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Roots & Rambles

 

An Evening Full of Inspiration Featuring Songwriting, Stories and Soulful Performances

San Pedro saw a rousing night of high-energy roots music on May 4 at the Grand Annex. To lay out the whole affair, this piece will unfold in the same order as the evening did. First was the Intro to Songwriting workshop, followed by the talented and engaging duo, Joselyn & Don, who performed their latest work. The evening concluded with two amazing sets by headliner Abby Posner & The Big Fall. This show was the last in the Grand Annex’s annual Roots & Rambles series made possible by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts (more on that below).

Workshop Intro to Songwriting

Abby Posner, assisted by Joselyn Wilkinson (another great songwriter) of Joselyn & Don, led an encouraging and open-minded workshop for nearly 20 people. Nothing was off the table, positive or negative. This exercise was about getting your ideas to flow. Posner noted there are rules to song-making — “but rules are made to be broken.”

Posner had participants think about the elements that make up a song and then expanded to discuss the pre-chorus (a sample or a build to the chorus). She had people consider the differences between the pre-chorus and the bridge, which she described as “almost … its own journey toward the end of the song.”

At the end of a verse that repeats, Posner encouraged songwriters to change it “ever so slightly.” The goal she said is to stretch as a songwriter and expand the melodic landscape.

On expressing feelings in a song, Joselyn emphasized it could be any feeling that rises in you, it could be like a dream or as simple as a bird landing on the windowsill.

The workshop participants shared what was on their mind, then Posner, after some votes, narrowed those thoughts down to a single subject to write just one verse, which was, “Let them judge me.

This was a worthy exercise to tap into your inner artist and share with fellow songwriters or those who want to be. Participants learned, collaborated, and encouraged each other. It was all together fun. And we discovered there are some insightful songwriters amongst us.

Joselyn & Don

Joselyn & Don, who have performed in venues throughout the West (Hotel Cafe, Lost Chord Guitars, The Lost Church, Nakano Theater) are always a joy to watch. The duo opened their set with the hypnotic number, Deep Down, from their album, Seeds & Bones. Inspired by the LA River, Deep Down is a powerful ode to nature’s resilience and our unbreakable bond with it. Later in the set featured Workin’ the Hi-line, a story of Don’s late father, who immigrated with his father as a young man to the U.S. from the Philippines. Don’s elders helped build the “Empire Builder” rail line, also known as the Hi-Line, “with men of every color, together we’re a team, building the American Dream.” Joselyn & Don were a perfect opener, between the workshop and to pique inspiration with their poetic lyrics, ahead of The Big Fall.

Abby Posner & The Big Fall

Abby Posner, a working musician in Los Angeles for the past 18-plus years, is known for her ability to play nearly any instrument. A songwriter, performer and producer, Posner twists genres and pushes the boundaries of folk, roots, electronic and pop music.

The CalArts music graduate has composed and produced music for commercials/TV, films, and radio shows throughout the U.S. and UK. Additionally, she was selected for the ad campaign promoting Ken Burns’ Country Music documentary and has scored the music for several films including the award-winning Lady Buds. Posner received official showcases at Americana Fest 2023, and Folk Alliance International 2022 and 2024.

All of this experience has made space for talent to attract talent. Posner’s band, The Big Fall is a mighty band comprised of singer and songwriter Paula Fong; Philip Glenn on fiddle, mandolin, and keys; Elissa Moser Linowes on upright bass; Ari Brattkus on guitar; and Alexa Brinkschulte on drums. The night featured several numbers from the band’s recent album Second Chances.

Posner told the audience the show would be a rollercoaster ride. Ironically, she’s a bit of a comedian on stage, while ultimately, the night was comprised of love ballads/anthems, material written during COVID-19 — and during a silent retreat, tributes (Bob Dylan, Memphis’ Stax Records and Men at Work with a jazzy version of Land Down Under) — all of which were highlights.

Showcasing its talent, the band opened big with a great sound on Night Train, a solid country number featuring guitar picking, fiddle and beautiful vocal harmonies “trying to get to that night train state of mind.”

One Good Thing is Posner’s favorite song to perform live. No wonder. It’s dreamy mandolin, easy sound and Posner’s sincerity just pours over you. Continuing with sincerity, a mea culpa — Darkest Hours shares a broken heart, pleads forgiveness and promises to never leave again, all over the deep comfort of soulful keys, upright bass holding it all down, Posner’s agile blues guitar declaring these truths and powerful harmonies.

Posner and Paula Fong’s harmonies on I’m Doing Fine were amazing. The two singing together sounded as one. Posner’s rendition of Land Down Under, by Men at Work featuring Glenn on keys, was excellent. Who knew such an iconic sounding song could transform so enticingly into jazz?

For its finale, The Big Fall performed New Orleans, which is also Posner’s favorite city.

A real shit-kicking jam featuring Glenn on fiddle and Posner on guitar with ample use of the wah wah pedal. The band came all the way back around to the same big, loud, strong sound it kicked off with. Posner’s crystal clear voice belted out, “poison in the water, poison in my head. Poison drippin’ slowly on your side of the bed,” as the band’s energy crescendoed to reap a comparatively big standing ovation.

Roots & Rambles, NEA Grant Recipient

Roots & Rambles explores the cultural roots and future of folk music in the United States, featuring musicians who are dedicated to the preservation, creativity and evolution of American music. Audiences can meet the artists at pre-concert workshops, as they share history, stories and music-making styles. Grand Vision has received this grant from the National Endowment for the Arts or NEA to present artists who keep folk music traditions alive and carry them creatively into the 21st century. The NEA is an independent federal agency that funds, promotes, and strengthens the creative capacity of communities by providing all Americans with diverse opportunities for arts participation.

Roots & Rambles 2024 series is a mini-series within the Grand Annex’s multi-genre live music calendar. In four concerts, these artists’ music and on-stage storytelling reflect the cultural roots and convergences that allow American folk music to evolve. To dig deeper and connect with the community, each concert includes a pre-concert audience-participation workshop led by the artist on a unique aspect of their craft.

20024 Workshops included:

John Kraus & the Goers: Sea Shanty Stories & Sing-Along

Street Corner Renaissance: Historic Harmonies & the Future of Doo-Wop

Mara Kaye: A Storyteller’s Guide to Singing the Blues

Abby Posner & the Big Fall: Intro to Songwriting

The Roots & Rambles Series is supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts with a grant called Grants for Arts Projects, which began in 2019.

The Grand Annex has received other NEA grants since 2012. One in particular helped (for two years) the San Pedro Dia de Los Muertos festival become a larger, coordinated event featuring a main performance stage.

Details: https://www.abbyposner.com

Sweet Legacy

 

Polly Ann Bakery Delights San Pedro for Generations

By Melani Morose Edelstein, Columnist

Nestled amidst the vibrant streets of San Pedro, Polly Ann Bakery stands as a testament to tradition and family legacy. Since its inception in the late 1930s by the industrious Voss family, this bakery has been a cornerstone of the community, offering delectable baked treats and spreading joy across generations.

Antonio Heredia head baker. Photo by Arturo Garcia-Ayala

“I’ve witnessed firsthand the growth of this bakery over the years, but its core remains unaltered,” reflects Joseph Michael Voss, son and grandson of the original owners. “We’ve dedicated ourselves to preserving the traditions established by my grandparents. I spent three decades working alongside my father. Currently, my sister Diane Acosta and her husband Bob, along with Susie Voss, own the bakery. My wife worked as a skilled cake decorator for more than 40 years, and I am a retired baker; we were all actively involved,” Voss continues.

For 86 years, the Voss family and the entire bakery team, led these days by store manager of 15 years Minerva Heredia, have underscored their united commitment to preserving the timeless charm and unwavering dedication to quality that has characterized the bakery since its founding. Its enduring old-fashioned allure and steadfast pursuit of excellence persist without falter.

“Customers love us. We have been in the same location since 1938 and we are the only bakery left in Pedro. We make everything from scratch. Every morning starting at 3:00 am our bakers come and start making danish from scratch and cream puffs and eclairs – all from scratch every day. The devil dogs, a light chocolate cake like a ding dong, are very popular and our cakes, we make all kinds of cakes like picture cakes anything you want. We have four or five wedding cakes a week, and couples love to come to our free tastings” says Minerva Heredia, who runs the bakery alongside her husband Antonio Heredia, the main baker, and Antonio’s brother Armando Heredia. The three of them are excited about keeping the bakery’s traditions alive.

“Diane Acosta, the current owner, she’s still my boss,” says Heredia. “She still comes in every so often but the three of us run it. Diane is about to retire so she is the one who asked us if we were interested in buying, so we are in the process. We have already started the paperwork,” she says, adding, “Customers know me. They all say please take over. We want this bakery. They love the bakery. We all love the bakery, it’s the only one left.”

Entering Polly Ann Bakery, which is one of the oldest businesses in San Pedro, is like stepping into a time capsule of culinary delights. The aroma of freshly baked goods fills the air, enticing patrons to indulge in an array of pastries and cakes and homemade loaves of bread, each crafted with care and precision by skilled bakers following timeless recipes.

Polly Ann Bakery in Weymouth Corners, San Pedro. Photo by Arturo Garcia Ayala.

“You’ll find the same donut, the same coffee cake; all the same formulas for baking. All original and all from scratch. Every day seven days a week and the community loves it,” Heredia shares.

Polly Ann Bakery is more than just a purveyor of sweets; it’s a cherished part of the community fabric. Families have made it a tradition to visit for special occasions, from birthdays to weddings, knowing that the bakery’s custom-made cakes will be the highlight of any celebration. At Polly Anns they strive to make every experience memorable, whether it’s a birthday celebration or a simple morning indulgence.

Customers’ nostalgic ties to the bakery fuel their return visits. Fond recollections of childhood trips prompt them to introduce their own children to the bakery, carrying on the tradition from one generation to the next.

“My dad would sell a dozen cookies for a penny. He thought it was a creative way to pay the taxes. Buy a dozen cookies, get a dozen for a penny. You’d be surprised what people bought for a penny. It was a huge success,” Voss laughs.

Polly Ann Bakery’s reputation for legendary creations spans from cookies to cakes. Whether crafting an elaborate wedding cake adorned with intricate designs or a simple birthday cake bursting with flavor, each masterpiece serves as a testament to the bakery’s unwavering commitment to quality and craftsmanship.

What’s the secret to keeping a business alive for more than 80 years? “Hard work and long hours,” says Voss. “That’s what my dad always used to say.”

Despite the passage of time, Polly Ann Bakery remains deeply rooted in its heritage, continuing to serve the San Pedro community with the same warmth and hospitality that it did so many decades ago.

As long as there are celebrations to be had and sweet cravings to be satisfied, Polly Ann Bakery will continue to be a beloved institution in San Pedro, a testament to the power of family, tradition, and the simple joy of a freshly baked treat.

1440 W. 8th Street

Weymouth Corner Shopping Center

San Pedro

310-519-0966

Pollyannbakery@aol.com

 

Retaking The House

 

Grassroots Activists Can Be Key

Affecting national politics may seem far beyond the reach of the ordinary person. But this year, it’s not, thanks to the California Grassroots Alliance. It’s a network founded to answer a very simple question, posed by South Bay Indivisible activist Patti Crane in a video last year, “Could we as grassroots people flip enough districts to take back the House without depending on any other state and just do the work right here in our own home state of California?”

The answer, they decided, is yes — it’s possible. But they started from a place of deep frustration, following the 2022 midterms, when losing a handful of flippable districts in the state was just enough to give the GOP a razor-thin majority in the House.

“There were a couple heart-breakers, 564 votes in CA-13,” Crane told Random Lengths more recently. “To lose an election by only 564 votes is just bone-crushing, that’s just awful.”

They began by analyzing what worked and didn’t, re-interviewing candidates they had worked with. “Those interviews were so eye-opening,” Crane said. Then they looked at 10 potentially flippable districts, analyzed them all, and narrowed their list to six: two (CA-13 & 22) in the Central Valley, one in Northeast LA County (CA-27), two in Orange County (CA-45 and 47) and one in Riverside County (CA-41). Their plan, as laid out on their website is simple:

By attracting volunteers from both blue and red regions, equipping them with potent tools and evidence-based practices, and targeting their efforts toward the winnable seats, the Alliance helps assure the best and highest use of grassroots activists’ time, talent, and funds on the path to victory.

In case it’s not clear, “We made absolutely sure that we were centering the volunteers,” Crane said.

 

Kicking Things Off

On April 24, the Alliance held their online kickoff event, “Power in the House!” featuring Rep. Katie Porter, Wisconsin Democratic Party Chair Ben Wikler, and activist Jess Craven, publisher of “Chop Wood, Carry Water.”

The tone was set with a powerful two and a half minute motivational video, contrasting Californians in general as “people with plans and dreams, always seeking a better life” who “want the freedom to make our own choices for our families and our futures” with “some people [who] want choices only for the few … authoritarians trying to burn down our democracy because they want to take all the power for themselves.” It went on to say, “In 2022, MAGA Republicans grabbed power over the House by a razor-thin margin,” and “If they keep their grip on power, their plans for 2025 and beyond will destroy our democracy,” it warns.

“But we Californians have learned a thing or two about fighting fires. We know what to do to stop this MAGA inferno. We sound the alarm. We alert our neighbors. We draw the line together. We can build a fire break to halt this arson. We can join forces to smother the MAGA flames and we do it with our votes.”

 

Wisconsin’s Example

Wikler followed, fleshing out that message with a vivid description of how something strikingly similar has been done in Wisconsin, how Democrats fought back against the severe erosion, not just of Democratic Party political power, but of democracy itself that began with the 2010 Tea Party wave.

Among other things, Wisconsin Republicans “started by smashing unions, the counterweight to the power of billionaire mega donors in Wisconsin,” they “rigged the right to vote” in multiple ways, changed campaign finance laws, and had a “near total” lock on electoral power in the state, including a 5-2 majority on the state supreme court.

In 2018, things looked dire. Wisconsin could have gone deep red, as nearby former swing states like Iowa and Ohio had done, but instead, Wisconsin activists “refused to give up, and they started to organize,” going on to win the governor’s race by 1.1%, a “landslide” by Wisconsin standards at the time.

After winning again in 2020, “Republicans decided the problem was, they hadn’t rigged our system enough. What do you call a failed coup? Practice,” he said. They responded with tighter laws, sham investigations, threats to poll workers and election officials, and even threats to jail mayors of Wisconsin’s five largest cities.

Nonetheless, Democrats won again in 2022. “Our organizing beat their cheating,” Wikler summed up. It was the first time Democrats won a governor’s race after a Democratic president had been elected since 1962. And the margin was “a 3.4 percentage point true Wisconsin landslide.”

 

California’s Turn

But with all that progress made, Wisconsin doesn’t hold the key to winning back the House this year. California does. And so Wikler was there to pass that grassroots fighting spirit on.“In this moment. California, your own democracy can save democracy for this entire country, your votes, your volunteering, your donations to support these candidates for Congress,” he said. “They can turn the tide in this House battle that is central to the question of whether the American experiment will survive.”

And yet, as important as those candidates are, “Your activists, your supporters, your volunteers, they are actually the protagonist in this narrative,” he said. “Wisconsin is counting on you in the California Grassroots Alliance to do this hard work, save the House, and make sure that we are living through a rebirth of American democracy.”

Rep. Katie Porter had a similar message from a different perspective, she won one of the most challenging seat-flipping races in formerly deep red Orange County in 2018 — when Democrats flipped seven seats — and won re-election twice while Republicans retook four of those seats in 2020. She found it “shocking” after what happened in 2018 and 2020 “that so many of these so-called political operatives in D.C. don’t realize that just because you are in a blue state doesn’t mean you don’t have swing seats. Doesn’t mean you don’t have persuadable voters. Doesn’t mean that you don’t need to have a strong field program.”

In 2022, “We outperformed every other Democrat on the ballot from Gov. Newsom to our Orange County Board of Supervisors candidate. So I know that it can be done, but that it’s not easy and the help isn’t gonna come from Washington.” Porter said. “It’s going to come from us, from Californians who decide that they’re willing to work where they’re needed in California.”

Her experience is typical. “I sometimes hear candidates say, ‘Well, I just need the cavalry to come. I could win. But I just need help. I need the cavalry.’ I have news for you. You are the cavalry. If you are waiting for someone to come from Washington, you’re gonna be waiting a long time.” Which is why, she said, “The work that the Alliance does is just so important.”

Jess Craven echoed similar themes, but again from a different perspective — one who’d been working side-by-side with many in attendance, remembering how inexperienced they’d been as part of the wave of resistance activism that formed to take back the House in 2017 — “We came in, you know, energetic and willing and freaked out, but we were green, you know. None of us really knew what we were doing,” she said, in contrast to how “seasoned” they were now, which is why she felt so confident.

California suffers from “taking our own state for granted,” she said. But the activists present “know what we need to do. We just need to chop wood, carry water here in California,” she said, screen out noise and the polls, and focus on the work. “This is tough, but we are tougher.”

“If we flip the House,” she said, “We get to codify abortion rights and stop this nonsense. We get to pass common-sense gun laws. We get to get rid of the filibuster, or at least carve it out. We get to pass voting rights. We get to pass labor, stronger labor laws. There is so much — We get to pass the Pride Act and protect people like my 14-year-old nonbinary child.” Democrats, she said, are “just getting started. So let’s not quit before the miracle. Let’s go forward. Let’s do our work here in California. Let’s flip these seats that we know how to do, and let’s go for the big prize in November.”

 

Why So Positive? The Story of Why

The positive energy in the meeting was palpable. But was it justified? The history behind it suggests it is, as Crane explained. During the 2022 campaign, Indivisible Sonoma County, “poured their energy elsewhere,” particularly to flippable Central Valley districts. “They were worried, because they weren’t seeing enough action happening,” and took steps to remedy that, including conducting a series of candidate interviews, which they promoted to “grassroots groups all across the state.”

After the heartbreaking near-miss in that election, they reached out again, both to candidates and volunteers, to understand what had worked and what hadn’t. There were problems with the DCCC (Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee) beyond local control, but others were closer to home.

“The grassroots volunteers were never deployed pointedly into the right place as they wanted to be,” Crane said. “They’d go to one thing, there’d be too many people, and they’d go look at three other things where nobody showed up because there weren’t good filtering and channeling and pointing systems. It was just non-strategic.”

Once they decided to form the Alliance last summer, fixing this was the highest priority — “that we centered the volunteers,” Crane said, making sure they could be as effective as possible. This required “combining two things: we have what we call a bird’s eye view and we have the on-the-ground insights, and we’re adamant that you have to have both,” she stressed. In interviews, they found that “the people who knew the birds-eye staff about you know all of the districts, and what was going on statewide, and the people who knew what was going on deep on the ground in any individual district, they were not the same people. And didn’t talk to each other,” a recipe for chaos.

“Our understanding was that if we could knit these two views together that a whole lot of the timing mistakes would be ameliorated,” Crane said. “The people up on high, the birds-eye view people knew where there was funding, and knew how the pipeline would work, the people on the ground knew where there was hurt and where there was need, and where voters are deeply under-registered, under-represented,” she explained. “So we said, we’re going to flip that and we’re going to insist that we have both this umbrella view and this tight view.”

One example she cited was a $15,000 contribution from one donor. The Alliance “took that and divided it six ways,” giving $2,500 in each district to the on-the-ground group that experience said would best use it to register and turn out voters. They also coordinate information-gathering, such as gathering endorsement information for down-ballot races, which in turn make the centralized Blue Voter Guide interface all the more useful in areas where organizing resources are thin. And they did candidate interviews — available on their YouTube channel — to help activists and voters get to better know who they’re working to elect.

It’s especially important to pour organizing resources into the Central Valley districts, “which have some of the highest poverty rates in the United States, not just in California, but in the United States,” Crane pointed out. “The people are working two and three jobs to put food on the table, they don’t have the time to get in a car and go canvass for a day, and they don’t have childcare and also the population is young, much younger, so their typical family has much younger children,” she said, so “we have to pour blue energy — through the Alliance and through the Alliance partners — deliver energy into those districts, and not wait for those districts to find it on their own. Because the circumstances in those districts isn’t good enough for that to happen, and we know that’s our responsibility. We know that.”

Central Valley canvassing had already begun, even before the kickoff meeting, with 103 Bay Area activists going to canvass neighborhoods and visit college campuses in CA-13. Closer to home, Alliance volunteers took part in an 80-person canvass in CA -27. “When you have 80 people canvassing the Antelope Valley, you can get some coverage,” she noted. “That’s what has to happen, week after week after week, day after day, after day.”

In addition to the Alliance efforts, at the end of April, the DCCC announced they were making all Alliance target districts their key districts in California. “Technically, that’s slightly outside their portfolio, because these aren’t incumbents,” Crane said. But in terms of “the importance of things, and the fact that we lifted these up as a bundle,” it makes perfect sense. “Yes, they are made up of individual wins that are precious, but without the bundle, we don’t get the ultimate yield,” she said. “It’s sort of like making a match on the NPR. … We can’t unlock the House unless we get the bundle. So we are going for getting the bundle.”

Indivisible San Pedro is part of the Alliance and has been doing similar work since the 2018 cycle — even using Random Lengths’ offices for phone banking.

“The road to freedom runs through the Harbor Area with activism to win 55% of the vote across the county, the state and the nation,” said Indivisible member Peter Warren. “On so many levels, it is important to make sure the Democrats control Congress and the White House, from cleaning up the ports, to making sure reproductive freedom is secured for California and all people across the USA. We need to do all we can to ensure a Democratic majority in the House.”

Those who want to help ensure that majority can join the Alliance via their website at cagrassrootsalliance.org.

The Call of the Ports

Ann Carpenter Seeks Sustainable Solutions at the Crossroad of Goods and Ideas

By Evelyn McDonnell, Columnist

Ann Carpenter feels the call of the port. When she was growing up in Michigan, her dad sometimes took her with him on the big laker ships that parked along the banks of the Detroit River, where he worked as a property appraiser. The family would drive to the Upper Peninsula and watch ships heavy with ore rise and fall in the Soo Locks. After college, when she chased her love of the infinite Great Lakes horizon to the Pacific Ocean, she didn’t settle until she found San Pedro. Twenty-eight years later, Carpenter’s still here, a mover and shaker in the emergent “blue tech” industry housed in the old warehouses at the end of Harbor Boulevard. On May 2, at the annual Ignite22 fair hosted by the company she founded, Braid Theory, the Detroit daughter moderated a talk between representatives from six ports, from Los Angeles to Quebec to Singapore.

“I’ve just always been fascinated around ports and shipping,” Carpenter says. “Ports represent this freedom, the crossroads of people and goods, but also of ideas.”

The kayaker, diver, and sailor also acknowledges the contradiction in her attraction to entities that are hotbeds of pollution; she has “a love/hate relationship” with ports, she says. She began the journey that has led to her current position after attending San Pedro community meetings in the early 2000s “at a time when the Port of LA wasn’t such a good environmental steward, let’s just put it that way.” Activists were holding the port accountable for a range of serious environmental injustices, successfully suing the shipping company, Evergreen Marine Corp. for concealing pollution. “At that time, nobody used the phrase ‘blue economy’,” Carpenter says. “They would say, ‘Ports are the economic drivers, but the communities bear the brunt of all the port activities.’”

Because of her childhood romance with ports, and her own prior career at Lockheed, Carpenter came away from these meetings looking not for conflict, but for resolutions. “I never took the path of doing the advocacy. It was always about how do we fix it? How do we make this better? How do we find solutions? How do we bring innovation?”

Now as “tenant number one” at AltaSea, the blue tech hub that celebrates its reopening May 29, Carpenter is perched in a kind of crow’s nest, looking out on the cranes of the ports of LA and Long Beach, with the open sea beckoning beyond the breakwater. It’s a precarious position, a delicate balancing act, neither fish nor fowl, so to speak. Fortunately, Carpenter has six decades of experience sailing through squalls.

 

FLY AND FLOAT

Michigan is the Great Lakes state. Carpenter grew up on its many inland waterways: swimming, canoeing, sailing a Hobie Cat, catching frogs. But it was standing on the edge of Lake Michigan, looking out on the water stretching to the sky, with no other shore in sight, that determined her future. “To map that limitless horizon — that’s what I needed. I needed that ability to not see the end.”

After getting her bachelor’s in math from the University of Michigan-Dearborn, she and her siblings drove straight from Detroit to Malibu. “We didn’t stop until we landed right at the water.”

A boat brought Carpenter to San Pedro. She and her second husband, whom she met in Bora Bora, lived on a 44-foot sailboat for almost seven years, ultimately living as a “sneak aboard” at Cabrillo Marina. “To this day, I don’t think there’s any other experience like sleeping on a boat. You know, that little clanging of the halyards and the general rocking, the fresh air. It’s just like being in a cocoon.”

Life wasn’t all smooth sailing. Carpenter and her husband were anchored off Anacapa one day when the Santa Ana winds blew in. It took 11 hours to sail the few miles to shore. Waves poured into the cockpit. There were so many cries of “Mayday!” the Coast Guard was asking all vessels to assist. “You get at that point where you can’t even talk, you’re white-knuckled, the adrenaline is just flowing, and you’re completely quiet, and just nothing matters but staying alive.”

Experiences like that don’t scare the entrepreneur away; they deepen her connection to the water. “They make me love it even more … We paint this picture: Oh isn’t it wonderful: the palm tree, the ocean, everything is beautiful. But the power of every level of water — I mean water carves out canyons, water moves rocks. Water is life, the universe, and everything … All of that just makes you more respectful, more understanding that you have such a responsibility to live up to what the ocean gives us.”

After her second divorce, Carpenter bought a house in Point Fermin, where she still lives. She met her third husband kayaking off the shore. A harbor seal crawled on his vessel, so she figured he had to be all right. They have one child, Zeke.

Carpenter still considers a kayak her “vehicle of choice.” She loves “any body of water where I can’t see the edge, where you can just keep going. I also like tropical waters when you can actually see colorful fish, you don’t have to scuba dive but you could just snorkel and you see so much color and so much life and that beauty.”

The intrepid kayaker has a recurring dream: She is on a sailboat in Tahiti, the kind that’s built like a canoe with an outrigger that you can stand on. She is on the edge of the outrigger “like a flying fish just going right over the ocean. That kind of feeling is what I dream about a lot: That idea that you can skim with and be a part of and above the ocean. You can fly and float simultaneously.”

 

RETHINKING BUSINESS MODELS

In 1990, Carpenter left Lockheed and formed her own marketing and design firm. Around 2010, she joined PortTechLA, a business incubator. She founded Braid Theory in 2016. In 2017, they became tenant number one at Alta Sea.

It’s a little hard to parse what Braid Theory does. According to its website, “Braid Theory weaves together entrepreneurs, industry influencers, and corporate partners to accelerate the adoption of transformative technology, drive market growth, and create profitable collaborations.” Specifically, BT runs incubator and accelerator programs that help companies with new technologies develop their products, their pitches, and their profile and find financial backing and customers. Ignite22 is their annual showcase. On May 2, dozens of hopeful startups showed their products alongside goliaths such as SoCalGas and the Port of Los Angeles. There was a wine, The Hidden Sea. There was a company that still makes snowboarding goggles out of recycled water bottles. There was the California Seaweed Festival. AltaSea-based companies such as AltaSeads and SeaTopia mingled with entrepreneurs from around the world, while robots skitted about between the piers.

BT emphasizes environmentally conscientious companies. “We’re looking at energy transition, decarbonisation of shipping and goods movement, understanding the ocean,” says Carpenter. “So we’re absolutely not going to do the same kind of exploitative farming practices that we do on land. We can instead go from an extractive economy to a circular economy to a sustainable, regenerative economy. Those are where we focus on solutions.”

But she is not naïve about the fact that there can be an inherent contradiction between capitalism’s endless appetite for economic expansion and the planet’s fragile, finite resources.

“Part of it is, where’s the capitalistic business model when the ocean is your client? Who pays for it? How do you pay for it? So we start thinking like, how do we creatively rethink a lot about this; it can’t always be government or philanthropic funding and grants that does this. That’s core to what keeps me up at night, is how do you rethink business models to still have the market be part of funding the solutions?”

Terms like blue tech and blue economy can be camouflage for bluewashing: when companies hide rapacious practices behind the eco-sounding language (it’s the aquatic version of greenwashing). Should there even be a blue economy? How much more money do people need? As Carpenter – the portophile – says, if you really want zero- emissions, just stop all shipping.

As the saying goes, that ship has sailed – maritime trade has existed for more than a millennium. Braid Theory is about bringing groups together to be thoughtful and creative about progress, not to grow just for growth’s sake. Its founder is well versed in the damage caused by shortsighted past harvesting practices on land and sea, whether it’s the monocropping of corn for ethanol or the adverse effects of salmon farming. She calls BT’s annual gathering Ignite22 because “it is celebrating innovations that are shaping the 22nd century.”

Carpenter moderated a talk between representatives from six ports, from Los Angeles to Quebec to Singapore at Ignight22, Braid Theory’s event at AltaSea, May 2. Photo courtesy of Ann Carpenter.

Braid indicates entwining, and collaboration is Carpenter’s mantra. Before Covid, she founded a co-working space on 6th Street. “You’ve got to bring people together now for solving those long-term problems. You’ve got to be able to find a place where people are fired up, or create an environment where people are fired up, to solve the deeper problems, and not just kick the can down the road for that next century…. You can get out of your own way when you’re collectively looking at that point in the horizon that we all want to see.”

Evelyn McDonnell is the author or editor of eight books, an internationally recognized award-winning journalist, and a professor at Loyola Marymount University. She writes the series Bodies of Water – portraits of lives aquatic – for Random Lengths.

Copyright Evelyn McDonnell 2024

 

Save Tāminaru

 

The Fight to Preserve Terminal Island’sJapanese American Heritage

By Emma Rault, Columnist

May is celebrated nationwide as Asian American & Pacific Islander Heritage Month and National Preservation Month. However, this May brings worrying news: the Port of Los Angeles is considering demolishing the last two surviving buildings from the Japanese American community that used to call Terminal Island home. This even though it would violate one of five major goals in the port’s master plan.

Nowadays, many people associate Terminal Island with endless stacks of containers. But it was once known as East San Pedro, home to a vibrant community of some three thousand people, primarily Japanese immigrants and their American-born children.

They made their living fishing and canning tuna and sardines in a part of the island called Fish Harbor.

The national paranoia that followed Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941 changed all of that. Suddenly, Japanese Americans were accused of being a national security threat.

A few months later, Terminal Island residents were evicted at gunpoint, forced to leave their homes within 48 hours.

Most were eventually sent to the Manzanar internment camp in the remote Owens Valley desert, where they spent up to three years living behind barbed wire.

The Navy took over the island, bulldozed homes, businesses and churches, and fenced off the area as government property. None of the islanders would ever go home again.

It is remarkable, then, that two buildings from the Japanese fishing village have survived. Located on the community’s main drag at 700-702 and 712-716 Tuna Street, they housed a dry-goods store called Nanka Shoken and the A. Nakamura Co. grocery store, going back to 1918 and 1923, respectively.

Now, the port’s department of real estate has “recommended” these buildings for demolition, according to information relayed by Sergio Carrillo from Councilmember Tim McOsker’s office.

The port’s media relations team stated that these plans are currently “in the evaluation stage.” Demolition requires a vote from the Board of Harbor Commissioners, which last year decided in a 3–1 vote to tear down the former Star-Kist tuna cannery on Terminal Island.

Community advocates and historians are alarmed that the port is considering tearing down what remains of the Japanese fishing village.

To writer Naomi Hirahara, it has uneasy echoes of 1942, when the Navy’s bulldozers moved in and wiped away almost every trace of decades of community life.

“It’s kind of like a replay of what happened before,” she told Random Lengths News.

She is the co-author, along with Geraldine Knatz, of Terminal Island: Lost Communities of Los Angeles Harbor, which was published this year.

The surviving buildings matter, she says. “When I visited Tuna Street … I could just picture fishermen coming back from pulling sardines out of the water, or women coming home from a hard day’s working in the canneries,” she recalled.

“There’s just something about being on that particular land.”

Despite their storied history, the stores don’t currently have official historic landmark status — buildings need to be formally nominated for that. But their importance is widely acknowledged. In a 2013 letter to the port, the LA Conservancy described them as “nationally significant from a cultural standpoint.”

Akimatsu Nakamura, the proprietor of A. Nakamura Grocery on Terminal Island. Courtesy of Tim Yuji Yamamoto

For Warren Furutani, a former California Assemblymember and longtime activist whose parents and grandparents lived on Terminal Island, they have an important role in reminding people that the past is not just “a page in a book or a screen on a computer.”

Organizations like the LA Conservancy and the National Trust for Historic Preservation believe the same. Back in 2012, the National Trust for Historic Preservation named Terminal Island one of the country’s Most Endangered Historic Sites.

“We’re not trying to say these areas shouldn’t have port activity, but the historic sites comprise less than 3% of the acreage on Terminal Island,” the LA Conservancy’s Linda Dishman told the Daily Breeze at the time. “We’re talking about very small pieces of land.”

Advocates see the threat to Tuna Street as part of a broader pattern of cultural erasure. Hirahara points out that the National Trust put LA’s Little Tokyo on its 2024 list of most endangered historic places in the U.S. Sawtelle’s historic Japantown is also under threat, with many legacy businesses being displaced by unchecked development.

“Through the unfolding of history, [we see that] the demolishing of a community’s culture and history becomes a part of the demolishing of that people,” Furutani said.

“If you’re willing to asphalt or cement over history to put … cargo containers [there], what does that say about our values?”

A. Nakamura Co. Interior

For some, the issue is deeply personal. Derek Nakamura is the great-grandson of Akimatsu Nakamura, the founder and namesake of the A. Nakamura Co. supermarket. His grandmother, Aiko, worked there alongside her father.

“I would love for it to be saved,” Derek said of his family’s store.

He envisages perhaps a small museum or a mural on the storefront honoring Terminal Island’s Japanese history.

Tim Yamamoto, the grandson of Akimatsu’s other daughter, Hideko, said it makes him feel proud seeing those buildings and knowing his family operated a business there.

Akimatsu Nakamura (left). Nakamura stands next to his sons in front of the A. Nakamura Grocery circa 1940. Courtesy of Tim Yuji Yamamoto.

His parents made a point of educating younger generations about the history of Terminal Island. His mother’s recent passing, at age 103, has made him all the more determined that the buildings should be preserved. “I have pretty strong feelings about that.”

Naomi Hirahara, who was involved in the development of the Manzanar National Historic Site in the location of the former concentration camp, agrees that the historic buildings on Tuna Street have untapped potential.

“It seems ideal to put some kind of interpretation there,” she said.

Derek still has various items from the family business, including the custom “A. Nakamura Co.” stamp used for bills. The date on the rubber rollers is still set to Dec. 4, 1941 — just a few days before Pearl Harbor.

After the surprise attack on the U.S. Naval base in Hawaii, the stores on Terminal Island were padlocked for a month with military guards placed at the doors.

Then, following the 48-hour evacuation order, many families were forced to sell off their possessions for pennies on the dollar.

The Nakamuras were relatively lucky, Derek explained in a 2022 interview with Random Lengths. “My grandmother Aiko was friends with a lot of Caucasians and they saved a lot of stuff for us. And after the war, they gave it all back.”

Other families burned furniture in bonfires, unable to bear the idea of local scavengers getting hold of it. Warren Furutani’s grandfather, a boat mechanic, took a sledgehammer to his equipment.

“These are the kinds of stories … that [those] two old buildings [are] symbols of,” Furutani said.

In 2002, a monument honoring the Japanese village was installed on nearby Seaside Ave, funded partly by the State of California and partly through crowdfunding by the Terminal Islanders, a group of former residents and their descendants.

Growing up, Furutani could always tell when his father took a particular liking to one of his friends: “Eventually, they would be taken on a tour of Terminal Island.” They would get in the car to go look at what was left — those two storefronts.

Monuments are important, says Furutani, who contributed to the fundraising campaign — but they can’t replace built fabric. “They don’t provide the texture [of history].”

The port’s preservation policies — just lip service? The “recommendation” to demolish the store buildings on Tuna Street raises concerns that the port is violating its own historic preservation policies.

A. Nakamura Grocery building today. Photo by Arturo Garcia-Ayala

In 2011, the port first introduced plans to demolish what remained of the Japanese village. There was a huge outcry from former islanders and historic preservation organizations.

As a direct result, the port included preserving the “existing buildings and sites” as one of the five goals in its master plan, echoed in its 2013 “Built Environment Historic, Architectural and Cultural Resource Policy.”

When the port solicited community feedback on its draft master plan in 2013, several stakeholders asked for a Japanese history museum on Terminal Island.

And yet the buildings, which are owned by the port, have been sitting boarded up for years, falling into disrepair — a process sometimes called “demolition by neglect.”

Life on Terminal Island

So what was life on Terminal Island like?

Like mainland San Pedrans, the fishermen of “Tāminaru” had a reputation for being tough and a little rough around the edges. Terminal Islanders spoke their own dialect, Tāminaru-ben, a mixture of the fishermen’s choppy shorthand, Japanese, and English.

It was a tight-knit community where everyone looked out for each other. Children walked barefoot on dirt roads named after fish: Tuna, Albacore, Sardine. Teenagers took the ferry across to mainland San Pedro to attend high school. The island had its own successful baseball team, the San Pedro Skippers.

People lived by the rhythms of the ocean. Fishermen got paid “dark moon to dark moon.” When they brought in their catch, each cannery would sound its own whistle and the women would hurry to work.

Above all, it was life — not just business, but a community that remains a cherished part of people’s identities and the nation’s maritime history.

“We have a voice” With demolition once again on the table, stakeholders are realizing that now is the time to consider how these buildings might be brought back to life.

“It’s like, let’s open this up [for discussion],” said Hirahara.

Furutani emphasizes Terminal Island’s importance to California’s origin story. Croatian, Italian and Japanese fishermen came here from their seaside nations and helped build a thriving economy. In San Pedro, buildings like the Dalmatian-American Club and Croatian American Hall help tell this story. Tuna Street does, too.

Hirahara recalls the process of developing the interpretive center at Manzanar.

“There were so many conversations that were so fruitful. There were competing interests — there were people who didn’t want anything there to remind them. They were part of the conversation, too. … And now, as a result of that, we have this wonderful national historic site [where] hundreds of people visit and learn. Even the people who opposed it at the time, many of them feel very differently [now].”

In the late 1980s, Hirahara was a member of the Little Tokyo Service Center’s Housing Committee, which successfully fought for the preservation of the San Pedro Firm Building, a 1923 building in Little Tokyo that now provides 42 units of affordable housing to low-income seniors and is operated by LTSC.

Like the establishment of the Japanese American National Museum, it was a moment when LA’s Japanese American community powerfully came together. “We have some track record of reconceiving public space.”

“Through that experience,” she said, “I’ve come to see that we as people of Southern California do have a say in what’s important — and it’s not only economics.”

Preservationists and stakeholders are looking to connect with others who want to explore possibilities for saving the buildings on Tuna Street. To get involved, please email savetaminaru@gmail.com.

Atwood Hunt Park Anyone??― 14 Years Later

By Rosie Knight, Columnist

In 2010 our editor, Terelle Jerricks, wrote about the opening of the park at 22nd St and Miner. The park was only possible thanks to the work of Bea Atwood Hunt who campaigned for decades to have the fuel storage tanks that used to be there removed. The headline for that piece, which ran in our Jan 22 – Feb 4 issue read “Atwood Hunt Park Anyone?” And now over 14 years later we’re asking the same question. Despite community requests and city council conversations, the park has still yet to be renamed after the activist who made it possible. So we reached out to some prominent San Pedro politicians and leaders to ask their thoughts on the naming and why it has taken so long to give Bea Atwood Hunt her due.

In response to Random Lengths reaching out to the Board of Harbor Commissioners about the potential to change the name, their representative told us, “We’re going to have to pass on a conversation. Nothing has been presented so it would not be appropriate to discuss.”

At the Central San Pedro Neighborhood Council meeting in July 2023, a board majority voted to table the motion so that the Coastal San Pedro Neighborhood Council could take the lead given that the park is within Coastal’s boundaries. The tabled motion read:

Dear Commissioners:

The Central San Pedro Neighborhood Council supports and recognizes the contributions of our citizen activists. As such we recommend that the Park at 22nd Street be renamed to honor the legacy of this activism by naming the park after Bea Atwood Hunt who for some two decades lobbied the POLA and the Harbor Commissioners to remove the toxic chemical facilities and specifically the Union Oil Tank farm where the park now resides. Her courage and dedication to the process of civic engagement with the port for the benefit of the people of San Pedro is undeniable, as I’m sure your internal records would reveal. It is our intent that the renaming of this park would recognize this courage and dedication in a manner appropriate to her efforts.

Sincerely,

CeSPNC president

Coastal San Pedro Neighborhood Councilmember, Bob Gelfand, told Random Lengths News that their board recently voted down a motion to take up the cause of renaming the park, noting, “There wasn’t anyone at Coastal who was gung ho about it.”

That vote shut down, at least for the time being, any attempt to present a motion to the Harbor Commission.

But that might change as there are community members eager to see the park take on Hunt’s legacy more concretely.

Even without the park having her name, the legend of Bea Atwood Hunt still makes its way to newcomers to Pedro. On a Yelp review for the 22nd Street Park, Joan S. wrote, “The parkland is the former site of an oil tank farm. According to a local resident I spoke to as I was leaving: after cleaning up the area they had to let it rest for years. The lady, who is a 6th generation SP resident, mentioned that this would be a perfect spot to release blue butterflies. I hope they do!”

It’s nice to know that local residents are keeping the story of the park and why we have it alive, even if there’s no official acknowledgment as of yet.

When we reached out to 15th Council District representative, Tim McOsker’s office for his thoughts on the movement, his representative said, “The Councilmember appreciates the significance of recognitions like this, and looks forward to the suggestion going through a public discussion on the renaming of the port property.” So that’s a great call to action for any local residents to reignite the call for Bea to be recognized by the ports at their local neighborhood council meetings!

Speaking to one of Atwood Hunt’s grandchildren Richard Person, we learned that even before it was officially a park, the family would use it for that purpose when they’d come visit. “My sister and I would go down and run around the empty tank farm,” Person recalled.

Richard’s sister Theresa shared how happy Atwood Hunt had been at the small recognition that she did get before she passed away, recalling a feature from Random Lengths. “She was so excited with the 30th-anniversary story, she was so proud of it.” Person also told us how she thought that Atwood Hunt would have been delighted with the idea that the park may one day get to take on her name. For now, though, there’s still work to be done.

Saved by a Porn Star

 

The woman that called him an orange turd in courtroom testimony

Donald J. Trump stands accused of 34 crimes in the often mislabeled “hush money trial” in a Manhattan courthouse. What the media has gotten wrong is not to call it “an election fraud trial,” because simply paying off a porn star or Playboy bunny by itself isn’t really a crime. Doing so by concealing it in your tax records to influence the outcome of the 2016 election is a felony. We’ll see if he actually gets convicted for it.

However, the corporate media has had a field day covering the two days of very scandalous testimony by Stormy Daniels, the porn star who has become as much of a household name as Trump. Say what you will about presidential candidates getting caught up in a sex scandal, but a man with more integrity or humility would have faded out of politics a long time ago. This one, however, loves the spotlight as long as he’s in the headlines, no matter what it exposes– he needs the attention, feeds on it, and then claims “I am a victim”. He has no shame or humility.

Blame it on his lawyer some new and unusual nicknames were entered into the legal record during adult film actress Stormy Daniels’s testimony. Trump attorney Susan Necheles displayed a tweet from Daniels dated November 9, 2022, where Daniels states, “I don’t owe him shit and I’ll never give that orange turd a dime.”

Needless to say, the media and late-night comedians are having a field day with a term that’s hard to scrape off your shoes. If humor could have taken the Orange Turd down it should have happened long ago, as should have his involvement with the Jan. 6 insurrection, or even his stolen Top-Secret documents at his Mar Largo mansion. However, none of those cases are progressing as fast as the Manhattan Sex scandal cover-up. It’s commonly assumed his strategy is to drag all of those other cases out long enough so that if and when he were re-elected he could just pardon himself.

The Manhattan case is different since it’s in a state court and even as president he could not pardon himself– so the verdict there matters more because it will come before the election and might even prevent him from taking office. Can a convicted felon hold a federal office? One would hope that would not be true.

The U.S. The Constitution does not explicitly prohibit a presidential candidate from running for office while under indictment or even while serving time behind bars.

Eligibility requirements for presidents state only that they must be at least 35 years old, be a natural-born citizen of the United States, and have been a resident of the country for at least 14 years.

While the Constitution does not specifically disqualify candidates for public office due to criminal records, some people have argued that Trump’s actions are different because they violated a key part of a constitutional amendment.

Some courts and election officials have argued that Trump’s actions before and on the day of the Capitol riot on January 6, 2021, should deem him ineligible for office under Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, which disqualifies people who “engaged in insurrection or rebellion” after taking an oath to support the Constitution.

The cast of witnesses associated with this case is curious by itself – his former attorney Michael Cohen, the fixer; testimony by former National Enquirer publisher David Pecker, yes that’s his real name, during Trump’s hush money trial has even been shocking. Who knew, outside of the tabloid publishing business, what “catch and kill” meant as to covering up stories to protect friends or sacred cows? Or even that stories were specifically published to protect the Orange Turd or to take down his critics? The cast of characters associated with Trump’s fraud scheme could be straight out of some comedic fiction about a celebrity who becomes a politician only to see his future unravel by betrayal, corruption, sex, and egomania. I think somebody is already writing The PornStar and the President, yet it almost writes itself. It is a dark comedy that exposes the weakness of the American Republic because there’s a presumption of ethics where there often is none, and justice delayed becomes justice denied when a defendant can afford endless appeals.

Perhaps the most darkly humorous part of this story is how Stormy Daniels, the porn star, stared down this megalomaniac and his lawyers with some of the most searing and blunt testimony yet. Much of which is corroborated, by others, except there’s no video of the sex scene (wouldn’t that just have been special to play in court?). And when Trump responded by trying to get his gag order lifted, so he could publicly attack Daniels for her testimony, she tweeted, “Real men respond to testimony by being sworn in and taking the stand in court. Oh…wait. Nevermind.”

For the first time, a new Yahoo News/YouGov poll shows that a majority of Americans (52%) believe former President Donald Trump “falsified business records to conceal a hush money payment to a porn star” — the charge at the center of his ongoing criminal trial in Manhattan.

Yet another poll still shows the Biden versus Trump presidential race as a toss-up or even worse, the Orange Turd up by 5 points. This summer should be a curious spectacle and campaign season.

California Moves Faster to Transform Mental Health System for All

 

Gov. Newsom May 15 announced the state is accelerating the first round of funding, made available by Proposition One, to boost California’s ongoing transformation of the statewide Behavioral Health system.

In addition, a new website: MentalHealth.ca.gov, will serve as a one-stop source for people in need of mental health support and includes information about the state’s ongoing behavioral health transformation. Gov. Newsom announced San Mateo County would be an early adopter of the CARE Act, not waiting for the Dec. 1 deadline to help people with untreated schizophrenia spectrum or other psychotic disorders.

“California is moving full steam ahead, getting funding out faster, and implementing key reforms sooner to better help Californians,” said Gov. Newsom. The status quo is simply unacceptable. People are demanding more accountability, with real results. That is what we are aiming to deliver, but the state cannot do it alone – it is time for local officials to step up and begin to use the tools available to them to make our communities healthier and safer for all. San Mateo has stepped up. Now it’s time for other counties to do the same.”

The Redwood City location is utilizing investments from the Behavioral Health Bridge Housing or BHBH program, which, since 2022, has provided funding to short-term “bridge” housing settings to address the immediate and sustainable housing needs of people experiencing homelessness who have serious behavioral health conditions. Treatment centers and campuses will be possible all across the state thanks to the recently passed $6.38 Billion bond which builds on state-funded construction over the last three years to open new treatment and housing sites with each passing month.

Eligible entities, which include counties, cities, tribal entities, non-profits, and for profits, will be able to apply for funding from the first round of the $6.38 billion bond this summer. This bond application timeline is months ahead of the initial schedule.

In addition to providing resources and guidance on implementing the CARE Act, DHCS is issuing a new FAQ and optional standardized forms related to the modernization of conservatorship (SB 43), to add on to the county guidance released last month. Two counties have already begun implementing, and these new resources are designed to make it clear that counties do not need to wait until the Jan. 1, 2026 deadline to begin implementing this reform to help disabled people in their communities.

LEARN MORE ABOUT CALIFORNIA’S BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SYSTEM

VISIT MentalHealth.CA.Gov

LASD Detectives are Seeking the Public’s Help in Identifying an Abandoned Infant Lomita

On May 14, about 5 p.m., Lomita Station Deputies responded to a local business located on the 2000 block of Pacific Coast Highway in the city of Lomita, regarding an abandoned infant.

Upon arrival, deputies learned that an unidentified pregnant woman had entered the store carrying the infant and asked for a taxi. The store employee arranged for a taxi while the woman went to the restroom. When the taxi arrived, the woman left the store, leaving the infant behind in a shopping cart. The woman departed in the taxi, her destination unknown.

The infant is approximately between seven and nine months old and has since been placed into the care of Department of Children and Family Services.

Anyone with information is urged to contact Lomita Sheriff’s Station at 310-539-1661. anonymously at 1-800-222-8477; http://lacrimestoppers.org.

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Lawmakers Propose Renaming Joshua Tree Visitor Center in Honor of Senator Feinstein

 

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Senators Alex Padilla and Laphonza Butler (both D-Calif.), along with Representative Raul Ruiz (D-Calif.-25), May 14 announced legislation to rename the Cottonwood Visitor Center at Joshua Tree National Park as the Senator Dianne Feinstein Visitor Center. The bill received a hearing today in the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee (ENR) with the National Park Service.

The Cottonwood Visitor Center is located in the southern part of Joshua Tree National Park, just seven miles north of Interstate 10, and serves as the first contact station for the millions of visitors entering the park from the Interstate each year. The visitor center is the gateway to many hiking trails, including the Cottonwood Springs area.

The late Senator Feinstein was a champion for protecting California’s public lands, from the redwoods of the Headwaters and the San Francisco Bay, to Lake Tahoe and, most notably, the California desert. She authored the California Desert Protection Act of 1994 that created the Mojave National Preserve, expanded and redesignated Death Valley and Joshua Tree National Monuments as national parks, and designated over seven million acres of California desert as Wilderness. She also sponsored subsequent legislation to protect natural areas and wildlife corridors in the desert, leading to the creation of the Santa Rosa and San Jacinto Mountains National Monument, the Mojave Trails National Monument, the Sand to Snow National Monument, and the Castle Mountains National Monument.

“Senator Feinstein was widely regarded as a great protector of the California desert, having grown up with fond childhood memories of the desert and subsequently working to protect the landscape throughout her Senate career,” said Senator Padilla. “Thirty years after the enactment of Senator Feinstein’s landmark California Desert Protection Act, which created Joshua Tree National Park, I can think of no better way to honor her legacy than by ensuring that the Park’s visitors are reminded of Senator Feinstein’s enduring public lands legacy.”

Senator Padilla also introduced legislation to expand the Mojave National Preserve, established by Feinstein’s 1994 California Desert Protection Act, by approximately 20,000 acres to encompass the existing Castle Mountains National Monument. Doing so would allow the National Park Service to more effectively safeguard land within the Mojave Desert and better conserve and protect the Castle Mountains. Additionally, Padilla introduced legislation to expand Joshua Tree National Park by about 17,000 acres. Both of these bills were also included in the ENR Committee hearing today and received positive testimony from the National Park Service.

WATCH: Padilla highlights his three public lands bills to uphold Senator Feinstein’s legacy of protecting the California desert.