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Space Shuttle Endeavour: Why Isn't the California Science Center Conducting an EIR Before Cutting Down 265 Trees?

endeavour tree.jpeg
Which Way LA? via Facebook
Sacrificed in the name of science.
The California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) requires that any project which "may have a significant effect on the environment" be prefaced by an Environmental Impact Report (EIR) -- an often lengthy document investigating the project's possible effects on both the natural environment and on the urban environment humans have created.

So the bulldozing of a 268 full-grown trees in L.A. and Inglewood, to make way for the California Science Center's prized new space shuttle Endeavour, seems an obvious candidate.

Yet the Science Center, obsessed with its setting up its new NASA exhibit as soon as possible...

... never wrangled the project through the EIR process. And perhaps more importantly, the Los Angeles Department of Public Works never forced them to do so.

At a Board of Public Works meeting today that was more procedural than open-forum, five city commissioners gave final approval for the Science Center to clear out 265 trees in the way of Endeavour's impressive 78-foot wingspan. According to the Los Angeles Times, that sum includes 119 in South L.A., 124 in Westchester and the rest on LAX property. (Also, 128 in Inglewood. But Harry Frisdy, director of the Inglewood Pubilc Works Department, tells L.A. Weekly that he waived the Endeavour's EIR process because replacing all the old ficus trees along the median of Manchester Boulevard was already part of the city's master plan.)


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Los Angeles has no such excuse. Since when did hundreds of trees rooted in a residential area -- including "majestic," decades-old pines and magnolias that pump oxygen into the neighborhood and provide much-needed shade during 100-degree heat waves like this one -- not qualify as environmental impactors?

Lark Galloway-Gilliam, Leimert Park resident and member of the Empowerment Congress West Area Neighborhood Development Council, is baffled by the city's blatant disregard for the EIR process.

jeffrey rudolph.jpeg
California Science Center
The unstoppable Jeffrey Rudolph.
She wonders how, considering "the size and scope of the project, the fact that there's so many trees involved, and the fact that trees are such an environmental and economic factor," the Science Center was able to breeze right past CEQA.

"You can't replace a 60-foot tree with a little boxed tree -- a twig -- and say that that's the equivalent," Galloway-Gilliam told L.A. Weekly earlier this month.

When the Endeavour's controversial route came to her attention "by accident" in June, she says she convinced California Science Center President Jeffrey Rudolph to come by a neighborhood council meeting and answer some of the community's burning questions. According to Galloway-Gilliam, Rudolph claimed during that appearance that the California Science Center Foundation Board of Trustees was behind the decision to pass up an EIR (which the local activist says would have "triggered community hearings and the like").

We've contacted Public Works and the California Science Center for confirmation and further explanation.

But the board in question, for the record, is a total who's-who of 1 percenters in Los Angeles, including Stamps.com CEO Ken McBride, the Annenburgs and a rep for Bank of America. Not exactly the type of money-minded suits you'd want deciding between a glittering new tourist attraction and a leafy canopy in a poor L.A. neighborhood.

Rudolph, California Science Center president and the face of this whole debacle, insisted at the Public Works meeting today that the tree-clearing will be great for L.A. in the long run. Via City News Service:

To replace them, Rudolph said 768 trees would be planted, including some large box trees -- countering claims that mature shade trees would be replaced with saplings.

He also said, "None of the trees to be removed is a heritage tree or a native tree.''

But many none of those claims have been backed up by scientists or a study, as an EIR would require. Instead, Rudolph keeps throwing out random numbers and promises in hopes that the community rage meter will sink just low enough to avoid a costly, time-consuming lawsuit.

And he picked just the right low-income stretch of Manchester and Crenshaw for minimum resistance. Because as we've learned, no amount of party favors could ever convince residents and politicians in, say, forever-outraged Beverly Hills that the lives of their longtime tree friends were worth a one-time road trip for a space relic.

An online petition to "STOP 400 Majestic Trees being Chopped for Shuttle Endeavour's Path" has racked up 284 signatures. But that's barely one metaphorical tree-sitter per tag -- likely not enough to counter the multimillion-dollar interests of the California Science Center.

"Leimert Park is a national treasure, too," resident Keven Brown reportedly said at today's meeting. "... I'm all for the science, but there has to be a better way."

[@simone_electra / swilson@laweekly.com / @LAWeeklyNews]


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16 comments
timgoes
timgoes

Did anyone think to transport the shuttle on it's side. At a 90 degree bank. With one wing tip straight up 85 feet high. Getting the picture? Power lines can go up and down but trees can not. It could be done. Not too hard to build a cradle to hold it on it's side and placed on the same wheels it's planed to go on. This way it will fit down most of the roads without cutting the trees.

mhorns_1
mhorns_1

 @timgoes Sure it's possible, but the cost would be 1000 times more than cutting and replacing the trees.

lollipoptheif
lollipoptheif

 @timgoes It should be obvious that the equation for getting the shuttle Endeavour from Florida to Exposition Park was set to maximize for "photo-op".

The new guardians of Endeavour, the California Science Center, claim they explored alternative routes and modes of bringing the shuttle to her final destination. These were all found not feasible, so we have been told. Will California Science Center allow us a look at the full report on the routes considered? 

The shuttle will not be partially disassembled, or turned on her side or anything else. Because those photos only appeal to mechanics and engineering types.

What the CSS wants are the cool photos of the shuttle gliding along the streets of Los Angeles like a giant moth. Those photos along with the photos of the shuttle flying past area landmarks are planned as an integral and permanent part of the exhibit. The museum will have postcards and t-shirts and pijamas printed with these photos for sale in the gift shop.

If their equation was set to minimize the lateral footprint along the street route, then they would arrange to transport the shuttle in a vertical position - as when on the launchpad. It would then be moved with one wing leading and one wing trailing along the street. The widest footprint of concern would go from the tip of the stabilizer fin to the lowest point of her belly. Trees would only cause a problem when making a 90 degree turn from one boulevard to another, the ability to pivot the craft in its cradle could solve most of those problems.

 

But that is not the photos that CSS wants for their exhibit. Transporting the shuttle in an upright vertical position through the streets is for an exhibit on solving a logistical puzzle - showing the shuttle slicing along the street and pivoting as it threads the needle, thus minimizing the need to move street signs, disassemble traffic signals and chop down majestic old neighborhood trees.

The California Science Center's Endeavour exhibit will show the shuttle gliding along 12 miles of city streets from LAX  like a silent dark moth. At Exposition Park she will stand up on her rear end and raise her head to the sky into the vertical position - forever ready to launch.

getplanted.native
getplanted.native

Every day in Los Angeles someone sues the City for removing a tree, and someone sues LA for not removing a tree that collapsed and caused property damage.

getplanted.native
getplanted.native

I have been a dedicated environmentalist all my life. Most of my 33-year professional career  has been restoring forests and other ecosystems. I have planted trees in National Parks, National Forests, State Parks, and on private land. I volunteer with Tree People and other groups planting trees in and around Los Angeles. I have personally planted a total of around 40,000 trees. I love and respect trees as much as anyone.

 

Several million trees grow in Los Angeles. Many hundreds of trees are cut every day in Los Angeles. Many more hundreds die every day from various causes.

 

I think this squabbling about the loss of 265 trees for such a great cause is silly nonsense.

georgebuzzetti
georgebuzzetti

Well Mr. Ali why were you so buddy buddy with Soberoff the the rest of the Science Center people today.  What is in your comment is not what you said publically today. 

 

First, I want to thank L.A. Weekly for being the only press, so far, that has properly reported what happened today and the history of the law breaking in this decision. 

 

I am the Director of Policy for the Congress of Racial Equality of California (CORE-CA).  We presented both in writing and at the podium today on these issues. We are not the only ones to make these comments today.   How is it that all of these wealthy individuals, corporations, foundations and such did not know or care to follow the law with their buildings full of highly paid attorneys?  Is this credible? 

 

What message is the Science Center and the City sending to the youth they say they want to come and see this exhibit?  Is it "Break the Law" and if you are rich and powerful no one cares or can do anything about it?

 

CORE-CA is not against the Shuttle Endeavor coming to L.A.  We are against illegal practices against any community and the type of disrespect which is so common now.   CORE-CA today requested in public that the Board of Public Works state that they will not act in this disrespectful manner in an important decision to any community in the future.

lollipoptheif
lollipoptheif

to getplanted.native---

this is not an issue about cutting trees on private property. This involves the proper process for gaining approval to remove trees from public property i.e. the parkway and the median of a city street.

getplanted.native
getplanted.native

 @georgebuzzetti What message are you sending to youth? When you get mad about an issue  that you know almost nothing about, you don't need the facts. You spew misinformation and publicly accuse and convict  innocent people of crimes with no evidence or trial. That"s real Nazi of you.

 

georgebuzzetti, whoever the fuck you are, keep a low profile, and read and learn all you can about Law in the U.S. Here it's not like it is wherever you came from. People are presumed innocent until proven guilty. People are only (in most cases anyway) convicted rightfully as a result of evidence.

 

 

getplanted.native
getplanted.native

 @georgebuzzetti

 

What's all this silliness about "breaking the law?" Are you an attorney? Did a licensed attorney advise you on this issue? Have you no cue that in the U.S., the accused are innocent until proven guilty? Are you Judge, Jury, and executioner? Do you have a firm grasp about how the laws work regarding property owners managing trees on their own property? Do you often tell kids that you work with that they are victims when someone else makes a decision about landscaping plans on their own property?

 

I live in LA's Pico-Union Neighborhood. Right in my front yard, many trees are dying due to last winter's meager rainfall and this summer's unusual heat. I am doing my best to keep the trees in my neighborhood alive through this drought and heat wave. I am a professional gardener and work with trees every day

 

How many trees have you planted, and how many trees do you care for? In my case, the number is in the thousands. If you want to save trees, stop faking being a victim. Get out there and get to work with your CORE-CA volunteers. Tree People is there for you if you want help planting more trees in any part of Los Angeles.

NajeeAli
NajeeAli

@jillstewart @LAWeekly Glad somebody is covering this ! Whats going on is crazy!

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