14-0163-S18

The Public Works Committee is recommending that the City Council request the City Attorney to prepare an ordinance that would reinstate Ordinance No. 187,106.

District
First Seen November 12, 2025
Last Seen November 12, 2025
Appearances 1 meeting(s)
Official title: PUBLIC WORKS COMMITTEE REPORT relative to requesting an ordinance to reinstate Ordinance No. 187,106, adding Section 62.104.1 of Article 2 of Chapter VI of the Los Angeles Municipal Code (LAMC) for reconsideration regarding the Sidewalk Repair Program.

Timeline

Related documents

Report from Public Works Committee_10-22-25
What is Being Proposed

The Public Works Committee is recommending that the City Council request the City Attorney to prepare an ordinance that would reinstate Ordinance No. 187,106. This ordinance adds Section 62.104.1 to the Los Angeles Municipal Code and governs the city's Sidewalk Repair Program.

Why This Matters

The document indicates this is a reconsideration of a previous ordinance related to sidewalk repairs in Los Angeles. While the specific details about why the original ordinance was repealed or requires reconsideration are not provided in this document, the committee's action suggests there are policy reasons to restore this sidewalk repair framework.

Key Details

File Number: 14-0163-S18 Committee Meeting Date: June 11, 2025 Committee Vote: Two members voted YES (Hernandez and Hutt), one was ABSENT (Padilla), with one member listed as "ME" with no vote recorded Environmental Review: The Energy and Environment Committee waived consideration of this matter Fiscal Impact: No financial analysis has been completed yet by the Board of Public Works, City Administrative Officer, or Chief Legislative Analyst

Next Steps

This matter now goes to the full City Council for consideration. The ordinance is not official until the Council acts on it.

Report from Board of Public Works dated 5-22-25
What is Being Proposed?

The Board of Public Works is recommending that the City Council reinstate Ordinance No. 187,106 to establish a Sidewalk Repair Program (LAMC Section 62.104.1). This ordinance would streamline the approval process for sidewalk repair projects citywide by allowing most routine repairs to proceed with ministerial approval by the City Engineer, rather than requiring individual environmental review for each project. The proposal also includes adopting accompanying policies for street tree management and mandatory project features.

Why?

The City is obligated under the Willits Settlement Agreement (a federal court settlement from 2016) to spend approximately $1.3 billion on sidewalk repairs over 30 years to ensure accessibility for people with disabilities. Currently, individual sidewalk projects are reviewed case-by-case under the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA), which creates delays and bureaucratic burdens. The new streamlined process would enable the City to meet its settlement obligations more efficiently while maintaining environmental protections through established parameters and mandatory design standards.

Key Details

The program would apply citywide to the City's approximately 9,000 miles of sidewalks. Projects meeting specific parameters—lasting no more than 30 non-consecutive construction days, with excavation no deeper than 30 feet, causing no substantial adverse change to cultural resources, and removing no more than two trees—would qualify for streamlined ministerial approval. Projects outside these parameters would undergo discretionary review. The ordinance was previously approved in 2021 but was decertified by court order in 2023; this reinstatement follows legal revisions addressing those court concerns.

Impact

This affects all Los Angeles residents by potentially accelerating sidewalk repairs in neighborhoods citywide, improving accessibility for people with disabilities, seniors, and others with mobility challenges. Environmental advocates should note the program includes protections: street tree replacement ratios (2:1 for the first 10 years, 3:1 for years 11-21, 2:1 for final nine years), cultural resource assessments, and biological resource protections. The program aims to balance timely infrastructure improvement with environmental stewardship.