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12 West Hollywood Residents Running for City Council See Gay Generations Clash

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Its the gay pioneers versus the progressive gays of generation Z in West Hollywood’s upcoming City Council election.

The Los Angeles Times:

The Nov. 8 election has become a generational battle in West Hollywood, which grabbed international headlines when it incorporated in 1984 with the first City Council in the nation to have an openly gay majority.

With three council seats being contested, many are hurling accusations that the other side has sold out — the moderates to big business and developers, and the progressives to outside activists and labor unions.

On the heels of the national defund the police movement, the council decided this summer to incrementally cut up to four deputies from the West Hollywood sheriff’s station while hiring 30 additional unarmed security guards to monitor the streets.

(The council voted in September to delay reductions planned for that month until December, citing a reduction in crime after more security guards were hired. No deputies have been removed yet — and they would not lose their jobs but would be reassigned within the Sheriff’s Department.)

Last year, the council unanimously voted to implement what was then the highest minimum wage in the country — $17.64 an hour — and to require that full-time workers get at least 96 hours of annual paid sick, vacation or personal leave, with part-time employees getting a proportional amount of paid time off.

The decisions drew the ire of the Chamber of Commerce and residents concerned about crime — and the praise of progressive labor unions and activists who poured into public meetings.

Twelve people are competing for the three at-large seats held by Mayor Lauren Meister, Lindsey Horvath and John D’Amico.

Meister is seeking reelection, Horvath is running for L.A. County supervisor and D’Amico is retiring.

In addition to Duran and Heilman, another former councilman, Steve Martin, is running.

“We’re coming out of COVID, we’re all crabby, and we have this sanctimonious City Council trying to impose their woke world view,” said Martin, 68, who was on the council from 1994 to 2003.

Martin, who moved to West Hollywood in 1979, is running because he disagrees with the deputy cuts, saying they will make response times slower at a time when residents are worried about crime and homelessness.

In a text message, Heilman, 65, called the deputy reduction “foolish” and said he wants to “help get back to basics.”

Both he and Duran, along with Meister, were endorsed by the Chamber of Commerce’s political action committee and sheriff’s deputies union.

D’Amico, who voted in favor of the deputy reduction, said in an email that he is baffled by the former councilmen’s claims that the current council is overly influenced by outsiders.

“I guess they forget what happened when they pushed for cityhood, domestic partnerships, and [same-sex] marriage — all ideas that were headline grabbing and pushed by outsiders, but it turns out were exactly what was needed next,” he wrote.

D’Amico said he is retiring because he believes the council needs new, young leadership.

“This whole ‘make West Hollywood great again’ campaign by the Chamber of Commerce is a proxy for the developer-driven ideas of the late ’90s, championed by the current crop of 60-year-old gay guy candidates who are stagnating in their need to be needed,” wrote D’Amico, who is 59 and, like the former councilmen, gay.

Meister, 62, voted against the deputy reductions. A mailer funded by Unite Here Local 11, which represents hospitality workers, features images of her and Duran with grimacing faces. They “just don’t act like Democrats,” the mailer says.

Meister said in an email that while she is a lifelong Democrat, she is “everyone’s council member, not just those from one party.”

“Many are uncomfortable with a new divisiveness that has recently been injected,” she said.

Before she joined the council in 2015, Meister spearheaded a successful 2013 campaign to bring term limits to the council, at a time when all but one member had spent more than a decade in office.

Among the newcomers running for City Council this year is Zekiah Wright, who is endorsed by Unite Here Local 11, which pushed for the minimum wage hike and a hotel workers’ ordinance that limits the daily workload of housekeepers.

The union is also endorsing two other progressive candidates, Robert Oliver and Chelsea Byers.

Wright is originally from Florida and would be the first Black nonbinary person on the council. Sepi Shyne, who is Iranian American and lesbian, became the first queer woman of color when she was elected in 2020.

Wright, a 36-year-old attorney, moved to the city last November precisely because it is such a progressive place.

It’s “a city that was so unapologetically queer and affirming,” Wright said. “I want to make sure we’re preserving that so that other folks can come from the South or come from anywhere and see — ‘Oh my god, a community exists where I can feel welcome.'”

Wright supports the decision to hire unarmed security guards to supplement deputies and said the city has to consider alternatives to law enforcement when dealing with unhoused people, especially those experiencing mental health crises.

“We’re relying on sheriffs to do it. It’s not their job; they’re not equipped,” Wright said. “There’s only so much that they can do, especially if the person is not committing a crime.”

Ben Savage, the actor best known for his role in “Boy Meets World,” is another political newcomer aiming to join the council.

Savage, 42, has lived in West Hollywood for 18 years and said he worries about the safety of his elderly neighbors and young relatives. He said he would favor “restoring the proper number” of sheriffs’ deputies to speed emergency response times.

“For me, it’s an all hands on deck approach,” Savage said. “There should be proper funding for sheriffs, but there should also be increased funding for mental health programs, clinical services, and short-term and long-term housing. … It’s a false choice that there has to be one or the other.”

Keith Kaplan, 62, a Realtor and chairperson for WeHo for the People — a Chamber of Commerce-backed coalition that has decried the new progressive policies — said the city has “become hijacked by special interest groups.”

He said the newer council members are overly influenced by Unite Here and are passing “virtue signaling” policies.

Danielle Wilson, a research analyst with Unite Here Local 11 and a West Hollywood renter for three years, said it’s “shocking that people speak about our members as if they don’t live in the city.” About 100 union members live there, she said.

“I think, for some of these folks, it’s hard for them to imagine that a dishwasher or a room attendant or even a banquet server could possibly be their neighbor,” said Wilson, 29.

The race has exposed some ugly rifts for Albert Muñoz, an organizer for the Writers Guild of America who has lived in West Hollywood since 2019.

Muñoz, 41, voted against the incumbents in 2020 and was proud to see the council reduce the number of sheriff’s deputies and raise the minimum wage. He is disturbed by accusations that those policies are mostly supported by outside interests and not actual residents.

He said there is a generational divide — but also “a divide on being more inclusive of Black and brown people and people with different gender identities.”

The city is 71% white.

“When people are talking about those who are ‘younger,’ that might also be a code for different demographics,” said Muñoz, who is Latino and gay.

He is supporting Wright.

Meanwhile, Karim Amersi, who owns Hollyway Cleaners on Santa Monica Boulevard, likes “pro-business” candidates.

He said he is a moderate — “a Bill Clinton Democrat and Obama Democrat” — but that the council has swung too far to the left.

Amersi, 54, is angry about the deputy reduction. Crime and homelessness feel out of control, he said.

The dry cleaner — where customers have included Madonna, Jay Leno and Leslie Jordan, whose button-down shirt still hung on the rack after his death last month — was purchased by Amersi’s father in 1984.

It used to stay open until midnight. About a year ago, Amersi started closing at 9 p.m. because he thought it was too dangerous for his employees to work late. Cars had been broken into in the parking lot, despite its bright floodlights, and homeless people sleep outside the front door, he said.

A few nights ago, Amersi, who has long worked overnight, arrived at about 2 a.m., and a man who was sleeping outside took out a pocketknife and threatened him.

A few months before that, he said, a homeless man demanded his wallet. Amersi’s young son had left a toy gun in the car, he said, and he pulled it out, successfully deterring the man.

Amersi now lives in Sherman Oaks. But he has West Hollywood political signs plastered all over the dry cleaner’s windows. Among the candidates he likes are Duran, Heilman and Meister.

“I think now we’re at the point where we need experience,” he said.

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