Beverly Hills Patch accepts and publishes emails to the editor regarding any relevant local issue. The views expressed in the following commentary do not reflect the opinion of the publication, its editor and/or its writers. Emails may be edited for length and clarity. Have an opinion? Write to the site editor at mariec@patch.com. C ommentary submitted by Beverly Hills resident Jennifer Brugger. I am currently a Beverly Hills resident and have proudly been so for the past two years. I moved to the area from Thousand Oaks to be closer to my job and to give my son a great education in the Beverly Hills Unified School District, which I must say I am overjoyed at the progress he has made since moving to this community. However, being a single parent and the sole provider for my son, it has been an uphill battle to be able to afford the rent in such a pricey neighborhood. We did it though, on time and in full every month. But one and a half years into our residential bliss in Beverly Hills, I found out the sad reality of the lack of protection for renters in Beverly Hills. I was very happy to be living month to month in what I thought was a beautiful, two-bedroom apartment on South Elm Drive for only $1,800 a month. Then I came home from work one day and saw a notice on my door. The notice said we had 60 days to vacate the property and that they would be demolishing our building, plus four others in a row, to build a ginormous condo building. I had no extra money for this; we lived paycheck to paycheck as it was. My fear of shaking up my child’s life, moving schools and jobs right after what felt like a very recent move to the area was all too much to handle. I could barely sleep that night. The next day I spoke with a friend whose parents buy properties and rent them out in Glendale, and he had some very reassuring words for me: relocation fees. I asked what this meant. He said, “Relocation fees are monies paid to renters to assist them in moving within the allocated time frame. Los Angeles County requires landlords to pay these fees to tenants asked to vacate for condo conversions.” I got all excited. I thought, “OK, if they have to pay me even just a little to move, it will help with moving our things and paying a new deposit, and all of the expenses that go along with a move.” Not long after the good news hit my ears I heard the dreaded word “but.” He said, “But…you need to check with the city of Beverly Hills and make sure the same ordinances apply to BH residents as do to Los Angeles County residents because Beverly Hills sometimes has their own set of rules.” I figured Beverly Hills must have something in place similar to Los Angeles County to protect the little guys like me. So I placed a call to the city. I left a voicemail for Terence May, senior code enforcement officer of Beverly Hills. It was not an hour later when I received a return phone call from Mr. May with some very bad news. He said Beverly Hills does not have an ordinance in place requiring landlords to pay tenants’ relocation fees and that they were abiding the law in Beverly Hills by giving us 60 days to vacate. Soon after I was hunting Craigslist and buying a membership to Westside Rentals in desperate search for a home within walking distance from my son’s school. Very little within our price range was available and what was available was too far away or just outside the city limits, which meant I would have to change my son’s school. I ended up moving to a place nearby for $400 more a month. I had to sell my car for a lesser one and liquidate some of the items we owned to be able to afford it. But getting rid of my things wasn’t the saddest part of the experience. There were four other single parents living in my two-building complex and an elderly couple who had lived there 25 years. And the saddest yet… I was awoken one night by screaming and crying from what sounded like the front of the building at 3:30 a.m. I got scared that someone was being hurt and called the police. I stood on my balcony and watched the police arrive. I pointed to where I thought the noise was coming from. They banged on the door of the apartment and it was one of my son’s friends that lived there. I heard the police ask a crying young women to come out and talk to them. “My father left us and took our business. It’s just me and my mom, my younger sister and my younger brother living here, and I am in college with a part-time job taking care of my whole family,” the woman said through sobs. “They are kicking us out and we will have no place to live and it’s very stressful. I’m sorry we were fighting so loudly so late.” This is a one-bedroom apartment mind you. My heart sank. My position was awful but my neighbor’s position was much worse. I couldn’t believe such a wonderful city with such a sense of community and family would have no protection for us—the little renters—who also pay our taxes and spend our paychecks within city limits supporting small business, chains and overall being upstanding, hardworking citizens. Please protect us with a relocation fee ordinance. It promotes slow growth and protects us from overseas tycoons who come in, buy a block and kick the tenants to the curb. Also, say goodbye to the nostalgic 300 block of South Elm Drive with its early 1950s charm-filled buildings early this year. I know I will as the wrecking ball wakes me up at 7 a.m. daily to tear our old home down. Jennifer Brugger Beverly Hills Resident Be sure to follow Beverly Hills Patch on Twitter and “Like” us on Facebook . Read the original post: Commentary: Beverly Hills Needs a Relocation Ordinance to Protect Tenants
Posts Tagged ‘ building ’
Bandits Steal 20 Boxes of Pigs’ Feet from Train in Victorville
The Union Pacific Railroad police are investigating a unique robbery that occurred during an emergency stop in Victorville on Friday evening. Train bandits broke into a railcar and escaped with 20 boxes of frozen pigs’ feet. Classy choice, thieves. more › See the article here: Bandits Steal 20 Boxes of Pigs’ Feet from Train in Victorville
FireWire: Last Friday, The Grill on…
Last Friday, The Grill on the Alley in Westlake was closed due to a fire in the building. The restaurant remains shuttered for renovations but will reopen November 4 . Meanwhile , LAT reports that The Magic Castle caught fire yesterday, of all days. The 103-year-old mansion sustained minimal damages and will be down for at least the next two days. [EaterWire, LAT] See the rest here: FireWire: Last Friday, The Grill on…
Another Stabbing on the Metro Red Line This Morning
Two people were stabbed this morning following an altercation in a Metro red line station, reports L.A. Now . It’s the third in recent months. It happened at about 4:30 a.m. at the Hollywood and Western stop, and the victims, a man and a woman, were taken to the hospital after the incident. The man, whose throat had been slashed, was in serious but stable condition. The woman was in stable condition. more › Read more: Another Stabbing on the Metro Red Line This Morning
Tuesday Tidbit: Courtney Cox
Word recently slipped down the West Coast celebrity real estate gossip grapevine that sitcom star Courtney Cox ( Friends, Cougartown ) has added to her impressive real estate portfolio with a condo in the storied and star-stocked Sierra Towers building on the border of West Hollywood and Beverly Hills, CA. Property records show Miz Cox, separated from but still working with husband David Arquette, dropped $2,050,000 on the high floor residence in the full-service building. Records show the unit contains 2 bedrooms and 3 bathrooms in 1,672 square feet of interior space as well as a long balcony with views to the north and east. Miz Cox acquired the condo-crib from a not-famous short-term owner who, according to records we peeped, purchased the unit less than six months earlier for $1,450,000. Property records also show that just weeks after Miz Cox purchased her Sierra Towers aerie former cast mate Matthew Perry–himself on a bit of a real estate roll –dumped a 2 bedroom condo in the building he’d bought in April 2005 for $3,200,000 and sold at a huge loss in late September (2011) for $2,850,000. Some of Miz Cox’s new neighbors at Sierra Towers include a lot of high profile peeps like Cher, Elton John, Joan Collins, Diahann Carroll, and diet guru/social doyenne Nikki Haskell. Sharon and Ozzy Osbourne currently lease a unit in the building, which they had worked over by Million Dollar Decorator Martyn Lawrence Bullard , and past renters have included the likes of tabloid fixture Lindsay Lohan and stylist to the stars Rachel Zoe. In early 2007, after selling a spectacular John Lautner-designed house on Malibu’s Carbon Beach for $27,500,000 to dueling divorcees Frank and Jamie McCourt, Miz Cox (and Mister Arquette) spent $17,150,000 on a much more private bluff top compound she had worked over by architect Michael Kovac and much published nice, gay decorator Trip Haenisch . The property was featured in the July/August 2011 issue of Elle Decor magazine. In addition to their Malibu spread and a West Hollywood office building where their production company is based, Miz Cox and Mister Arquette also own two Beverly Hill residences located just a half a mile away from the Sierra Towers building. In June 2004 they spent $5,450,000 on a a sleek mid-century modern originally designed by A. Quincy Jones they they had done over by architect Cory Bruckner and in late 2008 property records show they scooped up an adjacent property for an unknown sum and unknown reasons. Back in mid-September (2011), just about the same time she was closing on her new condo at the Sierra Towers , Your Mama heard from an informant we’ll call Ivana Blowarealestatewhistle that the Cox-Arquette crib–the one with the circular swimming pool–is being readied for sale with an asking price of around $20,000,000 but that’s just celebrity real estate rumor and gossip at this point children, just rumor and gossip. Read the original: Tuesday Tidbit: Courtney Cox