City
May Swoop Down on the Bird Lady of Hollywood
The tons of birdseed she spreads
attract thousands of pigeons and the ire of residents. Officials may consider
a broader feeding ban.
By Bob Pool, Times Staff Writer
April 20, 2006
The seed is flung on the sidewalks
by the ton. And the pigeons flock to eat by the thousands.
That's the complaint in Hollywood as unfettered bird-feeding is ruffling
the feathers of neighborhood leaders and Los Angeles City Hall officials
who are in the midst of an ongoing community beautification campaign.
At the center of the dispute is a triangle-shaped traffic island at Argyle
Avenue and Yucca Street where hundreds of pounds of birdseed are spread
daily by an elusive woman who has become Tinseltown's biggest Bird Lady
since "The Birds" actress Tippi Hedren.
The food draws swarms of pigeons from rooftops, empty buildings and freeway
underpasses.
As they gorge themselves, the birds roost on neighborhood utility wires
and tree branches, their droppings covering sidewalks, staining parked
cars and streaking buildings' awnings and overhangs.
Authorities say they have pleaded with the Bird Lady to stop. So far she
has refused, and officials acknowledge they cannot force her to put away
her 25-pound bags of seed.
Los Angeles ordinances prohibit pigeon feeding only in a carefully specified
section of downtown. So officials may consider amending the city municipal
code to extend the ban to Hollywood or all of Los Angeles.
Argyle Civic Assn. officers say they have photographs and videos documenting
the Bird Lady's activities.
"I've collected birdseed bags she's discarded," said association
president Laura Dodson. "We calculate she spreads 112 tons a year
above Sunset Boulevard, centering on Vine Street. We've spotted 29 spots
she puts down food."
At the Argyle-and-Yucca traffic island, "she's putting three 25-pound
bags of birdseed down twice a day," Dodson said. "That's where
we're trying to put in palm trees."
In the past, leaders of the Argyle Civic Assn. have viewed the pigeon
feeding as a nuisance that has interfered with a long-planned $80,000
landscape project for the traffic island, which they say is a gateway
to the neighborhood.
But now they worry that the masses of pigeons which Woody Allen
once described as "rats with wings" could be dangerous
if health experts are correct and avian flu is headed for California.
Los Angeles County health officials say there's probably no cause for
alarm, however.
"To date, pigeons have not spread the current avian flu to humans.
One cat is believed to have caught it from eating a pigeon, but wild pigeons
don't seem to be a major source," said Dr. Karen Ehnert, the Department
of Health's senior veterinarian.
The county will test around lakes where waterfowl drop feces, said Ehnert,
who is among those watching for avian flu's arrival in this country. It
is anticipated that wild birds will bring it in and pass it on to poultry.
"Pigeons could give bird flu, but they're not the main carrier or
focus of it," she said.
Aware of the neighbors' surveillance over the last several years, the
Bird Lady alters her seed-spreading routine so that she sometimes hits
the streets at 3 or 4 in the morning, say frustrated locals.
Residents said they were waiting for Caltrans to clamp down on their pigeon
feeder because the roosting birds' defecation mars bridges and signs along
the nearby Hollywood Freeway.
Agency spokesman Dave White who used to clean bridges for Caltrans
said droppings are a major headache.
"You can't paint over it. You can't wash it out with a hose because
it turns into a muddy slurry that you can't send down the flood drain,"
White said. "So you shovel it out into bags or knock it to the ground
and clean it up as fast as you can."
But no state crackdown is planned in Hollywood, he said.
City officials, meanwhile, are pondering ways to deal with the pigeon
feeding.
Aides to City Councilman Tom LaBonge, who represents part of Hollywood,
have pleaded with the Bird Lady to quit spreading "the mounds of
birdseed," as one of them put it. She refused.
"I spoke to her. She told me she was afraid the birds would die if
she wasn't there," said the council staff member, who asked not to
be identified.
The next step could be to amend the city ordinance to prohibit pigeon
feeding on public rights-of-way in specific parts of Hollywood or to ban
it throughout the city, said Erik Sanjurjo, a deputy to LaBonge. A spokesman
for Councilman Eric Garcetti, who also represents a portion of Hollywood,
said Garcetti is willing to discuss the idea with LaBonge.
Pigeon feeding is currently banned downtown between 1st and 8th streets
and Main and Figueroa streets. The feeding ban was enacted in 1985 when
shoppers and businesspeople complained of hordes of pigeons covering sidewalks.
"The implication is you can feed pigeons everywhere else," said
Deputy City Atty. William Kysella Jr.
A citywide ban could prove controversial with animal lovers and those
who enjoy tossing an occasional scrap of lunchtime sandwich to a hungry
Columba livia, the scientific name for the rock dove North America's
most common pigeon.
Feeding bans have provoked debate in communities around Los Angeles.
Fines of up to $250 for repeat offender feeders were imposed 11 years
ago in Seal Beach as the then-mayor pledged, "We will not starve
our pigeons, but just encourage them to go on to greener pastures."
Nine years ago a Pasadena woman was spared a $500 fine when she agreed
to stop feeding pigeons on public streets. She was promptly spotted feeding
a huge flock outside City Hall, sending Pasadena officials scurrying to
amend their ordinance to include that location in the ban.
Two years ago Sausalito passed a no-feeding ordinance to thwart a lone
pigeon lover who was spreading large amounts of seed. A short time later
San Francisco escalated its crackdown by extending the feeding ban to
popular
tourist areas.
So without a new Los Angeles pigeon-feeding law, there can be no crackdown
in Hollywood.
Foul news indeed for foes of the fowl.
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