Public Safety:

Getting Back to Basics

What I'll Do

How We'll
Pay for It

  • Stop Wasting Money We Already Have

    The city sits on millions in restricted funds: old Quimby accounts for green space, mitigation dollars, dormant art set-asides - that often aren't spent for years because projects never happen or rules are too narrow.
    I'll require public reviews every five years: deliver the project, reinvest in the same policy area, or reallocate to core services like public safety, street repair, and lighting. Every change will be transparent and justified.

  • Make Parking Revenue Work for Safety

    Any parking revenue exceeding DOT's operating costs should be reported quarterly and restricted to visible safety improvements: street repair, lighting, curb management, neighborhood safety.

  • Civilianize the Right Roles

    Hire civilian staff for clerical and administrative work, freeing officers for sworn duties. But do it smart, with data and LAPD input, not just for budget optics.

Why This Matters

After 30 years in this district, founding nonprofits that help the homeless, building businesses, spending nine years volunteering in California prisons working on reentry, I understand what officers face daily. Public safety requires both strong enforcement and competent civilian systems.

I won't shy away from enforcement on gangs, encampments tied to crime, unregulated vending, and chronic nuisances. But I also won't ask LAPD to be the only tool the city uses.

  • Within my first year

    More officers in neighborhoods. Better alley cleaning, RV enforcement, gang graffiti removal. Real accountability on special funds and parking revenue.

  • Within two years

    Officers can say City Hall is actually supporting them. The worst chronic locations are being addressed with real consequences. Other city departments are carrying their share.

Public safety isn't complicated.

It's about doing the basics well and backing the people who do the hardest work.