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  • Whiskey Riff

    UCLA Baseball Stadium Closed On Account Of Illegal Lease & Failing To Provide Adequate Care For Military Veterans

    By Matt Fitzgerald,

    1 days ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3Cq2mv_0vnGyNlG00

    If you're going to lease your baseball stadium on veterans' land, and you don't do enough work with the Department of Veteran Affairs to adequately provide for the vets, you're liable to have a problem on your hands. UCLA is feeling the consequences of this. Jackie Robinson Stadium was closed off on the order of federal judge David O. Carter earlier this week, as reported by the Associated Press (h/t Military News ). UCLA's lease on the stadium was deemed illegal because the plot of land it's on isn't predominantly focused on providing for military veterans. Carter didn't believe the enhanced proposal presented by UCLA chancellor Darnell Hunt was good enough to keep the stadium open. https://twitter.com/abc7JoshHaskell/status/1839382484703990103 https://twitter.com/abc7JoshHaskell/status/1839391688584016034 https://twitter.com/FOS/status/1839485359677481442 Where the university falls short in particular is veteran housing access. To be clear, it appears this is a letdown on behalf of UCLA and Veteran Affairs, not just solely on the school. In fact, here's a little more from the AP report on the class-action lawsuit filed by veterans, which invokes a government deed that's well over a century old:
    "The class-action lawsuit alleged the VA had failed to provide adequate housing for veterans and that its leases at its 388-acre (157-hectare) campus in West LA violated an 1888 deed to the U.S. government for the 'permanent maintenance' of a home for disabled soldiers." It's difficult to try to sort out the specifics of this case, what role the VA plays in it — they're now tasked with guarding anyone from entering the stadium — and whether the housing shortage pertains to veterans trying to attend school, or just veterans in general. That convoluted picture is probably part of the reason why this stadium closure is happening in the first place, and why even locals who've been in the area for a long time are struggling to make heads or tails of it: https://twitter.com/PabloWeather/status/1839553249688391961 Just never would've expected to see a headline about a college baseball venue closing on account of inadequate care for military veterans. Hopefully everything gets sorted by the time the 2025 college baseball season rolls around. That's still several months out, but resolving a lawsuit can be met with a bunch of red tape and delays before it's settled. Another unfortunate byproduct of the lawsuit is that Judge Carter also ordered the closure of a couple parking lots, an oil drilling operation, and the Brentwood School for similar legal reasons related to veteran care. Best of luck to the veterans getting access to the housing they deserve. It's tough that their pursuit of justice comes at the expense of a seemingly unrelated major college sports team, though.
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    Andrea Utzman
    14h ago
    Although UCLA did "rent" the 10 acres, the Veteran's Affairs had NO business doing so, especially for the seemingly lowball amount being paid for prime L.A. real estate. 10 acres could be used to create housing to get homeless vets off the streets and out of tents on their campus. UCLA needs to buy the property at fair market value, provide an in-kind facility, or pack up and relocate. The days of these kinds of sweetheart deals that make veterans suffer need to end - thank God the judge agrees!
    Paul Rees
    1d ago
    So headline paints the school as assholes . When in reality it’s the veteran affairs department problem
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