San Pedro Double Shooting
Public Health Notice: Posting of Personal Information in Mobile Food Facility Inspection Reports
The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health or Public Health environmental health division has provided notice that mobile food facility official inspection reports containing personal information of approximately 806 mobile food facility “Persons-In-Charge” and permittees were posted on the Environmental Health Division website.
The mobile food facility official inspection reports contained specific personal information including name, driver’s license (or identification number) and potentially, date of birth.
After this error was discovered, Environmental Health promptly removed the mobile food facility official inspection reports that contained personal information and attempted to contact those affected, although some could not be reached.
Those who believe their information may have been included can contact Environmental Health at its customer call center at 888-700-9995 to determine if your personal information was included in the information that was released. Affected mobile food facility “Persons-In-Charge” and permittees would have participated in an inspection between July 1, 2020, and July 29, 2022.
Although Public Health does not have any indication that any personal information of mobile food facility “Persons-In-Charge ” or permittees was or may be used for identity theft, it encourages anyone whose information was included to take steps to protect against identity theft.
Public Health reported it is taking the necessary precautions to protect confidential information.
Details: ph.lacounty.gov.
‘Long Beach International Gateway Bridge’ Named
The Port of Long Beach’s new cable-stayed span was designated as the Long Beach International Gateway Bridge Aug. 24 after receiving approval from the state Senate.
Connecting Terminal Island to downtown Long Beach, the iconic bridge opened in October 2020 as part of the state highway system. The port handed over ownership of the bridge to Caltrans, placing responsibility for the bridge’s name with the state Legislature.
The bridge-naming bill was introduced to officially propose the bridge’s new moniker following a public survey conducted last year. The measure received unanimous approvals in the state Senate and Assembly.
With two support towers reaching 515 feet into the sky and a multicolored LED lighting system, the Long Beach International Gateway Bridge has already become an icon in Southern California’s skyline. The six-lane bridge was designed to last 100 years as a critical piece of infrastructure to sustain the port’s long-term growth. It is taller than its predecessor to accommodate large cargo vessels and wider to improve truck and commuter traffic for Southern California’s transportation network.
The $1.5 billion Long Beach International Gateway Bridge replaced the Gerald Desmond Bridge, which opened in 1968 and named after a former Long Beach city attorney and city councilman who helped secure funding to build the through-arch span. Demolition of the Gerald Desmond Bridge began in July and is expected to conclude by the end of 2023.
Barbara Morrison Square To Be Unveiled at Leimert Park Jazz Festival
On the occasion of her 73rd birthday, this DCA festival commission commemorates the late Barbara Morrison, international empress of jazz and blues, community activist, educator and entrepreneur, with the unveiling of Barbara Morrison Square at 43rd and Degnan, officiated by the 10th District Council Office.
The day-long line up of music royalty on Sept. 10, will include celebrities as well as local musicians, singers and DJs. The festival footprint also includes a California Jazz and Blues Museum Artwalk (featuring works from Ms. Morrison’s exclusive collection), a Kids Korner in Leimert Plaza Park, and a variety of vendors and food trucks.
Time: 12 to 8p.m. Sept. 10
Cost: Free
Details: Sign up to the BMPAC newsletter for updates on this and future programs at https://tbmpac.com/
Venue: The Barbara Morrison Performing Arts Center, 4305 Degnan Blvd #101, Leimert Park, Los Angeles
Read more about Barbara Morrison’s enduring legacy here
Gov. Newsom Announces Appointments
SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom Aug. 19, announced the following appointments:
Lawrence Nwajei, 61, of Los Angeles, has been reappointed to the Board of Parole Hearings, where he has served since 2021. Nwajei was a deputy commissioner and administrative law judge at the Board of Parole Hearings from 2020 to 2021. He was a staff attorney at Baron & Budd from 2018 to 2021 and served as judge pro tem in the Los Angeles Superior Court from 2019 to 2021. Nwajei was a sole practitioner from 1996 to 2018. He was executive director at Rexford Medical Corporation from 1990 to 1995. He earned a Bachelor of Laws degree from the University of Nigeria. This position requires Senate confirmation and the compensation is $192,407. Nwajei is a Democrat.
Jack Weiss, 57, of Los Angeles, has been appointed to the Board of Parole Hearings. Weiss has been founder of Pacific Intelligence & Cyber since 2019. He was a co-founder of BlueLine Grid from 2013 to 2018 and was a managing director at Kroll and Altegrity from 2010 to 2013. He served as District 5 City Councilmember on the Los Angeles City Council from 2001 to 2009, where he chaired the Public Safety Committee. Weiss served as an assistant U.S. attorney at the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Central District of California from 1994 to 2000. He was a litigation associate at Irell and Manella LLP from 1993 to 1994. Weiss was a law clerk at the U.S. District Court, Central District of California from 1992 to 1993. He earned a Juris Doctor degree from the University of California, Los Angeles School of Law. This position requires Senate confirmation and the compensation is $192,407. Weiss is a Democrat.
Long Beach Awarded $13.1 Million State Loan for Emergency Rental Assistance Program
The City of Long Beach has been awarded a $13.1 million California Department of Housing and Community Development or HCD cashflow loan to provide additional funding for the Long Beach Emergency Rental Assistance Program or LB-ERAP. The funds will be used to continue to provide rent and utility assistance to tenants and landlords who submitted complete applications on or before March 31, 2022.
In April 2021, the city launched LB-ERAP as part of the Long Beach Recovery Act to assist landlords and income-eligible tenants who have experienced financial loss or hardship due to COVID-19. As the city received additional federal funding through the year, the duration and scope of the $64 million program was extended multiple times to enable the city to seek more eligible applicants.
To date, the city has received nearly 12,285 completed LB-ERAP applications and provided or approved over 7,250 rent and utility payments totaling $58.8 million. Roughly 97% of these payments were made on behalf of residents earning less than 50% of the area median income.
The cashflow loan funds will enable the city to provide assistance to approximately 1,300 additional applicants that have already applied, and have been reviewed and approved by the city, with a continued focus on assisting the lowest income residents. The funding, however, is restricted to rental and utility assistance payments for eligible applicants, and payments are limited to rent and utility bills that were due on or before March 31, 2022.
The city stopped accepting new LB-ERAP applications on March 31, 2022.
Existing LB-ERAP applicants with questions about the status of their application may contact the LB-ERAP support line at 833.358.5372 for assistance weekdays from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. The Long Beach Development Services Department is continuing to host in-person pop-ups to provide assistance to existing applicants by appointment at various locations throughout the city.
The city council last month adopted a resolution to request and accept HCD cashflow loan funds. The funding provides support, in the form of a forgivable loan, to cities and counties throughout the state to continue offering rental relief for eligible households impacted by the pandemic. Established by a State budget act known as Senate Bill 115, cities are able to request cashflow loans to be repaid using future federal funding.
The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors recently voted to extend the COVID-19 Tenant Protections Resolution, previously known as the Los Angeles County Eviction Moratorium, through December 31, 2022. The resolution extends certain protections to residential tenants affected by the COVID-10 pandemic.
Details: lacounty.gov/noevictions and longbeach.gov/erap.
Little Fish’s “Eurydice” a Rare Piece of Perfectly Executed Theatre
It may be impolite to say, but rare are trips to the theatre when you don’t see obvious production flaws. It may be a weak link in the cast or the director’s letting them all shout or simply recite their lines at each other without listening. It may be props or blocking that explicitly conflict with the script. It may be flat or awkward sound or lighting cues.
Little Fish Theatre’s staging of Sarah Ruhl’s Eurydice is one of those outliers where everything is done right. If you don’t like this show, it’s because of the script — but this comes down more to taste than any great failings on the playwright’s part.
Eurydice (Jacqueline Misaye), a lover of books and all things “interesting,” loves and is beloved by Orpheus (Brendan Kane), who’s always got music in his head so fine that it makes the stones weep. In the Underworld, Eurydice’s father (Don Schlossman) —one of the few dead people who recall how to read and write — composes a letter bullet-pointing the speech he would give on her wedding day. The letter is subsequently found above ground by a man (Marc Leclerc) who baits Eurydice away from the reception and ultimately to her death, where she’s reunited with her father. Meanwhile, Orpheus mourns and schemes for a way to get her back, and . . . well, if you know your Greek mythology, you know how this is going to end.
That Ruhl hasn’t tied herself to the myth’s details proves both liberating and problematic. Eurydice is certainly not a straightforward redux of the Orpheus tale, nor simply the shopworn convention of retelling a male-focused story from the female point of view. Rather, Ruhl builds upon the myth’s foundation with blocks of her own invention, including unique plot elements and a “chorus of stones.”
The problems come where Ruhl has neglected to construct new bricks or properly hew preexisting ones to keep her edifice from showing gaps. How, for example, is her father’s letter on Earth (as opposed to the many, many others he’s written her), and how does this man randomly (?) happen by when Eurydice is alone (she has to leave the reception area to get herself a drink of water?) and also just happen to come across the letter? Nothing in the original myth informs this, leaving these as two among several occasionally significant holes or inconsistencies that apparently we are meant simply to ignore. Great writing doesn’t demand such soft focus.
But it’s not as if Ruhl is awful, and there’s plenty to like here, including a few beautiful turns of phrase. Take Eurydice’s description of Orpheus’s reaction to seeing her death: “His eyes were two black birds and they flew to me. I said no — stay where you are — he needs you to see!”
This show, though, exceeds its source material. In the title role, Misaye is particularly winning once she gets to the Underworld, and the tender dynamic between her and Schlossman —equally responsible for their rapport — plays up one of the best things Ruhl created from whole cloth. Kane and Leclerc (whose main role is Lord of the Underworld, although the program fails to note that he’s double-cast, which may cause confusion regarding who finds the above-referenced letter) each bend their dynamic energy to the needs of the moment, including physical adroitness that pays off even in subtler moments. Then there’s Colbert Alembert, Esther Mira, and Shirley Ritter-Hatton as Big Stone, Little Stone, and Loud Stone (respectively), who mine their unusual roles for all the comedy and presence they’re worth.
Director Tara Donovan is on top of literally every production aspect. Yeah, she’s got a good cast, but it cannot be overstated how good actors can go bad with improper guidance. Here, every syllable is dialed in. Actors take their time with their lines, they exchange real energy, and they’re present in each moment, however conversational or fantastical. Same goes for the movement (credit here also to choreographer Amanda Karr), as everything and body always finds its right place and rhythm.
The mise en scène is no less impressive. Lo-tech though Little Fish is, Aaron Francis and Joyce Hunter’s simple set build does the job, especially as highlighted by Gregory Crafts’s meticulous lighting design. Little Fish doesn’t have much in the way of a lighting grid, but by titrating just the right potion of filters, angles, and cues, Crafts conjures visual magic. If you don’t always notice, it’s only because of how embedded each element is in the logic of the whole.
Fault can be found with the script, and taste is always subjective; but technically, literally everything comes together in this Eurydice — and that alone is worth the price of admission.
Eurydice at Little Fish Theatre
Times: Fri.-Sat. 8:00 p.m. + Sun. 2 p.m.
The show runs through September 4
Cost: $20-$30
Details: (310) 512-6030, littlefishtheatre.com
Venue: 777 Centre St., San Pedro
Long Beach Transitions Monkeypox Vaccine Pre-Registration System to MyTurn
As of Aug. 19, the City of Long Beach Department Health Department transitioned the monkeypox vaccine pre-registration system to MyTurn, the State’s vaccination notification and appointment system. This transition will help manage efficient and equitable vaccine distribution as supply increases.
Those seeking vaccine will now utilize the State’s system, MyTurn, and the pre-registration system will be closed as people can now sign up directly with the State. Starting Aug. 22, city-run monkeypox vaccine clinics will be included among the open appointment slots on MyTurn. The Long Beach Health Department has begun administering the vaccine to those ages 18 and older though intradermal injection. On Aug. 9, the FDA authorized the emergency use of the Jynneos vaccine to allow healthcare providers to use the vaccine by intradermal injection for those who are determined to be at high risk for monkeypox infection. Those who are under 18 years of age and those who have a history of developing keloid scars will continue to receive the subcutaneous full dose.
Previously, the Jynneos vaccine was administered subcutaneously, or beneath the skin. Intradermal injection is administered between the layers of the skin and allows people to receive a smaller dose that is one fifth the amount administered through the subcutaneous injection. This new injection method produces a similar immune response. Two doses of the vaccine will continue to be administered four weeks apart.
As of Aug 18, there were 50 confirmed and probable cases of monkeypox in Long Beach. At least one has required hospitalization, and all others are either isolating and recovering at home or have recovered.
Details: www.myturn.ca.gov/