Tuesday, November 4, 2025
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Long Beach Approves LA28 Games Agreement, Unveils Community Crisis Response Dashboard

 

Long Beach City Council Approves Games Agreement for 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games

LONG BEACH — The Long Beach City Council May 14 approved with a 7 to 0 vote the games agreement with the Los Angeles organizing committee for the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games or LA28. As a venue city, Long Beach will support the delivery of events during the LA28 Games and will host several sporting events in areas throughout the city. Long Beach is the second venue city to finalize its games agreement with LA28. The LA28 Games are scheduled to take place July 14, 2028, through Aug. 27, 2028.

The City of Los Angeles is the host city for the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games with select competitions and events located in other Southern California venue cities. As the venue city set to host the largest number of events other than the City of Los Angeles, Long Beach will play a pivotal role during the LA28 Games. The games agreement serves to establish governing principles and commitments for the city’s participation as a venue city while also providing a framework for how the city and LA28 will work together to coordinate and deliver a successful LA28 Games. Key elements include outlining the city’s role, such as the process for delivery of standard and enhanced public services and arranging for the reimbursement of city expenses through supplemental agreements currently in development between staff and LA28. The complete games agreement is available here.

Details: https://tinyurl.com/LB-2028-Games-Agreement

 

Long Beach Health Department Launches New Dashboard Featuring Community Crisis Response Data

LONG BEACH — The City of Long Beach Department of Health and Human Services has launched a new data dashboard for the community crisis response (CCR) team, a five-person team that responds to a subset of calls-for-service to provide mental health support, health education and resource navigation for community members in need. The dashboard, which will be updated bi-weekly, hosts information about the amount, types and outcomes of the calls for service the CCR is dispatched to and will serve as a platform for providing interactive and timely information to the public.

The CCR Data Dashboard offers a comprehensive look at calls for service that the team has responded to since its launch in July 2023. The dashboard is comprised of data collected from the city’s Emergency Communication Center, Long Beach Police Department and from CCR’s data portal. The dashboard will allow users to view data related to call types, response times, demographics of those who receive services from the team, and call outcomes.

The dashboard was modeled after other jurisdictions that operate teams similar to CCR. The data dashboard is one of the tools being used to inform the city’s local implementation of CCR within Long Beach while supporting the city’s response to the mental health needs of the community. By providing timely, recent data, the Health Department can enhance current initiatives using an equity lens.

When responding to calls for service, the team focuses on offering emotional de-escalation, connection to resources and referrals, and transportation to appropriate care services. Receiving support from the CCR team is voluntary; community members may choose to engage in or decline services offered when the team arrives on scene. The team may also receive calls where the person identified for support is no longer located where they were reported to be. These instances may result in a call that is unresolved.

The CCR Team serves West Long Beach and Downtown. To learn more about the Community Crisis Response Team, visit longbeach.gov/ccr.

For more mental health resources longbeach.gov/mentalhealth.

Bribery Unleashed: The Supreme Court’s Wealth-Driven Corruption Crisis

Congress must stand up for what’s right and consistent with American values: Legally bribed politicians and judges isn’t that

Is there a way to reverse the decision by five Republicans on the Supreme Court that it’s OK for billionaires and big corporations to bribe politicians?

Americans are watching with increasing shock and dismay:

— President Biden tried to knock up to $20,000 off the debt of every person in the country with a student loan. Republicans decided this might somehow, someday mean fewer profits for banks — who financially support the GOP — so they sued at the Supreme Court. The Republican appointees on the Court, over the objections of the three Democratic appointees, killed the president’s effort without providing any cogent constitutional rationalization.

— Scientists have developed lab-grown meat that is healthier, easier on the planet, and, when manufactured at scale, cheaper than beef, pork, or chicken. The animal ag industry freaked out and threw a bunch of cash at Republican members of Congress, who are now trying to outlaw the product before the companies developing it can get to scale. Even the buggywhip makers back in the day didn’t think the way to protect their industry was to buy off politicians (of course that was before five corrupt Republicans on the Supreme Court legalized political bribery).

— Climate change is devastating our planet and fine particle emissions from trucks cause hundreds of thousands of deaths and illnesses from heart disease, COPD, asthma, and cancer every year. To solve the problem, the EPA put forward new truck emission standards that will phase in between 2027 and 2032. This week, twenty-seven Republican-controlled states whose politicians take money from the fossil fuel industry sued to block the rules and protect the profits of the trucking and petroleum industries.

— Title IX of the federal code, which forbids gender-based discrimination in education, is being extended by the Department of Education to protect members of the queer community. Rightwing Christian groups, which provide billions of dollars and millions of votes to Republicans, pinged state-level politicians, so now Texas, Louisiana, Alabama, Tennessee, and Oklahoma have filed suit before hand-picked rightwing judges to allow schools to legally trash LGBTQ+ students.

— The Consumer Finance Protection Bureau (CFPB) promulgated a new rule limiting credit card late fees to $8 each, protecting America’s most vulnerable families. The banks pulled the GOP’s chain and Republican senators Tim Scott, John Thune, John Barrasso, Jerry Moran, John Boozman, Steve Daines, Mike Rounds, Thom Tillis, Marsha Blackburn, Kevin Cramer, Mike Braun, Bill Hagerty, and Katie Britt introduced legislation to reverse the policy and allow banks to again screw low-income people.

— In 2003, George W. Bush signed legislation to privatize Medicare through the so-called Medicare Advantage scam, which last year overcharged our government more than $140 billion while denying millions of claims from Americans unfortunate enough to have signed up for it. Republicans on the take from the insurance industry are now pushing a plan to gut or even shut down real Medicare, leaving all seniors to the tender mercies of this predatory industry.

— Ultra-processed foods are accused of causing obesity, diabetes, cancer, and a host of other illnesses both physical and mental: American children, who consume as much as two-thirds of their calories from these products, are experiencing an epidemic of obesity and diseases associated with it. With Republican politicians running interference for them, the processed food industry has now succeeded in getting their ultra-processed “food” products placed in thousands of school lunch programs, paid for with our tax dollars. As The Washington Post noted a few months ago, “Republicans have continued to fight stricter standards” and, “Some Republicans are now threatening to block the USDA from further limiting sodium and reducing added sugar in milk…”

Increasingly, Americans are realizing the cancer eating our democracy is the power of great wealth and Supreme Court-legalized political bribery.

But what can we do?

In a 1978 Republican-only decision written by Lewis Powell (author of the notorious “Powell Memo” which told rich people how to take over our politics, schools, media, and courts), five corrupt members of the Supreme Court ruled that corporations are “persons” with full access to the Bill of Rights, including the First Amendment right of free speech. They added that money is the same thing as “free speech,” legalizing political bribery by both billionaires and giant corporations.

In 2010, five other Republicans on the Court doubled down on that Bellotti decision with Citizens United, which overturned hundreds of good government and anti-bribery laws, some dating all the way back to the 19th century. As a result, it’s almost impossible to prosecute any but the most obvious and egregious examples of bribery (see: Menendez) of both American politicians and judges, including billionaires and religious corporations blatantly bribing Supreme Court justices.

Clarence Thomas and Sam Alito openly flaunt the gifts they receive from wealthy interests with business before the Court, as Trump fangirl Aileen Cannon and hundreds of other federal and state court judges are routinely wined and dined at luxury resorts. As long as they continue to rule the way the morbidly rich want and bribery continues to be legal, it appears the gravy train will never end.

Unless we do something about it.

Every single one of these problems — and hundreds more — continue to exist in the face of overwhelming public disapproval because one or another industry or group of rightwing billionaires has been empowered by the Supreme Court’s Bellotti and Citizens United decisions to bribe politicians and judges.

Democrats in Congress must reverse those bizarre, democracy-destroying decisions with a new law declaring an end to this American political crime spree. If they retake the House and hold the Senate and White House this fall, it’ll be their opportunity to re-criminalize bribery of elected officials.

To do that, they need to defy the Court’s declaration that money is “free speech” and corporations are “persons.” That defiance requires something called “court-stripping.”

Republicans understand exactly what I’m talking about: Since the 1950s, they’ve introduced hundreds of pieces of court-stripping legislation. They tried to do the same thing most recently in 2005 with the Marriage Protection Act, which passed the House of Representatives on July 22, 2004.

That law, designed to override Supreme Court protections of LGBTQ+ people, contained the following court-stripping paragraph:

“No court created by Act of Congress shall have any jurisdiction, and the Supreme Court shall have no appellate jurisdiction, to hear or decide any question pertaining to the interpretation of, or the validity under the Constitution of, section 1738C or this section.”

In other words, Congress wrote, the Supreme Court has no say in the matter of this particular legislation.

The Marriage Protection Act died in the Senate, but it’s one of hundreds of pieces of court-stripping legislation introduced — almost all by Republicans (House Whip Tom Delay was the master of this) — in the wake of the Supreme Court’s decisions in Brown v Board and Roe v Wade.

This process of “court-stripping” is based in Article 3, Section 2 of the US Constitution, which says:

“[T]he supreme Court shall have appellate Jurisdiction, both as to Law and Fact, with such Exceptions, and under such Regulations as the Congress shall make.”

Regulations? Exceptions?!?

Turns out, the Constitution says Congress can regulate the Court by, for example, expanding the number of its members, determining if Court hearings must be public/televised, or if they must live by a Judicial Code of Conduct (among other things).

Congress should be doing all these things as soon as possible.

Additionally, Congress can create what the Constitution calls “Exceptions” to the things the Court can rule on.

In today’s crisis, Congress could say, “Supreme Court, you may no longer rule on whether money in politics is ‘free speech.’ We’re taking that power from you because the Constitution gives it to us and you have screwed it up so badly.”

And, it turns out, Congress has already gone there, most recently creating exceptions to what our courts may do in a law that was passed and signed by President Bush the very next year: The Detainee Treatment Act of 2005.

That law explicitly strips from federal courts — including the Supreme Court — their power to hear appeals against the Bush administration detaining, torturing, imprisoning in Guantanamo, or even killing suspected Muslim terrorists. It says:

“[N]o court, justice, or judge shall have jurisdiction to hear or consider an application for a writ of habeas corpus filed by or on behalf of an alien detained by the Department of Defense at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba…”

And that’s just the beginning. There’s even, as the Brennan Center notes, a court-stripping provision in the PATRIOT act of 2001. I lay out dozens of other examples and a history of court-stripping that extends back to the presidency of Thomas Jefferson — an outspoken advocate for reducing the power of the Supreme Court — in The Hidden History of the Supreme Court and the Betrayal of America.

As House Speaker Tom Delay said back in the days of his court-stripping Marriage Protection Act: “Judges need to be intimidated” and “Congress should take no prisoners in dealing with the courts.”

Putting forward such a law would highlight how Citizen United’s SCOTUS-legalized political bribery is at the core of our political dysfunction, even if it doesn’t pass Congress and even if the Court itself strikes it down.

Rightwing oligarchs and giant corporations have now taken total control of the entire GOP and corrupted more than a few Democrats, all while polluting our public discourse with their think tanks and media outlets: such legislation would, at the very least, highlight this and pressure the Court to change their policies. “Intimidate” the Court, to quote Tom Delay.

Congress must stand up for what’s right and is consistent with American values: Legally bribed politicians and judges aren’t that.

It’s high time to end the bribery and get something done for We the People.

Gary Valenciano And Apl de Ap to Headline Carson Philippine Independence Day Celebration

 

The City of Carson’s 126th Philippine Independence Day Celebration on June 8 promises to be an electrifying event as two renowned Filipino artists, International Sensation, “Mr. Pure Energy”, Gary Valenciano and Filipino-American rapper, singer, record producer, and founding member of the hip hop group Black Eyed Peas, Apl.de.Ap will share one stage to honor Philippine freedom.

Gary Valenciano, also known as Gary V, is an iconic figure in the Filipino music industry with his soulful voice and dynamic performances spanning decades. He has captivated audiences worldwide with his hits like Hataw Na and Take Me Out of the Dark.

Joining him is Apl.de.Ap, a multi-talented artist recognized not only for his music but also for his philanthropic efforts and global advocacy. As a member of the Grammy Award-winning group, The Black Eyes Peas, Apl.de.Ap has brought Filipino talent to the forefront of the international music scene.

In partnership with the Philippine Independence Day Foundation, the event will be held at Veterans Park in Carson. The celebration is open to the public.

“On behalf of the citizens of the great City of Carson, I extend my sincerest appreciation to the Philippine Independence Day Foundation for their exceptional dedication in ensuring a successful event each year to celebrate this important historical occasion. It is truly a delight to see the diversity of Carson celebrated through cultural events such as this. Thank you for giving the community the opportunity to see and experience the richness of Philippine history and culture, and for making a wonderful contribution to the ethnic diversity that makes Carson great,” said Carson Mayor Lula Davis-Holmes.

Philippine Independence Day has been celebrated in the City of Carson since 1986 and is the largest and longest running Filipino cultural celebration nationwide. Located in the heart of Southern California, this annual event draws thousands of Filipinos and non-Filipinos of all ages and backgrounds.

The Philippine Independence Day Celebration will be a jubilant occasion filled with cultural performances, traditional cuisine, and heartfelt tributes to the nation’s rich history. The inclusion of Gary Valenciano and Apl.de.Ap in the lineup ensures an unforgettable experience for attendees celebrating the spirit of freedom and unity that defines the Filipino people.

This year’s festivities include live entertainment, booths and exhibits, health education, food vendors, a children’s area, cultural exhibits and a parade.

Gary V. and Apl.de.Ap will be joined by numerous Filipino artists such as Junior New System, Annie Nepomuceno, Jules Graeser, Irene Cruz, Alexis and Jojo Riguerra, Jason Lustina, Jaime Barcelon, Jo Awayan, Kayamanan ng Lahi, Lea Auditor, Hoku Mae’Ole Polynesian Dancers, Chris Chatman, Janice Javier, Kindreds, and 4th Impact.

The flag raising ceremony will kick off the day’s ceremonies at 7:30 a.m. followed by a parade of various regional organizations from the Philippines and America at 10 a.m., led by Grand Marshall Apl.de.Ap.

Time: 7:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., June 8

Cost: Free

Details: Veterans Park, 310- 830-9991; https://ci.carson.ca.us/

Venue: Veterans Park, 22400 Moneta Avenue in Carson

Reclassification of Marijuana

 

The Justice Department May 16 took steps to reclassify marijuana from its Schedule I designation that it has held for more than 50 years, to a lower-risk drug.

The proposal, which now enters a two-month comment period and runs short of decriminalization, would expand researchers’ access to marijuana and allow cannabis producers to deduct business expenses on their tax returns.

Following the 1970 Controlled Substances Act, the federal government listed marijuana as a Schedule I drug, which is the most restrictive of five classes of controlled substances. It is considered to have no accepted medical benefit and a high potential for abuse. The classification places marijuana in proportion to heroin and ecstasy and above fentanyl and methamphetamine.

Last year, the Department of Health and Human Services recommended marijuana be reclassified to Schedule III, treating it as a lower-risk substance alongside ketamine and testosterone. Marijuana is legal for recreational use in 24 states and for medicinal use in 38.

Complete decriminalization of marijuana could be accomplished through Congress with legislation removing the drug from the Controlled Substances Act

 

Application Portal Opens Today for LA County Rent Relief Program

 

The application portal opens May 20 for the second round of the Los Angeles County Rent Relief Program or LARRP and will remain open through 4:59 p.m., June 4.

Interested parties can access the application directly by visiting lacountyrentrelief.com.

To better support applicants, community partners are offering free webinars and technical assistance in multiple languages. Visit lacountyrentrelief.com/webinars-and-events to register. We encourage applicants from Round 1 to complete any pending tasks and contact the rent relief customer call center at 877-849-0770 for expedited processing. The Call Center is open Monday – Friday from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.

The Department of Consumer and Business Affairs or DCBA will prioritize applications from vulnerable tenants and properties in high-need areas. Applicants are urged to apply early, but please note that submission of an application does not guarantee funding.

If an applicant has already been awarded a grant from the program, their existing application will be reviewed to see if they qualify for additional assistance with rental debt. If they qualify, the grantee will be notified by the program. Grantees should not reapply as this may result in a delay in processing.

Last Stand for Fair Wages

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Doubletree Hotel Workers in San Pedro Continue Picketing

By Daniel Rivera, Labor Reporter

Ten months after joining their UniteHere Local 11 compatriots on the picket line in July 2023, the hotel workers at On May 16, workers from the Doubletree Hotel in San Pedro continue walking the picket line for higher wages, increased staffing, and new pension plans. The hotel nestled behind the Cabrillo Marina is one of the 15 last holdout of 60 hotels in Los Angeles County that have signed a new contract with their workers.

The hotel has been holding protests sporadically since negotiations began, but they have also organized several large demonstrations with this protest being the fifth. Marching with sirens, megaphones, and horns at various times of the day, the workers remain determined to get management to agree to a new contract.

A tourist seen hurriedly leaving the hotel told this reporter he was cutting his stay short due to the noise from the protests.

“People come and complain about us. They’ve been aggressive with us, and we just tell them it’s not that we have anything against you guys. Go in there and tell them to settle with us and to sign the contract,” Maria Gurrora, a cook for 11 years told Random Lengths News. Many workers tend to use their break times or immediately before or after their shift to protest, but Maria is out on her day off to show support along with workers from other hotel workers from the union.

Gurrora said they are grateful for the the communitysupport, from the like of Los Angeles City Councilman Tim McOsker.

UniteHereLocal11 has won 46 contracts across the county, including the Hotel Maya in Long Beach, Proper Hotel in Downtown Los Angeles, and the Hampton Inn in Santa Monica.

Also back in April, voters in Long Beach voted on and passed Measure RW, a measure that aims to raise the wages of hospitality workers in Long Beach.

The measure carries many of the initiatives the unions have been pushing for, but to a lesser extent, like initial $23 wage increase instead of the ones secured by the union which could be as high as $25 in contracts with similar hotels. Not only are initial wage increases higher, but the future ones are too.Measure RW aims for the minimum wage for hospitality workers to rise to $29 per hour by 2028, while the contact proposed by the union aims for$35 per hour.

“Folks are asking for the same things, standards workers have already won on wages, healthcare, staffing, and pension,” Maria Hernandez, Communications Director for UniteHereLocal11 told Random Lengths News.

It’s the same reason the Hotel Maya workers continue to strike even though they would have been beneficiaries of Measure RW. The union views those raises as the minimum and has continued striking at various hotels across Los Angeles County. Workers across the hospitality industry have not only been feeling the economic pressure, with longer commutes and rising costs of living, they have also felt the pressure in the workplace.

Since the COVID-19 pandemic, most hotels along with many other businesses have been experiencing staffing shortages after a series of cutbacks that have resulted in increased workloads that staff continue to endure three years after the pandemic. In contrast, those businesses have failed to rehire the same workforce.

Ten-thousand workers have been on various strikes at the different hotels across LA and out of the 52 hotels that have experienced strikes over the last year, 46 have now signed contracts with UniteHere Local 11.

The contract includes a $5 wage increase as a baseline along with future promises of wage and staff, increases to decreaseworkloads. The contract also includes Juneteenth as a new paid holiday.

Some of the Major holdouts include the Hotel Figueroa and Aimbridge Properties like the Double Tree Hotels in Los Angeles and San Pedro with the latter being the sight of various fights and ongoing strikes.

Random Lengths News placed several calls to the management of the DoubleTree and has yet to comment on the ongoing protests.

Mayor Bass Signs Equal Rights Amendment Petition Alongside Women’s Rights Champions

Mayor Bass Signs Equal Rights Amendment Petition Alongside Women’s Rights Champions

LOS ANGELES – Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass today became the first big city mayor of California to sign the national petition in support of the Equal Right Amendment or ERA, a constitutional amendment to explicitly prohibit discrimination based on sex. Mayor Bass signed the petition alongside former Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney as well as City Attorney Hydee Feldstein Soto, labor leader and civil rights activist Dolores Huerta, co-founder and President of the Feminist Majority Foundation Eleanor Smeal, and Executive Director of the Feminist Majority Foundation Kathy Spillar. The ERA underscores three key issues of reproductive health and rights, gender-based violence and economic fairness.

“We need an Equal Rights Amendment now more than ever,” said Mayor Karen Bass. “Our very rights as women are on the table, and we need to work relentlessly to ensure that they are protected. Thank you to my friend and former colleague Congresswoman Maloney for all of your work championing this Amendment, and thank you to Dolores and to our City Attorney for joining me in this signing. Today we make a call to action for people across the country to join us in this important movement.”

Mayor Bass is the first woman and second African American to serve as Mayor of Los Angeles. Sign4ERA is a grassroots campaign to move Congress to ratify ERA as the 28th Amendment and is endorsed by more than 40 organizations, including the ERA Coalition, civil rights and human rights groups, mayors, and campus, religious, and civic groups. The petition drive was launched by Hunter College students and ERA activists at the Roosevelt House Public Policy Institute in New York City. Nearly 100,000 have joined Sign4ERA since. Sign4ERA’s ultimate goal is to reach 1 million signatures, following plans to expand its social media presence and engage supporters through a variety of community events.

Letters To The Editor: Open letter from Port Commissioner Sandy Naranjo

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Dear Community Member,

From the bottom of my heart, thank you for your unwavering support from the outset of my campaign. Despite significant challenges and opposition from well-funded interests, your encouragement has been crucial as I’ve championed essential environmental, climate, social justice, and equity reforms at the Port of San Diego.

Since my appointment in 2020 as the first environmental justice advocate and the first Latina Port Commissioner from National City, the resistance to my role has only intensified. These well-funded entities have systematically opposed the reforms, and the opposition reached a peak with a publicly funded, one-sided political attack costing over $155,000, aimed at undermining my efforts. This attack, alleging violations without any substance, was nothing more than a tactic to erode the progress we have fought so hard to achieve.

Moreover, when the City of National City faced threatening communications from the Port of San Diego, the choice by some National City elected officials and staff was to prioritize superficial appearances over substantial change. They opted for ribbon-cutting ceremonies for incremental improvements rather than working on systemic changes that will benefit both current and future generations. This preference has overshadowed a shared vision for a Port that does not generate revenue at the cost of public health but instead enhances public health and provides clean water, clean air , and accessible recreational opportunities for everyone.

Fortunately, not all were swayed. Councilmembers Marcus Bush and Luz Molina stood firm, advocating tirelessly for a thorough public discourse on the systemic issues plaguing our dealings with the Port. They resisted backroom deals and championed the cause of the people of National City against a formidable $300 million public agency.

Not a single councilmember who voted for my removal could cite any actual wrongdoing on my part, highlighting the external pressures exerted to remove a commissioner committed to accountability and transparency.

Because of your steadfast commitment to holding the Port accountable and making your voices heard, we have caught the attention of the state legislature. Assemblymember Alvarez has authored AB2783, the Port of San Diego Reform and Accountability Act. This legislation is critical as it aims to transform the Port into a model of transparency and ethical governance, establishing a robust lobbyist registry, restructuring the board of ethics, and codifying the Maritime Industrial Impact Fund (MIIF). These reforms are designed to mitigate the environmental impacts of port operations and improve public infrastructure, ensuring that the Port’s activities enhance rather than compromise our community’s health and well-being.

AB2783 will soon be heard by the Assembly Appropriations Committee on Wednesday May 15. I encourage you to track the bill and support it publicly as we strive to ensure our Port operates with the highest standards of transparency and ethics. You can sign up to support AB2783 and stay up to date here: https://bit.ly/AB2783NOW

Thank you again for standing with me through these challenges. We must continue to push for social justice and accountability, and I ask that YOU to please join me in urging state legislators and Governor Newsom to support AB2783. It is time for a Port of San Diego that reflects today’s values, not those of 1962.

Solidarity,

Sandy Naranjo

PS: Don’t forget to stay involved in advocating for a Port For ALL. Sign up at https://bit.ly/AB2783NOW

PSS: Attached is my statement that I read at the podium at the National City Council meeting. This is officially part of the city record via City Clerk.

PSSS: A Google Drive with all the documents important to my story: bit.ly/TruthNOW

Sandy Naranjo

Read Giving In To The Bullies: National City Surrenders To Port of San Diego Intimidation, Unseats Port Commissioner Sandy Naranjo, https://wp.me/p3AltZ-dwN

LA Fleet Week Returns to the San Pedro Waterfront

Fleet Week Events

May 18

LA Fleet Week Ambassador Training

The San Pedro Chamber of Commerce is hosting a training session for LA Fleet Week tourism ambassadors. The Chamber will be going over volunteer assignments, and event information.

Time: 10 to 11 a.m., May 18

Cost: Free

Details: Sign up at: https://signup.com/go/OrkzPgD

Venue: Battleship USS Iowa, 250 S. Harbor Boulevard, San Pedro

 

May 23 to 27

LA Fleet Week Welcome Party

Check out San Pedro’s official welcome party to kick off LA Fleet Week 2023. The Swing Band will be performing in San Pedro’s business district between 5 to 6 p.m. The Military band will follow right after and Midlife Crisis will end the night off

Consisting of approximately 50 Marine musicians, the mission of the 1st Marine Division Band is to provide musical support to the 1st Marine Division as well as other tenant commands aboard Camp Pendleton, the surrounding community, and throughout the United States. The Red Trolley will be operating starting May 23 to May 25 for all Military personnel. Starting May 26 through May 29 the trolleys will be operating to all Military and public.

Time: 5 p.m.

Cost: Free

Details: https://www.discoversanpedro.org/events/la-fleet-week

Venue: LA Waterfront

 

May 24 to May 27

Festival of The Sail at LA Fleet Week

Spend Memorial Day Weekend and Fleet Week on the LA Waterfront

Time: Various, May 24 to May 27

Cost: $0 to $75

Details: Tickets for all below events: https://lamitopsail.org/festival-of-sail/

 

Tallship Village Activities and Deck Tours

Free activities for kids and adults, including:
Sea Scout Maritime Demos ⋅ Kid-friendly STEAM Activities ⋅ Historic Reenactors ⋅ Unique Photo-Ops ⋅ Knot Tying ⋅ Crafts and more.

Time: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

 

Explore the Coast

Bilingual STEM Educational Sail. For youth (12 & under), Active Duty and Veterans are free, but registration is required.

Time: 12 to 2 p.m.

Cost: Adults $20, Seniors $10

 

Tallship Waterfront Sail

Time:2 to 4 p.m.

Cost: Adults $60, Seniors $40, Youth (12 & under) $25

Active Duty/Veterans free; registration required

 

Tallship Cannon Battles

With Visiting TallShip, Schooner Bill of Rights

Time:4:30 to 7 p.m.

Cost: Tickets: Adults $75, Seniors $50, Youth (12 & under) $25 Active Duty/Veterans free; registration required

 

Tallship Sunset Sail

Time: 6:00 – 8:30 p.m.

Cost: Tickets: Adults $75, Seniors $50, Youth (12 & under) $25 Active Duty/Veterans free; registration required

VIP Sail Fleet Week Ship Tour

Join an exclusive view of the visiting ships from the water, including hors d’oeuvres and drinks.

Time: 5:30 – 7:30 p.m., May 23

Cost: Tickets: $150

Details: https://lamitopsail.org/fleet-week-vip-sail

 

May 24

The Point Fermin Lighthouse 150th Anniversary

The Point Fermin Lighthouse (celebrating 150 years in 2024) will be participating in Fleet Week. May 24. Its Fleet Week event will celebrate that history while paying tribute to the fallen and expressing gratitude to living veterans and present-day military. The community is invited for informal nibbles while all enjoy the music and day’s offerings including guest speaker, new Coast Guard Base CO for Los Angeles/Long Beach, Commander Robert Poitinger.

Time: 11 a.m., May 24

Cost: Free

Details: https://www.laparks.org/park/point-fermin

Venue: Point Fermin Lighthouse, 807 W Paseo Del Mar, San Pedro

 

May 25

New Drag Brunch Rings in Fleet Week

A benefit for Veterans for Equality. Fleet Week seems like a natural time to launch a Drag Show in San Pedro. Because where would we be without the armed forces?

Enjoy a full bar, Mimosas and Bloody Marys.

It is said that in WWI and WWII, the military discharged service members found out to be gay, lesbian, bi and trans, and those folks stayed on where they were dropped, creating gay scenes San Francisco, San Diego and Long Beach. And surely, San Pedro.

Required watching on this topic is Scotty and The Secret History of Hollywood.(https://tinyurl.com/Scotty-and-the-Secret-Society)

VFE is a volunteer group of veterans who provide overwatch services for events hosted by marginalized communities in order to stand in the gap against protestors.

Time: 12 p.m., May 25

Cost: 15 to $25

Details: https://tinyurl.com/Drag-Brunch-The-Sardine

Venue: The Sardine, 1101 S. Pacific Ave, San Pedro

 

May 25, 26

LA Fleet Week After Party at West Harbor

Join the official LA Fleet Week after party on the West Harbor Promenade over Memorial Day Weekend. The 21+ event features a beer garden, food trucks, live DJ, and fun.

Time: 5 to 10 p.m., May 25, 26

Cost: Free

Details: https://www.westharborla.com

Venue: West Harbor Promenade, 6th St., and Harbor Blvd., San Pedro

Giving In To The Bullies

National City Surrenders To Port of San Diego Intimidation, Unseats Port Commissioner Sandy Naranjo

By Paul Rosenberg, Senior Editor

“We are taking the wrong approach. We are giving in to the bullies,” National City Councilmember Luz Molina said in the discussion before the council voted to unseat Sandy Naranjo as their representative on the board of the Port of San Diego. “We are giving in to the bullies, and to the narrative that our voices and well being of our residents on the west side of National City doesn’t matter when it’s up against the status quo and the special interests.”

Molina spoke following public comments from 14 people, none of whom spoke against Naranjo.

“Hearing from the public, it has me shaking. I think it is so important to hear from members of this community,” she said as she began to speak.

The other port commissioners censured Naranjo based on a secret report on October 10 last year, after which National City’s council backed her unanimously, with a letter Molina quoted from, stating that “It was the belief of this council that the port ‘perpetuated long-standing patterns of disenfranchising national city and its people.’”

But, Molina continued, “Since that time, she has been targeted both publicly and in private. with microaggressions and macroaggressions that range from the petty to the not-so-petty. The attacks have been persistent and perpetrated in an organized manner by commissioners from other cities, port leadership and others who have expressed their desire to get rid of Commissioner Naranjo.”

Neither Mayor Ron Morrison nor the other two council members who voted to remove Naranjo disputed Molina’s account. Rather, they simply accepted the power imbalance as inevitable and determinative.

“Everything that’s been happening the last 6 months, we’re playing defense, constantly playing defense. And I think that’s a disservice to us,” Councilmember Jose Rodriguez said.

“It’s not personal … it’s business,” Councilmember Ditas Yamane said. “When we are not at the table because they have no confidence in the representative that we put there, we are on the menu.”

But a conciliatory approach had never served National City’s interest, argued Councilmember Marcus Bush, who supported Naranjo.

“It’s not about Sandy. It’s not about one port commissioner, because Sandy’s predecessor was Dukie Valderama,” Bush recalled. “Let’s be real. He was nice to the port. He was very friendly at the port. He served 16 years. And the port still—he still wasn’t able to get accomplished” what National City needed. “He shared stories of handshakes he’s done, a good faith bargaining, and he was lied to. He was stabbed in the back. This is how the port operates. It’s very clear Sandy is being retaliated against.”

Public comments were particularly pointed, especially from activists with Mothers Outfront, a national climate justice organization, and from Josephine Palamantes, a member of the AB 617 Portside Committee, which advises the San Diego Air Quality Management District.

“I support Sandy Naranjo,” Palamantes began emphatically. “I’ve seen her in action with the board that has no regulations and oversight and she consistently asked the proper questions in defense of our communities. And the bullying that’s going on in the back street alleys and conversations, you all are an effect of it, and unfortunately, she’s taking the brunt,” Palamantes said. “Your constituents really rely on her because she tells the truth. And I would urge you to support her.”

“The port operates with a $300 million budget on public lands, yet functions like a private entity unaccountable to the people while making decisions that affect our communities,” said Alicia Gonzalez, California State Manager of Mothers Outfront. This isn’t just an opinion shared by community members and activists. As Random Lengths reported last October, the port commission’s lack of democratic accountability has been the subject of three civil grand jury investigations, from the late 1980s through last year. “National City,” Gonzalez said, “has been poisoned by pollution due to the port’s activities for decades, demonstrating a clear environmental injustice. The city should fight for its constituents and resist the port’s pressure and threats,” she said. “We urge the city to represent your constituents and not the port’s desires and retain Commissioner Narano to fight for our communities.”

But it’s not just a question of fighting to represent the most marginalized communities, as Naranjo herself made clear in her own testimony.

“I’m not just a representative of National City’s interest at the port, my primary role is to be a regulator,” she said. “My job is to engage in regulatory oversight of a $300 million agency. The port commissioner’s job is to be quasi-judicial. to ethically and reliable vote to address all concerns. We cannot let the port devolve into petty interests or self-regulate.”

As Naranjo reviewed in her testimony, the attacks began as a result of her questioning Port Attorney Tom Russell about undisclosed legal conflicts surrounding a deal to purchase a ship emissions capture system. That system came from a company owned by former Port of LA Harbor Commission President Nick Tonsich, whose presidency overlapped with Russell’s tenure as POLA’s port attorney. Naranjo’s questions were asked in a private board session during consideration of Russell’s salary increase, which Naranjo ultimately voted for.

Hence the significance she placed on her regulatory respectability. “ I just want to point out that at all times, port commissioners must be empowered to ask questions. There’s a reason why referees should not be outright attacked and why they wear black and white striped shirts,” Naranjo said. “It’s an ancient tradition meant to prevent the judge from being victimized. When the judge is victimized, when referees are not treated respectfully, the system breaks. They have to be protected from the attack. Make no mistake, what is happening here today is that an impartial referee is being attacked and removed for political gain and to void regulatory oversight.”

The primacy of regulatory responsibility makes sense, since its lack plays a central role in blocking effective representation, not just for National City, but for all impacted port communities. This is why Naranjo and her supporters on the council have supported AB 2783, Assemblymember David Alvarez’s

“Port of San Diego Reform and Accountability Act,” which among other things would introduce term limits and an ethics panel with new ethical guidelines. They’ve also engaged with San Diego LAFCO to deal with the port’s failure to properly adjust port boundaries over the decades.

But rather than recognize how a broken system needs to be fixed for community needs to be reliably met, Rodriguez criticized these efforts as a distraction. “Instead of putting together a team so we can better create advocacy for ourselves at an agency that we have a seat on, what do we do?” he asked. “We will try to bring another agency to oversee that agency. We try to focus on a state bill that won’t get us these issues.”

In short, he argued to ignore Palamantes when she said, “We need a commissioner who regulates the port, not not a rubber stamp.”

The city council voted 3-2 in the end to remove Naranjo. The bullies won this battle. But the war rages on.