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L.A. River's Glendale Narrows on Track to Open for Boating, Recreation This Summer [Photos]

The community is invited to weigh in on a proposal that would open a five-mile stretch of the river to the public.

UPDATE: There will also be the formal announcement of a Northeast LA Riverfront District Thursday at 9 a.m. in Marsh Park in the Elysian Valley. Patch will be there.

EARLIER: The public is being invited to comment on a plan to open a five-mile stretch of the Los Angeles River for public recreation during low-flood-risk summer months on Thursday, Jan. 24.

The program would begin on begin on May 27,  2013 and end on Labor Day, Sept. 2, 2013.

Perhaps most significantly, the plan would create a non-motorized boating course stretching from North Atwater Park to the Elysian Valley.

The course would run through a section of the natural-bottomed area known as the Glendale Narrows and be open from sunrise to sundown.

Access would be through pocket parks in Silver Lake's Frogtown and the Elysian Valley, as well as North Atwater Park.

Unlike the summer paddling programs held in 2011 and 2012 near the Sepulveda Dam on the river, this course would be "self-directed" and free, although guided trips are still a possibility.

Other recreational uses including fishing, birdwatching and hiking would also be allowed. Bikes and pets would be prohibited in the riverbed area.

Use would also be prohibited during flash-flood risk periods.

Rangers from the Mountain Recreation and Conservation Authority would patrol the area.

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The draft plan was  released Tuesday by the Los Angeles Department of Recreation and Parks to the Los Angeles River Cooperation Committee for public comment and discussion.

(See that in the gallery above.)

Los Angeles River Cooperation Committee is a joint working group of the Los Angeles County Flood Control District, the City of Los Angeles and the United States Army Corps of Engineers--four entities with ownership and management interests in the riverbed and surrounding area.

The program calls for a public comment period through Jan. 31, after which the Los Angeles City Council would take up the plan.

It also will require getting various forms of consent from the LADWP, the L.A. County Flood control agency and the Army Corps of Engineers, the federal agency that manages the area.

City Councilman Ed Reyes, who grew up in Cypress Park swimming in the river near the proposed district, told Echo Park-Silver Lake Patch the primary goal of the plan is to "create an environment where people can enjoy the river safely."

"How do we preserve the natural habitats and protect the wildlife, while allowing people to connect with the river?" Reyes said.

He said such public access is the next step in a larger goal: to turn the river into the city's "front yard" and open it up for investment and preservation.

The proposed "L.A.River Recreational Zone Pilot Program" brings to a head several concurrent efforts to establish legal and safe access to a section of the Los Angeles River that many feel is its most accessible and beautiful.

In August 2011, a city council committee chaired by Councilman Ed Reyes ordered city staff explore the possibility of expanding public access to the river beyond the guided tours.

In August of 2012, Governor Jerry Brown signed a law requiring the Los Angeles County Flood Control District, which manages the riverbed for flood control purposes, to come up with a plan for creating recreational access to the area.

Another study due by the end of the year will offer options for restoring native habitat and removing some concrete along the full 11-miles of the Narrows.

Known as the Alternative with Restoration Benefits and Opportunities for Revitalization, or Arbor, it must balance the need for flood control that the current concretized L.A. River channel provides with desires for preservation and access.

The first public meeting for comment on the L.A. River Recreation Zone Plan will be held at the Los Angeles River Center in Cypress Park at 5 p.m. on January 24.

Comments can also be sent to lariver@lacity.org.

See the full report, attached. And see photos from a recent paddle down the Glendale Narrows in the attached gallery.

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Phillip Eng January 19, 2013 at 01:03 pm
Finally! Recreation, preservation, safety, flood control, yes. But what is meant by investment?
Save the Los Angeles River January 19, 2013 at 02:09 pm
Of all the stupid things that are done at the river this is the most stupid. There is no concept of how this will work, how it will be controlled, nothing. The majority of people who live along the river do not want this mess forced on them. Allowing this will also ensure that the wildlife that lives on the river no longer does. The time the idiots want this to happen is the height of the nesting season and for the wildlife to raise their young. There are birds that nest on the rocks in the river goes unwanted people in the water doing foolish things and that's the end of that. Fisherpeople have already fished out the river of all breeding fish and are not supervised and under this still will not be. This is a ticket to disaster!!!
nonoise January 19, 2013 at 03:05 pm
The government wants to waste taxpayers money on this crackpot idea is crazy. They do not have money to fix the streeet, get more police officers, fix the sidewalks, but they can spend millions to row a boat. Some people that nothing between their ears. Don't vote for any city councilmember running for mayor. They put us in the bad place that Los Angeles is in.
John January 19, 2013 at 10:45 pm
Right now the river is a big drainage ditch. It could be partially reinvigorated as a natural wetland habitat and preserve. It could be a giant holding reservoir to capture and fi lter the toxic storm runoff before it reaches the ocean. It could be Paris or London with museums, theaters, cafes and pubs along manicured walkways. Best use would accomplish a mix of natural, functional, physical, and cultural uses. It is an ecological asset first, Niagata Falls during a storm, a low cost recreation area during summer, and potential cultural mall in the future.
Sue T, January 20, 2013 at 12:09 am
This boating nonsense will last until the first idiot falls out of their rubber raft and conks their head on a rock and drowns. Or until the city/county finds it can't afford to patrol the stream bed to rescue that idiot or clean up all the trash. Let's hope this happens before the egrets, herons, cormorants, etc. are driven away from their river nesting grounds. PLEASE, instead of allowing boaters to ruin our so-called "front yard", spend whatever money is available to fix up the path on the east side of the river, so those of us pedestrians who have been driven away by that horror story of a bike path can once again enjoy strolling by our beautiful river and viewing its wildlife. I, for one, do not need to sit in a boat to "connect" with the river. This is a terrible idea.
Dwain Wilson January 20, 2013 at 01:14 pm
Might I humbly suggest that everyone who feels passionately (one way or the other) about this proposal should participate in the public meeting and make your voice heard.
"The first public meeting for comment on the L.A. River Recreation Zone Plan will be held at the Los Angeles River Center in Cypress Park at 5 p.m. on January 24."
nonoise January 20, 2013 at 01:31 pm
Why at 5:00PM when working people are still on their way home from work? Only those not working can attend. People don't thinking about the working class.
nonoise January 20, 2013 at 01:33 pm
How much is still going to cost? People in Elysian Valley should be OUTRAGED!! These crazy people want to put businesses along the river and ruin your quality of life!! What??? No more noise, trash, people from all over coming into the small community and ruining it. NO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
nonoise January 20, 2013 at 01:33 pm
NO!!!!!!!!!!!
nonoise January 20, 2013 at 01:46 pm
Look at Councilmember Ed Reyes bottom line: Open it up for investment. He wants to ruin the quality for life for Elysian Valley. Let's talk truth. Ed Reyes does not care about the river. He is in the pocket of the Santa Monica Conservancy. They tell him what to do. He does not care about the neighborhood and never did.
It will not be too soon until he is out of office and not destroying about neighborhoods. And, hopefully his employee, No way Jose does not get elected to come in and do the same damage that his boss has.
nonoise January 20, 2013 at 01:50 pm
Patch, Frogtown is NOT Silver lake, it is Elysian Valley.
nonoise January 20, 2013 at 01:51 pm
Most of Elysian Valley is in Eric Garcetti's area. Where is the interview with him?
nonoise January 20, 2013 at 05:29 pm
I STRONGLY suggest that everyone be there. I would have missed the event posted in your post if you would not have posted it. Not everyone reads the entire story.
Mark January 20, 2013 at 10:21 pm
Just FYI, Silver Lake does not have any place called Frogtown. In fact, Frogtown is the gang name for Elysian Valley, which is not Silver Lake. In recent years, the hipsters, thinking it cool, have glorified the street gang by adopting its gang name for the area. But it is not Silver Lake no matter what it is called.
nonoise January 22, 2013 at 12:55 pm
Don't destroy the quality of life for those that live along the river. Don't destroy Elysian Valley.
DameEdithDivine January 22, 2013 at 06:35 pm
I agree that these are all issues that would need to be sorted out. Thank you opening my eyes to some of the negatives.
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nonoise June 16, 2013 at 07:20 am
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nonoise June 16, 2013 at 07:22 am
Just wait until the garage sales come back and the trash. Then echo park will need another $150Read More Million.
J, F, June 12, 2013 at 06:42 pm
The fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution states that: the right of the people to beRead More secure in their persons,houses,papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized "this fundamental right has a tense relationship with sobriety checkpoints, at a sobriety checkpoint, drivers are necessary stopped with out reasonable suspicion, and may be tested summarily and with out probable cause, Thus the constitution would prohibit people from being stopped without a search Warrant or at least without probable cause that they have committed a crime; however, the Warrant requirement only attaches should the search be unreasonable and the Supreme Court, as shown below, decided that such stops are not unreasonable under certain circumstances, The United States Supreme Court found properly conducted sobriety checkpoints to be Constitutional, While acknowledging that such checkpoints infringed on a Constitutional Right. Although the U.S. Supreme Court has found sobriety checkpoints to be constitutionally permissible, ten states (Idaho,Iowa,Michigan,Minnesota,Oregon,Rhode Island, Texas,Washington,Wisconsin, and Wyoming) have found that sobriety roadblocks violate their own State Constitutions or have outlawed tHEM.
nonoise June 13, 2013 at 08:44 am
Again, if you see a checkpoint you can still legally turn around or change directions to avoid it asRead More long as you are not already in it. Learn your rights. But don't drink and drive. Call Northeast LAPD to go to take the LAPD Community Based Police Academy course. It's free. Of course, Northeast doesn't let others know about it. You learn your rights a lot of other information they would rather not have you know. Call them and ask how to attend.
chuk bekr June 13, 2013 at 10:10 am
The fact that they are outlawed in some states AND what the constitution says , they areRead More UN-constitutional whether you can avoid them or not, same as checking your citizenship up to 100 miles north of Mexican border (as you simply drive down the road), no probable cause etc.
Cheryl Ortega June 5, 2013 at 10:42 am
The 125th at Logan was great. Parents, students, former teachers, some alumni from the 1940's. ButRead More what is most essential to keep in mind is that Logan, a public school, has educated generations of Echo Park children, natives and immigrants, English-speaking and those learning English, respecting the diverse cultures of families that have made their homes in our community. It's a public school that serves all children, those with children with disabilities, those who have behavior issues, all children. It turns away no one. It does what public schools are supposed to do; it educates the public. And it welcomes parents to participate in decision-making bodies that can influence their child's education.
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Valerie Cooper May 31, 2013 at 05:27 pm
Thank you, Lily!!
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J, F, June 1, 2013 at 01:32 am
THANKS!!!!!!