April 19, 2024 Breaking News, Latest News, and Videos

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Santa Monica Election Polls Need Your Help

Dear Editor:

I am the Voter Service Director of the League of Women Voters of Santa Monica and an Election Assistant with the LA County Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk.

I am also a resident of Santa Monica and am appalled to see the City of Santa Monica on the top of the list of areas in the County that are critically short of pollworkers.

What surprises me is that in our politically-active City, with so many community members volunteering for various boards and commissions, we can’t find civic-minded folks to ensure our elections run smoothly and efficiently. Even with our City’s elections being coordinated with the State elections, ensuring that major candidates and issues are always on our ballot, Santa Monica polls end up short-staffed election after election.

Yes, it’s a long day. Yes, the pay isn’t great. ($150 for inspectors and $105 for clerks.) But if you care about the integrity of the election, please help make sure we have the necessary pollworkers to process voters accurately and efficiently. You must be 18, a U.S. citizen, a registered voter and a resident of Los Angeles County. To volunteer, call 562.462.2226 or 800.815.2666 option 7. Check out the website: www.lavote.net for an application and more information.

Thea Brodkin

Director of Voter Service

League of Women Voters of Santa Monica

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Dear Editor:

Santa Monica voters have the right to be able to “follow the money” in local elections. The Mirror’s headline “Council Approves a Ballot Initiative to Toughen City’s Campaign Contribution Law” may have misled readers as to the reason for my “no” vote. That headline has since been corrected in your online edition, but I’d like to set the record straight for your newsprint readers.

The initiative approved 4-1 by the Council amends campaign contribution law, but does not toughen it. In fact, proponents of the original law, as well as outside experts like the Center for Governmental Studies, insist it reduces protections that voters intended. This is why I was the only Councilmember to vote against that initiative.

I fully support coordinated and comprehensive campaign finance reform for Santa Monica. In late July, after months of work with organizations like our Commission on the Status of Women, the California Clean Money Campaign and the League of Women Voters, I made a motion to place on the ballot a measure calling for Santa Monica local elections to be run with “clean money,” which is carefully monitored public financing of campaigns.

Not one of my colleagues would even second my clean money motion for discussion, despite a staff recommendation to place clean money on the ballot for voters to decide.

So did Santa Monica sidestep real reform by placing a decoy on the ballot? I hope voters aren’t confused. Figuring out who pays to play in elections is confusing enough already.

The elephant no one wants to confront is “independent expenditures.” These are huge sums spent by shadowy ad hoc committees who do their best not to reveal the source of their funding, or their true agenda, until it is too late for Santa Monica voters to evaluate the questionable credibility of their slick mailers. These are not the long-time grass-roots organizations like Santa Monicans for Renters’ Rights, who clearly label their campaign messages and make their platform and endorsement decisions in conventions open to the press and the public. The really big money in Santa Monica politics comes from a few private unidentified deep pockets, based on secretive back room decisions.

Real campaign finance reform for Santa Monica should include convening a voter task force and considering clean money, and donation restrictions, and independent expenditures. Such a holistic and integrated approach would truly empower Santa Monica voters.

The Council majority’s refusal to let voters decide on clean money, instead placing on our ballot a measure that rolls back previous protections, is extremely disappointing. Santa Monica voters still have a good option in November, though.

Many of our local woes come from state laws that encourage overdevelopment and evictions. While we have absolutely superb local representation in Sacramento, other districts often are controlled by developer money. We have a chance on November 7th to change that.

Clean money for Santa Monica won’t be on the ballot, but clean money for the state of California will be. Clean money already works well in other states, taking the “for sale” sign off the statehouse. Please study the issue and vote for Proposition 89, the California Clean Money and Fair Elections Act of 2006.

Kevin McKeown

Santa Monica City Councilmember

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I want to thank you for Lynne Bronstein’s August 17, 2006 article last week, “It’s All in the Process: Getting Help for the Homeless.” Providing residents, business owners and visitors with accurate information on the range of services available to homeless persons is critical to address this complex and difficult issue, and we applaud the Mirror for doing just that.

In addition to funding the services described in the article, the City has also developed several resource guides to better help residents respond to homeless issues in their neighborhood. The City’s “Good to Know/We’re In It Together” card provides tips and phone numbers for a variety of homeless-related issues. The orange “Homeless Services Referral Card” is a convenient, pocket-sized card that can be distributed instead of giving change to panhandlers. Both of these cards are available at public counters and libraries around the City or can be downloaded from http://santa-monica.org/hsd/services/1homelessnews.htm. This website also provides updated information about the innovative projects the City is undertaking to respond to homelessness in our community. The Santa Monica Chamber of Commerce also has created a reference card especially for business owners facing homeless-related issues. More information is available from the Chamber at 310.393.9825.

Thank you again for sharing this important information with your readers.

Sincerely, Mona Miyasato

Acting Human Services Manager

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