Wednesday, November 5, 2025
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Port Briefs: POLB Awarded Funds and See Cargo Volumes Rise in April

Port of Long Beach Awarded Funds for Critical Projects

The Port of Long Beach received federal funding for civil works plans laid out by the Army Corps of Engineers, aimed at financing several maintenance and repair projects along the waterfront.

The funds arise from the Harbor Maintenance Tax – collected by the federal government from ports based on the value of imports, some domestic cargo and on cruise passengers. Established by Congress in 1986 to fund dredging projects at U.S. seaports, funds from the Harbor Maintenance Tax were typically collected from but not directed to ports like the Port of Long Beach. The Water Resources Development Act of 2020, however, expanded the use of funds to include in-water maintenance and repair projects, allowing for a more equitable distribution among large and small seaports.

Combined, the Port of Long Beach and the Port of Los Angeles will receive $112 million as part of the Army Corps of Engineers work plan.

“We have long pushed for a fair share of Harbor Maintenance Tax funding to ports like ours, which traditionally have contributed more to the fund than they received,” said Port of Long Beach CEO Mario Cordero. “We thank Sen. Alex Padilla, Rep. Robert Garcia, Rep. Grace Napolitano and our other congressional leaders for securing the funds for critical repair, retrofit and replacement projects that will strengthen our ability to move cargo safely and sustainably, and our partners at the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for including funds in their 2024 work plan.”

The port is planning to spend $2.3 billion over the next 10 years in capital improvements aimed at enhancing capacity, competitiveness and sustainability. Although the bulk of the funding is designated for rail projects, the port has identified specific needs for seismic upgrades in addition to the maintenance and repair of existing rock dikes, concrete and steel bulkheads, wharves and other marine structures.

 

Port of Long Beach Cargo Volumes Climb in April

LONG BEACH Trade moving through the Port of Long Beach gained momentum in April, marking the eighth consecutive month of year-over-year cargo growth at the port.

Dockworkers and terminal operators moved 750,424 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs) last month, up 14.4% from April 2023. Imports rose 16.3% to 364,665 TEUs and exports declined 19.9% to 98,266 TEUs. Empty containers moving through the port increased 30.7% to 287,493 TEUs.

The Port has moved 2,753,244 TEUs through the first four months of 2024, up 15.8% from the same period in 2023.

City Council Confirms New LADWP CEO and General Manager/Chief Engineer

LOS ANGELES – Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass applauded the unanimous confirmation of Janisse Quiñones, PE to serve as the new CEO and general manager/chief engineer of the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power or LADWP and lead the department through the transition toward 100% clean energy by 2035.

Janisse Quiñones brings more than 25 years of leadership experience as a senior executive in utility and engineering industries where she managed large-scale operations in order to deliver reliable service to customers, prioritized the safety of workers on the job and directed improvements that made electrical infrastructure more resilient.

Janisse Quiñones most recently served as senior vice president of Electric Operations at Pacific Gas and Electric or PG&E, one of the largest utility companies in the United States providing natural gas and electric service to approximately 16 million people in northern and central California. At PG&E, Quiñones was responsible for the territory’s electrical system operations and the power generation fleet as well as the management of electrical assets that support the California independent system operator. Prior to that role, Quiñones served as senior vice president of gas engineering for PG&E and as the vice president of gas systems engineering for National Grid, vice president of operations for Cobra Acquisitions and director of design, planning, construction & vegetation management as part of her nine years of work at San Diego Gas & Electric or SDG&E which she started immediately after leaving full time military service. At SDG&E, Quiñones managed the majority of the company’s gas and electric distribution capital construction.

Details: Read more here.

 

EPA Survey Highlights Wastewater Infrastructure Needs to Protect National Water Bodies

WASHINGTON — On May 13, the Environmental Protection Agency transmitted a report to Congress outlining clean water infrastructure investments — including wastewater and stormwater system upgrades — that are needed over the next 20 years. Through the clean watersheds needs survey, states and U.S. territories report on future capital costs or investment needs to maintain and modernize publicly owned wastewater treatment works, stormwater infrastructure, nonpoint source control, and decentralized wastewater treatment systems like septic tanks. These investments are essential to supporting the Clean Water Act’s goal that the nation’s waters are fishable and swimmable.

The 2022 survey represents the most recent comprehensive and robust report on wastewater, stormwater, and other clean water infrastructure needs in the U.S., and shows that at least $630 billion will be needed over the next 20 years to protect our nation’s water bodies.

EPA has many federal funding resources available for communities and utilities to improve vital drinking water and wastewater infrastructure. President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law provides a $50 billion investment in upgrading critical water infrastructure – with almost $13 billion going to wastewater and stormwater management.

Learn more about the survey and access the interactive dashboard.

Public Health Officials Investigate Hepatitis A Outbreak

The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health is investigating an outbreak of hepatitis A infections. Public Health has identified five cases among people experiencing homelessness since mid-March 2024. Hepatitis A is a highly contagious liver infection that can be spread from person-to-person even before they feel sick. The infection is caused by the hepatitis A virus, which is found in the stool and blood of people who are infected. Individuals that are unhoused are at higher risk for contracting hepatitis A infection because they often have limited access to hand washing and toileting facilities.

Public Health is offering free hepatitis A vaccines to people experiencing homelessness in encampments and at interim housing sites where there is risk of potential exposure. Hepatitis A vaccine is typically a two dose vaccine series that is safe and highly effective in preventing infection. Additionally, previously unvaccinated people can receive hepatitis A vaccine soon after exposure to protect against developing the infection.

Although the current risk to the public is low, Public Health recommends residents take the following actions to help prevent the spread of disease:

  • Check if you have been vaccinated for hepatitis A. If you haven’t, contact your medical provider to determine if you should be vaccinated. Vaccination is the best way to prevent hepatitis A.
  • Wash your hands with soap and water before eating and preparing food and after using the bathroom.

About Hepatitis A

Hepatitis A can range from a mild illness lasting a few weeks to a severe illness lasting several months. Symptoms of hepatitis include fever, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, diarrhea, dark urine, or yellow eyes/skin. Although rare, hepatitis A can cause death in some people. Hepatitis A is usually transmitted through eating contaminated food, or through close contact with a person while infectious and a person with the virus can transmit illness up to two weeks prior to the onset of symptoms.

Areas with poor access to adequate water, sanitation, and hygiene services are high risk for experiencing outbreaks.

Details: publichealth.lacounty.gov.

South Bay Filipina Activists Meet Demanding: End Violence Against Women

Nearly one-hundred Filipina political activists, organized by the Filipina women’s group Gabriela, held a meeting May 11 in Long Beach. The meeting was overwhelmingly young women concerned about violence against Filipina women in the Philippines, Palestine and the United States.

One Billion Rising 2024 uplifted the strength of collective resistance to violence against women and children, including genocide, militarization and abuse in countries like the Philippines and Palestine. The community empowered each other to resist and protect each other through dance, song, poetry and chants.

The event was fundraised to send Palestinian Youth Movement delegates to the PYM National Conference in May and GABRIELA South Bay delegates to the International Women’s Alliance Assembly in Malaysia this June. This was a joint effort planned and facilitated by GABRIELA South Bay, Long Beach Queers 4 Palestine, and MaskBloc LB.

Welcomed by the organizers the Los Angeles Hands off Cuba committee representative told the crowd about the recent “Labor and Youth Activists” delegation to Cuba, which included LA Filipino activists, the new Cuban “Family Code” giving more rights to women and LGBTQ than anywhere in the world. They are planning reportback meetings early June.

Details: LA.US.HandsoffCuba@gmail.com

LA County Probation Department Places 66 Officers on Leave Amid Disciplinary Investigations

 

LOS ANGELES — The LA County Probation Department today announced that it has put 66 sworn probation officers on administrative leave since Jan. 1 pending internal affairs investigations into allegations of official misconduct, including at county juvenile facilities.

“The Department is releasing this information to regain public trust as it roots out employees who cultivate or contribute to a culture of violence, drug use, neglect and sexual misconduct in the nation’s largest probation agency,” said Chief Guillermo Viera Rosa.

“We are releasing this information in the spirit of greater transparency and to assure our stakeholders — especially the families of youths in our juvenile facilities — that we will not tolerate anything that impedes our mission to provide a safe, nurturing and structured environment for those entrusted to our care.”

Those placed on leave were assigned to both the Department’s adult and juvenile operations.

Of the 66 officers placed on leave, 39 were for issues of general misconduct, which includes suspected use of excessive force, child endangerment or abuse, possession of contraband, and negligent supervision.

In addition, 18 were put on leave for suspected sexual misconduct and nine for arrests unrelated to employment.

The number of those placed on leave for general misconduct includes 14 officers — two more than previously announced — related to youth-on-youth violence at Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall. These cases are now under investigation by the California Attorney General, who is handling the matter while the Probation Department restructures its Internal Affairs Unit.

Viera Rosa said all the officers placed on leave since the first of the year represent a small minority of the Department’s nearly 2,800 sworn personnel.

“It is out of respect for the majority of our officers, who perform their duties each day with integrity, that we moved quickly on these cases,” he said. “It’s not right that the majority should be tarnished by the misconduct of a few. We will not tolerate anything that is an affront to our mission and a disgrace to the important work we do.”

Wayfarers Leadership Begins Disassembly of Iconic Chapel to Avoid Destruction from Landslide

Photo by Henrik Kamm

Rancho Palos Verdes — Wayfarers Chapel is a National Historic Landmark, designed by renowned architect Frank Lloyd Wright, Jr. (Lloyd Wright). Resting on a peninsula, this site hosts the chapel and campus on a hillside above the Pacific Ocean where wayfarers could stop to rest, meditate, and give thanks. Lloyd Wright, the son of the American architectural innovator Frank Lloyd Wright, created a design with an emphasis on harmony between the natural world and the inner world of mind and spirit.

Wayfarers Chapel and the surrounding grounds are now closed due to the momentum of local land movement. The Portuguese Bend landslide has accelerated at an unprecedented rate and is dramatically impacting the Wayfarers Chapel campus and surrounding area. Constrained by nature and the rapidly moving landslide, the goal is to save the chapel by collaborating with historic preservation experts, led by Architectural Resources Group or ARG of Los Angeles, to carefully “deconstruct” (disassemble) the chapel to preserve as many materials (many of which are no longer being made or available) as possible for a future careful and thoughtful rebuilding of the chapel.

“The accelerating destruction of Wayfarers Chapel by the Portuguese Bend landslide complex is a looming tragedy felt by many. Our hearts go out to our many neighbors whose homes are threatened.” Dan Burchett, executive director of Wayfarers Chapel said “Wayfarers is committed to preserving our iconic chapel exactly as it has always been, either on the current site or a similar site close by in Rancho Palos Verdes. We are taking immediate action to carefully disassemble the chapel’s historic materials as a necessary step in the preservation of the chapel for generations to come.”

“Wayfarers Chapel has been a treasured part of our community for generations. The City of Rancho Palos Verdes is committed to working with Wayfarers Chapel to ensure it can be quickly rebuilt on a geologically safe location somewhere within the city, if possible. We are pleased that Wayfarers is working with the National Park Service and the preservation experts at Architectural Resources Group to ensure the chapel will be preserved according to the highest standards for historic preservation,” said Mayor John Cruikshank.

Aeriel view of Wayfares Chapel. Photo courtesy of City of RPV

The movement on the site to date has caused damage to the metal framing in both the walls and ceiling causing it to torque and bend; most of the glass panels have fractured; many doors are no longer operable; the concrete floor has heavily cracked; and even the cornerstone laid in 1949 has a long crack through it. In addition, services underground including electricity, water, sewer and gas utilities are broken and currently unusable. The chapel will not be able to withstand much more damage before it becomes impossible to Preserve.

“So many of the chapel’s original materials that were part of the Lloyd Wright design cannot be replicated today: the old growth redwood glulam, the blue roof tiles, the elegant network of steel that holds the windows together. With each passing day, more of this material is lost or irreparably damaged. Our team is working against the clock to document and move these building components to safety so that they can be put back together again,” said Katie Horak, principal of Architectural Resources Group.

Damage on Wayfares Chapel Photo courtesy of City of RPV

It has been determined that the immediate deconstruction of the chapel is the safest and most viable preservation action to take at this time and will prevent further irreparable damage to the chapel’s structure and materials. The team will begin the careful disassembly of the chapel, which includes cataloging and documenting each piece, preserving as much of the chapel’s original materials as practicable, and relocating all component parts to a temporary safe location until they can be reassembled. Simultaneously, the team will evaluate options for reconstruction on this site or one nearby.

Farewell to Nancy Webber: An Artistic Journey of Exploration, Expression, and Inspiration

May 14, 1937 — March 29, 2024
Nancy Wildermuth Webber died peacefully on March 29, 2024 at Providence Little Company of Mary in San Pedro, CA after a period of decline due to a heart condition, frailty and serious falls, all resulting from the complexities of aging. Nancy Webber was first and foremost an imaginative, creative and generous person who enjoyed the sensual treasures earth has to offer. A world traveler, one could guess at which countries she had visited through her zany take on fashion, often wearing luscious colors and fabrics humorously paired with contemporary pop doo-dads. Her deep interest in diverse traditional cultures, contrasting the antique and the new was also reflected in her extensive body of personal artwork. This love could also be seen in her far-flung collection of world textiles and art objects and in her delectable culinary creations.

Nancy Wildermuth Webber was born on May 14, 1937 in St. Louis, Missouri, daughter of Frederick A. Wildermuth and Myra Leach Wildermuth. She attended Dominican University of California in San Rafael, CA where she received a BA in Liberal Arts with an Art Major and English Minor, 1955-59. She attended Mills College (subsidiary of Northeastern University) in Oakland, CA from 1959-62 where she received a Master of Fine Arts in painting. During this time she also studied abroad at the Pius XII Institute in Florence, Italy where she received an MA in 1961.

In 1965 Nancy married painter Martin Webber whom she met while both were attending Mills College and together they moved to San Pedro, CA where Nancy gave birth to their daughter, Sophia in 1971. Ms. Webber began her position as full-time Professor of Art at Los Angeles Harbor College, CA in 1965 where she taught photography, drawing, painting, design, and film appreciation. After a long and satisfying career as an art educator she retired from full-time teaching in 2013 to devote herself to her own artwork — most especially to the development and completion of a book of her photographs, Life Imitates Art published in 2015. She continued adjunct faculty teaching at Harbor College until 2016.

Always an inquisitive traveler, Nancy visited countries around the globe including India, China, Japan, Europe, Mexico, South and Central America, Cuba, Indonesia and Thailand. Additionally she traveled broadly in the US and Canada.

From 1980-82 she enjoyed a sabbatical in London while photographing and drawing her surroundings. In 1994 she completed a Fulbright in Brazil and another in India where she photographed expansively while collecting textiles and objects in both locations. The photographs and objects were later exhibited in the Art Gallery at Harbor College. In addition, Webber developed a seminar informed by her travels.

In 1991 Nancy was a co-recipient of the Visual Art Award for the opening of the Metro Blue Line for which they created a large photo mural. In 1992 she received a J. Paul Getty Fellowship in Photography and Public Art. In 2008 she received another grant from the Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs, art in public places for the Harbor Animal Care Center in San Pedro. The piece is titled Peaceable Kingdom.

In addition to her considerable contributions in education, Nancy possessed a long and singular focus in her personal artwork. What began at age five, as a challenge by a guide at the Saint Louis Art Museum, to find the work of art in the gallery that matched a detail handed to her by the docent, later sparked a lifelong fascination. Years afterwards Nancy remembered the childhood game while visiting a museum in Florence, Italy as an art student. At this point she began her more than 25 year long series of observing similarities between art historical portraits and the faces of passers by, photographing both the museum portrait and the face of the stranger (or friend), pairing the photos to accentuate the resemblance.

From this extended matchmaking series Nancy produced her book, Life Imitates Art that includes over 200 re-embodiments using contemporary people who bear striking likeness to famous portraits. While always subtly humorous she incorporated art history, investigating the theme of the marriage of art and life, underscoring her determination to demystify art. She said, “Too often, we lock art up in intimidating edifices, like museums… I see art on the street all the time, and by showing what I see, I am making the historical work more alive and accessible.”

Nancy exhibited her works extensively, both nationally and internationally. Her photographic work is represented in the permanent collection at LACMA. Moreover, many of her works are in private and corporate collections. Additionally the photographs were published in the London Times, Life Magazine, and Camera at Work.itua

This imaginative and active artist also exhibited three-dimensional installation works and continued to do beautiful Prismacolor and graphite drawings of animals until the end of her life.

Nancy Webber will be greatly missed by her family and her many friends. She is survived by her daughter, Sophia, by her small terrier, EB and by Olive, the family mini pig.

Gov. Newsom Releases Revised State Budget

 

SACRAMENTO Gov. Gavin Newsom May 10 released a May Revision proposal for the 2024-25 fiscal year that ensures the budget is balanced over the next two fiscal years by stabilizing spending following the tumultuous COVID-19 pandemic, while preserving key ongoing investments.

Under the Governor’s proposal, the state is projected to achieve a positive operating reserve balance not only in this budget year but also in the next. This “budget year, plus one” proposal is designed to bring longer-term stability to state finances without delay and create an operating surplus in the 2025-26 budget year.

In the years leading up to this May revision, the Newsom Administration recognized the threats of an uncertain stock market and federal tax deadline delays setting aside $38 billion in reserves that could be utilized for shortfalls. That has put California in a strong position to maintain fiscal stability.

Below are takeaways from Gov. Newsom’s proposed budget:

A BALANCED BUDGET OVER TWO YEARS. The Governor is solving two years of budget problems in a single budget, tightening the state’s belt to get the budget back to normal after the COVID-19 pandemic. By addressing the shortfall for this budget year — and next year — the Governor is eliminating the 2024-25 deficit and eliminating a projected deficit for the 2025-26 budget year that is $27.6 billion (after taking an early budget action) and $28.4 billion respectively.

CUTTING SPENDING, MAKING GOVERNMENT LEANER. Gov. Newsom’s revised balanced state budget cuts one-time spending by $19.1 billion and ongoing spending by $13.7 billion through 2025-26. This includes a nearly 8% cut to state operations and a targeted elimination of 10,000 unfilled state positions, improving government efficiency and reducing non-essential spending — without raising taxes on individuals or proposing state worker furloughs. The budget saves costs by streamlining procurement, cutting bureaucratic red tape and reducing redundancies.

PRESERVING CORE SERVICES & SAFETY NETS. The budget maintains service levels for many key housing, food, health care, and other assistance programs that Californians rely on while addressing the deficit by pausing the expansion of certain programs and decreasing numerous recent one-time and ongoing investments.

NO NEW TAXES & MORE RAINY DAY SAVINGS. Gov. Newsom is balancing the budget by getting state spending under control and reducing the reliance on the state’s “Rainy Day” reserves this year.

Additional details on the May Revise proposal can be found in this fact sheet and at www.ebudget.ca.gov

CommUnity Town Hall

Join the CommUNITY Celebration/Town Hall in the Peck Park Community Center. This town hall was planned in response to a hate crime that occurred in San Pedro over the 2023 holiday season. Just as the San Pedro community always does, leaders have stepped up to come together and plan an event where, as a community, folks will learn about hate crimes and the prosecution of those crimes. Come together to send a strong message to reject hatred.

Time: 4 p.m., May 19

Venue: Peck Park, 560 N Western Ave., San Pedro