Showing posts with label in memoriam. Show all posts
Showing posts with label in memoriam. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 4, 2018

Elysian Park: In Memoriam, Peter Lassen
1939 – 2018, Community Activist

Photo: Diane Edwardson, Red Tailed Hawk. January 14, 2013.

Friends will gather at the Grace Simons Lodge in Elysian Park tonight to honor the life and legacy of Peter “Pete” Lassen who passed away August 8, 2018.  

I am personally saddened by Pete’s passing as he was a mentor and friend for nearly 25 years.  I always looked up to Pete.  As a community activist, I learned so much from him and we always had a great time talking about things not related to whatever community issue was at hand.  He was charismatic, friendly and had a mellifluous deep voice.  He put family first.  Pete was an inspiration to so many.  Most of all, he was a good person.  

Weeks later, my hands are shaking as I write this and I still can’t adequately sum up the decades of friendship and activism. So I’ll just tell a couple of stories.

A few years ago, while sharing lunch at HOME Restaurant patio, on a beautiful winter day with blue skies and fluffy white clouds, over the din of Riverside Fletcher intersection and the 5 Freeway, while discussing a nearby development proposal, Pete suddenly exclaimed, “Whoa! A huge hawk just took off from that power line tower! Wait there’s another one!”  In the afternoons the updrafts created by the roads and topography makes it an ideal jumping off place for hawks to soar.  Naturally, the hawk led into a long discussion of our enormous hawks and other wildlife in our neighborhoods.  In the last ten years, we actually spent more time talking about other stuff than the issue at hand.

As fellow city planning geeks, we often talked about the built environment, topography, history, native landscapes and urban wildlife. Pete always looked at how the minutiae fit into the big picture, not just how it affected immediate neighbors.

Pete was willing to explain complex and esoteric issues to community members trying to genuinely understand the technical plans on boards at community scoping meetings and how it related to the neighborhood.  When neighbors were attending 2 Freeway Terminus meetings, I told them, find Pete, hang out behind him and you’ll learn what’s important. That’s what I did.  He later said “I thought there were a number of people from your neighborhood asking me questions, and asking good questions.”

When we were involved in the SR2 Freeway Terminus Redesign, I would call him up and say things like “Am I insane?  Or is this the first time sound walls appeared on a map or at all? In 16 years, they never even discussed sound walls anywhere other than the immediate terminus.” Pete’s response was “Yes, you are insane, and, no, those sound walls were not in any previous plan or discussion [prior to the Draft EIR].”  He knew the teasing didn’t bother me.  Decades earlier, I’d learned from Pete, the importance of the details on a proposed map even if they’re not mentioned in the written portion of a proposed plan.

I remember Pete from the first community meeting I ever attended for a development proposal on the Red Car Property in the early 1990s.  He was someone I often consulted, particularly with large complex issues in the community. As community activists, through countless community meetings, small meetings and lunches, we volunteered our time fighting in the community’s interest on the Silver Lake - Echo Park - Elysian Valley Community Plan, SR2 Freeway Terminus Redesign, Glendale Blvd Corridor Plan, Neighbors of Dodger Stadium, Red Car Property, Menlo Property, Semi Tropic Spiritualists’ Tract, just to name a few things affecting our immediate neighborhood.

In his death, Pete joins more of my mentors, Virginia Adams and Rey Dominguez of Elysian Valley, Alicia Brown of Solano Canyon and Judy Raskin of Echo Park.  Pete, and all of them, not only made our community a better place, they made Los Angeles and the world a better place.   

Rest in peace Pete.
Diane Edwardson  

Read more about Pete Lassen: The Eastsider
 

Saturday, October 28, 2017

In Memoriam: Karin Flores, LA River Advocate

Photo: Diane Edwardson, December 25, 2009.  Blue Heron on the LA River.  

Karin Flores, LA River advocate, environmentalist, community activist and friend, died earlier this month.  A memorial will take place, today, October 28, 2017, 10:30 A.M. at The Frog Spot, 2825 Benedict Street, Elysian Valley). 

Karin was a tireless activist for the river and surrounding neighborhoods in the Glendale Narrows, including Elysian Valley and Atwater.  Through her work with Friends of the LA River, she got to know and genuinely care about the people who make the neighborhoods unique.  

Most of all, Karin was a good person.

Photo: Diane Edwardson, November 16, 2016. Air pollution hanging above Elysian Valley and Cypress Park, trapped by the inversion layer.

I got to know Karin while we volunteered with the Northeast Residents for Clean Air working to get Metrolink to respect the neighborhoods they pollute surrounding the maintenance yard in Cypress Park.  Her positive energy helped keep several of us going on the project since 2011.
Photo: Diane Edwardson, December 19, 2012.  Mushrooms in Red Car Canyon.

Karin had the gift of seeing not only the big picture, but how the minutiae fit into the big picture.  She loved the beauty and endless variety of mushrooms, not just locally, but worldwide as seen alongside environmental causes she supported on her Twitter feed, @PurpleSageLA

Karin was always supportive of the effort to acquire the Red Car Property as a park.  She understood its potential as a link between parks and neighborhoods.  She often suggested creative outreach and always knew who to contact in city/county/state departments to help solve problems.
Photo: Diane Edwardson, July 18, 2012.  Marine Blue Butterfly on Corralitas Drive.

Karin appreciated the art of the imperfect bird or butterfly photograph, where the animal's movement at the shutter snap turned the photo into art.

Karin was an asset to the community.  Her positive outlook and genuine concern for the neighborhoods made her easy to work with.  Her loss will be felt for years to come.

Thursday, November 13, 2014

Echo Park: In Memoriam, Judy Raskin 1934-2014, Community Activist

Photo: Diane Edwardson, July 14, 2013.  Red Tailed Hawk.

This morning, a memorial took place at Echo Park Lake for Judy Raskin, a tireless community activist & active birder.  Judy organized the annual bird count at Echo Park Lake for the Audubon Society.  She was active in Echo Park advisory board (which did not include the lake), Echo Park Improvement Association (EPIA) Neighborhood Issues Committee & was an animal advocate helping care for & find homes for animals in need.  

I've know Judy for at least 20 years as a fellow community activist.  She was a natural leader & strategist, who saw the big picture, not just the NIMBY issues.  Our shared projects were first the Glendale Corridor Project (south of the 2 Freeway Terminus) & the 2 Freeway Terminus Project in which Judy managed to sustain community interest for almost 20 years as chair of the Echo Park Community Action Committee (Echo Park CAC).   

As with any multi-year/decades long planning process covering such a huge area with multiple individual neighborhood issues, revolving door politicians & constantly changing project managers, it's about as simple as herding cats.  Judy used her skills as a retired publicist, finding leaders in individual neighborhoods, tapping their skills & organizing abilities, persuading community leaders with specialized technical knowledge into taking active rolls creating alternative plans and finding flaws in what was being sold to the community & mercifully, only calling big community meetings when really necessary to hold CalTrans & Metro accountable.    

Judy saw the Glendale Blvd Corridor from the 2 & 5 Freeway Interchange all the to Echo Park Lake as pieces that had to work together rather than individual projects existing in a vacuum (which is how projects are approved).  

Judy & Echo Park CAC created a plan to put a park on the 2 Freeway Terminus flyover ramp that was supposed to be taken out of commission when the 2 Freeway Terminus Project first started 17 or 18 years ago.  The community driven plan put a park on the current (soon to be removed) northbound exit to Glendale Blvd at the Terminus.  One option included plans for a bike lane from the Terminus to the Red Car Property on the Silver Lake side of the southbound 2 Freeway.  

The community driven plan for the 2 Freeway Terminus was considered among the variety of plans in the Environmental Impact Report in 2009 - this itself is an acheivement.  The community was overwhelming in support of it.  A year or two later, CalTrans came back with an entirely new plan, calling it a "Hybrid Plan" ("people like hybrids - they'll like this plan"), deeming the environmental review complete & no one is happy with the plan we're getting as a result. However, after the length of time, you have to commend Judy for the high level of work, professionalism & organization that got us to this point.  

The community lost another tremendous asset. She will be remembered & missed by so many activists and friends.  
 

Friday, July 19, 2013

Lake View Ave: Gunther Freehill
In Memoriam

Photo: Diane Edwardson, July 18, 2013.  Sunset over Silver Ridge.

Former Red Car Property neighbor, Gunther Freehill passed away in Washington DC, July 15, 2013,  following complications from a heart attack, at the age of 60. 

Freehill was a legendary AIDS activist who went from the front lines of ACT UP/LA to working as the public affairs director for LA County Office of AIDS Programs and Policy.  In 2005, Freehill moved to Washington DC's Dept of Public Health HIV/AIDS Administration.     

Freehill was a Red Car Property neighbor and Lake View Ave resident before he moved to DC.  He was always supportive of community efforts battling developers and working to acquire the Red Car Property as a park. 

I remember Gunther at community meetings as well as talking to him whenever we went door to door organizing.  He was an activist at heart.  It seems like so long ago that ACT UP/LA was controversial. 

Recommended reading:  Gunther Freehill's obituary in Frontiers.

Friday, November 16, 2012

Elysian Park: CCSEP Memorial Tree Planting Saturday, November 17, 2012

Photo: Diane Edwardson, February 18, 2012.  California Black Walnut.

Elysian Park Memorial Tree Planting
Saturday, November 17, 2012
11 AM
Location of planting, ceremony & directions:
Elysian Park
 
Guest Speaker: Donald R. Hodel, Horticulturalist
Topic: Chavez Ravine Arboretum, Elysian Park
Ceremony followed by a pot luck brunch, bring a dish to share
CCSEP will provide water & drinks

An annual event sponsored by the Citizen's Committee to Save Elysian Park, in conjunction with the Los Angeles Department of Recreation & Parks.

Honor those who are no longer with us; a favorite pet; celebrate a birth or just plant a tree.

Always a beautiful, moving ceremony.
 

Monday, October 8, 2012

Semi Tropic Spiritualists' Tract: In Memoriam, James Nunya, 1944 -2012

Photo: Diane Edwardson, September 28, 2011.  James Nunya was a community leader who fought to preserve the trees in the Semi Tropic Spiritualists' Tract.  (Click on photo to enlarge.) 
 
James "Jimmy" Nunya, 1944 - 2012
Semi Tropic Spiritualists' Tract Defender
 
I first met Jimmy in the early 1990s, when I used to walk the steep hills and public staircases in the Semi Tropic Spiritualists' Tract, as part of a daily 3+ mile trek with my dog, through some of the steepest hills in Elysian Heights. We always said "hello" when I passed his house at the top of one of the staircases.  He was a guardian of the hill, looking out for strangers and people who didn't belong, often scaring off people intent on committing crime.
 
After a few weeks he stopped me, "Let me ask you something.  You don't live on this hill.  No one who lives on this hill walks this hill.   Where do you live?"  When I told him I live on the hill across the 2 Freeway from his hill, we struck up an ongoing conversation about our hillsides, neighborhoods, development, nature and crime. Every year, we appreciated each other's Christmas lights since we could see each other's homes from our respective living rooms.
 
We always knew we would one day have to battle developers over the future of the Semi Tropic Spiritualists' Tract "garden lots."   Sure enough the battle began in 2004, continuing to the present.  Jimmy was always there at every meeting asking the questions developers and politicians didn't want to hear.  He kept asking the same questions, over and over, because most developers and politicians are adept at avoiding answering the questions.  In the activist world, this is an invaluable skill. 
 
Jimmy's enthusiasm to battle for the trees was tireless. Sadly, we lost the battle for the trees in 2011. Almost a year later, we lost Jimmy.  He will be missed.
 
In Jimmy's words, "Let me just ask one more thing...."

Friday, September 14, 2012

Elysian Valley: In Memoriam, Rey Dominguez, Community Activist, 1944-2012

Elysian Valley, 1924, from Taylor Yard.  A few years ago, Rey Dominguez sent me this photo of his neighborhood he found online.  Rey had a love of neighborhood history.  (Click on photo to enlarge.) 
 
Reymundo Dominguez, 1944 – 2012
Longtime Elysian Valley Community Activist
 
Reymundo (Rey) Dominguez, a longtime community activist who lived in Elysian Valley for 60 years, passed away Sunday morning, September 9, 2012.   He was 68.
 
Rey suffered with a chronic respiratory illness for the past few years and was in intensive care at Keck Hospital, where he died, according to his wife Cecilia (Ceci).
 
Rey was a senior design engineer for major aerospace companies including Boeing and Northrop for several decades. He was proud of his work as an engineer and worked on major projects such as the space shuttle, stealth bomber, space station and the Apache Military Helicopter.  He retired this year.
 
Rey was born in Los Angeles at Lying-In Hospital in Echo Park in 1944 and grew up in Chavez Ravine. Rey’s family was among Los Desterrados (“The Uprooted”).  His family home and neighborhood were bulldozed to make way for Dodger Stadium in the 1950’s. 
 
When he was 8 years old, Rey and has family relocated to Elysian Valley in 1961, where five generations of his family reside.  He graduated from Marshall High School and Los Angeles City College. He served in the Army June 29, 1965 through June 13, 1967 and was stationed in Germany during the Vietnam War. He received a good conduct, mark defense service and expert rifle medals.
 
Rey was a stalwart of the community,  but modest of his accomplishments.  He was always present, supporting  community projects and events, doing whatever needed to be done. He had a very big heart and was a very giving man who poured his soul into the projects in which he was involved. In turn, everyone loved and respected him.  Rey never ceased to inspire those around him with his optimism and loving support.
 
Rey, with his beloved wife of 42 years Ceci, was a key contributor to the planning and formation of the first Elysian Valley Community Garden, a founding member of the Elysian Valley Neighborhood Council, called for street light improvements, and the development of Marsh Park and Marsh Skate Park in Elysian Valley.  He successfully fought the City’s plan to locate a sewer exhaust facility in Elysian Valley, a residential neighborhood of working families. Rey was also very active with Virginia Adams in a zoning battle with Mission labs, which was polluting the community and encroaching on residential properties adjacent to their facility. 
 
Rey had a long friendship with Father Richard Estrada.  Rey assisted Father Richard with the development and fundraising of Jovenes Inc., an organization helping young immigrants with housing and other social service needs. He also had a very special place in his heart for Mission San Conrado, where he attended mass with his family. He joined Father Richard and others with The Water Project in the desert, along the border, several times to leave water for immigrants who crossed the border to the U.S. looking for a better life.
 
Even as his health declined, Rey remained active, along with Ceci, in the battle over making Metrolink’s Central Maintenance Facility in Taylor Yard a better neighbor. The diesel rail yard has severe impacts on the health of residents in Elysian Valley and Cypress Park communities.
 
For the past three years Rey and Cecilia volunteered to decorate with hundreds of marigold flowers the annual Dia de los Muertos Commemoration at El Centro Del Pueblo. Rey will now be included on the community altar with much love and admiration for the life he led. Rey’s last project was to establish a veteran’s recognition in Elysian Valley.
 
Rey was a Boy Scout leader for four years when his son was a Boy Scout.  Just this June, he   taught a local Girl Scout troupe to be the honor guard for the opening day of the baseball season at the Elysian Valley Recreation Center.
 
Rey was also an avid backpacker and distance cyclist. He loved the Los Angeles River, which was a couple of blocks from his home. Ray rode his bike in the Los Angeles Marathon four times and the Rosarito Beach to Ensenada bike ride three times before chronic respiratory illness limited his fitness.
 
Rey is survived by his wife Ceci; his children Reymundo Jr. and Laura; his grandson Ricky; and his sister Rosemarie Cabrera and brother Jesse Dominguez. In lieu of flowers, donations are being requested be sent to Barlow Foundation barlowhospital.org, St. Jude Children’s Hospital stjude.org. or the American Lung Association lung.org.
 
Services will be held Saturday, September 15th at 1:30 p.m. at St. Ann’s Church, 2310 Riverdale Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90031. A celebration will follow at 3:30 p.m. 4:30 - 6 p.m. at Barlow Respiratory Hospital (outdoors on the south side of the Library) 2000 Stadium Way, Los Angeles, CA 90026.
 
The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors will honor Rey by adjourning in his memory on Tuesday September 18, 2012.

Friday, August 21, 2009

Lacy Memorial

Photo: Diane Edwardson, August 18, 2009. Charles Lacy Memorial, Red Car Canyon. (Click on photo to enlarge.)

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Who Was Charles Lacy? Mystery Solved.


Photo: Diane Edwardson, March 14, 2008. (Click on photo to enlarge.)

Last week, the mystery of Charles Lacy came up since his memorial in the canyon has been cleaned up with mementos appearing regularly. Charlie and his dog, Ringo, used to play on the Red Car Property "meadow" and in the canyon. He grew up in the neighborhood, graduated Marshall High School and planted trees with the Conservation Corps. Charlie was a dedicated environmentalist and avid hiker. His mother hoped he would have been around to fight development of the Red Car Property the way he did with Fryman Canyon at the age of ten. Read more about Charles Lacy at Travels Without Charlie.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

In Memoriam


Photo: Diane Edwardson, 2004. Attilla on the Red Car Property at Corralitas. (Click on photo to enlarge.)

Over the past few years, the Corralitas Red Car Neighborhood lost a number of long-time park supporters and neighborhood stalwarts. Their loved ones continue their support for a park on the Red Car Property.

Inez Smith and her husband built their home atop Corralitas Drive in 1938. Inez and her family were kind enough to share their photos of the neighborhood which are frequently used on this site. We owe an huge debt of gratitude to the Smith family for preserving the neighborhood history. Inez always wrote letters and attended public hearings whenever development battles raged over the Red Car Property.

John Buse was a tireless park advocate and was responsible for the most spectacular holiday light display outside of Griffith Park. His home on Adelbert was directly above the Red Car Property and the Arco Station. People passing by on the 5 Freeway often mistook John's house for the Griffith Park Light Festival. It was visible as far away as the 134 interchange with 2 Freeway.

Jack Corwin was Silver Ridge resident for just a few years. Jack took daily walks with his dog on the Red Car Property. A New York transplant, Jack found the peace and beauty of the Red Car Property a wonderful way to get close to nature in his back yard, as well as meet new and interesting neighbors.

Skip Spruel practiced running sprints on Corralitas as well as the staircase. He was the longtime partner of Barry Copilow on Corralitas and later, Adelbert. Skip was an inspiration to anyone looking to get physically fit by using the neighborhood resources.

Jim Riley was a Corralitas resident since 1985. Jim shared many stories of the changing neighborhood, like how, in the early mornings, trash collectors used to find rattlesnakes curled up under the trashcans (prior to automated trash pick-up). Red tail hawks frequented his deck overlooking the 2 Freeway.

Richard Jamarillo was a Corralitas resident since 1970. A lifelong athlete, Richard was frequently seen in the Rosebud Tunnel practicing his tennis swing and keeping the neighborhood clean. Richard often recruited neighbors to paint over graffiti and sweep up the tunnel. Richard understood the value of neighbors working together to improve the community. A lifelong resident of the area, he always encouraged the park effort.

Ralph White was a Corralitas resident since 1985, adventurer, character and park supporter. When Ralph was in town, he always made it to public meetings for Red Car Property development battles.

Jim Lawrence was a Riverside Place resident since 1926, where his family moved when he was 2 years old. The Red Car Trolleys literally ran through Jim's backyard, inspiring a lifelong love of trains. He even worked for the Burlington Northern Railway. Jim was a longtime park supporter and invaluable for piecing together the neighborhood history. Jim always wrote letters and attended public hearings development battles for the Red Car Property.