Thursday, October 23, 2025
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The 2021 Assessment Roll, Long Beach

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By Jeff Prang

Los Angeles County Assessor

It’s that time of year again that my office undertakes its most important function of the fiscal year that lays the groundwork for the very property taxes that pay for our vital public services: The Assessment Roll. In fact, it’s a Constitutional mandate.

The Roll for 2022 has been closed as of June 30 and it reflects growth for Long Beach as well as the rest of the county.

First off, let me say this comprehensive tally values more than 2.5 million real estate parcels in Los Angeles County and results in the very tax dollars that goes to pay for vital public services, like healthcare, police, fire, schools and even librarians, to name just a few. As I mentioned,I am constitutionally mandated to close the Roll by the end of the fiscal year on June 30. As a point of reference, my fiscal year runs from July 1 to June 30.

I am pleased to announce that the 2022 assessment roll has a total net value of $1.89 trillion, indicating the 12th year of consecutive growth. The 2022 Roll also grew by $122.38 billion (or 6.9%) over 2021. That value places nearly $19 billion to be used for those public services I just mentioned.

Locally, Long Beach for 2022 came in at $70.03 billion for taxable values, which is a 6.6% increase over last year’s numbers. That includes 79,821 single-family homes, 17,416 apartment complexes, 10,910 commercial-industrial parcels for a grand total of 108,147 taxable properties.

Yes, it’s a solid growth at $70.03 billion.

Some basics: The Roll, as it is known, contains the assessed value of all real estate and business personal property in the county’s 88 cities along with the unincorporated areas. It also breaks down the number of single-family residential homes, apartments and commercial-industrial parcels.

This year’s Roll comprises 2.58 million real estate parcels as well as business assessments countywide. That includes 1.89 million single-family homes, 250,000 apartment complexes, 248,000 commercial and industrial properties and more than 165,000 business property assessments.

Since the Roll is the inventory for all taxable property in the county, it can provide some insight into the health of the real estate market. The Roll is also driven in large measure by real property sales, which added $69.6 billion to the Roll as compared with 2021; the CPI adjustment mandated by Prop. 13, which this year came in at 2%, added an additional $34.2 billion; and new construction added $6.3 billion.

Finally, as we move forward during this critical period, I wish for everybody to stay safe and healthy. This is a tumultuous time in our history. No question about that, but to repeat what has been said so many times before during emergencies that demand the best from us, this could be our finest hour.

 

Long Beach Health Briefs: City Launches Monkeypox (MPX) Data Dashboard and Begins Offering Bivalent COVID-19 Boosters

City Launches Monkeypox (MPX) Data Dashboard on City’s MPX Website

The City of Long Beach Department of Health and Human Services or Health Department has launched a new monkeypox (MPX) dashboard to provide the public with information on MPX cases and vaccinations in the city. The new MPX dashboard, available as a button feature on the Health Department’s MPX website, will offer a user-friendly experience and real-time access to increased data transparency.


Long Beach Begins Offering Bivalent COVID-19 Boosters

The Long Beach Department of Health and Human Services or Health Department is offering the bivalent Pfizer and Moderna COVID-19 boosters. The bivalent boosters, also known as “updated boosters,” will provide increased protection against the omicron variant that is currently circulating. The Food and Drug Administration or FDA amended the emergency use authorization for both Pfizer and Moderna to include the bivalent boosters on Aug. 31, followed by approvals from both the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices or ACIP and Centers for Disease Control or CDC on Sept. 1 and the Western States Scientific Safety Review Workgroup on Sept. 3.

The following bivalent COVID-19 boosters are being offered at all city-run COVID-19 vaccine clinics:

  • The Moderna bivalent booster is authorized for use in people ages 18 and older at least two months after they completed their primary series or received their most recent booster, regardless of the total number of booster doses they have already received.
  • The Pfizer bivalent booster is authorized for use in people ages 12 and older at least two months after they completed their primary series or received their most recent booster, regardless of the total number of booster doses they have already received.

Appointments will be made available on MyTurn beginning Sept. 21.

MMA Fighter Mavrick Arrested in Connection to Raid on San Pedro Gym

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Mixed martial artist and budding reality television star, Mavrick Wesley Von Haug, 54, alongside Cristian Briton, 30, were arrested in connection to the Sept. 8 raid on Von Haug’s gym on the 100 block of West 1st Street in San Pedro and an address in the 17000 block of Western Avenue in Gardena.

Von Haug was charged with manufacturing assault weapons, while Briton was charged with violating a penal code that makes it illegal for a nonimmigrant alien to ship in interstate or foreign commerce. Nonimmigrant aliens are lawfully admitted people who are not lawful permanent residents, such as tourists, students, business travelers, and temporary workers who enter the U.S. for fixed periods of time.

The search warrant was the result of an investigation by RIFTT (The Regional Illegal Firearms Trafficking Team) where a foreign national had attempted to illegally export 11 ghost guns, two of which were assault weapons and three silencers. RIFTT is a task force comprised of the Los Angeles Police Department’s Gang and Narcotics Division.

As a result of the search warrant, the task force recovered approximately 200 ghost gun frames, handgun slides, two assault weapons, a rifle, firearms magazines, ammunition, and numerous parts and tools for manufacturing ghost guns.

Recognized for his facial tattoos, Von Haug leased the warehouse facility on First and Palos Verdes Street to open Mavrick’s Ultimate Training Center. Von Haug also has a facility on 619 Mesa Street. Both have been closed since the start of the pandemic.

White Linen Affair

Join the City of Carson in a night of music, food and entertainment at Cajun & Blues White Linen Affair. Take part in the second line parade headed by Kenny Sara’s Buc Jump Brass Band. Groove to the music Lady of Soul “Madame Dee” and “The Family”.

R&B Funk Band “Switch”, best known for their hit single, There’ll Never Be will headline the event. This event is for 21 and over. No pets, outside food/drinks, high back chairs or tents and no in and out.

Time: 7 p.m. to 12 a.m. Sept. 10

Cost: General admission is $20, VIP seating is $55 per person.

Details: www.carsonca.gov; 310-631-3130 or 310-329-7717

Venue: Carson Event Center Rose Garden 801 E. Carson St., Carson

Trauma Intervention Program Looking For Volunteers

Trauma Intervention Program or TIP of Long Beach is looking for caring people willing to be part of a team of volunteers who provide immediate emotional and practical support to survivors of traumatic events.

TIP volunteers are called to emergency scenes by law enforcement through the 911 system to assist people experiencing a trauma such as witness to a crime, traffic accidents, or death of a loved one.

No experience is necessary but attendance at TIP’s eight-day training academy is required. September dates and times are listed below.

Details: 562-270-3355; www.TIPofLongBeach.org

Rep. Barragán Hosts Secretary Pete Buttigieg at Port of Los Angeles to Celebrate $20 Million Infrastructure Grant

Pete Buttigieg, Eric Garcetti and Rep. Nanette Diaz Barragán celebrate Infrastructure Law’s RAISE Grant at POLA. Photo by Arturo Garcia-Ayala

SAN PEDRO — Rep. Nanette Diaz Barragán (CA-44) Sept. 7, hosted Department of Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg at the Port of Los Angeles to celebrate the $20 million Rebuilding American Infrastructure with Sustainability and Equity or RAISE Grant awarded to the Port of Los Angeles.

Regional projects awarded RAISE Grants this year are:

  • The funding, part of President Biden’s Infrastructure Law passed last year, will fund construction of a four-lane, rail-roadway grade separation that will eliminate a significant truck access impediment to an important container terminal support facility located on Terminal Island, at the center of the Port of Los Angeles-Long Beach or POLA-POLB complex. This infrastructure improvement will help the Port of Los Angeles decrease emissions, reduce container dwell time, decrease truck turn time, increase cargo and enhance the safety of truck drivers in and around the port.
  • $15 million for the Inglewood transit connector project
    This project will complete an approximately 1.6-mile fully-elevated, automated transit system with three stations to fill a critical gap in the region’s transit system on segments along Market Street, Manchester Boulevard and Prairie Avenue.

Currently, access to the San Pedro Bay port complex for chassis and empty shipping container storage is impeded by several heavily used rail tracks and a tunnel with low vertical clearance, both of which will be addressed by the project.

When completed, the new rail-roadway will connect trucks directly to the highway system in two directions, resulting in a reduction of 2,500 truck-hour delays daily; a decrease of more than 3,000 metric tons of emissions per year; and a reduction of 1,200 truck miles traveled per day, which will also decrease accident potential in the area. The project will generate 300 new jobs.

Also in attendance were Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, executive director, Port of Los Angeles Gene Seroka and union representative, Joe Buscaino CD15 councilmember, International Longshore and Warehouse Union or ILWU Local 13 Sal DiCostanzo.

Mayor Eric Garcetti addresses attendees at POLA. Photo by Arturo Garcia-Ayala

Senators Dianne Feinstein and Alex Padilla (both D-Calif.) Sept. 6, announced that eight local governments, transit agencies and tribes in California will receive more than $119 million in grants from the Department of Transportation or DOT. This funding comes from the RAISE discretionary grant program. The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law that the senators voted to pass last year increased the funding available for the RAISE program.

RAISE projects are reviewed and selected by DOT based on merit. Projects are evaluated on statutory criteria of safety, environmental sustainability, quality of life, economic competitiveness and opportunity, state of good repair, partnership and innovation. New this year, under the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, 2022 RAISE applications were also evaluated on the criteria of mobility and community connectivity. DOT assesses projects for universal design and accessibility for travelers, and considers how proposals increase mobility for freight and supply chain efficiency.

 

 

LBPL Celebrates Hispanic Heritage Month with Vida Latina Program Series

The Long Beach Public Library or LBPL will host its fourth annual Vida Latina, a series of events in celebration of Hispanic Heritage Month, taking place Sept. 10 through Nov. 2, at various LBPL locations. This year’s celebration will present a mix of in-person and virtual activities for adults, teens and kids, including annual favorites such as Lotería and Cuentos y Cantos storytime and exciting new events like the Resistencia Poetry Club, Día de Muertos and Mercadito Literario, a literary fair fun for the whole family, on Oct. 15.

The Vida Latina series will cover an array of topics, including Hispanic/Latinx folk art, herbal remedy demonstrations featuring books from the Library’s collection, sexual health workshops for teens and their caregivers, bilingual storytimes for toddlers and preschoolers, family crafts and movie nights, poetry workshops for teens, and a Day of the Dead celebration.

Mercadito Literario will take place Oct. 15 at 1 p.m. at the Billie Jean King Main Library. It will highlight Hispanic/Latinx authors, poets, small business and local community resources.

Hispanic Heritage Month is recognized nationally from Sept. 15 to Oct. 15 by celebrating the histories, cultures and contributions of American citizens whose ancestors came from Spain, Mexico, the Caribbean and Central and South America.

Details:562-570-7500; lbpl.org

Long Beach Briefs: Community Grants Program Gives 2.7 M. and City Offering Updated COVID-19 Boosters

Community Grants Program Gives More Than $2.7 Million

LONG BEACH A community orchard in Paramount, carbon-capturing landscaping at Long Beach parks, and several solar power projects were among the projects awarded more than $2.7 million in funding from the Port of Long Beach Community Grants Program in 2021.

Details can be found in the Community Grants Program annual report, posted here.

Three parks and open space projects, totaling $837,645, were approved by the Harbor Commission last year. The projects include fruit trees, security lighting, fencing, bioswales, landscaping, and irrigation. These projects aim to provide buffers between sources of port-related impacts and the surrounding communities.

The awardees were:

  • City of Long Beach – $462,645
  • City of Paramount – $200,000
  • Conservation Corps of Long Beach – $175,000

Five solar power generation and two solar water heating projects were approved, totaling almost $1.9 million. Awarded projects include the installation of rooftop solar photovoltaic systems, canopy solar photovoltaic systems, and solar water heaters at facilities that serve sensitive populations such as children, pregnant women, the elderly, the chronically ill and individuals with respiratory and/or cardiopulmonary disorders and illnesses. Environmental benefits produced by these projects include greenhouse gas emission reductions and decreased energy consumption.

The awardees were:

Solar Power Generation

  • City of Long Beach Public Works – $121,084
  • First Congregational Church – $328,660
  • Long Beach City College (Liberal Arts Campus) – $415,398
  • Long Beach City College (Pacific Coast Campus) – $625,398
  • Memorial Medical Center Foundation – $310,787

Solar Water Heating

  • Long Beach City College (Liberal Arts Campus) – $30,000
  • Long Beach City College (Pacific Coast Campus) – $60,000

 

Long Beach Now Offering Updated COVID-19 Boosters

LONG BEACH Starting Set. 7, the Long Beach Health Department is beginning to offer bivalent Pfizer and Moderna COVID-19 boosters. These updated boosters provide increased protection against the omicron variant and are available via walk-up at all city-run vaccine clinics. If you would prefer to make an appointment, you can do so starting Sept. 21: here.

Both the Pfizer and Moderna bivalent boosters are authorized for people at least two months after they completed their primary series or received their most recent booster — regardless of the total number of booster doses they have already received. The Moderna booster is available to adults 18 and older while Pfizer is approved for children 12 and older.

Details: here.

County Announces Major Milestone in Guaranteed Income Program

LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles County’s landmark Breathe: LA County’s Guaranteed Income Program is underway, with 1,000 participants selected and now receiving $1,000 a month stipend, which will continue for the next three years. The participants range in age from 18 to 91 and live in communities throughout the County, speaking languages including Armenian, Cantonese, Farsi, Korean, Mandarin, Spanish and English.

More than 180,000 LA County residents applied for the program and the 1,000 people chosen were randomly selected by the University of Pennsylvania’s Center for Guaranteed Income, which is researching guaranteed income programs across the country and studying the Breathe program’s impact on LA County’s participants. The program administrator, Strength Based Community Change or SBCC, accepted all 1,000 recipients of the Breathe program.

All 1,000 participants will receive $1,000 a month via debit card for three years as part of Breathe: LA County’s Guaranteed Income Program. The program was launched to address poverty and income instability and is one of the largest and longest running programs of its kind.

SBCC connected with the 1,000 residents and heard first-hand about the expected life-changing impacts to participants and their families.

SBCC will keep in touch with the selected participants and assist them throughout the duration of the program to help them reach their personal and financial goals to improve the quality of life for their families and themselves.