LA Mayor Authorizes DWP To Shut Off Water, Power For Large House Parties

LOS ANGELES (CBSLA) -- Mayor Eric Garcetti says he is authorizing the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power to shut off utility service to properties where large parties and gatherings are held.

Starting Friday, Garcetti says in "egregious" cases where non-permitted large parties and gatherings take place, the DWP will cut off water and power service.

The announcement came hours after City Councilman David Ryu introduced a motion to increase penalties for property owners who hold large house parties in violation of public health orders.

It wasn't clear whether Garcetti's announcement was related to that motion.

In a motion introduced Wednesday, Ryu said property owners who skirt building and safety rules or city laws, such as the Los Angeles party house ordinance are in violation of COVID-19 public health orders and the city's party house ordinance, which became law in 2018.

Under the proposal, penalties for large gatherings could include water and power shutoff, permit prohibitions or having a certificate of occupancy held or revoked for any "large, close-contact, largely maskless gatherings, in direct violation of City Emergency Orders and County Health Orders".

"Despite a pandemic that has killed thousands in Los Angeles, some homeowners are choosing to put everyone at risk by renting out their homes to massive house parties,'' Ryu said. "This is irresponsible bordering on deadly, and it must be stopped.

"Whether it takes shutting off utilities or revoking their permits, we must do what it takes to shut these party houses down."

Dozens of people seen at a party being thrown at a Mulholland Drive mansion in Beverly Crest on Aug. 3, 2020, hours before a shooting occurred at the party. (CBSLA)

The proposal comes days after a large house party in the Beverly Crest neighborhood of Los Angeles ended in a shooting that left one woman dead and two others hospitalized.

Police later said the killing was believed to be gang-related.

Any large and unruly gathering "which threatens or interferes with the public health, safety or welfare" is prohibited under the city's party house ordinance.

That law includes increasing fines on both the party host and homeowner, as well as possible misdemeanor charges for repeat offenders.

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