Donations to Mayor's Education Reform Efforts Raise Questions
By Duke Helfand and Joel Rubin, Times Staff Writers
Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa collected more than $761,000 for
his education reform efforts during the last six months of
2006, some of it from companies and individuals who have
had business before the city but no direct link to
education, according to financial reports filed with the
state Wednesday.
The funds come on top of more than $1 million collected by
Villaraigosa during the first six months of last year.
Most of the money received during the last six months ?
more than $611,000 ? flowed into a committee established by
the mayor to promote his campaign to gain substantial
control of the Los Angeles Unified School District and to
pay legal fees defending against a district lawsuit
challenging his involvement.
An additional $150,000 went into a committee set up for the
mayor to support school board candidates in the March 6
election.
Between July 1 and Dec. 31, Villaraigosa received
contributions from developers, investment managers,
entertainment executives and attorneys, among others. The
checks were for as little as $100 and as much as
$100,000.
The largest contributors to the Mayor's Committee for
Government Excellence and Accountability included Anschutz
Entertainment Group, which owns Staples Center and is
building the L.A. Live sports and entertainment complex
across the street in downtown Los Angeles.
Los Angeles investor Marc Nathanson, chairman of Mapleton
Investments and vice chairman of cable and technology
operator Charter Communications, also gave $100,000, as did
Zenith Insurance Co. in Woodland Hills.
Developer J.H. Snyder Co. gave $50,000, as did Mani
Brothers, a real estate investment firm.
And the $25,000 club included entertainment mogul Jeffrey
Katzenberg, financial advisor Thomas Unterman and Eric
Smidt, head of a major tool and equipment retailer.
Nathanson from Mapleton Investments also gave $100,000 to a
second committee, Partnership for Better Schools, and the
Snyder company gave $50,000 to that committee as well.
Some of these contributors, or others giving to the mayor's
cause, maintain close relationships with Villaraigosa and
have had business dealings with the city. But a spokesman
for the mayor's government excellence committee said that
contributors are not buying access to the mayor but simply
supporting his cause.
"I think he has been able to galvanize folks behind him in
that mission," said spokesman Nathan James.
Contributor Nathanson said his investment firm has no
business with the city. "I have been concerned with the
problems facing schools in this city and the mayor told me
about his concerns and that he needed help, and it made
sense to me," he said.
Others, however, currently have projects in the city, or
are proposing them, including Westfield, owner of Century
City's open-air mall, which gave $100,000 last June as it
was looking to create new shops and condos. An affiliate of
JMB Realty, which wants to build two 47-story condo towers
nearby, donated $100,000 at the same time.
In all, the mayor raised more than $1.8 million last year
for his education initiatives through the two committees
that report to the California secretary of state.
He has made non-cash contributions to two school board
candidates ? Yolie Flores Aguilar on the Eastside and Tamar
Galatzan in the San Fernando Valley. And he has helped out
a third candidate in the Watts-to-San Pedro district,
Richard Vladovic, whom he is scheduled to endorse
today.
Separately, Villaraigosa raised more than $1 million more
from three foundations last year ? money that is not
publicly reported.
That money has gone to the nonprofit L.A.'s Best, an
after-school program offered in hundreds of Los Angeles
public schools. The money is being held by L.A.'s Best for
the mayor's educational purposes.
duke.helfand@latimes.com
joel.rubin@latimes.com
Times staff writer Howard Blume contributed to this report.
See the article on Los Angeles Times website