Week of July 15
LA METRO PUBLIC ART PROJECT – “TEARS OF SANTA MONICA”
For the week of July 15, artwork installation is slated to resume and run from Summer until
The Rent Control Board is considering allowing tenants to challenge citations from code enforcement officers after a longtime renter was evicted for installing a trellis on her patio.
It’s
Construction on three miles of walking and biking paths along Santa Monica State Beach will begin later this summer.
Council approved a $12.3 million contract with two engineering firms
City Council chambers are getting a $450,000 upgrade later this year.
City Council approved the improvements to the chambers’ audiovisual, agenda and meeting management systems last week at the
Last week, 20 potential Democratic nominees for President took the debate stage in Miami over two days to discuss everything from taxes to health care to foreign policy. Largely absent
The July 7 Committee For Racial Justice meeting this Sunday evening at Virginia Ave. Park will provide information about the local housing shortage, low income housing, affordable housing, rising rents,
A developer will be able to build the six micro-apartment buildings that the city of Santa Monica moved to block earlier this year.
WS Communities, a spinoff of developer NMS
A ridesharing service for seniors and people with disabilities is raising fares for the first time in two decades and capping the number of trips members can take each month.
Santa Monica’s 2019-2021 budget is 7% or about $108 million smaller than its last biennial budget, marking the beginning of a decade where the city will have to pay
City Council will meet Tuesday to vote on the 2019-2021 budget, appoint new board members and commissioners, raise fares on a ridesharing service for seniors and more. Here's
The man who made Santa Monica a leader in sustainability and helped the city prepare for climate change is retiring July 1.
Dean Kubani, the city’s chief sustainability officer,
Officials are revising development standards in Santa Monica’s single-family neighborhoods to discourage developers from replacing small homes with mansions.
In the city’s four single-family neighborhoods — Sunset Park, North