Politics & Government

Outside Voter Category Eliminated from Neighborhood Council Elections

Changes approved by Los Angeles City Council aim to prevent abuse from "factual basis stakeholders' in neighborhood council elections, which applies to Studio City. The ordinance still requires mayoral approval.

By City News Service

The City Council raised the bar Wednesday for Angelenos who want to vote in neighborhood council elections, approving changes that prevent people with only a receipt from a local business from participating.

The city's 95 neighborhood councils, including Studio City's, serve as advisory panels to the City Council and are allotted money to distribute to local schools and other neighborhood groups, or to fund community events such as parades and festivals.

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The council voted 12-0 to eliminate a voter and candidate category called the "factual basis stakeholder," which enables people who buy an item locally to vote or run for a post. An amended ordinance codifying the change requires mayoral approval. Initial talks on who can vote in the neighborhood council elections began in October. 

"Factual basis stakeholder" would be replaced with "community interest stakeholder," a label applied to those with a "substantial and ongoing" tie to the community, such as participation in a local nonprofit group, school or church.

Find out what's happening in Northridge-Chatsworthwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

The changes the council approved today also remove a requirement to have at least one "community interest stakeholder" sit on neighborhood council boards, as long as such stakeholders can run for the "at-large" position that is open to all stakeholders.

The "factual basis stakeholder" category was meant to enable those who do not live, work or own property in a neighborhood to still have a say, but critics of the category say it is vulnerable to abuse.

City officials and community members complained that the factual basis category allowed neighborhood council elections in Eagle Rock to be "taken over" last year by outside interest groups trying to sway a vote on medical marijuana.

Many of those "outside" voters only needed only to purchase something at a local coffee shop, such as Starbucks, to qualify for participation, giving rise to the nickname, "Starbucks stakeholders." 

The next round of neighborhood council elections begin in March 2014. 


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