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From 99c Only to Red Lobster

 

Unraveling the Tactics of Corporate Takeovers

By Rosie Knight, Columnist

It’s been just over a month since it was announced that the 99¢ Only Store was closing all of its nearly 400 stores across the country. The news hit Southern California particularly hard, as 99¢ Only Stores was founded in Los Angeles by David Gold and has become a staple, especially in San Pedro and the Harbor Area where affordable grocery stores with fresh produce are few and far between. The San Pedro location has already shuttered, leaving the community with fewer options than ever. It’s not just customers who have been impacted, but also the many workers 99¢ Only employed.

In a statement about their recent job fair and future actions to help impacted workers, Supervisor Janice Hahn said, “This is an all-hands-on-deck situation. Arm-in-arm with our labor partners, the County is stepping in to make sure these workers have the support they need to get through this crisis, and not only get new jobs – but better jobs,” said Hahn.

“While I hold out hope that the company can be purchased and that the 99 Cents Stores can be saved, we are preparing for the worst and doing everything we can for these workers and their families.”

Kelly LoBianco, director of the LA County Department of Economic Opportunity added, “You’ve got cashiers, stock and warehousing workers, drivers, supervisors, managers and more now displaced and in need of urgent support to get back on their feet. With our Rapid Response teams, we’re able to quickly mobilize partners, provide a wide range of resources to all those affected immediately, and connect workers to quality jobs in new career pathways.”

But what led to 99¢ Only shuttering? And how is it connected to the recent announcement that Red Lobster would declare bankruptcy and shut its doors? The answer is a depressing one linked to many other closures of major chains, from Neiman Marcus to Toys-R-Us: hedge funds, investment groups, and private equity firms buying out companies and then shutting them down.

When we first reported on the closures of 99¢ Only, we drew the line between the fact that the private equity firm that bought the chain in 2011, Ares Management, and the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, had also bought Neiman Marcus and then declared bankruptcy shutting down most of the locations of the once popular department store.

We attempted to discover the true reason behind the closure of 99¢ Only. The official statement attributed it to “shifting consumer demand and persistent inflationary pressures.” However, we faced difficulties connecting with anyone at Ares Management and the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board. This included Mike Simoncic, the interim CEO of 99¢ Only.

But as we — and thousands of customers — looked for answers, another famed chain was falling victim to the same fate as 99¢ Only and might give us some clues as to why the popular and seemingly thriving discount grocery store shut down.

Red Lobster has long been an American casual dining staple. You see them in most shopping complexes and malls, and the company was even name-dropped in a Beyoncé song, cementing the brand’s status. In 2020 they were sold by the investment group Golden Gate and were bought out by an investment company named Thai Union Group. Four years later, the company is filing for bankruptcy and shuttering locations around the county with 99 restaurants already closed in 28 states with no prior notice to the workers who kept the restaurants going. In a statement filled with language that is now recognizable to those following these closures, Red Lobster CEO Jonathan Tibus explained the company line about the closures. “Recently, the debtors have faced a number of financial and operational challenges, including a difficult macroeconomic environment, a bloated and underperforming restaurant footprint, failed or ill-advised strategic initiatives, and increased competition within the restaurant industry,”

The real truth though is far more complex and goes back to Red Lobster’s previous owners, Golden Gate. In a recent piece at The American Prospect, Luke Goldstein explains why the company really went out of business and it’s not because of endless shrimp. “Golden Gate crippled Red Lobster by selling off one of its most valuable assets, the real estate it owned, in what’s known as a sale-leaseback, for $1.5 billion.” Goldstein writes. “With that sale, Golden Gate nearly made back its $2.1 billion purchase of Red Lobster, while turning the chain into a permanent leaser, adding a massive additional cost in the form of rent that was orders of magnitude bigger than the cost of Endless Shrimp. When commercial leases started going up, Red Lobster was highly exposed, but by then Golden Gate had already sold off its shares to Thai Union, which inherited all the debts Golden Gate stacked on the company.”

This is hardly a new trend though, as private equity groups go as far back as the 1950s and in the Wall Street boom of the ’80s a new era of greed began. Investment groups took on massive debt in leveraged buyouts and used brutal strategies to impose hostile takeovers. Politician Mitt Romney made his millions after co-founding an investment group called Bain Capital, alongside many other corporate raiders. The wear on the model wouldn’t start to show until the ’90s when leveraged buyouts and corporate raiding fell out of fashion, but they wouldn’t be gone for long thanks to the owners of Snapple, who bought and sold the company within a few years making 900 million for themselves in the process. That’s just a brief history of the model now defining where we shop, eat, watch, and spend our money.

While we still don’t know the reasons behind the closure and bankruptcy of 99¢ Only, it’s clear to see that this is a pattern of extreme capitalism and greed which is impacting us every day. And one that we know Ares Management and the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board have utilized before in their takeover and eventual Chapter 11 bankruptcy of Neiman Marcus, a company that was saddled in debt from leveraged buyouts. Unlike 99¢ Only though, the company emerged after a reorganization in 2020 with less debt and new ownership.

Interestingly, another struggling discount store, Dollar Tree, has purchased 170 Southern California locations of 99¢ Only despite its recent announcement that it too will be shuttering many of its own Dollar Tree and Family Dollar stores over the next few years. While it is a relief that some of our local 99¢ Only Stores locations will remain as discount grocers, Dollar Tree doesn’t offer the same variety of fresh produce and non-processed foods as 99¢ Only offers. Perhaps these newly acquired Dollar Tree stores could run a pilot project to bring more fresh produce into these new stores — potentially by rehiring the buyers from 99¢ Only who had the contacts needed to cater to that demand — especially as the square footage of the 99¢ Only Store locations was on average around twice as large as that of equivalent Dollar Tree stores.

Trump’s Crimes Also Include Climate Change

By Sen. Bernie Sanders

Yes. These are crazy times.

I don’t need to tell you about the outcome of Donald Trump’s criminal trial that is dominating the discussion right now.

Yes, Donald Trump denied his election defeat, peddled conspiracy theories, and converted the Republican Party into a cult of the individual.

Yes, Donald Trump is a racist, a sexist, a xenophobe, a homophobe, and a religious bigot.

Yes, Donald Trump is now a convicted felon who is just as unfit for office as he was before the jury announced its verdict.

Yes. Yes. Yes.

There are a million reasons Donald Trump should never be elected president again, but I am asking you today to turn your attention to one not getting wall-to-wall coverage on television.

Climate change.

As you read this, India is recording its hottest temperature ever — reaching 126 degrees Fahrenheit in New Delhi, an area with a population of 33 million people, almost 4 times the size of New York City.

At that temperature, the body loses the ability to cool itself, breathing rates increase, and dehydration becomes a critical issue. Consider that last fact alongside the reality that local governments are setting limits on water usage because of a shortage in the area.

So, yes. This is a very serious issue.

In the midst of all that, understand that this is only early in India’s summer season, meaning there is a good chance that everything they are seeing today has a significant chance to become worse in the weeks to come.

So what does the weather in India mean in the context of Donald Trump and this election?

In Donald Trump’s first term as president, he withdrew from the Paris Agreement, he weakened clean energy regulations and fuel economy standards, supported multiple pipeline projects, expanded drilling offshore and on public lands, removed climate information from government websites, and appointed judges and agency leaders who undermined our ability to move toward sustainable energy and protect the environment.

But if you think his first term was bad, just wait until his second…

Last month, Donald Trump hosted oil executives at Mar-a-Lago and promised them that if they could raise $1 billion for his election campaign, he would roll back all of the environmental progress made during the Biden administration and then go even further.

He said $1 billion would be a “deal” for them with all the money they’d save and make during this second term.

That means not only all of the work we have done in trying to transform our energy systems away from fossil fuel will be undone but that, essentially, the global fight against climate change will be over — and lost. If the U.S., the second largest carbon emitter in the world surrenders to the oil industry, why would China and every other country in the world not do the same?

Folks, let me be as clear as I can be: if Donald Trump wins this November, the fight to protect the very health and habitability of our planet for future generations is over.

If Donald Trump is elected, our kids and grandchildren are going to continue to see rising global temperatures that will lead to shorter lifespans and worse mental health; increased instances of food and waterborne disease; human and animal diseases; increased exposure to wildfires that will mean more heart and lung diseases and flooding during extreme weather events that will make it harder for health care services to get to those who need it.

It will mean a substantially increased risk of wars, social unrest, and mass migrations. It will mean an estimated $100 trillion in lost global economic activity with more than 100 million people thrown into extreme poverty.

Those are some of the very real stakes in this election.

So yes, we must defeat Donald Trump. But we must do more. We must elect progressives everywhere who understand the very real risks of a changing climate and are committed to doing everything they can to transform our energy systems to save the planet.

That is going to be something I am working on between now and November, and I can use your help to support my travel and other work to elect progressives this fall.

Gov. Newsom Announces Appointments

SACRAMENTO – Gov. Gavin Newsom June 6 and 12 announced the following appointments, respectively:

Debra Lee, of Carson, has been appointed chief of the division of occupational safety and health at the Department of Industrial Relations, where she has been acting chief since 2024 and has served in several positions since 1994, including deputy chief for safety, acting deputy for safety, regional manager, district manager, associate industrial hygienist and industrial hygienist. Lee was an industrial hygienist at Northrop Grumman from 1992 to 1994 and a hazardous waste specialist at the Georgia Department of Natural Resources from 1990 to 1992. Lee was an industrial hygienist at Health Science Associates from 1987 to 1990 and for TRW Electronics and Defense from 1985 to 1987. Lee earned a Bachelor of Science degree in Environmental and Occupational Safety and Health from California State University, Northridge. This position requires Senate confirmation and the compensation is $202,368. Lee is a Democrat.

Marina A. Torres, of Los Angeles, has been appointed to the Medical Board of California. Torres has been a Partner at Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP since 2023. She was of counsel at Halpern May Ybarra Gelberg LLP from 2022 to 2023. Torres was an assistant U.S. attorney at the U.S. Attorney’s Office from 2015 to 2021, where she was an acting international narcotics, money laundering, and racketeering section opioids coordinator from 2020 to 2021. She was counselor to the director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security from 2014 to 2015. Torres was a senior litigation associate for WilmerHale from 2011 to 2014. She was a member of the RAW Legal Team for Obama for America in 2012, where she was Regional Co-Chair of the Futuro Fund from 2011 to 2012. Torres was a litigation associate at Munger Tolles & Olson LLP from 2008 to 2011. She was an attorney for the Immigrants’ Rights Project for the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California in 2008. Torres was a judicial extern for U.S. District Court Judge Dale Fischer in 2006. She was an AmeriCorps vista volunteer for the Illinois Migrant Assistance Project at the Legal Assistance Foundation of Metropolitan Chicago from 2004 to 2005. She was a presidential support analyst at the Central Intelligence Agency in 2002. Torres is a trustee of the Mexican American Bar Association, a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and a member of the Emerge California Board of Directors. She earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science, Ethnic Studies, and Rhetoric from the University of California, Berkeley and a Juris Doctor degree from Stanford Law School. This position requires Senate confirmation and the compensation is $100 per diem. Torres is a Democrat.

Remember My Falun Gong Article

They’re back in the news ― Shen Yun and the cult

By James Preston Allen, publisher

I rarely like to say I told you so when I’m right because it only makes me look worse when I am not, but this time it’s different. Our regular readers will recall my column, “History of Propaganda,” published April 4, and my follow-up column, “A Cult or Not a Cult,” published April 18, which took on the Shen Yun propagandistic performances and the Falun Gong religious cult. I am told it’s a fabulous show. Now the truth is being exposed, we find out how the whole enterprise of this cult and its Epoch Times newspaper is being funded– money laundering!

On June 2, the chief financial officer of the pro-Donald Trump conspiracy theories pushing publication, Epoch Times, was arrested and charged the following day on money laundering charges.

According to a June 3 released statement by the Justice Department, Weidong “Bill” Guan, the Chief Financial Officer of a multinational media company headquartered in New York City participated in a transnational scheme to launder at least approximately $67 million of illegally obtained funds to benefit himself and the media company.

Federal prosecutors said members of the company’s “Make Money Online” team, which Guan managed, used cryptocurrency to “knowingly purchase tens of millions of dollars in crime proceeds,” including funds from fraudulently obtained unemployment benefits that were loaded onto prepaid debit cards, according to federal prosecutors.

The Epoch Times was not named in the June 3 indictment, but instead was referred to as a “multinational media company.” The news organization, linked to China’s Falun Gong spiritual movement, said it would cooperate with the federal probe.

Prosecutors said the charges are unrelated to the media company’s newsgathering activities. And yet it seems vaguely similar to the scams perpetrated by other cronies of the Orange Felon.

Now I know times have been financially challenging for journalism recently, but the idea of money laundering has never really crossed my mind as a means of sustaining this publication or journalism in general. Perhaps it has something to do with integrity and transparency. Maybe I’m just too honest to partake in this kind of crime. But The Epoch Times and the Falon Gong care little for either, and would effectively steal or rob to support their far-right ideologies and their favorite criminally convicted politician, the Orange Turd, as he was famously called in a New York courtroom that convicted him of 34 counts of fraud.

Will the MAGA Locos now rise and defend the Falon Gong the same way they do their convicted leader? Just how far up the ladder will this indictment go to take down a far-right religious cult?

I’m wondering if some of those fraudulent pandemic California Unemployment payments ended up funding a religious far-right propaganda machine. Just when you think things have gotten too weird, stuff like this happens to rip the mask off the veneer of lies and we are shocked, shocked there’s corruption going on.

The cynics among you will say oh yes the whole system is corrupt but as the resident skeptic, I actually believe that most people are basically well-meaning and honest. I once witnessed the former LA mayor, Jim Hahn, walk half a block to return a five-dollar bill that fell from a patron’s pocket at the San Pedro Brewco. He just picked it up without thinking and caught up to the man. Can you imagine the patron’s surprise at having the mayor do that? The same thing happened to me recently when I pulled money out of my clip to pay for something and a fiver fell out unnoticed and a complete stranger handed it back to me. My point is not everyone’s corrupt but the few who are makes us all look bad. And the Orange Guy is a shining example to the world of what being a greedy SOB looks like.

Rachel Maddow reported Epoch Times has ties to Falun Gong, a religious spiritual movement from China that came to view Trump as a messianic figure who would deliver them from the Chinese Communist Party on Judgment Day. I suppose a biblical word of caution is needed here― beware of false messiahs. However, many of the white Christian nationalists who don’t read anything other than far-right propaganda probably won’t ever hear about a case like this as the story won’t be carried by Fox (so-called ) news.

Just to remind you the real purpose of really good propaganda is not to convince you of something but to bring about confusion about what is true and what is false. By providing a long list of false narratives, and repeating them incessantly, some people become confused and others just tune out because they are conflict-avoidant. Who really wants to argue with the MAGA Loco at the coffee shop spouting irrational lies as if they are God’s truth spoken by the Orange messiah from the pulpit of his latest political rally? I have long since ceased attempting rational conversation with deranged true believers.

The problem with this is that the political discourse becomes siloed within tribal factions – so much so that even the US Congress is divided and dysfunctional because the House Republican leadership cannot separate itself, nor can the Republican Party, from the Orange Prophet of corruption.

Port of Los Angeles May Cargo Volume ‘Strong, Consistent’ at 753,000 Container Units

 

LOS ANGELES — The Port of Los Angeles processed 752,893 Twenty-Foot Equivalent Units (TEUs) in May. While that represents a slight 3% decline over last May, overall cargo volume remains 18% ahead of 2023 after five months.

Seroka said he’ll be traveling to Taiwan and China next week for meetings related to increasing cargo volume and reducing the port’s carbon footprint. The ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach will co-sponsor a China-U.S. Green Shipping Corridor in Shanghai, gathering with port leaders and other stakeholders to establish a global trade route to Southern California that uses low- and zero-carbon vessel fuels.

Jared Bernstein, chair of the United States Council of Economic Advisers, joined the port’s media briefing. Bernstein is responsible for providing economic advice to President Biden in order to help formulate domestic and foreign policy.

Bernstein offered his view on the economic outlook, as well as the profound influence of ports and supply chains on the economy.

WATCH BRIEFING HERE

May 2024 loaded imports landed at 390,663 TEUs, a 4.5% decline compared to the previous year. Loaded exports came in at 125,963 TEUs, an increase of 24% compared to last year. May marked the 12th consecutive month of year-over-year export gains.

The port processed 236,268 empty containers, a 12% decrease compared to 2023.

Machista Bar Gets Reprieve from Nuisance Abatement Proceedings

By Terelle Jerricks, Managing Editor

The Machista Bar was reprieved from the nuisance abatement and revocation proceedings on May 21. The administrator put the case on hold for an indefinite amount of time to research the status of the Certificate of Occupancy and the state liquor license. The owners of the troubled watering hole believed they were the targets of unfair enforcement measures, accusing Councilman Tim McOsker, through their attorney Kirt Hopson, of rigging the system against them.

In his brief, Hopson argues that McOsker, driven by a personal agenda, has initiated a campaign to drive the Machista Bar, a minority and woman-owned bar, out of business, citing that McOsker’s daughter purchased a home near the bar and is a resident there.

Hopson noted that five months after opening in April 2022, the Machista Bar was hit by multiple rounds of gunfire, shattering a glass door and a window. Hopson reports that the bar passed its first inspection without any penalties or negative inspection reports in January 2023. In May 2023, the bar was a victim of vandalism and theft after a transient gained access to their roof and stole the copper wiring in their AC unit. In November 2023, Machista Bar was visited by the Los Angeles Police Department Harbor Division’s vice squad for an inspection, an inspection initiated due to complaints about noise, patrons and the aesthetics of the building. The Machista Bar, Hopson wrote, took action to correct the issues addressed and no further action was required. “The year 2023 ended on a good note,” he said.

On Jan. 2, McOsker visited the bar to speak with the bar’s owner, Jessica Vazquez. She wasn’t present. He left a message with the barkeeper. From the clips provided by Hopson, it’s only apparent that he stopped by the bar, and asked to speak with Vazquez. Another clip catching less than 30 seconds of the conversation shows McOsker disagreeing with the barkeep’s characterization of the issues the bar was being asked to correct or mitigate.

Then there was the Jan. 20, 2024 shooting resulting in one death and two wounded, and an underage bar patron on the run as the shooter.

In phone calls to this reporter, Hopson explained that even before the shooting, City Councilman Tim McOsker had been turning the screws on the small business owner by staging DUI checkpoints near the bar and was doing it to benefit his daughter who purchased a house behind the bar. The LAPD’s vice squad visited the establishment at least once last year. Hopson said the bar addressed all issues and argued this was a case of McOsker using his power for the benefit of his daughter.

Hopson admits several calls were made to the police regarding incidents in the vicinity of the bar, but argues that most of those incidents had nothing to do with the bar and its patrons.

The Jan. 20 shooting began as an altercation between two women, 18-year-old Estrella Rojas and Blanca Rosas, which then turned into a shooting, resulting in one person dead and two wounded.

When asked why there was an 18-year patron in the bar in the first place, Hopson’s answer was short: “She had a fake I.D.” He didn’t go into any detail like whether her identification was state-issue identification or if she borrowed the identification from a friend or relative to whom she looked similar.

LAPD’s Harbor Division captain, Shannon White, agreed that the bar complied with the vice squad’s recommendations, but noted that the owners refused further meetings with them after the second visit.

“The most I can say is that, yeah, the violations were nothing that I would go, oh, four alarm fire. They were cooperative in trying to fix things whether it was the graffiti or trash in the alley,” Capt. White explained. “They did have a security officer there that they’d added under that ownership obviously to limited efficacy. So it does beg the question, what else could have been done?”

McOsker’s office, when contacted for this story said the councilman had no comment regarding the Machista Bar’s allegations or hearing being put on hold. While the case is under advisement, pending a decision, the public can submit written comments to Los Angele City Planning Department staff member Iris Wan at Iris.Wan@lacity.org

LIFE AFTER MOTHER: Right to Choose Death with Dignity

 

In the acclaimed 2014 film Still Alice, Julianne Moore plays a woman with Alzheimer’s, who schemes to end her life by taking a whole vial of very strong sleeping pills, probably a barbiturate. Except the plan goes awry, she’s no longer capable of understanding what she’s doing, she’s interrupted by the sound of someone entering the house, and the pills spill all over the floor. Instead she will spend the rest of her natural life, her mind slipping away little by little, cared for by her family or in an Alzheimer’s facility.

More recently Amy Bloom described in her memoir In Love how her husband, Brian Ameche, a former football player, began showing symptoms of Alzheimer’s in 2016, and was ready to avoid a fate similar to the fictional film character Alice.

After exploring just about every option — legal or otherwise — and complying with every step in a lengthy and complicated process, the couple traveled to the non-profit DIGNITAS in Switzerland in early 2020, where Ameche was allowed the choice of drinking a fatal dose of sodium pentobarbital, and died quickly and peacefully.

Explaining why the couple went to Switzerland when some states have right-to-die laws concerning physician-assisted death, Bloom writes, “Choosing to die and being able to act independently while terminally ill is a deliberately narrow opening. Many people can’t get through it.”

She explains how having the right to die with dignity is one thing, exercising that right is another. Depending on the state, you may have to meet residency requirements. A doctor must diagnose you’ll be dead within six months. You have to have physician interviews, some days apart, in which you assert you are not psychotic or suicidal or depressed and hope the doctors agree with you. If a drug is prescribed, you have to be physically able to self-administer it, and in some states, pick it up from a pharmacy willing and able to supply it.

In Switzerland two non-profit organizations, DIGNITAS and Pegasos, provide assistance with navigating the process, which even under Swiss law remains complicated. You must apply to become a member of the organization. Once accepted, you must pay the membership fee in cash or by PayPal (no checks, no credit cards) to the Swiss account. Then a request for assistance must be made, paperwork including medical and dental records must be submitted, which may be followed by a “provisional green light.” Then the person, and an accompanying family member or caregiver, must be physically and financially able to travel to Switzerland for examination by a Swiss doctor. If the Swiss doctor approves, then the patient may be able to choose a physician-assisted death.

I understand physician-assisted death is a complicated issue, but I support making an option available for the terminally ill that may choose death with dignity.

Soulful Sounds and Summer BBQ: Juneteenth Comes Alive in Carson

By Terelle Jerricks, Managing Editor

This year, the City of Carson is celebrating Juneteenth a day before Father’s Day, turning the entire weekend into the first barbecue holiday of summer.

Since it became a federal holiday, Juneteenth is increasingly becoming known as Freedom Day, commemorating the emancipation of enslaved Africans throughout the Americas.

Of course, in the Black experience over the past 35 years, no cookout was a cookout without Hangin’ on a String, played by the band Loose Ends, blaring out the radio. The City of Carson and the Carson Citizens Cultural Arts Foundation went a step further and got Loose Ends’ original lead singer, Jane Eugene, to perform some of those greatest hits including Hangin’ on a String.Jane Eugene02

Greg Rose, a vocalist of the soul and R&B persuasion, is going to belt out some of the greatest standards of the past 40 years.

Guitarist Jubu Smith is going to be there. You’d know his guitar solo from the Tony! Toni! Toné! single, Just Me and You in the film Boyz in the Hood. Maybe if the crowd is nice, he’ll perform that cut and take you all back to the ’90s. If not that one, he’ll perform his guitar solos from Tony! Toni! Toné!’s Anniversary.

Gee Mack & Asia Raye is a fun cover band that will hit all the right notes from soul to neo-soul. Asia Raye’s voice, stage presence and showmanship can out-shine any who come before or after her on stage. You should expect to hear cuts from Rose Royce to Erica Badu, and from Marvin Gaye to Jill Scott.

Not all the music is going to be secular. Gospel artist Brent Jones is going to be performing singles from his self-titled album (2023), including Nothing Else Matters. Music lovers won’t be skipping any beats. If you have legs and feet you will be dancing regardless.

Also showing up to perform are the Buckjump Brass Band, Demdebra West African Drum and Dance Ensemble, and DJ Alcatraz.

The event will feature craft vendors, food, a Teen Fun Zone and entertainment for all ages.

Juneteenth Celebration
Time: 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. June 15
Cost: Free
Venue: Mills Park, 1340 E. Dimondale Drive, Carson

Juneteenth San Pedro
The San Pedro Committee Network’s annual Juneteenth celebration at Peck Park is happening again. This celebration of freedom stands as a powerful testament to the resilience, perseverance, and undying spirit of the African American community. Join in for a day of celebration with games, food, entertainment, prices, and the annual scholarship awards.
Time: 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. June 15
Cost: Free
Venue: Peck Park, 560 N. Western Ave., San Pedro

Juneteenth at King Park
In Long Beach, California, Juneteenth holds a special significance. As a diverse and vibrant community, Long Beach has its own unique history intertwined with the struggle for civil rights and freedom. From the early days of the Civil Rights Movement to the present, Long Beach has been a beacon of hope and progress for marginalized communities.

This day will be filled with joyous festivities, cultural performances, music, food, and opportunities to reflect on the journey toward freedom and equality. Everyone is invited to come together in unity and solidarity to honor our shared history and to continue the fight for justice and equality for all. Let’s celebrate freedom, diversity, and community at this special event in Long Beach.

Time: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.. June 22nd, 2024
Cost: Free
Venue: MLK Park in Long Beach

Rep. Barragán Leads Letter to HUD and Urges Ratification of U.S.-Croatia Double Taxation Treaty

 

Rep. Barragán Leads Letter to HUD to Request Stronger Policies to Reduce Housing Barriers

Washington, D.C. — Rep. Nanette Barragán (CA-44) June 10 led more than 30 members of Congress in a letter to the Department of Housing and Urban Development that recommends strong policies to promote housing opportunities for individuals impacted by the criminal justice system. This letter comments on HUD’s notice of proposed rule making, which was announced last April and would amend regulations for certain HUD programs to reduce barriers to affordable housing for individuals with a criminal record.

“In the United States, nearly 80 million Americans have a conviction or arrest record,” the Congressmembers wrote. “Without access to safe and stable housing, individuals returning from incarceration are more likely to fall into homelessness and return to prison or jail. These obstacles complicate successful reentry and create a cycle between incarceration, homelessness, and reincarceration…HUD must consider the entire tenancy cycle and enact policies that help secure and maintain housing for these individuals, who are working towards building a new life but are often targeted due to their past.”

Details: View the letter here.

Rep. Barragán and Congressional Croatian Caucus Urges Ratification of U.S.-Croatia Double Taxation Treaty

Washington, D.C. — This week, Rep. Nanette Barragán (CA-44), co-chair of the Congressional Croatian Caucus, with fellow co-chair Dave Joyce (OH-14) and vice chairs Dan Kildee (MI-08) and Claudia Tenney (NY-24) sent a letter to the Senate to engage with the Department of Treasury to address any issues holding up the U.S.- Croatia treaty for the avoidance of double taxation and to ultimately ratify the treaty. The treaty was signed by the United States and the Republic of Croatia in December of 2022.

“The Republic of Croatia is a critical ally to the United States, and the Senate must work with Treasury to resolve issues and move towards treaty ratification. said Congresswoman Barragan. “This treaty builds on 30 years of diplomatic partnership and will further deepen cooperation between our nations and will serve the interest of American and Croatian taxpayers. These opportunities to strengthen social, economic, and cultural partnerships with Croatia are vital to the United States and my district, which is home to one of the largest and liveliest Croatian communities in the United States.”

Nigerian Monarch Visits Los Angeles Harbor to Foster Trade Relations

By Terelle Jerricks, Managing Editor

On June 7, a royal delegation from the Delta region of Nigeria visited the Port of Los Angeles followed by a boat tour of the harbor the next day.

The delegation, led by the king of the Warri kingdom in the Delta state of Nigeria, Ogiame Atuwatse III, and the top members of the African Diaspora Foundation and Aivlys LLC met with Port of Los Angeles executive director Gene Seroka. The port director explained that the topics of discussion were trade relationships and friendship.

“As trade is shifting, the world looks very different from a ports perspective and the supply chain, and it’s been the has those who have helped bring us together,” Seroka said. “We talked about ideas and concepts in business and protocols in investment. But again, it’s the friendship and the relationship that bonds.”

Joe Gatlin, the CEO of Gatlin Enterprises and chair of the US section of the African Diaspora Foundation, is a key figure in linking the port director and the Nigerian royal delegation. During the tour of the harbor, Gatlin spoke broadly about the conversations taking place regarding future trading relationships with the nation of Nigeria.

“We’re here for one reason only … to show off our community, but the King came for trade,” Gatlin said.”

Gatlin noted that trade will make a difference not only on the African continent but here in the Los Angeles harbor.

“The imports from the continent will mean more job opportunities for our community. It’ll bring millions to our port,” Gatlin said. “One of the reasons I’m so excited about this, [is that] this will help our entire community. So I’m also asking all of you to get the word out … to get ready for this input. It will happen soon. We’re on the clock. Believe me, this will happen very soon and it will impact all our communities.”

In attendance at the boat tour with Olu Atuwatse III, were retired congresswoman Diane Watson, Popeyes Louisiana Kitchen franchise owner Ed Rice, and a cadre of other leaders in business, politics and nonprofit fields.

Gatlin let loose a tidbit of information that went unmentioned at the press conference later in the day. He had noted that at one time, Nigeria was the number one producer of farmed fish and fed nearly half of the continent.

“It was huge,” Gatlin said. “It went down over the years. Now, they’re going to revive it.”

Gatlin connected that story to San Pedro’s place in history as a fishing town.

“As we all know San Pedro is a fishing town. But all of Southern California lost a lot of that when Starkist and Chicken of the Sea and all those left. But it’s going to come back…For that fishing industry now coming back to San Pedro.”

Gatlin conveyed visions of port-related unions expanding their members because of the work that would be generated due to the new trade links with Nigeria.

Gatlin’s excitement was palpable.

“Every Union on the waterfront will increase its membership. Sometimes even double their membership. So I want to make sure our people are ready for that. They’re trained for that. They go to school to become welders, whatever is needed. This is going to have a huge impact on our community.”

Since his elevation nearly three years ago, the 40-year-old monarch has been the subject of a great deal of excitement due to his pedigree, education, his stances on ensuring women’s access to education, and the divestment of oil infrastructure responsibly. Atuwatse is also a serial entrepreneur. He founded Noble Nigeria and Coral Curator and is the Chairman of Ocean Marine Security and a director at the Gulf of Guinea and Vessellink Nig.

The monarch obtained a Bachelor of Arts in International Studies and Political Science from Case Western Reserve University, in Cleveland, Ohio, USA in 2006 and a Master of Science degree in Management from the same university in 2007.

In 2008, Atuwatse returned to Nigeria for the mandatory National Youth Service Corps and served in the public affairs department of National Petroleum Investment Management Services or NAPIMS. After NYSC, he worked as an officer at the Shell Nigeria Closed Pension Fund Administrator or SNCFPA and Sahara Energy between 2010 and 2012.

This past January, Shell Oil controversially announced it was selling its Nigerian onshore subsidiary, the Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited or SPDC to Renaissance, a consortium of five companies comprising four exploration and production companies based in Nigeria and an international energy group for $2.4 billion. Critics have blasted the sale for allowing the oil company to shirk its responsibility for cleaning up the petroleum-contaminated rivers and streams and large areas of polluted land that have impacted the lives and livelihoods of the people living in the Niger Delta region.

Atuwatse made no mention of potential oil exports or the ongoing criticism of the sale during the press conference at Terranea Resort on June 8. In an interview with Shehu Musa Yar’Adua Foundation posted to YouTube a few days before he visited the port, his majesty articulated a hope that Shell would do right by the people of the Delta region and address the damage caused by its oil infrastructure.

Shell has blamed oil spills on sabotage, including theft of oil and interference with pipelines. However, Amnesty International and CEHRD have reported that Shell has made false statements about the extent of oil spills caused by illegal activity.

At the boat tour around the Los Angeles harbor and the press conference later in the day, the only thing discussed openly was friendship between the Port of Los Angeles and Nigeria and the possibilities of trade in strengthening that relationship.

Port director Seroka, tempered the excitement without extinguishing it by noting that the friendship that was started with this visit was only the beginning.