Last Saturday Metro hosted a community input meeting on its planned North Hollywood to Pasadena Bus Rapid Transit project. The northeast L.A. City community of Eagle Rock has emerged as ground zero of a conflict between supporters urging "BRT for Equity," and critics claiming BRT will "devastate" businesses and "severely increase traffic."
Metro’s North Hollywood to Pasadena Transit Corridor project has $267 million in Measure M funding. The ~18-mile BRT line is planned to run mostly on streets in four cities - Burbank, Glendale, Pasadena, and Los Angeles - as well as partially on the 134 Freeway. There are many BRT features under consideration, though the most contentious aspect of the project is up to nine miles of dedicated peak period bus-only lanes.
Burbank: Tonight Monday 7/15, 6-8 p.m. at Buena Vista Branch Library, 300 N. Buena Vista Street
Glendale: Wednesday 7/17, 5:30–7:30 p.m. at Glendale Downtown Central Library, 222 E. Harvard Street
Saturday's meeting was held at the Eagle Rock Plaza. The overflow crowd was reported variously as "200" (CBS) and "350" (Boulevard Sentinel.)
Public comment was split more-or-less evenly between BRT proponents and opponents.
The anti-BRT crowd continues to misleading state that they want "#BetterBRT" on the 134 Freeway instead of on Colorado Boulevard where it would serve the core of the Eagle Rock community.
Longtime Eagle Rock community activist and TERA (The Eagle Rock Association) co-founder Kathleen Aberman testified "We don't want to ride the buses. They're dirty. They're not safe, and they're dangerous." Other anti-BRT speakers threatened to take Metro to court to block the project.
Current TERA president Greg Merideth, in a June 2019 e-newsletter, staked out a nuanced position in support of BRT. Merideth stated:
Now is not the time to raise pitchforks, but instead to raise ideas... TERA has every intention of actively engaging Metro, participating in the EIR process, submitting thorough comments at every stage, engaging our elected officials and leveraging our highly engaged residents, stakeholders, and businesses to ensure that Metro does right by Eagle Rock.
We find Metro’s goals of increasing transit access, improving regional mobility, reducing transportation costs, and easing commutes as not only worthy but necessary. ...we will support increased transit access on Colorado Boulevard but only in a manner that works for our unique neighborhood.
Supporters spoke in favor of Colorado Boulevard BRT on grounds of mobility justice, environmental justice, sustainability, and convenient transit.
Bike the Vote L.A. founder and Eagle Rock homeowner Michael MacDonald's public comment included reading a 2016 letter from the Eagle Rock Chamber of Commerce that refuted false claims by Eagle Rock 411 that Metro had not consulted the local chamber.
ER411 website falsely claims "Metro did not reach out to Eagle Rock's Chamber of Commerce" - screenshot today of ER411 FAQ page
ER411 spokesperson Cherryl Weaver repeatedly lying that "Metro hasn't even ever... reached out to them [ER Chamber] in any way." - via Facebook
2016 Eagle Rock Chamber of Commerce letter expressing support for Colorado Boulevard BRT - signed by Michael Noguiera of ER411. Image via @topomodesto Twitter
Chamber of Commerce president Michael Noguiera has been a big part of the recent ER411 campaign against BRT, including hanging a Chamber-logo anti-BRT banner across Colorado Boulevard. ER411 claims that Metro did not reach out to the Eagle Rock Chamber, but in 2016, Noguiera signed the Chamber's letter to Metro stating "I would like to express my strong support for an alignment that runs down Colorado Boulevard through Eagle Rock."
BRT supporters reported being boo-ed, aggressively shouted at, confronted angrily, harassed, and even having overheard an ethnic slur directed at a person of color commenting in favor of the project. BRT for Equity leader Felicia Garcia called the meeting's environment "toxic" and "exhausting." She questioned "How many [people] came by meeting [and] left when they saw signs waved in faces [and] aggressive shouting?" In a post-meeting letter to Metro, MacDonald also cited the meeting's toxic atmosphere and urged Metro to make its meetings "safe and welcoming."
Though it would be understandable that folks would want to sit out these toxic meetings, for BRT to succeed, supporters should attend the remaining two meetings - tonight and Wednesday. Reportedly, County Supervisor Hilda Solis is working with Metro to schedule two additional Eagle Rock meetings.