Sunday, October 12, 2025
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LASD is Asking for the Public’s Help Locating At-Risk Missing Person Darrius Jerome Lewis Jr. in Carson

Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department Missing Persons Unit investigators are asking for the public’s help locating at-risk missing person Darrius Jerome Lewis Jr A.k.a. DJ. He is a 19-year-old male Black who was last seen at 12 p.m. Feb. 10, on the 1000 block of West Carson Street in the city of Carson.

Darrius is 6’00” tall, 170 lbs with black (afro type) hair and brown eyes. He was last seen wearing a black t-shirt and black sweatpants.

Lewis is diagnosed with autism. His Family is concerned for his well-being and asking for the public’s help. Anyone with information about this incident is encouraged to contact the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department’s Missing Persons Unit at 323-890-5500, or anonymously, at 800-222-8477 or http://lacrimestoppers.org

Briefs — Help For Unhoused Residents

LA County Supervisors Back Newsom’s CARE Court Plan

The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors March 15, threw their support behind Governor Newsom’s recently unveiled CARE Court proposal, a new framework to address the growing mental health and homelessness crisis in California.

The Board unanimously approved a motion which directs the LA County CEO’s office to send a letter of support to the Governor from the Board, directs County departments to assist in the development of the CARE Court program and advocates for the necessary ongoing funding to successfully implement the program.

Gov. Newsom March 3, announced a new proposal called the Community Assistance, Recovery, and Empowerment or CARE Court which would use the judicial system to compel people suffering from severe mental illness and/or addiction into treatment and, for those who are unhoused, into housing.

In LA County, Supervisor Hahn has championed local Homeless Courts which use a similar model to the CARE Court to effectively connect people with the care and services they need. She has supported a Homeless Court program launched by Redondo Beach in 2020, funded a new Homeless Court in Long Beach, and is helping the City of Torrance start their own Homeless Court this year.

Details:https://tinyurl.com/2p9cxy3x


Gov. Newsom Announces $181 Million in Awards for 13 New Homekey Projects

SACRAMENTO Governor Gavin Newsom March 15, announced $181 million in funding for 13 new Homekey projects across the state. When fully operational, the projects will provide 605 housing units for people experiencing, or at risk of experiencing, homelessness.

This announcement, when added to recent Homekey Round 2 awards, means the state has funded 39 projects statewide so far this year, for a total allocation of more than $695 million. The state has already approved projects that – when completed – will create over 2,400 units of housing for Californians most in need of a home.

The awards include the following projects in Los Angeles

  • The County of Los Angeles will receive $7.3 million to acquire and rehabilitate a 21-unit former hotel in Redondo Beach, providing permanent supportive housing to chronically homeless households.
  • The County of Los Angeles will also receive $25.2 million to acquire and rehabilitate a 76-unit hotel for permanent supportive housing, serving entirely chronically homeless households. The property is centrally located near amenities and is just steps away from a transit station. It is within one-half mile of a grocery store, health facility, and pharmacy. Supportive services include case management, benefits advocacy, payee services, linkage and referrals, medical, mental health and substance abuse linkages.
  • The County of Los Angeles will also receive $14.7 million for a 44-unit hotel conversion project in Westlake. The Lyfe Inn will provide interim housing serving medium to large homeless and chronically homeless families.
  • The County of Los Angeles has also been awarded $13.8 million to purchase a project that proposes the conversion of a 40-room housing facility located in the heart of the Boyle Heights neighborhood to provide interim housing for youth at-risk of homelessness.
  • The Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles will receive $12 million to acquire a newly constructed 41-unit multifamily housing project for permanent supportive housing. The 6521 Brynhurst project is centrally located to amenities and will be serving homeless and at-risk of homeless households.
  • The City of Culver City will receive $26.6 million to acquire and rehabilitate two adjacent motels into 76-units of permanent and interim supportive housing, including two manager units. By co-locating the interim units with permanent supportive housing, the project provides an innovative approach to streamlining service delivery and responding to requests from stakeholders for more coordinated responses to homelessness.

Strike Vote Begins for Thousands of Grocery Store Workers

LOS ANGELES Thousands of grocery store workers across Central and Southern California March 21, begin voting to authorize a strike against Ralphs, Vons, Albertsons and Pavilions to protest Unfair Labor Practices (ULPs). Voting will take place for several days in various locations across SoCal and the outcome is expected to be released March 27.

A bargaining committee composed of workers and union leaders negotiated with the companies for 12 days before the contract expired on March 6, without reaching an agreement.

Employees presented reasonable proposals including a $5/hr. raise, improved safety in the stores and adequate scheduling and hours. The companies only offered a $0.60 wage increase and refused to address substantial proposed improvements.

As workers negotiated in good faith, Ralphs and Vons/Albertsons/Pavilions engaged in unlawful activities that undermined the bargaining process and violated workers’ rights to bargaining and union representation. Approximately 47,000 supermarket employees represented by seven UFCW Locals in California are impacted by the companies’ unlawful actions.

UFCW 770 and the other six UFCW Locals filed Unfair Labor Practice or ULP charges against the companies with the National Labor Relations Board or NLRB for violating labor laws by surveilling, intimidating, and interfering with employees for engaging in union activities.

Frontline grocery store workers continue to bear the brunt of the COVID-19 pandemic and post-pandemic effects. More than 10,000 ufcw770 employees have been infected with COVID-19, many more lost co-workers, friends and family members.

Supermarket employees are overworked, underpaid and undervalued while grocery companies stack huge earnings–Kroger alone made $4 billion in profits in 2021.

UFCW Locals 8GS, 135, 324, 770, 1167, 1428, and 1442 represent over 60,000 employees covered by a Master Food Agreement that determines key issues like wage scales, progressions, pension, health contributions and the like. Once the deal is settled with Ralphs, Vons/Albertsons/Pavilions, the other markets affected by this contract including Gelson’s, Stater Brothers & Super A, can either approve it as it stands or negotiate additional details in the agreement.

The impacted employees work at stores spanning from Central California to the border with Mexico.

Upcoming Foodways Summit Will Connect You to the Bounty of Local Agriculture

For any community, food sovereignty is a consummation devoutly to be wished. It’s what you have when the people in your community — rather than corporations — control the means of food production and distribution.

To achieve food sovereignty, those who produce food locally and those who wish to consume it need to establish contact. You may be fully on board with all the economic, health, and environmental benefits of buying organic, locally-grown produce, but without the requisite knowledge, your desire for best practices dies on the vine.

Founded in 2014, Long Beach Fresh’s raison d’être is to connect local eaters, feeders, and seeders in an ever-growing network to move the Long Beach area toward food sovereignty. With their third annual Foodways Summit, LB Fresh is highlighting a long weekend of events to do just that, with “tours, panels, and parties that celebrate and explore the local food movement in Long Beach, CA. Our objective is to gather and connect the local food movement together and with new partners, storytellers, farmers, gardeners, helpers, leaders, investors, chefs, food brands, educators, food buyers & distributors, health professionals, residents, seniors, youth, organizations, students, newbies, partners and supporters.”

The inspiration for the Foodways Summit came to LB Fresh co-founder Ryan Smolar in 2017 while attending the Placemaking Week conference in Amsterdam. “The conference utilized the city as a learning laboratory,” he recalls. “Instead of sitting in a conference hall watching PowerPoints and listening to panels of experts, we visited community spots, gave real-time advice to improve local situations, and learned new abilities and contexts. At LB Fresh, we thought this model would adapt nicely to showing off and getting more people engaged in improving the local food system.”

The inaugural Foodways Summit took place in 2018, another the following year. Needless to say, the C-word prevented the 2020 and 2021 iterations from happening. But with COVID now at a manageable level, the 2022 Foodways Summit is on — with plenty of new developments in local food production to highlight.

“The LB food scene feels more vibrant than ever,” Smolar says. “We’ve seen multiplied urban ag[riculture] sites develop, including GROW2ZERO Farms, Sowing Seeds of Change Farm, LB Organic’s Crown Victory Garden, and the Santa Fe Community Garden behind Casa Chaskis. We hope to connect folks with these new assets as well as the good food places in their neighborhoods.”

Smolar says this year’s Foodways Summit was slated for March 31 through April 3 to take advantage of the fact that four major local food events — the weekly Bixby Knolls Farmer Market, the annual LB County Fair and Urban Ag Contest, and the monthly North Long Beach Crop Swap and Cambodia Town Night “Marklet” — were happening so close together. In addition to these, LB Fresh is curating a Home Cooks & Home Gardens Tour. “It’s an amazing opportunity for people who are interested in local food, people who want to support local food, to really experience different aspects of our local food system in a short period of time.”

On Thursday, March 31, attendees at the Bixby Knolls Farmers Market will get not only the usual weekly chance to shop for locally-grown produce and more, but you’ll also be treated to DelicaSea, a unique chance to learn about and sample local aquaculture, with chefs offering tastings of dishes prepared from shrimp grown in a Downey warehouse.

“It’s shocking how many kids who live just a few miles from the ocean have no connection with it,” Smolar says. “I think it’s really important to do something ocean-related that’s away from the ocean and get people more connected to local possibilities they didn’t know existed.”

As happens every April, Bixby Knolls First Fridays takes the theme of Long Beach County Fair and provides local farms and growers with the chance to come together in friendly competition to show off their wares. It’s a great way to get plugged into the quality and surprising variety of local produce that is grown within city limits.

On the morning of April 2, one and all are invited to the Firehouse Community Farm for the monthly Long Beach Crop Swap, where local denizens come together to trade and share backyard and garden-grown produce, herbs and plants — pomegranates, oranges, lemons, limes, basil, rosemary, passion fruits, avocados, eggplants, kale, lettuce, tomatoes, ice cream bananas, figs, chilis, sage, and more.

Later that same day is the Home Cooks & Home Gardens Tour, where you’ll be transported to several “secret” gardens across the city for lots of eating and learning about local chefs hoping soon to take advantage of AB 626, a 2019 law that cleared the way for home kitchens to officially open up shop as small restaurant enterprises. (Long Beach has yet to authorize such microenterprises — AB 626 provides the opportunity for cities to opt in if they choose — and LB Fresh hopes the tour will help draw attention to what a good thing doing so would be.)

The final event of the Foodways Summit is the Night “Marklet, a monthly display of, if not all things Cambodian, lots — including, of course, food, such as a Battambong BBQ pop-up, where Texas meets Phnom Penh.

“The Night ‘Marklet’ is a great opportunity for people who are interested in Cambodia Town but haven’t figured out where the access points are,” Smolar says. “This is a chance to get in direct connection with Cambodian culture.”

In addition to satisfying a hunger many of us have for eating the freshest food possible and keeping our dollars within our community, buying and eating local has a positive impact on our country and the world at large.

“LB Fresh sees local food as touching upon some of the key issues of our time: climate change and economic equity, healthcare access,” Smolar says. “[Unfortunately,] it’s almost secret knowledge. Where are all the gardens in your community? It’s almost like they’re locked away. […] There aren’t a lot of opportunities to go and not only eat local seafood but talk to the fishermen who caught it. With the Foodways Summit, we’re trying to use these events to expand the reach of the stewards of the local food movement — which benefits us all.”

Book Review — Witches, Witch-Hunting, and Women

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Ever since the early 1950s, when Arthur Miller used the 17th-century Salem Witch Trials to dramatize what Sen. Joseph McCarthy and the House Un-American Activities Committee were doing in the name of ferreting out communists, the term ‘witch hunt’ has come to mean any wanton persecution of innocent people. Actual witch-hunts, however, are generally thought of as pieces of the distant past, to be filed away with geocentrism and the Crusades.

This is simply not the case. Today witch-hunting — the literal persecution and murder of women for practicing black arts — is not only alive and well but enjoying a resurgence. And according to Silvia Federici, it has everything to do with capitalism, and always has.

In 2004’s Caliban and the Witch: Women, the Body and Primitive Accumulation, Federici plumbs the depths of witch-hunting as a response to resistance against nascent capitalism. But at barely 100 pages, the six essays comprising Witches, Witch-Hunting, and Women offer only an overview of its subject, some of which is a redux of Caliban and the Witch material.

But that’s the point. Responding to requests that she “produce[s] a popular booklet revisiting the main themes of Caliban and the Witch that could reach a broader audience,” the six essays that comprise Witches, Witch-Hunting, and Women are breezy enough (academically, at least) to fit the bill, while at the same time expanding her scope to indict neoliberalism as a fomenter of modern-day witch hunts.

Federici takes sharp aim at the conventional Western wisdom seeing capitalism as a rising tide that lifts all boats. “A study of the witch hunt,” she writes, “makes us reassess the entrenched belief that at some historical point capitalist development was a carrier of social progress […].” And though she “agree[s] with the prevailing view that witch-hunting requires a multicausal explanation […] I trace all of its underlying motivations to the development of capitalist relations.”

Federici points to pre-Reformation England and the creation of enclosures, “whereby landlords and well-to-do peasants fenced off the common lands, putting an end to customary rights and evicting the population of farmers and squatters that depended on them for survival,” as an earliest example of these capitalist relations. “[I]n all its forms this was a violent process, causing a profound polarization in what had previously been communities structured by reciprocal bonds.”

Although Federici admits to the circumstantiality of evidence supporting land enclosure as a major factor in the production of witch hunts, she makes an interesting case. Start with the fact that witch trials did not begin prior to this point and “were predominantly a rural phenomenon and, as a tendency, they affected regions in which land had been or was being enclosed”; and that poverty was often noted in accusations made against alleged witches. While in earlier times a disproportionate percentage of older women had been able to depend on the commons for survival, enclosures and “the loss of customary rights left them with nothing to live on, especially if they were widows who had no children capable of or willing to help them.” And because it was often older women who “carr[ied] the collective memory of their community […] who remembered the promises made, the faith betrayed, the extent of property (especially inland), the customary agreements, and who was responsible for violating them,” it was often they spoke out against this early capitalist hegemony. “Those who prosecuted [women as witches] charged them with being quarrelsome, with having an evil tongue, with stirring up trouble among their neighbors … But we may wonder if behind the threats and the evil words we should not read a resentment born of anger at the injustice suffered and a rejection of marginalization.”

That marginalization, Federici notes, including alienating women from their own bodies, “one frontier capital has yet to conquer.”

The ‘witch’ was a woman of ‘ill repute,’ who in her youth engaged in ‘lewd,’ ‘promiscuous’ behavior. [… A]lthough the participation of ecclesiastics in the witch hunt was fundamental to the construction of its ideological scaffolding, by the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, when the witch hunt was most intense in Europe, the majority of witch trials were conducted by lay magistrates and paid for and organized by city governments, Thus, we must ask what female sexuality represented in the eyes of the new capitalist elite in view of their social-reformation project and institution of a stricter discipline of labor. A preliminary answer, drawn from the regulations introduced in most of Western Europe […] with regard to sex, marriage, adultery, and procreation, is that female sexuality was both seen as a political threat and, if properly channeled, a powerful economic force. [… T]he attack on women comes above all from capital’s need to destroy what it cannot control and degrade what it most needs for reproduction.

Part Two of Witches, Witch-Hunting, and Women, “New Forms of Capital Accumulation and Witch-Hunting in Our Time,” considers the contemporary upswing of violence against women — including a resurgence of explicit witch hunts — in places like Mexico, India, and particularly Africa, because “‘globalization’ is a process of political recolonization intended to give capital uncontested control over the world’s natural wealth and human labor, and this cannot be achieved without attacking women, who are directly responsible for the reproduction of their communities. […] Brutalizing women is functional to the ‘new enclosures.’ It paves the way for the land grabs, privatizations, and wars that for years have been devastating entire regions.”

Although Federici does not always provide sources for her claims (e.g., “it has been noted that [contemporary] witchcraft accusations are more frequent in areas designated for commercial projects or where land privatizations are underway”), in the book’s final and longest essay she provides a compelling sketch of how

… the new witch hunts in Africa are taking place in societies that are undergoing a process of ‘primitive accumulation,’ where farmers are forced off the land, new property relations and new concepts of value creation are coming into place, and communal solidarity is breaking down under the impact of economic strain. […] ‘Some chiefs and headmen profit from selling considerable portions of their domain to international investors, and fomenting social disruption in the village facilitates the transaction. A divided village will not have the power to unite and oppose attempts to having the land they cultivate being taken over by someone else. [… T]he villagers are at times so engaged in accusing each other of practicing witchcraft that they hardly notice that they are being dispossessed and they have turned into squatters on their own ancestral lands.

A surprising target of Federici’s criticism is the feminist community at large, which she feels “have not spoken up and mobilized against” today’s African witch hunts, leaving the subject mostly to journalists and academics and thereby allowing it to be depoliticized. “Feminists first contribution,” she says, “[…] should be to engage in a different type of investigation, one analyzing the social conditions that produce witch hunts,” which would go further toward ending them than the more detached analysis of scholarship. “[I]t is important that we recognize that there is much that women and feminists can do to oppose these new witch hunts and that such intervention is urgently needed. [… I]f women do not organize against these witch hunts, no one else will, and the terror campaign will continue under the form of witch-hunting and in new forms.”

In merely the latest example of how readily men will persecute women as supernatural evildoers, just last month Greg Locke, a Tennessee pastor with 2.2 million Facebook followers, took to his televised pulpit threatening to expose a half-dozen witches in his congregation, holding them responsible for (among other things) causing $30,000 of damage to church equipment.

How much more readily men will sell out women as witches where capitalist incentives prevail is playing out in real-time in today’s developing world. Witches, Witch-Hunting, and Women helps us stay mindful not only of what is happening, but of whence it comes. And as the author notes, it is only by “striv[ing] to understand the history and logic of witch-hunting and the many ways in which it is perpetuated in our time […] that we can prevent it from being turned against us.”

CSUDH Students Lead the Fight Against Food Insecurity

College students struggle to pick between buying groceries or paying tuition.

A junior at the California State University of Dominguez Hills recalls sleeping in her car. A freshman that stepped foot on her university campus for the first time said she has no clue how loans work. A graduate student remembers a decade-long journey of deciding between paying for tuition or dinner.

Students at the California State University of Dominguez Hills, or CSUDH, are leading the fight against hunger on their campus. On March 4, CSUDH students welcomed Reps. Nanette Barragán, D-San Pedro and Adam Schiff, D-Burbank for a conversation on food insecurity and the newly introduced Food for Thought Act of 2022. The piece of legislation will invest in free meal programs in minority-serving institutions and community colleges. The bill aims to help eliminate the barriers to hunger by increasing access to nutritious meals.

In a round table discussion, students took turns sharing their experiences with hunger. Adam Schiff called it a “systemic failure.”

“An 18-year-old shouldn’t be figuring out where to get a loan for basic necessities,” Schiff said. “It shouldn’t be so hard.”

As stated by CSUDH President Thomas A. Parham, an estimated 60% of students at California State University, Dominguez Hills face food insecurity. Two-thirds of the student body are employed, but when COVID-19 swept the nation, seven-tenths of students lost part if not all of their income. The bill contents it marks a step forward in securing students a college degree without the taxing worry of going hungry.

Eighty-seven percent of the student body are people of color, and 66% are first-generation, according to Parham, who said the university is in need of more funding for resources. “The students have talked about resource constraints,” Parham declared. “Admittedly, we are a resource constrained institution, we are constrained on budget, we are constrained on people, and we are constrained on space.”

The university pains a historical origin of resistance and uprising. Following the Watts Rebellion exposing a lack of opportunities for Black youth to gain access to higher education, then Gov. Pat Brown established CSUDH in the soon-to-be city of Carson, a city known for its diversity.

But, despite the Cal State University title, students claim the university does not receive the same funds, attention, or care as other universities in the CSU system.

“The minority in society is the majority here,” said senior Jonathan Molina Marcio. “So how is it with a campus with such rich culture, we have the less resources out of most of the universities on our system? So it begs the question of equity versus equality. I feel like our campus has so much to offer. But it’s always left in the dust because we’re always kind of forgotten.”

The students expressed their gratitude to the university for its efforts to help the student body but said it still isn’t enough. “I don’t have any judgment to cast on my university. If anything, I think our university does the best that they can with what they have,” said Nadia Al-Said, a junior at the university.

The Office of Sustainability and Basic Needs Program at the university provides support to students who face homelessness and food insecurity. The Basic Needs Program hosts food distribution events once a month. In mid-November, the program organized a walk to raise awareness for hunger. The campus urban farm associated with the Office of Sustainability harvests produce for monthly distribution to on-campus programs. But the university’s food pantry and emergency housing program is currently unavailable to students, two important resources for students on campus.

Many students shared their stories, recalling instances of having to choose between a meal or gas to attend work. Others explained the numerous times they had to drop out because they could not afford to pay for tuition and meals. “Those challenges at the time felt like world benders for me,” said David Saladaña, a graduate student and program and development coordinator for the Office of Sustainability. “On a week-to-week basis, struggling to see if I was going to pay for bills or pay for gas to go to work or eat.”

After the students finished answering questions about food insecurity on campus, Barragán and Schiff expressed their gratitude to the students for sharing their stories.

“I couldn’t help but think as I was listening to you, I wish every member of congress was listening to you hear what you had to say because so many of our colleagues have no idea and even those of us who do, need to be reminded,” Schiff expressed.

But one student shared the clash between romanticizing and glorifying one’s suffering. And how it shouldn’t take students to share their trauma for people to care.

“We have to sit here and share our stories and open our hearts out for people to listen to us and take notice of us, I really appreciate that you think we are resilient and that we have persevered, but it shouldn’t have to be so, it shouldn’t have to be that way,” Al-Said said. “And we shouldn’t have to be praised for our suffering and we shouldn’t glorify our own suffering that we have experienced in life, in situations that we didn’t have control over. All we are trying to do is better our futures and better our life because the reality is without our degree, what are we going to do to make ends meet?”

If passed, the Food for Thought Act will unlock assistance for updating or purchasing critical food infrastructure and funding current or new programs fighting hunger.

“We need our students to be able to focus on studying and doing well, not worrying about their next meal,” Barragán said.

Under the act, grantees will collect data on the severity of food insecurity on campuses to measure the expansion of anti-hunger programs. The students hope the bill will be the extra help they need to combat hunger on campus and other campuses across the state.

“It is what it is, but we are actually doing something here at Dominguez,” Saladaña said.

The Church I Lead was Struggling, Then the Pandemic Hit

By Lisa Williams

During World War II, sailors departing ships for shore would follow a beacon of light emanating from the steeple of San Pedro United Methodist Church. Upon arriving, they could take a shower, eat a meal prepared in our kitchen, maybe write a letter home.

History is never far away when the church you lead, and worship in, was built in 1923. It’s a grand three-story structure with beautiful stained-glass windows and a sanctuary with an open-beam vaulted ceiling that can seat 350 people. It’s a big church, and over time we have become a small congregation.

Decades ago, when we were the only Protestant church in town, the sanctuary filled up for both weekly services. Before the COVID-19 pandemic, we averaged about 52 people on Sunday mornings. Today about 25 parishioners gather in person, and another 100 from around the country join us online.

Since the pandemic, it has become vital for us to find ways to reinvent our ministry, to think outside the box.

Our decline in church membership mirrors a national trend. For decades, about 70% of the U.S. population belonged to a religious congregation, but a steady decline began around the beginning of the 21st century. Last year, U.S. membership in houses of worship dropped below 50% for the first time since Gallup began measuring it in 1937.

And for the first time in decades, the big red double doors in front of our church would not open for worship. We realized that our church life as we knew it would change. We could stay stagnant, and possibly slowly disappear, or change with the times.

While more than 4,000 churches in America shut their doors in 2020, we had to reframe what it means to have “open doors.” We needed to step out of our silos, and partner with other faith-based organizations and interested parties that share the common goal of supporting our community.

For inspiration, I looked back to my roots. I thought about growing up in Palmdale, watching my father, a Methodist minister, care for a family in need during the middle of the night. It reminded me of the role faith-based organizations play in society, even all these years later.

We looked for another way to be a beacon of light in the community, a solution that would pay the bills and nourish the San Pedro community. As church attendance has waned, so have contributions to churches. Thirty years ago, about 50% of all charitable contributions went to houses of worship. That figure had shrunk to about 30% by the time the pandemic struck.

One of the greatest assets many churches have is their buildings and surrounding property. San Pedro UMC is no exception. We have vast space within the church and outside it. More than 20 years ago, an empty lot next to the church was given to us. It sat vacant until we began dreaming about how it could best serve our community today.

To utilize the land, we partnered with 1010 Development Corp., a nonprofit that has been a leader in affordable housing development in Los Angeles. Our goal is to build 54 affordable housing units and provide support for those who live there. We expect to break ground by the end of this year.

It wasn’t easy during the pandemic to think of how people might use our campus in new ways when everyone needed to stay home. Still, we tried to imagine what it might be like to fill the courtyard with voices and families. Since San Pedro has a large homeless population, we decided to expand our partnership with Family Promise of the South Bay, a nonprofit that provides services to those experiencing homelessness.

The organization leased half of our building, space that includes restrooms, showers, a kitchen and gym, and classrooms. They will be used as a respite center to provide resources and support to help families get back on their feet. In February, the first residents moved in, four families that will temporarily stay with us while they work toward obtaining housing.

By renovating the same kitchen that produced those hardy meals for sailors during WWII, we will be able to develop programs to help address food insecurity in our community. During the pandemic, many people frequented food banks for the first time. Our teaching kitchen will help families learn to cook healthy meals from staples they receive from a food bank while supplementing them with produce from the farmers market. The kitchen will also be a place where people can learn a vocation.

Yes, membership in houses of worship is declining, but people who identify as spiritual — especially millennials — say they still yearn for something more. Congregations have a unique opportunity to step beyond the walls of their buildings and help change the world for the better.

Pastor Lisa Williams has led San Pedro United Methodist for seven years. This piece originally published in the Los Angeles Times, March 13, 2022.

Random Letters: 3-17-22

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Putin’s Republican Apologists

“There is no room in this party for apologists for Putin,” said Mike Pence, the defeated former vice president and assassination target of the Donald Trump Death Cult on Jan. 6, 2021

Pumpkin-headed former president and Putin puppet-for-life Donald Trump is a political dead man walking in 2024, just like in 2020.

Now excuse me if you will for my momentary urge to smash pumpkins with a wooden baseball bat, just like Eli Roth bashed in Nazi noggins as Staff Sergeant Donny Donowitz “The Bear Jew” in Quentin Tarantino’s World War II era cinematic masterpiece Inglourious Basterds, but traitor Trump and his non-stop neo-Nazi nonsense calls for a response.

No matter how late Mike Pence is to the democracy party, I suppose it’s better late than never that deranged Donald’s former lap dog Pence is showing some patriotism these days, as opposed to the pro-Putin propaganda pushed by the GOP during the four years of the failed, far right fascist Trump regime.

Just another reason why I (as an unapologetically partisan Democrat and enthusiastic participant in Operation Good Trouble) will be voting for Mike Pence for president in the 2024 California presidential primary. I’ll be voting to re-elect President Joe Biden in the 2024 general election of course. https://afro.com/opinion-operation-good-trouble/

Jake Pickering, Arcata, Calif

Grocery Corporations Stonewall Unions Negotiations

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By Anealia Kortkamp, RLn Editorial Intern

In a surprising turn, major Southern California grocery chains and the United Food and Commercial Workers Union, or UFCW, have refused to consider a new contract put forward by negotiators this past January. Instead, Ralphs, Albertsons (which is also the parent company of Vons), Stater Brothers and Gelsons have opted to let the contract expire, leaving 16,000 UFCW workers in the Los Angeles branch, local 770 in a state of limbo. In addition, the National Labor Relations Board has become involved due to a filing by the union on grounds of unfair labor practices, according to a contract negotiations update on 770’s website. As of March 7, grocers are working without a new contract, with only the provisions of the now expired contract remaining.

The negotiations had seemed by both parties to have started off well. While the conditions presented by COVID-19 had ensured that these negotiations sat on a very different precedent than previous ones, early on it all seemed very routine. However after long and intense negotiations, both parties came to a stalemate on wages, scheduling and safety concerns. The demands included wage increases, as well as increases to health benefits, which COVID-19 had shown there was a major gap in. For instance, according to UFCW’s webpage, more than 10,000 of 30,000 UFCW 770’s workers had been struck by the disease.. For their part major grocery chains have refused to release their numbers regarding in store COVID-19 outbreaks. In addition to this, members sought an end to the two-tier pay system. The system rewards seniority of two years with a nearly livable wage of around $22 per hour. However, in an industry with an incredibly high worker turnover rate, very few ever make this rate, with most still at just above California’s bare minimum wage of $14. Given that the grocery corporations do not wish to make these concessions in spite of record profits and some of the largest CEO-to-worker pay disparities of any industry in America, workers in grocery stores have felt increasingly jaded. All this was brought up during the union’s routine public zoom meetings.

In spite of corporate and union stonewalling, negotiations seemed poised to continue had it not been for actions taken by the company during the routine actions the union took part in during negotiations. Like a warrior preparing to do battle, UFCW workers would take part in small-scale demonstrations of union strength and solidarity to show their preparedness for both the bargaining and whatever was to follow. This is standard behavior for unions in negotiations and protected under the still-binding old contract. These involve several stores’ employees holding rallies, shop stewards reaffirming support and minor outreach. According to both contract and legal precedent regarding the matter, corporations were not to hinder these actions, however they did, with a diversity of tactics. UFCW 770 had 12 actions over a five-week period, during which time corporate engaged in surveillance, recording, managerial intimidation, purposefully scheduling workers at times that would leave them either too exhausted to engage in the actions or would have them working during it, according to the unfair labor practice statement on 770’s website. Corporate has even tried bribing members not to participate through a $100 appreciation card given right as negotiations got underway, said John Grant, president of 770.

“Negotiations are supposed to be a meeting of two parties on equal ground, informationally speaking,” said Grant. “One side working with far more information creates a power imbalance too irreconcilable for negotiations to occur in good faith.” Yet, also on UFCW’s docket for filing an unfair labor practice is the corporations purposefully withholding information required for free and fair negotiations. Information kept from UFCW members includes injuries data, COVID-19 infections, overtime, scheduling practices, and health and safety records. UFCW has already seen success with unfair labor practice strikes in Oregon, Colorado, Texas and New Mexico and leadership is under the assumption that California will be a repeat of this in spite of a wave of inflation rising food prices since those strikes. UFCW is preparing to take a strike vote, with a meeting scheduled for March 21. No corporation involved could be reached for comment.

Across most industries, the rate of resignations is at a historic high, grocery store workers more so than most. The pandemic also has brought out the worst in consumers, according to many within UFCW’s ranks.

“I’ve had people shove me, spit at me, throw water at me,” said Louie Leva in a video on UFCW’s YouTube page.

Grocery workers coming forward anonymously have reported blatant disregard for COVID-19 policy, shoplifting and customer aggression both from customers and from corporations unwilling to protect those in their employ. Grocery workers are being told by management to deal with things far outside their job description, with no additional compensation.

“The impact on workers is increasing apprehension,” Grant said when asked what workers and the communities stand to lose if the behavior of stonewalling and manipulation by corporations continues. “Houselessness, food insecurity, will get worse. Workers will continue to have to string together part-time jobs just to make ends meet.”

“The other effect is on the community,” Grant carried on. “The health of the grocery store is a factor in what makes communities healthy and grow. Look at what they (grocery corporations) did in communities of color and working-class communities. They left those areas. You have shit for product stores coming in, if anyone comes in at all. Cheap produce, junky processed food, crap, coming in and it affects the actual physical health of the communities they come into. It creates food deserts.”

“In addition, it creates poor jobs where workers don’t have the economic resources to take good food options, or even to sustain their families,” Grant said.

Tripping Over the Sidewalks to Discover LA’s Problems

At this point, Tim McOsker is the odds-on favorite to replace Joe Buscaino as council person representing the 15th Council District in this year’s election, but he is not the only choice. However, the race is just now beginning with four other contenders for the job: Danielle Sandoval, Anthony Santich, Bryant Odega and perhaps one more.

McOsker has amassed a campaign war chest of some $500,000 (most of it from outside the district), which is about twice as much as necessary and has received more endorsements than anyone else running. He’s one of the most connected insiders-of-outsiders to the inside of City Hall that you might ever find. For those who don’t remember, he was Mayor James Hahn’s chief of staff back when the one-term mayor held the city together when secession was on the ballot. Prior to that, McOsker served with Hahn when he was city attorney.

Since that time McOsker retreated back to his hometown of San Pedro and has pretty much been the “fixer” for what’s needed fixing here, including the Chamber of Commerce, the Property owners Alliance, AltaSea and Buscaino’s own slow motion housing developments. Over that time, I have come to call him the “plumber,” the guy you call when things are broken. And there’s a lot broken around here. Yet, it was in his latest campaign newsletter that he stumbled across something we all know is broken:

Yesterday, while out on the campaign trail, I was a little too hurried, kicked a huge crack in the sidewalk, and went down. Only a little damage was done — just a few scratches, thankfully. But, my accident does highlight the need to do a better job of sidewalk, curb, and street repair. There are too many unsafe conditions for our residents. We need to prioritize resources for good, walkable communities. It gave me a chance to remind everyone to download the MyLA311 app on our phones. When you see a broken curb, illegal dumping, graffiti, or a similar issue, report it! Let’s all take a part in calling for the services that a safe, livable community requires.

Now this admission is all good and well except that he doesn’t remind everybody that the City of LA has a $1.4 billion settlement to fix the sidewalks already and that the citizenry of this desert-by-the-sea shouldn’t have to call anyone to point out the liability the city faces because of trip and fall accidents. Of course, right now there seems to be a bidding war going on in the mayor’s race over who would hire the most cops, which is already the largest part of the city budget and often another major liability.

Yet, the seven-month audit by LA Controller Ron Galperin, “Repairing L.A.’s Broken Sidewalk Strategy,” concluded the city’s most hazardous sidewalks are not getting repaired fast enough, despite the city spending millions of dollars a year. “We’re spending about $30 million a year on sidewalk repair, but in the last fiscal year we spent $12 million just for settlements” from sidewalk claims and lawsuits.

It would take nearly 500 years to fix all of LA’s buckled and cracked sidewalks at the current pace of the city’s repair program, the audit reports.

There are also more annual claims for repairs than what can be scheduled. So what’s the point in calling in to MYLA311? However, it’s not just the sidewalks or the police department or the entire labyrinth of bureaucracy of this city that’s problematic. What’s problematic are candidates for office making promises to get elected, then failing to get this monolith of a city moving in the right direction once in office. That takes coordination and cooperation. Something the city seems incapable of doing.

So some candidates are more prone to pass ordinances to clear sidewalks of homeless encampments than fixing sidewalks and curbs in order to save, according to Galperin, $12 million a year in settlements. We can, however, spend that much on chasing the homeless off the sidewalks and then suggesting we need more police. Give that $12 million, divided among the neighborhood councils, so that some sidewalks could start getting fixed. It’s just like with the homeless crisis, too much grandstanding and victim-shaming and not enough creative solutions to start solving the problem.

The Number One Issue

Having people live on the streets doesn’t make anyone happy — not the homeless, not the homeowners and not the businesses. The LAPD knows they can’t arrest their way out of the mess, but candidates like Joe Buscaino keep inventing ways to criminalize the poor. So what to do? We know there’s a shortage of affordable housing and that we can’t build enough of it fast enough or affordably enough right now.

We also know that ad hoc street encampments aren’t viable or healthy. What we do know is that providing safe campsites on unused public lands and safe parking all with sanitation and services can be the start to solving the problem right now. Let the unhoused have temporary safe places to live off of the public right of way while the city and county get their act coordinated with temporary and permanent shelter options. In the meantime, we can bring in the professionals to sort out the mentally ill, the addicted, the medically bankrupt and the disillusioned.

In other words, start from the bottom of the problem and work towards the top. Not the other way around. This has been self-evident to anyone who has truly taken the time to analyze the issue, but it’s not the commonly held illusion which is that building more housing alone will solve this crisis. It’s like the refugee crisis in the Ukraine, only without the bombs falling. Deal with the immediate humanitarian problem first!

Then you can start building more tiny home villages; initiate more adaptive reuse projects or buy motels. Finally, after we have put a decade into these approaches, we just might figure out permanent supportive housing or building more mental health and addiction clinics. And the police can go back to solving crimes and the extra cops who are no longer chasing the unhoused can go back to community policing — all without having to hire more of them.

So, to all the candidates running for office, stop tripping over LA’s broken sidewalks and focus your attention on what’s really wrong with our city.