officer. During his tenure at Devonshire, he received numerous commendations, including recognition for officer of the month, officer of the quarter, and the Devonshire Officer of the Year for 2005 for his work at reducing crime at the Northridge Mall.

Cmdr. Graham had many more accomplishments as a Sergeant in Southeast Area, Sergeant II at Operations-Central Bureau, Office of Operations, and Lieutenant at West Valley Area. While at West Valley, he served as the area’s acting detective commanding officer from October 2012 until February 2013.

On Oct. 5, 2014, Commander Graham was promoted to Captain and assumed command of the Central Patrol Division. At Central Division, he became deeply involved in the growing homeless crisis affecting Los Angeles. He was part of the architect team that revamped the Safer Cities Initiative (SCI) in Skid Row to the Resources Enhancement Services and Enforcement Team (RESET), creating a template for the City-Wide creation of the Homeless Outreach and Proactive Engagement (HOPE) team. At HOPE, Cmdr. Graham worked with numerous government and private agencies to stem the tide of violent crime against people experiencing homelessness.

On December 25, 2016, Commander Graham was transferred to North Hollywood Area and promoted to area commanding officer. During his two and a half years there, he worked with a strong leadership and supervisory team, a supportive community, and strong volunteer corps, as well as a staff of hard-working and dedicated officers who presided over two straight years of crime reduction.

On July 31, 2019, Commander Graham became the first Filipino-American to be sworn in as a Los Angeles Police Commander. He was appointed by Chief Moore to be the Department’s homeless coordinator under the Office of Operations. Commander Graham is currently the Commander of Transit Services Group.

Justice Department Announces Series of Cases to Combat Addiction Treatment Kickback Schemes in Orange County

SANTA ANA – Over the past 10 months, the Department of Justice has filed criminal charges against 10 defendants – four of whom were taken into custody Dec. 16 – for kickback schemes at substance abuse treatment facilities in Orange County.

The defendants in these cases charged as a result of The Sober Homes Initiative are substance abuse facility owners and patient recruiters who allegedly, among other things, provided kickback payments for the referral of patients to substance abuse treatment facilities, recovery homes or laboratories. These facility owners allegedly assigned a value to patients depending on the type of insurance the patients had, and then paid patient recruiters kickbacks for each patient the recruiters referred to their addiction treatment facilities. The recruiters allegedly received recurring payments for each month the patients continued to receive purported services from the facilities.

Cases charged as a result of The Sober Homes Initiative

  • Nick Roshdieh, 51, of Aliso Viejo, and Vincent Bindi, 66, of Laguna Nigel, who owned Crest Recovery LLC (dba Truvida Recovery), were arrested Dec. 16, on charges contained in an indictment that allege conspiracy to pay and receive kickbacks for referrals to clinical treatment facilities and paying kickbacks for referrals to clinical treatment facilities.

Donald Vawter, 30, of Rancho Santa Margarita, an employee of Truvida, was also taken into custody today and was charged in the indictment with conspiring to pay and receive kickbacks for referrals to a substance abuse treatment facility and paying kickbacks for referrals to a substance abuse treatment facility.

Michael Hislop, 56, of Boston, Massachusetts, a patient recruiter, also was taken into custody today pursuant to charges in the same indictment that allege conspiracy to offer and pay kickbacks for referrals to a substance abuse treatment facility and receiving kickbacks for referrals to a substance abuse treatment facility.

If convicted, Roshdieh and Bindi would face a maximum total penalty of 65 years in prison, and Vawter and Hislop would face a maximum total penalty of 35 years in prison.

This case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Gina Kong of the Santa Ana Branch Office and Trial Attorney Alexandra Michael of the Los Angeles Strike Force.

  • Casey Mahoney, 45, of Los Angeles, and Joseph Parkinson, 32, formerly of Costa Mesa, were indicted in October in a multimillion-dollar addiction treatment kickback scheme. According to court documents, Mahoney controlled Healing Path Detox LLC and Get Real Recovery Inc., addiction treatment facilities in Orange County, and allegedly paid approximately $2.7 million in kickbacks paid to Parkinson and other patient recruiters in exchange for addiction treatment patient referrals.

Mahoney is charged with conspiracy to pay and receive kickbacks for referrals to clinical treatment facilities, paying kickbacks for referrals to clinical treatment facilities, and money laundering for fraudulently transferring kickback funds to an account held in the name of a patient broker’s mother. Parkinson, a patient recruiter, was charged with conspiracy to pay and receive kickbacks for referrals to clinical treatment facilities, receiving kickbacks for referrals to clinical treatment facilities, currency structuring, and possession with intent to distribute fentanyl.

If convicted, Mahoney would face a maximum total penalty of 35 years in prison, and Parkinson would face a maximum total penalty of 165 years in prison.

  • Darius Moore, 28, formerly of Santa Ana, was charged by complaint on March 29, and later by indictment on April 28, with conspiracy to pay and receive kickbacks for referrals to clinical treatment facilities and receiving kickbacks for referrals to clinical treatment facilities. According to court documents, Moore, a patient recruiter, referred patients to multiple addiction treatment facilities in Orange County in exchange for kickback payments from the facilities. Moore allegedly received not less than $488,500 in kickbacks in exchange for his referral of patients for purported addiction treatment services.

Moore pleaded guilty on Dec. 10 to one count of conspiracy to pay and receive kickbacks for referrals to clinical treatment facilities and one count of receiving kickbacks for referrals to clinical treatment facilities. He is scheduled to be sentenced on May 13, 2022, at which time he will face a statutory maximum penalty of 15 years in prison.

  • Adrian Gonzalez, 37, of Laguna Hills, was charged by information on June 25, with paying kickbacks for referrals to clinical treatment facilities. According to court documents, Gonzalez controlled Stone Ridge Recovery Inc. and Landmark Recovery LLC, addiction treatment facilities in Orange County, and paid at least $1,080,000 in kickbacks to patient recruiters for the referral of addiction treatment patients to Gonzalez’s facilities.

Gonzalez pleaded guilty on Aug. 6 to paying kickbacks for referrals to clinical treatment facilities. He is scheduled to be sentenced on Jan. 28, 2022, at which time he will face a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison.

  • Dorian Ballough, 30, formerly of Costa Mesa, was charged by information on July 30 with conspiracy to pay and receive kickbacks for referrals to clinical treatment facilities and receiving kickbacks for referrals to clinical treatment facilities. According to court documents, Ballough acted as a patient recruiter for multiple addiction treatment facilities in Orange County, for which Ballough was paid at least $1.8 million in kickbacks in exchange for his referral of patients for purported addiction treatment services.

Ballough pleaded guilty on Nov. 12 to one count of conspiracy to pay and receive kickbacks for referrals to clinical treatment facilities and one count of receiving kickbacks for referrals to clinical treatment facilities. He is scheduled to be sentenced on April 8, 2022, and faces a maximum total penalty of 15 years in prison.

  • Kyle Reed, 29, formerly of Huntington Beach, was charged by information on July 30, with conspiracy to pay and receive kickbacks for referrals to clinical treatment facilities and receiving kickbacks for referrals to clinical treatment facilities. According to court documents, the charges relate to Reed’s role as a patient recruiter for multiple addiction treatment facilities in Orange County, for which Reed was paid at least $604,474 in kickbacks in exchange for his referral of patients for purported addiction treatment services.

Reed pleaded guilty on Nov. 19 to one count of conspiracy to pay and receive kickbacks for referrals to clinical treatment facilities and one count of receiving kickbacks for referrals to clinical treatment facilities. He is scheduled to be sentenced on May 6, 2022, and faces a maximum total penalty of 15 years in prison.

Carson Grab-and-Go Toy Drive 2021

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Video by Harry Bugarin

On Dec. 18, Carson City Councilman Cedrick Hicks alongside more than 30 volunteers from an assortment of local faith based and community service organizations gave away toys to hundreds of families. Volunteers and attendees noted after such a grim year as we attempt exit the pandemic, joy is what’s most needed this holiday season.

The first 500 kids between the ages of 2 and12 received a toy. Under a one toy per child policy, parents had to bring proof of residency and the child had to be present. Volunteers from Victory Outreach Church -Carson and the Compton-based nonprofit organization, Lyrical Revolution, founded by World Class Wreckin’ Cru member and promoter, Lonzo Williams.

On Phasing out Oil in Long Beach

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By Miles Aiello, Founder of the OTTER Coalition

It was a beautiful day with little clouds in the sky on a bright afternoon in Long Beach, California. People ran along the bluff overlooking the Pacific, folks rode bicycles on the beach path, others roller-bladed by listening to music. Two women were enjoying lunch and staring out into the ocean. What lay before them was not a pristine glimmering bio-diverse ecosystem, rather, four operating oil rigs within hundreds of feet off the shore. These oil rigs, old and outdated, have cleverly been disguised to resemble tropical island resorts with waving palm trees and tall eye-catching buildings. Folks go about their business with their lives, exercising, eating, breathing, adjacent to this extractive capitalism that compromises air quality, perpetuates fossil fuel reliance, and risks the next oil spill. The age of oil is over. It’s time for Long Beach to be a trailblazing city and immediately phase out offshore drilling.

Since the infamous Santa Barbara oil spill of 1969, where an estimated 3.5–4.2 million gallons spilled into the water, there have been 44 other large spills nationwide — each over 10,000 barrels (420,000) gallons. The most tragic of which happened in 2010, when the British Petroleum (BP) offshore drilling rig Deepwater Horizon spilled an unconscionable 4.9 million gallons into the Gulf of Mexico. This catastrophe killed 11 workers, injured 17, further endangered critical marine species near extinction and cost the local economy billions of dollars.

Oil spills are inevitable as we have witnessed since their inception. The most recent occurred off the coast of Huntington Beach. The spill sent 140,000 gallons into the Catalina channel, impacted the local economy, killed birds and fish and severely damaged local wetlands that will take decades to recover. This was not Huntington Beach’s first oil spill. The last one occurred in 1990, when 444,000 gallons gushed into the pacific, killing fish and 3,400 birds.

On any given day in Long Beach, whether one is walking their dog or doing yoga at Bluff Park, one can taste the oil on their tongue. A rising headache develops from the smell, causing nausea and light-headedness. Just a few hundred feet from Long Beach’s coast lies the four fabricated islands known as the THUMS Islands or the Astronaut Islands. These islands aim to deceive the public and hide the ugly industrial realities of oil extraction by creating a “tropical illusion”, which was the intended goal of the project when it was first being constructed in the ’60s.

A bystander looks on at Island White in Long Beach, California. Source: Pinterest

This reality begs the question, how can Long Beach claim to be a progressive city taking on climate when it allows four offshore oil drills to continue extracting oil in its harbor? Allowing these rigs to continue operating further depends on our reliance on fossil fuel, locking us further onto fossil fuel reliance for decades to come.

In order to circumvent catastrophic impacts from climate change, it is imperative to revolutionize our energy systems while transitioning off of fossil fuels immediately. The Intergovernmental Panel of climate change (IPCC) has stated we have 10–12 years to prevent global temperatures from rising above 1.5º C (2.7ºF). If we reach 1.5º C, we risk ‘climate breakdown’, or ‘runaway climate’ — the point in which the physical processes of the planet that keep balance can no longer offset greenhouse gas emissions. If Long Beach claims to be a progress climate-friendly city, isn’t it unethical to advocate and allow offshore drilling?

In addition to risking runaway climate, there are several other risks at hand. Offshore drilling threatens our local coastal economies, marine biodiversity and increases the probability of human health impacts in our communities. These risks, coupled with the climate crises and our short time scale, quite convincingly make the case that continuing offshore drilling is counter-intuitive and jeopardizes the global community’s goal of keeping global warming from rising above 1.5 Cº.

The paths forward for the City of Long Beach are two-fold. First, the city needs to immediately look into the process of phasing our offshore drilling. Two, the city must continue to draft and implement plans to increase locality, increase walking ability, and increase multi-modal transit. To push this agenda forward, the Otter Coalition (Opportunities Towards Transformative Environmental and Economic Resilience) has held two rallies and marches with over 35 people attending. This organization, started by myself and others, is currently coalition building and starting a petition to end offshore drilling in Long Beach. Folks who are interested in joining our coalition can find us on Instagram: @ottercoalition.

It is only a matter of time before the next tragedy. As Long Beach’s own Congressional Representative Alan Lowenthal has said, “where there is drilling there is spilling”. The time is now for Long Beach to be the progressive city it claims to be — end offshore drilling in Long Beach’s harbor and increase urban locality now. The two issues are inextricably linked. It’s time we challenge the fossil fuel industry greed and prioritize Mother Nature and public health.

Random Letters: 12-16-21

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Port Seeks a Negative Declaration For Phillip’s 66!

In the middle of a fervent pledge to reduce petroleum import and use … the port is now engaging in this 40 YR lease for Phillips. “IF” we will no longer be importing fossil fuels why will there be an additional 30% increase in “ship calls”? Can this be related to the glut of butane and propane being generated by the refining process with an interest in exporting it? Does this involve the Rancho LPG facility and its vast storage of LPG (next to the Phillip’s refinery) as a means to re-open that shipping opportunity via a pipeline to the wharf? If so, this will “institutionalize” that massive and highly explosive facility that continues to threaten the entire region!

Not unlike other “nefarious” and “controversial’’ port developments and projects, the timing of these approvals come during the holidays when people are distracted by the trappings of the season. PLEASE…..engage in the review of this situation and make comment. These comments are due by Dec. 20! From what I understand, the Northwest Neighborhood Council is requesting an extension. Hopefully, they will get that extension so that we all have time to participate. This could very well be a crucial development that…unless we engage…. undermines community safety for many years to come.

Janet Gunter, San Pedro


Demolition of the Star-Kist Cannery

I am writing this letter in opposition to the proposed demolition of the StarKist Cannery Plant # 4 located at 1050-1054 Ways Street on Terminal Island.

I am requesting that the Los Angeles Harbor Department finds an alternative use for this historic building.

The facility traces its origins to the French Sardine Co. founded on Terminal Island in 1918 by my grand uncle Martin J. Bogdanovich. While Star Kist closed its facilities on Terminal Island in 1984, the building continues to represent a significant link to Los Angeles’ once mighty tuna industry. The plant is also significant for its design by John K. Minasian, a prominent engineer who worked on projects at Cape Canaveral and Edwards Air Force Base and served as the chief engineer for the Space Needle at the Seattle world fair. It was the single largest example of tilt-up construction built by private industry on the West Coast and boasts an unusual level of architectural detailing on its fish harbor facing façade. It also was the workplace of tens of thousands of San Pedrans who made their living working at the facility. Star Kist Plant #4 was literally the economic engine for San Pedro for decades.

It is for these reasons the facility should be preserved under the Port of Los Angeles Cultural Resource Policy of May 28, 2013. This policy assures that buildings such as Plant #4 are identified early in the planning process for proposed projects or potential leasing of vacant properties. Numerous individuals and organizations including the Central San Pedro Neighborhood Council, the Los Angeles Conservancy, the Dalmatian American Club of San Pedro all advocate for the preservation of the facility.

Since the plant was used in tuna canning, it can be repurposed for canning any type of food products. Another RFP (nationwide) should be released in 2022 targeting those companies in the food industry, especially in California’s central valley to gauge their interest. Since the facility is located in the middle of export facilities, I am sure that a suitable suitor for the facility can be found, in line with the goals outlined in the Port’s Master Plan.

Honorable Anthony Misetich, Former Honorary Mayor of San Pedro, Former Mayor of the city of Rancho Palos Verdes


For Public Comment

I am the granddaughter of Joseph M. Mardesich Sr. acknowledged as a “pioneer” of the California tuna canning industry who was a full founding partner of French Sardine Company Inc. 1917-18, located in Fish Harbor on Terminal Island, California. The company was renamed Star Kist in the early 1950s. In c.1924 Mr. Mardesich sold out his interest to the other partner(s) and founded his own Franco Italian Packing Company that thrived as a “private label packer” for decades.

Our family has a vested interest in the history of the fishing industry and the area known as “Fish Harbor”; and is a sponsor of the permanent exhibition “Caught, Canned and Eaten: The History of San Pedro’s Tuna & Canning Industry” in the Los Angeles Maritime Museum, where Grandfather’s bronze bust likeness, photographs and story are on view.

For many years we have had concern about the disposition of the remaining buildings in Fish Harbor and spoken up previously.

In May 2013 a policy regarding historic preservation was adopted and press release distributed by the Port of Los Angeles (POLA) on May 28 stating: “Groundbreaking Document Provides Framework for Preservation,”

It included three important statements about the POLA commitment:

  • Preparing and maintaining an inventory of historical, cultural and architectural resources of the Port;
  • Completing a comprehensive survey to evaluate Port historical resources within two years of adoption of the policy and every five years thereafter. Buildings, objects, districts and sites within the Port that are at least 50 years old will be evaluated; resources less than 50 years old that have exceptional importance may also be reviewed;
  • Establishing priorities for preservation and adaptive reuse, where possible, of historical buildings, structures, districts and other sites owned by or located on property owned by the Harbor Department. Staff will consider historical resources at the earliest stages of planning, adaptive reuse in leasing transactions will be encouraged.

It seems these items, and the third in particular, have been overlooked with respect to the recent proposal to raze the historic StarKist cannery building “Draft Initial Study”… APP No. 190311-032 cited above. An excerpt from document “Introduction” contradicts the concept of preservation and adaptive use:

“The primary objectives of the proposed Project are to create a parcel of land that is more marketable for future development, to reuse and capitalize the site more efficiently, and to alleviate public nuisance.”

If indeed there is indeed an element of “public nuisance” at the StarKist property and docks, then who created and caused it since the Harbor Department is the ostensible owner/manager of said property ergo it is their neglect that is at the root and why hasn’t the property been safely maintained?

We among many in San Pedro and harbor communities believe in preservation in the concept of “repurpose.” The Star Kist edifice could function as a cannery for products other than fish shipped in from agrarian communities, and/or other commerce affiliations and use for the building, this should be intensely investigated and explored.

The POLA needs to stop the pattern of needlessly demolishing and consider more restoration and preservation. If we do not save our history today, it’s lost for tomorrow and future generations.

Stephanie Mardesich, San Pedro

My Recycled Life — House Is a Museum

My mother, a frustrated artist, turned her suburban home into her own personal museum. She painted most of the walls white like an art gallery, the better to show off her art collection, and furnished the living room with eight tall glass display cases packed with still more art, crafts, curios, collectibles, antiques, mementos, memorabilia and relics of her life.

I love displaying those things as much as she did, but I don’t like the prospect of living in a museum. I don’t like those glass display cases — they’re hazardous. Two years and two estate sales later, though, all eight cases are still where they were, and all serve a useful function, serving as much-needed storage space in a house that remains packed with lifetimes of accumulated material goods. Each sale has emptied out a few shelves, but each time the shelves have simply provided new spaces for clutter cleared from other areas of the house.

At this stage the easy choices have been made. The obvious trash has been trashed, the obvious donations donated, the most saleable items sold. One entire case remains, taken up by the family collection of bottles and glassware. Another case is stuffed with relics from my mother’s childhood — some of her dolls, her antique doll tea set, animal figurines, baby spoons, decorative plates — that I haven’t found a buyer for. What I call the “united nations” collection — Asian, African, Latin American curios — fill a third case. Keep going, there’s more: heirlooms from my father’s family, relics from my childhood, sports memorabilia, basketry, pottery, rocks, shells, figurines, souvenirs, tins, candleholders — and that’s just some of what’s on display in the living room. Wait ‘til you see the rest of the house.

One or two buyers from auction houses have expressed interest in the glass display cases, but only the glass display cases, nothing else. I can’t sell the cases without somewhere else to put the contents. One estate-sales man offered to have workers come and pack the contents into crates and move all the crates and cases into my garage — for a hefty price, of course. That would crowd more things into a garage too crowded already, and it doesn’t address the primary issue — how to ultimately dispose of the cases or what they contain.

Since moving in I’ve been struggling to make the house less like a museum and more like a living space. Most of the rooms have a new color scheme. The living room has been painted a sandy, sunny Southwestern peach, displaying Western art from the family collection. Most of the bulky Danish mid-century modern furniture has been sold, and what’s left leans to the functional and minimal. Those glass cases are (still) proving to be a major challenge. Maybe by the end of 2022 all my family’s personal museum collection will be re-housed, in my home or somebody else’s, and those buyers can come and get the cases, if they still want them.