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A Remembrance of LA’s Queen of Jazz – Barbara Morrison

Sept. 10, 1949 to March 16, 2022

The music world and Los Angeles lost its “Queen,” legendary jazz and blues singer Ms. Barbara Morrison, on March 16. The world of music in Los Angeles will be quieter for her loss. Yet, Barbara leaves the city richer in cultural assets from her contributions and the legacy she leaves behind.

Morrison recounted how she earned the title “Queen,” in a 2013 interview with Random Lengths News.

It was from a man named Larry Gales, who worked with Thelonious Monk,” said Morrison. “I was so young and dumb when I got started in this business because I was trying to sing jazz and I didn’t know who any of the jazz giants were like Miles Davis or Ella Fitzgerald. So they would say, ‘Oh lord, here comes the Queen.’

All the fellas would make fun of me and it just stuck. The other singers in town thought they were calling me Queen because I could sing better than them but that wasn’t why. They were calling me Queen because I was too dumb to know anybody. That’s when I knew I had to go to school to learn and study and find out who these people were that were making me want to sing this music.”

One of Morrison’s greatest gifts was in the way she expressed a song. With a two-and-a-half octave range, Barbara’s vocalizing style — often down to the last echo of a note — seamlessly spanned numbers from The Great American Songbook to improvisational jazz, exuberant blues and R&B classics.

Morrison was a musical force in Los Angeles. Among her many achievements, she was one of the first hires in the mid-’90s by jazz guitarist Kenny Burrell, director of the jazz studies concentration at UCLA, where she taught voice. Additionally, Morrison served as an adjunct professor of global jazz studies at the UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music.

The singer and teacher opened the Barbara Morrison Performing Arts Center or BMPAC in 2011 in Leimert Park, tapping the center to launch new artists. In 2016, she opened the California Jazz and Blues Museum to educate the community on LAs prolific jazz performers and provide historical context about California’s influence on the genre. Morrison also taught beginning to advanced music, jazz/blues interpretation and history, acting and concert performing techniques.

There is much more to know about Los Angeles’ ordained queen and three-time Grammy-nominee. In Morrison’s honor, here, find remembrances of the singer, teacher and philanthropist from members of the music community who loved her, throughout Angel City.

Memories of the Queen of Blues and Jazz:

Jazz drummer and Producer of the Long Beach Jazz Festival Al Williams, first met Barbara Morrison in 1975 at The Coronet Room, a blues club in Long Beach. Williams recalled Barbara was on stage belting out the sounds of Sarah Vaughan and Dinah Washington.

“Barbara was slender, sexy, and her voice was warm and sultry,” Williams wrote via email. “She had a personality that would fill a stadium. She had an outstanding sense of humor — kept the audience and the musicians on stage laughing. At that time, I offered her a job at my club, The Jazz Safari, next to the Queen Mary.

“Barbara worked with Johnny Otis, Ray Charles, Ernie Andrews, James Moody, among others. She toured internationally — a salute to jazz and blues — with the Phillip Morris big band, gathering a global following, creating a huge fan base that earned her international fame and allowed her to travel back to Europe with her own band many times.”

Williams noted that eventually, around the late seventies, she asked him to work with her. And that was the beginning of a deep friendship — like a sister and brother relationship — a mutual love, respect and support of each others’ musical projects which lasted all of her lifetime.

“When I began performing at the Easter Jazz Sunrise Service at First Lutheran Church in Carson, I asked Barbara to be the vocalist. She was excited. I changed the lyrics to some church and jazz favorites to spiritually fit with the occasion. Barbara knocked them out of the box!”

Al said Barbara was the strongest person he had ever met.

“She was positive every time she stepped out and she always had a smile on her face, even after having multiple surgeries for diabetes, losing both legs at different times. She was fiercely independent; she learned to drive her own vehicle from gig to gig. She kept on performing.


“She called me one night and talked about opening a jazz and blues club in Leimert Park.

She asked me my thoughts on it and I was skeptical. However, The Barbara Morrison Performing Arts Center has been a huge success for more than 16 years. Some of the greatest jazz musicians performed there. She offered singing and dancing classes for the kids who wanted to be performers (YES, INC- Young Educated Singers) teaching them no matter what their financial situation was. Now, some of them are successful performing artists, thanks to her. She also opened the first California Jazz and Blues Museum — photos, history, tributes, memorabilia, etc.

“No matter what the circumstances were in Barbara Morrison’s life, she always had a positive attitude. I will truly miss Barbara’s light-hearted energy and I smile every time I think of her.

Love to my Queen.”


International jazz, pop, R&B and gospel singer, Windy Barnes Farrell remarked that the title of Queen often conferred onto Morrison was highly apropos. “Highly gifted and highly revered, she was THE hardest working woman that I know in show business,” Barnes said.

 

Barnes went on to note that Morrison rolled over major obstacles like they were mole hills. That defeat had no place in her life as she demonstrated resilience and great fortitude smack in the face of adversity.

“She always sang while smiling ear to ear, not an easy feat. She couldn’t help it because her joy in pleasing the crowd would well up and pour out of her even after she sang her last note,” Barnes said.

“She had a way of sing talking … She sang the notes … and there were many, and sang the lyrics, but she spoke directly to you straight from her heart. And we all heard.

She is sorely missed and Queen Barbara Morrison’s name will be forever embedded across the hearts of all who knew and loved her.

Rest my friend, job exceptionally well done.

With loving memories.”


Legendary LA jazz singer, Dwight Trible, called Morrison his comrade, friend and undisputed Queen of blues and jazz singing in Los Angeles.

“I don’t think anyone would dispute that,” Trible said. “The thing that sticks out the most to me, is that Barbara did not discriminate.”

By discriminate, Trible explained that Morrison could be playing at the Hollywood Bowl one night and a family room or some hole in the wall place in Compton the next.

“But she did it with the same zeal and all of her energy that she did when she was at the Hollywood Bowl,” Trible said. “There was no place she would not sing at … from festivals to hole in the walls, storefront churches and everything else. And she did it with all her might all the way to the end. Even when she lost both of her legs to diabetes. She was still singing as good as ever.

“She never made any excuses for herself. She did it with everything she had, which, like all of us know, we have no excuse for why we say we can’t do a certain thing, because she did it to the end with her condition.”


[Referring to the group photograph below] Lou Mannick highlighted: Barbara, in 2019 with her singers (me (Lou), Candice, Otis, Moni Olguin, Sam Yodice included) in San Pedro at Jan’s place on 6th St.. Mannick said, “Note, all around her, the old, the young, the crippled walking on a cloud in her presence. It’s not an exaggeration. Check it out.”

Of Barbara, Lou Mannick, who is known for accompanying jazz bands with his musical saw, said, “Goodness, such a woman as that!

“Barbara was a rolling party. I met her at a house concert when she asked (mid-song) if there were any dancers in the house. I immediately had her in my arms doing dance moves, later to find out she was dancing on artificial legs. True story.

“What can I say? I love Barbara and deeply grieve losing her. When Barbara rolls in, the good times roll on. But now, she’s rolled on. Bye-bye, dear wonderful Barbara Morrison.”


Long Beach based entrepreneur, businessman and musician William (Bill) Grisolia said Barbara was an international force for women, for music, for people of color, for the important music of blues and jazz — a quintessentially American art form which she also took internationally.

“Barbara was awarded the Legend of the Long Beach Blues Award by the New Blues Festival in its second iteration,” Grisolia said. “She blessed us with many performances with her own band and along with Southern California’s Dean of the blues, Bernie Pearl. She was an innovator, an entrepreneur and treated everyone with joy and equanimity.

“During the pandemic, we had the joy of working together at her invitation at her marvelous performing arts center in Leimert Park. These performances were live streamed and I am as proud of that work as anything that I’ve ever done.

“Early on in our relationship she began to call me her blues husband. As a result, the Long Beach Blues Society plans an upcoming tribute which will feature the dean, her collaborator big Llou Johnson, as master of ceremonies, other talents and of course yours truly.

It seems like she helped and entertained a million people. And she did it all against odds that would defeat most.”


Cathy Segal Garcia, jazz vocalist and teacher said “Barbara was, and still is, and will always be, an extraordinary shining light for thousands of people! A true professional at her craft, balanced by her absolute commitment to living a full life … leading people by her actions and love.”

 

 


Timothy Morganfield, Barbara’s friend and longtime business partner said, “We lost a real jazz legend. [But] to me, I lost a friend, sister and business partner. When you say Leimert Park, you have to say Barbara Morrison.”

Morganfield explained that when he first went to work for Barbara to build her a stage, he described it as a good feeling. When she wrote out his first check, Barbara asked his name.

He told her, “Morganfield.” Her face dropped. She said, “Muddy Waters?”

Morganfield is a descendent of Muddy Waters, born McKinley Morganfield, April 4, 1913 – April 30, 1983.

“We put together the Muddy Waters [West Coast] Festival (2017), across from the Barbara Morrison Performing Arts Center with Big Bill Morganfield, one of Muddy Waters’ sons.”

In fact, Barbara was mentoring Joseph Mojo Morganfield’s (Water’s youngest son) daughters, Julissa and Bella.

When the pandemic hit and everything shut down, Barbara invested in a live streaming system.

“During the pandemic we streamed more than 60 shows so she could pay her band members,” Morganfield said. “That was her heart, she takes care of musicians.”

House Passes Landmark Marijuana Legalization Bill

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The City of Los Angeles Department of Cannabis Regulation announced that The House passed legislation April 1, that would legalize marijuana nationwide, eliminating criminal penalties for anyone who manufactures, distributes or possesses the substance.

Lawmakers approved the measure 220-204. Republicans Tom McClintock of California and Matt Gaetz and Brian Mast of Florida voted in favor of the legislation, while Democrats Chris Pappas of New Hampshire and Henry Cueller of Texas voted against it.

The legislation, titled the Marijuana Opportunity Reinvestment and Expungement Act, passed in the House last year, but did not move forward in the Senate. The bill would decriminalize marijuana at the federal level and it would establish procedures for expunging previous convictions from people’s records and impose a tax on the sale of cannabis products.

“The tax would begin at 5% and eventually increase to 8%. Funding raised through the tax would go toward a fund to provide job training, mentoring, substance-use treatment, legal aid, re-entry services and youth recreation programs. It would also provide loans to help small businesses in the cannabis industry that are “owned and controlled by socially and economically disadvantaged individuals,” a summary of the bill read.

The bill now, once again, will head to the Senate.

Democrats would need all of their members and 10 Republicans to overcome a 60-vote hurdle needed to advance to a final vote.

Details: www.congress.gov/bill/ Marijuana-Legalization-Bill

Arts Announcements: Port Soundscape, Internships, Jazz Informance, Earth Day and Scholarship Exhibit

Below, you will find listings of current Arts Announcements for the local community and around the greater Los Angeles area.


The Port of Long Beach Recordings

In the spirit of soundpedro, artist Phil Peters is showing The Port of Long Beach Recordings at Canary Test in LA. Peters went to the nation’s second busiest port to capture the soundscape, and now bottles those noises inside of a gallery. The exhibit runs to May 11.

“The Port of Long Beach Recordings is a soundtrack to the globe’s hunger for commodities, the ever-expanding growth of imported products, and the enormous system of infrastructure still insufficient to process it all.” Renée Reizman for Hyperallergic, April 4.

Read more at Phil Peters Bottles the Soundscape of the Global Supply Chain

Details: 617- 997-6152; www.thecanarytest.com

Venue: Canary Test, 526 E 12th St C, Los Angeles


Summer Internships Available at Arts Council Long Beach

The Arts Council has four internship opportunities available: an arts learning internship, marketing internship and development internship sponsored by the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors through the Los Angeles County Department of Arts and Culture and a public art internship made possible by the Getty Foundation’s Marrow Undergraduate Internship program.

Applications are due April 20, 2022.

Arts Learning Internship Job Description —https://tinyurl.com/artys-learning

Marketing and Grants Internship Job Description —https://tinyurl.com/marketing-grants

Development Internship Job Description —https://tinyurl.com/development

Public Art Internship Job Description — https://tinyurl.com/public-art


Jazz Informance Live Stream, featuring Herbie Hancock, Sean Jones, U.S. Education Secretary

The Herbie Hancock Institute of Jazz in conjunction with the U.S. Department of Education will present a peer-to-peer jazz informance on April 19, featuring the Peer-to-Peer Jazz Quintet. Hosted by U.S. Secretary of Education Dr. Miguel Cardona, the “informance” — a combination of performance and educational information — will be presented by five of the Baltimore/Washington, DC area’s most gifted high school music students along with 14-time Grammy Award-winning jazz legend Herbie Hancock, internationally acclaimed jazz trumpet recording artist Sean Jones, and renowned jazz educator Dr. JB Dyas. It will not only focus on what jazz is and why it’s important to America, but also on leadership in the time of a crisis such as a pandemic and how the principles of jazz — collaborating, improvising, not seeking perfection, playing off each other’s strengths, perseverance and the vital importance of really listening to one another — can enlighten leaders as they navigate through a crisis, uncertainty and challenging times.

The informance will be live streamed from the U.S. Department of Education (ED) headquarters building in Washington, D.C., beginning at 1 p.m. EDT, at https://tinyurl.com/mediasite.ed.gov/webcast, to hundreds of school districts in the United States and around the world, and streamed on ED’s YouTube, www.youtube.com/c/usdepartmentofeducation; Facebook, www.facebook.com/ED.gov and Twitter, www.twitter.com/usedgovaccounts, as well as the institute’s website, hancockinstitute.org.

Time: 1 p.m., April 19

Details: https://hancockinstitute.org/2022/03/used-informance-apr-19


Aquarium of the Pacific Earth Day Celebration

The festival will happen April 23 and 24 and the public is invited to send in their submissions for the Trashin’ Fashion, art, and poetry contests. See below for a list of other festival events.

Time: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., April 23, 24

Cost: $26.95 to $36.95

Details: 562-590-3100; aquariumofpacific.org/events/info/earth_day_celebration/

Venue: Aquarium of the Pacific, 100 Aquarium Way, Long Beach


Clean-up To Help Local Wildlife

In partnership with the Association of Zoos & Aquariums

Time: 9 to 10 a.m. (registration opens at 8:30 a.m.), April 23

Cost: Free

Venue: Located at wildlife habitats, walking distance from the Aquarium.

 

CONTESTS:

Trashin’ Fashion Design Contest:

The aquarium will host its Trashin’ Fashion design contest during its annual Earth Day Celebration on April 23 and 24. The public is invited to enter for a chance at cash prizes that will be awarded to the top three designers with the most creative eco-friendly designs. Top designs will be showcased at the aquarium throughout the Earth Day Celebration. The goal of the contest is to draw awareness to issues of pollution and create a sustainable relationship with our ocean.

Details: www.aquariumofpacific.org/multimedia/trashinfashion

Earth Day Poetry Contest:

The aquarium will host its annual Earth Day poetry contest, where poets of all ages submit their poems celebrating the theme, “saving local species.” The top three entrees will be eligible for cash prizes and will be presented during the aquarium’s Earth Day celebration April 23.

Details: www.aquariumofpacific.org/multimedia/earthdaypoetry

Art Contest:

The aquarium’s Earth Day art contest, managed in partnership with the Arts Council for Long Beach, will celebrate our ocean planet. The aquarium seeks entries from artists working in drawing, painting, collage/mixed media, sculpture, digital art and photography. Three winners will be selected to display their artwork at the festival on April 23 and 24. Winners will receive cash prizes and will have the opportunity to participate in short artist talks during the festival. For rules and submission guidelines, please visit aquariumofpacific.org/multimedia/art-contest.


6th Annual Alpay Scholarship Exhibition

Art and media students from Southern California colleges and universities are invited to submit engaging new work to be showcased in Palos Verdes Art Center’s Alpay Scholarship Exhibition, Now Trending. One $5,000 cash prize will be awarded. Additionally, the scholarship winner will be considered for inclusion in future PVAC exhibitions. This call is open only to currently enrolled undergraduate and graduate students in Southern California.

All media will be considered, including but not limited to: painting, drawing, printing, sculpture, glass, ceramics, fiber art, photography, video, film, VR (virtual reality), AR (augmented reality), installation art, performance art, sound art, and mixed media. Juror: Ben Jackel.

Apply through May 6 at: www.artist.callforentry.org/festivals_unique_info

Time: June 6 to July 9

Cost: Free to enter

Details: 310.541.2479; www.pvartcenter.org

Venue: Palos Verdes Art Center/Beverly G. Alpay Center for Arts Education

5504 Crestridge Road, Rancho Palos Verdes

Celebrate Earth Day, Take a Hike

The Trails Of The Peninsula

On this Earth Day, Random Lengths News looks at the nature and open spaces of the Palos Verdes Peninsula and its walking trails which are there for the wildlife and for the public to enjoy.

Palos Verdes Peninsula Land Conservancy or Conservancy, has a mission to “preserve land and restore habitat for the education and enjoyment of all.”

The PVPLC preserves and manages undeveloped land as open space for historical, educational, ecological, recreational and scenic purposes. Since its founding in 1988, the Conservancy has preserved 1,600 acres of open space on the Peninsula. It works to restore native coastal sage scrub, grassland, cactus scrub and riparian habitat to return damaged lands to a healthier condition. Its vision is to create and manage large blocks of natural open space. In these spaces, visitors can enjoy solitude, children and adults can learn about the natural environment and native plants and animals can thrive.

The Conservancy works with four cities in which the preserved lands are located: Rancho Palos Verdes, Rolling Hills, Rolling Hills Estates and City of LA in San Pedro. On its restored or preserved lands, the peninsula is home to 15 familiar trails which include: White Point Nature Preserve, Ocean Trails, San Ramon, Forrestal, Portuguese Bend, Abalone Cove, Filorum, Three Sisters, Alta Vicente, Vicente Bluffs, Agua Amarga, Vista del Norte, Malaga, Chandler Preserve and George F. Canyon Preserve. The Navy Defense Fuel Supply Point on North Gaffey St. in San Pedro is also on restored land.

Zoe Allen is the program manager for the education department of the Conservancy.

“Protecting these natural habitats is important not only to the plants and animals that rely on it for survival, but it’s also important in making sure the public continues to have access to these natural spaces and that students can continue to learn about them,” Allen said.

The Conservancy has invested in restoration efforts around the walking trails that include locations like Alta Vicente (near RPV city hall) and Abalone Cove. Conservation director at the Conservancy, Cris Sarabia said the Alta Vicente restoration implementation was completed a couple years ago and is now in “maintenance mode.”

“You can expect to see a mix of native wildflowers, coastal sage scrub, cactus scrub and all of the little critters that depend on them,” said Sarabia via email. “Abalone Cove is being worked on and people can sign up to volunteer at this location with (its) stunning views, plenty of parking and trails throughout.”

Same as with other sites, Sarabia noted the Conservancy planted many different species of native plants that attract a variety of fauna. Interpretive signage surrounds the sites and visitors can see the different stages of restoration that are being worked on. Recently the Conservancy had an Americorp team helping with the restoration project. Americorp service program engages Americans in intensive service to meet community needs — in the Conservancy’s case, environmental needs.

Hikers on a nature walk at Three Sisters Reserve

 

The Conservancy works within certain timelines for restoration. It restores at least five acres a year and all projects are in different stages from planning and implementation to maintenance.

Goals of Restoration

True to its mission to preserve land and restore habitat for the education and enjoyment of all, the Conservancy’s restoration work emphasizes the recovery of degraded ecosystems through planting and seeding, to re-establish or enhance biological functions and services on the peninsula. Habitat restoration provides increased nesting, cover and foraging opportunities for wildlife. And in particular, restoration efforts have assisted in the recovery of four at-risk species, coastal California gnatcatcher, cactus wren, El Segundo blue butterfly and Palos Verdes blue butterfly.

Earth Day Celebration Events

Film

Saging The World Premiere

The California Native Plant Society will screen Saging The World, a 30-minute film about indigenous people and their use of white sage. “Saging ” has become a common occurrence seen in media and in cleansing rituals — burning sage bundles in the hope of purifying space and clearing bad energy. Instead of healing, the appropriate use of saging in popular culture is having a harmful effect.

Indigenous communities have tended a relationship with white sage — which only occurs in southern California and northern Baja California, Mexico — for thousands of generations. Today, poachers are stealing metric tons of this plant from the wild to supply international demand. Saging the World spotlights the ecological and cultural issues intertwined with white sage, centering the voices of Native advocates.

The screening will include a panel discussion with Native advocates from the film, as well as a white sage plant giveaway.

Time: 7 to 9 p.m.. April 22

Cost: $10 to $15

Details: www.saging-the-world-premier

Venue: Warner Grand Theater, 478 W 6th St., San Pedro

 

My Garden of A Thousand Bees

The Warner Grand Theatre will present the Wild and Scenic Film Festival’s Best of Fest highlighting, My Garden of A Thousand Bees by cinematographer Martin Dohrn (who worked on some of David Attenborough’s films). Dohrn was in lockdown for COVID-19 and stuck at home outside of London. He couldn’t go anywhere but he had his camera gear. Deciding to improvise, he filmed all the bees in his tiny urban garden. Dohrn was shocked to discover more than 60 species of bees and the many personalities that exist in this insect family.

 

Time: 4 p.m., April 24

Cost: $15 to $20

Details: 310-541-7613; www.pvplc.org

Venue: Warner Grand Theatre, 478 W. 6th St. San Pedro

 

Educational and Volunteer Activities

  • Celebrate Earth Day at the Conservancy’s annual outdoor volunteer day at White Point Nature Preserve. Volunteers will restore the plants at White Point Nature Preserve. Los Angeles Harbor Commissioner Diane Middleton will kick off the event with introductory remarks. This is a great opportunity to try out the free nature backpacks on your walk. They are loaded with information, field guides, fun activities and equipment to help visitors, pre-k through adults, enjoy understanding nature through experiential activities.

Volunteer and explore the preserve trails.

Time: 9 a.m. to 12 pm. April 23

Details: www.pvplc.org/public-activities/ and www.pvplc.org/event/earth-day-celebration-apr23/

 

All of the preserve trails on the entire peninsula, from Palos Verdes to San Pedro including Terranea and the golf course are open from sunrise to sundown. They are always closed for two days following rain. Find maps on all the trails at www.pvplc.org

 

Former San Pedro Train Engineer Sentenced to 3 Years in Prison for Intentionally Derailing Locomotive Near U.S. Navy Hospital Ship

LOS ANGELES – A former train engineer at the Port of Los Angeles was sentenced April 13, to 36 months in federal prison for intentionally running a locomotive at full speed off the end of railroad tracks near a United States Navy hospital ship, Mercy – a hospital ship that was deployed at POLA to provide medical relief during the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Eduardo Moreno, 46, of San Pedro, was sentenced by United States District Judge Philip S. Gutierrez, who also ordered him to pay $755,880 in restitution.

Moreno pleaded guilty in December 2021 to one count of committing a terrorist attack and other violence against railroad carriers and mass transportation systems.

On March 31, 2020, Moreno drove a train at high speed, did not slow down near the end of the railroad track, and intentionally derailed the train off the tracks near the United States Naval Ship.

No one was injured in the incident, and the Mercy was not harmed or damaged. The incident resulted in the train leaking a substantial amount – approximately 2,000 gallons – of diesel fuel, which required clean up by fire and other hazardous materials personnel. Clean-up crews recovered approximately 400 gallons of fuel from the fuel tank and the ground adjacent to the derailment, according to court documents.

Moreno caused $755,880 in damage because of the derailment.

In his first interview with the Los Angeles Port Police, Moreno acknowledged that he “did it,” saying that he was suspicious of the Mercy and believed it had an alternate purpose related to COVID-19 or a government takeover, according to an affidavit filed with a criminal complaint in this case. Moreno stated that he acted alone and had not pre-planned the attempted attack. While admitting to intentionally derailing and crashing the train, he said he knew it would bring media attention and “people could see for themselves,” referring to the Mercy, according to the affidavit.

In a second interview with FBI agents, Moreno stated that “he did it out of the desire to ‘wake people up,’” the affidavit states. “Moreno stated that he thought that the Mercy was suspicious and did not believe ‘the ship is what they say it’s for.’”

“[Moreno’s] offense was extraordinarily serious, and he used his unique access as a licensed train conductor to derail a multi-ton train toward a government hospital ship whose purpose was to treat vulnerable patients in the midst of a global pandemic,” prosecutors wrote in a sentencing memorandum.

 

City of Carson Free E-Waste Recycling and Paper Shredding Event

The City of Carson will be hosting a free e-waste recycling and paper shredding event for the community. All electronics such as computers, monitors, televisions, cell phones, ink and toner cartridges, printers, microwaves, cables and wires, and laptops will be recycled. Clean out your garage and help protect the environment. Come to this convenient drive-thru recycling event.

All papers will be shredded on-site. Proof of Carson residency required to participate. No commercial/business waste will be accepted. There is a limit of 2 file paper boxes per household.

Time: 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. April 16

Cost: Free

Details: Public Information Office,310-952-1740.

Venue: Carson City Hall Parking Lot, 701 East Carson St., Carson

New Cases and Daily Test Positivity Rate Increasing in LA County

Public Health reports the number of new cases and test positivity rates increased again this past week. The average number of daily new cases reported the last seven days increased to 960, a 23% increase from the average of 783 daily new cases the previous seven days. This past week, reported cases in LA county increased an average of 3.2% per day.

And while the April 12, test positivity at 1.0% remains very low, it has been inching up these past couple of weeks.

COVID-19 hospitalization numbers remain stable with 265 patients currently hospitalized and deaths remain low, reflecting the relatively stable hospitalization numbers. Sadly, other communities in the country, including New York City, have started to see small increases in hospitalizations a few weeks after their recent rise in case numbers, reflecting past patterns where, within a couple of weeks of increasing case numbers, hospitalizations start to rise, followed, tragically, by increases in deaths.

With increased transmission across the county, being up to date on vaccines and boosters offers protection against severe illness and death. For the week ending March 25, unvaccinated people were five times more likely to be hospitalized compared to fully vaccinated residents. And the likelihood of dying for those unvaccinated was also higher. For the week ending March 18, unvaccinated residents were eight times more likely to die than residents who were fully vaccinated.

Grocery Workers Ratify Contract Agreement and Supermarket Strike Ratification Agreement Moves Forward

So Cal Grocery Workers Ratify Life-Changing Contract Agreement with Stater Bros.

LOS ANGELES Members of United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) Locals 8GS, 135, 324, 770, 1167, and 1428 voted overwhelmingly to ratify a new three year contract outlined in the tentative agreement reached with Stater Bros. on April 1. The deal, which includes significant wage increases, stronger healthcare, and protected pension provisions, was reached after months of negotiation and active participation by tens of thousands of California’s essential grocery workers.

The six UFCW Locals released the following statement on the contract ratification vote passage:

“Today, by ratifying this contract, Stater Bros workers have secured life-changing raises, better healthcare, and protected pensions over the next three years. After more than two years of risking their lives to serve California’s communities as essential workers – the members of UFCW stood together for their families and each other, and secured one of the most historic contracts in California labor history.

“This contract is a concrete and direct result of their tireless work. The pandemic and its deadly impact on our communities may not be over, but the essential workers who keep Stater Bros.’ stores running have proven it is possible to secure a fair deal when co-workers have each other’s backs. Together, our members are fighting for a better, more promising future and this contract will help achieve it.”

Key provisions of the agreement include:

  • Historic wage increases
  • More workers receiving benefits sooner
  • Guaranteed hour minimums

This contract will go into effect immediately for over 13,000 essential grocery workers in approximately 170 Stater Bros. locations across Central and Southern California, with the start of the contract term retro to March 7, 2022. The ratification for UFCW Southern California Locals April 4, tentative agreement with Ralphs, Vons, Albertsons, and Pavilions will be completed the week of April 11.


Supermarkets Strike Averted: UFCW Grocery Store Workers Reach Tentative Agreement

LOS ANGELES A tentative agreement was reached April 4, by the member-led bargaining committee representing seven United Food and Commercial Workers Union Locals across southern California and Albertsons, Vons, Pavilions, and Ralphs.

The member-led deal in a UFCW press release said it includes significant wage increases, guaranteed hours for part time workers, stronger health benefits, improved store safety and a secured pension.

Once the members of the seven UFCW local unions covered by the agreement have an opportunity to review and vote, there will be more details on the contract. Nothing is final until the members decide and vote.

Barragán Bill Signed Into Law and Marijuana Legalization Bill, Heads to Senate

House Passes Landmark Marijuana Legalization Bill, Heads to Senate

The City of Los Angeles Department of Cannabis Regulation announced that The House passed legislation April 1, that would legalize marijuana nationwide, eliminating criminal penalties for anyone who manufactures, distributes or possesses the substance.

Lawmakers approved the measure 220-204. Republicans Tom McClintock of California and Matt Gaetz and Brian Mast of Florida voted in favor of the legislation, while Democrats Chris Pappas of New Hampshire and Henry Cueller of Texas voted against it.

The legislation, titled the Marijuana Opportunity Reinvestment and Expungement Act, passed in the House last year, but did not move forward in the Senate. The Bill would decriminalize marijuana at the federal level and it would establish procedures for expunging previous convictions from people’s records and impose a tax on the sale of cannabis products.

“The tax would begin at 5% and eventually increase to 8%. Funding raised through the tax would go toward a fund to provide job training, mentoring, substance-use treatment, legal aid, re-entry services and youth recreation programs. It would also provide loans to help small businesses in the cannabis industry that are “owned and controlled by socially and economically disadvantaged individuals,” a summary of the bill read.

The bill now, once again, will head to the Senate.

Democrats would need all of their members and 10 Republicans to overcome a 60-vote hurdle needed to advance to a final vote.

Details: www.congress.gov/bill/ Marijuana-Legalization-Bill


President Biden Signed Rep. Barragán’s Bill Into Law at White House

Washington D.C. Congresswoman Nanette Barragán March 18, was at the White House, in the Oval Office, as President Joseph R. Biden signed her John Lewis National Institutes on Minority Health and Health Disparities Research Endowment Revitalization Act into law.

In April 2021, the Congresswoman’s bill passed the House of Representatives on voice vote. Before that, in March 2021, the Senate version of her bill, led by Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA), passed by unanimous consent. The bill, now law, will increase investments into schools conducting critical minority health and health disparities research and diversity in the scientific workforce.

The research endowment program at the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities or NIMHD provides funding to the endowments of academic institutions across the country, such as Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science in California’s 44th Congressional District. This bill will once again allow for current and former NIMHD or Health Resources and Services Administration Centers of Excellence to receive research endowment funding.

Details: www.youtube.com/watch?NIMHD-floor-speech

Public Health Expands Two Community Programs: Violence Prevention and Access to “Test to Treat”

Public Health Violence Prevention Program Expands Countywide

As a part of National Public Health Week, the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health announced that the Office of Violence Prevention’s or OVP, Trauma Prevention Initiative or TPI, is expanding to five new communities across the County.

TPI provides a comprehensive, place-based model for violence prevention and intervention that invests in community-driven safety solutions, including peer outreach and local leadership.

The effects of violence on the lives of individuals, families, and communities in the County are physically, socially, and emotionally devastating. They are also unequal, as data on violence-related injuries and deaths makes it clear that people of color and people in communities that have borne the brunt of poverty, divestment, and racism are disproportionately impacted by violence.

TPI was first implemented in South Los Angeles communities in 2016. On July 13th, 2021, the LA County Board of Supervisors approved a motion to expand TPI to five new communities across the County and provide additional resources to South LA communities. OVP partners with community members and stakeholders to adapt violence prevention and intervention strategies to the unique needs of each community.

OVP’s approach to address violence includes the following strategies:

  • Establishing community action for peace networks to build leadership, identify community priorities, and promote peace.
  • Street outreach and community violence intervention to respond to violent incidents and promote peace.
  • Hospital violence intervention to engage victims of violence in the hospital setting.
  • Hiring peer specialists with lived experience to support community engagement and intervention in each region.

TPI also collaborates with partners to support safe community hubs like the DPH wellness communities and school-based wellbeing centers, libraries, and parks and recreation.


Public Health Expands Access to “Test to Treat” Program

Because the efficacy of therapeutics requires rapid access to starting treatment, Public Health is expanding access to therapeutics across L.A. County by launching the Public Health “Test to Treat” Tele-health Services and adding additional “Test to Treat” locations.

Two oral COVID-19 oral therapeutics (Paxlovid and Molnupiravir) are available in LA County which have been found effective against Omicron subvariants BA.1 and BA.2. These therapeutics are for use in children and adults who weigh at least 88 pounds, test positive for COVID-19, have mild to moderate symptoms, and are at high risk for progressing to severe disease. These two therapeutics must be started within five days of a patient experiencing symptoms.

Residents currently have the option of accessing these medications by going to one of 58 Test to Treat sites in the county, one of the 26 DHS-Fulgent testing sites, or one of three Public Health vaccination sites (Market Street Center in Santa Clarita, Obregon Park in East Los Angeles, and Ted Watkins Memorial Park in South Los Angeles).

The federal government “Test to Treat” program includes 20 CVS minute clinics and 11 Walgreens locations in L.A. County that allow patients to walk in to get tested, evaluated, and treated on the same visit at the same location. States and local jurisdictions have also been identifying other clinical sites that can offer similar services.

Residents can find current “Test to Treat” locations in LA County at: ph.lacounty.gov/covidmedicines.

Beginning this week, residents having difficulty accessing medications or a “Test to Treat” location have several additional options.

Individuals can contact the Public Health call center seven days a week from 8 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. at 833-540-0473.