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LA County Reports Significant Differences by Race in Pregnancy Related Deaths, Similar to CDC Findings

A CDC report published Sept. 19 used U.S. data from 2017-2019 to highlight striking inequality in maternal deaths. Pregnancy-related deaths, defined as deaths related to pregnancy occurring within a year of birth, were determined to reflect disparate causes by race/ethnicity. Additionally, four of every five deaths were found to be preventable.

The CDC’s data are national, but the pattern they reveal applies in Los Angeles County. The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health monitors maternal mortality using five-year averages, so that small year-to-year shifts in this relatively uncommon outcome don’t obscure the pattern of deaths. As the graph shows, giving birth while Black in Los Angeles County increases the risk of maternal death approximately three-fold. Tragically, this inequality aligns with data from across California and the nation.

Link: http://publichealth.lacounty.gov/mch/fhop/FHOP2019/Maternal%20Mortality_2019.pdf

The graph does demonstrate a marked decline in the Black maternal death rate over time, but this still leaves us with a large birth equity gap between Black and other birthing people across the County.

Why is this? The CDC study reports that about 80% of maternal deaths are preventable. Current science indicates that prevention means looking at inequality not only in health care, but also in every domain of social experience. Racism in society has resulted in inadequate access to resources that support health and excessive exposure to social stress, due to discrimination.

In response, Los Angeles County has marshaled a coalition of county agencies, community partners, medical allies, and philanthropic funders to eradicate birth outcome inequality. Through the African American Infant and Maternal Mortality or AAIMM prevention initiative, the Department of Public Health – with its partners – has designed a multifaceted agenda. AAIMM strategies include:

  1. Taking on root causes of birth inequality – promoting income equity and challenging racism in health care and beyond;
  2. Supporting Black families across birth and parenting experiences – doula care, fatherhood support, home visiting; and
  3. Promoting optimal medical care – anti-racism training for practitioners, modeling quality care through a Black Maternal Health Center of Excellence (at Charles Drew University).

Details: www.blackinfantsandfamilies.org.

 

Gov. Newsom Announces $1.1 Billion in Small Business Support Coming to California

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SACRAMENTO — Gov. Gavin Newsom Sept. 21, announced $1.1 billion in funding to support California’s small businesses. The funding comes from the U.S. Treasury’s State Small Business Credit Initiative or SSBCI and is intended to leverage an additional $18 billion of capital to California small businesses.

As part of the federal American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, California will receive $1.1 billion to help support small businesses. The California Infrastructure and Economic Development Bank or IBank and the California Pollution Control Financing Authority will split the allocation equally to fund small business credit support programs – IBank will also launch a new program designed to create a more equitable venture capital ecosystem.

This is the second time states have been able to apply for this federal program. The first was in 2010, when California applied for, and received, $168 million to operate three state credit-support programs — the Small Business Loan Guarantee Program, the Collateral Support Program, and the California Capital Access Program (CalCAP) for Small Business.

Small Business Loan Guarantee Program

As in 2010, IBank will use a large portion of the SSBCI funds for its Small Business Loan Guarantee Program, working with nonprofits and lenders to offer small business loan guarantees. The guarantees can repay lenders up to 80% of a small business’ outstanding loan if a small business is unable to make its payments. By guaranteeing loans, IBank gives lenders the confidence they need to issue loans to small businesses that otherwise struggle to access capital.

Encouraging Lenders to Sign Up

To deploy funds quickly and put them in service to small businesses, IBank is asking lenders — including community development financial institutions and minority depository institutions — to sign up to use its loan guarantee program. Certification requires only a one-page form. The list of lenders already participating is available on IBank’s Participating Lenders website.

Venture Capital Program

In addition to small business loan guarantees, IBank will use approximately $200 million of its SSBCI funds to launch the new Venture Capital program, designed to create a more-inclusive venture capital ecosystem by investing in underrepresented VC managers, underrepresented and underserved entrepreneurs and business owners, and geographic areas that are socio-economically disadvantaged or that receive very limited venture capital funding. The program will also promote climate equity and climate justice.

Success Under First Round of SSBCI (2010)

Under the first round of SSBCI, California used its $168 million to support more than 10,000 loans that generated more than $1 billion in total financing and created or retained more than 90,000 jobs for Californians.

 

Former Marine Sentenced for Cyberstalking Young Women in ‘Sextortion’ Campaign While on Active Duty

LOS ANGELES A South Bay man has been sentenced to 60 months in prison for cyberstalking multiple young women in a “sextortion” campaign he waged while he was an active-duty member of the United States Marine Corps, the Justice Department announced today.

Johao Miguel Chavarri, 26, a.k.a. “Michael Frito,” of Torrance, was sentenced Sept. 16, by United States District Judge Maame Ewusi-Mensah Frimpong, who also ordered him to pay a $15,000 fine.

Chavarri pleaded guilty on May 27 to three counts of cyberstalking.

From May 2019 to February 2021, Chavarri stalked and sent anonymous threatening communications to numerous victims, including the three victims discussed in court documents.

Chavarri, often using the name “Frito,” contacted victims on social media platforms, including Instagram, Snapchat, and Twitter, complimented their appearance and/or their publicly posted photos, and suggested a relationship in which he would pay the victim to send him photos or videos. Some of the victims initially agreed to Chavarri’s requests and sent him nude, sexually explicit, or compromising photos. When victims either refused Chavarri’s initial request for photos, refused to send him additional photos or videos, or otherwise refused to continue to communicate with him online, Chavarri began to harass, threaten, and extort the victims using numerous online accounts.

In most cases, he threatened to publish sexual photos and videos of the victims online or on well-known pornography websites and to distribute the sexual photos or videos to the victims’ boyfriends, friends, families, or employers — people he often specifically identified by name. Chavarri threatened his victims and their friends and family that he would ruin their lives. He knew many of his victims personally.

“Perhaps most troubling is the emotional distress that [Chavarri] intentionally inflicted on his victims,” prosecutors argued in a sentencing memorandum. “He terrified and terrorized them. The young women feared not only for their privacy and their relationships with their friends, family, employers, and community, but also for their physical safety. They suffered, and continue to suffer, significant emotional harm.”

 

 

Special Hearing: Deputy Gangs in the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department

The Civilian Oversight Commission is hosting a special hearing on deputy gangs in the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department. The public is encouraged to attend. As the Commission works to boost transparency and accountability, community input is vital to the ongoing analysis of the department’s policies, practices & procedures.

On Sept. 23, there are three ways to tune in:

  1. In Person: RSVP and join at Loyola Marymount University, Advocacy Center, 919 Albany Street, Los Angeles, CA 90015
  2. Watch: Register for Webex (password: COC123) or follow the Facebook Livestream.
  3. Listen: Call 213-306-3065 and enter access code: 2595 535 8178 and numeric meeting password: 262123

The Special Hearing is on:

Time: 9: a.m. to 1 p.m. Sept. 23

Details: View the Agenda

Venue: Loyola Marymount University, Downtown Law Campus Advocacy Center, Robinson Courtroom 919 Albany Street, Los Angeles, 90015

POLB Briefs: Port Has Second Busiest August and Harbor Commission Approves Dredging Projects

Port of Long Beach Has Second-Busiest August

LONG BEACH — Cargo volume in August at the Port of Long Beach fell just short of another record month as a slowdown in consumer spending in the U.S. continued.

Dockworkers and terminal operators moved 806,940 twenty-foot-equivalent units of container cargo last month, down just 764 TEUs – 0.1% – from August 2021, which was the busiest August ever. Imports were down 5.6% to 384,530 TEUs and exports increased 1.6% to 121,408 TEUs. Empty containers moved through the Port increased 7.2% to 301,001 TEUs.

Falling gas prices alleviated worries about inflation, but consumer spending remained flat in August.

The port delayed the start of a “Container Dwell Fee” that would charge ocean carriers for containers that remain too long on the docks. Still, the San Pedro Bay ports – Long Beach and Los Angeles combined – have seen a 50% decline in aging cargo on the docks since the program was announced on Oct. 25.

 

Board Approves Port of Long Beach Dredging Projects

LONG BEACH — A critical channel deepening project that will help move cargo more efficiently to and from the U.S. advanced sept. 12, after the Long Beach Harbor Commission concluded an extensive environmental review process and greenlit the endeavor.

The work will also allow the port to welcome newer, cleaner and more efficient cargo vessels. The Port of Long Beach and the federal government will share the costs, estimated at almost $170 million. The port’s portion is estimated at $109 million.

Among other features, the project includes deepening the Long Beach Approach Channel from 76 feet to 80 feet deep, easing turning bends in the main channel to deepen a wider area to 76 feet, deepening parts of the West Basin from 50 to 55 feet, constructing an approach channel and turning basin to Pier J South with a depth of 55 feet, improving the breakwaters at the entrance to Pier J, and depositing dredged material in nearshore sites for refuse or in federally approved ocean disposal sites.

Last October, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers concluded a multi-year federal study that showed deepening and widening channels in the harbor would lead to improved vessel navigation, safety, and national economic benefits of almost $21 million annually. In July, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers issued a record of decision concluding the federal environmental review process for the project. The important milestone opens the way for projects to compete for federal funding.

Details: Find the approved environmental impact report at www.polb.com/ceqa.

Biden VS Newsom on Farmworkers’ Right To Vote

On the last day of the 23-day march from Delano, 5000 farmworkers and supporters headed for the state capitol building in Sacramento.

BERKELEY, CA – 9/10/22 – In California’s heated debate over farmworker voting rights, Democratic Party leaders are increasingly closing ranks against the state’s governor, who refuses to sign a bill to make it easier for workers to win union recognition. After a march by workers and supporters from Delano to Sacramento, President Biden himself weighed in.

“I strongly support California’s Agricultural Labor Relations Voting Choice Act (AB 2183),” Biden announced on Sept. 6. Noting that farmworkers had worked through the pandemic, he declared, “The least we owe them is an easier path to make a free and fair choice to organize a union. Government should work to remove not erect barriers to workers organizing.”

The barriers to organizing in the fields have historically been fearsome for many California farmworkers. Some of the marchers, who braved temperatures of over 110 degrees as they walked through the San Joaquin Valley, had bitter memories of field elections that went disastrously wrong. One particular catastrophe took place in the late 1990s in Watsonville, when growers organized an atmosphere of terror to keep strawberry pickers from joining the United Farm Workers.

In mandatory meetings anti-union consultants warned there would be violence if the union was organized and that growers would fire people and go out of business. These were not idle threats. In 1995 VCNM, a large Watsonville strawberry company, plowed under a quarter of its fields after workers organized. The company later disappeared completely. Then strawberry growers set up a company union to fight the UFW. Dozens of pro-UFW workers were denied jobs or fired in the following seasons.

One worker, Efren Vargas, recalled, “My foreman told me how to make trouble for the UFW organizers when they came to the field to talk to us.” In 1998 he and other pro-UFW workers at Coastal Berry were beaten in the fields. Vargas was hit in the head, knocked to the ground and kicked repeatedly. Supervisor Joel Lobato told him, “You deserved to get fucked up.”

After the beatings, the company union filed for an election with the Agricultural Labor Relations Board, to keep the UFW out. The UFW protested that a fair election couldn’t be held in that atmosphere, but the ALRB went ahead anyway. Workers went to vote in the fields where the beatings had taken place. Predictably, the company union won.

This summer, when 26 UFW members and supporters began marching from Delano on August 3, they were hoping to end growers’ ability to use fraudulent elections like the one at Coastal Berry. When they arrived in Sacramento 23 days later, having traversed 330 miles, some remembered what happened in the fields of another notoriously anti-union grower, Gerawan Farming.

In 2013, in its effort to get rid of its obligation to negotiate a union contract, Gerawan foremen went into its peach orchards and vineyards, demanding that pickers sign a petition against the union. Supervisors shut down work entirely, and blocked entry to the fields and packing sheds, to pressure employees. One UFW supporter, Severino Salas, recounted threats that if the company had to sign a contract with the union, it would tear out the grapevines and trees.

The ALRB then conducted an election in the same fields where the threats had been commonplace. When the votes were finally counted, workers had lost their right to negotiate a union contract. Gerawan had achieved its goal. When workers have to vote in the fields, the voting booth isn’t a pure isolated place where the world doesn’t intrude. It’s part of the world where the threats are made. Consequently, growers have tried to prevent any changes in the field voting procedure.

This year’s march from Delano to Sacramento was not the first to try to remedy this situation. Last year the union organized a similar peregrination. Both were directed at California Governor Gavin Newsom, asking him to sign AB 2183, to give farmworkers an alternative to high-pressure field elections. Last year Newsom vetoed the bill on the march’s first day. This year he waited until marchers had completed their 23-day trek before announcing that he would not sign this time either.

Farmworkers react with anger and dismay after United Farm Workers President Teresa Romero tells them that the Governor has announced he will not sign the bill.

 

AB 2183 proposes two alternative systems for voting. In one, growers would pledge in advance to remain neutral if workers try to organize, and agree not to require workers to attend anti-union meetings. The grower would allow workers access to union organizers at work. When the union asks for an official election, the board would inform the company and mail ballots to all the workers, who would fill them out at home and send them back. Workers could ask for ballots directly from the ALRB.

In the other alternative, where growers don’t agree to neutrality, workers could sign union authorization cards at home, and the union would then submit them to the ALRB. The labor board would then compare the cards to a list of eligible employees. If a majority have signed, the company would be obligated to negotiate a contract. This system already exists for California’s public employees.

Unions far beyond the UFW have fought for labor law reform for years to provide alternatives like these. During the Obama administration the AFL-CIO sought passage, unsuccessfully, of the Employee Free Choice Act. That would have allowed the same “card check” process, avoiding an election on the employer’s property. Unions made another push, after President Biden took office, for the PRO Act, which would also make it harder for employers to use intimidation tactics.

Last year Governor Newsom argued that he had concerns over the “security” of the ballots. This year Newsom’s communications director Erin Mellon told the Fresno Bee that although he supports changes in state law to make it easier for workers to organize, “we cannot support an untested mail-in election process that lacks critical provisions to protect the integrity of the election and is predicated on an assumption that the government cannot effectively enforce laws.”

This was a strange argument, since absentee voting is used extensively in California in general elections (including his own recall election), so there’s plenty of experience with it. Peter Schey, director of the Center for Human Rights and Constitutional Law in Los Angeles, responded, “Passage of this bill would provide California’s farmworkers with a variety of means for casting their votes, including voting by mail and dropping off ballots at designated locations. These and related provisions in the bill will simply provide farmworkers with more meaningful opportunities to exercise their longstanding right to vote in union elections.”

Newsom seems blind to the existence of grower intimidation, which the absentee process is designed to make more difficult. Growers and their allies argue that intimidation is not a problem. Republican Latino political consultant Mike Madrid, for instance, claimed, “These are not issues of huge concern. They are of symbolic concern.” The argument filed by the California Farm Bureau Federation against the bill states, “This bill would strip agricultural employees of their rights to express their sentiments about unionization in secret-ballot elections conducted by the Agricultural Labor Relations Board, free from fear, intimidation, coercion, or trickery exerted by anyone interested in the outcome.”

According to Schey, however, “There is no question but that these [in the field] voting conditions create opportunities for voter intimidation and prevent many farmworkers from participating in an election out of fear of employer reprisals. While the Agricultural Labor Relations Act prohibits the use of intimidation by employers, it is our experience that the reality on the ground is that agricultural employers regularly use fear-instilling tactics to prevent unionization.”

UFW President Teresa Romero and union co-founder Dolores Huerta march with union veterans to the state capitol to call on the Governor to sign AB 2183

 

Governor Newsom’s rationales for opposing AB 2183 may have less to do with the security of the ballots, however, and more with his own relationship with growers. According to Sacramento journalist Dan Bacher, Newsom has received over $977,000 in campaign donations from the agricultural industry. “That figure doesn’t include funds raised to fight his recall,” Bacher says, “which included $250,000 from Stewart and Lynda Resnick, billionaire agribusiness owners of the Wonderful Company.” In the 2018 election cycle the Resnicks, the world’s largest almond growers, contributed $116,800, while E.J. Gallo, another storied and wealthy grower, gave the governor $58,400.

Newsom agreed to put his own interest in the PlumpJack Group, which he founded with billionaire Gideon Getty in the 1980s, into a blind trust when he became governor. But during the years of his ownership the company expanded from being an operator of restaurants and boutique hotels to an important agribusiness enterprise. It is now a major vineyard owner, with four estate vineyards, producing between 50,000 and 75,000 cases of wine each year. A decade ago PlumpJack paid $400,000 per acre for one 45-acre vineyard, and this year bought another in Napa Valley for $14.5 million, from another wealthy grower, Robert Mondavi.

In the state legislature, each year AB 2183 has passed both houses by substantial majorities. Taking the side of the union, and urging the governor to sign the voting rights bill, legislators have been joined by Vice-President Kamala Harris, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and former Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Julian Castro. Helping to organize this Democratic Party pressure is Cesar Chavez’ granddaughter, Julie Chavez Rodriguez, now White House director of Intergovernmental Affairs.

Politicking and inner-party infighting, however, should not obscure the fundamental issue of workers’ rights. Growers, like employers generally, want to control the voting process as much as they can, not from some altruistic interest in the sanctity of the vote, but because they want to keep the union from being organized.

In the end, however, it’s really no business of the growers where farmworkers vote. If the right to decide on whether to organize a union or not belongs to workers, and only to them, they should be able to exercise that right at home or away from the field, or wherever they want.

Indigenous Mexican farmworkers join members of the American Indian Movement in calling on the Governor to respect the labor rights of farmworkers.

Faces of the marchers and their supporters


Chicano organizations and lowrider car clubs brought their flags and exquisitely restored vehicles to support farmworker rights.

 

https://www.thenation.com/article/activism/farmworker-ufw-march-voting-rights/

CA Attorney General Sues Amazon For Inflated Prices, Antitrust Violations

LOS ANGELES A lawsuit filed by CA Attorney General Rob Bonta Sept. 15, targets Amazon’s dealings with third-party merchants and suppliers. Amazon penalizes sellers and suppliers that offer lower prices at other internet sites, including Walmart and Target.

Amazon seller sanctions included disqualifying them from winning the “Buy Box” (the box containing the “Add to Cart” button on the listing page the shopper clicks to add the product to their cart), demoting seller listings to the bottom of Amazon’s organic search results, and blocking sellers from creating new listings in their third-party seller accounts altogether.

The lawsuit alleges “Amazon makes consumers think they are getting the lowest prices possible when in fact, they cannot get the low prices that would prevail in a freely competitive market because Amazon has coerced and induced its third-party sellers and wholesale suppliers to enter into anti-competitive agreements on price. The intent and effect of these agreements is to insulate Amazon from price competition, entrenching Amazon’s dominance, preventing effective competition, and harming consumers and the California economy.”

Sellers pay Amazon a transaction fee, and often pay for Amazon’s fulfillment services, advertising, and other offerings. Because of Amazon’s market power over third-party sellers and wholesale suppliers, Amazon can and does charge substantially higher fees and demand substantially higher profitability on its sales of their products than it could in a competitive market.

The heavily redacted Amazon complaint cites internal Amazon documents.

Amazon is no stranger to lawsuits from consumers, U.S. lawmakers and regulators targeting Amazon’s anti-competitive business practices, consumer injuries, counterfeit and fraudulent items, and deaths. Amazon recently proposed a settlement with European antitrust regulators, who charged the company with violating competition laws. The key allegations accused Amazon of using data it collected from third-party sellers to its own benefit.

Dharmesh M. Mehta, Vice President of Worldwide Customer Trust and Partner Support, represented Amazon before the United States House of Representatives Subcommittee on Consumer Protection and Commerce on March 4, 2020. Mehta is responsible for and leads the team dedicated to preventing fraud, counterfeits, fake reviews, and other forms of abuse from harming Amazon customers, brands, and selling partners. His testimony about Amazon’s business practices and behavior is a confirmation of Amazon’s manipulative global system of counterfeits, fraud, deception, misrepresentation, and false advertising.

An exclusive report by The Wall Street Journal’s Dana Mattioli identifies the March 9, 2022 letter sent to U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland by Democratic and Republican members of the House Judiciary Committee. At issue are Amazon’s responses to lawmakers’ inquiries about how it uses the data of third-party sellers on its platform when creating private-label products and how it treats those Amazon brands in its search results.

The House Judiciary Committee’s published bipartisan investigation examined whether Amazon engages in anti-competitive conduct, anti-competition practices, and whether existing antitrust laws, competition policies, and current enforcement levels are adequate to address these issues.

Amazon is the dominant online retail store in the United States and a critical outlet and distribution channel for many merchants. For hundreds of thousands of third-party sellers, Amazon sales are effectively their entire business — if they lose Amazon, they lose their livelihood.

South Bay Median Home Price Plummets

By Carl Clark forwww.BeachChatter.com

With four months left in a very chaotic real estate year, we want to take this opportunity to lay some groundwork for understanding why the market has headed into a recession. And, to keep things on a positive note, we end with a couple of suggestions on how you might profit from this turn of events.

Some of the nation’s most respected analysts (including Ivy Zelman of Zelman & Associates and Mark Zandi of Moody’s Analytics) are predicting recessionary price drops ranging from 10-20% and lasting through the next two years. (Arguing that we’re only looking at a brief correction, pundits at Goldman Sachs and the Mortgage Bankers Association continue to predict single digit growth.) Meanwhile, here on the street, we’re watching prices drop across the board for the second month in a row.

In August we reported that median home prices across the Los Angeles South Bay fell from July, the prior month. Now looking at August sales we find all four areas of the South Bay showed declining median prices again. The month-over-month price drops ranged from 6% at the Beach to 25% in the Inland cities. (See bottom for description of areas.)

Underlining the month-to-month price slippage, three of the four areas also showed declining prices versus the same month last year. Only in the Harbor area are homes still selling for more than they did in 2021. Even there, median price has slid from 9% down to 4% above August of 2021.

2022 Compared to “Normal” Business in 2019

The past two years have seen real estate stumble with the Covid lockdowns in 2020, then skyrocket with the low interest rates in 2021. It’s worth a look back to 2019 to see how the current conditions compare to the most recent “normal” market.

Looking at sales volume in the period January through August of 2019, 1064 homes had sold in the Beach cities. So far this year only 905 homes have sold. That is a 15% drop in sales since the last normal year of business. The trend line for the Beach area has been sliding downward since April.

For the first eight months of 2019 the Harbor area showed sales of 2955 compared to 2945 for this year. That is a drop of .3% – a statistically insignificant change. However, the trend line has been dropping since March. August sales were up slightly from July, which was an unusually slow month for the Harbor area. We expect sales to continue a downward trajectory into 2023.

Palos Verdes home sales for the same period in 2019 totaled 537 versus 568 in 2022. The Hill is the only part of the South Bay where year to date 2022 sales exceed those of 2019. At 6% it’s a healthy increase, too. Despite being the best performing area in South Bay, Palos Verdes sales volume peaked in March and continues to slide. Sales in July were unusually weak, so August shows an upward step in the trend line.

Sales in the Inland area, very much like the Harbor area, are down only .4% from 2019 sales for the same period. The difference is statistically insignificant, and the trend line is headed downward.

Declining sales volume creates a larger inventory of homes to sell. As the inventory grows, sellers have more competition and buyers become more demanding and prices start declining. We anticipate continuing growth of available inventory, followed in late fall or early winter by a spate a price drops.

Median Price Up 54% Since 2019

Palos Verdes homes have seen the greatest impact of the Covid-era buying mania. Comparing median prices from the first eight months of 2019 to the first eight of 2022, we find a 54% escalation on the Hill. Normal growth over a three year period would have created 9-10% in price appreciation. Expect much of that excessive price expansion to be erased over the coming months.

Compared to 2019, Beach area median prices have shot up by 32%. This is easily three times normal growth. As we see in the chart below prices started adjusting downward as early as May in the Beach cities.

Since 2019 median prices for the Inland area have climbed 30%. Here in the August 2022 chart below we see Inland area prices have been dropping steadily since May when the median was $910K. During that four month period values have slipped by over $50K.

In the Harbor area home prices have escalated 34%. From 2019 at $565K to 2020 at $607K the Harbor area median grew $40k. Then in 2021, it added another $90K reaching $700K. So far in 2022 the median has reached as high as $830K – another $130K increase, but has now dropped back to $725K, losing $105K off the June median.

Most home buyers are constrained by their income to a particular price range, and salaries have not increased at a rate even remotely similar to real estate prices. Recent studies have shown about 25% of potential buyers were priced out of the purchase market in California by the soaring Covid-era prices.

Interest Rate Shrinks Annual Sales Dollars

In total sales dollars for January through August of 2019, the South Bay weighed in with $5.3 billion. During the same period in 2020 the aggregate amount shrank back to $4.9 billion, followed in 2021 by an upward explosion to $7.9 billion. So far in 2022 the area has reached $6.9 billion.

Each time the Federal Reserve System (fed) increases the short term interest rate the pool of potential buyers shrinks again. As this is written, the Fed is preparing to increase the rate by at least .75% in mid-September and two more increases are anticipated by the end of 2022.

At the current rate of declining value, we estimate the 2022 annual sales value to be approximately $9.5 billion, a decrease of 27% from 2021. Remember that huge budget surplus California had last year? Do not anticipate another this year, and possibly not for a couple of years as the state works its way through this recession.

The Silver Lining in the Cloud

One theory of success in real estate is “Buy low, sell high.” Flippers subscribe to that concept, buying at the bottom, updating and selling at the top of the immediate market. Another theory, not as well supported, but statistically more profitable, is “Buy and Hold.” Buy a piece of property at the best price you can and use it or lease it but – never sell it.

A deep market adjustment doesn’t come very often, so when it does one should take maximum advantage. At the moment it appears there will be a heavy price contraction starting late this year. We’ll know better in late fall and early winter, but all indications today are that a wise property investor should be preparing to buy at the bottom of the market – soon. We constantly search the Southern California coast for outstanding investment bargains. Tell us what you want to invest – we’ll tell you where to buy.

Methodology

For purposes of comparing homes in the LA South Bay, we have divided the South Bay into four areas. Each is composed of homes of roughly comparable style, geographically similar location and physical characteristics, as well as approximately similar demographic characteristics.

The areas are:

Beach: comprises the cities of El Segundo, Manhattan Beach, Hermosa Beach and Redondo Beach;

PV Hill: comprises the cities of Palos Verdes Estates, Rancho Palos Verdes, Rolling Hills and Rolling Hills Estates;

Harbor:. comprises the cities of San Pedro, Long Beach, Wilmington, Harbor City and Carson;

Inland: comprises the cities of Torrance, Gardena and Lomita.

New CA Legislation: Addressing LGBTQ Vets, Social Media Transparency, Environment, Hate Crimes, Affordable Housing, Cannabis

In the last week, Gov. Gavin Newsom has been busy signing these and many other legislative bills for California residents.

Social Media Transparency Measure

SACRAMENTO Gov. Gavin Newsom Sept. 13, signed a first-of-its-kind social media transparency measure to protect Californians from hate and disinformation spread online. AB 587 by Assemblymember Jesse Gabriel (D-Encino) will require social media companies to publicly post their policies regarding hate speech, disinformation, harassment and extremism on their platforms, and report data on their enforcement of the policies.

Assemblymember Gabriel said the law will finally pull back the curtain and require tech companies to provide meaningful transparency into how they are shaping the public discourse, as well as the role of social media in promoting hate speech, disinformation, conspiracy theories and other dangerous content.


Supporting Veterans Harmed by “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” Policy

SACRAMENTO – Gov. Gavin Newsom Sept. 17, signed legislation to assist LGBTQ veterans discharged under “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” or DADT in updating their records and accessing education, health, burial and other benefits available to honorably discharged service members.

Though LGBTQ service members could serve openly following the repeal of DADT, veterans discharged less than honorably under the policy face a burdensome process that can require legal counsel and other assistance to obtain an upgrade to their discharge classification.

AB 325 by Assemblymember Jacqui Irwin (D-Thousand Oaks) establishes the Veteran’s Military Discharge Upgrade Grant program to help fund service providers that will educate veterans about the discharge upgrade process and assist eligible veterans to apply.

Watch a video message from Governor Newsom on AB 325.


Strengthening California’s Cannabis Laws

SACRAMENTO – Gov. Gavin Newsom Sept. 18, signed several measures to strengthen California’s cannabis laws, expand the legal cannabis market and redress the harms of cannabis prohibition.

Though the state has made significant progress since the legalization of cannabis, local opposition, rigid bureaucracy and federal prohibition continue to pose challenges to the industry and consumers. The Governor is calling on legislators and other policymakers to redouble efforts to address and eliminate these barriers.

The Governor signed SB 1326 by Senator Anna Caballero (D-Merced), which creates a process for California to enter into agreements with other states to allow cannabis transactions with entities outside California. SB 1186 by Senator Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) preempts local bans on medicinal cannabis delivery, expanding patients’ access to legal, regulated cannabis products.

The Governor also signed two bills to further unwind California’s failed history of cannabis prohibition. AB 1706 by Assemblymember Mia Bonta (D-Oakland) ensures that Californians with old cannabis-related convictions will finally have those convictions sealed. And AB 2188 by Assemblymember Bill Quirk (D-Hayward) protects Californians from employment discrimination based on their use of cannabis off-the-clock and away from the workplace.

These bills build on the Administration’s efforts to strengthen California’s cannabis legalization framework. As part of this year’s state budget, the Governor signed legislation to provide tax relief to consumers and the cannabis industry; support equity businesses; strengthen enforcement tools against illegal cannabis operators; bolster worker protections; expand access to legal retail; and protect youth, environmental and public safety programs funded by cannabis tax revenue.

To expedite policy reforms that prioritize and protect California consumers’ health and safety, the Governor has directed the California Department of Public Health to convene subject matter experts to survey current scientific research and policy mechanisms to address the growing emergence of high-potency cannabis and hemp products. The Governor has also directed the Department of Cannabis Control to further the scientific understanding of potency and its related health impacts by prioritizing the funding of research related to cannabis potency through its existing public university grants.

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


California to Crack Down on Hate Crimes, Protect Targeted Communities

SACRAMENTO – Amid an increase in hate-fueled violence across the country, Governor Gavin Newsom today signed legislation to equalize and strengthen penalties for using hate symbols and bolster security for targeted religious and community-based nonprofits.

AB 2282 by Assemblymember Rebecca Bauer-Kahan (D-Orinda) brings parity to penalties for burning crosses and using swastikas and nooses. Currently, using a noose as a hate symbol carries the lightest penalty of the three while cross burning is the most highly penalized. Under AB 2282, individuals who use any of the three symbols of hate will be subject to the strongest of these criminal penalties.

Watch a video message from Governor Newsom on AB 2282.

In addition, AB 2282 equalizes the restrictions on where the symbols can legally be used and expands restricted locations for each to include K-12 schools, colleges, cemeteries, places of worship, private property, public spaces and places of employment, among other locations.


New State Sites Identified for Affordable Housing, Gov.Signs Legislation to Boost Housing on State Property

SACRAMENTO – Gov. Gavin Newsom Sept. 19, announced that the California Department of Housing and Community Development or HCD and the California Department of General Services or DGS are seeking qualified developers to develop housing on five state-owned properties. This is the latest offering under one of the first executive orders (N-06-19) that Gov. Newsom issued upon taking office in 2019, creating the Excess Land for Affordable Housing program. To date, this program has brought 16 partnerships between the state, affordable housing developers, and local communities to produce sustainable, innovative, and cost-effective housing on state-owned excess sites, creating a pipeline of more than 4,400 new homes in various stages of development.

Gov. Newsom also announced the signing of SB 561 by Senator Bill Dodd (D-Napa), AB 2233 by Assemblymember Sharon Quirk-Silva (D-Fullerton), and AB 2592 by Assemblymember Kevin McCarty (D-Sacramento) – all passed by the Legislature to create more affordable housing, and codify and build upon the success of the Excess Land for Affordable Housing program.

The sites announced Sept. 19, aim to create hundreds of new housing units for low-income Californians. They include former office buildings of the state Water Resources Board in Fresno, former offices of the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation in Covina, a single-story commercial building in Midtown Sacramento, a vacant California Department of Transportation site in Oceanside, and a buffer zone near the Atascadero State Hospital in Atascadero.

SB 561 codifies the Excess Land for Affordable Housing executive order by requiring DGS and HCD to identify state surplus land that can be used for affordable housing development.

AB 2233 also helps to codify the executive order, requires the California Housing Finance Agency, HCD, and DGS to identify and prioritize surplus properties that can be used for cost effective housing developments – and it generates a progress report to the Legislature.

AB 2592 requires DGS to prepare a report to the Legislature on a streamlined plan to transition underutilized multistory state buildings into housing for the purpose of expanding affordable housing and adaptive reuse opportunities.


State Sweeping Climate Measures, Ushers in New Era of World-Leading Climate Action

SACRAMENTO – On Sept. 16, California enacted some of the nation’s most aggressive climate measures in history as Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a sweeping package of legislation to cut pollution, protect Californians from big polluters, and accelerate the state’s transition to clean energy. The Governor partnered with legislative leaders this session to advance measures to achieve carbon neutrality no later than 2045 and 90% clean energy by 2035, establish new setback measures protecting communities from oil drilling, capture carbon pollution from the air, advance nature-based solutions, and more.

This is an essential piece of the California Climate Commitment, a record $54 billion investment in climate action that exceeds what most countries are spending and advances economic opportunity and environmental justice in communities across the state.

Over the next two decades, the California Climate Commitment will:

  • Create 4 million new jobs
  • Cut air pollution by 60%
  • Reduce state oil consumption by 91%
  • Save California $23 billion by avoiding the damages of pollution
  • Reduce fossil fuel use in buildings and transportation by 92%
  • Cut refinery pollution by 94%

Taken together, these measures represent the most significant action on the climate crisis in California’s history and raises the bar for governments around the world.

The climate package signed Sept. 16 includes:

  • CARBON NEUTRALITY: AB 1279 by Assemlymembers Al Muratsuchi (D-Torrance) and Cristina Garcia (D-Bell Gardens) codifies the statewide carbon neutrality goal to dramatically reduce climate pollution.
    • Establishes a clear, legally binding, and achievable goal for California to achieve statewide carbon neutrality as soon as possible, and no later than 2045, and establishes an 85% emissions reduction target as part of that goal.
  • PROTECT COMMUNITIES AGAINST OIL DRILLING: SB 1137 by Senators Lena Gonzalez (D-Long Beach) and Monique Limón (D-Santa Barbara) protects communities from the harmful impacts of the oil industry.
    • Establishes a setback distance of 3,200 feet between any new oil well and homes, schools, parks or businesses open to the public.
    • Ensures comprehensive pollution controls for existing oil wells within 3,200 feet of these facilities.
  • 100% CLEAN ELECTRIC GRID: SB 1020 by Senator John Laird (D-Santa Cruz) establishes a pathway toward the state’s clean energy future.
    • Creates clean electricity targets of 90% by 2035 and 95% by 2040 with the intent of advancing the state’s trajectory to the existing 100% clean electricity retail sales by 2045 goal.
  • CAPTURING AND REMOVING CARBON POLLUTION: SB 905 by Senators Anna Caballero (D-Merced) and Nancy Skinner (D-Berkeley) and SB 1314 by Senator Monique Limón (D-Santa Barbara) advance engineered technologies to remove carbon pollution, while banning the use of those technologies for enhanced oil recovery.
    • Establishes a clear regulatory framework for carbon removal and carbon capture, utilization and sequestration.
    • Bans the practice of injecting carbon dioxide for the purpose of enhanced oil recovery.
  • NATURE-BASED SOLUTIONS: AB 1757 by Assemblymembers Cristina Garcia (D-Bell Gardens) and Robert Rivas (D-Salinas) enlists nature in the state’s climate agenda.
    • Requires the state to develop an achievable carbon removal target for natural and working lands..

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

Homeless Initiative Virtual Community Listening Sessions, South Bay/Harbor Area

The Los Angeles County Homeless Initiative is holding a series of community listening sessions to strengthen strategies for addressing and preventing homelessness and they would like to hear from you.

Los Angeles County Homeless Initiative will conduct listening sessions in each of the Service Planning Areas or SPA of the county. Additional sessions will be held for people with lived experience, and for representatives of cities and Councils of Government.

During these listening sessions, the homeless Initiative will present a New Framework to End Homelessness in Los Angeles County and solicit feedback from diverse stakeholders to ensure an accelerated implementation of this framework is responsive to the unique needs and priorities of communities countywide.

The Homeless initiative would like to hear from as many voices as possible. All meetings will happen virtually on Zoom.

Register now at the link below to ensure your voice is heard. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.

If you are unable to attend your SPA listening session, you may participate in another SPA session. Please stay up-to-date on developments here website

South Bay/Harbor Session

Time: 10 to 11:30 a.m.Sept. 28

Details: Click to register https://tinyurl.com/3wnjxaek