Supervisor Michael D. Antonovich: A Legacy of Service from Los Angeles County Newsroom on Vimeo.
LOS ANGELES – Los Angeles County Supervisors Michael Antonovich and Don Knabe, who together have more than 55 years of service on the Board of Supervisors, attended their last county board meeting Tuesday.
Colleagues and constituents praised the accomplishments of both men, while Knabe and Antonovich each tried and failed at times to hold back tears.
“They’re both legends,” Supervisor Hilda Solis said. “They have forever changed the landscape of their districts, Los Angeles County and the lives of their constituents.”
Antonovich and Knabe are registered Republicans and widely viewed as the most conservative members of the five-member board. But those who worked with them stressed the nonpartisan nature of county service and noted successes that defied political labels.
Antonovich has served as Fifth District supervisor on the board since 1980. The Fifth District includes the Antelope and Santa Clarita valleys, along with a portion of the San Gabriel and San Fernando valleys and foothills. Antonovich was recognized for fighting on behalf of Porter Ranch residents displaced by the Aliso Canyon gas leak, a battle that will continue beyond his tenure with a civil lawsuit against Southern California Gas Co.
He has also added thousands of acres of open space to protected lands.
Though Antonovich is known as a law-and-order politician, a farewell video highlighted his compassion and work as a fervent champion of foster children and homeless animals. [See video above]
“Foster children need help, need a direction,” Antonovich said in the video, urging private sector players to offer opportunities for children aging out of foster care.
“This man has a big heart,” Solis said, calling Antonovich “the dean of the board” and adding that she identified with his tenacity in “fighting on behalf of the underdog.”
Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas said when he joined the board he had been warned he’d never get along with Antonovich, “a caricature of the right wing” just as Ridley-Thomas was “a caricature of the left wing.”
But Ridley-Thomas said the two had “gotten along famously” and Antonovich always had his back “when it came down to issues that matter the most.”
When Antonovich said his goodbyes, he choked up when thanking my good brother Mark.”
Knabe, who has served since 1996, was honored as a champion of the Safe Surrender program for unwanted newborns and combating child sex trafficking, an issue he said was the most shocking of his tenure.
One young woman, a survivor of the streets who now has a daughter on her way to Harvard, said of Knabe, “He changed the way I view politicians … the things that government can do.”
Ridley-Thomas said inroads made against child sex trafficking and the success of the Safe Surrender program — which began with Knabe reading the story of a baby thrown in a dumpster and has taken in 149 newborns since 2001 — were synonymous with Knabe.
Antonovich said he was confident about the state of the county.
“We have a balanced budget. We have a credit rating higher than the state of California,” Antonovich said, before making a pitch to leave the structure of the board alone. “Five people can represent an area, with a good staff, and come to reasonable decisions. And we have a proven track record.”
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ANNON says
I don’t see why all the hype. They NEVER did me any good.
Tim Scott says
Antonovich played to his Santa Clarita power base and as far as I know never did anything for anyone in the Antelope Valley. Since the Santa Clarita power base has been handed off to Antonovich’s chosen successor that is unlikely to change.
Knabe wasn’t our guy, so I wouldn’t expect him to do anything for us. Basically every decision the board of supervisors ever made that was good for people in the AV was made over the objections of these two.
Adam says
In the midst of a housing crisis when most people cannot afford a home in LA county, Antonovich has continuously pursued ridiculous zoning plans that effectively stop the average person from ever building a home on their land out here. (see town and country plan, specifically acreage and effluent treatment requirements). Meanwhile developers get a huge pass to develop on areas where endangered species and Native American burial sites exist (see tejon mountain village, centennial and newhall ranch project). I get it, no one gets a free ride. But if I want to build my own house / tiny home / rv / etc and live on my own land in the desert should I really be thrown in prison like a criminal? (see phonehenge, battle for California desert). We need to change the zoning laws for the upcoming generations. Get this, according to the Measure M website, the High Desert Corridor will help facilitate the projected growth to 700,000 people in north LA county by 2017. Notice that no part of measure M is to help the already overburdened 14 freeway and I doubt nearly a million extra people that direction will help it. The real ‘wall’ will be a traffic wall consisting of the 14 fwy with the wealthy on one side and everyone else on the other.
callingitasitis says
Thank you for your service to our country and the county.
phil cronk says
most of us don’t even understand what role they play…
bill p says
OMG my comment went through! not “awaiting moderation”? wow for once i got to say something…. amazing…