A report to Mayor Villaraigosa also suggests ways to prevent dumping and streamline cleanup.Piles of smelly, rotting trash dumped illegally in some of Los Angeles' poorest neighborhoods have been allowed to sit for weeks because dumping has increased: The number of complaints has doubled in the last year while sanitation staffing has remained stagnant, the city's top public works officials reported Monday.
In a report to Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, the officials defended the city's refuse-collection efforts but vowed to cut response times to citizen complaints by half -- from an average of 17 days to between seven and 10 days -- and recommended streamlining the city's debris-removal programs by consolidating them under a single bureau.
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Villaraigosa ordered the study after The Times reported last month that refuse, including dead animals, festered for weeks in some South L.A. alleys and that illegal-dumping arrests by Public Works investigators had dropped from 359 in 2002 to 55 in 2007 and to three so far this year.
The Times reported this week that city records showed that residents in some South L.A. neighborhoods, as well as an aide to the mayor, waited up to two months for refuse to be removed after they alerted the city.
LA TimesLegal and/or illegal dumping, same results.
Environmental Justice