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Biggest Labor Notes Conference Ever Marks Labor Movement Growth

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Chicago – Spurred on by an increase in the number of strikes, labor shortages, Covid surges, skyrocketing inflation, failed promises by politicians, and a perpetual war economy, 4000 unionists from across the country and 200 international guests from 25 countries attended the Labor Notes conference in Chicago June 17-19.

The electrifying victories at the Staten Island Amazon warehouse, JFK8, and the organization of more than 100 Starbucks shops nationally, have marked a new stage in US labor and fights that will change the demographics and power of organized labor. Certainly, here and around the world.

Stacy Davis Gates, president of the Chicago Teachers Union opened the Friday night rally by explaining the teachers’ successful fight against school closings, smaller class sizes, nurses in every school, a sanctuary for immigrants, and a project for homeless students and their families. They have successfully battled two Democratic mayors to achieve these goals.

“Workers are suffering under immigration policies, we are fighting for women’s reproductive rights, higher wages, and sick days. At the same time, we fight for affordable housing and expand the defense of workers’ rights and human rights.”

Nolan Tabb, a member of UAWD and UAW Local 281 leading the strike against John Deere, noted that they voted down two prior contracts that were negotiated by the international because they thought a better deal could be had.

“Rank and file organizing, through our Unite All Workers for Democracy caucus, won an immediate 10% wage increase plus an additional 10% over the life of the contract, pension protection, and most importantly, in the times of high inflation, reinstated cost-of-living allowance (COLA) that raises wages according to the government inflationary index,” Tabb said. Even with these gains, the deal is still well behind actual inflation.

One of the biggest contract battles on the horizon is the Teamsters UPS contract which covers over 340,000 workers. New incoming reform president, Sean O’Brien said a strike against UPS is eminent next year to reverse givebacks of prior years and to get rid of two-tier pay.

 

“Speaking of the reform slate victory, we took over the most controversial union and this would not have happened without the activism of the rank-and-file,” Obrien We will fight for no concessions.” With rhetoric and bravado, he said, “we have your back.”

Perhaps the most inspiring organizing effort on a national level has been that by Starbucks workers that originated in Buffalo in September 2021 and have now organized more than 160 of the 9000 locations.

United Workers Union barista and central Buffalo leader, Michelle Eisen, spoke of their efforts “as what union organizations have historically done… The most important lesson of the organizing is that it is shaped through the same experiences and worker-led.” Individual workers have pledged $1 million to a strike fund as Starbucks pushes back in city after city. “We are told we are unskilled, but will without our labor businesses cease to exist.” Their slogan of the day is No contract, No coffee.”

Random Lengths News has covered the fight to organize Amazon workers, led by Chris Smalls, since its inception. Smalls was fired for fighting for safety on the job and without any international union behind them, with rallies, democratic organization, and training of worker activists, they succeeded, as some called David versus Goliath. “In 20 years of existence, no union has organized Amazon, the way we have.”

Since the victory at JFK8 in April, but a loss at a nearby smaller warehouse of primarily part-time workers, Amazon has filed 25 NLRB complaints against the Amazon Labor Union. In response to this, Smalls said “This is a call to action. It is the most important court hearing happening in the country. We need everybody to attend court hearings by zoom. We need all of you, brothers and sisters, to be there for us. If we win a contract, guess how many other workers will be inspired to join the union. Help us get one first. It will have a domino effect. It’s a hot labor summer no matter what industry we are all in this together.”

Ending the program was Sen. Bernie Sanders, who applauded the crowd by remarking “You are in the forefront of trying to transform this country. There is more concentration of ownership than at any point in the history of this land, more corporate greed, and super PACs that feed both political parties. Musk and Bezos own more wealth than the bottom 42% of the population.” He pointed out that “during the pandemic, when working people paid the price and 5000 nurses died to protect us, 200 billionaires increased their wealth by $2 trillion. During the pandemic, 338,000 people died unnecessarily because we do not have Medicare for all. But today we are seeing workers take on the billionaires.”

Over the course of four days, hundreds of workshops and panels took place, marking a rise in the militancy of young workers who comprised the overwhelming majority in attendance. There were hundreds of rank-and-file workers as well as committee people and shop stewards representing scores of industries and cities.

This was in marked contrast to the AFL-CIO convention which rejected the participation of workers from Starbucks and Amazon who had asked to attend.

Many workshops discussed the need for political campaigns, other than just voting, to be combined with on-the-job demands and specifically trade union issues. For example, a panel of rank-and-file General Motors workers in Mexico who’d recently overthrown a corrupt pro-company leadership as well as the delegation from Puerto Rico whose workshop discussed the crippling impact of the debt burden and the collapse of social services (closing of scores of hospitals and schools over the past decade) in this US colony, being forced to service a debt that is untenable.

Environmental Briefs: Wetlands Restoration, County Contracts With Sterigenics On Hold and Clean Car Waiver Gets Automakers Support

EPA Awards $3.7 Million to Support Wetlands Restoration

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency or EPA has awarded a total of $3,745,495 to boost programs that restore habitat, protect tribal water quality and preserve wetlands across the Pacific Southwest. The funding was awarded through EPA’s Wetland Program Development Grants.

Wetland Program Development Grants assist state, tribal, and local government agencies and interstate/intertribal entities in developing or refining programs which protect, manage, and restore wetlands.

Below are the local projects funded in this year’s round of grants:

California State Coastal Conservancy will receive $365,000 to build capacity for assessing wetland recovery efforts. The project will develop a regional monitoring program for the Southern California Wetlands Recovery Project.

Southern California Coastal Water Resource Project will receive $443,005 to develop a Submerged Aquatic Vegetation Monitoring Program for the Southern California Bight.

Details: www.epa.gov/wetlands/wetland-program-development


Hahn Prohibits County Contracts with Sterigenics While Elevated Emissions Persist

LOS ANGELES —The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors June 15, approved a motion authored by Supervisor Janice Hahn to prohibit county departments from contracting with Sterigenics, a medical device sterilization company, while it continues to emit elevated levels of a dangerous carcinogen from its Vernon plant.

Los Angeles County has no existing contracts with Sterigenics U.S., Inc. Hahn’s motion, approved unanimously by the board, directs that all county departments shall refrain from entering into any new or amended contracts to purchase goods or services from Sterigenics.

Details: http://file.lacounty.gov/SDSInter/bos/supdocs/169900.pdf


ICYMI: Leading Automakers Support California’s Clean Car Waiver

SACRAMENTO Last week, five major automakers intervened in defense of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s or EPA decision to restore California’s waiver under the Clean Air Act for its greenhouse gas or GHG and zero-emission vehicle or ZEV standards. Ford, Volkswagen, BMW, Honda and Volvo filed a motion last June 7, backing California’s waiver in response to lawsuits filed by Republican-led states, the oil industry and other business interests against the EPA’s decision in March to restore California’s Clean Air Act waiver, remedying the previous administration’s groundless ​attack.

Last month, Gov. Gavin Newsom, Attorney General Rob Bonta and the California Air Resources Board led a multistate coalition joining the U.S. EPA to defend the waiver from the new lawsuits. California’s standards, which 17 states have chosen to adopt, result in emissions reductions of hundreds of thousands of tons annually and are essential components of California’s and other states’ plans to fight climate change and protect public health.

Details: www.governor-newsom-statement-on-biden-administrations-restoration-of-californias-clean-car-waiver/

Amazon vs Amazon Labor Union — Chris Smalls and Eric Milner Respond to Shipping Giant’s Counter NLRB Suit

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On June 13, Amazon labor leader Chris Smalls held a press conference as the National Labor Relations Board considered whether the Amazon Labor Union’s historic union victory on Staten Island in April should stand — or whether a re-do election is warranted.

This spring, workers at the largest Amazon warehouse on Staten Island, employing more than 8,000 workers, voted 2,654 to 2,131 to join the Amazon Labor Union, an organization founded by current and former Amazon warehouse workers.

A week after ballots were tallied on April 1, Amazon filed 25 objections to the election. Among its complaints, the company says the National Labor Relations Board’s regional office in Brooklyn, which oversaw the election, favored the union and facilitated its victory.

The company also raised objections to some of the ALU’s actions, claiming that organizers harassed and threatened employees who weren’t supporting the union, including suggesting they may lose their benefits if they didn’t back the union. Amazon also claims that union organizers handed out marijuana to workers in return for their support. In fact, union leaders have spoken openly about providing workers with marijuana, but not as a bribe.

ALU lawyer Eric Milner called some of Amazon’s objections silly.

To Amazon’s allegation, that ALU observers videotaped check-in tables and voting lines, Milner explained that the evidence will show that one ALU observer kept his cell phone in a waist belt holster, but no evidence will be presented that the phone was used to record.

“If anything, the evidence in this hearing will demonstrate that it was Amazon’s observers that were the ones breaking the rules and improperly using their phones during the election,” Milner said.

Milner also addressed Amazon’s allegation that NLRB favored the union in its advice.

“Again, just totally silly. Amazon’s objections that the ALU failed to file LMRDA [Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act] forms are also silly,” Milner said. “Again, we’re at the NLRB, not the Department of Labor, and such failures, even if they were true, are not valid objections to this election.”

Amazon alleges that the ALU made misrepresentations about dues, about the support they had from other unions, and about the arrest of Chris Smalls, Milner continued. But even if the ALU made those misrepresentations, misrepresentation by a union during the union campaign is no objection.

Other points of objection Amazon made include:

  • An allegation that ALU President Chris Small was loitering in the polling place
  • ALU interfered with Amazon’s “small group meetings”
  • ALU systematically destroyed Amazon campaign materials, thereby hindering the company’s ability to communicate with its employees
  • The NLRB ordered voters to cover up Vote No shirts, but not ALU shirts
  • The ALU allegedly threatened and harassed employees

Milner said the evidence will show that Smalls was permitted to be at the polling location before and after each and every voting session and that during the voting, he was not in a restricted area.

As for the allegations that the ALU interfered with Amazon’s “small group meetings,” Milner explained that the evidence will show that what actually occurred was that individual employees expressed their valid Section 7 rights and engaged in communication and discourse with highly paid anti-union consultants.

Section 7 of the National Labor Relations Act (the Act) guarantees employees “the right to self-organization, to form, join, or assist labor organizations, to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing, and to engage in other concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection,” as well as the right “to refrain from any or all such activities.”

Milner disputed Amazon’s assertions that the ALU destroyed company campaign materials, calling it truly laughable in the face of Amazon’s well-publicized anti-union effort to the tune of $4.3 million last year alone.

“What actually happened is that the ALU successfully countered Amazon’s false narrative about unions and showed the JFK8 workers, as well as workers around the world, that in solidarity there is strength,” Milner said.

As to Amazon’s assertion that the NLRB Region 29 tipped the balance in favor of the union by ordering voters to cover up Vote No shirts, but not ALU shirts, Milner called this too, “silly,” because Vote No conveys an actual message regarding the election, whereas an ALU logo does not.

“In fact, the evidence is going to show that employees were free to wear Amazon paraphernalia in the voting tents,” Milner said. “And voters were instructed to remove ALU lanyards prior to entering the voting.”

Milner went on to say that the allegations regarding the light projection are similarly not objectionable, as are the allegations regarding marijuana. The evidence is going to show that to the extent it may have occurred it was well outside of the critical period and that it’s not relevant to this proceeding.

With respect to the allegations that the ALU threatened and harassed employees, Milner said the ALU is confident that Amazon will fail to provide any credible evidence of such an occurrence.

“If anything, the evidence is going to show that employees were afraid of, and were coerced by Amazon, not the ALU,” Milner said. “But, like a small child, Amazon is still here, still lashing out because they were unable to ram this false narrative down the throats of the JFK8 workers. And now they are seeking to blame anyone and everyone but themselves for the results.”

ALU leader Chris Smalls stressed the importance of keeping the public informed about Amazon and the lack of accountability the retail giant faces.

“We have to show the public, tell the public what is going on when it comes to Amazon, a trillion-dollar company that gets bailed out by our tax-paying dollars, that gets no accountability because the government is always bailing them out,” Smalls said. “The laws that are supposed to protect workers are not protecting workers.”

In regards to the retaliatory measures by Amazon thus far, Smalls calls the struggle between the ALU and Amazon a war.

“They have fired our members. Just last week they fired another one, Uncle Pat, that’s been with us,” Smalls said. “He flipped over 500 workers in the building, and Amazon saw that in the press conference that we held outside the building and they’ve targeted him ever since then, and they terminated him just last week.”

Smalls noted that an unfair labor practice complaint has been filed on behalf of the fired worker in an effort to get his job back with back pay.

In answer to a question about how to persuade consumers who are not necessarily union members and are not plugged in with the movement, Smalls simply said, “having a conversation, spreading awareness about it, because a lot of people are disconnected from what we go through in the warehouse.

“They have no idea. As much as we are in tune, it’s a small world when it comes to labor. Everybody knows what’s going on. The same folks. How do we get that out? How do we get this message out to people that are just disconnected? And it’s not really their fault either. Society plays a part in that. How do we get that to them? We’ve got to tell them!”

Random Happening: Music By The Sea Is Back

“Music & Sunshine, Vendors, Family & Friends Every Sunday in July.”

 

After a three-year hiatus Music by the Sea kicks-off its 25th anniversary June 26 at Point Fermin Park in San Pedro.

The opening lineup includes Nasty Bad Habits, The Latest, Dirty Ice Cream and The Harbor Groove Band.

Producer of the event, Mike Caccavalla, said Music by the Sea will have a moment of silence to begin all six Sundays. The event will display pictures of band members that have died since 2019 near the stage. The event producers are asking attendees to bring a picture of their loved ones to hold up during the moment of silence as well.

On MBTS’s Facebook page, Caccavalla posted,

Music by the Sea want(s) to acknowledge our losses. I have added a line to the shirt this year stating “’In Memory.’”

 

Find information below on some of the bands performing for the opening weekend.

 

The Harbor Groove Band – 70s,80s,90s, Cumbia, R&B, old school, funk and more. www.facebook.com/harborgrooveband/

 

Dirty Ice Cream – www.facebook.com/groups/dirty-ice-cream

 

Nasty Bad Habits https://www.facebook.com/NastyBadHabit

Divestment from Fossil Fuels Bill Does Not Receive a Public Hearing

SACRAMENTO — Senator Lena A. Gonzalez (D-Long Beach) issued the following statement after the chair of the assembly committee on public employment and retirement refused to allow Senate Bill 1173, The Fossil Fuel Divestment Act to have a public hearing in the committee.

The bill would have significantly advanced state climate goals by requiring California’s two largest public pension funds to divest over $11 billion of fossil fuel investments by 2030.

“While I am deeply disappointed that my Senate Bill 1173 was not set for a hearing in the Assembly Committee on Public Employment and Retirement this week, I remain committed to the necessary and ongoing fight against the impacts of climate change on our state, and especially those communities in my district that are disproportionately impacted by the negative effects of the climate crisis,” said Senator Lena Gonzalez “Teachers and state employees whose retirement futures are invested by our state’s pension funds have long demanded that CalPERS and CalSTRS cease investing their money in fossil fuel companies, and this demand will only grow stronger and louder. I’m thankful for the hard work of our grassroots supporters at Fossil Free California, the California Faculty Association, and the youth climate activists with Youth Vs Apocalypse who helped move this bill out of the Senate and look forward to continuing this fight to ensure policy aligns with our state’s values as a world climate leader, and that we can pass on a livable planet to future generations. ”

Rancho Palos Verdes Implements $1,000-$7,500 Fines for Illegal Fireworks

With fire season underway and the Fourth of July holiday approaching, the City of Rancho Palos Verdes has implemented tougher fines for illegal fireworks ranging from $1,000 to $7,500.

To deter the use of fireworks that could spark a wildfire on the high-risk Palos Verdes Peninsula, the Rancho Palos Verdes City Council in May increased fines for fireworks violators in the city to $1,000 for a first violation, $5,000 for a second, and $7,500 for third and subsequent violations. Previously, the fine started at $500.

The City reminds residents that fireworks, including those marketed as “safe and sane,” are illegal year-round. This includes smoke bombs or smoke sticks that are commonly used for gender reveal parties.

With vast open space areas and canyons full of brush, virtually the entire City of Rancho Palos Verdes falls in a Cal Fire-designated “very high fire hazard severity zone.” It can only take one spark to ignite a catastrophic wildfire on the peninsula, threatening lives and property in an area with limited evacuation routes. Fireworks can also trigger extreme episodes of trauma and fear in those who have post-traumatic stress disorder and in pets.

Residents and visitors are reminded to respect their neighbors and to help protect against wildfire – do not light fireworks. Enjoy the Fourth of July holiday safely.

Report fireworks in the City of Rancho Palos Verdes to the Lomita Sheriff’s Station at 310-539-1661.

Half a Billion Dollars for Housing and Services for People Experiencing Severe Mental Illness and Substance Abuse

SACRAMENTO — Gov. Newsom’s press release stated it bluntly, “the nation is experiencing a mental health crisis.”

California, June 21, announced $518.5 million in grants to help provide services and housing options to those with severe mental illness or substance abuse problems, including for those who are living on the streets. The latest funding will help Gov. Newsom’s CARE Court proposal, taking a new approach to homelessness and taking stronger action to get people off the streets and into a place where they can get the care they need.

The funding will provide treatment beds for more than 1,000 people at a time, plus behavioral health services for many more. It is part of a $2.2 billion effort to expand mental health housing and services across California, especially for people experiencing homelessness.

The Governor’s meeting in Sacramento with members of the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) included families who are caring for loved ones struggling with behavioral or mental health disorders and could be helped by CARE Court. The Governor heard their stories and talked about the historic actions that California is taking to address this crisis.

CARE Court will provide Californians suffering from untreated schizophrenia spectrum and other psychotic disorders with community-based treatment, services, and housing, and is intended to serve as an upstream intervention for the most severely impaired Californians.

The awards announced today are delivered through the Department of Health Care Services’ or DHCS Behavioral Health Continuum Infrastructure Program (BHCIP) Round 3: Launch Ready grants. In all, $2.2 billion was provided by the Legislature and the Governor to construct, acquire, and expand behavioral health facilities and community- based care options while investing in mobile crisis infrastructure.

LA County received $155,172,811 in grants.

Grants were awarded in the following counties:

  • Alameda County – $18,405,122
  • El Dorado County – $2,852,182
  • Humboldt County – $4,170,560
  • Kern County – $3,138,065
  • Madera County – $2,035,512
  • Mendocino County – $7,711,800
  • Monterey County – $3,558,670
  • Nevada County – $4,458,799
  • Orange County – $10,000,000
  • Placer County – $6,519,015
  • Riverside County – $103,181,728
  • Sacramento County – $30,553,889
  • San Diego County – $30,874,411
  • San Francisco County – $6,750,000
  • Santa Barbara County – $2,914,224
  • Santa Clara County – $54,074,660
  • Solano County – $14,332,411
  • Sonoma County – $9,751,915
  • Stanislaus County – $33,369,900
  • Yolo County – $12,500,000

Recipients of BHCIP Launch Ready grants include cities, counties, Tribal entities, nonprofits and for-profit organizations statewide that serve target populations. Additional information on BHCIP Round: 3 Launch Ready awardees is available at BHCIP Grant Award Information.

The next round of funding will include more than $480 million focused on children and youth behavioral health issues. Awards will be made this fall.

Details: BHCIP grant information

Community Comes Together for Tamale Vendor Harassed While at Work

A massive outpouring of support in San Pedro for Juan Aguilar, a tamale vendor that was harassed and called racial slurs while working by a man neighbors described as a “white supremacist.”

On June 11, Supporters and activists gathered in front of the perpetrator’s home, where the incident took place, buying tamales to support Aguilar. His supporters condemned the racism and assaults that vendors frequently experience.

In two hours, Sánchez sold 1,500 tamales. A personal record.

Although it wasn’t the first time Aguilar had experienced racism while selling his tamales in San Pedro, it was the first time he recorded an incident. The video received a whopping two million views on TikTok. Local activists got a hold of the video and decided to organize a sell out. And they did sell out.

Juan Aguilar works seven days a week, up to five hours a day, selling his tamales down the streets of San Pedro. Selling tamales is his only source of income, his way of supporting his family.

 

LA South Bay Real Estate: May 2022

Number of Homes Sold

The number of homes sold in the South Bay has declined from last month, and has declined from last year. The quantities are actually rather dramatic given that May is typically a time of increasing sales. The drops range from -7% to -17% lower than April sales of this year, and from -17% to -25% below May of last year.

With over half the year remaining, mortgage interest rates have doubled, currently sitting around 6%. The hike in interest rates has so far reduced the average buying power by about -25%. Coupled with home price increases estimated to have risen 38% since the start of the pandemic, the immediate future of real estate looks dismal.

202205_sales_vol_chart

Inflated consumer prices are also blocking potential home buyers as the Consumer Price Index (CPI) climbs toward a 10% annual hike. There’s little chance of saving for a down payment when the price of everything on the shopping list is going up..

Retirement accounts are often a source of down payment funds. As of this writing the major stock market indices are all down: Dow Jones Industrial Average, -16%; S&P 500, -22%; Nasdaq Composite, -31%. Forecasts are growing for a Fed-induced recession that may begin as soon as this fall. Some potential buyers may see borrowing from their retirement fund to purchase a property as a means to preserve the capital during a recession. Others may not be in a position to do that.

Median Price Sold

May prices delivered a mixed message. The Palos Verdes Peninsula, which had seen two months of decline from a temporarily high median price, headed back up again. The Beach cities continued a steady climb, and the Inland area showed a modest price increase after having dropped 1% in April.

However, the Harbor area, which is as large as the other three areas combined, took a -6% hit to prices. We anticipate the Harbor and Inland areas, which comprise the bulk of the traditional middle class family homes in South Bay, to be the first to react to the economic stress.

Typically, the recession cycle starts with a slowing of sales. As properties languish on the market, sellers begin to reduce prices. One after another, median sales prices will drop until the price reduction offsets the impact to buyers. At that point, buyers will begin to support the reduced purchase prices and we can see growth in the market.

Experts differ in their estimates of how long this cycle will take, and when we can expect the market bottom. There are some predicting a rapid fall based on the speed with which the Federal Reserve Bank (Fed) is reacting. The June meeting of the Fed ended with a .75% hike in the prime rate, and a promise to raise it at least another .75% before the end of the year. While that could slow the economy as early as the beginning of 2023, more conservative minds suggest the end of 2023 for a turn-around.

Area Sales Dollars

The total sales dollars tell the truest story. While sales are slowing and median prices are beginning to slow, the combination shows up here.

Everywhere except the Beach is showing reductions in total sales on a month to month basis, and on a year over year basis. The declines are small to date, with year over year ranging from -1% to -10% in May. Month to month changes ranged from +2% at the Beach to -19% in the Harbor area.

202205_monthly_sales_$_chart

These early numbers follow the general pattern we’ve seen in recent recessions, whereby entry level homes are the first impacted and the last to recover. We anticipate the Harbor area to lead the charge down, followed by the Inland area. Recent years have shown the Beach to be the strongest growth area, so we expect the recession to hit there last, following declines on the Hill.

The nature of the impending recession is still uncertain. Some pundits are saying that at least initially we should expect “stagflation,” that odd environment we first encountered back in the 1990s when prices of everything continued to climb, along with job layoffs and massive unemployment. Other forecasters suggest that because the international economy is roiling with continuing high tariffs (courtesy of the last administration) and new monetary sanctions daily (courtesy of the current administration), this particular recession may last much longer than normal.

In Summary

As the table below shows, the majority of the negative impact for May happened in the quantity of housing units sold. With one exception, prices continued to escalate. We believe this is temporary and likely to change before the end of the year. The -6% drop in median price at the Harbor presages the direction of home pricing as inventory grows and listings stagnate.

Approximately 3 out of 4 listings coming across our desk recently have been either Price Reduction or Back On Market. That means property is staying on the market longer. The Average Days On Market (DOM) for May ranged from 10 days on the PV Hill to 14 days in the Harbor area. As recently as this winter we were still seeing multiple offers on the first day the property was available.

Another measure of the market condition is how far the average sales price declines in the first 30 days on market. We did a quick look for May and came up with these statistics. Thirty days after the original listing, the price had dropped from the original: at the Beach, -9%; the Harbor -6%; PV Hill -18%; Inland -5%. As of May, we’re also seeing property that has been on the market for several months, with several price reductions.

Notable Properties

The high and low sales for May were not terribly dramatic. A Manhattan Hill section home and a downtown Long Beach condominium. Thay are simply very big, and very small.

High Sale

Located at 812 5th St, this Manhattan Beach hill section home was originally listed at $10.5M and sold for $8,980,000 after 34 days active on the market. The home offers six bedrooms and seven full bathrooms in 5576 sq ft. Amenities included ocean view, pool, spa, custom waterfall & fire features, a full basement with recreation/media room, home theater, storage, a temperature-controlled wine cellar, and private guest quarters.

Low Sale

Measuring barely 381 sq ft, the studio condo at 819 E 4th St #25 sold for $215,000 in one day. Located in the vibrant East Village of Downtown Long Beach this tiny home offers a remodelled kitchen and bathroom. The unit sits on the second floor, overlooking the intersection of 4th and Alimitos and within walking distance of many downtown shops, clubs and eateries.

 

Folk-Psychedelic Album Release Show at Rancho Los Cerritos

Songwriter, Alyssandra Nighswonger, celebrates her new album, Will You Stay, with a unique sonic experience in the garden atmosphere of the historic Rancho Los Cerritos June 18.

The evening will also feature performances by renowned poet, Derrick Brown, theatrical composer, Ellen Warkentine and DJs Lono Calls and Lili Bird. Nighswonger said, Will You Stay is an album about “those bittersweet times when you say goodbye to a part of yourself and get pushed to bloom.”

It was recorded locally at The Compound Studio in Signal Hill. Inspired by influences like The Moody Blues and King Crimson, the work is immersed heavily in the Mellotron, played by Los Angeles multi-instrumentalist and producer, Fernando Perdomo. To create Nighswonger’s whimsical universe, the album also has R. Scott Dibble on Hammond B3 Organ, Joy Shannon on harp and percussionist, Slam, on vibraphone. Also featured at the event, Derrick C. Brown, who is a novelist, comedian, poet, storyteller and former paratrooper for the 82nd Airborne. Winner of the 2013 Texas Book of The Year award for Poetry, he is also owner and president of Write Bloody Publishing, which Forbes and Filter Magazine call “…one of the best independent poetry presses in the country.”

Opening the event, Ellen Warkentine is a theatrical multi-instrumentalist composer/performer from Long Beach, now based in Brooklyn, New York. Her melodic work references avant-pop, early jazz, and vaudeville. She will be accompanied by harpist Chris Lyles.

Rancho Los Cerritos is a landmark that echoes with history of indigenous, Spanish, Mexican and American California. The five-acre site contains beautifully preserved historic gardens. Tickets are available on Eventbrite, and the album is available on Bandcamp.

The evening promises to be a dreamy one and stay tuned for an upcoming album review for Will You Stay.

June 18 — Will You Stay Album Release Show

Time: 6:30 p.m. doors open

Cost:$12 General Admission or $28 VIP

Details: www.eventbrite.com/e/alyssandra-nighswonger-will-you-stay-album-release-show

Venue: Rancho Los Cerritos, 4600 Virginia Road, Long Beach.