COUNCIL OFFICES
Everything revolves around council offices and they have incredible power to initiate, pause, or stop projects.
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While City Departments may have their own methodologies that can dictate which projects get resources, which projects the City applies for grant funding, which streets will get repaved, and which streets will be prioritized, at the end of the day, the Council office has the final say.
Since there are more opportunities in the repaving schedule than LADOT resources allow for, it comes down to Council office priority.
If the Council office wants to focus on a specific corridor, they can direct departments (via a motion at council or otherwise) to do so (for example, CD10 and Venice Blvd).
If the Council office doesn't like a project, they can kill it (for example, Paul Koretz and Uplift Melrose).
The most successful council offices have seasoned staff that monitor grant opportunities, the repaving schedule, and current events to optimize outcomes and get new infrastructure, like bike and bus lanes, in the ground quickly.