Friday, December 30, 2016

Possible MRSA Outbreak at 3rd and Rose



Venice Neighborhood Alert 



Venice Stakeholders Calls for Intervention by County Department of Health to Assess Risk and Implement “Best Practices” to Prevent MRSA Spread


A representative of Lava-Mae, the organization providing showers to homeless individuals at 3rd and Rose in Venice, reports that they have seen six of cases of apparent MRSA, an antibiotic resistant bacteria, in those who have been using Lava-Mae’s showers.

Mark Ryavec, president of Venice Stakeholders Association said, “We understand that the County Department of Public Health has been contacted about the situation but not initiated any response to either assess the risk of spread or implement any action to treat the individuals.”

Jasmin Mouflard, Lava-Mae’s Los Angeles Director, said, “We saw six individuals who were taking drugs to treat MRSA and another three people who have the open sores that suggest they also are infected with the staphylococcus bacteria.” 

“While we are not health care professionals, we concluded that the six who have been prescribed with drugs to treat the bacteria have MRSA,” Mouflard said.

Rick Swinger, a nearby resident, said, “This certainly appears to be dangerous for the homeless population in the area.  I have also been told that it could represent a health risk for residents who can pick it up from their shoes or from their dogs by walking in the area.”

Ryavec said, “At the first notice of the presence of MRSA, the County Health Department should have instituted “best practices” that are routinely applied in hospitals and locker rooms to contain and eradicate the bacteria.”

Ms. Mouflard noted that they spray the disinfectant Oxivir 516 Concentrate over the shower walls and floor and the nearby ground after each shower use, but do not have the time or resources to treat the entire sidewalk along 3rd Street or Rose Avenue.  She said the chemical kills MRSA in five minutes.

MRSA, which stands for Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, is a staph bacterium transmitted through contact with a person carrying it or by touching objects contaminated with it.  It can affect healthy people who live in crowded environments or who are frequently involved in group activities, including child care workers, inmates, and athletes.

MRSA is commonly found in the nose, and since carriers are contagious, they can release contaminated droplets into the air by sneezing and coughing. If the bacteria is colonized on the skin, frequent scratching increases a carrier’s risk of spreading MRSA.  MRSA can gradually infect vital organs.



Saturday, December 24, 2016

A Holiday Consideration...

I am going to offer you an unconventional message in celebration of Christmas and Hanakkah. It comes from my friend Felicia Michell who sent me these thoughtful words recently on Facebook. It reverberated with me since I lost my younger brother Steve last March to a heart attack and the effects of diabetes.

"Just some thoughts as we enter the holiday season. It is important to remember that not everyone is looking forward to the holidays. Some people are not surrounded by large wonderful families. Some of us are having problems during Christmas and may be overcome with great sadness when we remember the loved ones who are not with us. 

For many it is our first Christmas or Hanakkah without a particular loved one and many others have lost loved ones at this time. And, many people have no one to spend these times with and are overcome with loneliness. We all need caring, loving thoughts right now. 

May I ask my friends, wherever you might be, to kindly post this status for one hour to give a moment of support to all those who are having family troubles, health struggles, job issues, worries of any kind and just need to know that someone cares. Do it for all of us, for no one is immune. I hope to see this on the walls of all my friends. I did it for a friend and you can too!" 

My thanks to Felicia for reminding us of the somber side of the holidays, and reminding me of the losses that all of us occasionally feel at this time of year. 

My warmest wishes to all for a lovely time over the holidays! 

Mark

Saturday, December 17, 2016

Year End Request for Donation


Would you consider a year-end donation to the VSA?  All contributions are tax deductible.

Even though I am in a campaign for City Council, the VSA is active on several fronts.
 
Our appeal is pending in our lawsuit against the City and the County of Los Angeles for maintaining a public nuisance along the Boardwalk and beachfront.

We continue to represent residents in efforts to stop the councilman's unilateral and misguided efforts to:

1.  Convert the Westminster Center to homeless storage and counseling.

2.  To build 156 dense, traffic-producing apartments on the Thatcher Yard in the Oxford Triangle.

3.  To build 120 units of housing for the chronically homeless - who are frequently drug addicted and/or mentally ill - on the Venice Blvd. median next to the Canals.

(I was in City Hall testifying against both the Thatcher Yard and Venice median projects last week.)

4.  To build a massive project on the site of the MTA bus yard on Main Street without community input or consultation with the Venice Neighborhood Council.

The VSA also continues to press for return to enforcement of the "no sleeping on a sidewalk" ordinance 24 hours a day, with the offer of a shelter bed in every instance, and to remove campers from proximity to residences.  We are lobbying for enforcement of the new version of LAMC 56.11 to reduce the amount of stuff on sidewalks to the amount that can fit into a 60 gallon city trash bin.
 
We would welcome your contribution to support these efforts.

Donations may be made using the donation button on this page or a check payable to the Venice Stakeholders Association may be sent to the VSA at 1615 Andalusia Avenue, Venice, CA 90291.

Best wishes to all our supporters for the holidays!

Thank you. 

Mark Ryavec
President

Tuesday, December 6, 2016

Alert! Please Send a Message Tonight Opposing the Contract for Dense Housing in the Oxford Triangle

Our friends in the Oxford Triangle need our help tonight.
 
The City’s Homelessness and Poverty Committee has called a special meeting tomorrow at 9 a.m. - with less than 24 hour notice - in downtown LA to consider entering into an Exclusive Negotiating Agreement (“ENA”) with Thomas Safran & Associates for the development of the Thatcher Yard. 

This is another attempt by Bonin and the City to sneak this dense, traffic clogging project past the community. Oxford Triangle residents will be attending in numbers. 

To help our neighbors please send an email this evening to:  

<mike.bonin@lacity.org>
<debbie.dynerharris@lacity.org>
<chad.molnar@lacity.org>

and make these points:

1. Don’t ruin the quiet, single family community of the Oxford Triangle with dense, multifamily housing that can only take ingress and egress through Washington Boulevard, requiring that all the new traffic drive through the entire neighborhood on the way in and on the way out. 

2. Listen to the residents of the Oxford Triangle.  They overwhelmingly oppose any project on the Thatcher Yard that does not conform to the R-1 residential zoning of the Triangle.
 
Thanks for you help!
 
Mark