Monday, September 29, 2025
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Mayor Bass Brings Olympic Flag Back To Los Angeles as Preparations For 2028 Games Continue

 

LOS ANGELES Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass returned to Los Angeles Aug. 13 with the official Olympic Flag after she made history by becoming the first Black woman mayor to ever receive the Olympic flag at a closing ceremony of the Olympic Games. During the ceremony, Mayor Bass received the flag as part of the handover ceremony from Mayor Anne Hidalgo, who is the first woman to serve as Mayor of Paris. Team USA Gymnast Simone Biles, the most decorated gymnast in history, joined Mayor Bass in receiving the flag during the historic moment. She returned to L.A. alongside LA28 and regional leaders. Los Angeles will host the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games.

The Mayor’s priority for the 2028 Games is to ensure Angelenos benefit from the preparation and hosting of this major event, both now and for decades. She is focused on helping local, small businesses, creating local jobs, and delivering lasting environmental and transportation improvements throughout Los Angeles.

“The Olympic Games have officially come back to Los Angeles,” said Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass. “We have been working with the urgency that is required to put on an international event, and we are focused on all the ways we can match Paris’ success in Los Angeles. My goals for the Games are big, and I want to ensure Angelenos from all corners of the City have the opportunity to show the world all of our communities, that we will grow small and local businesses, and that we will invest in the transportation improvements necessary to leave a lasting legacy in our city for generations to come. Forty years ago, Mayor Bradley hosted a Games that continue to benefit Los Angeles – I will be sure to do the same. Congratulations to the City of Paris, Mayor Anne Hidalgo and Paris 2024 for an outstanding Olympic Games. We look forward to seeing a transformative Paralympic Games in Paris in just a few weeks.”

During her trip to Paris for the closing ceremony, Mayor Bass visited cities and communities outside of the Paris city center to observe how they are engaging the local community and benefiting from the Games. Additionally, Mayor Bass visited the Paris Media Centre, the Athlete’s Village and sporting event venues to examine effective logistics and communication output in order to recreate effective operations in Los Angeles.

Examining the All of Paris Region Approach to Hosting the Games:

  • Examining Strategies To Embrace The Games In Creative Ways – After Mayor Bass landed in Paris she toured the Paris 2024 Olympic cauldron at Tuileries Garden, which is an example of partnership between the private sector and the Games. She was joined by LA Metro CEO Stephanie Wiggins and George Pla, Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Commission President. The group also visited Hôtel De Ville, Paris’ historic City Hall, to participate in the City-hosted La Terrasse des Jeux, a free fan festival and watch party where more than 4,000 residents and visitors are able to come together to experience the Games outside of the arenas. The Mayor hopes to implement similar activities throughout the City in 2028.
  • Observing Creative and Accessible Activations Throughout The Region And Outside of Arenas – Mayor Bass visited the Parc des Nations at La Villette, home to 15 National Olympic committee’s hospitality houses in a shared urban park space, which includes Club France. Ten of the 15 hospitality houses offer free entry, giving visitors from all around the world the opportunity to cheer on their athletes and feel at home at little to no cost. The park sees around 100,000 visitors a day. The mayor also visited Station Afrique, a space dedicated to members of the Association of National Olympic Committees of Africa. Mayor Bass hopes to implement a similar hospitality house system in Los Angeles, where diaspora communities, visitors, and residents can connect to the cultures and nationalities represented within the Olympic Movement.
  • Observing Logistics To Optimize The Olympic Experience – Mayor Bass visited the Place de la Concorde, the venue hosting Breaking, 3×3 Basketball, BMX Freestyle Cycling and Skateboard, with LA28 leadership where she observed the crowd flow, capacity, and other important characteristics that will factor into the planning of the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games.

Observing Logistics Important To A Successful Olympic Games

  • Preparing To Host Press From All Over The World – Mayor Bass visited the City of Paris’ temporary Media Center at Carreau du Temple, which is host to hundreds of non-accredited media covering the 2024 Games. Operated by the City of Paris, the Paris Media Centre is designed to give journalists a window into the vibrant atmosphere and dynamism of the city as it hosts the 2024 Games. With capacity for 600 people, the media center provides 300 workstations, two press conference rooms, interview areas, recording studios, as well as relaxation and catering areas, creating a free, all-hours, centralized location for journalists to operate during the 2024 Games.
  • Observing Sport Competitions – Mayor Bass supported Team USA at the Men’s Basketball final where the USA played against France, while observing the different venues in Paris — their crowd flow, capacity, and other important characteristics that will factor into the planning of the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games.

In order to host a successful Games in 2028, Mayor Bass is collaborating internationally and across all levels of government to deliver for the people of Los Angeles:

  • Federal and Local Partners – Mayor Bass and local leaders including Council President Paul Krekorian, Councilwoman Traci Park, and city administrative officer Matt Szabo, joined second gentleman Douglas Emhoff and his Presidential Delegation, including California Senator Laphonza Butler and Congressman Robert Garcia, in meeting with Team USA athletes in the Athletes Village. Mayor Bass also met with athletes and coaches from the Refugee Olympic team, representing more than 100 million displaced persons worldwide, as well as the director of the Olympic Refugee foundation where they discussed their historic first medal and the significance of the Olympic Refugee team within the Olympics movement.
  • Strengthening Partnerships For the 2028 Games – Mayor Bass met with Saint-Ouen-sur-Seine Mayor Karim Bouamrane at Saint-Ouen City Hall to follow up on the partnership established with Los Angeles during their meeting in March. This partnership includes collaboration on shared priorities for youth, the environment, sports, and culture and to share knowledge from the 2024 Games experience. Saint-Ouen is a city just north of Paris and, with Saint-Denis, is home to the Olympic and Paralympic Athletes Village for the 2024 Games. Mayor Bass and Mayor Bouamrane also met with youth from the 100 Black Men of America Summer 2024 Cultural Exchange, an opportunity for young future leaders to experience new perspectives by visiting a foreign country and exploring different cultures. The delegation to Saint-Ouen during the Paris 2024 Games consist of participants from Los Angeles, the San Francisco Bay Area, New Orleans, Louisiana, Savannah, Georgia, Prince George’s County, Maryland, and London, England. There are six young men and four young women in the delegation.
  • Partnering with Private Companies like Delta – An LA28 inaugural founding partner, Mayor Bass met with Delta leadership as she continues to collaborate with the public and private sectors for the 2028 Games.

The Corporate Press (Finally) Sounds the Alarm on Project 2025

 

But Omits Warnings for Journalism and Media Communication

https://www.projectcencored.org/corporate-press-sounds-alarm-project-2025

By Mischa Geracoulis Aug. 8

After months of expert legal and public policy analysis, advocacy group warnings, and independent press reporting on the Presidential Transition Project 2025 (Project 2025 for short), the corporate press is finally catching up. Capturing headlines is Project 2025’s Mandate for Leadership, a 180-day playbook for the next conservative administration. Its authors are a cadre of ultra-conservative, mostly men — some of whom espouse White supremacist and misogynistic views — connected to the Heritage Foundation and its lobbying arms, Heritage Action for America and Sentinel Action Fund.

Much of the 920-page playbook — which is available online for any and all to see — reads like a textbook for dismantling democracy as we know it, and an ax-grind against liberals and progressives. The playbook’s government and policy recommendations reek of Trumpism, no matter how much Trump denies knowing about it. At least seventy former and current Heritage staffers worked for the Trump administration; four were even part of Trump’s cabinet.

Written in hyperbolic, accusatory language, the playbook’s sweeping recommendations are antithetical to any semblance of governmental checks and balances. If enacted, Project 2025 would decimate the democratic principles and practices that provide citizens with agency, including the rights to be informed and freedom of the press. Journalists and anyone who values these rights would be remiss to ignore Project 2025’s plans for media and communications. And yet, until now, much of the establishment press have done just that.

Marginalizing White House correspondents

The playbook’s first chapter (pp. 23–42), written by Rick Dearborn, a Heritage Foundation fellow and Trump’s former chief of staff, says there’s no legal requirement to provide “permanent space for media” at the White House, and advises the next administration to “reexamine the balance between media demands and space constraints on the White House premises.”

For decades, the press corps has had access to the White House press room. Lisa Graves, the executive director of True North Research, a national investigative watchdog group, noted during an upcoming episode of the Project Censored Show that when Trump was president, he was especially hostile to certain members of the press corps, Black women in particular. Dearborn’s proposal, said Graves, signals that a conservative administration would limit press access to loyalists who won’t pose critical questions.

Plundering public media

Chapter eight on media agencies (pp. 235–251), written by Mora Namdar of the American Foreign Policy Council, with contributions by Mike Gonzalez and Victoria Coates of the Heritage Foundation and shock-jock Frank Wuco, attacks the US Agency for Global Media and the media outlets it oversees — Voice of America, Office of Cuba Broadcasting, Middle East Broadcasting Network, Radio Free Asia, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, and Open Technology Fund — for liberal bias, criticism of the US government and Trump, and for supposedly endangering national security. According to Namdar, any critique of the government that is “insulting to the president” is harmful to US foreign policy and national security goals.

The chapter defends former Trump appointee, Michael Pack, alleging that Pack’s efforts to reform the US Agency for Global Media and its attendant outlets were unjustly blocked. But Pack, who served as CEO of the arch-conservative Claremont Institute from 2015 to 2017, is part of the right-wing media. He didn’t “reform” the agency; he gutted it and its outlets, either sacking the leaders or compelling them to resign, only to replace them with Trump loyalists. Facing multiple lawsuits for wrongful terminations and charges of improperly using donations to benefit his own company, Pack settled on the latter, agreeing to pay back $210,000 to Public Media Lab, the nonprofit from which he’d appropriated the funds. In January 2021, Biden restored the jobs of those fired, and Pack resigned.

Mike Gonzalez promises that conservatives will “reward” a president who strips the Corporation for Public Broadcasting of taxpayer funding. “The 47th President can just tell the Congress — through the budget he proposes and through personal contact — that he will not sign an appropriations spending bill that contains a penny for the CPB.”

This applies to NPR, PBS, Pacifica Radio, and American Public Media, all of whom Gonzalez characterizes as “leftist broadcasters” that must be “shorn of the presumption that they act in the public interest.” This would include stripping the stations of their noncommercial, educational status, and imposing steep licensing fees.

The assault on public media would be detrimental to the many Americans who rely on these outlets for community-based reporting on public affairs, arts, culture, and education. Public media provides a space for newer voices and marginalized perspectives, making for a more broadly informed citizenry that in turn impacts civic engagement and voting choices.

Moreover, defunding public media would accelerate the ongoing crises of newsroom layoffs and news deserts, opening even more doors to the takeover of vulnerable local news markets by syndicated news media corporations. The US government invests much less in public media than many comparable nations. Fiscal year 2024 breaks down to approximately $1.60 per US citizen — a small price for a commitment to an informed public. Already operating on threadbare budgets, American Public Media gets a portion of CPB funding and otherwise depends on donations and grants, while funding for the Pacifica Network is entirely dependent on listener contributions and grants.

Suppressing online freedom of expression

Chapter 28 on the Federal Communications Commission (pp. 845–861), is written by Brendan Carr, a Republican Trump-appointed commissioner, known for accusing social media platforms of biases against Trump and opposing net neutrality. Carr calls for reforms to Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, the bipartisan legislation that protects citizens’ freedom of expression online, as a way “to rein in Big Tech’s attempts to drive diverse political viewpoints from the digital town square.”

Although bipartisan politicians and citizens alike agree that online platforms are fraught with misinformation and disinformation, leveling Section 230 and net neutrality would only privilege Trumpist and MAGA positions and corporate interests at the expense of diverse perspectives and freedom of expression.

Indeed, the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression argues that “undermining Section 230 would lead to less expressive freedom and viewpoint diversity online.” The Electronic Freedom Foundation says that if the law was changed to “make us liable for the speech of others, the biggest platforms would become locked-down and heavily censored.”

China as a distraction from online privacy concerns

Other concerns about Big Tech, such as personal private data collection and AI, are only cursorily addressed in the playbook. The spotlight is on the “Chinese Communist Party” and on banning carriers, such as China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom, and taking stronger action against TikTok. Carr wants to expand the Covered List—the list of communications equipment and services deemed to pose an unacceptable risk to US national security and citizen safety. Carr says the US “needs to stop entities from directly or indirectly contributing to China’s malign AI goals.” To secure US networks from the interference of our foreign adversaries, the FCC should compile and publish a list of “all entities that hold FCC authorizations, licenses, or other grants of authority with more than ten percent ownership by foreign adversarial governments, including China, Russia, Iran, Syria, or North Korea.”

Outsourcing cyber protection

At the same time, Carr wants the FCC to create “a market-friendly regulatory environment,” and rescind “heavy-handed FCC regulations…that restrict investment and competition.” This ties to the chapter by Ken Cuccinelli, a fellow at the Center for Renewing America, on the Department of Homeland Security (pp. 133–170), which takes aim at the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA). Cuccinelli, who served as acting director of US Citizenship and Immigration Services during the Trump administration, claims that CISA is an “apparatus of the political Left…[which] the Left has weaponized to censor speech and affect elections at the expense of securing the cyber domain and critical infrastructure, which are threatened daily.”

Cuccinelli wants CISA to “leave cybersecurity functions to the Department of Defense, FBI, National Security Agency, and US Secret Service.” He says, “The entirety of the CISA Cybersecurity Advisory Committee [should be] dismissed on Day One [of a new administration].” The only role he sees for CISA is to “help states and localities assess whether they have good cyber hygiene in their hardware and software in preparation for an election—nothing more.”

If Carr or Cuccinelli are genuinely worried about US cybersecurity, the recent global outages caused by the cybersecurity vendor CrowdStrike validates the need for “cybersecurity redundancy,” multilayered security measures and backup systems that ensure continuous protection and functionality even if one layer fails or is compromised. In fact, current CISA director Jen Easterly proposed in 2023 that tech companies should be held liable for selling vulnerable products and has repeatedly warned Congress about the need for additional cybersecurity.

Reining in Big Tech, however, will not be accomplished by turning the FCC regulatory environment over to the profit-driven private market that Big Tech already runs. Nor can protection from foreign adversaries be assured by ending CISA’s work to secure the infrastructure. Cuccinelli may be more focused on settling a score from 2020 than national security. Ever since then-CISA director Chris Krebs debunked Trump’s 2020 election fraud claims, far-right Republicans have been looking to dismantle the agency. As Graves noted, Project 2025 is as much about personnel and Trump loyalty as policy.

This is but a snapshot of a few chapters that highlight what Project 2025 holds in store for independent journalism, press freedoms, and the public’s right to be informed. Despite the critical attention now being focused on Project 2025 by the establishment press, these issues remain surprisingly underreported. Make no mistake, if enacted, Project 2025 would not only be an assault on the press but on every liberty accorded through a democratic system of checks and balances upon which the right to know and the free flow of information hinges.

Read Project 2025 as fair warning for the upcoming presidential election, as potential consequences of choice, and as an act of civic duty.

California Briefs: Governor Urges Restriction of Cell Phoces in Schools and State Launches AI Collaboration

Governor Newsom Urges Schools to Restrict Cell Phones in the Classroom Ahead of School Year

SACRAMENTO — In a letter to California schools, Gov. Gavin Newsom Aug. 8 called on every school district to restrict smartphone use in classrooms as the new academic year begins. In his letter, the Governor applauds districts that have already implemented cell phone restrictions, like Los Angeles Unified, and reminded education leaders of the mental health, scholastic and social risks of cell phone use in classrooms.

In 2019, Governor Newsom signed AB 272 (Muratsuchi) into law, which grants school districts the authority to regulate the use of smartphones during school hours. Building on that legislation, he is working with the California Legislature to further limit student smartphone use on campuses. In June, the Governor announced efforts to restrict the use of smartphones during the school day.

Details: Find a copy of the letter here.

 

California, NVIDIA Launch AI Collaboration

SACRAMENTO — California is partnering with NVIDIA on a new initiative to collaborate on AI efforts and provide students, educators and workers with access to this technology.
The initiative, signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom and NVIDIA founder and CEO Jensen Huang, aims to: Train students, educators and workers; Support job creation and promote innovation; Use AI to solve challenges that may improve the lives of Californians

Among other goals, it strives to bring new AI resources into community colleges from NVIDIA – including curriculum and certifications, hardware and software, AI labs and workshops, and more – to open pathways for students, educators and workers to learn new skills and advance their careers.

This initiative builds off of Gov. Newsom’s executive order, which called for the state to utilize AI to best serve Californians. This year, the state unveiled a state worker training program, held a GenAI summit, issued a GenAI toolkit for state procurement, launched pilot projects to explore how GenAI could help address challenges like traffic congestion and language accessibility, and more.

Harness AI to grow the economy & create jobs

  • NVIDIA aims to provide technical guidance, mentorship, and access to advanced AI hardware and software resources to support cutting-edge research initiatives.
  • California will explore opportunities to support early-stage AI startups and public-private partnerships to create AI innovation zones and job creation hubs.
  • NVIDIA strives to explore hackathons or design sprints that showcase practical applications of AI in California.

Training for students, educators, and workers

  • California and NVIDIA plan to collaborate on creating AI laboratories in higher education facilities that can be equipped to meet the evolving needs of AI education and research.
  • California will fund AI worker training initiatives across educational institutions and industries and work with NVIDIA to develop faculty programs to improve AI literacy and curriculum.
  • NVIDIA aims to create pipelines and learning paths for AI talent and industry-recognized certifications for AI in specific sectors, including train-the-trainer programs for faculty.
  • California will adopt skills and training for state careers, including new roles for AI specialists in government.

Promote statewide innovation, real-world applications

  • NVIDIA and California will support initiatives to use AI technologies to address local challenges, including opportunities for students to work on real-world AI projects.
  • NVIDIA to help enable access to cutting-edge AI hardware, software, and cloud computing resources for educational and research initiatives.

Direct collaboration with Community College system

  • Integrate AI concepts into curriculum for students to learn how to use AI applications to help them get jobs in high-demand sectors.
  • Organize AI workshops and bootcamps relevant to in-demand local jobs and collaborate with regional employers to build up an in-demand skilled workforce.

Identify faculty for AI ambassador programs and faculty development programs, expand AI certificate programs across colleges to meet local employer needs.

California is issuing a call to action encouraging other AI and tech stakeholders to join future partnerships to ensure California continues to be a global leader in education, innovation, research, and preparing the workforce of the future and today. California’s University of California and California State University systems will also partner with the state on these efforts in the future.

ANNOUNCEMENT: UNICEF’s Threat to Progress Report and Webinar

 

In late July 2024, UNICEF, with support from the Karolinska Institutet, released a report which explores and analyzes the many ways that children of all ages are impacted by climate change.

Climate change is impacting almost every aspect of child health and well-being from pregnancy to adolescence. Children are disproportionately affected by climate change because they are uniquely vulnerable to environmental hazards compared to adults.

This report aims to provide a comprehensive ‘stocktake’ of the impacts of climate change on children across six major hazards that impact their health and well-being: extreme heat, droughts, wildfires, floods and storms, air pollution and ecosystem changes.

This report makes three recommendations with accompanying specific actions:

Reduce emissions to meet 1.5°C degree threshold ensuring the best interest of the child

Protect children from the impact of climate change

Prioritize child health and well-being in climate policy, investment and action

Read the full report and explore more of the findings here.

A webinar to discuss the report will be held Aug. 14. This webinar will support both dissemination of the topline findings and recommendations for how to protect children from climate-related adverse health impacts, as well as enable a brief dialogue amongst collaborators and participants on how the climate and health community can work together to empower strong and urgent action.

This webinar session, hosted by the Children’s Environmental Health Collaborative and the Child Health Task Force or CHTF, will kick-off the Climate Change and Health Forum.

Details: https://tinyurl.com/Climate-Change-Health-Forum

Rep’s. Barragán, Waters Dedicate Compton Post Office to First Black Marine to Win Medal of Honor

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COMPTON, CA — Rep. Nanette Barragán (CA-44) and Rep. Maxine Waters (CA-43) last week held a post office dedication ceremony to name the post office in Compton after Private First Class (PFC) James Anderson, Jr., a Compton native who was the first Black Marine to be awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor after his heroic efforts in the Vietnam War.

In December 2022, President Biden signed into law Congresswoman Barragán’s bill to name the post office after PFC Anderson.

On February 28th, 1967, while on patrol outside of the village of Quang Tri Province on Vietnam’s central coast, PFC Anderson’s platoon was ambushed and came under heavy enemy fire. During the firefight, an enemy grenade landed near PFC Anderson and his fellow Marines. Without hesitation, PFC Anderson pulled the grenade to his chest and absorbed the majority of the blast with his body, killing him instantly and saving the lives of his fellow Marines. PFC Anderson was posthumously awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor by then Secretary of the Navy Paul R. Ignatius on August 21, 1698.

“PFC Anderson was an American hero,” said Rep. Barragán. “His selfless actions in Vietnam saved the lives of his fellow soldiers. As the first Black Marine to win the Congressional Medal of Honor, it was important that we recognize his bravery and sacrifice here in his hometown. It was an honor to stand with PFC Anderson’s family this morning as the Compton post office was officially dedicated in his name. Thank you to Congresswoman Waters, Councilwoman Darden, Mayor Sharif, President Biden, and all of those who made this dedication possible today.”

 

Los Angeles County Shows Progress Housing Residents on Skid Row

LOS ANGELES — A state grant from Gov. Gavin Newsom’s encampment resolution fund aimed at expanding housing and services on Skid Row helped move 1,975 people into interim housing and 990 in permanent housing, according to new outcome data released Aug. 12 on the grant’s first year. Additionally, about 8,000 people experiencing unsheltered homelessness received outreach services or services through an access center or health clinic during the first year of the grant.

These outcomes highlight the impact of an infusion of funding, as well as collaboration among state, county, city and community partners, in resolving homeless encampments in Los Angeles County. The $60 million encampment resolution fund awarded to Los Angeles County in June 2023 has already been a catalyst for clearing homeless encampments in the densely populated Skid Row. It also has spurred progress for the Skid Row action plan, a comprehensive initiative designed to improve living conditions and transform the downtown neighborhood into a safe and thriving community.

The three-year state grant is supporting a wide variety of projects, including increasing interim and permanent housing opportunities, the launch of a 24/7 ‘Safe Landing’ triage space at the Cecil Hotel for walk-ins, trauma-informed training for interim housing providers and an air traffic access center to move people into interim housing more quickly.

L.A. County was one of several regions to receive the grants. The California Interagency Council on Homelessness injected $191 million across California, aimed at supporting 23 projects across 22 communities and housing 7,300 homeless individuals statewide.

There are 3,791 people experiencing homelessness in Skid Row, 2,112 of them unsheltered, according to the 2024 Greater Los Angeles Homeless Count. This is the densest concentration of people experiencing homelessness in the county, according to the count. This year’s results showed a 14% drop in homelessness and a 22% drop in unsheltered homelessness in Skid Row.

The new data showed that older residents particularly benefited from the encampment resolution fund, as 34% of people placed in permanent housing were aged 55 and older. The grant also focused heavily on women, placing 453 in permanent housing and 737 in interim housing. The every woman housed program, which is designed to end homelessness for women and families in Skid Row, helped make those placements possible and contributed to an overall 42% drop in unsheltered women in the neighborhood from 2022 to 2024, according to Homeless Count data.

The next steps for the Skid Row Action Plan include expanding job and entrepreneurship opportunities and building a campus that will include a harm reduction health hub, a safe services outdoor space and an enriched residential care facility for people who need additional help staying permanently housed. Community members and organizations will continue as integral partners through resident councils.

Supervisors Approve Ordinance to Require Hospitals to Report Medical Debt Data

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LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors Aug. 7 voted to move forward with a new ordinance by Supervisor Janice Hahn that will require hospitals to report data on medical debt with the goal of identifying gaps in financial assistance and reducing the burden of medical debt on LA County residents in the future.

“Too many LA County residents have medical debt that they can’t afford and it is holding them back,” said Supervisor Janice Hahn. “If we can get data from hospitals on the patients who are burdened by medical debt and being sent to collections, we can begin to figure out how to tackle this problem going forward.”

Medical debt exceeds $2.9 billion for LA County residents, impacting one in ten adults in 2022 and disproportionately affecting families with children, lower-income, Latino, Black, American Indian, and Pacific Islander residents, and people with chronic health conditions. About 46% of this debt belongs to individuals with income under 200% of the federal poverty line.

Currently, hospitals report limited data to the state on the amount of financial assistance provided to their patients. However, the reporting does not include aggregate data on medical debt collections making it impossible to identify trends related to medical debt or gaps where financial assistance could help low-income patients in need.

This ordinance will require the seven acute care hospitals in the unincorporated areas of Los Angeles County to submit aggregate data on debt collection and financial assistance operations, as well as requiring hospitals to report on patients accounts advanced to collections. The ordinance complies with HIPAA and includes privacy protections so that data will not include any health information regarding diagnosis or treatment.

View Public Health Presentation

This ordinance comes on the heels of a unanimous vote in June to approve Hahn’s proposal to develop and launch a $5 million pilot program to purchase and eliminate $500 million worth of medical debt for 150,000 LA County residents.

The ordinance will need a second reading at an upcoming Board of Supervisors meeting before it goes into effect. First reporting is due from hospitals 180 days after the ordinance goes into effect.

LA Briefs: Veterans Eligible for Increased Housing Options and Breathe Guaranteed Income Expanded for Foster Youth

Following National Advocacy By Mayors, More Veterans Eligible for Increased Housing Options

LOS ANGELES — Following the advocacy of Mayor Bass and the United States Conference of Mayors to the federal government, a new policy change will make more veterans eligible for housing and increase their housing options. Today, the US Department of Housing and Urban Development or HUD Aug. 8 published a federal notice establishing policy stating veterans experiencing homelessness should not be disqualified from supportive housing based on their disability status.

The United States conference of mayors task Force on homelessness has focused on drawing attention to the reality that across the country, veterans are sometimes forced to choose between housing and their disability income, leaving too many units for veterans vacant and too many HUD Veteran Affairs Supportive Housing Vouchers (HUD-VASH) unused.

This policy change follows actions and advocacy by mayors, including:

  • U.S. conference of mayors or USCM task force on homelessness – As chair of the United States conference of mayors task force on homelessness, Mayor Bass and then-USCM President Reno Mayor Hillary Schieve led a bipartisan group of more than 50 mayors from across the country to meet with members of the Biden-Harris Administration, U.S. Senate, and U.S. House of Representatives. While there, they advocated for this change in veteran eligibility directly with the Acting Secretary of Housing and Urban Development.
  • Partnership through ALLINside – Mayor Bass secured an agreement with the White House and the U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness as Los Angeles was selected to be one of five cities to enter in a partnership called ALL INside, an initiative to address unsheltered homelessness across the country. The mayor’s office of housing and homelessness, USICH, HUD and the White House Office of Management and Budget Aug. 7 convened with L.A. housing leaders to build on efforts to remove barriers to housing and to discuss the need for more housing vouchers, increasing the project base voucher cap for housing authorities, and funding for programs to prevent and end homelessness.
  • Expediting Housing Access: Aafter declaring a local homelessness emergency, Mayor Bass partnered with local housing providers including the Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles and the L.A. County Development Authority and helped secure waivers from HUD the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development to expedite the process of moving unhoused Angelenos people into housing. Last week, HUD approved the city’s request to extend the presumptive eligibility waiver for another year by HUD.

HUD is expanding access to housing for veterans by:

  • Requiring public housing agencies that administer HUD-VASH to set the initial income eligibility for veterans at 80%, rather than 50%, of area median income. The use of this higher initial income eligibility threshold is optional, but HUD is now making this increase mandatory. This expanded eligibility will allow for more veterans to be housed.
  • Adopting an alternative definition of annual income for applicants and participants of the HUD-VASH program that excludes veterans’ service-connected disability benefits when determining eligibility for housing. This change will mean that veterans, including those who are most severely disabled, will no longer need to choose between their benefits and housing.

HUD-VASH is a collaborative program that pairs HUD’s Housing Choice Voucher or HCV rental assistance with U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs case management supportive services. The Los Angeles Housing Department and the Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles are expected to issue guidance to come into alignment with HUD’s new policy on veteran income eligibility.

LA County to Expand Breathe Guaranteed Income Program

Breathe, Los Angeles County’s guaranteed income program which began by supporting 1,000 County residents with $1000 a month for three years will soon expand to offer 2,000 more people a path to financial stability.

“When we started working to implement Breathe, we had a simple vision: to provide no-strings-attached funding that would mean real economic liberty for Angelenos. Since then, we have seen families be able to pay for childcare and rent and grow their savings for the first time. I am proud of this second expansion of Breathe, which will reach young people during the vulnerable stage of transitioning out of our foster care system,” said Los Angeles County Supervisor Holly J. Mitchell.

The program’s expansion, adopted by the Board of Supervisors Aug. 6, will provide 2,000 foster youth between the ages of 18 and 21 with $500 monthly or $1,500 quarterly stipends for up to 18 months. Youth who are eligible for this new expansion will be notified by their Department of Children and Family Services social worker. More information around eligibility can also be found here.

Guaranteed income programs provide households with cash support with no strings attached in hopes of providing financial stability and broadening recipients’ horizons, allowing them the time to complete deferred education and job training and participate more fully in their communities. Early research, like that undertaken by University of Pennsylvania’s Center for Guaranteed Income Research or CGIR, shows that programs are meeting these goals.

Early data from the Breathe program, gathered by CGIR, found that the additional income is being used primarily to purchase food, groceries, and household goods, resulting in a reduction of economic stress for participants. Full data and research findings on the program will be released in early 2027. The program first expanded last summer to include 200 former foster youth with $1,000 per month for two years.

In addition to expanding Breathe, the County’s Poverty Alleviation Initiative is leading coordination across 12 guaranteed income projects that have launched countywide across cities, nonprofits, and other government agencies, serving more than 8,500 participants.

Details: ceo.lacounty.gov/pai/breathe/

Click here for our latest video on the Breathe program.

 

Long Beach Briefs: City Launches Microgrant Program, Explores Housing Students Experiencing Homelessness Through Tiny Homes and Unveils FY Budget

 

City Launches Inclusive Business Navigator Microgrant Program

The City of Long Beach, through the Long Beach Recovery Act, is launching microgrants to support startups and micro-entrepreneurs with access to small amounts of capital to launch or grow their business. The Program, led by the Economic Development Department, will distribute $2,500 and $5,000 grants to qualified businesses, with up to $80,000 in total funding.

Applications are available through 5 p.m., Aug. 26.

Details: Program eligibility and requirements: longbeach.gov/biznavigators.

 

City Explores Opportunity to House Students Experiencing Homelessness Through Tiny Homes

The City of Long Beach announced today that it is shifting the focus of its tiny homes project toward housing students experiencing homelessness. The City and Long Beach City College or LBCC are discussing possible collaborative efforts that could provide needed shelter for some LBCC students.

Discussions with LBCC are in the early stages and a location for the tiny homes has yet to be finalized. The potential innovative partnership would help the city locate a viable space for tiny homes, assist LBCC in providing an additional pathway to housing stability for students and make a direct positive impact on the lives of LBCC students who are experiencing homelessness.

Funding for this effort stems from the Homekey Program Round 2 Grant, which was awarded to the Long Beach Department of Health and Human Services or Health Department by The State of California Department of Housing and Community Development or HCD in August 2022.

Details: longbeach.gov/homelessness and read more here: https://tinyurl.com/Student-tiny-homes-explored

 

Long Beach Unveils Proposed Fiscal Year 2025 Budget

LONG BEACH — Last week the City of Long Beach unveiled its proposed fiscal year 2025 or FY 25 budget. The $3.6 billion proposed FY 25 budget includes the city manager’s proposed budget, the mayor’s recommendations to the city council and the proposed FY 25 capital improvement plan or CIP. The proposed budget focuses on key areas of investments identified in the Long Beach Strategic Vision 2030, among other critical priorities.

More information, including information about budget hearings and workshops, is available at longbeach.gov/fy25.

Details: https://tinyurl.com/Proposed-FY-2025-Budget-LB

Jezebel Fantasy Shows Just How Weird GOP Really Is

Normal Politics May Be Perfect Answer

By Paul Rosenberg, Senior Editor

When Kamala Harris replaced Joe Biden as the Democratic presidential nominee, she simultaneously unified and energized the Democratic, anti-MAGA coalition and threw the MAGA world into utter chaos, resulting in a flood of confused spluttering rage, racism, misogyny and conspiracism. With so much media focus on Harris and the swelling support for her campaign, the MAGA reaction was largely overlooked.

But one example shouldn’t have been: evangelical leader Lance Wallnau, a leading Neo-Pentecostal prophet in the New Apostolic Reformation (NAR) saying that Harris represents “the spirit of Jezebel, and in a way that’ll be even much more ominous than Hillary because she’ll bring a racial component and she’s younger.” This echoed an earlier claim he made in March that “the left is loaded with demons.” Drawing a parallel to Nazi Germany, he said, “I don’t think it’s people anymore; I think you’re dealing with demons talking through people.” Wallnau’s 2016 book, “God’s Chaos Candidate” played a key role in crystalizing evangelical support that was key to electing Donald Trump, so his comment should be taken quite seriously. He’s also deeply involved in campaigning for Trump this year, promoting even more demon talk.

Lance Wallnau, a leading evangelical leader backing Trump, posits that the ex-president is the modern-day Cyrus.

As Melissa Gira Grant noted in the New Republic, “To call a Black woman a ‘Jezebel’ hearkens back to America’s racist and misogynistic history of casting Black women as insatiably sexual, which served to justify slaveholding men’s systematic sexual assault of enslaved women.” But demon talk takes things even further, as we’ll soon see.

Such attacks aren’t going over very well with the broad general public, which has resonated with Democrats calling out MAGA Republicans as weird. On the surface, at least, it seems like tired old news.

“This is just an evolution of GOP using fear, religion, and sometimes hate to win when the real issues are against them and their policies,” said Indivisible San Pedro activist Peter Warren, also involved in the California Grassroots Alliance, which is focused on flipping five seats to win a House majority here in California. “If it ain’t Willie Horton or some conjured, racist fear about minority-preference hiring — now dressed up as DEI — it is some other bogus issue such as outdated crime and border statistics that ignore what is happening now,” he summed up. For the most part, he just tunes it out.

In the book of Isaiah, God used Cyrus, a Perian king, to conquer Babylon in the sixth century BCE and end Babylonian captivity, during which Israelites had been forcibly resettled in exile. From his books and public comments, it appears Wallnau is peddling bad theology.

“We’re doing our work, which is registering people to vote, turning out voters who voted before, doing the work that needs to get done so that our majority can register and turn out and vote.”

But there’s something deeper — and much stranger — going on when it comes to the religious right base, which bears watching in light of the post-election violence seen last time. And raising the specter of Jezebel as a demonic spirit — not just a figure from the past — represents a key part of it.

Local community leader and senior pastor of the Warren Chapel CME Church, Pastor Adam Stevenson, defined bad theology as, “involving incorrect or dangerous beliefs about God and faith, which can result from misinterpreting scripture, adding human rules to God’s word, or focusing on one view of God’s character at the expense of others. This can lead to misunderstandings about what it means to follow Jesus and live out the Christian faith. The Bible warns against false gospel teachings to avoid confusion or division within the church and our communities.”

“Spiritual Warfare” Is As Strange As It Sounds
While the notion of “spiritual warfare” has some biblical roots, what’s practiced by the NAR differs significantly from previous Christian practices focused on individual-level practices, typically exorcisms. Under the guidance of C. Peter Wagner, who both named the NAR and played a central role in shaping its development, two new forms of spiritual warfare have been added: occult-level spiritual warfare — combatting occultism, witchcraft, Freemasonry, Eastern religions, New Age, shamanism, astrology, etc. — and strategic level spiritual warfare, involving geographical territories and even higher spiritual realms.

It’s crucial to stress that traditional Pentecostals see these developments as heretical. They have condemned them — and their forerunners — as far back as 1949. They see these forms of fighting occult spirits and demonic forces as essentially engaging in the very things they claim to be fighting — claiming a spiritual agency that neglects true faith in Christ, similar to what the Apostle Paul warned against in Colossians 2:18-19. But in today’s MAGA-fied religious right, that aspect of the Colossian heresy seems to have been reborn, celebrated as the new orthodoxy.

Jezebel as a demon in this cosmic war framework holds an especially violent potential, as Frederick Clarkson, senior researcher at Political Research Associates, explained.

I have been reporting on this dramatic uptick in the rhetoric of violence, civil war, and the final battles of the End Times for several years,” Clarkson told Random Lengths. “Religious, political, and gender differences are now usually cast as demonic. Jezebel is one demonic force, that is said to occupy not just individuals, but whole ‘territories,’” he said. “We are hearing a lot from apostolic leaders about ‘taking back territories.’ My friend and colleague Chip Berlet once succinctly identified the result of this kind of ideological priming of the pump in a paper titled, ‘Heroes Know Which Villains to Kill: How Coded Rhetoric Incites Scripted Violence.’”

The two new forms of spiritual warfare shape how the NAR views Jezebel, as illustrated in Michael Brown’s 2019 book, Jezebel’s War With America: The Plot to Destroy Our Country and What We Can Do to Turn the Tide. The book’s description explains:

Jezebel died 3,000 years ago. But her spirit lives today.

Jezebel was the most wicked woman in the Bible, a powerful seductress who killed the prophets, led Israel into idolatry and immorality, and emasculated men. …

The influence of the same demonic force is being felt in the massive increase of pornography and sexual temptation, the militant spirit of abortion, the rise of radical feminism, and most importantly, the attempt to silence prophetic voices.

The prophetic voices Brown has in mind are fellow NAR Neo-Pentecostals like Wallnau, Trump’s spiritual advisor Paula White Cain, and “Stop the Steal” organizers Dutch Sheets and Matthew Trewhella, who were intimately involved in whipping up the Jan. 6 insurrection. Neo-Pentecostals have also been disproportionately represented in giving opening prayers at Trump campaign rallies, according to a recent survey in the Atlantic. So if Jezebel’s attempting to silence them, she’s doing a very poor job.

Jezebel Lore Is Even Weirder
While Wagner wrote at least 10 books dealing with spiritual warfare, firmly establishing it as a shared reference frame, a handful of books by lesser-known figures have helped advance the demon Jezebel as a prime antagonist within that framework. The first, in 1994, by Francis Frangipane, was The Three Battlegrounds, by which he meant “the mind, the church, and the heavenly places.” This was before Wagner began his work, but there’s a rough correspondence between Frangipane’s three battlegrounds and Wagner’s three kinds of spiritual warfare. Although not named in the title, the Jezebel spirit plays a significant role in the book.

More books followed in the 2000s and 2010s. One with a noteworthy twist was Bridging the Racial and Political Divide: How Godly Politics Can Transform A Nation by Texas apostle Alice Peterson. It was a masterpiece of spiritual gaslighting about America’s racial politics. Peterson asserts a continuity over time in the Democratic Party based on an “invisible network of evil comprising an unholy structure,” identified with — you guessed it — the demon Jezebel. Since Jezebel’s been associated with the Democrats at least since the Civil War, neither Lyndon B. Johnson’s embrace of the civil rights movement nor Richard Nixon’s “Southern Strategy” played any role at all in Peterson’s account. And lest you doubt her, she assures us she’s actually seen the demon Jezebel with her own two eyes — along with smaller demons underneath her skirt. This account epitomizes the religious right’s widespread gaslighting of its racist history, which continues to this day with Kamala Harris as the Democrat’s presidential nominee.

Needless to say, this focus on Jezebel strikes most folks as weird. So don’t expect to see it shouted from the rooftops between now and Election Day. But it plays a significant role in internally orienting a hard core of religious support for the most blatantly immoral presidential candidate ever.

“NAR is driving a disconnect between people that transcends religious, political and gender differences. These are all cast as demonic manifestations,” Clarkson warned. “While this literal demonization is bad enough leading to a deepening polarization, the risk is that this worldview may propel groups and individuals into their own visions of End Times religious war,” he explained. “In this scenario, mere discrimination against religious minorities is small potatoes compared with the mass elimination of everyone, including fellow Christians, who may not be of quite the right sort.”

In contrast, “Everything we do is compatible with the whole range of religious faiths,” Patti Crane, a leader with the California Grassroots Alliance, told Random Lengths. “It’s not compatible with fringe cults that put a person above a deity, and that’s what we’re seeing on the right with Trump.”

A Growing Cult Growing Out Of Touch
The Atlantic’s reporting confirmed as much. Not only do opening prayers mention Trump more often than Jesus (87 mentions vs 61), but the way he’s spoken of has changed dramatically since 2016. Then, Wallnau prominently compared him to the Persian King Cyrus, a non-believer who nonetheless liberated the Israelites from Babylonian captivity — a flawed, even unholy vessel used for a holy task. Now, “Cyrus isn’t mentioned, but Trump does get compared to righteous, prophetic heroes of the Bible, including Esther, Solomon, and David,” the Atlantic reported. More than that, “No one prays for Trump to do right; they pray that God will do right by Trump,” evangelical scholar Bradley Onishi told the Atlantic. That’s as cult-like as one can get.

“In the Central Valley, we meet many people with deep faith, and the best possible expression of that deep faith is for them to vote for Democrats, who stand for religious freedom,” Crane said.

The NAR’s rhetoric of Jezebel’s destructive threat resonates with the more common claims of rising crime and an out-of-control border, both of which, Warren notes, are based on out-of-date data, citing a just-published story in the New York Times, that border arrests had fallen to a new low of under 60,000 for July, down from a peak of 250,000 in December.

“The GOP is looking at old statistics just like they look at old statistics with crime,” Warren said. “This is all outdated material, and then they turn to the kind of fear tactics that they’ve used before, whether it’s Willie Horton and the crime thing or the cities with crime or fear at the border, we are being invaded.” He went on to note that in a sense it was all just theater, since “The Biden administration worked a bipartisan bill to fix the border and Trump killed it. So when Trump is attacking on the border, it’s an issue that he didn’t let go away because he would not allow a legal compromise that Jim Langford, the Republican from Oklahoma had worked out. … Now they’re continuing with the border as an issue, but the actual facts don’t support it anymore.”

Even more important, perhaps, Harris is running a forceful new ad highlighting the fact that Trump blocked the border bill, among other things. It’s not just that the facts have changed, the messaging has, too. All of which can make a big difference as far as the campaign is concerned.

But the deeper purpose of the demon Jezebel narrative and everything else the NAR is doing is not to win elections, but to thwart them, which the Trump campaign and its allies are working to do on several different fronts — most notably signaling in advance a multi-level unwillingness to certify election results unless Trump is declared the winner. To pull off such a blatant subversion of democracy, it certainly helps to have a chorus of religious figures claiming that it’s all God’s will — which appears to be a distinct possibility, in light of the big-picture view Clarkson closed with.

“The revolutionary movement we call the NAR has two main factions. One is incrementalist, and not prone to violence. The other is accelerationist and wants to know victory ASAP,” Clarkson explained. “Wallnau, who is currently leading a political mobilization campaign called The Courage Tour, has cast his lot with the accelerationists who helped bring about the insurrection of Jan. 6th. He says he was there. He also says that it was not as bad as some make it out to be, but that there were a few unrepresentative hotheads. That Wallnau is gaslighting his audiences suggests that he is committed to setting the stage for future revolts.”

Perhaps the best way to stop that is to make sure that this election is not even remotely close.

Editor’s Note: To learn more about the NAR, you can join a free Zoom webinar with Fred Clarkson and other experts titled “The New Apostolic Reformation and the Threat to Democracy,” hosted by Political Research Associates and the Southern Poverty Law Center on Thursday, August 15th from 1:00 to 2:30 PM EST (register here) and again on Wednesday, August 21st, 1:00 – 2:30 PM EST (register here).