area. the councilman, phil brock joins us live. councilman great to have you here. first quickly how are you doing physically. i m doing fine. a stranged finger, nothing. jonathan: good to know. this homeless person was pulling signs off a building. you contacted him first and said, stop doing that. then what happened? what did he do. actually i said can you pick those papers up and put them in a trash can. he gave me the standard homeless response, you can imagine. i walked over, picked up the trash, put it in a trash can. was turning to walk away. he confronted me and i said, i m a santa monica city council member. i really don t want to see anyone littering on our third street promenade. it s our great shopping district. he then threw some sort of sticky liquid on my back and shoulder. threw that same liquid on my
so now we are paying double. joey: yeah. it s quite a burden to put on business owners. get confused corporations and small businesses. you all are hard-working americans and so are your employees and it sounds like you take pretty good care of them. thank you both for joining us. all right. thank you. thank you. joey: all right. we re going to toss now to carley shimkus another hard-working employee. carley: great job with that segment. great news to get to here. santa monica city council members attacked by homeless man earlier this month is defending his actions. phil brock says he was confronted after consulting a man who tore down fliers and harassed shoppers at open air mall. is he responding to the former mayor who argues brock should not have gotten involved. the idea that you don t do anything is wrong. we tell people if you see something, say something. i want people to report crimes. i want people to make those
When The Ratkovich Co. submitted an application to build 1,061 residential units on unused land in Alhambra in May 2017, Brian Saenger, the company’s president and chief executive, said he had no idea of the difficulties that would lie ahead.