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  1. #1
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    Neighbors oppose El Mercado expansion

    The owner of the massive Boyle Heights marketplace wants to expand and says he needs a full liquor license to compete with nearby restaurants. Neighbors say his crowds are too rowdy as it is.
    By Alicia Lozano
    November 29, 2008

    On the third floor of El Mercado de Los Angeles in Boyle Heights, musicians often compete from opposite ends of the cavernous room. Mariachis perched on the stage of La Perla restaurant battle ranchero accordions in the adjoining El Torasco restaurant. Patrons shout over the festive music while waitresses scramble to take orders.

    But while merchants love the crowds, they are a source of conflict between neighbors and Pedro Rosado, the 73-year-old owner of El Mercado. Rosado hopes to expand the massive complex by acquiring a full liquor license -- currently he can sell beer and wine -- and adding a dance floor and sports bar to the third floor. But some residents complain that the clientele is already too rowdy at night and on the weekends, saying the customers urinate on sidewalks and drive drunk around the neighborhood.



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    Longtime resident and community organizer Nadine Diaz, 46, said that about a month ago she saw a man stumble out of El Mercado about 9 p.m., unzip his pants and relieve himself in the middle of the sidewalk while facing homes opposite the marketplace. Others have chucked eggs and trash into her yard, she said.

    "This is not tolerable," she said.

    Rosado shrugs off those stories, arguing that El Mercado cannot be blamed for the neighborhood's problems. Boyle Heights has 250 liquor licenses within 15 square miles, according to the Los Angeles Police Department, and El Mercado is surrounded by three bars. Rosado insists that to stay competitive he must offer liquor.


    "All my competition has everything they need and I am falling behind," he said. "When someone goes out with their wife or girlfriend, the lady doesn't want a beer -- she wants a margarita."

    Some of Rosado's opponents cringe at the idea of taking a family or a date to El Mercado. "You walk in there and it smells like urine," Teresa Marquez said. "I can't even take the elevator because I would probably throw up,"

    Marquez, 61, is a lifelong resident of Boyle Heights. She remembers El Mercado as a tourist destination when it first opened in 1968, offering Japanese, Italian and Mexican food to visitors.

    But El Mercado is not Olvera Street -- there are no tour buses filled with international spectators snapping pictures of mariachis. Instead, Spanish-speaking vendors haggle with customers over handmade leather boots. Discounted car accessories collide with miniature statues of the Virgin of Guadalupe in display windows. PiƱatas dangle from crisscrossed wires.

    Just across the street on Cheesbroughs Lane, 61-year-old Rita Rodriguez said she can hear people howling at 1 a.m. after the restaurants close. About 10 years ago someone swerved out of El Mercado's parking lot and slammed into her fence before speeding off, she said. Rosado eventually closed off that exit, but Rodriguez said she still sees men urinating 20 feet from her living room.

    Despite residents' complaints, Rosado is meeting with the East Los Angeles planning commission on Dec. 10 to finalize his plans for El Mercado. In addition to the liquor license, dance floor and sports bar, he hopes to add 30 parking spots to the 270-car lot and build a grand entrance that would funnel foot traffic from the parking lot straight onto the third floor. He hopes that by creating more space and redirecting late-night traffic, his neighbors will be more friendly toward El Mercado.

    "I want to have something in East L.A. that's worth coming to," he said. "It's sad, but we have nothing. It's a place of stereotype."

    Opponents accuse Rosado of perpetuating a negative image of Boyle Heights by allowing El Mercado to disintegrate into a place marred by crime and prostitution.

    "I wake up on the weekend and people are asleep on the sidewalk because they're too drunk to get home," Marquez said.

    She continued: "El Mercado has not helped improve this community. Right now it looks like a rural Mexican town -- crowded, not a business that will attract me or many of the community here. It's too dirty."

    Marquez's family has been in the neighborhood since they emigrated from Mexico in the 1920s. She remembers bringing relatives to El Mercado for fresh produce and flowers. But she stopped going years ago after it fell apart, she said.

    "People hear mercado and think of Mexico," she said. "But mercados in Mexico are more like farmers markets and Rosado's not trying to make it that. I wouldn't take my 18-year-old granddaughter."

    Supporters of El Mercado argue that Rosado has brought much-needed jobs to Boyle Heights. If the planning commission grants Rosado the permits to expand, they estimate that he could create 100 new jobs.

    Taurino Ramirez has been working a churro stand in El Mercado for 19 years and is grateful to Rosado.

    "Thanks to my job, my kids go to school," he said. "Drug-dealing and prostitution happens everywhere. I'm not saying that it happens at El Mercado, but it does happen all over."

    http://www.latimes.com/news/local/lo...tory?track=rss
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  2. #2
    Senior Member azwreath's Avatar
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    Sounds like El Mercado fits right in with what Boyle Heights has become thanks to a proliferation of illegal aliens........another neighborhood where the decent people who built it were forced out and has now denigrated into yet ANOTHER Third World offal pit:

    Boyle Heights is a district east of Downtown Los Angeles on the East Side of Los Angeles, California, USA. The Heights are on the East side of the Los Angeles River. For much of the twentieth century, Boyle Heights was a gateway for new immigrants. This resulted in diverse demographics, including Jewish American, Japanese American & Mexican American populations, as well as Russian American and Yugoslav populations. Now the neighborhood is over 95% Hispanic according to the 2000 US Census.

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boyle_Heights,_Los_Angeles,_California - 73k

    MORE OF MEXICO'S "BEST, BRIGHTEST, AND MOST TALENTED" THEY CLAIM THEY ARE "LOSING" TO THE US!!

    Education

    Number of people who have achieved the following levels of education:


    No High School 10368
    Some High School 4914

    AND EVEN MORE RECIPIENTS OF OUR TAXPAYER FUNDED SERVICES AND BENEFITS!!!

    Average Household Income $35,181
    Median Household Income $26,449
    Median Income Under 25 $25,656
    Median Income 25-34 $26,404
    Median Income 35-44 $26,801
    Median Income 45-54 $29,825
    Median Income 55-64 $26,382
    Median Income 65-74 $23,715
    Median Income Over 75 $22,557


    IN ALL LIFESTYLE CATEGORIES, THE RESIDENTS OF BOYLE HEIGHTS FALL BELOW THE NATIONAL AVERAGE


    Lifestyle

    The following values are represented as an index, where the value 100 represents the national average.



    Below Average:
    Total Houshold Expenditure 68
    Contributions 57
    Insurance 60
    Clothing 69
    Education 63
    Entertainment 66
    Food 72
    Health Care 72
    Household Furnishings 62
    Shelter 67
    Household Operations 61
    Other 70
    Personal Care 69
    Reading 66
    Transportation 67Utilities
    75Gifts 59


    BUT WHEN IT COMES TO CRIME, BOYLE HEIGHTS COMES IN ABOVE THE NATIONAL AVERAGE:

    Crime

    The following values are represented as an index, where the value 100 represents the national average.

    Above AverageTotal Crime Risk
    Personal Crime Risk 269
    Murder Risk 366
    Rape Risk 128
    Robbery Risk 356
    Assault Risk 174
    Property Crime Risk 104
    Burglary Risk 82
    Larceny Risk 110
    Automotive Theft Risk 173


    information compiled in 2007. Source link:homes.point2.com/Neighborhood/US/California/Los-Angeles-County/Los-Angeles/Boyle-Heights-Real-Estate-Agent.aspx - 30k


    There's plenty of images to Google as well which paint a pretty grim picture of past and present. The people fighting to save and restore Boyle Heights have their work cut out for them, that's for sure.
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