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Gov. Newsom Welcomes World Leaders to California for Summit of the Americas

LOS ANGELES – Gov. Gavin Newsom June 6, welcomed world leaders arriving in Los Angeles for the ninth Summit of the Americas — a series of forums between leaders on issues that are critical to the Western Hemisphere.

With a focus of “Building a Sustainable, Resilient, and Equitable Future,” the Summit of the Americas will take place June 6-10. The Biden Administration has billed it as the “highest priority event for the region.

The Governor will meet with world leaders and discuss the greatest challenges facing California and the Western Hemisphere, including climate change and economic resiliency. The Governor will highlight California’s economic might that is backed by its diversity and how the state’s economic strength is driving climate change solutions that allow the world to tackle the climate crisis head on.

Governor Newsom will underscore key elements of the “California way:” defending democracy and protecting fundamental rights, achieving health care for all, transforming public schools, innovating nation-leading climate policy and building a strong economy that embraces diversity and opportunity for all.

California is ranked as the most diverse state in the nation, with immigrants making up nearly 27% of its population and more than half of foreign born Californians hailing from nations of the Americas. California is home to 829,369 immigrant entrepreneurs and 25 Fortune 500 companies founded by immigrants or children of immigrants, according to data from New American Economy. A third of the state’s labor force, immigrants strengthen the state’s workforce across industries from Fortune 500 companies to neighborhood microbusinesses.

Note: The US excluded Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela — causing some countries to not attend the event in boycott.

Suspect Threatening to Kill Worshipers in San Pedro Apprehended and Charged

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The suspect wanted in connection to phone calls to local churches and threatening to kill worshipers, Robert Alfred Aguilar, was apprehended at 7a.m on May 31. His bail was set at $325,000 at a hearing this morning at the Long Beach courthouse.

This isn’t Aguilar’s first brush with the law. This past March, he was charged with one count of dissuading a witness and three counts of making criminal threats under California penal codes 136.1(C)(1) and 422(A) respectively.

Break-ins in Downtown San Pedro

Also, there were three break-ins in downtown San Pedro last night, all within the span of 20 minutes. Thieves broke the glass door and entered JM Salon on 7th Street, then they hit Sweet Suzie’s Candy Shop and Hojas Teas on 6th Street. Police are investigating the break-ins. No arrests have yet been made.

UCLA Study Finds Inmate Deaths in LA County Jails Misclassified

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A study released by UCLA’s Carceral Ecologies Lab and Bio Critical Studies Lab on June 1 found that deaths in Los Angeles County jails were often classified as natural, even with evidence to the contrary. The study was of 59 deaths from 2009 to 2019. There were 292 reported deaths during that period, but the study said that security holds prevented researchers from accessing all but 59 of the cases. The Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department denied this, saying that researchers requested 210 autopsy reports, and that the department mailed them all between January and April 2021.

According to a summary of the report, the majority of Black and Latino men did not die from “natural causes” but from the actions of jail deputies and staff. 26 of the cases that were studied were reported to have died from “natural” causes, and 54% of these cases had evidence of physical violence on their bodies, and 85% involved an alleged mental illness.

The study also found that 74% of the deaths of Black men were classified as natural. More than 75% of the deaths were before the inmate had stood trial.

The Sheriff’s Department said the study implies that Department of Medical Examiner-Coroner doctors purposefully misclassify deaths. The Sheriff’s Department denied this, and said the Department of Medical Examiner-Coroner is a separate entity.

First Presumptive Case of Monkeypox Reported in LA County

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The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health confirmed the first presumptive case of monkeypox in the county on June 2. The infected person is an adult, who recently traveled and was in close contact with someone who was infected. The Department of Public Health is waiting for the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention’s final confirmation that the patient really is infected, as a presumptive case merely means they are symptomatic and have been in contact with an infected person. The patient has symptoms, but is doing well and not being hospitalized. The patient is being isolated.

According to the Department of Public Health, the risk of monkeypox in the general population is very low. There have been 19 reported cases in the United States, according to the CDC’s website.

People who are infected with monkeypox usually take seven to 14 days for symptoms to appear, but can take five to 21 days. First they will have a fever, headache, muscle aches and exhaustion, followed by a rash. The illness will usually last from two to four weeks.

Hahn Gives $165K Grant for Career Training Program for Probation Youth

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Commerce, CA– Los Angeles County Supervisor Janice Hahn has provided a $165,000 grant to launch a new career training program at the Dorothy Kirby Center probation camp in the City of Commerce. Probation youth who enroll in the pilot program will be able to participate in hands-on career training, learn about personal branding and resume building, and get connected to internship and apprenticeship programs after they complete their time and return to their communities.

“I want to make sure we are setting up the young people in our care for success,” said Supervisor Janice Hahn. “Through the WestCal Academy program, they will be able to get hands-on experience in different careers so they can find something they are passionate about and get connected to mentors who can show them the ropes of the industry.”

The 24-week course is a partnership between Supervisor Janice Hahn and WestCal Academy, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit education organization headquartered in Torrance, California with multiple satellite locations across LA County. The pilot program received $165k of funding from Supervisor Hahn’s office through the Juvenile Justice Crime Prevention Act.

Probation youth at the Dorothy Kirby Center who choose to enroll in the program will take weekly hands-on courses in a wide range of vocational fields. Most weekly classes will be on-campus at Dorothy Kirby, but the program also includes two excursions in which students will be transported to WestCal’s Torrance headquarters.

Classes will include:

  • automotive technology
  • cosmetology
  • dental assistance
  • medicine
  • HVAC maintenance
  • pharmacy
  • EMT
  • longshore

“The Los Angeles County Probation Department continuously seeks new educational and job opportunities for transitional-age youth to help them and their families receive the services they need to thrive,” said Dr. Jesus Corral, Senior Director of Education Services for the LA County Probation Department. “We look forward to collaborating with WestCal Academy to provide the students at Dorothy Kirby Center with an opportunity to explore a variety of Career Technical Education pathways.

“The goal of WestCal® is to transform these young people into taxpayers by helping them secure a lucrative career. Dr. Tabakian, our founding President, personally brought me into WestCal®,” said Joseph P. Lopez, Project Coordinator for WestCal Academy’s program at the Dorothy Kirby Center. “As a WestCal® graduate, I can say that this program made me a better person. Ultimately, I want history to remember our project today as the first of many WestCal® programs that helped youth in Probation’s care.”

Upon completion, WestCal graduates will be equipped with the skills to transition into an internship, apprenticeship, or continue their education in a college program or a Career Technical Educational (CTE) certification program. To assure accountability to the County and its taxpayers, WestCal will track students’ career pathway outcomes upon enrollment.

Importantly, young people who are discharged from the probation camp prior to the end of the 24-week course will be able to continue their training with WestCal either remotely or at a WestCal location.

Long Beach Opera’s Tejano Take on Handel Scores with a Sense of Fun that Purists May Hate

It may all be a matter of taste, but a lot of us find Baroque opera, well, boring. All those arias recycling identical forms and similar melodies . . . Even if you enjoy what you’re hearing initially, after intermission your mind may be screaming Basta! regardless of the performers’ talent.

So if Long Beach Opera were bound and determined to kick off Artistic Director James Darrah’s second season (after not one but two show cancellations related to personnel issues that are outside the scope of this review) with Handel’s Giustino, it was probably a savvy nod to the large percentage of non-purists that make up their subscriber base to throw in numerous contemporary wrinkles that would Handel spinning. But whether you think this Tejano take on the internecine conflict that led to the ascension of Byzantine Emperor Justin I succeeds depends largely on your expectations and focus. For example, where do you stand on Handel turned disco?

One fine day, young Giustino (Luke Elmer) is visited by Fortune (j) with tidings of glory and riches, the opportunity for which soon knocks in the form of Emperor Anastasio (Marlaina Owens) soliciting Giustino’s help rescuing his wife Arianna (Anna Schubert) from rebel kidnappers Amanzio (Douglas Williams) and Vitaliano (Orson Van Gay). Or something like that. The plot was convoluted before Darrah tinkered with it, and tinker he has (the libretto has been “taken apart and reassembled by Darrah,” LBO tells us), to the point that we aren’t sure exactly who Leocasta (Amanda Lynn Bottoms) is. (It certainly didn’t help that a 7:30pm start time this late in SoCal spring makes the supertitles unreadable for the first 20 minutes.)

But when I go to the opera, I don’t give a fuck about fidelity to Handel or the lives of the Byzantine emperors or even plot — just give me spectacle! On this count, there is fun to be had with this Giustino. Even before white-suited Fortune sashays onto the scene with moneybag in hand and Día de los Muertos iconography on her sleeves, the Big Gulp cup at the foot of the yellow motel bed where Giustino slumbers is enough to let us know this isn’t going to be your great-great-grandfather’s Handel. There’s visual pleasure in the characters’ color schemes: Leocasta’s long yellow stockings and platform heels, Vitaliano’s green tracksuit, evil Amanzio as a man in black, Arianna’s orange and Anastasio’s minor symphony of beige. Giustino is the least distinct — but those boots! Kudos to costumer Adam Rigg for a color-coded hodgepodge of fun that provides the audience with ready identifiers.

Rather than go for the mannered acting one expects with opera of old, Darrah’s cast is often fast and loose with their choices. This isn’t always successful — sometimes they’re a bit unfocused, while at others they are too restrained — but it’s good fun when they hit the sweet spot. Delightful, for example, is Van Gay’s entrance: he sets down a six-pack of beer on top of the motel-room TV, then joyously works the catwalk in anticipation of the mayhem he will soon cause.

Nothing about LBO’s Giustino is likely to be more divisive than the music, particularly the use of trap drum kit and electric guitar and bass. It’s quite a shock the first time an aria is suddenly discofied by an eruption of four-on-the-floor from the rhythm section. But hey, spectacle! You can’t fault composer/arranger/sound designer Shelley Washington for lack of courage, even as you lament her inability to sonically integrate these instruments with the rest of the orchestra. And while perhaps this failure can be chalked up to logistical difficulties inherent to such an intimate outdoor space, the occasional seeming randomness of axillary percussion is simply puzzling.

Vocally, there’s a lot to like. Anna Schubert’s smooth command of everything she voices stands out in a show with a lot of standout moments across the board; but because I’m no fan of Handel, it’s the personality the entire casts bring with their technical prowess that wins me over. Even Doug Williams, who was having vocal issues serious enough to merit a pre-show announcement and ostensibly forced him to sing his part an octave low, worked his role successfully (particularly when he finds his inner fabulousness in Act Two). And perhaps the most enjoyable aspect of Luke Elmer’s embodiment of the title role is how his acting makes his fine singing seem like an afterthought.

Curiously, LBO’s staging does not deliver as promised. “The action of the scenes will move amongst the audience and to different parts of the location,” says LBO’s website, “and will be live-filmed to create a movie within an opera playing at all times.” This is simply untrue. Although there are entrances from offstage between bleacher sections set up in the MoLAA sculpture garden, not once are the performers “amongst the audience”; and only a couple of scenes are “live-filmed,” with most having no video accompaniment other than static, generic Southwest landscapes that background the supertitles.

Similarly, the lighting does not fully deliver on the possibilities inherent to the combination of MoLAA’s outdoor grid and what LBO adds to the scene. What’s nice at the outset feels static by Act Two, and only toward the finale does LBO layer enough lighting cues to make things interesting again.

No, Long Beach Opera’s Giustino does not fully deliver on concept — and yes, that concept will be unpalatable to purists. But Darrah and company produce enough positive energy to give a philistine like me a pretty good time with Handel. And that’s no easy trick.

Long Beach Opera’s Giustino

Details: May 28, 7:30 pm

Location: Museum of Latin American Art, 628 Alamitos Ave. Long Beach 90802

More Info: molaa.org, LongBeachOpera.org

Suspect Threatening Mass Shooting of Worshippers Sought, and Scammers Caught

Community Alert
Los Angeles Police Department Harbor detectives seek the community’s help in locating a suspect. The individual is suspected of making phone calls to churches and threatening to kill worshipers by unknown means.

The suspects is Richard Alfred Aguilar. He is a male Hispanic with black hair, brown eyes, 5’10” height, 160 lbs. He is 36 years old. The suspect is known to frequent the San Pedro Beacon St. transient area.

Anyone with information about this suspect is encouraged to contact Harbor Detective J. Zavala at 310-726-7860 or email at, harbordetectives@lapdonline.

Do not attempt to apprehend the suspect. If he is located, call 911 immediately and contact the police.

SoCal Scammer Arrests
By Raphael Richardson

SANTA ANA, Calif. – Four men were arrested, with one still wanted, after being caught scamming elderly victims out of $5 million by pressuring them to buy fraudulent services.

The indictment by federal prosecutors, assisted by the U.S. Secret Service and Huntington Beach Police Department, alleges that five men ran a scam operation from 2015 to May of 2019, in which telemarketing companies run by the scheme’s ringleader called timeshare owners and offered to end their contracts with timeshare companies for a “one-time fee.” If the victim was interested, their call was transferred to another telemarketer, who would convince the victim to sign a contract with the telemarketing company and pay a fee. Victims would then be contacted again a few weeks later, in order to be forced to pay more money.

The scam also utilized several Southern California-based companies, all founded by the ringleader, to perpetuate the timeshare-relief scam, the indictment charged. Once one company became inundated with consumer complaints, another company was founded to keep the scam in operation.

Prosecutors identified five of the men involved in the scam, four of which have already been arrested. 41-year-old Michael McDonagh of Long Beach was named by authorities to be the ringleader of the operation. Additionally, 42-year-old Antonio Duarte of Corona, 32-year-old Christopher James Vannoy of Norwalk, and 40-year-old Ruben Ortiz of Long Beach were also arrested. Authorities are still searching for a fifth suspect, 43-year-old Frank Anthony Molina, of San Pedro.

McDonagh, Duarte, Vannoy and Molina have been charged with one count of conspiracy and 28 counts of wire fraud and telemarketing fraud against the elderly, while Ortiz, who joined the scam group three years after it started, faces one charge of conspiracy and 12 counts of wire fraud and telemarketing fraud against the elderly.

The group scammed more than $5 million out of the dozens of victims, many of which were over 55 years old, authorities said. If convicted, each suspect would face a statutory 20 years in federal prison for conspiracy, and a statutory maximum of 30 years in federal prison for each fraud count.

Members of the public who have been a victim of these scams have been urged by authorities to contact the Secret Service’s Santa Ana Resident Office at 714-246-8257.

 

Protecting Workers and the Elderly Remains Everyone’s Responsibility as Transmission Remains High

With increases in the number of cases, hospitalizations, outbreaks at worksites, and the test positivity rate, Public Health encourages everyone to layer in additional protections to safeguard those most vulnerable, especially workers and the elderly.

Cases continue to increase in LA County, as the average number of daily new cases reported over the last seven days increased to 4,442 from one month ago when the number reported was 1,935 – an increase of 130%.

The seven-day average test positivity rate also increased when compared to one month ago. The rate today is 4%, more than double from what it was one month ago on April 30 when the seven-day average test positivity rate was 1.8%.

While hospitalizations remain relatively modest, higher case numbers have translated to an increase in the number of people hospitalized. Over the last seven days, the average number of COVID-19-positive patients per day in LA County hospitals was 452, an increase of 92% from one month ago when the average number of COVID-positive patients per day was 236.

Older adults are substantially more likely to require hospitalization than younger individuals and the number of older adults requiring hospitalization has increased significantly with this latest surge in cases. On April 23, the COVID hospitalization rate for residents 80 years old and older was 37 per 100,000 people. One month later, on May 23, the hospitalization rate for residents 80 years old and older was 67 per 100,000 people, an 82% increase.

With high rates of transmission, outbreaks across many sectors are also increasing. One month ago, for the two-week period ending May 2, there were 14 outbreaks opened at skilled nursing facilities, 15 outbreaks opened among people experiencing homelessness, and 40 outbreaks opened at worksites. For the two-week period ending May 30, there were 35 outbreaks opened at skilled nursing facilities (150% increase), 32 outbreaks opened among people experiencing homelessness (113% increase), and 62 outbreaks opened at worksites (55% increase). Outbreaks at schools remained high with 28 outbreaks opened during the two-week period ending May 30.

And while many of those infected experience mild or moderate illness, the risk is not equally distributed. Older people and those with chronic health conditions remain at higher risk, even if vaccinated. With the most infectious variants to date circulating across LA County, reducing possible exposures makes a difference, particularly for those working at jobs that put them in close contact with many other workers and customers during the course of the day.

Public Health May 31, reported four additional deaths and 2,151 new positive cases today. The lower number of cases and deaths likely reflect reporting delays over the holiday weekend. Of the four new deaths reported today, two were between the ages of 65-79 and two were aged 80 years or older. Of the 4 newly reported deaths, all had underlying health conditions. To date, the total number of deaths in L.A. County is 32,133.

Public Health has reported a total of 2,976,323 positive cases of COVID-19 across all areas of L.A. County. Today’s positivity rate is 4.0%.

There are 479 people with COVID-19 currently hospitalized. Testing results are available for more than 12,017,244 individuals, with 22% of people testing positive.

Details: http://www.publichealth.lacounty.gov including:

 

A Republican Tried to Introduce a Commonsense Gun Law. Then the Gun Lobby Got Involved.

After a sheriff’s deputy was murdered in a Denver suburb, Colorado state Rep. Cole Wist took action by sponsoring a red flag bill. It likely cost him his seat. ProPublica spoke to Wist about the harsh realities of gun reform.

https://www.propublica.org/article/a-republican-tried-to-introduce-a-commonsense-gun-law-then-the-gun-lobby-got-involved?utm_source=sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=dailynewsletter&utm_content=feature

Cole Wist was a Republican state House member in Colorado with an A grade from the NRA. Then, in 2018, he supported a red flag law, sponsoring a bill to allow guns to be taken away — temporarily — from people who pose an immediate threat to themselves or others.

Wist lost his seat in the legislature that year in the face of an intense backlash from Rocky Mountain Gun Owners, a gun rights organization in Colorado that boasts it accepts “no compromise” as it battles “the gun grabbers.” The group campaigned against him, distributing flyers and referring to him on social media as “Cole the Mole.”

 

Wist, an attorney, doesn’t regret trying to enact what he considered a measured response to an epidemic of gun violence in the United States. He acted after a mentally ill man in his Denver suburb killed a sheriff’s deputy. The bill didn’t pass until after Wist was out of office and his successor, Tom Sullivan, shepherded it through. Sullivan is a Democrat who lost his son in the Aurora theater massacre.

Wist left the Republican Party this year, citing the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection as the reason, and is now unaffiliated with any political party. Days after the slaughter of 19 children and 2 adults in an elementary school in Texas, ProPublica talked to Wist about the challenges ahead as proponents once again work to enact gun reforms.

Colorado is one of 19 states, including Illinois, Florida and Indiana, that have red flag laws, sometimes called extreme risk protection orders. Texas does not. After the Robb Elementary School murders (May 24), a bipartisan coalition in the U.S. Senate agreed to negotiate over possible anti-violence measures, including expanding red flag laws.

In Colorado, a spokesperson for the Rocky Mountain Gun Owners called Wist “a sellout” on Friday and said the organization had no choice but to work against him. “At the end of the day, my goal is to hold politicians accountable regardless of whether they’re a Republican or a Democrat,” said RMGO’s Executive Director Taylor Rhodes.

Rhodes called the assault on the elementary school a “massive terrorist attack” but said gun control is not the answer.

“We protect everything in our nation that’s valuable with guns. We protect our banks with guns, courthouses … our homes. We protect them with guns.” The group’s logo includes an image of a firearm that resembles an assault rifle.

This interview with Wist has been edited for length and clarity.

Tell me about why you introduced the legislation in Colorado.

Every time we have an incident like this, people tend to go into their camps. We’ve got some folks who say we should ban certain kinds of guns or expand universal background checks or any other number of policy proposals to try to eliminate guns from society. On the other hand, you have folks who say no, these are mental health issues, this is an indication of a larger mental health crisis in the country. But you know, I don’t really hear a whole lot of policy solutions from those folks. So in an effort to try to pair concerns about mental health and the combination of mental health crisis with access to firearms and weapons, I started investigating extreme risk protection orders and how they’ve been passed in other states. And one of the first states in the country to do this was Indiana. And I don’t think you’d really think that Indiana is a hard left state, by any means. … And ultimately, I decided to sponsor legislation relating to extreme risk protection orders.

When you served in the state legislature, the Republicans controlled the state Senate and Democrats had the House. What was the makeup of your district?

I represented a district that at that time was predominantly Republican. It had historically elected Republican legislators, but it was a suburban district becoming more purple. And, you know, look, when you’re elected to represent a district in the legislature, you’re not just elected by the people that voted for you, you’re elected to represent everyone in the district, and that includes unaffiliated and Democratic voters.

Who opposed you when you ran for reelection in 2018?

So there’s a group called the Rocky Mountain Gun Owners, a very active gun rights organization. They targeted me or targeted my race for campaign activity and actively worked against me. … They put flyers on people’s doors, including my own door, and used their resources to campaign against me.

Are the Rocky Mountain Gun Owners similar to the National Rifle Association?

I think they characterize themselves as being the no-compromise gun rights organization. So I would characterize them as certainly more aggressive on gun rights issues than the NRA, and the NRA is the more well-known organization, the one with more resources. But in Colorado, Rocky Mountain Gun Owners is the gun rights group that seems to have the most sway. They’ve been successful in recalling a couple of legislators here.

Did it seem like they sacrificed your seat to send a message to other lawmakers to stay in line?

I guess that’s a fair interpretation, that you either stay in line and vote the party line on this issue, or they will remove you. And that’s what they did. I mean, there were other factors in play in 2018. That was also the midterm election of Donald Trump’s first term in office or his only term in office. … So there were more issues in play than gun policy. But it was certainly a group that worked against my reelection and didn’t help. … It might have been enough to suppress turnout on the Republican side for me.

What was the reaction from the GOP leadership to your sponsorship of the red flag bill?

I was the assistant minority leader in the state House at that point. There was an effort to strip me of that leadership post. That effort failed. I think there’s some reluctance in Republican circles here to take on groups like the Rocky Mountain Gun Owners for fear of getting primaried, for fear of having them work against you. And I suppose people may look at my experience as being something that deters them from even having conversations. I introduced a bill that was very controversial. In those circles, even being open to conversations about gun policy or gun safety legislation creates risk for folks in Republican circles here. So, if your objective is to stay in office for a long time and continue to get reelected … you don’t cross that line.

In the aftermath of Uvalde, what does your experience suggest about the likelihood of our politicians enacting some measures to prevent future atrocities?

I see some of the same signs happening again, in the aftermath of this event, where everyone sort of retreats to the corners. And some people are calling for banning certain kinds of guns and changing the purchase age for certain kinds of guns. If you try to ban AR-15s, I think that’s a policy solution that some people think is something we should do. I don’t agree with that. We’ve got millions of guns already in the possession of gun owners across the country. How much of an impact are you going to have if you ban certain kinds of guns at this point? I think a better discussion is to talk about why people commit these kinds of violent acts with guns and other weapons. … And so I think red flag laws and legislation that focuses on trying to reduce risk and talking about why these kinds of events happen is the most productive conversation for us to have. Let’s give law enforcement and families tools that they can use.

But one of the things that’s lost in this conversation is that — I’ll talk specifically about Colorado — we have one of the highest suicide rates in the country. We also have one of the highest percentages of gun ownership in the country, and the highest percentage of suicides here are committed by guns. So when folks are going through a severe mental crisis, yes, there’s a risk that they might go commit a homicide, but there’s probably a greater risk that they’re going to hurt themselves. So I think there’s this way of characterizing red flag laws as confiscating guns and trying to hurt someone’s constitutional rights. But instead, I think it’s something that’s being used to help protect that person, to prevent them from harming themselves and prevent them from harming family members.

Can you describe the toll this experience took on you and your family?

I received threats as a result of going through that process. And that was very stressful for my family. I don’t miss that part of public life. And, you know, social media and other things have made being in office very difficult. And folks can say just about anything and do say just about anything. So I can choose to do a couple of things. As a private citizen, I can kind of retreat from this and not talk about it, or try to do what I can to raise awareness and just try to encourage folks to come together. I don’t know that you’re ever going to change everyone’s minds. But we don’t solve problems unless we talk to each other and not talk past each other. And every time we have an incident like what happened in Texas this week, there’s sort of the initial, let’s talk, let’s come together, let’s talk about this. But I’m just amazed at how quickly everyone just sort of retreats to the same old political position. I hope this time is different.

Briefs: Los Angeles County Prioritizes Mental and Physical Health

Hahn Applauds New Agreement between Metro and Department of Mental Health

Today, Los Angeles County Supervisor Janice Hahn May 26, applauded an agreement between LA Metro and the Los Angeles County Department of Mental Health or DMH which will make trained mental health professionals available to respond to mental health crises on the public transit system.

Under the agreement, DMH will pilot up to 10 mobile crisis outreach teams that will operate during Metro hours, seven days a week, to de-escalate situations and provide linkages to appropriate follow-up services including possible 5150 or 5585 involuntary psychiatric evaluation and/or provision of transport to appropriate facility-based care, when needed. DMH will also provide 30 community ambassador network teams to provide outreach and linkages to services to individuals experiencing mental illness within designated areas of the metro system. Finally, DMH will provide Metro transit security and contract security personnel with intervention training to include basic awareness of mental health conditions and de-escalation skills and behaviors for managing a mental health incident.


Los Angeles County Partners With K-12 Schools to Address Diabetes

LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health or Public Health is expanding its type 2 diabetes prevention efforts into the classroom in response to an increased prevalence of the disease in the county. The type 2 diabetes and prediabetes prevention toolkit for schools, recently released by Public Health in response to a November 2021 motion by Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors Chair Hilda L. Solis provides K-12 schools with multiple school-based resources to help create environments that support healthy eating and engagement in regular physical activity.

The percentage of individuals diagnosed with diabetes has increased in Los Angeles County over the last decade, from 9.5 percent in 2011 to 11.3 percent in 2018.

Details: https://tinyurl.com/prevention-toolkit