Saturday, October 25, 2025
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LA County Counsel Terminates LASD’s Lawyer Same Day Supervisor Kuehl’s Warrant Is Challenged In Court

LOS ANGELES — On Sept. 16, the L.A. County Board of Supervisors terminated the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department’s legal representation, the same day the LASD Sept. 14 search warrant was challenged in court. At a Sept. 22 emergency hearing, the sheriff’s department did not have representation or county authorization to pay for legal representation in this matter.

A Los Angeles Superior Court judge ruled the search warrant was valid, explaining that the warrant was carried out in connection to a public corruption case involving Sup. Kuehl and Los Angeles County Civilian Oversight Commissioner Patricia Giggans and contracts awarded to the nonprofit organization, Peace Over Violence.

Both Kuehl and Giggans’ homes were searched on Sept. 14. The L.A. County Hall of Administration, the Peace over Violence headquarters and the Los Angeles Metro offices were all searched as well.

On Sept. 20, Attorney General Rob Bonta took over the corruption investigation in response to Sheriff Alex Villanueva’s request for the Justice Department to investigate whether a crime was committed. Bonta noted that the California Attorney General’s office has supervisory authority over the sheriff and may, if deemed necessary, take full charge of any investigation or prosecution of violations of law of which the superior court has jurisdiction.

Bonta directed LASD to cease its investigation and all evidence, investigative reports, and information to DOJ special agent supervisor Paul Ramirez and DOJ special agent Allen Mack so that DOJ can handle all further investigation.

Ports Briefs Funding For Energy Efficiency and Dwell Fee Postponed Again

Port Offers Funding for Energy Efficiency Projects

The Port of Long Beach is accepting proposals for energy efficiency projects that qualify for funding under its Community Grants Program.

The Community Grants Program is a more than $46 million effort designed to help those in the community who are most vulnerable to port-related impacts. Combined with a previous program started in 2009, the Port of Long Beach has set aside more than $65 million. To date, $36.5 million has been committed.

Projects that receive grants will serve people most sensitive to port impacts, including seniors, pregnant women, children, and those with asthma or chronic illnesses. Public and private agencies are eligible to apply; home improvements are not eligible.

A total of $2 million in funding is available for the solicitation. Of the $2 million, $338,314 is dedicated to school projects. The minimum funding request is $5,000.

Full proposals must be submitted online and are due by 4 p.m. Friday, Nov. 18.

Details: www.polb.com/grantopportunities.

 

Ports Dwell Fee Put on Hold Again

SAN PEDRO The San Pedro Bay ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach will postpone consideration of the container dwell fee for four weeks, until Oct. 21.

Since the program was announced on Oct. 25, 2021, the two ports have seen a combined decline of 52% in aging cargo on the docks.

The executive directors of both ports will reassess fee implementation after monitoring data over the next month. Fee implementation has been postponed by both ports since the start of the program. The Long Beach and Los Angeles Boards of Harbor Commissioners have both extended the fee program through Oct. 26.

California Advances Commitment to Pay Equity and Supporting Women

SACRAMENTO – Gov. Gavin Newsom and First Partner Jennifer Siebel Newsom Sept. 27 met with leaders from the Legislative Women’s Caucus to highlight a package of priority legislation signed by the Governor to strengthen California’s commitment to advancing gender equity and protecting the rights of women.

The measures signed by the Governor include SB 1162 by Senator Monique Limόn (D-Santa Barbara), which requires employers to make salary ranges for positions available to applicants and employees and expands pay data reporting requirements to better identify gender and race-based pay disparities.

Gov. Newsom noted California has the strongest equal pay laws in the nation, but the state is not letting up on the work to ensure all women in California are paid their due and treated equally in all spheres of life.

Advancing pay equity and combating gender-based price discrimination

SB 1162 requires employers to make pay scale information available to employees and included in job postings. Building on a measure the Governor signed in 2020 to identify patterns of wage disparities through mandated statewide pay data reporting, SB 1162 expands state pay data reporting requirements, which include employee sex, race and ethnicity information, to cover contracted employees.

Gov. Newsom also signed AB 1287 by Assemblymember Rebecca Bauer-Kahan (D-Orinda) which eliminates the discriminatory “pink tax” by prohibiting different prices for goods based purely on what gender they are marketed to. AB 1287 allows for price differences when there is a significant difference in the cost or time to produce a particular good.

Supporting victims of domestic violence and sexual assault

In addition, Gov. Newsom signed AB 1467 by Assemblymember Sabrina Cervantes (D-Riverside), which supports survivors by requiring sexual assault and domestic violence counselors at public colleges to be independent from the Title IX office and prohibits these counselors from releasing the identity of a victim without permission.

AB 2185 by Assemblymember Dr. Akilah Weber (D-San Diego) provides domestic violence victims access to free medical evidentiary exams by Local Sexual Assault Response Teams or other qualified medical evidentiary examiners.

SB 1017 by Senator Susan Talamantes Eggman (D-Stockton) increases eviction protections for survivors of domestic violence, sexual assault, human trafficking and other serious crimes.

A full list of bills the Governor announced signing can be found below:

  • AB 1287 by Assemblymember Rebecca Bauer-Kahan (D-Orinda) – Price discrimination: gender.
  • AB 1467 by Assemblymember Sabrina Cervantes (D-Riverside) – Student safety: sexual assault and domestic violence procedures and protocols: sexual assault and domestic violence counselors.
  • AB 2185 by Assemblymember Dr. Akilah Weber (D-San Diego) – Forensic examinations: domestic violence.
  • SB 1017 by Senator Susan Talamantes Eggman (D-Stockton) – Leases: termination of tenancy: abuse or violence.
  • SB 1162 by Senator Monique Limόn (D-Santa Barbara) – Employment: Salaries and Wages.

 

 

County, State Briefs Address Social Causes For Veterans, Immigrants, Native Communities and Funds Scientific Research

County Launches Pilot Program To Reduce Veteran Suicide

LOS ANGELES On Sept. 29, Los Angeles County officially launches the Veteran Suicide Review Team or VSRT, a collaborative between city, county, federal and private agencies to reduce veteran suicide in LA County.

The Los Angeles County Department of Mental Health or LACDMH will serve as lead in the project, working closely with Public Health, Los Angeles County Department of Military and Veteran Affairs or LACDMVA and the US Department of Veterans Affairs or VA, and the Medical Examiner/Coroner to implement a data-driven and a collaborative death review process to collect data, analyze veteran suicides, and identify gaps in service to enhance support structures.

The core team participating in the monthly reviews consists of multiple county agencies, VA VISN 22 and associated VA medical centers, FBI, CalVet, LA City, and suicide-specific veteran community organizations who will work together to review data brought in from each of their departments to best identify trends to shape future strategy.

The LA County Board of Supervisors unanimously approved the pilot program based on recommendations of a study released last year. The study revealed a 16% increase in veteran suicide from 2017 to 2018 in LA County.

Supervisors Kathryn Barger and Sheila Kuehl co-authored the motion, which was adopted in February, 2022.

Details: https://tinyurl.com/yc5he9ju

 

California IDs For All

SACRAMENTO As other states cruelly target migrants and vilify immigration, Gov. Gavin Newsom today announced the signing of legislation that will support immigrants, advance equity, and expand opportunity.

What Does This Mean?

  • Undocumented Californians will be able to obtain a State ID, a critical step for inclusion and meaningful participation in our communities and economy.
  • Street vendors can more easily get local health permits, supporting better economic inclusion and opportunity.
  • Immigrant students will have improved access to in-state tuition at public colleges and universities, and to ESL courses at community colleges. Additionally, immigrant student borrowers will have more options to finance their college educations.
  • Provides low-income Californians, regardless of their immigration status, eligibility for legal assistance in civil matters affecting basic human needs.
  • Access to community health workers and promotores who can facilitate and provide culturally and linguistically responsive care.
  • Cal/OSHA postings will be provided in various languages to protect workers and support safe workplaces.
  • An alternate plea scheme will be created for defendants charged with drug offenses, which mitigates particular harm for noncitizen Californians.

Last month, Gov. Newsom signed SB 836 by Senator Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco), prohibiting the disclosure of a person’s immigration status in open court in a criminal case by any party unless approved by the judge.

Details: http://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov.

 

Gov. Newsom Signs Legislation to Support California Native Communities

SACRAMENTO On Sept. 23, Native American Day, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed several bills to support California Native communities and build on the Administration’s work to promote equity, inclusion and accountability throughout the state. In a ceremony joined by leaders of Native American tribes from across California, the Governor signed AB 1314 by Assemblymember James C. Ramos (D-Highland) to help address the ongoing crisis of missing and murdered Native people from communities across the country.

Under AB 1314, local law enforcement will be able to request that the California Highway Patrol activate an emergency Feather Alert, similar to an Amber or Silver alert, to assist in search efforts for a Native person who has been reported missing under suspicious circumstances.

The state budget this year invests $12 million over three years to fund tribally-led programs to help address the crisis of missing and murdered Indigenous people on tribal lands. This investment built on last year’s investment of $5 million to fund training and guidance for law enforcement agencies and tribal governments to improve public safety on tribal lands and study challenges related to the reporting and identification of missing and murdered Native peoples, particularly women and girls.

Gov. Newsom also signed AB 1936 by Assemblymember Ramos, which re-designates the University of California’s Hastings College of the Law as the College of the Law, San Francisco and advances restorative justice efforts for Round Valley Indian Tribes and Yuki people whose ancestors suffered mass killings and other atrocities funded and supported by college founder Serranus Hastings in the mid-19th century.

Under AB 2022 by Assemblymember Ramos, the racist and sexist term “squaw” will be removed from all geographic features and place names in the state, and a process to review petitions to change offensive or derogatory place names will be created. The Newsom Administration has launched a series of ongoing actions to identify and redress discriminatory names of features attached to the State Parks and transportation systems.

Governor Newsom also signed AB 1703 by Assemblymember Ramos, the California Indian Education Act. The measure encourages local educational agencies and charter schools to form California Indian Education Task Forces in partnership with local tribes to develop curricular materials that highlight the unique history, culture and government of tribes in their region.

Details: http://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov.

 

Senators Announce Over $43 Million in Funding for Advancement of Scientific Research in California

WASHINGTON, D.C. — U.S. Senators Alex Padilla and Dianne Feinstein (both D-Calif.) Sept. 23, announced that seven universities, one nonprofit, and one startup in California will be receiving over $43 million in grants from the National Science Foundation or NSF. This funding will support 14 research projects and fellowships to advance academic studies on wide-ranging scientific topics and increase diversity in scientific fields.

NSF supports research, innovation, and discovery that provides the foundation for economic growth in this country. In FY 2021, NSF awarded over $1.1 billion to California, with over $900 million allocated to fundamental research. By advancing the frontiers of science and engineering, our nation can develop the knowledge and cutting-edge technologies needed to address the challenges we face today and will face in the future.

Details: Find a full list of California projects receiving funding here.

 

 

Rep. Barragán Votes for The Presidential Election Reform Act

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WASHINGTON, DC Congresswoman Nanette Diaz Barragán (CA-44) Sept. 21,voted to pass H.R. 8873, the Presidential Election Reform Act, legislation that would prevent future attempts to subvert presidential election results.

This bill is a response to the attempts by former President Trump and his allies to challenge the 2020 election results that led to the January 6th Capitol attack. Introduced by Representatives Zoe Lofgren (D-CA) and Liz Cheney (R-WY), two members of the January 6th Committee, the bill will help safeguard the election system against attacks on future presidential election results.

The Presidential Election Reform Act would reform the Electoral Count Act by:

  • Reaffirm that a Vice President cannot reject or delay counting presidential election results,
  • Raise the threshold for objection to a state’s electors to one-third of both chambers of Congress,
  • Set a deadline by which governors need to transmit their states’ electoral appointments to Congress,
  • Provide a federal judicial remedy should a state’s governor refuse to certify results,
  • Prohibit election officials from willfully refusing to certify ballots,
  • And confirm that the rules of an election, including how electors are selected, cannot change after an election has occurred.

When Trump is Finally Revealed as an Agent of Foreign Governments – Will America Wake Up?

It’s time to tell the truth about Trump: he’s been an agent of organized crime and foreign governments for decades. And he’s continuing his work for Putin, Xi, Erdogan, and MBS — undermining Americans’ faith in democracy — to this day.

Czechoslovakia’s Státní bezpečnost (StB) first started paying attention to Trump back in 1977, as documented by the German newspaper Bild when the StB’s files were declassified, because Trump married Czech model Ivana Zelnickova, his first wife, recently buried on his golf course in New Jersey.

Czechoslovakia at that time was part of the Warsaw Pact with the Soviet Union, and Ivana and her family had been raised as good communists. Now that a Czech citizen was married into a wealthy and prominent American family, the StB saw an opportunity and started tracking Trump virtually from his engagement.

As 2016 and 2018 investigations by The Guardian found:

“Ivana’s father, Miloš Zelníček, gave regular information to the local StB office about his daughter’s visits from the US and on his celebrity son-in-law’s career in New York. Zelníček was classified as a ‘conspiratorial’ informer. His relationship with the StB lasted until the end of the communist regime.”

Last year’s investigative reporting breakthrough by Craig Unger for his book American Kompromat led Unger to Uri Shvets, a former KGB spy who’d been posted to Washington, DC for years as a correspondent for the Soviet news agency TASS.

Shvets told the story — from his own knowledge — of how Trump and Ivana visited Moscow in 1987 and were essentially recruited or seduced by the KGB, a trip corroborated by Luke Harding in his book Collusion: Secret Meetings, Dirty Money, and How Russia Helped Donald Trump Win.

Their trip was coordinated by Intourist, the Soviet travel agency that was a front for the KGB, and the Trumps’ handlers regaled Donald and Ivana with Soviet talking points, presumably about things like the horrors of NATO.

The KGB’s psychological profile of Trump had determined he was vulnerable to flattery and not much of a deep thinker, so they told him repeatedly how brilliant he was and that he should run for president in the US.

Much to the astonishment and jubilation of the KGB, Trump returned from Moscow to the US to give a Republican presidential campaign speech that fall in Portsmouth, New Hampshire.

He then purchased a large ad in The New York Times, The Washington Post, and The Boston Globe on September 1, 1987 that questioned America’s ongoing support of Japan and NATO, both thorns in the side of the USSR and their Chinese allies.

Trump’s ad laid it on the line:

″Why are these nations not paying the United States for the human lives and billions of dollars we are losing to protect their interests? … The world is laughing at America’s politicians as we protect ships we don’t own, carrying oil we don’t need, destined for allies who won’t help.″

As The Guardian reported in 2021:

“The bizarre intervention was cause for astonishment and jubilation in Russia. A few days later Shvets, who had returned home by now, was at the headquarters of the KGB’s first chief directorate in Yasenevo when he received a cable celebrating the ad as a successful ‘active measure’ executed by a new KGB asset.

“’It was unprecedented,’ [Shvets said.] … It was hard to believe that somebody would publish it under his name and that it will impress real serious people in the west but it did and, finally, this guy became the president.’”

Meanwhile, Putin was making friends.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who flipped his nation into a strongman neofascist state following an unsuccessful attempted coup in 2016 (he imprisoned and tortured numerous journalists and banned political opposition), has been deepening his relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin ever since that US election year.

In 2017, Erdogan gained access to America’s deepest secrets by secretly paying off General Michael Flynn even as Flynn became Trump’s National Security Advisor, who also had at least one secret phone conversation with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak after Flynn started working in the White House.

Flynn pleaded guilty in December of 2017 to “willfully and knowingly” making “false, fictitious and fraudulent statements” to the FBI about one of those conversations with Kislyak. Flynn was also an unregistered agent of a foreign government while working in the White House: he was taking about a half-million dollars from Erdogan.

Nobody knows if this was when Trump started stealing Top Secret documents and nuclear secrets from our intelligence agencies, but if Flynn was one of his back-channel paths to Russian intelligence and Putin, even via Erdogan, it would make sense.

Trump’s 2016 Campaign Manager Paul Manafort, after all, just last month admitted that during the 2016 election he was handing secret campaign polling and strategy information off to Russian intelligence, presumably so they could successfully use it to micro-target vulnerable voters via Facebook and other social media in swing states.

Trump also sucked up to arguably the wealthiest oligarch in the world, Saudi Arabia’s Mohammad bin Salman. Breaking with the tradition of American presidents first visiting close allies among democratic nations, Trump’s first foreign trip was to Saudi Arabia, and the kingdom later gifted his family with $2 billion.

It’s still unknown if or how much money they might’ve transferred directly to Trump himself via one of his offshore accounts. Because Saudi Arabia is a police state, and Trump is really good at hiding his money after a lifetime of working with organized crime, we’ll probably never know.

Democracies, even flawed ones like the United States with our Supreme Court-legalized political bribery, are a perpetual embarrassment to autocrats like Putin, Xi, MBS, and Erdogan.

If they can help America tear herself apart through political conflict, it reduces the pressure on them for democratic reforms.

And Trump is still doing their work.

Just this week, he called-in to a pro-January 6th rally held with and for prisoners in a Washington, DC jail to encourage them in their ongoing efforts to destroy democracy in America (and not testify against Trump).

Imprisoning the people who’d beaten hundreds of police officers and murdered one of them was, Trump told the crowd, “a terrible thing that has happened to a lot of people that are being treated very, very unfairly.”

It’s hard to underestimate the damage to our nation done by Donald Trump along with the propaganda and social media efforts of Russia and, perhaps, other autocratic nations.

A handful of right-wing billionaires — themselves no fans of democracy — have also turned their media empires and billions to supporting Republicans who are working to destroy faith in our electoral system, the heart of our democracy.

The result is that America has become so torn apart that family members won’t speak to each other, our political system has turned into gridlock, and almost the entire GOP — under Trump’s influence — seizes on every little chance to trash-talk our nation.

Their efforts, of course, aren’t limited to America. Foreign autocratic governments have long been interfering in the domestic politics of western democracies, a process that’s stepped up radically in the past decade. It was recently revealed, for example, that Russia invested more than $300 million in supporting hard-right politicians in democratic nations.

But America leads the world when it comes to evangelizing for democracy: we were the world’s first modern democracy and have survived over 240 years so far.

Taking us down, particularly through internal division that would “prove” the weakness of democracies, is the ultimate goal of these nations and their president-for-life leaders.

It’s becoming harder and harder for Trump and his acolytes to claim that they harbor any loyalty to or love for America or democracy.

Their hatred of our system of government isn’t just evident rhetorically; they turn out on the streets with AR-15s strapped across their backs and “Free helicopter rides for liberals” displayed on their tee-shirts.

When Trump is finally revealed as not just a con man and hustler but an agent of foreign dictators, a spy, and a traitor, will America finally wake up?

Stay tuned…

Collecting the Art of California at Gardena High School, 1919-1956

Edgar Alwin Payne, Rockbound, 1921, Oil on canvas. Gift of the Class of 1921.

Palos Verdes Art Center / Beverly G. Alpay Center for Arts Education announces GIFTED: Collecting the Art of California at Gardena High School, 1919-1956, organized by the GHS Art Collection, Inc. in association with the Gardena High School Student Body and curated by Susan M. Anderson.

Palos Verdes Art Center will present the exhibition, featuring 50 paintings, at a public reception from 6 to 9 p.m. Sept. 24. Docent tours will be available Tuesdays and Saturdays during the run of the show, from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. and by appointment.

The exhibition and accompanying catalog chronicle the history of the school’s ambitious endeavor within the context of the wider cultural scene in Los Angeles, revealing that a broader public than was previously known — one driven by educational rather than economic values — participated in the development of Southern California art.

From 1919 to 1956, students in the senior class selected, purchased and donated some seventy-two works of art to the high school as class gifts. Over the years, artists, the federal art projects, and other individuals and organizations also made many gifts of art to the collection. In 1923 Gardena High School designed a new auditorium to house the permanent collection, establishing the first public art gallery in Southern California with a collection of regional art. Since the mid-1950s, the collection has been in storage and unavailable for viewing by the public. The exhibition GIFTED: Collecting the Art of California at Gardena High School, 1919- 1956 was originally exhibited at the Hilbert Museum of California Art in 2019. This presentation of GIFTED is the first for Los Angeles County, where Gardena High School is located. PVAC noted it is thankful to the organizers for sharing this important exhibition with its community.

Gardena High School established the collection when plein-air painting flourished in Southern California, setting the tone for the high school’s collecting emphasis during the following decades. Notably, students demonstrated a high level of sophistication in their choices as a result of the aesthetic discourse and collaboration nurtured by the school. Most works selected prior to World War II were plein-air landscapes, evidence of regional artists’ fascination with the area’s natural beauty and art currents popular at the time. The GHSAC includes works by prominent painters of California Impressionism, including William Wendt, Edgar Payne, Hanson Duvall Puthuff, Jean Mannheim, Franz Bischoff, Maurice Braun, Alson Clark, Agnes Pelton and Marion Wachtel among others. Later works by Loren Barton, Maynard Dixon, and Emil Kosa reflect the influence of the American Scene movement popular during the Depression era as well as the dramatic shifts in style characteristic of the art of the post-war period.

Accompanying the exhibition is the catalog, GIFTED: Collecting the Art of California at Gardena High School, 1919-1956, a 216-page, color-illustrated publication by California art scholar Susan M. Anderson, former curator of Laguna Art Museum. The exhibition catalog, co-published with the former Pasadena Museum of California Art and designed by Garland Kirkpatrick, is the definitive study of the history and importance of the collection within a regional and national context.

View paintings from the exhibition at:https://tinyurl.com/pvac-gifted

Time: Opening reception 6 to 9 p.m. Sept. 24, through Nov. 12.

 

Cost: Free

Details: 310-541-2479pvartcenter.org

Venue: Palos Verdes Art Center, 5504 Crestridge Road, Rancho Palos Verdes

 

Local Artists Inspire Healthcare Heroes at Dignity Health – St. Mary Medical Center

Jennie Cotterill puts final touches on mural completed with fellow artist Edwin Santa Cruz.

LONG BEACH ― The St. Mary Medical Center Foundation and Carolyn Caldwell, President and CEO at Dignity Health – St. Mary Medical Center, present its inaugural President Wellness Challenge to inspire lifestyle changes and better daily habits among employees. The challenge aims to get employees moving, thinking and working in healthier ways, while lowering the risk of heart disease or a stroke, by way of team-building efforts.

Among the healthy habits promoted in this challenge is stair climbing, a quick and effective way to get your heart rate up and get your steps in..

 

 

 

 

 

In-progress photo of mural designed and executed by Rick Reece. Rick spends his days as a freelance illustrator and is currently the Chair of the Art Department at Cal State University, Long Beach

“As health care workers, we know how important it is to stay healthy”, states Carolyn Caldwell, President and CEO at St. Mary Medical Center.

“We reached out to local artists in the community to help us with our wellness challenge. Art has been shown to help lower heart rate and reduce anxiety and what better way to inspire our staff to take the stairs instead of the elevators than by having amazing murals lead the way.”

While the artists were given creative freedom, they were asked to stay within the theme of wellness from a physical, mental, nutritional or environmental standpoint.

The first mural, titled Let’s Fly, was completed by Delanie Johnson, an alumni of CIC – Long Beach Polytechnic High School. She is a sophomore in the College of Art and Design with a concentration in Studio Arts at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. Delani selected the Monarch butterfly for her mural, which is currently on the endangered species list.

“Changes in our environment need to happen to support the life of these butterflies”, said Johnson. “Similarly, we need to make changes in our own life in order to support our wellness and longevity. My hope is that the staff at St. Mary Medical Center draw inspiration from these murals.”

“As part of CommonSpirit Health, St. Mary’s mission is to improve the health of the people and community we serve, and the health of the planet is critical to this work. A healthy environment – fresh water to drink, clean air to breathe, fertile soil in which to grow our food – is vital to our health. As such, we’re committed to making meaningful changes to address climate change and reduce our environmental footprint,” says Caldwell.

Over the summer, CommonSpirit Health introduced the CommonSpirit Health Climate Action Plan. By committing to reach net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2040 and a 50% reduction in its operational greenhouse gas emissions by 2030, the organization is taking bold steps in recognizing environmental protection as an essential part of improving health for all.

Details: hellohumankindness.org/climate/.

Padilla, Blackburn Introduce Bipartisan Bill to Ensure Artists Are Paid for Their Music Across All Platforms

WASHINGTON, D.C. — U.S. Senators Alex Padilla (D-Calif.) and Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) Sept. 22, introduced the bipartisan American Music Fairness Act to ensure artists and music creators receive fair compensation for the use of their songs on AM/FM radio. This legislation will bring corporate radio broadcasters in line with all other music streaming platforms, which already pay artists for their music. Identical legislation (H.R. 4130) has already been introduced and received a hearing in the House, setting Congress up for action this fall.

“From Beale Street to Music Row to the hills of East Tennessee, the Volunteer State’s songwriters have undeniably made their mark. However, while broadcasters demand compensation for the content they create and distribute, they don’t apply this view to the songwriters, artists, and musicians whose music they play on the radio without paying royalties. Tennessee’s creators deserve to be compensated for their work. This legislation will ensure that they receive fair payment and can keep the great hits coming,” said Senator Blackburn.

The United States is the only democratic country in the world in which artists are not compensated for the use of their music on AM/FM radio. By requiring broadcast radio corporations to pay performance royalties to creators for AM/FM radio plays, the American Music Fairness Act would close an antiquated loophole that has allowed corporate broadcasters to forgo compensating artists for the use of their music for decades.

In recognition of the important role of locally owned radio stations in communities across the U.S., the American Music Fairness Act also includes strong protections for small, college, and non-commercial stations.

The Blackburn-Padilla bill is identical to companion legislation (H.R. 4130) introduced in 2021 in the House of Representatives, which received a hearing in the House Judiciary Committee in February and is currently working its way through the committee process.

This legislation will positively impact artists and the music industry at large by:

  • Requiring terrestrial radio broadcasters to pay royalties to American music creators when they play their songs.
  • Protecting small and local stations who qualify for exemptions — specifically those that fall under $1.5 million in annual revenue and whose parent companies fall under less than $10 million in annual revenue overall — by allowing them to play unlimited music for less than $500 annually.
  • Creating a fair global market that ensures foreign countries pay U.S. artists for the use of their songs overseas.

The American Music Fairness Act is endorsed by: the AFL-CIO, the American Association of Independent Music (A2IM), the American Federation of Musicians, the Recording Academy, the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), SAG-AFTRA and SoundExchange.

Full text of the bill is available here

 

Arts Brief: Inspired By Exhibition Opens in Long Beach

Pennie Fein, The Resurrection of Frida, Mixed Media

Inspired By Features Small Works By 54 Local Artists

LONG BEACH — The Long Beach Creative Group presents Inspired By, a new jurored group show which opens Sept. 24 in the Roderick Eli Briggs Memorial Gallery in Long Beach.

Local artists Cory Bilicko, Ellen Butler, and Carlos Cordero served as jurors for this exhibition, reviewing 242 pieces and selecting 83 works by 54 artists.

“On previous open calls, jurors made independent decisions online, resulting in a show composed of the highest scoring applications,” explained Helen Werner Cox, the group’s exhibition coordinator. “This time, the selection process was improved through a final meeting of the jurors, in which they were able to see the results of their scoring and advocate for any works they felt strongly about that did not get in. The subsequent modifications strengthened the quality of the show.”

Artworks, Top: Marje Lightle, Painting Bottom: Rose Corliss, 2 Roses, Sculpture (1 of 2)

Participating artists span the gamut of experience, from first time exhibitors to MFA professionals. The artists are Lori Nielson, Mary Allan, Lynn LaLonde Allen, Gabriela Alvarez, Kiley Ames, Eva-Marie Amiya, Steffani Bailey, Zadie Baker, Debra Behr, Katy Bishop, Evan Cespedes, Peter De Pelsmacker, Pennie Fien, Joseph Fleming, Yulia Gasio, Francisco Gutierrez, Kathryn Heaton, Cindy Hoang, Emma Hughes, Patrice Hughes, Catherine Hwang, Louise Ivers, Kevin Jacobs, Jordan Jimenez, Dan Kee, Tim Kjenstad, Madison Lamothe, Rich Lanet, Marj Lightle, Aleksandra Mantelzak, Sherry Marger, Rissa Martinez, Karena Massengill, Chris McGuire, Mary Anne McKernie, Roxanne Norman, Tom Pekovitch, Ronald Reekers, Lizbeth Roque, Corliss Rose, Martin Runel, Linda Jo Russell, Laura Shapiro, Peggy Sivert, Karen Stein, Madi Myat Su, Ziyi Tan, David J Teter, Judy Todd, Nora Tomlinson, Elena Tomska, Maureen Vastardis, Gail Werner, and Tina Ybarra.

Time: 1 to 4 p.m. Fridays through Sundays, Sept. 24 to Oct. 22

Cost: Free

Details: www.longbeachcreativegroup.com

Venue: The Roderick Eli Briggs Memorial Gallery, 2221 East Broadway in Long Beach