Friday, October 10, 2025
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Warner Grand Theater At 91 Years Undergoes Renovations

SAN PEDRO The Warner Grand Theater turns 91 this year. The historic movie palace opened Jan. 20, 1931 in San Pedro and was purchased in 1996 by the city. The ceiling, designed by renowned American muralist Anthony Heinsbergen, is estimated to be one of about 200 Heinsbergen murals that still survive from the 757 theater murals he created.

The original walls of the auditorium are presently hidden. Once glittering with gold leaf and vibrant reds, the concert hall was painted a neutral beige by the previous owners, covering over the rich art deco designs. The theater is undergoing extensive renovations, expected to continue through 2023. The renovations will include a restoration of the ceilings, walls, chandeliers and tapestries to restore this historical landmark to its original grandeur.

The Warner Grand Theater is one of three remaining historic art deco Warner Bros. theaters in Los Angeles.

Long Beach Creative Group: Points Of View

Feb. 13 to March 12

The Long Beach Creative Group presents Points of View, The group show opens Feb. 13, and runs through March 12. The exhibition features work by Andrew Dickson, Yulia Gasio, Vladimir Goryachev, Samantha Minear Carroll and Roxanne Sexauer. All are local artists who share a connection to California State University, Long Beach and have significant international experience.

“Our community has a remarkable collection of professional, mid-career artists whose work has been seen all over the world, but rarely in Long Beach,” said Helen Cox, LBCG Exhibit Coordinator.

In addition to the regular exhibition, the LBCG is presenting artist talks Sundays at 2 pm. Feb. 13 Andrew Dickson, Feb. 20 Yulia Gasio, Feb. 27 Vladimir Goryachev, and March 6 Samantha Minear Carroll and Roxanne Sexauer March 12. These events are free, and reservations are not required.

The gallery is sustained through a combination of art sales, private donations, volunteers, and the generous support of Cameron Briggs.

The LBCG is an established consortium of experienced artists, educators, and art enthusiasts engaged in creating exhibit space and opportunities for artists through curated exhibits and events. Starting Feb. 13, the gallery will be open to the public Fridays through Sundays, from 1 to 4 p.m. No appointment is required.

Details: www.longbeachcreativegroup.com LBCG/Rod Briggs Gallery 2221 East Broadway, Long Beach

Supervisor Hilda L. Solis Appointed to Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts’ Board of Trustees by President Biden

Appointment recognizes Supervisor Solis’ longstanding commitment to building diversity, equity, and inclusion into arts sector infrastructure, and ensuring access to arts resources in historically underserved communities

President Joseph R. Biden has appointed Los Angeles County Supervisor Hilda L. Solis to the Board of Trustees at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, commonly referred to as the Kennedy Center.

The Kennedy Center, the living memorial to President John F. Kennedy, is this country’s national cultural center — as a presenter, it hosts world-class performing arts that are made available to the broadest possible constituencies, and as an agency, it delivers powerful arts education opportunities nationwide.

Supervisor Solis is President Biden’s first Kennedy Center appointment – a recognition of her long standing advocacy for underserved communities and people of color. Solis has fought for equitable resources for these groups in many sectors, including environmental justice, community building, public safety, housing, workforce development and arts and culture. She co-authored the resolution that directed the Los Angeles County Department of Arts and Culture to release its 2017 Cultural Equity and Inclusion Initiative (CEII), which set out strategies for ensuring people in LA County have equitable access to arts and culture, and improve inclusion in the wider arts ecology for all residents, in every community. CEII directs these outcomes so that everyone can participate in the benefits the arts provide — personal and community resiliency, positive education outcomes and career opportunities in the creative economy. The Kennedy Center, likewise, is steeped in this work on a national level. It works to foster anti-racism across the performing arts field and through its social impact initiatives, leverages arts for non-arts outcomes.

Spring 2022 Urban Garden Paid Internship Program

The Leadership ARTS Mentoring Program or LAMP offers leadership skill development in combination with learning conventional gardening and hydroponics for young people aged 18 to 24 currently living in low-income households. Participants have an opportunity to earn up to $2600.

This is a 9-week internship –18 hours per week – Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., March 1 through April 28,

Applications are being accepted now through Feb.18. Applications are reviewed in the order they are received.

Interviews will be conducted beginning Feb. 10 until all 12 spots are filled.

Applicants will be invited to interview based on their income eligibility, on the quality of answers provided on the application questionnaire, and spots available.

Details: To apply: www.surveymonkey.com/r/LAMPSG2022

California Briefs: CA Invests in Mental Health; Housing Programs; Receives Funding to Plug Oil & Gas Wells

Gov. Newsom Invests Funds In Mental Health Housing Expansion

LOS ANGELES COUNTY – At the site of a new facility that will offer housing and medical services to people transitioning out of homelessness, Governor Gavin Newsom Jan. 31, announced the availability of $1.1 billion to get and keep vulnerable Californians off the streets and provide them the mental health housing and treatment they need. This announcement highlights a critical part of the Governor’s $14 billion homelessness package that will create 55,000 new housing units and treatment slots when fully implemented.

This announcement makes available approximately $1.1 billion in new funding through Homekey – $518.5 million for the Behavioral Health Continuum Infrastructure Program and $570 million for the Community Care Expansion Program – that local partners are encouraged to utilize as part of the state’s strategy to rebuild mental and behavioral health services and house those most in need, especially those at risk of or experiencing homelessness.


California Eligible for Federal Funding to Clean Up Abandoned Oil and Gas Wells

WASHINGTON, D.C. — U.S. Senator Alex Padilla (D-Calif.) Jan. 31, announced that California is eligible for $61,495,000 in the first phase of federal funding to plug orphaned oil and gas wells. This funding from the US Department of the Interior comes from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.

The California Natural Resources Agency has documented 5,356 oil, gas, and geothermal orphaned wells on state and private lands.

Initial funding will allow state officials to begin building out , remediating high-priority wells, and collecting additional data regarding the number of orphaned wells. States will be eligible to apply for additional future funding from the Department of Interior.

Ports Briefs: Container Dwell Fee’s Still Hold; Infrastructure Bill Helps POLB With Navigational Improvements

Ports Keep ‘Container Dwell Fee’ on Hold

The Port of Los Angeles and the Port of Long Beach announced Jan. 28, that consideration of the “Container Dwell Fee” will be held off another week, until Feb. 4.

The two ports have seen a combined decline of 67% in aging cargo on the docks since the program was announced on Oct. 25.

The executive directors of both ports will reassess fee implementation after monitoring data over the next week. Fee implementation has been postponed by both ports since the start of the program.


Federal Funding Announced for Navigation Improvements

LONG BEACH The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is receiving $8 million in Bipartisan Infrastructure Law funding to help make navigational efficiency improvements to Port of Long Beach waterways that will allow visiting ships to transit the harbor faster, reduce transportation costs and cut pollution.

Last October, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers signed a chief’s report showing deepening and widening channels in the harbor would lead to air pollution reductions, improved vessel navigation and national economic benefits of almost $21 million each year.

Among other features, the recommended plan includes deepening the Approach Channel from 76 feet to 80 feet, constructing an approach channel to Pier J South to a depth of 55 feet, deepening portions of the West Basin from 50 feet to 55 feet, and performing structural improvements to breakwaters at Pier J to allow for depths of 55 feet.

The funds awarded this week will help initiate and complete the preconstruction, engineering and design phase.

Details: Final Integrated Feasibility Report, www.spl.usace.army.mil/Missions/Civil-Works/Projects-Studies

Aliso Canyon Disaster Studied; New LBPD Deputy Chief; New Trans-Pacific Green Shipping Corridor

Researchers Called to Lead Aliso Canyon Disaster Health Study

LOS ANGELES The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health or Public Health Jan. 18, announced the release of a Request for Proposals or RFP to solicit independent researchers to conduct the Aliso Canyon Disaster Health Research Study or Health Study. The purpose of the Health Study is to evaluate the short and long-term health impacts of the 2015-2016 Aliso Canyon Disaster on people living in the surrounding communities. Public Health has been charged with facilitating the search for independent third-party researchers under the oversight of a Scientific Oversight Committee or SOC.

The gas blowout and disaster, the largest in the history of the United States, occurred six years ago at the Southern California Gas Company’s Aliso Canyon gas storage facility located in the Santa Susana Mountains in Los Angeles. More than 109,000 metric tons of methane gas was released into residential communities surrounding the facility for 111 days. Thousands of residents were displaced from their homes, schools were relocated, and many people reported illness and acute health symptoms during and following the disaster.

Since the blowout, Public Health has conducted numerous community outreach efforts and solicited input from the impacted communities. This input was fundamental in the development of the RFP under the guidance of the independent SOC. Once the researchers are selected, community input will continue to remain an essential part of the Health Study process.

After completing the vetting and RFP process, the aim is for the Health Study to commence by the fall of 2022.

Submissions are due April 12. For information contact AlisoStudy@ph.lacounty.gov.

Details: http://publichealth.lacounty.gov/eh/healthresearch/.


LBPD Commander Patrick O’Dowd Promoted to Deputy Chief

LONG BEACH Deputy Chief O’Dowd Jan. 29, assumed command of the Long Beach Police Department’s Support Bureau, which includes the jail, training, port police, and security services divisions.

Deputy Chief O’Dowd began his career with the Long Beach Police Department in 1993 as a clerk typist in the Records Division. He was promoted to records supervisor where he worked until being hired as a police recruit in 1995. He promoted to Sergeant in 2011, Lieutenant in 2015, and Commander in 2018. Deputy Chief O’Dowd has worked a variety of assignments throughout his career, including patrol, special enforcement section, gang investigations detail, financial crimes, homicide, internal affairs, and administrative lieutenant for the Patrol Bureau. Prior to promoting to deputy chief, he led the East Patrol Division as a Commander and was then assigned to the Office of the Chief of Police, where he served as chief of staff.


POLA, Port of Shanghai and C4 Cities Form Partnership in First Trans-Pacific Green Shipping Corridor Between US and China Ports

Los Angeles and Shanghai Jan. 28, announced a partnership of cities, ports, shipping companies and a network of cargo owners to create the first green shipping corridor on one of the world’s busiest container shipping routes.

Convened by C40 Cities and the ports of Shanghai and Los Angeles, including maritime stakeholders, this partnership has agreed to create an initiative establishing a green shipping corridor to decarbonize goods movement between these ports. The partnership will achieve these goals by developing a “Green Shipping Corridor Implementation Plan” by the end of 2022.

Key decarbonization goals for the Green Shipping Corridor include:

  • The phasing in of low, ultra-low and zero carbon fuelled ships through the 2020s with the world’s first zero carbon trans-Pacific container ships introduced by 2030 by qualified and willing shipping lines.
  • The development of best management practices to help reduce emissions and improve efficiency for all ships using this international trade corridor.
  • Reducing supply chain emissions from port operations, improving air quality in the ports of Shanghai and Los Angeles and adjacent communities.

The City of Shanghai, the City of Los Angeles, the Port of Shanghai (through the Shanghai Municipal Transportation Commission) the Port of Los Angeles and C40 Cities initiated this partnership. Participating partners include A.P. Moller – Maersk, CMA CGM, Shanghai International Ports Group (SIPG), COSCO Shipping Lines, the Aspen Institute’s Shipping Decarbonization Initiative, facilitators of Cargo Owners for Zero Emission Vessels (coZEV), and the Maritime Technology Cooperation Centre in Asia.

$50,000 REWARD For Information On The Murder of Monica Molina LAPD Jan. 2022

The City of Los Angeles is offering a reward for information leading to the identity and arrest and prosecution of the persons or persons responsible for the murder of Monica Molina, a 43 year-old female.

On Sunday, May 2, 2021 at about 4:20 a.m. Molina was standing on her front patio at 1230 Eubank Ave. when she was shot and killed by an unknown suspect.

South Bureau Homicide detectives have been unable to identify the suspect responsible for this murder and believes that no future leads will develop in this case without the assistance of the community.

The Los Angeles Police department is requesting your help in identifying the person or persons responsible for this murder. If you know who committed this crime, or if you have any information about the murder, please contact LAPD immediately. All information will be kept strictly confidential.

If you have any information, contact Detective Harrington at 323-786-5100 at South Bureau Homicide. During non-business hours and on weekends and holidays, contact the department operations center at 877-275-5273 or text the word “LAPD” and your message to 274637 (CRIMES) or log onto www.lapdonline.org and click on “Anonymous Web Tips.

Gov. Newsom Announces Reward for Unsolved Murder in Los Angeles

LOS ANGELES Gov. Gavin Newsom Jan 27, announced a $50,000 reward for information leading to an arrest and conviction for the murder of Tioni Theus.

On Jan. 8, 2022, 16-year-old Tioni Theus was found dead along the 110 Freeway in South Los Angeles. She had been fatally shot by an unknown assailant or assailants. The California Highway Patrol has exhausted all investigative leads and requested that a reward be offered to encourage any individuals with information about this murder to contact the CHP at 323-644-9550.

Under California law, law enforcement agencies may ask the Governor to issue rewards in certain unsolved cases where they have exhausted all investigative leads, to encourage individuals with information about the crimes to come forward. Public assistance is vital to law enforcement, and rewards may encourage the public cooperation needed to apprehend those who have committed serious offenses.

More information on the Governor’s Reward Program can be found here.

California Signs Equal Pay Pledge, Advances Pay and Gender Equity

SACRAMENTO Gov. Gavin Newsom, First Partner Jennifer Siebel Newsom, and the California Department of Human Resources or CalHR Jan. 27, announced the State of California has signed the California Equal Pay Pledge, an initiative the First Partner launched to close the gender pay gap. Gov. Newsom also announced the creation of a new chief equity officer position to lead efforts to improve state hiring and other procedures with an equity focus, including efforts to achieve pay parity among the state government workforce.

The announcement follows the unveiling of the Governor’s California Blueprint, which includes a proposed $1.4 million package to improve awareness of state pay equity rights and inform enforcement efforts against those that violate equal pay laws.

“We can’t reach full gender equity or close persistent gender and racial wealth gaps without reaching pay equity,” said California First Partner Jennifer Siebel Newsom, whose California for ALL Women campaign promotes initiatives that build women’s economic equity, support equal representation, and advance a family-first agenda. “As the state’s largest employer, California is leading by example. I call on other employers to join us as we work to create a California where all women are valued, respected, and paid equitably.”

Over 60 major California employers, including Airbnb, Apple, Gap Inc., Intel and Twitter, have signed the pledge, which the First Partner leads in collaboration with the California Commission on the Status of Women and Girls and the California Labor Commissioner’s Office. By signing the Equal Pay Pledge, signatories agree to conduct an annual, company-wide gender pay analysis, review hiring and promotion procedures to reduce unconscious bias and structural barriers, and promote best practices to close the pay gap.

California regularly releases summarized annual pay data for state employees through CalHR’s women’s earnings report, annual census and total compensation reports. The latest Women’s Earnings Report, which includes state employee pay data from 2020, indicates that the state worker gender pay gap has trended downward since 2010. In 2010, the civil service gender pay gap was 21.3 percent and decreased to 14.3 percent in 2020.