In an effort to repair its fractured relationship with the community after it failed to meet air quality mandates, the Port of Los Angeles on Tuesday announced a series of measures to make its mammoth operations more transparent.

Port Executive Director Gene Seroka said he will personally hold quarterly open houses where the community can talk to him or his staff about environmental efforts underway and voice complaints. The port also is placing real-time information about whether it’s complying with air-quality mandates on its website.

“Here you are going to judge us on the results or on the process,” he said. “The results are there, now we are working on the process.”

Additionally, the port will hold monthly meetings in its administration office beginning in August where employees will provide updates on current environmental projects.

The port had been under increased scrutiny after an audit in February found it out of compliance at its 173-acre TraPac terminal, failing to meet the goal of plugging in the vessels at call 80 percent of the time. The process, called Alternative Maritime Power technology, has helped dramatically reduce the amount ozone-forming pollutants. It also comes after revelations that 11 of the 52 pollution-cutting measures agreed to in the 2003 China Shipping settlement weren’t met.

Earlier this year, Seroka agreed to place compliance records online, but many of those posted are more than a month old.

“It’s a step forward,” said a skeptical Chuck Hart, president of San Pedro Homeowners United and a watchdog on the port’s environmental record. “We will see. I applaud him for being more open with the community. Any improvement is good.”