Video Of First Interested Persons Meeting Now Available — See John Howland And Bill Delvac Discuss Whether Neighborhood Council Assent Is Necessary For Development Projects (TL,DR: Yes). This Revelation Makes BID Control Of DLANC Seem Even More Unsavory Than It Already Did

Yesterday afternoon the Ethics Commission held the first in a series of three meetings to gather even more input from interested parties concerning proposed revisions to the Municipal Lobbying Ordinance. I recorded the whole thing for posterity and you can watch it here:

I’ll be commenting on this and the next meeting1 from time to time, and today I just want to point out an interesting response from seasoned Los Angeles lobbyists John Howland and Bill Delvac2 to an interesting question from Ethics Commission ED Heather Holt. One of the proposals on the table is a requirement that lobbyists report attempts to influence neighborhood councils in addition to the other City agencies they’re already required to disclose information about. In the context of this discussion, Holt asked the lobbyists:

Just out of curiosity, for development projects, is there a general sense that you need a neighborhood council buy-in for it to go anywhere?

In response to this, über-düber lobbyist John Howland smirked and emitted an inarticulate snort, seemingly in disbelief that the boss of the Ethics Commission could ask such a silly question, before saying “yes.” This response was echoed by Bill Delvac, with Howland interjecting the occasional assent:

BD: We’re happy when we get to neutral.
JH: Yeah. Well, yeah.
BD:
[Unintelligible] … the Charter and the Code, they’re really not binding. But it matters more to some Councilmen [sic] than it does to others and often [unintelligible] you wanna get their support. I wouldn’t have written the Charter that way, but …

This interchange certainly supports the Ethics Commission’s proposal to subject lobbying directed at neighborhood councils to disclosure, and, interestingly, there didn’t seem to be any actual opposition to this proposal from the lobbyists. So maybe, no matter what gets compromised out of the rest of the proposals, this one will make it through the gauntlet, which is a good thing.3

And turn the page for a discussion of some potential implications, possibly as-yet unconsidered, of this proposal having to do with the fact that, probably uniquely among NCs, the DLANC has a ton of BID staffers on its board of directors.

Now, the City’s various boards and commissions are high-value targets for lobbyists. Lobbyists appear before them, the boards and commissions recommend to Council, and probably, for the most part, their recommendations are accepted. Lobbyists earn a lot of money convincing boards and commissions to accept their clients’ positions. This is why lobbyists are required to disclose their attempts to influence boards and commissions.

And if being able to convince boards and commissions of things is worth so much money to lobbyists, how much more money would an actual vote on a given board or commission be worth? What if a lobbyist could tell his client that not only does he have the ear of the commissioners, but he actually is a commissioner? Of course, this is clearly a corrupt situation, which is why it’s illegal in the City of Los Angeles for anyone who’s required by the MLO to register as a lobbyist to also serve on a board or commission.

This summary is an oversimplification, but only a slight one. The law in question is LAMC §49.5.13(A), which states:

A member of a City board or commission who is required to file statements of economic interests pursuant to the Political Reform Act shall not receive compensation to communicate, either personally or through an agent, with a City official for the purpose of attempting to influence action on a City matter on behalf of a person other than an agency.4
The key bit there is the limitation to members of boards or commissions who are …”required to file statements of economic interests pursuant to the Political Reform Act.” Recall that the whole reason the Ethics Commission has proposed that neighborhood councils be redefined as City agencies is that their members aren’t required to file statements of economic interests. That’s why it would require a change in the law to require disclosure of attempts to influence.

But, as before, if NCs are sufficiently high value to make the disclosure of attempts to influence them necessary, how much more necessary is it for members of the boards of NCs to be forbidden from accepting money to influence City action? Once lobbyists are required to disclose attempts to influence neighborhood councils there’s no principled argument that will distinguish between NC membership and commission or board membership with respect to compensated lobbying.

That’s a big reason why the situation with the board of directors of DLANC is so upsetting. Its board of directors is chock-full of the staff of business improvement districts. Check out the current DLANC Board directory. On the board are Rena Leddy, executive director of the Fashion District BID, Estela Lopez, executive director of the Central City East Association, which runs the Downtown Industrial District BID, Bob Newman, on-and-off employee of the Historic Core BID, and Josh Kreger, director of real estate and planning at the South Park BID.

Each and every one of these people5 “…receive[s] compensation to communicate, either personally or through an agent, with a City official for the purpose of attempting to influence action on a City matter.” It’s just what they do. And the City not only knows about it, they like it that way. Rena Leddy alone has boasted as late as April 2017, here in this board packet, that she and the rest of the Fashion District staff

…spend 40-60% of their time on building relationships and advocating on behalf of the Fashion District and see it as a key tool in some of the more fundamental issues facing the future. With DTLA 2040 on the horizon, the Fashion District needs to be fundamentally proactive in the future of the District. Zoning modifications, allocation of public resources to address infrastructure issues, public benefit priorities, grants and partnerships [are all] integral to the future.

That is, advocating for the financial interests of her BID is around half of Rena Leddy’s job as executive director. And she has a seat on the board of DLANC with which to push the agendas of her employer, the BID. And she’s not ashamed to use it, even in the most blatant of ways.

Just for instance, consider the fact that Mark Levy is on the Fashion District’s Board. He also works for mega-development City Market South. Not only does Rena Leddy lobby for Mark Levy’s employer by, e.g., getting quoted extensively in puff pieces about the project,6 she also VOTES IN FAVOR OF CITY MARKET SOUTH when its matters come up before DLANC.

Here is an example from June 2017. Take a look at the minutes of that month’s meeting.7 Look on page seven to see an application by City Market South for a bunch of variances.8 Then look on page ten to see that Rena Leddy seconded a motion to bundle the land use items and then VOTED IN FAVOR of City Market South’s application. There’s no reasonable way that this kind of thing should be allowed. It looks corrupt and it quite possibly is corrupt.9 Mark Levy is Rena Leddy’s employer in that he’s on the BID’s board of directors, at whose pleasure Rena Leddy retains her very job. How can anyone expect that she’ll make impartial decisions about Mark Levy’s projects when they come up before DLANC?

And there’s no question that the Ethics Commission has the power to recommend to City Council that LAMC 49.4.13 gets changed in this way. LAMC 49.5.13 is part of the Government Ethics Ordinance and the City Charter at §702(f) gives the Ethics Commission the power

to make recommendations to the Mayor and the Council concerning campaign finance reform, lobbying, governmental ethics and conflicts of interest and to report to the Council every three years concerning the effectiveness of these laws

If the City Council ends up agreeing with the Ethics Commission’s proposed updates to the MLO and including NCs, despite the fact that they don’t fill out statements of economic interest, as City Agencies for purposes of the MLO, I really hope that the very next step is to include NCs as City boards or commissions for purposes of LAMC 49.5.13(A). If they do that it will take care of this kind of nonsense that Rena Leddy, Estela Lopez, and Josh Kreger are getting away with. And what’s an Ethics Commission even for if not taking care of nonsense?


Image of John Howland is ©2017 MichaelKohlhaas.Org.

  1. Tomorrow morning, by the way. This one takes some extra work to get in to. You have to register for the Congress of Neighborhood Councils, which is free but required, and then RSVP to ethics.policy@lacity.org. The meeting seems to start at 9:25 a.m. and the room does not seem to have been announced yet. It’s somewhere in City Hall. The registration page for the NC thing claims that they’re giving away free breakfast and lunch, but you know what Robert Heinlein used to say.
  2. Of whom I was not aware before yesterday’s meeting. He seems like an interesting character, and I actually agreed with a lot of what he had to say about the proposed revisions, although by no means everything. I learned a lot from listening to this guy and hope to post about some of it soon, or anyway at some point.
  3. By the way, wouldn’t you like to know which Councilmembers Bill Delvac had in mind? My impression is that, like José Huizar, who is happy to do what DLANC says if it’s also what he wants, but is super-happy to, e.g., ignore the Boyle Heights NC if that suits his purposes, CMs pretty much do what they want. I’d really like to know who the ones are to whom it matters. Bill? Drop me a line, friend!
  4. This is a really interesting law, by the way. It’s far stronger than the Municipal Lobbying Ordinance in that it forbids anyone who gets paid to influence action from sitting on a board or commission. In particular, it’s NOT required that they be subject to registration under the MLO. Thus anyone who’s paid to influence, even if they only spend a little bit of time on it or don’t get very much money for it, or whatever, even if they’re not an actual lobbyist, is not allowed on a board or commission.
  5. Except maybe Bob Newman. No one seems to be able to understand exactly what the guy does, at least in addition to hiring himself out as a paid thug for batty little fusspot Blair Besten of the Historic Core BID.
  6. Which is certainly lobbying activity according to the MLO which, at LAMC §48.02 defines lobbying activity as including “seeking to influence the position of a third party on municipal legislation or an issue related to municipal legislation by any means, including but not limited to engaging in community, public or press relations activities.”
  7. Draft minutes, it’s true, but this isn’t the kind of thing that changes later.
  8. They’re represented by our old friend, Mr. Snerk himself, John Howland!
  9. And it may actually be illegal according to State-level ethics laws. I don’t understand them well enough to know, at least not yet. I’m told that State law forbids even the appearance of a conflict of interest and that NC members are in fact subject to State ethics laws. However, as I said, I don’t know enough to make a convincing argument myself.
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  1. Great post! I think its also critical to call out the Downtown Los Angeles Neighborhood Council (DLANC) President Patti Berman because she also works for a BID- the Historic core BID (although not full-time). It is under her longtime leadership that the many “conflicts of interest” have been allowed to fester and mutate. DLANC is primarily collection of BID staff lobbying for development projects (see the Planning Committee).

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