Editor's note: This is the second in a series of articles focused on a report released by City Hall's Planning and Community Development Department that updates
Santa Monica property owners are up in arms and in a lather.
It seems that in addition to a mandatory 20-percent cutback in water usage triggered by the drought which
An anti-nuke sculpture on Main Street may not need the intensive testing that was originally planned for it.
"Chain Reaction" was on the chopping block last year after
Editor's note: This is the first in a series of articles focused on a report released by City Hall's Planning and Community Development Department that updates
Downtown property owners on Lincoln Boulevard and Colorado Avenue will get a chance to decide whether or not they want to pool money for improvements and extra service.
City Council
Editor's note: This is a semi-regular feature that announces the deaths of people who lived in or impacted Santa Monica. Oftentimes the names and information are gathered from
During a previous water crisis, the City passed a law requiring developers of multifamily dwellings to install individual water meters for each unit. This law has been on the books
After complaints from the American Civil Liberties Union, City Council voted to alter its noise ordinance Tuesday night.
In July, after a person was cited under the previous noise ordinance
The bikeshare naming process was a breeze.
In less than five minutes, City Council decided on "Breeze" for the name of its $5.6 million, 500-bike system.
Bikeshares
Am I the only who recalls the just five years ago the city effected at 60 percent water increase, phased in at twenty percent a year over three years? The
When city planners unveiled a proposal to add a hotel and office space to the Bergamot Station Art Center last year, some residents and gallerists were up in arms.
A
City Hall is suing a landlord who city attorneys say took away the parking space of a tenant with a disability without justification.
The City Attorney's Consumer Protection