OpEd: The promise of WeHo often leaves behind seniors and those with disabilities

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A long term West Hollywood resident approached me to ask, ‘what about the seniors’? “I have no where to go” he said. Then he handed me a copy of an article from PBS News Hour.

“LGBTQ seniors face discrimination in long term care”, “What is West Hollywood doing for seniors?” the man asked. “Every time I watch the city council meeting they spend more time on people that don’t even live in West Hollywood”

When it comes to issues central to the disabled community such as equal access, or the ability to walk down the sidewalk, the city council opted to support ‘outzones’ and ‘scooters’, over the pleadings of the most affected residents living with disabilities.

The Pride and Halloween festivals do not offer a ‘Senior Zone’. In fact the City Council decided skip televising the Pride event on WEHO TV. Many seniors and disabled folks cant walk miles through crowds but want to watch the event on their old fashioned cable tv channel.

West Hollywood has a housing policy that touts ‘aging in place’ initiative. But in fact there are millions spent on homeless initiative, but a struggling senior has few choices. The late John Altschul Former often said “One of the biggest holes in the growth of our city was that many were displaced by development and the City never secured transitional housing facilities.”
The City recently purchased the Holloway Hotel on Santa Monica blvd and committed over 6 million dollars to renovate the ‘homeless transition’ facility. But there are no similar facilities for seniors or those displaced by the Ellis Act, or disabled folks that need assisted care facilities.

The biggest killer to a seniors or those living on a fixed income was the council’s choice to raise the sales tax to highest in the County, and the minimum wage to highest in the nation. The council did not initiative a impact study, or bring in consultants to ask how this would affect residents and seniors living in West Hollywood. So those residents on fixed incomes are paying more for their helpers, food, clothing and all their necessities. The ordinance is a giant tax on seniors and those on fixed incomes.

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It was just 20 years ago when the Santa Monica Blvd re-development project would set course to widen sidewalks and create ‘the most walkable city in California’. Restaurants were encouraged to obtain encroachment permits and expand patios on to the public right of way. But then a new city council approved scooters, and outzones, and suddenly the most walkable city became an obstacle course for all, especially those with limited mobility.

Myra Friedman is a disabled resident who took her complaints to the City Council on numerous occasions. When she expressed her issues walking her dog or using the sidewalks she was told by Mayor Shyne ‘there are two sides’, dismissing the one-arm disabled resident to ‘the other side’. The aspirations of young, strong, healthy individuals seems to have replaced the needs of those who cannot help themselves. Friedman resigned from the Disability Board in shock over the treatment she received by the Mayor.

Many years ago I served alongside Anne Semonico on the Disability Advisory Board sub-committee to give our input into the development of West Hollywood Park and its aquatic center. We contracted for lifts so those with disabilities to have equal access to the new pool.

Two weeks ago while attending a physical therapy session I overhead one of the doctors speaking to her patient, “West Hollywood is so political”, and my ears popped up. She continued to express her problems getting access for her patient at the WeHo Pool. “Its all about money” , “We cant even get in”, was her complaint. “I heard there is a disability board to speak she claimed”, and I interrupted to ask what happened. The promise of a pool that would help disabled residents is not available to all who need it, and there is a cost. There should be a waiver of costs for those with disabilities. What became clear is that local weho residents, in need of physical therapy, do not have easy access to the pool area. There seem to be little accommodations for those who cannot afford the pool pass.

The Council Chambers used to have closed caption TV’s for those of us who are visually impaired, but they have been removed from the council chambers. They are expected to be installed again but only after complaints from members of the disability community.

But a simple google search found one impressive West Hollywood business. Springboard Hospitality’s committment to disabled folks

Accessibility Statement
Springboard Hospitality

We aim to extend genuine hospitality to all guests and visitors of our hotel. Our goal is to make it as effortless as possible for everyone, including people with hearing or vision loss, or any other disability, A fully copy of their statement is here. https://www.springboardhospitality.com/accessibility-statement/

Perhaps Springboard’s committment should be rolled out as a policy for all West Hollywood hotels. Thats the type of policy the City Council should be advocating. Let’s be the most disabled friendly. We advocated for the most vulnerable, except for those who have disabilities.

The young whipper-snappers on the City Council do not understand the plight of living with a disability or growing old. Our issues, our identity, our rights to full and equal access should never be compromised for any policy. Instead of protecting the most vulnerable seniors and disabled residents this City Council has opted for ‘popular’ programs over the necessities of its disabled or senior living in West Hollywood.

As a matter of urgency and with an aging population of seniors and estimated 20% of residents who are disabled we need to do more to promote and build new senior living and assisted living facilities to our city, so we can all ‘age in place’. Those are the kind of incentives that the council should be providing to meet the needs of its residents, its seniors and all those who are living with a disability in the City of West Hollywood.

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[…] AB1620 allows a person with disabilities to move from a second-floor unit to a first-floor unit. The idea was something I brought forward in my run for city council in 2015. WEHOville wrote about it here. […]

weho-disability-bias
weho-disability-bias
8 months ago

there are only a handful of disabled parking spots in the pool garage— that’s very telling. City Council discrimination against the disabled applies to the old and young. The human city turned into a woke-joke festival.

Susan
Susan
8 months ago

I have had a pool pass for years that is free. I am a disabled senior. I don’t know if they have changed the criteria but it’s horrible if they have.

whoever designed and build the new pool, gave no thought to the needs of disabled and elderly people. There isn’t even a ramp down into the recreation pool. Cortez and his pool staff have done what they can to work around these serious design problems, but the City Hall people who approved these design plans should be held accountable.

Landmark Comparison
Landmark Comparison
8 months ago
Reply to  Susan

As a comparison, Paul Williams designed the Hollywood YMCA which has served many in the community since 1921 which contains space for every conceivable discipline. A lap pool sits adjacent to a shallower pool used for children, seniors and aquatic therapy classes. It is all very effective, great location and situated in a landmark building. The West Hollywood Park Complex seems to have been built for effect rather that utility leaving many discouraged and unserved.

Susan
Susan
8 months ago

Landmark Comparison. I know the Hollywood Ymca pool quite well. It has a great many problems as well for a disabled person. If you like swimming indoors, it is still a lovely pool. I suspect you would really appreciate looking at photos of the New York City public indoor pools

Landmark Comparison
Landmark Comparison
8 months ago
Reply to  Susan

Thank you, I believe my point was that the designers of the West Hollywood Project appear to have been oblivious to the positive and negative aspects of other public serving pools. I also realize that building public pools in NYC nearly rose to an art form.

Roberto Ramirez Gonzalez
Roberto Ramirez Gonzalez
8 months ago

Seniors concerns

Franki Jacobs
8 months ago

Larry I love your Op Eds and they are real, you and I both have done anything we could to help seniors. I went to Assemblyman Miguel Santiago for seniors in Weho refused CalVCB benefits for 2 years of calling 📞 😳. Any senior violated of break ins, burglaries, getting attacked walking or getting on a bus or being run down by drunk drivers is the JOB OF LAX DISTRICT ATTORNEY OFFICE to assist THEIR MARSY LAW VICTIM RIGHTS, instead they rather torture us , Gaslight all of us, undermine all of us!! I used my own personal bank account… Read more »

michaelz
michaelz
8 months ago

Thanks for this article larry….Its all such BS….The city
cares zero for seniors….grow old and get out…..

weho-disability-bias
weho-disability-bias
8 months ago
Reply to  michaelz

True

Jason
Jason
8 months ago

I love all the poor seniors complaining about the “young”…the biggest problem is multi-million dollar single family home owners who have opposed new dense construction for decades. Who do you think owns these? People in their 20s or those who are also 50+? Get real!

Eastside Straight Girl
Eastside Straight Girl
8 months ago

My two cents on this one Larry is that we have two Gray-haired Lame Ducks sitting on the Council & I have not heard them propose anything regarding the strong support for the aging population which they are part of! You would think that with all of the dedication, support, & care that the aging people have put into this city to help it become what it is today, that they would be treated with more respect & attention to help them ease into senior life! What I have observed is a blatant disdain for the seniors that is quite… Read more »

John McCormick
John McCormick
8 months ago

There is no safety net for seniors in Weho. I’ve been told point blank. I’ve had to retire and in the middle of waiting for federal disability claim. I turned to the city, the lgbtq center and our county representative a few months ago. In each case, I’ve found no real tangible help. The list for housing help is closed in Weho. Allegedly 8000 already waiting. Everyone has been professional and kind, but until I lose my rent control apartment after nearly 14 years and move to the street, there is no urgency to find solutions. Apparently “Aging in Place”… Read more »

Slim to None
Slim to None
8 months ago
Reply to  John McCormick

Unfortunately “Aging in Place “ is another feel good West Hollywood euphemism. The solutions are slim to none. The Planning Department in concert with Housing simply mark time while they collaborate and pencil in and pencil out their potential financial windfalls with developers. No altruism here. Is it a surprise that the Community Development Director retired with a proverbial gold watch?

John Ryan
John Ryan
8 months ago

Sepi Shyne, defender of the rich and young!
MONSTER!

Michael G Labarbera
Michael G Labarbera
8 months ago

The editorial is spot on. Our council (and ALL the real estate developers) seem determined that West Hollywood should only be available to the very young who are also very rich. How lazy that none of us seniors living in WeHo had the sense to pick parents who could provide us with trust funds. I fear on a daily basis what I would be able to do should anything happen to change my present housing situation; and I contributed to Social Security, Medicare AND IRAs my whole working life. I was hardly lazy about planning my senior years.

WehoQueen
WehoQueen
8 months ago

I’m confused why people think anyone’s goal is to have young people here. Seems to me, as people typically stay in their rental apartments for 30, 40, 50 or more years, and they more often than not don’t leave until the day they drop dead, we are a city of a bunch of old people. Sure there may be some flashy younger people with trust funds, but rental units are for old and often poor people. That is the City council’s target demographic, as those people keep voting for the same type of person decade after decade. John Heilman has… Read more »

greeneyedguy
greeneyedguy
8 months ago
Reply to  WehoQueen

but rental units are for old and often poor people”

You are so out of touch

Don Jones
Don Jones
8 months ago

LA Times Steve Lopez now writes an interesting Saturday column about aging.

This past week, the column wrote about California’s Master Plan for Aging. By 2030, 25% of CA’s population will be over 60. West Hollywood’s 60+ population is already 22.7% and will far exceed 25% by 2030.

Let’s make sure city hall is familiar with this master plan https://mpa.aging.ca.gov/

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