Thursday, May 19, 2011

LA Daily News: LA Trails Bay Area, San Diego and Sacramento in Some Stats

In California, L.A. region trails the Bay area, San Diego and Sacramento in health, wealth, education

The Los Angeles Daily News
competitive in a global world is to draw on everybody's talents," she said. "Leaving large groups behind is not in everyone's interest."
 
The $200,000 study, an initiative of the New York-based Social Science Research Council, was funded by the California Community Foundation and other groups and was intended to assist public policy makers.
 
Brianne Gilbert, a senior research associate at the Center for the Study of Los Angeles, at Loyola Marymount University, said the human development study is useful in gauging quality of life.
 
A recent center study on leadership in Los Angeles also employed education and health criteria.
 
"My heart goes out to the people in the areas on the lowest end of the spectrum," Gilbert said. "What can we do to make their lives better? How do we allow people better access to education, healthcare and jobs?"
Steve Graves, a professor of geography at Cal State, Northridge, said the study will be especially useful in stimulating discussion among students.
 
"This is pretty cool stuff," said Graves. "It's just a measure of how well people live, and these things are important."
 
But while a human development index might make more sense in such nations as Sudan, he said that in Los Angeles - where residents frequently cross neighborhood lines to attend college or check in to a hospital - the quality-of-life criteria can become blurred.
 
Not everyone, however, was pleased with the"well-being" rating. Pacoima-Arleta, for instance, got a score of 3.45 - on a par with downtown Los Angeles - ranking among the bottom 20 neighborhoods in the state.
Bill Steward moved to Pacoima in 1959, before many of its streets were paved. He started the annual Pacoima Christmas Parade in the 1960s to draw the community together. He campaigned for better services from the city, such as sidewalks.
 
But while he managed to land a solid job at the state unemployment office, many other residents had to leave Pacoima to find work.
 
"It wasn't 'well-being,' at the time," said Steward, 81, who now lives in Sherman Oaks. "For years, we tried hard to build it up.
 
"The well-being of Pacoima is better than people think," he said. "Pacoima is no worse than any place else. They have their problems, hoodlums.

"And a lot of good people."

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