"I just want to make sure that in funding these capital projects, we're not going to short our general services and that we're going to be able to provide services at the level that the community has come to expect," Councilmember Julian Gold said.
Each year, the Chamber, in partnership with the city, travels to New York City in the fall and San Francisco in the spring to scout new businesses to bring into Beverly Hills.
"Assuming many of the one-time measures we employed in this year's budget to reduce expenditures are reversed going into next year, we're forecasting an approximate deficit of $4.6 million for next year and just under a million dollars for the following year," said Muir.
"I think that if we can at least meet or exceed the state standards, we will be demonstrating good faith to HCD in our efforts to accommodate to the overriding purpose of the Rena allocation," said Commissioner Thomas Hudnut.
Last year the HRC added the homeless initiative to its charge. Since then, the Commission has implemented the homeless initiative into its monthly agenda. While the official homeless count this year was not conducted due to COVID-19, last year's count was 16. According to James
"When HBO moved from Santa Monica, they didn't move to Beverly Hills," Bergman said. He added that he expects major shifts in how Americans work in the wake of the pandemic, saying, "We're going to see dramatic long term employment destruction."
The Jewish Community Foundation of Los Angeles (The Foundation) has awarded $3 million to 19 organizations as part of the second phase of its COVID-19 Response Grants initiative. In describing the grants to the Courier, Foundation President and Chief Executive Officer Marvin I. Schotland said,