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BALANCED
BUDGET
ADOPTED
BY COUNCIL |
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The City Council in June adopted
a $383.1 million municipal budget for the 2005-06 fiscal
year that began July 1.
The budget includes $207.5 million in operating funds
for police, fire, parks, library and all other basic
city services and $175.6 million in restricted funds
(for transportation, housing, Redevelopment Agency
projects and other designated uses). $11.9 million was
budgeted for phase one of the Charnock well field
drinking water restoration project. Strategic budget
enhancements to address community priorities for 2005-06
include funding new staff positions to address homeless
issues. Also funded were positions to coordinate youth
and neighborhood programs at Virginia Avenue Park when
it reopens this fall, an additional trades intern, a
graffiti removal technician and streetscape and lighting
improvements in the Pico neighbor-hood—all part of the
city’s commitment to gang violence prevention. A
cultural arts master plan and new ongoing funds for
landscape maintenance are among other
community-requested priorities funded this year.
For more information on the budget, please visit the
Finance section of the city’s website at
www.smgov.net. |
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LONG-RANGE
COUNCIL AGENDA ITEMS |
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MAJOR MATTERS EXPECTED TO COME
BEFORE CITY COUNCIL IN JULY AND AUGUST: |
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- Appeal of quarter mile radius requirement for
off-site affordable housing at 507 Wilshire Blvd.
- Annual transportation demand management
ordinance
- Actions to implement living wage contractor
model
- Introduction and first reading of ordinance to
implement Promenade Uses
- Task Force recommendation
- SMC access to its new Bundy campus
- Landmarks appeal at 921 19th Street
- Development agreement for 1333-37 Ocean Avenue
- Appeal of designation of 125 Pacific as a city
landmark
- Ordinance establishing a new race route
- Landmarks Ordinance revision
- Ordinance allowing administrative approval of
number and type of driveways required for parking
structures with over 40 spaces
- Ordinance adopting 2005 Edition of the
California Energy Code and local code amendments
- Preliminary design approval for the 2nd and 4th
Streets Pedestrian and Streetscape Improvements
Project
- Discussion of housing issues, including state
requirements, affordable and market rate local
housing, development incentives, inconsistencies
between state and local regulations
- Public hearing on 2005 Storm water Parcel Report
- Auto Dealer Interim Ordinance
- Issuance of Wastewater Revenue Bonds (Hyperion
Project)
- Regulations and fees for inspection of
alcohol-serving establishments
- Resolution establishing Santa Monica fire
stations as locations for “safe surrender” of babies
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| The long-range nature of this list means that some
items may not be heard in the month originally
scheduled, as new
matters emerge and agendas are re-worked. No item will
come to Council before the date originally published.
Also
available on-line at
www.smgov.net. |
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Even Doonesbury’s Mr. Butts
Can’t Smoke on the beach
in Santa Monica! |
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| Designed
especially for the city by Doonesbury
creator and Pulitzer Prize winner Garry
Trudeau, a sticker featuring the
character “Mr. Butts” is the centerpiece
of a public awareness campaign kicking
off this summer to make sure people know
there is no smoking on Santa Monica
beaches. The design, generously donated
to the city by Trudeau, will be seen on
700
beach trash cans and will be included in
media outreach intended to reach
potential beach goers. |
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| “We simply asked Trudeau if he’d be
willing to lend Mr. Butts’ persona to
this education effort,” said Barbara
Stinchfield,
director of Community & Cultural
Services, “and he said yes. We are
grateful and know that the attention our
campaign
receives because of the Doonesbury
connection will really get the ‘no
smoking on the beach’ message out.” |
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| Cigarette butts are the single most
prevalent form of litter found on our
beaches. Because of their
slow-to-degrade composition, they
persist in the environment for years,
impacting public health, sealife and the
Santa Monica Bay. The Santa Monica City
Council enacted the ordinance
prohibiting smoking on the beach (SMMC
4.44) shortly after passing a similar
prohibition for its parks in 2004. Santa
Monica was one of the first cities in
the state to do so, and cities up and
down the coast have followed suit, with
smoking now prohibited on beaches from
San Clemente to
Malibu, including Los Angeles county
beaches. |
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| The Doonesbury comic strip was
launched in 1970 and now appears in more
than 1,400 newspapers in the United
States and abroad. |
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BEING
PREPARED IS KEY TO WEATHERING ANY STORM |
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| While
the recent earthquakes and tsunami alerts are unsettling
reminders of our state’s potential for natural
disasters, they
also are an effective means to convince most of us of
the need for emergency preparedness at home and work.
Even as
public safety officials continue to develop and refine
procedures that will enable them to quickly respond to
life-threatening
events, citizens must also be prepared to cope on their
own for at least 72 hours, since a major disaster could
overwhelm
both local resources and emergency responders’ ability
to answer every call for assistance. |
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TSUNAMI SENSE |
| We know that people are particularly concerned about
tsunamis as a result of last December’s tragic losses in
Southeast Asia and the recent warning issued for the
California coast. Santa Monica residents should be
reassured that much of the city is protected from the
potentially devastating effects of tsunamis by the
Palisades bluffs along the Pacific Coast Highway. They
provide protection for most of the populated area
located north of the Santa Monica Pier, since scientific
research indicates the largest possible tsunami
inundation is 30 feet, well below the bluffs’ height.
Residents located between the bluffs and the ocean, and
those south of the Pier, are advised to move 1/4 mile
(four blocks) inland in the event of either a tsunami
evacuation or strong earthquake lasting 20 seconds or
more. If you feel a strong earthquake, drop, cover and
hold until the shaking stops. Depending on the location
of its epicenter, the ‘quake may be the only warning of
an approaching tsunami so it is important to react
quickly, not waiting for an official warning:
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Turn off any active heating or cooking appliance
in your home, but DON’T take the time to turn off
gas or electric service.
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If you can, WALK rather than drive
out of harm’s way. This will reduce the likelihood
of traffic congestion. Following are safe refuges
and evacuation centers:
- Santa Monica High School – 601 Pico Blvd.
- Olympic High School – 721 Ocean Park Blvd.
- Roosevelt Elementary School – 801 Montana Ave.
- Santa Monica College – 1900 Pico Blvd
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L.A. County lifeguards will notify the public in
beach areas of the need to move 1/4 mile inland to
higher ground, while city emergency personnel will use
all available resources, including the city’s website
and City Hall on Call (458-8999), to reach the public in
other parts of the city. Local media will, of course, be
an important source of emergency notification and
information.
- Use common sense. Do not go to the coast to see a
tsunami if an alert or warning has been issued. If you
are on the beach following an earthquake, and you see
the water receding in a manner that is not normal,
quickly make your way to higher ground.
- Stay away from coastal areas until the all clear is
given by designated safety officials.
The City of Santa Monica’s Office of Emergency Services
has an extensive disaster preparedness website, with
emergency planning and supplies checklists, as well as
links to numerous other agencies and organizations that
offer information and assistance in dealing with
disasters. Please visit
santamonicafire.org/disaster/ or call
458-8686 to obtain the information you’ll need to be
well-prepared in the event of an emergency.
City Hall on
Call (458-8999) also provides information via recorded
messages and fax documents (enter Option 1, #504 to
begin) and is available anytime of the day or night.
We’re committed to ensuring the safety and welfare of
all those who live in, work in or visit this community.
We’ll do our part—but we need you to do your part, too,
so take the time now to prepare for that unexpected
emergency.
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