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Legislation Helps Minority and Women Owned Businesses Compete for Infrastructure Funding

WASHINGTON, D.C. — U.S. Sen. Alex Padilla and U.S. Reps. Pete Aguilar and Jimmy Gomez (all D-Calif.) March 3, announced a package of legislation to help minority- and women-owned businesses compete for contracts to develop and build federal infrastructure projects as billions of dollars in funding is distributed through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.
In the House, the Disadvantaged Business Enterprise Supportive Services Expansion Act is led by Rep. Aguilar and the Accelerating Small Business Growth Act is led by Rep. Gomez. Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) is also co-sponsoring both bills. Together, these bills would help agencies accomplish President Joe Biden’s new goal of increasing the share of federal contracts going to small, disadvantaged businesses by 50% by 2025, which would translate to an additional $100 billion for these businesses.

Details: Disadvantaged Business Enterprise Supportive Services Expansion Act can be found at https://tinyurl.com/disadvantaged-act

Accelerating Small Business Growth Act can be found at https://tinyurl.com/accelerating-act

The Mind as Safe Prison in “The Private Lives of Imaginary Friends”

Things have been bad for 36-year-old Rory. He’s still living with his parents, he hasn’t had a job in more than a decade (never mind a girlfriend), and he “can’t shake the sensation that this is…me, fully realized.” But the reappearance of imaginary childhood friend Murphy provides the opportunity to retreat to a better world, one hermetically sealed from all those external expectations he can’t quite understand, let alone even begin to meet.

At least that’s how it seems at the beginning of The Private Lives of Imaginary Friends, the most recent work by local playwright Ryan McClary. But you’ve heard the one about things not always being what they seem?

Understanding what’s what in the Imaginary Friends universe turns on the question of what’s wrong with Rory (Thomas Amerman) — or more accurately, what conditions pertain not only to Rory but also to Murphy (Robert Young) and next-door neighbor Dana (Emily Formentini) and her imaginary friend Siohban (Maribella Magna), all four of whom can see and interact with each other.

The answer to those questions isn’t given until deep in Act 2, and the journey to that point is more or less pure comedy, much of which hinges on Rory, Murphy, and Siohban’s efforts to get Dana, a vituperative 35-year-old who’s not making a much better go of the real world than Rory is, to join in their reindeer games.

The humor here is big on silly, and the cast is required to do some heavy lifting to make it play. Fortunately, all four castmembers are buff enough for the hoisting. Even within exclusively comedic scenes, the tonal shifts come fast and furious, with the cast adeptly negotiating each twist and turn. An especial highlight is shortly before intermission, with Murphy directing an imaginary film that casts Dana in a role that helps her access her imaginary side. Young in particular is hilarious here.

Although the yuks sometimes wear thin in Act 2 (an imaginary talk show is a bit slow and doesn’t cover new ground), when the reality of the situation begins to seep through, we find ourselves in the middle of a play that has traded in the silly for the substantive, providing us with an emotional center and a deeper insight into what Act 1’s imaginary rigamarole was all about.

As they so often do, through the practical magic of carpentry the Garage has transformed their small space into a completely ad hoc configuration. Unlike most black box theaters, the Garage is willing to sacrifice square footage in service of aesthetic considerations — one of the real treats about seeing a show here. Because Young and Amerman are central to set-building &c. at the Garage, one can only marvel at their achieving this success while simultaneously holding down roles in a play that rarely lets them offstage.

All of us inhabit not just the world of the mind, but the world of a particular mind: our own, unique and private to each of us. For a spectrum of reasons, some find moving through the external world, whose rules and signals can be mysteriously incongruous with our private logic, too treacherous to attempt. The Private Lives of Imaginary Friends gives us a view of/from such a place, along with a glimmer of hope that sometimes, with a little help from our friends, progress can be made, step by tentative step.

The Private Lives of Imaginary Friends at the Garage Theatre
Times: Thursday–Saturday 8:00 p.m.
The show runs through April 9
Cost: $18–$25 (Thursdays 2-for-1); closing night w/afterparty: $30
Details: thegaragetheatre.org
Venue: The Garage Theatre, 251 E. 7th St., Long Beach

The Zoom version of The Private Lies o Imaginary Friends.

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Governors Actions: Administration Boosts Emergency Drought Funding & Gov. Makes Judicial/ Other Appointments

Newsom Administration Boosts State Funding for Drought Emergency

SACRAMENTO After California recorded its driest January and February in more than 100 years of records in the Sierra Nevada, Gov. Gavin Newsom’s administration announced March 13 it is spending an additional $22.5 million to respond to the immediate drought emergency.

The additional $22.5 million allocation includes more funding for the Department of Water Resources, State Water Resources Control Board and the California Department of Food and Agriculture.

More than a third of the money – $8.25 million – will be used to increase outreach efforts to educate Californians on water conservation measures and practices. The funds requested are part of a comprehensive effort by the Newsom Administration to increase water conservation.

On March 1, the survey of the state’s snowpack showed levels were dropping sharply after robust storms in December. Current snowpack readings are about one-third below average. The Department of Water Resources is analyzing the latest snowpack data and has indicated it may revise its current forecast for State Water Project deliveries in 2022.

The Save Our Water campaign is securing partnerships with retailers and other organizations to urge Californians to reduce water use in the immediate term and also make permanent changes to landscaping to build resilience in the long-term.

Details: Save Our Water


Gov. Newsom Announced the Following Judicial Appointments for Los Angeles

Nicholas F. Daum, 47, of Los Angeles, has been appointed to serve as a Judge in the Los Angeles County Superior Court. Daum has been a Partner and Associate at Kendall Brill & Kelly LLP since 2009. He was an Associate at Susman Godfrey LLP from 2004 to 2009 and served as a Law Clerk for the Honorable Raymond C. Fisher at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit from 2003 to 2004. Daum earned a Juris Doctor degree from Yale Law School and a Master of Arts degree in History from the University of California, Berkeley. He fills the vacancy created by the retirement of Judge Anthony J. Mohr. Daum is a Democrat.

Bradley S. Phillips, 68, of Los Angeles, has been appointed to serve as a Judge in the Los Angeles County Superior Court. Phillips has been a Partner at Munger, Tolles & Olson LLP since 1984 and was an Associate there from 1979 to 1983. He served as a Law Clerk for the Honorable William Matthew Byrne, Jr. at the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California from 1978 to 1979. Phillips earned a Juris Doctor degree from Yale Law School. He fills the vacancy created by the retirement of Judge John A. Torribio. He is a Democrat.


Gov. Newsom Announced the Following Appointment

SACRAMENTO Gov. Gavin Newsom March 4, announced the following appointment:

Gail Willis, 59, of Los Angeles, has been appointed to the State Personnel Board. Willis has been an educator and mathematics prevention/intervention specialist for the Los Angeles Unified School District since 1996. She was Southern California special assistant at the California Department of Insurance from 2016 to 2018. She is a member of the California Teachers Association and vice president of the Southern Los Angeles Area Planning Commission. Willis earned a doctor of philosophy degree in educational leadership, administration and public policy and a master of arts degree in education from Pepperdine University. This position requires Senate confirmation and the compensation is $52,794. Willis is a Democrat.

Torrance Man Sentenced for Tax Evasion for Hiding Fees in Multimillion Health Care Fraud Conspiracy

LOS ANGELES – A South Bay man was sentenced to 12 months plus one day in federal prison for tax evasion.

Jeffrey Lawrence, a.k.a. Jey Lawrence, 59, of Torrance, was sentenced on Feb. 28, 2022 by United States District Judge R. Gary Klausner. In addition, Judge Klausner ordered Lawrence to pay restitution of $100,919.

Lawrence pled guilty to a single count of tax evasion stemming from his referrals in 2015 of prescriptions to TC Medical Pharmacy. In March 2015, Lawrence entered into an agreement with pharmacy owner Thu Van Le, whereby Le agreed to pay Lawrence for the referral of compounded medications prescriptions. Between March and June 2015, Lawrence then directed Le to pay more than $300,000 in referral fees to another person’s bank account in order to conceal Lawrence’s receipt of taxable income.

Lawrence did not file a tax return for the year in which he earned the referral fees that were paid to his nominee’s account. After deductions, Lawrence’s taxable income from the concealed referral fees was more than $280,000, and his tax due was more than $100,000.

Jeffrey Lawrence and Thu Van Le were among six defendants indicted by a federal grand jury on June 21, 2018.

 

Hospitalizations Continue to Decline, Reducing Stress on Healthcare System

Hospitalizations in Los Angeles County continue to decline, reducing stress on the healthcare system. This progress reflects the lower rate of COVID-19 transmission in the community and is providing much needed relief to healthcare workers who are at elevated risk.

Currently, 491 people are hospitalized, representing a 32% decrease from last Monday when there were 731 people hospitalized with COVID-19 and the first time L.A. County has fewer than 500 people hospitalized since July 17, 2021. The seven-day average of new daily admissions of people with COVID-19 decreased by 38%, from 100 patients one week ago to 62 admissions today. Also, just 5% of COVID positive hospitalized patients are currently in the ICU.

Cases among healthcare workers are also decreasing. Between Feb. 27 and March 5, Public Health reported a total of 80 new positive cases among healthcare workers; this is a decrease of 93% from the week of Dec. 26, when 1,205 positive cases were reported.

Public Health reported 1,136 new positive cases on Sunday, with an additional 291 positive cases today, and 40 new deaths for March 13 and 14. The March 14 case and death numbers reflect delays in weekend reporting.

Public Health has reported a total of 2,813,689 positive cases of COVID-19 across all areas of L.A. County. The positivity rate on March 14 was 0.6%

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

Green Way to Dispose of Entertainment Media

One surprising discovery I made, while cleaning out my mother’s garage, was several crates full of cassette tapes, mostly of one very obscure Americana-type band my mother had been involved with in the 1980s. In those pre-internet days, she had this idea how she and they would make money selling cassettes via mail-order, but that plan never happened.

Disposing of hundreds of cassettes was just one part of consolidating my parents’ collections of entertainment media. I spent more than a year immersed in their love of music and movies while sorting the “keep” from the “don’t keep.” They never dumped their collections of vinyl records, nor their cassette tapes, nor their VHS tapes. I found stacks of DVDs and CDs to sort, too, some of which were defective or for antiquated computer programs.

Some second-hand entertainment media can be easily sold, at such shops as Third Eye or Bagatelle, both in Long Beach. Any discernible market for cassettes, VHS tapes, and obsolete computer paraphernalia, though, dried up decades ago. Video/audio tapes (and their housing) are made of plastic—including non-recyclable plastic — and metals, including toxic metals, so if you don’t want them, they should be handled as electronic waste, e-waste for short.

Finding a company that recycles unwanted entertainment media can be difficult, but I searched online and discovered Green Disk, a company founded in 1993 by tech-industry personnel who wanted to minimize the impact of waste associated with computers and related electronics. Their website includes a long list of the electronics they accept for recycling.

Third Eye is another Long beach location that sells second-hand media. Photo courtesy of author.

Three times in the last year I’ve used Green Disk’s “Pack-IT” self-service for my unwanted entertainment/computer media, moving more than 100 pounds of e-waste out of the house by a method friendly to the environment. Green Disk requires a minimum of 25 pounds for each shipment, and charges a minimum service fee. I budget for disposal of my e-waste, the way I do for other household expenses. When I’ve needed assistance, such as questions about calculating weight or fees, I’ve had very good experiences with the company’s customer service.

I’ve packed all those pounds of unwanted or defective cassettes and VHS tapes, along with unwanted or defective or obsolete CDs and DVDs, into boxes, then used the company’s website to calculate the weight and pay the service fee. The company provides the shipping labels, but I pay postage. The shipment goes to the company’s non-profit partner, Goodwill ESMV in Dayton, Ohio, and they take it from there. I doubt I’m done with using their service yet.

Long Beach Small Business Grant Opportunities

LONG BEACH The week of March 7, the City of Long Beach announced the Long Beach Recovery Act Small Business and Non-Profit Relief grants, a new recovery program to help small businesses and nonprofits that have experienced financial hardship due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The grant opportunities, totaling $8.4 million in funding, will provide working capital to eligible small businesses and nonprofits to help them pay for a variety of business expenses, such as payroll, rent, personal protective equipment or PPE, technology upgrades, marketing and more.

These grant programs will provide much-needed support for local businesses and nonprofits an integral part of the Long Beach community and economy. The program will include the following four grant opportunities for small businesses and nonprofit organizations affected by COVID-19:

  • The restaurant, brewery and bar relief grant will provide direct financial relief to small Long Beach food and beverage businesses. Eligible small businesses can receive between $5,000 and $25,000 to support their business.
  • The personal services and fitness relief grant will provide direct financial relief to small Long Beach personal services and fitness businesses. Eligible small businesses can receive between $5,000 and $25,000 to support their business.
  • The small business relief grant will provide direct financial relief to small Long Beach businesses that do not qualify for the restaurant, brewery and bar grant nor the personal services and fitness relief grant. Eligible small businesses can receive between $2,500 and $10,000 to support their business.
  • The nonprofit relief grant will provide direct financial relief to 501c3, 501c19, and fiscally sponsored nonprofits. Eligible nonprofits can receive between $5,000 and $25,000 to support their nonprofit.

The application period began March 16 and will close May 15, 2022. Additional information regarding the application process and eligibility requirements will be outlined in a forthcoming press release.

To learn more, small businesses and nonprofits can call the City’s BizCare Hotline from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at 562-570-4249, email 4Biz@longbeach.gov, or visit longbeach.gov/bizcare.

The City has contracted with LiveStories to provide comprehensive grants administration support services. LiveStories will be making available the following services:

  • A user-friendly online application portal that can translate grant applications in multiple languages;
  • Intaking, reviewing, approving, and funding applications via electronic fund transfers; and
  • Case management support and a call center to quickly resolve application issues. For technical support, applicants can call 855-582-3973 weekdays from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m or email forward-support@livestories.com.

A total of $20 million has been allocated for business support under the Recovery Act.

Details: longbeach.gov/recovery.

Pro-Union Rallies Held in Bessemer, Ala― Amazon Labor Organization Inches Closer to Union-hood

The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) has certified that the Amazon Labor Union (ALU) has collected enough signatures for a union election to be held at fulfillment center LDJ5. This is the retail giant’s second fulfillment center in an area where workers have secured the right to a union vote. The first is JFK8, also on Staten Island.

ALU president Christian Smalls said the NLRB hearing on March 14 will determine the logistics of the LDJ5 election.

“Just two weeks after officially winning our first NLRB petition for election and setting our JFK8 election date for March 25-30, the ALU has already won our second petition for an election at LDJ5,” said arecent ALU newsletter.

“Soon enough, we will have union elections at all four of the Staten Island facilities, and then at warehouses all over the country. Amazon workers everywhere are realizing what we are worth, what we should expect and demand, and what collective power we have to make the necessary changes to our workplaces.”

This issue of the ALU newsletter is titled “Ain’t No Stoppin’ Us Now,” a nod to the1979 disco song performed by McFadden & Whitehead.

“LDJ5 has 1,500 workers and they’re hiring like crazy,” ALU organizer Cassio Mendoza told this reporter. “JFK8 has 6,700 workers—about 5,000 full-time, the rest flex and part-time. The ALU is on a campaign footing, treating each and every day as if the election was happening tomorrow.”

The ALU holds weekly break room meetings inside these warehouses and has a constant presence at the bus stop outside, where rank-and-file organizers talk with workers and distribute literature during the shift change, Mendoza said.

Ten days ago, the ALU started a phone bank with the goal of calling every worker at JFK8 to “talk union” — answering questions and listening to concerns, explaining the benefits of a union, and exposing management’s lies. “There has been a lot of positive feedback,” Mendoza noted. He estimated that the ALU has the support of 60 percent of the workers. He added, however, that organizers expect that number to change as Amazon uses its nearly unlimited resources to step up its anti-union campaign and harassment of union activists.

Amazon handed over to the union the list of names on its payroll, as labor law requires.

“The list was 8,000 names long!” Mendoza pointed out. “That’s far more than the number of workers actively employed at JFK8.”

Mendoza said the list included workers who were fired or quit and therefore are not eligible to vote. The point was to waste the union’s time and frustrate the activists.

Amazon’s union-busting moves

Meanwhile, Amazon has spent millions on union-busting consultants and lawyers. They barrage workers with anti-union emails, texts, and letters sent to their homes, signs in the break rooms, ads on workplace TVs, notices in the bathrooms, and “captive audience” meetings. Now they are using the police to do their union-busting work.

On Feb. 23, Director of Operations and General Manager of JFK8 Felipe Santos called the New York Police Department (NYPD) to arrest Chris Smalls for “trespassing,” because he was at JFK8 giving four large trays of food to a colleague for the weekly union lunch.

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More than a dozen NYPD officers took part in the operation. The police also roughed up and arrested Brett Daniels and Jason Anthony, two other ALU organizers who work at JFK8, when they came to Smalls’ aide.

The ALU has filed an unfair labor practice charge with the NLRB against Amazon over this illegal harassment. It is also calling on Santos to drop the charges and apologize to the ALU organizers. To promote this campaign, the ALU has launched a petition drive that anyone can signhere.It has also put up “Drop the Charges” posters in breakrooms and has organized workers to shout “Felipe Santos, Drop the Charges!” whenever they catch sight of him inside the warehouse.

The ALU is appealing to all union supporters for help at this critical time. Volunteers can make phone calls to Amazon workers, knock on doors, house a union organizer, staff a table to get out the word, or host an event or meet-and-greet with a union representative. You can sign up through the ALU’sAction Portal.

The ALU is planning a rally outside JFK8 on Sunday, March 20.World-Outlookwill be there to cover it.

‘Our union is us workers’: Union vote in Bessemer

The union organizing activities here are taking place at the same time that a new union vote is underway at the Amazon warehouse in Bessemer, Alabama.

About a year ago, Amazon workers in Bessemer who sought representation by the Retail, Wholesale, and Department Store Union (RWDSU) lost the vote by a margin of 738 ballots cast in favor to 1798 against. This means that more than 3,500 workers, a majority of the 6,100 workers at that facility, did not vote. It is likely much of this was due to harassment and other intimidation tactics by the company. Later, federal labor officials scrapped that election and ordered a new one, ruling that Amazon’s anti-union campaign had tainted the results.

In early February, ballots went out again to the Amazon workers at the Bessemer warehouse. Workers are voting by mail; the hand-tally of ballots is set to begin on March 28 and is expected to last several days.

To help the union organizing effort there, pro-union rallies by hundreds of Amazon workers and their supporters have taken place in the Bessemer area, including one on Feb. 26 and another on March 1. Participants include coal miners who are members of the United Mine Workers of America (UMWA) and have been on strike against Met Coal for 11 months.

“I’ve been on strike with the UMWA for almost a year, since April 1, 2021,” said Braxton Wright, a former UMWA miner and Amazon worker. “In September, I started working at Amazon.”

Wright was speaking at the March 1 union rally, according to avideoposted on Facebook byBAmazonUnion, an organizing campaign of RWDSU’s Mid-South Council.

“The camo you see here today are the UMWA striking miners who after 11 months are holding the line,” Wright continued. “When you vote yes for the RWDSU you will gain brothers and sisters across the country who will stand with you. You will never be alone. We are one, we are everywhere.”

A number of other rank-and-file workers, including veterans of last year’s union campaign at Bessemer such as Daryl Richardson and Jennifer Bates, as well as younger workers like Isaiah Thomas, addressed the March 1 rally.

“The message to the young people, who are my age, I am only 20 years of age — I hope I give some kind of hope to the people out there — is this,” said Thomas. “The only way that we can bring about change is by coming together and forming our union. Our union is us workers. Solidarity till the end. Solidarity till we win!”

Willa Madden in Birmingham, Alabama, and Argiris Malapanis and Mark Satinoff in New York contributed to this article. They regularly write for World Outlook

Elderly Woman Paralyzed After Being Stabbed In Her Long Beach Liquor Store

An elderly Asian woman has suffered paralysis after being stabbed in the neck in her own liquor store in Long Beach, Calif., on Jan. 30.

The attack, which was caught on surveillance video, reportedly left 65-year-old Yongja Lee paralyzed from the neck down and unable to speak.

TheLong Beach Police Departmentdescribed her assailant as a Black male, standing 6 feet and 2 inches (188 centimeters), weighing 200 pounds (91 kilograms), and with brown eyes. They said he was on foot when he fled the scene in the 900 block of East Broadway.

Read more at: https://news.yahoo.com/elderly-asian-woman-paralyzed-being-211448032.html?guccounter=1

Public Health Continues Expanding COVID-19 Therapeutic Awareness and Access

Increasing the awareness and access of COVID-19 therapeutics that can prevent severe illness in individuals at elevated risk is a priority of the County’s post-surge plan.

These free medications can help prevent serious illness, hospitalization, or death, and are particularly critical for residents at elevated risk of poor outcomes should they become infected with COVID.

Paxlovid (available for anyone 12 and older weighing more than 88 pounds) and Molnupiravir (available for adults 18 and older) are oral therapeutics that must be taken within 5 days of the first COVID-19 symptoms and require a prescription from a healthcare provider. Evulsheld is administered via injection and is available for anyone 12 and older weighing at least 88 pounds who has not been exposed to COVID-19 and can’t get a COVID-19 vaccine for medical reasons, or who may not respond well to a vaccine because they have a weak immune system due to a medical condition or treatment.

Public Health is working with partners and providers to inform patients about these medications, including the Los Angeles County Medical Association or LACMA and the Community Clinic Association of Los Angeles County or CCALAC. Public Health is also dispatching community health workers in the field and expanding efforts to raise awareness about therapeutics, sponsoring radio PSA’s and commissioning print, digital and social media ads.

To ensure access to COVID therapeutics across the county, Public Health is working to enroll new providers in a network of sites that can provide information to residents and have sufficient supply of these life-saving therapeutics, particularly in those communities with residents at elevated risk of poor COVID-19 outcomes. Public Health will also be launching a pilot project aimed at providing a telehealth option for patients who are unable to access care or are uninsured. Patients testing positive at selected testing sites in under-served communities will be linked to a telehealth option and, if eligible, will be shipped medications at no cost.

The federal government also recently announced the “Test to Treat” program, which is launching this week and will allow patients to walk into local pharmacies and clinics with onsite clinics to get tested and treated on the same visit at the same location. Eighteen CVS Minute Clinics in LA County are participating in the first wave and can be found by visiting: https://www.cvs.com/minuteclinic.

Residents who would like to access these medicines or have questions on which treatment is right for them should contact their medical provider or call the COVID-19 information line at 833-540-0473, 8:00 am – 8:30 pm daily. The call center is a free resource where residents can get culturally and linguistically appropriate information about available therapeutics, and how to access them. Residents can also visit the Federal therapeutics locator to find available therapeutics near them.

To date, 17,840 doses of Paxlovid, 37,748 doses of Molnupiravir, and 12,936 doses of Evusheld have been distributed across LA County.