
EAST NEWHALL
November 2008
Extreme Neighborhood Makeover in East Newhall!
The City's Neighborhood Leaf Out program completed the Newhall Extreme Makeover Tree Planting event in November. Neighborhood volunteers joined City staff�in planting 15 new Camphor trees along Arch Street in Newhall. Additional trees will be planted in the area in the months to come. The Extreme Neighborhood Makeover program is aimed at improving neighborhoods through partnerships among residents, the City, agencies and volunteers. The program in East Newhall is the second since the City started the program earlier this year.
In an effort to better assist neighborhoods improve their property values and instill community pride, the City is continuing its “Extreme Neighborhood Makeover” program in the East Newhall area of the City, on Market Street between Arch and Race Streets on Thursday, September 18 from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.
The program involves a unique and bold step by the City and the community working together to help resolve neighborhood beautification and safety issues proactively. The goal is to help maximize property values
throughout Santa Clarita neighborhoods and best assist individual property owners with challenges they face in
complying with the law.
“A recurring issue we have heard quite a lot about at City Hall is one that involves neighborhoods. Residents have let their local government know that they are deeply concerned with issues in their neighborhoods that impact their property values and their quality of life. They have told us that they would like to see their neighbors embrace a strong sense of pride in their neighborhoods and have that reflected in how they care for their property. Issues including lack of landscaping, trash and clutter in plain sight, graffiti, inoperable vehicles on the front lawn, abandoned shopping carts in the neighborhood, illegal dumping and poor maintenance of houses have a cumulative, negative impact on the entire neighborhood,” explains Mayor Bob Kellar.
Over the past two decades, the City’s “reactive code enforcement” policies have slowly grown to encompass a more “proactive approach,” enabling the City to better interact with individual neighbors at an early stage in the
process. The City’s dedicated Community Preservation Officers work diligently with homeowners
to help
bring them into compliance with City codes and most importantly, improve their properties.
Many homeowners are actually surprised to learn that storing inoperable vehicles on the front lawn, paving the entire front yard with asphalt or concrete, or converting a garage without a permit are illegal in the City of Santa Clarita. It is not unusual for the Community Preservation Office to have several hundred active files on-going!
The program begins with an invitation-only Neighborhood Block Party for all residents of the nearly 160 homes in the Extreme Neighborhood Makeover target area. The Block Party, slated for Thursday, September 18 from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m., is sponsored by the City of Santa Clarita and its partners, including the Sheriff’s Department, Fire Department, KHTS-AM 1220 and local nonprofit agencies. While not all of the homes in the area have issues, it will take the combined efforts of the entire neighborhood to succeed in transforming these blocks through the Extreme Neighborhood Makeover program.
Many City departments including graffiti abatement, streets, housing, community services and others will be joined by local, licensed contractors, who are willing to provide residents with discounts for goods and services that will assist them in improving their individual properties as part of the new program.
During the next several months, the City will be doing whatever it can to provide improvements to the neighborhood in the public rights of way, including community tree planting, graffiti removal, working with other agencies, and even helping secure volunteers who can provide help individual residents who need it.
“We see the Extreme Neighborhood Makeover program as a clearing house of resources that the City will help to bring to the neighborhood. We have access to licensed contractors and vendors, we regularly receive calls from church groups and scout troops seeking meaningful volunteer work in the community and we all have a desire to improve our neighborhoods,” added Mayor Kellar.
For more information about the City’s Extreme Neighborhood Makeover in East Newhall, please contact Norm Sieger at 661-286-4064 or email him at nsieger@santa-clarita.com
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