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Council Considers Proposals to Curb Problem of Debris Cluttering Streets : Litter: The city hasn’t changed its sweeping route for 15 years, but parking restrictions may be a sign of the times.

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

It is the white plastic foam cups that Lois Comeau hates the most. She can spot them in the gutters of her Atwater Village neighborhood from 50 feet away.

Every other day after work, Comeau drags a garbage bag down Atwater Avenue to the corner of Fletcher Drive and fetches the cups, discarded candy wrappers and other litter wedged in the leaves and dried grass. On a typical day, she fills an entire bag.

“It just drives me crazy,” the adult-school teacher said. “I remember when Los Angeles was a clean city. I just feel so sad that it is not that way anymore.”

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Comeau lives on one of the hundreds of streets in the city of Los Angeles that are not posted for regular street sweeping, which means that her neighborhood is swept about once a month rather than once a week. And because there are no signs restricting parking on sweeping days, the cleaning often does little good because the gutters--where 97% of debris piles up--are blocked by automobiles.

It has been almost 15 years since the Los Angeles City Council added streets to the city’s posted sweeping schedule, but complaints from residents such as Comeau may change that. Several proposals to add thousands of miles of posted residential routes are being mulled over by two council committees, and the full council is expected to take them up early next year.

“I hear about it every time I meet with block clubs or neighborhood groups,” Councilwoman Joan Milke Flores said. “People want their streets cleaned.”

But the proposals carry hefty price tags and involve sensitive political decisions that the council may be reluctant to make. Should the city provide the same level of street sweeping to all neighborhoods? What areas are the neediest? Who should pay for the expanded sweeping routes?

One proposal would add a one-time $36 charge to the water and power bills of residents who live on streets that would get new postings. In some parts of the city, residents have already offered to buy “No Parking” signs for their streets to get better service. Some council members say they find such alternatives offensive, but others say they may be the way of the future.

Currently, all 13,085 curb miles of paved residential streets in the city get swept, but some neighborhoods get more frequent service than others. (Curb miles are a measure of the curbs on both sides of a street, meaning a one-mile-long street has two curb miles).

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About 1,926 curb miles are swept at least once a week at night, because they are major or secondary highways in commercial and industrial areas, with which the city deals separately from predominantly residential neighborhoods. An additional 3,419 curb miles are posted with “No Parking” signs and are swept weekly during the day.

The remaining 7,740 curb miles--more than half the residential streets in the city--have no posted parking restrictions and are swept on an irregular basis, averaging once every 4 1/2 weeks.

“What people want more than anything else is a safe city and a clean city,” said Councilman Joel Wachs, one of several council members interested in converting some or all of the 7,740 curb miles to more regular sweeping schedules. “The two go hand in hand. There is a relationship between how a city looks and what kind of activities go on there--how safe it is.”

Postal worker Patric Quinn said residents in his Canoga Park neighborhood rank the need for cleaner streets just behind efforts to eliminate graffiti and gang-related crime.

“If a neighborhood looks like a dump, that is the way people are going to feel about it,” said Quinn, who recently organized neighbors in the Owensmouth area. “And if they feel that way, they aren’t going to care about anything.”

The council stopped adding posted routes in 1975 because the “No Parking” signs, equipment and personnel were too expensive. The expanded sweeping proposal preferred by the city’s Bureau of Street Maintenance would cost more than $80 million over five years. The city spends about $13 million a year on street cleaning.

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Officials say the city is relatively healthy in financial terms, but new programs still mean trade-offs. Each dollar spent on sweeping streets, for example, is a dollar less for police officers or sewer mains. For $80 million, the city could pay the salaries of 350 new police officers for five years, according to the Police Department.

And problems, some very costly, continue to come up. In a recent report, City Administrative Officer Keith Comrie warned council members that state gas tax revenues--which are frequently used for street programs, such as paving and sweeping--will be needed for seismic reinforcement of bridges and roadways identified since the Bay Area earthquake in October.

“It is important to assess the priority of posting additional street sweeping routes with other city programs and financial commitments,” Comrie wrote.

Councilman Zev Yaroslavsky, who chairs the council’s Budget and Finance Committee, has put off decisions about the proposals until January because of the large sums of money involved. Yaroslavsky said he wants to consider them during the council’s mid-year budget review, when the council decides about new funding requests from throughout the city.

“I am not opposed to more sweeping, but we are talking about a lot of money,” Yaroslavsky said. “It is critical that we see it in the broader context of the city’s budget. If the economy has really cooled off this year, and our revenue projections are too optimistic, then all of this may be pie in the sky.”

Street maintenance officials say it is an ideal time to consider expanding the city’s sweeping program. The Bureau of Street Maintenance has put behind it a series of problems in 1986 and 1987 involving mechanically flawed equipment and a backlog of unswept streets in residential neighborhoods. And, according to Assistant Director David A. Reed, the bureau has caught up with some other pressing priorities, such as street paving.

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“We think it is a damn good time to concentrate on some of the quality-of-life aspects of this city,” Reed said.

Although Reed said the bureau has not pushed for any particular proposal, officials have made it clear that they prefer one calling for weekly restricted parking routes on all 7,740 curb miles still not posted. Under the proposal, about 1,550 curb miles would be added each year for five years, at an eventual cost of $80 million--the most expensive option.

Other proposals being considered by the council range from adding 775 to 3,600 curb miles of weekly posted sweeping routes. Several of the proposals also suggest creating a new category, monthly posted routes, which would keep streets on a four-week schedule but would impose new parking restrictions on sweeping days. The cheapest proposal would cost about $5 million.

“Our greatest concern is, that, if the council decides to begin posting again, that it make some kind of commitment to continue the program,” Reed said. “If you start the program up again, you are going to raise people’s expectations. Then all of a sudden if it stops again . . . that would make a lot of people very angry.”

Early discussions among council members have already touched upon one of the most sensitive issues in city government: the equity of city services across community borders and council districts. Flores, whose district extends from Watts to Wilmington, has suggested that street-sweeping schedules be made more uniform citywide.

One proposal by Flores would add 775 curb miles of weekly posted street sweeping, as well as 6,965 curb miles of monthly routes. The weekly postings would involve erecting about 50,000 “No Parking” signs on residential streets identified by the Bureau of Street Maintenance and the City Council as the dirtiest in the city.

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Flores likes the proposal because it attempts to balance the number of weekly posted curb miles among the council’s 15 districts by assigning more new miles to those districts that have fewer posted curb miles. As an example, Yaroslavsky’s district, which has three times more posted curb miles than Flores’ district, would get 14 additional curb miles compared to Flores’ 109.

“I want everyone in this city to be equal,” Flores said. “What is happening now is, people in some parts of the city are getting different kinds and different levels of city services than people in other areas. That is wrong.”

Yaroslavsky, on the other hand, said the city cannot afford to provide the same level of service throughout. He said the council must select the neediest areas.

“We have to be discriminating with our budget dollar,” he said. “Not every neighborhood gets the same amount of police protection. Not every neighborhood is going to get the same amount of street cleaning. It is just the way it is.”

The city began establishing posted street sweeping routes in the early 1960s. Officials intended to eventually post all residential streets. But when money ran out in 1975, there were still large areas without signs. To qualify for signs, more than 25% of the curbside parking spaces on a particular block had to be occupied at sweeping time--a formula the Bureau of Street Maintenance intends to continue using, if new routes are approved by the council.

Generally, the city assigned highest priorities to streets in the central city, gradually adding streets in outlying communities as years passed. But politics and timing also played a role.

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Street maintenance officials typically responded to requests from council members, who were sometimes more concerned about pleasing voters than tending to the city’s dirtiest streets. As a result, some areas of the city developed a patchwork of postings. In Atwater Village, for example, streets north of Glendale Boulevard are posted for weekly sweeping, but those south of the boulevard are not.

Recent complaints about poor street sweeping in some areas of the city are due in part to the changing landscape of Los Angeles, city officials said. Some streets that did not qualify for restricted parking routes 15 years ago are now crowded with parked cars from new apartment buildings and condominiums. Sweepers that once were able to hug the curb without posted parking restrictions are now confined to the center of the street because of heavy curbside parking.

“We have not found a street sweeper yet that will go under a motor vehicle,” said Reed of the Bureau of Street Maintenance. “If we can’t get to the gutters and curbs, we can’t guarantee anybody a clean street. There are many areas of the city that are not going to be as clean as the residents would like them, unless there is an expansion of restricted parking.”

Frustration about inadequate sweeping has run so high in some Harbor Gateway neighborhoods, the narrow city strip connecting Watts to the Los Angeles Harbor, that residents have offered to pay for their own “No Parking” signs. Tom and Betty Anderson, who live on 149th Street near Rosecrans Park, have collected more than 200 signatures of residents willing to chip in for the signs.

“All the trash and junk blows down our street from the park,” Tom Anderson said. “It really needs to be swept more than once a month. And with some ‘No Parking’ signs, we would be able to call in the parking enforcement people and get some of the parked cars ticketed. Right now the guy cruises down the middle of the street. It is a waste.”

The Department of Transportation, which oversees the placement of “No Parking” signs and their enforcement, estimated in a recent report that it would cost $2.1 million to manufacture, post and maintain for five years the 50,000 signs needed to add 775 curb miles of weekly sweeping. The report said it would cost each affected “business or dwelling unit” $36 for the signs.

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Flores, who represents the Harbor Gateway, said she wouldn’t stand in the way of constituents wanting to pay for their own signs, but she described such arrangements as unfair. She said everyone in the city should pay for the signs, or no one should.

“Maybe we could cut that $36 price tag in half if everyone was paying it,” Flores said.

Wachs said he would also consider charging for the service, but Councilwoman Joy Picus, whose San Fernando Valley district would get 142 of the 775 proposed curb miles, said a fee for the signs would simply anger residents who are already fuming about their dirty streets.

“They would be just outraged by it,” Picus said. “I would not support it.”

Free or not, some residents don’t want anything to do with the signs. A neighborhood in San Pedro recently had its signs removed because residents were tired of getting parking tickets on sweeping days. They gave up their weekly sweeping with the signs. And in some affluent areas, residents say they would rather have their gardeners clean the street than clutter the parkways with unsightly “No Parking” signs.

“Frankly, signs are a form of litter themselves,” one Hollywood Hills resident said.

Regardless of what action the council takes, several officials said the effort to clean the streets of Los Angeles will take more than stepped-up sweeping schedules. Flores says she cleans the street outside her San Pedro home and encourages complaining constituents to take a broom to their streets too.

Gail Watson, executive director of Los Angeles Beautiful Inc., said many residents need to change bad habits.

“I am here in an area where they have street sweepers all the time,” Watson said from her downtown office. “But the area is still a mess. The only answer is for the people who live and work around here to care about it. We need to educate people to be concerned about dropping things in the street or out the car window. Then we wouldn’t need to spend all this money on cleaning the streets.”

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PROPOSED RESTRICTED PARKING One proposal before the City Council would add 775 curb miles of posted street sweeping routes. Curb miles are a measure of the curbs on both sides of a street, meaning a one-mile-long street has two curb miles. The following are among the routes identified by the Bureau of Street Maintenance as likely candidates:

1. Eagle Rock Boulevard from Verdugo Road to Division Street; Division from Eagle Rock to Rome Drive; Rome from Division to Cazador Street; a line generally north from Cazador to Verdugo/Eagle Rock. (16 curb miles)

2. Glendale Boulevard from Garden Avenue to the Los Angeles River; east of Los Angeles River from Glendale to Fletcher Drive; Garden from Fletcher to Glendale. (14 curb miles)

3. Glendale from Casitas Avenue to Garden; Garden from Glendale to Carillon Street; Carillon from Garden to Casitas; Casitas from Carillon to Glendale. (16curb miles)

4. A line generally north of Shannon Road from Crystal Springs Drive to Commonwealth Avenue; Commonwealth from north of Dundee Drive to Los Feliz Boulevard; Los Feliz from Commonwealth to Lowry Road; Lowry from Los Feliz to Amesbury; Amesbury from Lowry to Carnavon Way; Carnavon from Amesbury to Shannon. (14 curb miles)

5. A line generally north of Shannon from Crystal to Carnavon; Carnavon from Shannon to Amesbury; Amesbury from Carnavon to Lowry; Lowry from Amesbury to Los Feliz; Los Feliz from Lowry to Griffith Park Boulevard; Griffith Park from Los Feliz to Hyperion Avenue; Hyperion from Griffith Park to Riverside Drive; Riverside from Hyperion to a line generally north of Shannon. (18 curb miles)

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6. Yosemite Drive from La Roda Avenue to Eagle Rock; Eagle Rock from Yosemite to Alumni Avenue; a line generally northeast from Alumni to La Roda. (8 curb miles)

7. A line generally west of Monterey Road and Lomitas Drive to Avenue 50 and the Pasadena Freeway; a line generally along the Pasadena Freeway from Avenue 50 to Via Marisol; a line generally south from Via Marisol and the Pasadena Freeway to Monterey south of Pullman Street; a line generally south of Pullman to the intersection of Coleman Street and Collis Avenue; a line generally north from Coleman and Collis to Monterey and Lomitas. (12 curb miles)

Source: City of Los Angeles Bureau of Street Maintenance

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