Sushi Kyo, a new sushi restaurant, is planned for the old Chronic Tacos location on the Myrtle side of the Vons shopping center. A full menu here (scroll down a bit).
- Brad Haugaard
- Brad Haugaard
Richard Singer has published two new books about Monrovia: Monrovia Confidential: Larceny, Bribery, Drugs, Scandal and Murder in a great little American town! and Tales of the Gem City.: Stories, Sketches, and Vignettes - 1912-1950.
These are Singer's fourth and fifth Monrovia history books. His previous books were 1887 (about Monrovia's founding), Renaissance Years (the city's decline and its renaissance starting in 1974), and People Like You and Me (Monrovia during World War II).
Tales of the Gem City and Monrovia Confidential are available for purchase for $20 each at Charlie's House, 430 S. Myrtle Ave. in Old Town. All proceeds from the sales go to support Monrovia's historical heritage.
- Brad Haugaard
The City Council will consider adopting a $285 million two-year budget for 2025–27 at its next meeting (agenda here), emphasizing infrastructure funding, pension obligations, and building a reserve. The staff report says city finances are "strong and stable" and expects a surplus of $2.34 for the first year but a $2.65 million deficit in the second year, largely due to rising pension liabilities. Residents may see fee increases for city services.
Major costs are: Employees, pensions, and maintenance. Lower sales tax receipts caused by a slowdown in consumer spending aren't helping.
Major infrastructure improvement plans are: upgrading Old Town, citywide tree replacement, parks, water projects, slope stabilization on Cloverleaf (the hillside is slip-sliding away), computer systems, vehicle replacements, City Hall renovation, Community Center work, preservation of city documents, police and fire facility improvements, streets, parking lots. Details here. Scroll down to Attachment D for list of projects.
- Brad Haugaard
- Brad Haugaard
- Brad Haugaard
The Monrovia Police have taken to making humorous videos - this one of arresting a tagger.
- Brad Haugaard