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Mapping L.A. Project Is Revised in Nearly 100 Ways

More news stories on Segregation

Doug Smith, Los Angeles Times, June 3, 2009

There are nearly 30,000 city blocks in Los Angeles, and over the last several weeks, my colleague Maloy Moore and I have examined them all.

We’ve considered each one’s size and population density, its racial and ethnic makeup, its proximity to landmarks, its topography and history.

Then we listened to what readers told us about the deeply rooted perceptions that make them see a block as belonging in one community instead of another.

All this was in service of a project that The Times began months ago to map the city of Los Angeles and make it possible for us to give people neighborhood-by-neighborhood news and information.

{snip}

Our toughest decisions came from the powerful and often irreconcilable associations people make with names and places. Among the bitter rifts we encountered were the competing claims to the name West Adams. One of the less fraught comments on the subject went like this: “Over here by Adams and Fairfax we like to think of ourselves as West ‘West Adams.’ how about West (squared) Adams? OK then, the ‘real’ West Adams? Never mind, just trying to lighten the conversation.”

Historical purists would reserve the designation West Adams for the once-upper-crust district of Victorian mansions now falling in the shadow of USC. But residents farther west have appropriated the name for that hard-to-define area between the 10 Freeway and Baldwin Hills. To bolster their case, the area’s Neighborhood Empowerment Zone bears that name.

{snip}

The Thomas Guide puts names in the midst of communities but does not try to make clear where neighborhood boundaries are.

The city’s neighborhood councils sometimes reflect narrow political considerations and have a propensity for names such as People Involved in Community Organizing that don’t do much to define a community. Many areas of the city are left out entirely while prized turf, such as Occidental College, is occasionally claimed by more than one council. The same problems apply with even greater force to homeowner associations.

{snip}

Unlike most other attempts at Mapping L.A., this one follows a set of principles intended to make it visually and statistically coherent: It gathers every block of the city into reasonably compact areas leaving no enclaves, gaps, overlaps or ambiguities. Except when there was a compelling reason not to, we kept landmarks such as schools in the communities bearing their names.

We’ll be the first to acknowledge that our map isn’t perfect. No lines can capture the geographic diversity and demographic energy of Los Angeles.

We’re not planning to revise our map again until the 2010 census. But our comment line is still open. If you have a better idea, let us know.

[Editor’s Note: The Los Angeles Times’s map of LA neighborhoods is available as an interactive map here.]

Original article

Email Doug Smith at doug.smith@latimes.com.

(Posted on June 3, 2009)

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Comments

1 — Question Diversity wrote at 6:14 PM on June 3:

You mean there are still streets in Cuidado Los Angeles that still have visibly English names? From what I understand, in the last decade, all the Martin Luther Kings have become Cesar Chavez streets. Soon, Rosa Parks Drive will become Avienda Sonia Sotomayor

2 — Flaxen-headed Strumpet wrote at 7:36 PM on June 3:

Well there are potentially numerous issues open for discussion and analysis here regarding modern U.S. urban plannng/annexation, school system, local property taxation, and state/federal revenue sharing schemes/policies as are practiced in their infinite permutations nationwide.

But the bottom line is that Lost Angels (however one wishes to define it) is (politically and demographically; if one omits Blacks and Asians from the picture) )about where greater Mexico City was in 1938. In other words, one could easily be urinating on the back wall of a 7-11 accross municipal lines from the store itself. What’s a 7-11 clerk to do in such a situation?

3 — Anonymous wrote at 10:08 PM on June 3:

Los Angeles is a case study in urban failure in so many ways. It was, like so many once great American cities, overrun by Blacks and is now being overrun by Hispanics. Its like a laboratory showing us the results of ethnic displacement only no one is paying attention.

4 — Anonymous wrote at 12:06 AM on June 4:

According to the map, these are the White neighborhoods in LA:

Pacific Palisades — 88.6% White
Beverly Crest — 87.6% White
Hollywood Hills West — 84.9% White
Fairfax — 84.7% White
Brentwood — 84.2% White
Bel Air — 83% White
Century City — 82.5% White
Beverly Grove — 82% White
Encino — 80.1% White
Beverlywood — White 80%
Cheviot Hills — 78.5% White
Rancho Park — 62.9% White, 16.1% Asian, 14.3% Latino
Woodland Hills — 78.3% White
West LA — 76.7% White
Hollywood Hills — 74.1% White
Tarzana — 74% White
Sherman Oaks — 73.8% White
Pico-Robertson — 73.5% White
Playa Del Rey — 72.6% White
Studio City — 78% White
Chatsworth — 65.4% White
Lake Balboa — 49% White, 31.7% Latino
West Hills — 70.9% White
Toluca Lake — 71.9% White
Valley Village — 66.7% White, 18.9% Latino
Chatsworth — 65.4% White
Sunland — 64.9% White, 21.5% Latino
Venice — 63.9% White, 22.2% Latino
Porter Ranch — 60.9% White, 26.7% Asian
Tujunga — 60.7% White, 28.7% Latino
Shadow Hills — 59.1% White, 28.7% Latino
Los Feliz — 57.6% White, 18.7% Latino, 13.4% Asian
Granada Hills — 55.5% White, 20.6% Latino, 16.1% Asian
Westchester — White 52.3%, Black 16.6%, Latino, 16.4%
Mar Vista — 51.3% White, 29% Latino, 12% Asian
Northridge — 49.5% White, 26.1% Latino, 14.4% Asian
Sawtelle — 49.6% White, 22.8% Latino, 19% Asian
San Pedro — 44.6% White, 40.4% Latino
Valley Glen — 39.5% White, 41.2% Latino

5 — browser wrote at 5:23 PM on June 4:

Los Angeles is a case study in urban failure in so many ways. It was, like so many once great American cities, overrun by Blacks and is now being overrun by Hispanics.”


What wave will overrun it next? Chinese? Hindus? Moslems?
The gates of over-populated Asia have hardly even opened yet. Once they do, they can overrun the Mexicanos in California with millions upon millions…. with hundreds of millions yet to spare. That will be the end of the dream of Aztlan for good. The chicanos will be dreaming instead of the wonderful old days of Anglo rule when life was a paradise by comparison.

6 — Anonymous wrote at 9:34 PM on June 7:

“What wave will overrun it next? Chinese? Hindus? Moslems?”


Good question. History is not static, it is on-going. There is no final result, only the present. It only exists as it is right now. But that doesn’t mean anything as regards the next century. No one should sit on their laurels and fall asleep. The Amerindians probably thought the continent was theirs forever and ever too. It wasn’t.

7 — Anonymous wrote at 9:02 PM on June 10:

America needs the Wall on its Southern border, yesterday, and tighten non-White Immigration controls.

There needs to be forced assimilation for all non-White peoples, and those who do not want to assimilate will be welcomed, or actually required, to leave.

White families need to begin earlier than most do today. It is not uncommon for Whites to put off getting married, and begin a family until one partner, or both, have secure good paying jobs, to afford, not only their first apartment, and some furniture, but to eventually put a down payment on a House.

This is detrimental in many ways, as many women have found that they have missed the window of furtility, and now must turn to IVF to conceive a child, or children.

Whites, as a group, must support our young people that want to marry and begin a family, but cannot because of finacial constraints, something that is never a problem for the Darker Races, since they have no intention of spending a dime on their proginey, and they know that the mother will simply get White financed Welfare.

What I would suggest is an altuistic approach by Our people, to assist Our People, whether it be by donating their children’s old Kibs, in good condition, as we just did, to another family, for their first son.

We could donate clothes, diapers, coupons for baby formula, and White Doctors could assist our people through reduced cost Medical Care.

That is not to say that Doctors and Nurses would not be paid, but think about years ago, when people gave food, or did work for the Doctor as payment, in lieu of money.

How many times have we heard of the Farmer giving a basket or two of eggs, a full milk can, and pies to the Doctor, to pay for the Medical Services?

Children need quality Health Care, and White Couples need to be encouraged to have larger families, without going into Bankruptcy.

We need to address this situation now, not later, while we still have a Community to grow, and protect.


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