Categories: Politics

Voters will have to look closely to spot the differences in the race for Nury Martinez’s seat

Los Angeles City Council District 6 candidates Imelda Padilla, left, and Marisa Alcaraz during a debate in Panorama City in March.
(Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times
)

Voters will have to look closely to spot the differences in the race for Nury Martinez’s seat

LA politics

Dakota Smith

June 20, 2023

The two women running in the June 27 elections for a seat on the Los Angeles City Council representing the central and eastern San Fernando Valley have striking similarities. Both are Democrats in their 30s, hold master’s degrees, and were raised in the Valley by relatives who emigrated from Mexico.

Candidates Marisa Alcaraz and Imelda Padilla also agree on many city issues. Both support city-mandated minimum wage increases, the hiring of more police officers and the ability to ban the homeless from setting up tents near elementary schools.

Voters casting their ballots in the elections for District 6, which includes all or parts of the neighborhoods of Lake Balboa, Van Nuys, Panorama City, Arleta, North Hills, North Hollywood and Sun Valley, may not see much difference in the candidates.

“To the average voter, they both look quite similar,” said political adviser Eric Hacopian, who is not involved in the race. “Elections like this, especially in the middle of summer, are won by whoever has the better turnout schedules.”

Yet there is a remarkable contrast between the professional backgrounds of the candidates. Padilla, 35, has held a variety of jobs over the past decade, including working with a medical group, for an LA County program to help young women, as a counselor and, briefly, an assistant in District 6.

Alcaraz, 38, has worked at city hall for the past 10 years for a South LA city council district that is mostly Latino and working class.

During a debate at Van Nuys last week, Alcaraz described himself as a “policy nerd” who has worked on legislation and policies that have helped city workers, supermarket employees and others.

“It comes down to who’s going to fight for the working class for families in the Valley. Who’s going to fight for renters, who’s going to fight for immigrants?” Alcaraz said in an interview. “You can see through my track record and what I’ve worked on that I’ve always been someone who stood up for working-class people.”

In an interview, Padilla praised her work cleaning up an abandoned supermarket lot on Sunland Boulevard, one of many quality-of-life issues she has worked on, and her time serving on the Sun Valley Area Neighborhood Council.

“My experience in the community will make me a better candidate, knowing how to hit the ground running and prioritizing what City Hall should be doing from day one,” Padilla said.

The special election was sparked by the resignation of City Council President Nury Martinez, whose inflammatory comments about her colleagues and various groups

on a leaked recording

sparked outrage last year.

Both Alcaraz and Padilla grew up in the Valley and have support from a wide range of unions, community leaders and politicians. Alcaraz’s backers claim she has the relationships with City Hall to provide resources for the district, while Padilla’s supporters point to her track record in the Valley.

Alcaraz works as Deputy Chief of Staff for Councilman Curren Price, representing neighborhoods in South LA and the area around the downtown convention center.

Price was charged with 10 criminal charges last week

what costs

he called “unwarranted” in relation to development votes and his wife’s medical coverage from the city. Alcaraz called the allegations “sad”.

alcaraz,

who lives in Lake Balboa

also served briefly as a council aide to former Councilman Richard Alarcn in the northern San Fernando Valley, where she helped resolve horse issues, among other things.

At Price’s office, she spearheaded some of the council member’s biggest initiatives.

Alcaraz was critical to the city’s 2018 street vending ordinance approval, said Rudy Espinoza, executive director of Inclusive Action for the City, an economic justice organization. The law legalized street vending and was the culmination of years of protests and hearings supported by immigrant groups.

Espinoza said Price’s office was willing to support street vending when other council offices would not discuss the issue. Alcaraz was “consistent and practical” in moving the ordinance forward and helping other council offices support it, he said.

There’s a lot of value in being understated and getting the job done, Espinoza said of Alcaraz’s approach.

The street vending issue was personal to Alcaraz, whose

own

father is from Tijuana and

. Her father

sold bottled water to motorists struggling with overheating cars on the US-Mexico border, she said in an interview.

Alcaraz also played a key role in promoting a program

in LA

called Solid Ground, which helps individuals avoid homelessness through financial aid and counseling.

The program launched in 2018 in LA County. Soon after, Alcaraz helped bring it to the city, said Leticia Andueza, associate executive director at New Economics for Women, a

N

community organization for economic development. Today Solid Ground is active in 16 centers in the city.

“She was instrumental in moving it to the city,” Andueza said. “Definitely, it has an impact. It helps stabilize families.”

Padilla’s supporters point to her work in District 6. She was part of a group pushing for the “Clean Up Green Up” program targeting dangerous and unhealthy businesses in the Valley and other parts of the city.

Signed into law in 2016 by former mayor Eric Garcetti, the ordinance aims to reduce health risks from industrial businesses and traffic pollution.

padilla,

who lives in Sun Valley,

So

worked

didn’t work for several

profits, including the Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy, where she helped push to raise the city’s minimum wage.

A decade ago, she worked as an assistant for about a year, helping out for Martinez and doing several cleanups around the district, she said.

Padilla knows the needs of the people of this community, said Councilwoman Monica Rodriguez, who has worked with Padilla since the candidate was a youth organizer and

Rodriguez

worked for former Los Angeles mayor Richard Riordan.

Rodriguez also praised Padilla for her work in creating an annual event that helps Los Angeles Unified

School district

high

school

and high school students are exploring college opportunities and careers.

Padilla’s brother was incarcerated when she was 18, she said. That led her to focus on helping young people, she said, noting that she saw a lack of highly educated young men coming back into the community to inspire boys.

She’s brimming with energy,” said Thomas Soule, who sits alongside Padilla on the board of the Los Angeles Valley College Foundation, a nonprofit that is part of the Los Angeles Community College District. She always has lots of good ideas. .

Padilla chairs the board and has helped raise funds for students

who are in the country without a permit

, among other initiatives. She attended Valley College while still in high school, she said, and the school has a “very happy special place in my heart.”

The polls will close at 8 p.m. Tuesday. The winner will be re-elected to this seat in March 2024, when Martinez’s term would expire.

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