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South Pasadena art commission to package public-art policy for council and website

July 25, 2025 | South Pasadena City, Los Angeles County, California


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South Pasadena art commission to package public-art policy for council and website
The South Pasadena Public Art Commission’s ad hoc committee recommended the commission package sections of a public-art policy handbook for formal review by the City Council and publish the materials on the city’s public-art web pages.
The recommendation was presented at the commission’s July 21 meeting by Vice Chair Rena Velasco, who said the committee’s goal is to provide “accessible policy sections on the city's public art program web page.” The proposed materials include artist selection criteria, artist-call process descriptions, guidelines for murals, and policies for donations and loans of artwork.
The recommendation matters because the commission said an online handbook would let staff and the public access rules and procedures continually, and would align South Pasadena with neighboring cities that publish similar policy materials online. City staff advised the commission that if the handbook will be proposed for council adoption, the commission should prepare a document or mock-up for council review before posting it online. A staff member said, “the best thing to do would be to create some sort of document for their review and consideration and approval prior to posting it on the website.”
Vice Chair Rena Velasco and Chair Anna Lee Andres said the ad hoc has drafted multiple sections and can prepare memos or a draft document for council consideration. Erica Ramirez, the city’s new community development director, reminded commissioners that an ad hoc cannot be a majority of the commission because that would trigger public‑meeting rules: “ad hocs generally cannot be a majority of the commission. Or else it creates a meeting.”
Commissioners said publishing the handbook content online would allow staff to handle the visual presentation and website hosting after the commission and council have approved the text. The commission agreed it will refine the draft sections and coordinate with staff on a council submittal and the website mock-up.
The commission closed the discussion without a formal vote to adopt the handbook; staff indicated the next procedural step is to prepare a document suitable for council review and to return to the commission with a proposed presentation package.
The Public Art Commission will continue to develop the policy material and coordinate with staff about the required council submittal and the timing for posting the approved content on the city website.

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