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Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors

The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors (LACBOS) is the five-member governing body of Los Angeles County, California, United States.

County of Los Angeles Board of Supervisors
Type
Type
Unicameral board
of Los Angeles County
Term limits
3 terms (12 years)
History
Founded1852 (1852)
Preceded byCourt of Sessions
Leadership
County Chair
Janice Hahn
since 2022
County Chair Pro Tem
Lindsey Horvath
since 2022
Supervisor, First District
Hilda Solis
since 2014
Supervisor, Second District
Holly Mitchell
since 2020
Supervisor, Third District
Lindsey Horvath
since 2022
Supervisor, Fourth District
Janice Hahn
since 2016
Supervisor, Fifth District
Kathryn Barger
since 2016
Structure
Seats5
Political groups
Nonpartisan (5) (de jure)
Democratic (4) (de facto)
Republican (1) (de facto)
Length of term
4 years, three term limit
Elections
Two-round system
Last election
November 8, 2022
Next election
November 5, 2024
Meeting place
Kenneth Hahn Hall of Administration
Civic Center, Los Angeles, California
Website
bos.lacounty.gov

History

On April 1, 1850 the citizens of Los Angeles elected a three-man Court of Sessions as their first governing body.[1] A total of 377 votes were cast in this election.[1] In 1852, the Legislature dissolved the Court of Sessions and created a five-member Board of Supervisors.[1] In 1913 the citizens of Los Angeles County approved a charter recommended by a board of freeholders which gave the County greater freedom to govern itself within the framework of state law.[1]

As the population expanded throughout the twentieth century, Los Angeles County did not subdivide into separate counties or increase the number of supervisors as its population soared. Today, each supervisor represents more than two million people. As a consequence, individual Supervisors often had a substantial influence over the governance of the county, and the group was collectively known as the "five little kings".[2][3]

With the election of Holly Mitchell to the board in 2020, the board of supervisors were occupied entirely by women for the first time in its history.[4]

Governance

Elections

Supervisors are elected to four-year terms by a vote of Los Angeles County citizens who reside in the supervisorial district.[5] Supervisors must reside and be voters in the district they represent.[5] Elections for the 1st and 3rd districts coincide with California's gubernatorial elections, while those for the 2nd, 4th and 5th districts coincide with the United States presidential election.[5] Supervisorial terms begin the first Monday in December after the election.

Term limits

In March 2002, Los Angeles County voters passed Measure B to limit the supervisors to three consecutive four-year terms.[6] If a supervisor fills a vacancy, the unexpired term counts towards the term limit if there are more than two years (half the term) left to serve. The provisions of the measure were not retroactive, meaning that the term limit clock for supervisors who were serving at the time the measure passed would start with the next election. At the time term limits were imposed, Don Knabe, Mike Antonovich, and Yvonne Brathwaite Burke’s terms were scheduled to end in 2016 (Brathwaite Burke chose to retire in 2008), while Gloria Molina and Zev Yaroslavsky served their terms until 2014.

Board of Supervisors Chair/Mayor

The chair or “mayor” of the Board of Supervisors serves a term of one year, meaning that a supervisor who is elected for a term on the board will get a chance to serve at least one term as chair/mayor. Upon expiration of the term, the duties of the chair/mayor are rotated among the board members by order of seniority. Along with their general responsibilities as a member of the board of supervisors, the chair/mayor has several unique duties to fulfill, including presiding over board meetings and controlling the agenda of the board. During his or her term of office, the chair has the option of calling himself or herself “mayor”, a practice that was started by Michael D. Antonovich during his tenure as a supervisor. This tradition was not continued by the current incumbents.[7]

CEO

Until recently, the chief executive officer was the appointed individual heading the county but had little power as supervisors retained the right to fire and hire department heads and often directly admonished department heads in public.

Based on an ordinance authored by Supervisors Knabe and Yaroslavsky that took effect in April 2007, the CEO directly oversees departments on behalf of the supervisors, although the Los Angeles County Fire Department, Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department, Assessor, District Attorney, Auditor-Controller, and Executive Office of the Board of Supervisors continue to be under the direct purview of the Board of Supervisors. The change was made in response to several candidates either dropping out or declining to accept the position to replace former Chief Administrative Officer David Janssen. Antonovich was the lone supervisor to oppose the change, stating that such a move would lead to a more autocratic form of government and disenfranchise the 1.3 million who live in unincorporated areas.[8]

However, this was rescinded in 2015 and the CEO has returned to a facilitation and coordination role between departments. Departments continue to submit recommendations and agenda items to the Board to be adopted and ratified, and the Board directly manages relations with the department heads instead of going through the CEO, as would be the case in a council-manager system prevalent in most of the county's cities.[9] In 2016, the CEO further recommended, and the Board approved, transferring positions considered "transactional" and focusing the CEO on "strategic" initiatives and long-term, structural issues.[10]

Board meetings

The Board meets every Tuesday at 9:30 a.m. at the Board Hearing Room (381B) at the Kenneth Hahn Hall of Administration in Downtown Los Angeles.[11] On Tuesdays following a Monday holiday, Board meetings begin after lunch, at 1:00 p.m.[11] Board meetings are conducted in accordance with Robert's Rules of Order, the Brown Act (California’s sunshine law), and the Rules of the Board. The Chief Executive Officer, the County Counsel and the Executive Officer, or their deputies, attend each Board meeting.[11]

The regular agendas for the first, second, third and fifth Tuesdays of the month are essentially a consent calendar, that is, all items are automatically approved without discussion, unless a Supervisor or member of the public requests discussion of a specific item.[11] The fourth Tuesday of the month is reserved for the purpose of conducting legally required public hearings, Board of Supervisors motions and department items continued from a previous meeting, have time constraints, or are critical in nature.[11] Since Board meetings are considered Brown Act bodies, a Board agenda is published 72 hours before the Board meeting is convened.

At the start of a meeting, after an invocation and the Pledge of Allegiance, all items that do not have "holds" placed on them by a Supervisor or a member of the public, or are mandatory public hearings, are approved on a consent calendar.[11] Following that, presentations of various dignitaries (e.g., local consulate officials, awards to County employees and the general public, and pets for adoption) are made.[11] Then, items that were not approved are called in numerical order unless a supervisor wishes to take items out of order.[11]

Members of the public are allotted three minutes to make public comment on all the agenda items that they intend to discuss.[11] An additional three minutes are provided during general public comment on any topic within the board's jurisdiction.[11] Individuals must submit comment cards before the start of the meeting and wait until their item is called. On popular topics with multiple speakers, comments may be restricted to as little as one minute each, and the board has the discretion to figuratively muzzle anyone who is addressing the board in a disruptive manner.[11]

Weekly Board meetings are broadcast live online and televised on local public television (KLCS Channel 58). Transcripts and statements of proceedings are published online.[11] However, because some Board decisions have major implications, speakers and protesters on behalf of many causes regularly attend the meetings. The county is sued frequently by various public interest law firms and organizations on behalf of people who disagree with the Board's decisions.

Criticism and controversy

Board expansion

"Good-government" advocates have long supported the idea of expanding Board membership to reduce the size of each district, and establishing an elected County Executive as a check and balance on the Board's power, but voters have rejected such proposals every time they have appeared on the ballot. However, former supervisor Gloria Molina supported expansion of the Board (to potentially increase Hispanic representation), and former supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky supported both Board expansion and the creation of an elected County Executive, much like in King County, Washington.

Cooperation with ICE agents in jails

From 2005 to 2015, the board had a program, known as 287(g), that allowed federal U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents into county jails to determine whether inmates were in the country legally.[12] After 2015, the board of supervisors and the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department still cooperate with federal immigration agents.[13][14]

Interim public defender appointment

In 2018, the board appointed Nicole Tinkham as interim public defender, despite a letter signed by 390 public defenders who were concerned that Tinkham lacked criminal law experience and the potential for a conflict of interest, given Tinkham’s prior representation of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.[15][16] Prior to the appointment, the board had failed to appoint a permanent Public Defender, following the retirement of Ronald Brown.[17] One deputy public defender testified to the board: “I feel like you are making a mockery of my life’s work … clearly somebody failed to think this through.”[18] The American Civil Liberties Union has also criticized the appointment of Tinkham.[19]

Naming of public space

During a supervisor’s term in office, public spaces in Los Angeles County are often named after them. In 2018, the Los Angeles Times criticized the board for their decision to name a new mental health center after Supervisor Sheila Kuehl while she remained in office. Kuehl was in her first term as a Supervisor and had just assumed the board chairmanship.[20] The Times also criticized other past supervisors for the same practice, such as Mike Antonovich.[20]

Racial and political gerrymandering

In 1991, a federal court ruled that the board denied Latinos a chance to be elected to the board. The court found that supervisors, all white, purposefully gerrymandered districts so that Latinos were a minority in each of them, a Voting Rights Act violation. As a result, Gloria Molina, the first Latina supervisor, was elected to the board of supervisors.[21]

In 2010, Los Angeles created a nonpartisan commission to impartially redraw the districts for the board of supervisors.”[22]

In 2016, Governor Brown, however, signed Senate Bill 958 which states that “the political party preferences of the commission members…shall be as proportional as possible to the total number of voters who are registered with each political party in the County of Los Angeles.”[22] Some argue that the new bill infringes upon the rights of political minority parties and independent voters.[22]

Transparency

In 2018, the Los Angeles Times editorial board criticized the board for a lack of transparency and accountability. In early 2015, the board was to discuss and adopt a set of policy priorities and post them on the county's website, together with an explanation of how they would be implemented and a schedule of hearings so the public could weigh in. The Times criticized the board for not following through on that promise.[23]

Current Supervisors

Members of the Board are officially nonpartisan, and are elected by constituents of their respective districts.[24] As of 2022, they are:

Current County Chair & Chair Pro Tem

Current County Chair is Janice Hahn & Current County Chair Pro Tem is Lindsey Horvath As of 2022.

Supervisorial districts

Los Angeles County is divided into 5 supervisorial districts (SDs), with each Supervisor representing a district of approximately 2 million people.

District Supervisor Population
(2011)
Area Represented cities and unincorporated areas
First
1,967,029[25] 246 square miles (640 km2)
Second
1,977,349[26] 162 square miles (420 km2)
Third
1,956,453[27] 431 square miles (1,120 km2)
Fourth
1,971,639[28] 458 square miles (1,190 km2)
Fifth
1,946,135[29] 2,807 square miles (7,270 km2)

References

  1. ^ a b c d "History - Los Angeles County". www.lacounty.gov. Retrieved February 10, 2018.
  2. ^ Walters, Dan (June 25, 2017). "Commentary: For the powerful five 'kings' of Los Angeles County, change is in the air". Calmatters.
  3. ^ "The 5 Little Kings Who Are No More". Los Angeles Times. December 7, 1990.
  4. ^ "L.A. County makes history with all female Board of Supervisors". Los Angeles Times. November 5, 2020.
  5. ^ a b c (PDF). Board of Supervisors. County of Los Angeles. June 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 22, 2013. Retrieved September 10, 2013.
  6. ^ "Directory of Los Angeles County, CA Measures - March 5, 2002 Election". League of Women Voters of California Education Fund. April 19, 2002. Retrieved September 10, 2013.
  7. ^ "Antonovich Says This Town Is Big Enough for 2 Mayors". October 26, 1996 – via LA Times.
  8. ^ "Power Shift Means Less Accountability, More Bureaucracy".
  9. ^ Sewell, Abby (July 8, 2015). "L.A. County supervisors move to consolidate power by weakening CEO's job". Los Angeles Times.
  10. ^ "CEO ORGANIZATION REPORT" (PDF).
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Information Regarding Agendas and Meetings of the Board of Supervisors". Executive Office. County of Los Angeles. Retrieved September 10, 2013.
  12. ^ Holguin, Robert (May 13, 2015). "L.A. County Board of Supervisors ends 287(g) immigration enforcement program". ABC7 Los Angeles. Retrieved February 13, 2018.
  13. ^ Radio, Southern California Public (September 23, 2015). "LA County will continue to cooperate with immigration agents". Southern California Public Radio. Retrieved February 13, 2018.
  14. ^ "How should LA County Sheriff's Department deal with ICE? Residents divided over watchdog's report in heated meeting". Daily News. October 26, 2017. Retrieved February 13, 2018.
  15. ^ "Hundreds of deputy public defenders protest choice of new interim leader". theavtimes.com. January 23, 2018. Retrieved February 10, 2018.
  16. ^ "County Board of Supervisors Fumbles the Public Defender Appointment". KNOCK. February 3, 2018. Retrieved February 10, 2018.
  17. ^ Board, The Times Editorial (February 9, 2018). "Is the new public defender ending or stoking office turmoil?". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved February 10, 2018.
  18. ^ "Hundreds Of LA County Public Defenders Protest Appointment Of Interim Leader - LA West Media". LA West Media. January 23, 2018. Retrieved February 10, 2018.
  19. ^ Radio, Southern California Public (February 1, 2018). "The L.A. County supervisor's pick for interim head of the public defender's office faces criticism". Southern California Public Radio. Retrieved February 10, 2018.
  20. ^ a b Board, The Times Editorial (January 9, 2018). "A note to L.A. County's supervisors: Stop naming things after yourselves. It's obscene". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved February 24, 2018.
  21. ^ "Race and county redistricting". Bill Boyarsky on LA Observed. Retrieved February 10, 2018.
  22. ^ a b c "A Case of Democratic Gerrymandering in LA County". Davis Political Review. May 3, 2017. Retrieved February 10, 2018.
  23. ^ Board, The Times Editorial (January 12, 2018). "If L.A. supes can't bother to update their website, how can we trust them to keep the public informed?". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved February 10, 2018.
  24. ^ Sewell, Abby (April 3, 2016). "This year's election could usher in liberal 'supermajority' on L.A. County supervisors board". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved October 31, 2016.
  25. ^ "First Supervisorial District Map" (PDF). County of Los Angeles Board of Supervisors. County of Los Angeles. Retrieved November 26, 2020.
  26. ^ "Second Supervisorial District Map" (PDF). County of Los Angeles Board of Supervisors. County of Los Angeles. Retrieved November 26, 2020.
  27. ^ "Third Supervisorial District Map" (PDF). County of Los Angeles Board of Supervisors. County of Los Angeles. Retrieved November 26, 2020.
  28. ^ "Fourth Supervisorial District Map" (PDF). County of Los Angeles Board of Supervisors. County of Los Angeles. Retrieved November 26, 2020.
  29. ^ "Fifth Supervisorial District Map" (PDF). County of Los Angeles Board of Supervisors. County of Los Angeles. Retrieved November 26, 2020.

External links

  • Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors
  • Los Angeles County Supervisors - Past To Present

angeles, county, board, supervisors, lacbos, five, member, governing, body, angeles, county, california, united, states, county, angeles, board, supervisorstypetypeunicameral, board, angeles, countyterm, limits3, terms, years, historyfounded1852, 1852, precede. The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors LACBOS is the five member governing body of Los Angeles County California United States County of Los Angeles Board of SupervisorsTypeTypeUnicameral board of Los Angeles CountyTerm limits3 terms 12 years HistoryFounded1852 1852 Preceded byCourt of SessionsLeadershipCounty ChairJanice Hahn since 2022County Chair Pro TemLindsey Horvath since 2022Supervisor First DistrictHilda Solis since 2014Supervisor Second DistrictHolly Mitchell since 2020Supervisor Third DistrictLindsey Horvath since 2022Supervisor Fourth DistrictJanice Hahn since 2016Supervisor Fifth DistrictKathryn Barger since 2016StructureSeats5Political groupsNonpartisan 5 de jure Democratic 4 de facto Republican 1 de facto Length of term4 years three term limitElectionsVoting systemTwo round systemLast electionNovember 8 2022Next electionNovember 5 2024Meeting placeKenneth Hahn Hall of AdministrationCivic Center Los Angeles CaliforniaWebsitebos wbr lacounty wbr gov Charter of the County of Los Angeles Contents 1 History 2 Governance 2 1 Elections 2 2 Term limits 2 3 Board of Supervisors Chair Mayor 2 4 CEO 2 5 Board meetings 3 Criticism and controversy 3 1 Board expansion 3 2 Cooperation with ICE agents in jails 3 3 Interim public defender appointment 3 4 Naming of public space 3 5 Racial and political gerrymandering 3 6 Transparency 4 Current Supervisors 5 Current County Chair amp Chair Pro Tem 6 Supervisorial districts 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditOn April 1 1850 the citizens of Los Angeles elected a three man Court of Sessions as their first governing body 1 A total of 377 votes were cast in this election 1 In 1852 the Legislature dissolved the Court of Sessions and created a five member Board of Supervisors 1 In 1913 the citizens of Los Angeles County approved a charter recommended by a board of freeholders which gave the County greater freedom to govern itself within the framework of state law 1 As the population expanded throughout the twentieth century Los Angeles County did not subdivide into separate counties or increase the number of supervisors as its population soared Today each supervisor represents more than two million people As a consequence individual Supervisors often had a substantial influence over the governance of the county and the group was collectively known as the five little kings 2 3 With the election of Holly Mitchell to the board in 2020 the board of supervisors were occupied entirely by women for the first time in its history 4 Governance EditElections Edit Supervisors are elected to four year terms by a vote of Los Angeles County citizens who reside in the supervisorial district 5 Supervisors must reside and be voters in the district they represent 5 Elections for the 1st and 3rd districts coincide with California s gubernatorial elections while those for the 2nd 4th and 5th districts coincide with the United States presidential election 5 Supervisorial terms begin the first Monday in December after the election Term limits Edit In March 2002 Los Angeles County voters passed Measure B to limit the supervisors to three consecutive four year terms 6 If a supervisor fills a vacancy the unexpired term counts towards the term limit if there are more than two years half the term left to serve The provisions of the measure were not retroactive meaning that the term limit clock for supervisors who were serving at the time the measure passed would start with the next election At the time term limits were imposed Don Knabe Mike Antonovich and Yvonne Brathwaite Burke s terms were scheduled to end in 2016 Brathwaite Burke chose to retire in 2008 while Gloria Molina and Zev Yaroslavsky served their terms until 2014 Board of Supervisors Chair Mayor Edit Main article Los Angeles County Chair The chair or mayor of the Board of Supervisors serves a term of one year meaning that a supervisor who is elected for a term on the board will get a chance to serve at least one term as chair mayor Upon expiration of the term the duties of the chair mayor are rotated among the board members by order of seniority Along with their general responsibilities as a member of the board of supervisors the chair mayor has several unique duties to fulfill including presiding over board meetings and controlling the agenda of the board During his or her term of office the chair has the option of calling himself or herself mayor a practice that was started by Michael D Antonovich during his tenure as a supervisor This tradition was not continued by the current incumbents 7 CEO Edit Main article Los Angeles County Chief Executive Office Until recently the chief executive officer was the appointed individual heading the county but had little power as supervisors retained the right to fire and hire department heads and often directly admonished department heads in public Based on an ordinance authored by Supervisors Knabe and Yaroslavsky that took effect in April 2007 the CEO directly oversees departments on behalf of the supervisors although the Los Angeles County Fire Department Los Angeles County Sheriff s Department Assessor District Attorney Auditor Controller and Executive Office of the Board of Supervisors continue to be under the direct purview of the Board of Supervisors The change was made in response to several candidates either dropping out or declining to accept the position to replace former Chief Administrative Officer David Janssen Antonovich was the lone supervisor to oppose the change stating that such a move would lead to a more autocratic form of government and disenfranchise the 1 3 million who live in unincorporated areas 8 However this was rescinded in 2015 and the CEO has returned to a facilitation and coordination role between departments Departments continue to submit recommendations and agenda items to the Board to be adopted and ratified and the Board directly manages relations with the department heads instead of going through the CEO as would be the case in a council manager system prevalent in most of the county s cities 9 In 2016 the CEO further recommended and the Board approved transferring positions considered transactional and focusing the CEO on strategic initiatives and long term structural issues 10 Board meetings Edit The Board meets every Tuesday at 9 30 a m at the Board Hearing Room 381B at the Kenneth Hahn Hall of Administration in Downtown Los Angeles 11 On Tuesdays following a Monday holiday Board meetings begin after lunch at 1 00 p m 11 Board meetings are conducted in accordance with Robert s Rules of Order the Brown Act California s sunshine law and the Rules of the Board The Chief Executive Officer the County Counsel and the Executive Officer or their deputies attend each Board meeting 11 The regular agendas for the first second third and fifth Tuesdays of the month are essentially a consent calendar that is all items are automatically approved without discussion unless a Supervisor or member of the public requests discussion of a specific item 11 The fourth Tuesday of the month is reserved for the purpose of conducting legally required public hearings Board of Supervisors motions and department items continued from a previous meeting have time constraints or are critical in nature 11 Since Board meetings are considered Brown Act bodies a Board agenda is published 72 hours before the Board meeting is convened At the start of a meeting after an invocation and the Pledge of Allegiance all items that do not have holds placed on them by a Supervisor or a member of the public or are mandatory public hearings are approved on a consent calendar 11 Following that presentations of various dignitaries e g local consulate officials awards to County employees and the general public and pets for adoption are made 11 Then items that were not approved are called in numerical order unless a supervisor wishes to take items out of order 11 Members of the public are allotted three minutes to make public comment on all the agenda items that they intend to discuss 11 An additional three minutes are provided during general public comment on any topic within the board s jurisdiction 11 Individuals must submit comment cards before the start of the meeting and wait until their item is called On popular topics with multiple speakers comments may be restricted to as little as one minute each and the board has the discretion to figuratively muzzle anyone who is addressing the board in a disruptive manner 11 Weekly Board meetings are broadcast live online and televised on local public television KLCS Channel 58 Transcripts and statements of proceedings are published online 11 However because some Board decisions have major implications speakers and protesters on behalf of many causes regularly attend the meetings The county is sued frequently by various public interest law firms and organizations on behalf of people who disagree with the Board s decisions Criticism and controversy EditBoard expansion Edit Good government advocates have long supported the idea of expanding Board membership to reduce the size of each district and establishing an elected County Executive as a check and balance on the Board s power but voters have rejected such proposals every time they have appeared on the ballot However former supervisor Gloria Molina supported expansion of the Board to potentially increase Hispanic representation and former supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky supported both Board expansion and the creation of an elected County Executive much like in King County Washington Cooperation with ICE agents in jails Edit From 2005 to 2015 the board had a program known as 287 g that allowed federal U S Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents into county jails to determine whether inmates were in the country legally 12 After 2015 the board of supervisors and the Los Angeles County Sheriff s Department still cooperate with federal immigration agents 13 14 Interim public defender appointment Edit In 2018 the board appointed Nicole Tinkham as interim public defender despite a letter signed by 390 public defenders who were concerned that Tinkham lacked criminal law experience and the potential for a conflict of interest given Tinkham s prior representation of the Los Angeles County Sheriff s Department 15 16 Prior to the appointment the board had failed to appoint a permanent Public Defender following the retirement of Ronald Brown 17 One deputy public defender testified to the board I feel like you are making a mockery of my life s work clearly somebody failed to think this through 18 The American Civil Liberties Union has also criticized the appointment of Tinkham 19 Naming of public space Edit During a supervisor s term in office public spaces in Los Angeles County are often named after them In 2018 the Los Angeles Times criticized the board for their decision to name a new mental health center after Supervisor Sheila Kuehl while she remained in office Kuehl was in her first term as a Supervisor and had just assumed the board chairmanship 20 The Times also criticized other past supervisors for the same practice such as Mike Antonovich 20 Racial and political gerrymandering Edit In 1991 a federal court ruled that the board denied Latinos a chance to be elected to the board The court found that supervisors all white purposefully gerrymandered districts so that Latinos were a minority in each of them a Voting Rights Act violation As a result Gloria Molina the first Latina supervisor was elected to the board of supervisors 21 In 2010 Los Angeles created a nonpartisan commission to impartially redraw the districts for the board of supervisors 22 In 2016 Governor Brown however signed Senate Bill 958 which states that the political party preferences of the commission members shall be as proportional as possible to the total number of voters who are registered with each political party in the County of Los Angeles 22 Some argue that the new bill infringes upon the rights of political minority parties and independent voters 22 Transparency Edit In 2018 the Los Angeles Times editorial board criticized the board for a lack of transparency and accountability In early 2015 the board was to discuss and adopt a set of policy priorities and post them on the county s website together with an explanation of how they would be implemented and a schedule of hearings so the public could weigh in The Times criticized the board for not following through on that promise 23 Current Supervisors EditFurther information List of members of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors Members of the Board are officially nonpartisan and are elected by constituents of their respective districts 24 As of 2022 they are Hilda SolisDistrict 1since 2014 Holly MitchellDistrict 2since 2020 Lindsey HorvathDistrict 3since 2022 Janice HahnDistrict 4since 2016 Kathryn BargerDistrict 5since 2016Current County Chair amp Chair Pro Tem EditCurrent County Chair is Janice Hahn amp Current County Chair Pro Tem is Lindsey Horvath As of 2022 Janice HahnChairSince December 6 2022 Lindsey HorvathChair Pro TemSince December 6 2022Supervisorial districts EditLos Angeles County is divided into 5 supervisorial districts SDs with each Supervisor representing a district of approximately 2 million people District Supervisor Population 2011 Area Represented cities and unincorporated areasFirst Solis 1 967 029 25 246 square miles 640 km2 Cities Alhambra Azusa Baldwin Park Covina Diamond Bar El Monte Industry Irwindale La Puente La Verne portion Montebello Monterey Park Pomona Rosemead San Gabriel South El Monte Walnut West Covina Whittier portion Unincorporated areas Avocado Heights Charter Oak East Los Angeles Hacienda Heights Rowland Heights San Jose Hills South San Gabriel Valinda West Puente Valley Los Angeles City neighborhoods Angelino Heights Atwater Village Boyle Heights Chinatown Civic Center Downtown Los Angeles Eagle Rock East Hollywood Echo Park El Sereno Elysian Park Elysian Valley Glassell Park Highland Park Historic Filipinotown Lincoln Heights Little Armenia Little Tokyo Mt Washington Pico Union portion Silverlake Temple Beaudry Thai Town University Hills Westlake Wholesale DistrictSecond Mitchell 1 977 349 26 162 square miles 420 km2 Cities Carson Compton Culver City El Segundo Gardena Hawthorne Hermosa Beach Inglewood Lawndale Lynwood Manhattan Beach Redondo Beach Unincorporated areas Athens Del Aire Del Rey East Rancho Dominguez El Camino Village Florence Florence Firestone Ladera Heights Lennox Marina del Rey Rancho Dominguez West Carson West Rancho Dominguez Willowbrook Windsor Hills Los Angeles City neighborhoods Adams Normandie Baldwin Hills Country Club Park Crenshaw District Del Rey Exposition Park Faircrest Heights Hancock Park Harbor Gateway Harvard Heights Harvard Park Hyde Park Jefferson Park Koreatown Lafayette Square Leimert Park Little Bangladesh Manchester Square Marina Peninsula Mid City Miracle Mile Palms Park La Brea Pico Union portion Playa Del Rey Playa Vista South Carthay portion South Park University Park Venice portion Vermont Knolls Vermont Square Vermont Vista Victoria Park Watts Wellington Square West Adams Westchester Wilshire CenterThird Horvath 1 956 453 27 431 square miles 1 120 km2 Cities Agoura Hills Beverly Hills Calabasas Hidden Hills Malibu San Fernando Santa Monica West Hollywood Westlake Village Los Angeles City neighborhoods Arleta Bel Air Beverly Crest Beverlywood Brentwood Canoga Park Canoga Park Carthay Century City Chatsworth Cheviot Hills Encino Granada Hills Hollywood portion Lake Balboa Mandeville Canyon Mar Vista Mission Hills North Hills North Hollywood portion Northridge Pacific Palisades Pacoima Palisades Highlands Palms Panorama City Porter Ranch Rancho Park Reseda Reynier Village Sherman Oaks portion South Carthay portion Studio City portion Sun Valley portion Sylmar Toluca Lake Valley Glen Van Nuys Venice Westwood Tarzana Valley Glen Van Nuys Venice portion West Hills West Los Angeles Westwood Winnetka Woodland Hills Unincorporated areas Agoura Malibu Vista Monte Nido Seminole Hot Springs Topanga Topanga Canyon VA HospitalFourth Hahn 1 971 639 28 458 square miles 1 190 km2 Cities Artesia Avalon Bellflower Cerritos Commerce Cudahy Downey Hawaiian Gardens Huntington Park La Habra Heights La Mirada Lakewood Lomita Long Beach Lynwood Maywood Norwalk Palos Verdes Estates Paramount Pico Rivera Rancho Palos Verdes Rolling Hills Rolling Hills Estates Santa Fe Springs Signal Hill South Gate Torrance Vernon Whittier Los Angeles City neighborhoods Harbor City San Pedro Wilmington Unincorporated areas Bandini Islands East La Mirada East Whittier La Habra Heights Palos Verdes Peninsula San Clemente Island Santa Catalina Island South Whittier Walnut Park West Whittier Los NietosFifth Barger 1 946 135 29 2 807 square miles 7 270 km2 Cities Alhambra Arcadia Bradbury Burbank Claremont Duarte Glendale Glendora La Canada Flintridge La Verne portion Lancaster Monrovia Palmdale Pasadena San Dimas San Marino Santa Clarita Sierra Madre South Pasadena Temple City Los Angeles City neighborhoods Angeles National Forest Hollywood Hills portion Lakeview Terrace Los Feliz North Hollywood portion Shadow Hills Sherman Oaks portion Studio City portion Sun Valley portion Sunland Toluca Lake Tujunga Valley Village Quartz Hill Unincorporated areas Quartz Hill San Francisquito Canyon San Pasqual Sand Canyon Stevenson Ranch Sun Village Universal City Val Verde Valencia Valyermo WrightwoodReferences Edit a b c d History Los Angeles County www lacounty gov Retrieved February 10 2018 Walters Dan June 25 2017 Commentary For the powerful five kings of Los Angeles County change is in the air Calmatters The 5 Little Kings Who Are No More Los Angeles Times December 7 1990 L A County makes history with all female Board of Supervisors Los Angeles Times November 5 2020 a b c Charter of the County of Los Angeles PDF Board of Supervisors County of Los Angeles June 2006 Archived from the original PDF on July 22 2013 Retrieved September 10 2013 Directory of Los Angeles County CA Measures March 5 2002 Election League of Women Voters of California Education Fund April 19 2002 Retrieved September 10 2013 Antonovich Says This Town Is Big Enough for 2 Mayors October 26 1996 via LA Times Power Shift Means Less Accountability More Bureaucracy Sewell Abby July 8 2015 L A County supervisors move to consolidate power by weakening CEO s job Los Angeles Times CEO ORGANIZATION REPORT PDF a b c d e f g h i j k l Information Regarding Agendas and Meetings of the Board of Supervisors Executive Office County of Los Angeles Retrieved September 10 2013 Holguin Robert May 13 2015 L A County Board of Supervisors ends 287 g immigration enforcement program ABC7 Los Angeles Retrieved February 13 2018 Radio Southern California Public September 23 2015 LA County will continue to cooperate with immigration agents Southern California Public Radio Retrieved February 13 2018 How should LA County Sheriff s Department deal with ICE Residents divided over watchdog s report in heated meeting Daily News October 26 2017 Retrieved February 13 2018 Hundreds of deputy public defenders protest choice of new interim leader theavtimes com January 23 2018 Retrieved February 10 2018 County Board of Supervisors Fumbles the Public Defender Appointment KNOCK February 3 2018 Retrieved February 10 2018 Board The Times Editorial February 9 2018 Is the new public defender ending or stoking office turmoil Los Angeles Times Retrieved February 10 2018 Hundreds Of LA County Public Defenders Protest Appointment Of Interim Leader LA West Media LA West Media January 23 2018 Retrieved February 10 2018 Radio Southern California Public February 1 2018 The L A County supervisor s pick for interim head of the public defender s office faces criticism Southern California Public Radio Retrieved February 10 2018 a b Board The Times Editorial January 9 2018 A note to L A County s supervisors Stop naming things after yourselves It s obscene Los Angeles Times Retrieved February 24 2018 Race and county redistricting Bill Boyarsky on LA Observed Retrieved February 10 2018 a b c A Case of Democratic Gerrymandering in LA County Davis Political Review May 3 2017 Retrieved February 10 2018 Board The Times Editorial January 12 2018 If L A supes can t bother to update their website how can we trust them to keep the public informed Los Angeles Times Retrieved February 10 2018 Sewell Abby April 3 2016 This year s election could usher in liberal supermajority on L A County supervisors board Los Angeles Times Retrieved October 31 2016 First Supervisorial District Map PDF County of Los Angeles Board of Supervisors County of Los Angeles Retrieved November 26 2020 Second Supervisorial District Map PDF County of Los Angeles Board of Supervisors County of Los Angeles Retrieved November 26 2020 Third Supervisorial District Map PDF County of Los Angeles Board of Supervisors County of Los Angeles Retrieved November 26 2020 Fourth Supervisorial District Map PDF County of Los Angeles Board of Supervisors County of Los Angeles Retrieved November 26 2020 Fifth Supervisorial District Map PDF County of Los Angeles Board of Supervisors County of Los Angeles Retrieved November 26 2020 External links Edit Los Angeles portalLos Angeles County Board of Supervisors Los Angeles County Supervisors Past To Present Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors amp oldid 1132407098, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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