Editorial: A broken appeals system lets 3 Westwood residents stymie the Village’s growth

Three people are holding Westwood hostage.

They have been for the past two decades.

Because of its penchant for holding businesses at bay or filing appeals against them, Westwood Village has long been synonymous with empty buildings, unfulfilled promises and the distant memory of a thriving community that once was.

According to Los Angeles city documents, more than 60% of the 72 appeals filed in Westwood since 1998 have come from Steve Sann, Sandy Brown and Wolfgang Veith. Sann chairs a phony community council, Brown heads the Holmby Westwood Property Owners Association and Veith is a happenchance community member and part of Sann’s cooked up council.

The three stooges have filed appeals against businesses or developers for everything including constructing too tall of buildings, not having enough parking spaces as designated by a 30-year-old zoning ordinance, seeking alcohol licenses and installing windows.

Their aim: to make Westwood clean, safe and beautiful. And yet, the neighborhood is anything but.

Los Angeles’ appeals process has been ringing the death knell of Westwood for decades. Restaurants with the potential to succeed anywhere else have come and gone after facing community opposition. Some never even get the opportunity to open, after the burden of appeals becomes too much to handle on top of startup costs.

The fact that a couple of civically hyperengaged individuals can railroad entire business districts – even those that are largely composed of students – is evidence enough that the city’s developmental regulations need fixing.

Courts have long sanctioned those who engage in vexatious litigation, or lawsuits intended only to harass an individual or entity. And Westwood’s all-too-eager litigants are indeed vexatious.

Sann, responsible for nearly a third of all appeals in Westwood since the beginning of the millennium, has sued UCLA for trying to increase its student housing; allegedly helped box out Sepi’s from relocating in the Village; helped revoke Panera Bread’s restaurant permit in 2014 because it apparently didn’t qualify as a full-service, sit-down business; and filed seven appeals specifically against businesses’ use of alcohol.

The UCLA alum has defended his conduct, stating he cares about the character and history of the Village. But that’s hard to believe when he has stood against student housing, the formation of a more inclusive neighborhood council and even – in an expletive-laden rant captured on tape – proclaimed to block the entry of any new businesses coming into Westwood.

Brown and Veith fare no better. Brown, long the vice president of the now-ousted Westwood Neighborhood Council, filed 10 of the 72 appeals and has a track record of trying to block D1 Café from obtaining an alcohol permit because she thought the owner – an Iranian immigrant – didn’t understand English, as well as saying students shouldn’t have more nightlife entertainment in the Village because they don’t pay property taxes. Veith filed 11 appeals and attempted to block the conversion of a UCLA fraternity house into an apartment complex.

There’s no putting it lightly: The city’s appeals process has become a bully pulpit for those with the time and energy to kill, despite it being meant as a safeguard to protect the interests of a majority of the community. What’s more, each appeal costs the appellant only $89, while the city is stuck footing a $13,538 bill for processing – often ending with Los Angeles denying baseless appeals anyway.

The individuals filing these appeals might argue it’s their right to do so. But it’s hard to believe even a majority of these individuals’ dozens of obstructions to development or business in Westwood have been in its interest. The neighborhood lacks housing, business and accessibility. And the irony is that a process meant to empower community members to protect their interests has been warped to counteract them.

Reducing the appeal abilities of these counterproductive individuals is a start. But the city has a long way to go before it can ensure the appeals process enshrines the virtues and values of Los Angeles’ communities instead of blockading them.

Strong all-around performance propels baseball to win over Loyola Marymount

This post was updated June 2 at 9:53 p.m.

The Bruins will live to fight another day.

No. 1 seed UCLA baseball (50-9, 24-5 Pac-12) got some revenge against Loyola Marymount (34-24, 15-12 WCC) on Sunday night via a wire-to-wire 6-1 victory. With both teams boasting 2-1 records in the Los Angeles regional, the Bruins and Lions will now face off Monday night at 7 p.m. to determine which squad moves on to super regionals.

“Certainly (Monday) should be a pretty special time for LA college baseball,” said coach John Savage. “So hopefully the place will be rocking again, like it has the last two days, and we can get at each other.”

After launching four home runs earlier in the day in a win over Baylor, UCLA took LMU deep three times. Both teams went three-up, three-down in the first, but junior first baseman Michael Toglia gave the Bruins a 1-0 lead on a towering fly ball that hugged the left field foul pole with one down in the second.

It was Toglia’s second home run of the day – hitting the first as a lefty and second as a righty – and 16th of the season.

Freshman third baseman Matt McLain picked up an infield single with one out in the third and a single to center by junior shortstop Ryan Kreidler put men on first and second for the Bruins. Junior second baseman Chase Strumpf – who was 1-for-10 on the weekend coming into the at-bat – roped another home run to left to put UCLA up 4-0.

The Bruins made it three straight innings with a homer when junior right fielder Jeremy Ydens launched yet another deep line drive down the left field line.

“None of us are trying to hit home runs,” Strumpf said. “It’s just a solid commitment to an approach to the middle of the field, and I’d say it showed up.”

UCLA picked up one additional extra-base hit over the next five and added just one more run in the ninth on a single by sophomore Garrett Mitchell that scored junior left fielder Jack Stronach.

And having used eight pitchers over the first three games of the tournament, Savage had to turn to a surprise candidate to start the game.

Freshman right-hander Nick Nastrini – who hadn’t pitched since Feb. 26 after getting diagnosed with thoracic outlet syndrome – took the mound for the Bruins. Fresh off three-plus months of rest, he tossed five full innings and seven strikeouts.

“The outing by (Nastrini) … really came out of nowhere,” Savage said. “Everybody’s played the entire season, he hasn’t pitched in a game for three months. That’s very difficult to do, to get up to game speed and make pitches, control the environment.”

In his three appearances before the injury, Nastrini pitched 10 2/3 scoreless innings in two starts with 17 strikeouts. He allowed his first career earned run on an LMU sacrifice fly in the fifth, but still received a standing ovation from the UCLA fan section on his final trip back to dugout.

“Coming out of my surgery … I was really thinking I was just going to be more of a midrelief kind of guy, not really going to start,” Nastrini said. “My weight room, my throwing program and just my mental game, I knew I was prepared going into tonight.”

Redshirt senior right-hander Nate Hadley replaced the freshman and put up a 1-2-3 sixth followed by a two-strikeout, scoreless seventh. Hadley allowed the game-winning run against the Lions the previous night, but lowered his postseason ERA to 2.08 on Sunday.

Sophomore right-hander Holden Powell came in to start the eighth – and after walking the first two LMU batters he saw – got six outs in a row to end the game.

UCLA’s bullpen owns a 1.88 ERA through its first four games of the regional.

The Lions and Bruins will be back at Jackie Robinson Stadium for their third matchup of the weekend Monday at 7 p.m.

 

Home runs let baseball survive a few more hours as it takes down Baylor

This post was updated June 2 at 5:12 p.m.

Facing elimination, the Bruins used the long ball to stay alive – at least for a few more hours.

No. 1 seed UCLA baseball (49-9, 24-5 Pac-12) took down Baylor (35-18, 14-8 Big 12) 11-6 in the NCAA regionals Sunday, hitting four home runs to pull away late. The win sets up a 6 p.m. rematch with Loyola Marymount, which pushed the Bruins to the losers’ bracket with a 3-2 upset victory Saturday.

“Last night was a big blow, whenever you lose that second game in the winners’ bracket,” said coach John Savage. “This group has shown resilience all season … and at the end of the day, we survived and moved on to tonight.”

UCLA matched its run total from Saturday with one swing of the bat in the first inning Sunday. After junior second baseman Chase Strumpf drew a two-out walk, senior designated hitter Jake Pries smacked a line drive over the left field wall to give the Bruins the early 2-0 lead.

The Bears responded in the top of the second with back-to-back doubles off freshman right-hander Jesse Bergin, scoring a run and prompting coach John Savage get arms warmed up the bullpen early. However, Bergin stayed in the game and right fielder Cole Haring drove a two-run homer to dead center, giving Baylor a 3-2 lead.

Savage pulled Bergin and brought in junior right-hander Felix Rubi, who let a runner reach third but got the groundout to keep the deficit at one run.

The Bruins tied the game in the bottom of the third with some help from the top of their order. With one out, sophomore right fielder Garrett Mitchell ripped a triple into the right field corner and came home on a sacrifice fly from junior shortstop Ryan Kreidler.

Haring gave the Bears the lead again a half inning later with his second home run of the day, a towering solo shot over the left field foul pole.

UCLA took the lead back in the bottom of the fourth. With runners at first and third, junior center fielder Jeremy Ydens roped a double into the left center gap to score both. Ydens later beat the tag at home plate to score on left fielder Jack Stronach’s sacrifice fly to shallow right, making it 6-4 Bruins.

Baylor got a run back in the top of the fifth on a wild pitch from junior right-hander Nathan Hadley that also moved a runner over to second. Hadley was able to record the final two outs and preserve the lead.

The Bruins broke the game open in the bottom of the inning with a pair of homers. Junior first baseman Michael Toglia launched a no-doubter over the Jack and Rhodine Gifford Hitting Facility in right to drive in a pair and freshman catcher Noah Cardenas smashed a solo shot to left to push the lead to 9-5.

Kreidler gave UCLA its fourth and final homer of the day with a two-run shot to center in the bottom of the sixth, extending the lead to five after the Bears got a run back in the top of the inning.

The Bruins’ 11 runs were their most in a playoff game since 2012.

“I think the biggest thing for us is approach,” Mitchell said. “Using (the) middle of the field is big for us. It keeps us on most pitches and I think we did a really good job of using the middle of the field today.”

Working with a five-run cushion, junior right-hander Kyle Mora tossed two scoreless innings before walking the first two batters in the ninth. Savage brought in sophomore right-hander Holden Powell, who needed just four pitches to get the final three outs.

“If you look at what they’ve done all season, we’d never be in the position where we are now without that bullpen,” Savage said. “At the end of the day, we really leaned on them and they gave us what we need today.”

Overall, the UCLA bullpen held Baylor to three runs in eight innings one day after the Bears scored 24 runs. Baylor catcher Shea Langeliers – who drove in 11 runs against Omaha on Saturday – went 0-for-4 on Sunday.

“That’s probably one of the reasons why UCLA is the No. 1 team in the country,” said Baylor coach Steve Rodriguez. “There’s a reason why they have one of the best ERAs and most strikeouts in the country.”

UCLA will now take the field for the third time in 24 hours for a rematch against LMU at 6 p.m.

“We’ve been in a similar situation where we have to win some games,” Pries said. “The biggest thing we do is we trust each other. When we’re trusting each other, that’s when our confidence builds and we get a little momentum.”

Softball advances to NCAA title series behind walk-off 10th-inning home run

This post was updated June 2 at 4:24 p.m.

It was deja vu for the Bruins.

Two games, two wins and redshirt junior pitcher Rachel Garcia in the circle one win away from the Women’s College World Series championship series.

No. 2 seed UCLA softball (54-6, 20-4 Pac-12) outlasted No. 3 seed Washington (52-9, 20-4) in a 3-0 win thanks to Garcia’s walk-off three-run home run in the 10th inning.

Last year at this exact point in the season, UCLA lost to Florida State – the eventual national champions – in the semifinals.

“I was very proud of our effort last year, you can clearly see (Garcia) was convicted; she wasn’t going to let that happen again,” said coach Kelly Inouye-Perez. “That’s what it comes down to. Your ability to stay convicted. This team never gave up. This team literally continued to throw many punches. Washington is a legit team. Every time we play them it’s a dogfight and we knew that coming in.”

Freshman left fielder Kelli Godin led off the 10th with an infield single. With two outs, redshirt sophomore right fielder Aaliyah Jordan singled up the middle to bring Garcia up to the plate with two on and two outs. On the 1-1 pitch, she hit a grounder to third that was called foul by the third base umpire, keeping her at-bat alive.

But on the next pitch, Garcia sent the walk-off big fly half way up the bleachers in left and sent the Bruins back to the championship series for the first time in nine years.

Garcia said the game plan was to look in and when that 1-2 inside change up came in, she knew she had to hit it.

“I think just during that whole at-bat, I could just hear everyone behind me telling me I got this,” Garcia said. “I’m not going to lie, I think I shed a tear a little bit. Just seeing everyone run out to the home plate just really put a smile on my face. I was just super excited for all of us.”

Garcia took the circle and went the distance in a 10-inning complete-game shutout, throwing 179 pitches with 16 strikeouts.

She had to pitch out of situations in which the Huskies had runners on first and second in the seventh, eighth and ninth innings, but strikeouts and ground balls got the Bruins out of those jams.

Gabbie Plain started in the circle for Washington, turning in six innings before Taran Alvelo pitched three innings in relief. Plain came back in the 10th inning and got a pop out and fielder’s choice before giving up the walk-off home run.

The Bruins are headed back to the championship series for the first time since 2010 – the year last they won it all.

“It’s amazing, we feel so good right now,” said junior center fielder Bubba Nickles. “But we’re not done yet. We have a lot that we want to accomplish still. Today was tough, but it was a good way for us to be prepared for the next couple of days.”

Baseball pushed to losers bracket after upset loss against Loyola Marymount

The Bruins are going to have to take a slightly longer route to Omaha, Nebraska.

No. 1 seed UCLA baseball (48-9, 24-5 Pac-12) stranded eight men on base and went 0-for-7 with men in scoring position en route to a 3-2 loss to Loyola Marymount (34-23, 15-12 WCC) on Saturday. The Bruins will have to play Baylor in the championship game of the losers bracket Sunday at noon, something coach John Savage said was an oversight by the NCAA.

“Brutal schedule by the NCAA, awful,” Savage said. “You can’t play a (7 p.m.) game and come back at (12 p.m.) Now, it was going to be them or us, it happens to be us. I’d say the same thing if we won, OK? I don’t get it, I don’t understand it. ‘Oh, it’s TV,’ we get all that, but it’s unfair to the student-athlete.”

The Bruins stranded the bases loaded in the seventh after junior shortstop Ryan Kreidler flied out to the warning track in right, but they got another chance when junior second baseman Chase Strumpf and junior first baseman Michael Toglia drew walks and advanced into scoring position with one down in the eighth.

However, junior left fielder Jack Stronach and sophomore shortstop Kevin Kendall picked up back-to-back strikeouts to end the penultimate inning with LMU still holding onto a one-run lead. The LMU fan section along the first baseline was louder than it had been all night, but Kreidler said it was great to play a crosstown team regardless.

“We’re really excited about the atmosphere,” Kreidler said. “Getting to host the regional is a really special thing and we earned the right to do that. To be able to play a crosstown team like LMU is a awesome opportunity, so we were glad they brought their fans. Like (Savage) said, it was a great atmosphere for baseball.”

The Lions got on the board first, scoring in the bottom of the opening frame. An infield single, hit batter and walk loaded the bases for redshirt junior right-hander Jack Ralston before he was able to record an out, and right fielder Trevin Esquerra capitalized with a sacrifice fly to put LMU up 1-0.

Ralston responded by escaping the jam without any further damage, going on to strike out 10 Lions over the next 5 2/3 innings.

Savage pulled Ralston after 6 1/3 innings and 108 pitches. At the time, he allowed seven hits and two earned runs and would eventually pick up his first loss of the season.

“(Ralston) is pretty good, that guy was 11-0,” said LMU coach Jason Gill. “So I was pretty stoked we scored one.”

Ralston’s third earned run came across after Savage gave him the hook. On redshirt senior right-hander Nathan Hadley’s first pitch of the night, catcher Cooper Uhl hit a go-ahead single to right to give the Lions a 3-2 lead they would hold onto for the rest of the game.

Hadley escaped the inning without allowing another run, but the Bruins were still down 3-2 heading into the top of the eighth. Junior eighth-inning man Kyle Mora held the Lions off the board the next inning, but sophomore All-Conference closer Holden Powell did not get to make the trip out to the mound after UCLA’s offense was unable to force the bottom of the ninth.

The Bruins will have to take the field on the early end tomorrow with first pitch against the Bears at noon. UCLA has already spent its extra life and will have to win three straight games in order to move on to the Super Regionals.

“This is a blow for sure, but there’s a lot of baseball left,” Savage said. “We’ll come out tomorrow and get after it.”