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Why LA’s City Council Members have Such Full Dance Cards

LOS ANGELES

READ EM AND WEEP--These two bulletins from the City News Service are real and edited only for space. 

October 14, 2016, City News Service 

Four City Council members will begin a weeklong trip to Europe Saturday for a Cisco Systems-led tour of two cities where private citizens and governments have connected the internet into various household objects and day-to-day functions. 

Executives with the telecom hardware giant will show council members Bob Blumenfield, Gil Cedillo (photo above), Curren Price and Mitch Englander around Hamburg, Germany, and Copenhagen, Denmark, said company lobbyist Arnie Berghoff. 

The “smart and connected cities” tour will include a stop at Hamburg’s inland port, which has been fully automated, he said. In both cities the council members will meet with elected and other government officials, he said. 

Berghoff said Cisco will not be paying for the council members’ trip-related expenses. 

October 18, 2016, City News Service 

Los Angeles City Council meetings for the rest of the week have been canceled because not enough members will be in town to attend them. 

Five council members are out of town, leaving just nine City Council members to attend meetings, which is not enough for the required quorum. 

Council members Bob Blumenfield, Gil Cedillo, Mitchell Englander and Curren Price are in Europe this week taking part in a Cisco Systems-led tour of Hamburg, Germany, and Copenhagen, Denmark.  

There are a total of 15 City Council seats, but one has been vacant ever since former Seventh District councilman Felipe Fuentes stepped down last month to go work for a Sacramento lobbying firm. 

Some City Council committee hearings will still go on, depending if a quorum can be reached. 

These two bulletins from the City News Service are real and have only been edited for length and the insertion of links to related campaign finance and lobbyist activity posted at the Ethics Commission website.  

There are many who think the councilmember’s travel costs might be better spent on a ‘Priority-Setting 101’ workshop for our city leaders.

(Eric Preven is a CityWatch contributor and a Studio City based writer-producer and public advocate for better transparency in local government. He was a candidate in the 2015 election for Los Angeles City Council, 2nd District. Joshua Preven is a CityWatch contributor and teacher who lives in Los Angeles.)

 –cw

 

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