We discuss the aftermath of Istanbul's airport attack and why Turkey is a target; L.A. City Council's vote on rules for Hollywood's street performers; and L.A. city officials and homelessness advocates join AirTalk's homelessness roundtable.
Istanbul airport attack: Why Turkey is being targeted
Yesterday's suicide bombing at Istanbul’s Ataturk airport is the latest of seven attacks that have rocked Turkey in a year.
So far, 41 people were reported dead and 239 people injured, and 128 remain hospitalized. No entity has taken responsibility, but Turkish officials say the attack bear the hallmarks of ISIS.
In the past few months, Turkey has stepped up its pressure on the terrorist organization, by using artillery against them, cracking down on their finances and curbing their oil possession.
Ataturk airport is one of the busiest in the world, and the attack has sent shockwaves through the world. How will Turkey’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, respond to the attack? With so many attacks in such a short period of time, how will he make sense of the Ataturk attack for the people of his country -- and the world?
Guest:
Amberin Zaman, a public policy scholar for the Wilson Center and former Economist correspondent for Turkey. She is also Turkish.
LA moves to regulate street performers on Hollywood Boulevard
If you’ve ever taken a stroll down Hollywood Boulevard, you know you’re likely to run into a colorful cast of street performers — ranging from Marvel and DC superheroes to Star Wars and Disney favorites — who offer a photo or put on a little show for you and expect you’ll throw a little cash their way as a thanks for the souvenir.
While some say the performers add to the neighborhood’s charm, police and some businesses in the area say they can block the flow of pedestrian traffic, crowd entrances to shops and restaurants, and even threaten public safety along the Boulevard — think fistfights between costumed characters and the hassling of tourists over souvenir photos.
Today, the Los Angeles City Council directed the city attorney to draft rules that would require street performers on the boulevard between Highland Avenue and Orange Drive to obtain a daily permit to perform, play music, ask for money or do any other “First Amendment expressive action.”
The area would be designated as the “Hollywood Entertainment Zone.”
In a report issuing its recommendations to the council, the Los Angeles Police Commission, citing the L.A. Tourism and Convention Board, said that 74 percent of visitors to the area report being approached by one or more solicitors — that includes food and merchandise vendors and the costumed characters.
Among those, 20 percent said their experience was unsatisfactory; the most common complaint was that solicitors were “aggressive and rude.”
The Police Commission highlighted several recent high-profile cases in which solicitors exhibited more bad behavior than entertaining antics. In one, a costumed Mickey Mouse duked it out with Donald Duck. In another, Mr. Incredible punched Batgirl in the face. Both encounters were captured on cellphone video and shared on YouTube (which you can watch below). Mr. Incredible was convicted of battery.
In another case, a Chinese tourist took a photo with a woman in a pirate costume. They had agreed on a price of $20, but when he handed her a $100 bill, she refused to give him change. She was later arrested, and her case is pending in court.
The Police Commission recommended adding several new regulations to restrict solicitors and street performers:
- Require a 24-hour pass for any permissible vending, including performing, soliciting donations, handing out free food, or using amplified sound or setting up equipment on the sidewalk.
- Issue only 20 passes per day — 10 for the north side of the street and 10 for the south side.
- Prohibit blocking the free flow of pedestrians or generating a crowd that does so.
- Allow solicitors to occupy no more than 5 square feet.
- Prohibit performers and vendors from doing their thing within 5 feet of a crosswalk or building entrance or exit.
- Prohibit the display of wild or exotic animals or birds.
- Limit noise level to 75 to 96 decibels, depending on the distance measured.
- Allow the city to revoke day-pass privileges for three months upon a second violation.
Business owners welcome the regulations, saying they’ll help streamline traffic and keep large groups from blocking store entrances. The performers say the rules would snuff out the street scene that is a big part of why both visitors and locals come to Hollywood.
Guests:
Kerry Morrison, Executive Director of the Hollywood Property Owners Alliance, a position she has held since the inception of the Hollywood Entertainment District BID in 1996.
Carol Sobel, Santa Monica-based civil rights attorney; she represented street performers that sued the city in 2010
This post has been updated.
Why state legislature has been unable to move on police transparency bills
Despite heightened awareness around police-involved shootings in the nation, California has yet to pass a major bill to give the public more access to police information, reports the Los Angeles Times.
Five major proposals were introduced this year. A state Senate committee on Tuesday voted down two police transparency-related bills, the paper reports, joining the fate of two other bills killed last month.
The lone surviving bill that has made it out of committee concerns the release of video footage involving an officer’s death.
Guest:
Liam Dillon, reporter at the Los Angeles Times who’s been following the story
Peter Scheer, executive director of the First Amendment Coalition, a nonprofit organization working for a more open and accountable government
Is the bird, in fact, the word? Evidence expert explains whether a parrot’s mimicry can be admitted in Michigan murder case
Can a parrot that some say witnessed a murder be used during trial to sing like a canary?
This is the question being asked in the western Michigan town of Ensley Township after local resident Martin Duram was shot and killed in May 2015. His wife, Glenna, has been charged with his murder. The couple had an African gray parrot as a pet, and prosecutors believe ‘Bud’ witnessed the murder.
How do they know? Since the shooting, the bird’s new owner says the parrot has been mimicking back what sounds like an argument, at the end of which it screeches at the top of its lungs, is “Don’t f***ing shoot!” The bird’s owners believe he’s recalling the final exchange between Glenna and Martin Duram before he was shot. Prosecutors in Newaygo County, Michigan are examining whether the parrot’s squawks can be used as evidence against Glenna Duram in her murder trial.
While there doesn’t appear to be any legal precedent for using a bird’s word as evidence, there are other cases where similar situations have arisen.
Should the bird’s utterance be allowed as evidence?
Guest:
Richard Friedman, professor of law at the University of Michigan School of Law
Some homeless people can't be helped, 'but do these people deserve to die on a sidewalk?'
Vikki Vickers, 50, was one of the tens of thousands of homeless people living on the streets of Santa Monica for four-and-a-half years.
It's been about three years now since Vickers moved into the Downtown Women's Center in Downtown Los Angeles, but she is still aware of the social stigma that surrounds the homeless community. Still, she says the public needs to be compassionate.
Vickers: People need to dig deep into the human emotion of this. Maybe someone is so mentally ill that they cannot be helped and cannot get into the job market, and maybe there’s someone who is a drug addict who will never get a job. But do these people deserve to die on a sidewalk? That is the deep core emotion that needs to be thought of. Yes, maybe they’re scary and maybe they shouldn’t be in someone else’s backyard, but that doesn’t make them an animal that needs to be abandoned and left to die either.
Even still, the homeless are not always receptive to compassion or to a helping hand.
Patt Morrison: Are there people who are going to be shelter-resistant and say, "Nope. You can build me the nicest apartment, but I ain’t going there"?
Vickers: Absolutely, I was one of those people. For four-and-a-half years, people approached me every once in a while and said, “Please come inside,” and told me all the wonderful things they could do for me. But I was so afraid and so into my psychosis that I could not comprehend that.
It took gentle persistence by a man who came by and dropped off food from the pantry every other week…just a gentle kind approach. And finally, one day I was so sick, I took finally took his advice and went to Ocean Park Community Center and from there, they just saved my life.
But yeah, that does happen, but does that mean it’s still OK to leave them out there? I think we should be more mobile. We should have RVs where we can go to people, build relationships, give the homeless the supplies they need, and treat them as what they are: people
Guest host Patt Morrison turned to L.A. County Supervisor Sheila Kuehl for a response.
Morrison: As you’re listening to Vicki Vickers, someone who’s been there, who’s lived it, who was homeless, who is schizophrenic, you realize you really can’t have a one-size-fits-all program. So how much energy do you devote to the homeless population that would be happy to get in shelters. That may not have drug or alcohol problems? That you can deal with their issues more quickly than people who are these long term, intractable homeless?
Kuehl: Well the county is not treating it as a choice. The county is addressing each of these populations. We’re doing homeless outreach to try to get people to know that there are safe ways to come in. We’re looking to get landlords to take their vouchers, we’re supporting them with services, we’re putting a billion dollars a year into services for homeless people that’s not just for building facilities, and putting another $150 million for building, plus anything we can get if the state lets us get something on the budget.
It’s not easy to house a person in a county with 2 percent vacancy and where landlords prefer people who have not been homeless because they think of them as less worthy tenants. But let me tell the landlords, when they come with services and their own advocates, they’re much better tenants. So, take our vouchers and let them in and that’ll help people get back on their feet.
Callers like Steve wanted to know why they should be responsible for paying for homeless services.
Steve from Brea: Obviously I don’t want my tax dollars paying for this type of thing, even though I know it already is. Why can’t the families be located for some of these homeless. I know not all of them have families, but I honestly think the families should be on the hook for providing care, not us as taxpayers. And by the way, why do homeless people choose where they get to live? If I’m paying for it, I want to choose where they live. There’s plenty of affordable housing in other cities, they don’t have to live in L.A. — nor should they be allowed to. There are plenty of other affordable cities that aren’t too far away. I’m not talking Arizona or Napa Valley, but if my tax dollars are paying for the care, they should work harder to find cities that have housing. There are plenty of cities. They can go to Victorville or Palmdale.
Morrison asked Bob Solomon, co-director of Community & Economic Development at the University of California, Irvine, to address this common question.
Solomon: We subsidize developers of housing all the time, we give tax breaks to wealthy developers of housing and there’s no reason we couldn’t give the same breaks to encourage the private market to develop more housing. The notion that a voucher is not enough to provide a unit simply says we have a cookie cutter notion — largely coming out of Washington D.C. — and the voucher amount should be increased.
For example, if you have a voucher that pays $1200 and is not used, and you have a thousand of those, you’re better off having 500 that work and pay $2400. It’s obvious, this is not really higher math.
Rebecca Prine with the nonprofit organization Recycled Resources also wanted to address the question since she's surveyed homeless people since 2009.
Prine: We’ve outreached to about 750 individuals since we’ve been in operation and the majority of people do not have families. Either as a result of a mental illness or addiction, their families have shunned them. They really don’t have another support system, other than the people who are outreaching to them. Your tax dollars are paying for this regardless, so you’re either going to be spending tax dollars on the emergency services that it takes people to get back on their feet when they’re on the streets, or you can spend significantly less in housing somebody.
As someone with first-hand experience living on the streets, Vickers shared why an internal support system didn't work for her.
Vickers: I had a very difficult upbringing and when my symptoms started, I ran away from my family and cut off contact with them and they left it that way; there was never a good relationship in the first place, so I in essence don’t have one.
Does that mean that he should pay for me? Honestly, in my opinion, no. But could he help me? I would hope that he would want to. It’s a human problem, you have to have compassion. You can’t just watch someone die and say, “It’s OK, I’m not going to help,” or the problem is never going to be solved and there are going to be thousands of people who die on the sidewalk.
Lawmakers like Supervisor Sheila Kuehl and Councilman Marqueece Harris-Dawson are making homelessness a priority with a 47-point Homeless Strategy and a Comprehensive Homeless Strategy.
What are your biggest concerns surrounding homelessness?
This story has been updated and the interview edited for clarity. Listen to the full discussion by clicking the playhead above.
Guests:
Marqueece Harris-Dawson, Los Angeles City Councilmember representing District 8 in South LA and chair of the Homelessness and Poverty Committee; he tweets
Sheila Kuehl, Los Angeles County supervisor; she tweets
Robert "Bob" Solomon, Co-Director of Community & Economic Development Clinic and clinical law professor, University of California, Irvine
Rebecca Prine, Founder and volunteer director, Recycled Resources for Homeless
Vicki Vickers, Formerly homeless and a current advocate for the Corporation for Supportive Housing’s “SpeakUp!” program
Series: Homelessness in California
On Wednesday, KPCC listeners and readers will find special coverage of homelessness in Los Angeles County. It’s part of a first-ever statewide media project aiming to focus the public and policymakers’ attention on how to solve that growing problem.
What are some of your biggest concerns? What suggestions do you have for lawmakers? Let us know on our Facebook page or in the comments below!