Ernani Bernardi

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Ernani Bernardi also known as Noni Bernardi and Nani Bernardi was a big-band musician turned politician in Los Angeles, California. He represented District 7 on the City Council there from 1961 to 1993, making him the second-longest-serving council member in the history of the city. He was also the musical arranger for two of the mid-20th century's most popular dance melodies.

Bernardi in 1974

Biography

Bernardi was born on October 29, 1911[1] above a grocery store his family owned in Standard, Illinois, the son of musician Alfonso Bernardi and Nerina Biagini. His parents were immigrants who came to America by way of Ellis Island, from a small town in the province of Modena in the Emilia Romagna.[citation needed] His mother died in childbirth, and he was raised by his father, two grandmothers, an aunt and an uncle. When he was eleven, he was moved to the nearby town of Toluca, Illinois, where he later played varsity basketball.[2][3]

Bernardi attended the University of Detroit, where he planned to study journalism and become a sportscaster. He was playing saxophone in a dance band at Detroit's Graystone Ballroom when he met Lucille May Sawasky of Port Arthur, Ontario. They were married in 1933 and lived in Detroit briefly before moving to New York. The couple had four children, Joanne Marie Roots, Judith Ann, John Paul and (Ernani) James.[1] They settled in Los Angeles in 1939 or 1940, and Bernardi began his second career as a contractor, building custom homes. After their children were grown, Lucille Bernardi went to work in the county probation department as a records clerk. When older, she suffered from Alzheimer's disease, and Bernardi, by then a City Council member, would bring her to work with him from their home in Van Nuys[2][3] to watch television in his office.[4] She died in 1993. Ernani Bernardi remarried in November 2001 to Eve Troutman.[5]

Bernardi was described at age 74 in 1985 as "crusty, . . . short, bald and bespectacled,"[6] and four years later he was said to have "a puckish sense of humor."[2] As he aged, his hearing deteriorated, and he wore special headphones at council meetings so he could hear what was going on.[7][8] Even at age 86, he had "a booming voice and aggressive style."[9]

He died of heart failure at the age of 94 on January 4, 2006.

Music

Bernardi's father, Alfonso, was a music teacher who taught his son how to play the saxophone. Ernani went on to become a musician, performing under the name Noni Bernardi as lead alto sax for several of big bands of the era such as those of Benny Goodman, Tommy Dorsey and Kay Kyser. He was known for his arrangements of Goodman's "And the Angels Sing" and Dorsey's "I'm Getting Sentimental Over You."[2][4][10]

Bernardi moved to California in 1940 to perform with Kay Kyser's Kollege of Musical Knowledge.[2] His musical prowess was acknowledged in 1994 when at age 82 he was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Ironically, as the Los Angeles Times pointed out, his star—and those of 29 other musicians and actors—was funded by the city's Community Redevelopment Agency, an organization that Bernardi had been fighting with for years. The tribute is in the 7000 block of Hollywood Boulevard.[11]

The ex-councilman continued playing the sax well into his eighties. In 2000 he was a regular at age 88 with his band booked, among other places, at a retro big band restaurant called Leon's Steak House in North Hollywood.[12] The Times reported:

When this guy takes his spot in front of a 16-piece ensemble of blaring trumpets and gleaming saxes—The Way It Was Orchestra, as he calls it—his frail arms start pumping, his toes tap and his body begins to radiate a vigor that energizes the old musicians like swigs from a fountain of youth. . . . nothing stirs the diminutive Bernardi—he's about 5 foot 3, a little over 100 pounds—like his music.[12]

City Council

Elections

See also List of Los Angeles municipal election returns, 1957 and after.

By 1957 a contractor in the San Fernando Valley, Bernardi ran for the Los Angeles City Council District 7 seat that year but came in third in the primary election, after James C. Corman, the eventual victor, and Kay Bogendorfer. When Corman was elected to Congress, Bernardi ran again in 1961 and was elected.[2] He served eight terms until he retired in 1993.

In 1961, District 7 covered Van Nuys, Sepulveda, Granada Hills and Sylmar,[13] and in 1986 it covered Panorama City, part of Sun Valley and Sylmar.[14] For most of his early terms in office, Bernardi represented a "predominantly white working-class district in the mid-San Fernando Valley." His backers included many Valley tax opponents who were behind the successful passage of California's Proposition 13 anti-tax measure.[6]

In 1986, a 12-vote majority of the City Council moved Bernardi's 7th District to a "largely new" part of the Valley for him, the northeast area,[2] which contained more minorities than his former territory. One "City Hall lobbyist" opined that the measure in some way was a payback for Bernardi's public criticism of his colleagues.[2] Yet he was reelected in 1989 by 55% to 45% over Fire Captain Lyle Hall, "who had more money, a more sophisticated mail campaign and labor unions' support that translated into scores of ready volunteers." Bernardi also picked up support from Latino leaders in his new district.[15]

By the time Bernardi retired in 1993, the 7th District was 70 percent Latino and 19 percent African-American, encompassing one of Los Angeles's poorest areas.[16] Registered voters were 39 percent Anglo, 30 percent Latino and 19 percent African-American.[17]

His tenure of 32 years has been beaten only by the 35 years of Council Member John Ferraro.[3]

Highlights

Bernardi was nicknamed "Mr. No" because of his opposition to city spending,[3][7] and he was known as the City Council's "gadfly" because of his "pesky pursuit of lost causes," but in 1985 he was successful in forcing the City Council to put a tough campaign-reform law on the April ballot after he circulated petitions that would have required a vote on an even tougher law.[6] He did this by "enlisting the support of the League of Women Voters and a ragtag group made up mostly of retirees to qualify an initiative for the ballot."[8]

Bernardi listed his campaign-reform success as among his most satisfying achievements, as well as an ordinance requiring all residential developments of five or more units to set aside at least 15 percent of the units for low and moderate-income families. He also supported rent control.[2]

He led successful campaigns for city charter amendments that limited police and firefighter pensions and that did away with a requirement that the city pay comparable wages to those of private industry. "I think he reflects a philosophy of misery" because of his efforts to cut allocations for human services, fellow Councilman David S. Cunningham, Jr. said.[6] The Los Angeles Times added:

Yet, there is a compassionate side to Bernardi. After visiting Tent City, a shelter for the homeless set up across from City Hall during the 1984 Christmas season, Bernardi returned to his office and began calling food stores and restaurants to solicit food donations. When a grocery store donated a box of uncooked beans, Bernardi opened up the City Hall kitchen and cooked the beans himself.[6]

He was seen as a "loner" on the 15-member City Council, lacking the spirit of compromise, thus limiting his political effect, yet longtime council president John S. Gibson, Jr. praised him for probably saving the city "millions of dollars over the years with his questioning."[6] In a ceremony marking his 25th anniversary on the council, he was presented with the "no" voting button from his desk, "which Councilman John Ferraro quipped was 'worn out' from overuse."[10]

In 1987 he voted against supporting a Los Angeles Festival of Arts with money and services because it was "chintzy" for a $5.8 million festival to ask for help. He was joined by Council Members Gloria Molina and Nate Holden, who said not enough minority artists were represented.[18]

In 1988 Bernardi provided $70,000 from his $641,978-a-year office budget for police task forces to combat burglaries and drug trafficking in his district, and, even though he supported a lobbying group called FAIR, "devoted to using the harshest possible measures to reduce illegal immigration,"[19] he helped establish a hiring hall to get immigrant workers off the street.[2]

Critics claimed that "as an aging white man," he lacked "modern-day sensitivity" when, in August 1989, he called African-American Councilman Mark Ridley-Thomas "Curly" during an "emotionally charged discussion of racism." Ridley-Thomas rebuked Bernardi for the "condescending and racist" remark, and Bernardi apologized.[7]

In his last years on the council, he continued casting "no" votes: against building the Metro Rail subway, against establishing a downtown redevelopment project, against declaring Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday a city holiday. He said he didn't mind recognizing the civil rights leader, but did not want to give city workers another day off.[8]

One of his final campaigns was against the practice of the City Council drawing its own district boundaries. He urged that instead the boundaries should be set by a special commission of retired Municipal Court judges. In a related comment, on his last day in office he issued a press release applauding the U.S. Supreme Court in its Shaw v. Reno decision invalidating the drawing of a serpentine-shaped Congressional district whose parts seemed to have nothing to do with each other than the fact they were inhabited mostly by black people.[17]

Campaign for mayor

Bernardi ran for mayor of Los Angeles while he was in his last few months on the City Council in 1993, saying that the other candidates failed to address issues that were important to him—mostly slashing the size and cost of government.[7] He ran a low-budget, no-frills campaign,[8] and in the end received just 1 percent of the citywide vote.[20]

Post-council

In 1994 Bernardi sued the city of Los Angeles and its redevelopment agency, alleging that the agency violated the state's open meetings law when it was considering plans for Downtown Los Angeles.[21] He helped finance the costs of his lawsuit by selling a videocassette of several big bands performing his favorite tunes.[22] Eventually, appellate courts and the state supreme court ruled in favor of Bernardi in the main thrust of his claim, which effectively set a cap on the amount of money the agency could spend on the project.[9][23][24]

In the 1990s he spoke against the idea of establishing neighborhood councils as part of a proposed city charter reform process.[9]

In 1999, City Council President John Ferraro appointed Bernardi to a committee to oversee the spending of $744 million in bond funds for police and fire stations.[25]

References

Access to some Los Angeles Times links may require the use of a library card.

  1. 1.0 1.1 Los Angeles Public Library reference file
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 2.9 Richard Simon, "Bernardi's Iconoclasm Brings Acclaim, Enmity," Los Angeles Times, San Fernando Valley edition, April 3, 1989
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Rick Orlov, "Valley's Ardent Fighter, 94, Dies," Los Angeles Daily News," posted January 7, 2006, at Political-Graveyard
  4. 4.0 4.1 Jack Cheevers, "Lucille Bernardi Dies," Los Angeles Times, October 13, 1993
  5. "Former Councilman Gets Hospital Tests," Los Angeles Times, December 20, 2011
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 Richard Simon, "Council's Gadfly Relentlessly Pursues Lost Causes But Reform Measure Gives Him His Day in the Sun," Los Angeles Times, February 17, 1985, page 1
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 John Schwada, "Bernardi Announces Bid for Mayor," Los Angeles Times, January 15, 1993
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 Richard Simon, "Bernardi Continues His Long Solo in City Politics," Los Angeles Times, March 22, 1993
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 Efrain Hernandez Jr., Los Angeles Times, March 13, 1998
  10. 10.0 10.1 Richard Simon, "Bernardi Feted for 25 Years as City 'Naysayer,' " Los Angeles Times, May 31, 1986, page 6
  11. Hugo Martin, "Turning the Tables," Los Angeles Times, February 26, 1994
  12. 12.0 12.1 Jeffrey Gettleman, "In This Joint, House Special Is Yesteryear," Los Angeles Times, February 19, 2000
  13. Carlton Williams, "12 Vie for 7th District Council Post," Los Angeles Times, March 21, 1961
  14. "Los Angeles' Realigned Council Districts," Los Angeles Times, September 21, 1986, page B -3
  15. Amy Pyle and Stephanie Chavez, "Bernardi Win Is for Little People, His Backers Say," Los Angeles Times, June 8, 1989
  16. Jack Cheevers, "Elections: The Head of a Pacoima Youth Group Joins a Growing Field . . .," Los Angeles Times, January 27, 1993
  17. 17.0 17.1 Scott Harris, "Last Press Release of the Anti-Politician," Los Angeles Times, July 4, 1993
  18. "Morning Report," Los Angeles Times, August 27, 1987, page G-2
  19. Bruce Kelley, "El Mosco," Los Angeles Times, March 18, 1990
  20. Jack Cheevers, "Bernardi Endorses Ex-Foe Hall," Los Angeles Times, May 29, 1993
  21. Julie Tamaki, "Bernardi Suit Against City Is Dismissed," Los Angeles Times, September 13, 1994
  22. Hugo Martin, "Legal Bills," Los Angeles Times, March 15, 1995
  23. Eric Malnic, "Bernardi Wins Round Against CRA," Los Angeles Times, January 26, 1996
  24. "Appeals Court Affirms CRA Spending Cap," Los Angeles Times, March 21, 1997
  25. Patrick McGreevey, "Bernardi Is Top Choice to Oversee Bond Funds," Los Angeles Times, April 10, 1999

Further reading

Preceded by
James C. Corman
Los Angeles City Council
7th District

1961–93
Succeeded by
Richard Alarcón
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