Tuesday, October 7, 2025
spot_img
spot_img
Home Blog Page 447

LA County Reports 76% Increase in Anti-Asian Hate Crimes in 2020

That is the largest total since 9/11

The Los Angeles County Commission on Human Relations (LACCHR) Oct. 20, released a special report on anti-Asian hate crime in LA County in 2020. Since 1980, LACCHR collects and reports hate crime data submitted by law enforcement agencies, educational institutions, and community-based organizations. The report revealed that anti-Asian hate crimes rose 76% from 25 to 44 in 2020. This is the largest number of anti-Asian hate crimes reported since 2001.

View the 2020 anti-Asian Hate Crime Report here.

LA County’s annual Hate Crime Report, which will encompass all reported hate crimes in LA County, will be released in November.

Supervisor Hahn said the report is disturbing but, unfortunately, not surprising and the escalation of attacks against the AAPI community is taking a toll on residents. She noted she has heard from residents who are afraid to walk alone, or go to the grocery store, or even leave their homes.

The AAPI community needs to know that they are not alone. We are united in supporting them and addressing these attacks,” Hahn said.

Otto Solórzano, Acting Director of the LA County Department of Workforce Development, Aging and Community Services said that with hate crimes likely to be underreported, the department knows that the actual number of hate crimes is higher than it’s able to report.

If you experience a hate crime or hate act, call 211 or go to www.LAvsHate.org to receive assistance.

Significant findings include the following:

  • Specific Asian nationalities and ethnicities were the targets of hate. Most slurs were anti-Chinese, but anti-Japanese and anti-Asian Indian hate crimes also occurred. Among the victims were people of Korean, Taiwanese, Vietnamese, and Guatemalan ethnicity.
  • In 10 of the anti-Asian hate crimes (23%), the suspects explicitly blamed the victims for COVID-19.
  • The rate of hate-related violence in 2019 (76%) and 2020 (77%) was significantly higher compared to prior years.
  • The median age of victims increased from 30 to 41. Half of the victims were over 40, including two seniors. In 2019, there were no victims of hate crimes over 40.
  • There was a tripling in the number of female victims of anti-Asian hate crime compared to the previous year, rising to nearly half of all victims
  • In cases in which the race of the suspect was known, Whites comprised 42% of anti-Asian hate crime suspects. This was followed by Latino/a (36%) suspects and African American (19%) suspects.

What Can You Do?

In response to the rise in hate, the Board of Supervisors directed LACCHR to develop an initiative to prevent and respond to hate incidents in the County, which resulted in “L.A. vs Hate.” The initiative has three components: (1) a community-driven public engagement campaign to encourage residents and organizations to unite against and report acts of hate; (2) the first government hotline (via 211) for reporting acts of hate and providing assistance to hate victims; and (3) a network of community agencies that provide hate prevention and rapid response services.

Since launching in June 2020, “L.A. vs Hate” content has been viewed over 468 million times and has been shared over 88 million times. Since September 2019, when L.A. vs. Hate and 211 began accepting calls to report hate, L.A. vs. Hate has received more than 1,400 reports of hate acts.

For more information on the “L.A. vs Hate” initiative, including shareable graphics ready-made for social media, please click here, www.lavshate.org

 

Californians Need to Redouble Water Conservation Efforts

SACRAMENTO – Following the second driest year on record and with near record low storage in California’s largest reservoirs, Gov. Gavin Newsom Oct. 19, issued a proclamation extending the drought emergency statewide and further urging Californians to step up their water conservation efforts as the western U.S. faces a potential third dry year.

Bolstering conservation efforts, the proclamation enables the State Water Resources Control Board to ban wasteful water practices, including the use of potable water for washing sidewalks and driveways. The Governor issued an executive order in July calling on Californians to voluntarily reduce water use by 15% compared to 2020 to protect water reserves and complement local conservation mandates. The action today comes as the board reports that in August, California reduced urban water use by 5% compared to 2020.

A copy of today’s proclamation can be found here.

The proclamation adds the eight counties not previously included in the drought state of emergency: Imperial, Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, San Francisco and Ventura. In addition, the proclamation requires local water suppliers to implement water shortage contingency plans that are responsive to local conditions and prepare for the possibility of a third dry year.

Expanding the Save Our Water initiative, a critical resource during the last drought, California has launched robust water conservation public education campaigns in partnership with stakeholders, including public water agencies. Statewide per capita residential water use declined 21% between 2013 and 2016 and as of 2020, the urban sector is using approximately 16% less on average statewide than in 2013. The Administration will continue to monitor the evolving drought conditions and evaluate all tools available to respond in real-time.

California is experiencing its worst drought since the late 1800s, as measured by both lack of precipitation and high temperatures. August 2021 was the driest and hottest August on record since reporting began and the water year that ended last month was the second driest on record. Today’s proclamation authorizes the Governor’s Office of Emergency Services to provide assistance and funding under the California Disaster Assistance Act to support the emergency response and delivery of drinking water and water for public health and safety.

Details: https://drought.ca.gov/.

LASD is Asking for the Public’s Help Locating at Risk Missing Person Abigail Aguilar Martinez

0

Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department Missing Persons Unit investigators are asking for the public’s help locating at risk missing person Abigail Aguilar Martinez. She is a 42 year-old female Hispanic, who was last seen Sept. 13, 2021 at 2 p.m. on the 1000 block of West Carson Street in Torrance.

Abigail is 5’10” tall, 160lbs with brown eyes, long brown hair, last seen wearing a yellow shirt and has a “Precious Moment” character tattoo on her left leg. She is driving a black Ford Focus hatchback with a CA license plate of 7WZG999.

Due to Ms. Aguilar Martinez’s medical condition, her family is very concerned for her well-being and asking for the public’s help in locating her.

Anyone with information about this incident is encouraged to contact the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Homicide Missing Person Unit, Detective S. Rincon at 323- 890-5500.

Or anonymously, you may call 800-222-8477, http://lacrimestoppers.org

Over $34 Million Secured for California Transportation Infrastructure

0

U.S. Senator Alex Padilla (D-Calif.) Oct. 19, secured over $34 million in federal funding for 15 projects across California in the Senate’s Transportation, Housing, and Urban Development appropriations bill. The bill was released by the Senate Appropriations Committee today and will now be reconciled with its House counterpart before final passage.

California projects included in the Senate Transportation, Housing, and Urban Development appropriations bill. Below includes Los Angeles area projects

$5 million for the Inglewood Transit Connector Project
This project would provide residents and visitors with a state-of-the-art elevated guideway connecting the Crenshaw/LAX Metro Line directly to destinations in the City of Inglewood, including The Forum, SoFi Stadium at Hollywood Park, and the future Inglewood Basketball and Entertainment Center.

$3.5 million for the Sepulveda Transit Corridor Project
The Sepulveda Transit Corridor project aims to improve speed, frequency, capacity, and reliability of transit service between the heavy concentrations of households in the San Fernando Valley and the major employment and activity centers on the Westside. This is part of a larger, future project to extend the corridor further south to LAX.

$1 million for Pathway Torrance, a Community Resource and Response Center
This project would retrofit an unused former community health facility into Pathway Torrance. This dedicated community health facility would provide programmatic and specialized support, City paramedic response, emergency training, and education for area residents, students and persons who are at risk for, or are experiencing, homelessness.

$1 million to help Long Beach transition to zero-emission buses
This funding would support the purchase of battery-electric or fuel cell electric buses to help Long Beach transition its aging bus fleet to zero-emission technology.

$480,000 for Southern California Highways to Boulevards Regional Study
This would fund a study to identify and evaluate urban highways in Southern California for conversion to city streets or placing a lid over existing rights-of-way, particularly those intersecting with environmental justice areas and disadvantaged communities. These conversions would free up additional land for affordable housing or green spaces.

A full summary of the Senate’s Transportation, Housing, and Urban Development Appropriations bill is available here.

Op-ed: Oil Spill Shows Why We Need Climate Investments in Build Back Better Act

As a major oil spill off the coast of Southern California dumps oil into the Pacific Ocean, closes beaches and threatens another ecological disaster, Congress finds itself at a pivotal moment in the climate crisis — much like it did 11 years ago.

At that time, theHouse passed landmark climate legislation that needed action in the Senate.While the Senate stalled, theDeepwater Horizon oil spill devastated marine life and public health along the Gulf of Mexico, a stark reminder of the consequences of the U.S. dependence on fossil fuels.

But the Senate failed to act, and the prospect of legislation faded that winter when control of the House of Representatives flipped to Republicans — many of whom were ardent climate change deniers.

This time we must do better. The ongoing series of disasters proves fossil fuels are not safe. They are not worth our billions in federal subsidies or the price we pay to clean up the mess left behind by fossil fuel companies.

For the last decade, the consequences of inaction have been laid bare for all to see: record wildfires, brutal heat waves, unprecedented droughts, stronger storms, and now another oil spill. All this from just one degree of warming, with more on the way unless we change the way we produce and use energy.

The impacts go well beyond these large-scale disasters. The fossil fuel industry is also responsible for environmental injustices that reach directly into communities of color and disadvantaged communities. In my Los Angeles County district, oil wells are literally between homes and right next to schools. Refineries and oil storage tanks are more prominent than ocean views and lines of trucks belching diesel pollution into the air race back and forth from the Port of Los Angeles. My constituents have paid the price with much higher rates of cancer, asthma, and other respiratory diseases than the rest of the country.

Thankfully, we are on the brink of action now.

With the unprecedented climate investments in the Build Back Better Act, we face another consequential moment. Will this Congress and administration act in a way that recognizes the true scale of the climate crisis? Will we jumpstart the transition off fossil fuels with the urgency it requires?

Or, like we did 11 years ago, will we give in to long-running dishonest efforts by the fossil fuel lobby to weaken and defeat the climate and environmental justice provisions in the Build Back Better Act? This may be our best chance in a generation for Congress to meaningfully address the climate crisis.

It’s critical we hold the line on the investments in climate and environmental justice in the Build Back Better Act. These include transformational steps to move our transportation system to zero emissions, create climate smart ports, incentivize a dramatic build out of clean energy, and support the retrofit and construction of zero emission homes and buildings.

All these bold actions combined will mean cleaner air, lower energy bills, the creation of millions of good paying green jobs, and the development of an American manufacturing base for climate friendly products.

It will be a game changer for environmental justice communities hit hardest by both climate change and out-of-control pollution.

And Congress should end all fossil fuel subsidies to help pay for it.

While the oil spill is front page news, every year we allow the fossil fuel industry in the United States to emit several billion metric tons of carbon dioxide into our atmosphere without consequence, while also elevating the rates of cancer and asthma from smog and particulate matter.

Why should we allow the fossil fuel industry to continue profiting from polluting our oceans, air, and communities — and forever change our climate? Let’s reclaim those dollars and use them to keep hope alive for staving off the worst impacts of climate change.

At home, communities of color and economically disadvantaged communities have organized relentlessly to create this window for us to act. They have been told “no” far too many times over the years, while the fossil fuel lobby continued to dictate America’s energy policy.

No more.

It’s time for Congress to flip the script — for all our sake — and move beyond fossil fuels.

It’s time to pass the Build Back Better Act with climate and environmental justice front and center.

Nanette Diaz Barragánrepresents the 44th District of California and is co-chair of the United for Climate and Environmental Justice Congressional Task Force.

Long Beach City Council Adopts Plan For Latino Cultural Center Business

The city is moving forward with plans to create a Latino Cultural Center, gathering community input and exploring potential public and private locations to recognize and celebrate the City’s Latino/X heritage.

The Office of Civic Innovation and the departments of Economic Development, Parks, Recreation & Marine, and Public Works are leading the effort to develop the framework and plan for the creation of the cultural center.

The top priorities for the activation of the Latino Cultural Center were selected through the community engagement process which includes space, facilities, programs, exhibits, services, community education, and economic development.

Details: www.longbeach.gov/iteam/priorities/latino-cultural-center

Public/Media Assistance Needed to Identify Unknown Patient

On Oct. 14, 2021, about 9 a.m., an unidentified male on a bicycle was hit by a car at 223rd and Vermont Avenue in Torrance and was brought to the hospital by ambulance. The hospital is seeking the public’s and news media’s help in identifying this patient because he had no documentation or evidence of his identity with him or in his property. Below is a general description of the patient; anyone with information that may help to identify him is asked to contact the hospital at: 424-306-6310.

Sex: Male

Race/Ethnicity: Possibly Asian

Approximate age: 50-60 years old

Eyes: Brown

Hair: Dark brown/gray salt and pepper

Height: 5’3”

Weight: 150 pounds

Other descriptive information: He has salt and pepper-colored short hair and may be balding in the front. No tattoos. He is petite, but muscular. His bicycle was reported to be spray-painted different colors. He had one key with him and a watch, socks and shoes.

Barragán Requests Gov. Newsom Declare State of Emergency in Carson

Congresswoman Nanette Diaz Barragán Oct. 18, asked Governor Gavin Newsom to declare a State of Emergency to guide Carson and Los Angeles County through the air quality crisis stemming from noxious odor emitting from the Dominguez Channel.

In a letter to the governor, Congresswoman Barragán wrote: “The odor coming from the Dominguez Channel is an issue of health and environmental injustice. My constituents are experiencing nausea, headaches, difficulty breathing, and other unbearable conditions. This odor and the associated health impacts interfere with students’ ability to learn and play safely, the operations of local businesses and the wellbeing of their employees, and the overall health and quality of life of my constituents who simply cannot avoid the smell.”

The letter follows a news conference on Friday in which Congresswoman Barragán, Carson Mayor Lula Davis-Holmes called for federal, state and county governments to immediately marshal all resources necessary to address the pervasive odors and poor air quality in Carson coming from the Dominguez Channel.

Congresswoman Barragán’s full letter to Governor Newsom can be found here: www.barragan.house.gov/Governor-Newsom-Dominguez-Channel.v6.pdf

Indigenous Peoples Honored With Tongva Monument in Rancho Palos Verdes

Several years ago, Rancho Palos Verdes resident Tom Steers had the idea to place a monument honoring the Tongva people on the Palos Verdes coastline. Steers approached the city about the monument dedicated to the peace-loving hunter-gatherers who inhabited the Los Angeles Basin and the Southern Channel Islands.

The plan came to fruition and on Oct. 16, the city of Rancho Palos Verdes unveiled the monument in a ceremony honoring the Indigenous people of Los Angeles at a site where they once fished for abalone, at Abalone Cove Park.

Designed in collaboration with the Gabrieleño/Tongva San Gabriel Band of Mission Indians, the stone monument displays interpretive bas relief plaques sculpted by artist Geri Jimenez Gould.

The monument joins a series of similar nearby installations highlighting Catalina Island, the natural habitat of the Palos Verdes Peninsula and Portuguese Bend.

The project won the support of the Gabrieleño/Tongva SanGabrielBand of Mission Indians, Los Serenos de Point Vicente and the Rancho de los Palos Verdes Historical Society before it was approved by the Rancho Palos Verdes City Council in March 2020.

Tribe leaders and elders took part in the design process to ensure historical and cultural accuracy, including Chief Anthony Morales, the late Tribal Council Elder Julia Bogany, Geri Gould, and Jesus Gutierrez, who are both Tongva-descendant elders.

The monument — a concrete block faced with Palos Verdes stone and bronze plaques — includes a central scene depicting a Tongva village with Catalina Island visible in the background. The location at Abalone Cove was selected for both its historical significance and its high visibility, as the park sees thousands of visitors each month.

In the precolonial era the Tongva people of California from the Los Angeles Basin and the Southern Channel Islands, inhabited an area covering about 4,000 square miles. During colonization, the Tongva were referred to as Gabrieleño and Fernandeño. These names were derived from the Spanish missions built on their land: Mission San Gabriel Arcángel and Mission San Fernando Rey de España.

The Tongva along with the Chumash, were the most influential people at the time of European arrival. They developed an extensive trade network through te’aats or canoe’s and a vibrant food and material culture based on an Indigenous worldview that positioned humans as one strand in a web of life.

At Abalone Cove Park, Sup. Janice Hahn presented Chief Anthony Redblood Morales with an official scroll.

“On behalf of the County of Los Angeles honoring the legacy of the Gabrieleño/Tongva San Gabriel Band of Mission Indians … today we are honoring you by unveiling this monument.” Hahn said.

Chief Morales extended greetings and welcomes to everyone before leading the crowd in a traditional prayer.

“Our songs are also our prayers,” he said. “We are the direct descendants of the ancestry that built the San Gabriel Mission over 250 years ago. I’m not going to go into the bad treatment and history that was imposed on our people. We the know the atrocities, slavery and abuse. That’s a chapter of our history that we can not ever let that be forgotten. In today’s time, it’s our opportunity to be heard.”

The chief mentioned the late Tribal Council Elder Julia Bogany who was going to be at the unveiling, but unfortunately died this past spring. Bogany’s vision was and she said, “Now, not only do we need to be verbal or heard, now is the time for us to be visible. We are the least heard people.”

Chief Morales said the city council and President Joe Biden did a good thing in acknowledging Indigenous Peoples Day, as well as the president signing the proclamation to recognize the day. He noted that alongside the president sat the first Native American woman to serve as a cabinet member, Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland.

“It’s an honor that finally, finally we are going to be visible.”

The president signed the first-ever presidential proclamation Oct. 8, for Indigenous Peoples Day, refocusing the federal holiday for Christopher Columbus toward appreciating the native people of America.

The Tongva monument was funded by more than 50 private donors. Marilyn Long, President of the Long Family Foundation, offered encouragement and initial financial support for this project.

Steers said he is pleased to see the monument shared with the public, especially during the same week as Indigenous Peoples’ Day.

Geri Gould, a Santa Fe, New Mexico-based painter and sculptor specializes in bas relief portraits for medals, coins, awards, and public works. For the monument, Gould focused on family and village life, which is central to Native American culture. The main plaque depicts a traditional Tongva village, a ki, or reed home, a young family, and fishermen preparing the daily catch. Two side panels tell the story of the Tongva and the coastal region known as Shwaanga. A fourth plaque lists the donors who made the monument possible.

“The Gabrieleño/Tongva San Gabriel Band of Mission Indians is honored that the city of Rancho Palos Verdes is acknowledging us as the local tribe of the Los Angeles Basin and allowing this sculpture to be erected on the bluffs of the Palos Verdes Peninsula, the site of Native American villages and where our people lived off the ocean,” said Chief Morales.

“When you look across the water to Catalina Island, there are burial sites there,” the Chief said. “Our ancestors lived there. When you see this monument and the waters and the Island, imagine our ancestors with their te’aats, their canoe’s, probably taking off from these shores and going back and forth.”

Rancho Palos Verdes Mayor Eric Alegria encouraged everyone to visit and appreciate the monument.

“I hope this beautiful monument serves to educate generations of Angelenos about the Tongva people, both locally on the Peninsula, and regionally.”

The monument is located just south of the parking lot at Abalone Cove Park at 5970 Palos Verdes Drive South.

Rightwing Love Fest, Anything But…

By Terelle Jerricks and James Preston Allen

On Saturday Oct. 16, a far-right political rally was held at Point Fermin Park. Organizers attempted to get a permit for the event, but according to sources at the Harbor Division of the Los Angeles Police Department, they were denied after a telephone call from Councilman Buscaino’s office. The same organizers brought a similar event to Portland, OR, a week or so before, and it ended up in violence ― a shootout between the far-right group and ANTIFA activists. The LAPD was on high alert for this event, staging more than 118 officers both at the park and offsite in case of violence. None occurred.

According to promotional flyers, the rally was called the “Fall Love Fest–United We Stand, Divided We Fall,” an attempt to mimic the hippie peace and love posters from the 1960s. Though the organizers of the event were not mentioned on the flyers, a number of the people who showed up were loud members of the Proud Boys, wearing group-identifying clothing.

Guest speakers listed in the flyer included Elsa Aldeguer, founder of Latinos for Trump, Jen Loh, who founded Latinos United for America, and Family America Project founder Genevieve Peters as well as Jesse Holguin, the founder of Lexit, named to suggest that Latinos exit from the Democratic Party. Campaign speeches were promised from candidates for state attorney general, Eric Early, Mark Meuser for Senate, and Derrick Gates for Congress. It doesn’t appear that any of them actually showed up after the permit was denied, but their followers did.

Random Lengths News photojournalist, Arturo Garcia-Ayala and publisher James Preston Allen attended the event. The following is an on-the-ground-report after leaving the event:

The LAPD was already present when they arrived. Officers were patrolling in pairs and were spread throughout the park. There were about a dozen people [event attendees] walking around in small clusters at the park. They had a tent set up for selling concessions.

After an hour, the number of attendees grew to nearly 100, who gathered at the amphitheatre. A couple of people who apparently weren’t fans of the Proud Boys walked up to attendees and hurled a few insults before leaving. Eight others, identified by the Harbor division police officers as belonging to the Rancho San Pedro street gang, got into a verbal altercation with the event attendees. Harbor Division officers formed a line to separate the two sides and the local gang members left. The attendees were largely from elsewhere such as Sacramento, Bakersfield and Fresno.

The LAPD said the right-wing group couldn’t have a bullhorn without a permit. The event started with introductions followed by prayer using the same jingoistic language common at Trump rallies, referencing the “stolen election” and anti-vaxxer conspiracy theories.

Otherwise, the most-common messaging was delivered on signs reading “Don’t Tread on Me” and “Fuck Biden,” along with pro-Trump flags.

Roof Korea, a group of people identifying as a security force for the event, aggressively followed people who looked like they didn’t belong or appeared to be members of the press. Roof Korea is named after armed Korean Americans defending their business during the 1992 Los Angeles Rebellion.

They engaged outsiders with the intent to provoke, as if spoiling for a fight. They harassed anyone with a camera.

Garcia-Ayala said he tried diffusing the confrontations by responding truthfully while using humor.

“They usually just went away. I went around taking pictures, but people kept saying things like, ‘you shouldn’t take pictures because you work for the liberal media.’ Or, ‘You’re ANTIFA media. You’re probably here just to take pictures of people’s faces,’” one of them said.

Though they’re trying to rebrand themselves as being about peace and love, their behavior when it came to the press was anything but. There was an edge of hostility and not “love” that underpinned this event that was just waiting for someone to light a match to this gathering, which didn’t happen. There were a handful of people who were opposed that showed up to bear witness but the vocal opposition just didn’t show up realizing that this was a made for TV News provocation.

Garcia-Ayala said he believed he was allowed to walk freely at first because of his military service (he is a veteran of the war in Afghanistan).

Garcia-Ayala said:

Even though they were promoting peace and love, a lot of them were dressed in riot gear, militarized body armor, knee and shoulder pads and helmets. Very militant. I’m kind of glad the counter protesters didn’t show up. It looked like these guys were ready for a fight. The reason why I left. It was because there was obviously beer there. these guys, these guys were getting drunk. So they were getting a little bit more brazen when it came to approaching me. So, that’s when I left.

Garcia-Ayala said he was approached by two groups of people and one individual. He was approached by Roof Korea members once, a random group of attendees the second time. And an individual who was particularly verbally aggressive. Every time Garcia-Ayala would walk away from a situation, someone would continue to follow him.

“Everytime I would take a picture, it was almost as if they wanted to just grab my camera,” Garcia-Ayala said.

Captain Jay Mastick of Harbor Division confirmed that there was only one person detained but not arrested and that he had officers from Metro Division on standby if trouble erupted and others from through LAPD on duty that day.