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CHRONICLES: The Photography of Ray Carofano

An abbreviated look at a man’s photographic life.

Photographer Ray Carofano’s career has spanned more than 50 years, first as a hobby, then a passion, and finally, a profession. Chronicles: The Photography of Ray Carofano at the Palos Verdes Art Center offers a deep exploration of the artist’s evocative photographic suites, showcasing the depth, nuance and emotional resonance of his work.

Curated by friend and artist Ron Linden, this long-awaited exhibition charts the career of the revered San Pedro artist from the painterly rendered riverrun views of the Los Angeles River (the only series in which Carofano uses color), to his hauntingly decaying landscapes in Broken Dreams, Carofano takes us on a not-so-sentimental journey, guided by a discerning eye and keen aesthetic. Whether the subject is abandoned and forgotten or functioning in isolation, these images trace society’s impact on open space like punctuation marks on a blank page.

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Ray Carofano, Doc (and Ray with camera). Slab Dwellers series. Archival pigment print. Photo courtesy of PVAC.

His series Broken Dreams is comprised of images of “outsiders,” objects and scenes in the Mojave Desert. In Carofano’s words, it’s “a place where everything seems a little out of alignment.” Salton Sea Beach #24 presents a moody sky where the space between the clouds resembles energetic beings. In the center of a chasmic expanse of water, an industrial-type structure sits alone, as if guarding this space. As the sky transfigures into a mesmerizing (and “sultry” per Linden) sea, it renders an undefined, illuminated horizon. This masterful Beach is visually intoxicating.

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Ray Carofano, “Salton Sea #24,” Broken Dreams series. Archival pigment print. Photo courtesy of PVAC

Broken Dreams provides moments of lightness among the fractured dreams. One of these, Niland (near the Salton Sea), could charm anyone, even the “radical” outsiders of the Mojave. The scene of cracked earth, tumbleweed and stormy-looking skies reveals two isolated, dilapidated buses from the rear, sitting beside each other. One, tilted slightly askew, leans on the other, supported by its friend in this deserted landscape.

Linden noted that Carofano earned a reputation as a “dark room genius,” who mastered techniques such as split-printing and split-toning. The artist’s genius is abundantly highlighted through his longtime compadre’s curation of this exhibition, which Linden calls an abbreviated look at a man’s photographic life.

It’s certain that viewers will wonder what the story is behind each one of Carofano’s photographic images. L.A. River #62 from the riverrun series, and poster art for this show, is a sleek composition of shadows, lines, color and reflection. This piece plays tricks with what you think you see. Particularly through its singular, refracted ‘X’, as it marks the scene, revealing itself both above and below water. With its simultaneously subtle and bold presence, riverrun portrays seldom seen images of the 51-mile storm drain that is still flatteringly called the Los Angeles River, Linden wrote of this series in its companion book, RIVERRUN.

 

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Ray Carofano, “LA River # 62,” 2014, Archival pigment print, riverrun series. Photo courtesy of PVAC

Slab Dwellers and Faces of Pedro reveal this singular photographer’s deep love of humanity and commitment to building community through his art. In these two suites, Carofano turns his unflinching lens on an eccentric community of desert outsiders as well as locals in his own backyard, all of them becoming characters in a complex narrative that both reveals and expands the margins of society. In Slab Dwellers’, Cornelius (the library manager), a blondeish, dreadlocked woman wearing a flannel shirt, sits at a counter, a quarter-full clear bottle, shot glass and Coke before her as her gaze averts the camera. The library shelves behind her contain all sorts of ephemera. In addition to books, there are dolls and doll heads, which resemble Cornelius in her stillness. The curious story behind this image conveys just another day in Slab City.

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Ray Carofano, “Cornelius (the library manager)” Archival pigment print, Slab Dwellers Series. Photo courtesy of PVAC

Carofano’s Faces of Pedro series is a more than two-decade, breathtaking documentary project. His book on this project, of the same name, consists of 56 black and white photographic portraits of San Pedro residents, past and present. They are each breathtaking for Carofano’s striking photographic skills and the subjects’ expressions, a few of which are confrontational. Through a dance of give and take between photographer and subject, the resulting portraits, some shocking at first glance, are empathetic in Carofano’s hands, and viewers soon understand the vulnerability and complex systems and events that brought these individuals to their circumstances. These Faces with monikers like Jiminy Cricket, New York Pete, Montana, et al, capture the depth of these souls and envisage the stories each could tell.

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Ray Carofano, “New York Pete,” 2002, Archival pigment print, Faces of Pedro Series. Photo courtesy of PVAC.

Throughout Chronicles, via Carofano’s lens, forms display personality, desert scenes arrest your mind’s eye and human subjects reach your heart.

“Much has been written about this New Haven native’s exodus to southern California where he transitioned from a highly successful career in commercial photography to launch his life-long passion as a fine arts photographer. Driven by intense curiosity and armed with virtuosic technical skills, Carofano has amassed a remarkable archive chronicling our physical, social, and environmental surroundings. I’ve been privileged to share more than three decades of friendship and collaboration with Ray and his wife, Arnée. Chronicles is but a brief synopsis of a remarkable, wide- ranging, career.” — Ron Linden

Born in 1942 in New Haven, Connecticut, Carofano studied at Quinnipiac College, Southern Connecticut State College and Paier School of Art. Largely self-taught, his passion for photography began at an early age when his parents gifted him a complete set of The Encyclopedia of Photography.

Ray Carofano’s work can be found in the permanent collections of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Texas; University of Texas, Gernsheim Collection, Austin, Texas; Santa Barbara Museum of Art, Santa Barbara, California; Museum of Photographic Arts, San Diego, California; Galera de Arde Fotografo, San Miguel Allende, Mexico; Fototeca de Cuba, Havana, Cuba, and many private and corporate collections here and abroad.

Time: 6 to 9 p.m., artist reception, June 7. Chronicles runs to July 5

Cost: Free

Details: pvartcenter.org

Venue: Palos Verdes Art Center, 5504 Crestridge Road, Rancho Palos Verdes

Martyrs of the Waterfront

 

Union Remembers Fallen Workers in Ceremony and Struggle

On May 15, the ILWU Locals 13, 63 and 94 showed up at John S. Gibson Park to remember Dickie Parker and John Knudsen, two longshore workers who had been martyred and more than a hundred others who died on the waterfront doing their job since the founding of the ILWU in 1934.

Greg Mitre served as the master of ceremonies in place of Local 13 president Gary Herrera.

Mitre said the presidents of Locals 13, 63 and 94 weren’t there that day because they’re in San Francisco in arbitration regarding a safety issue at a terminal at the Port of Los Angeles.

“That puts our members in peril and it’s a safety issue,” Mitre said. “It was so important that we’ve taken it to the coast arbitrator, which means that it will have coast implications. And once implemented, it will be implemented coastwise.”

Councilman Tim McOsker expressed deep gratitude and humility for being included in the First Blood event. Reflecting on his family’s union roots and his appreciation for the sacrifices made by workers — especially those who lost their lives in early labor struggles — he acknowledged the ongoing fight for dignity, safety, and fair treatment, now waged in boardrooms instead of the streets. He credited union leaders for equipping him with the knowledge to advocate effectively for working families. McOsker emphasized the vital role labor plays in securing livelihoods and concluded by likening Jesus to a unionist who led a movement that changed the world.

Dickie Parker and John Knudsen were the first workers killed during the lead-up to the 1934 West Coast general strike, marking the beginning of violent clashes in a historic labor movement. Before 1934, longshoremen lacked strong union representation, with company-controlled unions dominating after World War I.

However, the 1933 National Industrial Recovery Act sparked a surge in union membership and renewed demands for fair labor conditions, including a closed shop, union hiring halls and a coastwide contract.

Employers refused these demands, insisting on an open shop, and proposed arbitration under that condition, which the longshoremen rejected. This led to widespread slowdowns, though workers in Los Angeles and Long Beach were criticized for not striking hard enough. In response, around 300 local dockworkers rallied at Point Fermin and later confronted strikebreakers at Pier 146, where Parker and Knudsen were fatally shot by employer-hired guards.

Their deaths symbolized the beginning of the strike’s violent phase, which soon spread to San Francisco and Seattle. Though others died later, Parker and Knudsen’s deaths marked the “first blood” of the struggle — a fact remembered with pride by the local labor community for their sacrifice in a pivotal moment for union rights on the West Coast.

To commemorate the spilling of that first blood, a ceremonial piper performed Flowers of the Forest. The honor guard from VFW Post 2967 lead by quartermaster Carlos Portillo lead the pledge of allegiance in full regalia and ILWU pensioner and poet laureate, Jerry Brady, read one of his poems, First Blood. The event was capped by the release of a dozen white doves in honor of the dead and bacon-wrapped hotdogs and soft drinks for everyone in attendance.

Roots of Radical Traditions

 

From Memorial Day to the Pledge of Allegiance

These days, Memorial Day seems like nothing more than a good time for a barbecue, a vacation to Laughlin, or a round of golf while others plant flags on the graves of veterans. Long forgotten is the memory of why this holiday came about in the first place. Memorial Day emerged after the bloodiest conflict in United States history — the American Civil War — in which some 700,000 were killed, many more wounded (more dead than all the other wars we’ve ever fought). It was a war that divided our nation not unlike how we are divided today. Now, oddly enough it’s a culture war, over many issues that we thought were long settled that are residual from that war.

Memorial Day is now relegated to mourning all veterans of all wars, even the ones we as a nation should never have fought — Vietnam and Iraq come to mind.

The coincidence of this day with the Fleet Week U.S. Navy recruitment exposition adds another layer of complexity that elevates the art of war but ignores the costs of blood and treasure to our nation. We show off all the hi-tech weapons and military might but not so much the sacrifices that come with deployment and combat. Ask any veteran with PTSD about being in a war zone.

The original Decoration Day was started by the mothers and widows of the dead of that gruesome war. You might even imagine that it was a protest of sorts that would emerge in the 20th Century as Mothers for Peace. It was a radical idea that caught on and in 1868 was adopted by the veterans of the Grand Army of the Republic. One early Memorial Day account occurred in Boalsburg, PA, where a trio of women decorated the graves of fallen soldiers in October 1864.

Another was held in Charleston, SC, where Black freedmen and white “Northern abolitionist allies” hosted an enormous and historically significant program on May 1, 1865, at the “Martyrs of the Race Course” cemetery where 257 Union dead were buried. This was clearly a radical idea for its day — there were no barbecues or baseball games.

The Pledge of Allegiance, “I pledge allegiance to my Flag and the Republic for which it stands, one nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.” The first version was written in 1885 by Captain George Thatcher Balch, a Union Army officer in the Civil War who later authored a book on how to teach patriotism to children in public schools.

In 1892, Francis Bellamy revised Balch’s verse as part of a magazine promotion surrounding the World’s Columbian Exposition, which celebrated the 400th anniversary of Christopher Columbus’ arrival in the Americas.

Francis Bellamy was a Baptist minister, a Christian socialist and the cousin of the author Edward Bellamy, author, journalist and political activist most famous for his utopian novel Looking Backward. The idea of the pledge was the idea of unifying the nation after this most bloody civil war, that even 20 years after still divided this country.

However, the very ideals of the pledge — with liberty and justice for all — still seems as radical today with the Black Lives Matter and the attacks on “wokeness” and critical race theory. We are still in a civil war over the “for all” part of our justice system that seems to be for some, mostly rich and definitely privileged and not all equally.

How else to explain how the Orange Felon has avoided prison on multiple felony counts and then elected president and having all cases summarily dropped? How else to account for his bribery, his violation of the Emoluments Clause and his pardoning of the majority of the Jan. 6 insurrectionists?

We do have a biased and often weak judiciary that even now, as lower courts rule against the Orange Felon, he tries to intimidate and even gets away with not following court orders on deporting immigrants. These are acts that would place the average citizen in jail, but not him.

So here we are in the first quarter of a new century, 250 years after our founding of the first modern democratic republic, and wondering if the next Fourth of July we will still have that republic.

Will we remember amidst all the flag waving and barbecues that this is something that our ancestors fought and died for, birth right citizenship, that bright light held up by the Statue of Liberty that was a beacon to the world at large for the oppressed and the homeless fleeing political oppression and autocracies abroad? Or will we now just be silent and submit to the censorship of contemporary fascism?

It happens incrementally by going after the undocumented immigrants first, then those who speak up for the oppressed, then the academics and the news media who write or report on the abuses of power. Will they go after the artists like Bruce Springsteen who speak out and deplore the actions of the Orange Felon, and then who is next?

True freedom is still a very radical ideal, one that must be defended in each generation and our greatest enemy is now not from abroad but from within, by people who venerate the wealthy, bow to abuses of political power and never question the authority of those who act with impunity and injustice against those without power or money.

This is a time for the reset button on our liberties where we have the temerity to ask “What exactly does it mean to be free in this moment?” For many, it’s come down to being shackled by debt, homeless out of greed and powerless to speak out of fear of retribution.

This is no longer the land of the free and the home of the brave, but a form of servitude to the oligarchs. And I feel that there’s a reckoning coming. Will you be the next one to speak out?

Neon Sun: Inside San Pedro’s Most Artistic New Eatery

 

Have you heard about the new restaurant on 9th Street called the Neon Sun? The buzz it’s been getting as of late has been deafening. The restaurant feels like a curated art experience, from the walls to the eating utensils, which I later learned were designed by a local artist who goes by the name Kurtis.

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The table is set with handmade ceramics and unique utensils made by local artist Kurtis. Photo by Arturo Garcia-Ayala.

 

I ordered the warm cabbage salad, a vibrant dish featuring chili crisp, mint, cilantro, garlic, ginger, and delicate slivers of Chinese sausage served over sautéed purple cabbage. The combination of flavors and textures was exciting and satisfying. With a side of rice, it could easily stand as a main dish. My only gripe? There wasn’t enough sausage — but that’s just the meat-eater in me talking.

Next up was the wagyu poke, featuring seared wagyu beef, shishito peppers, pineapple, cucumber, and another hit of chili crisp. The beef was cooked to a tender medium rare and beautifully infused with the sweet and tangy notes from the pineapple and cucumber. If I had been drinking that night, it would’ve paired perfectly with a crisp white wine or light cocktail.

This leads me to the next detail. Neon Sun is B.Y. O. B (Bring your own beverage), at least until the eatery gets its beer and wine license. Tori admitted that more than one patron has complained of being unable to get bottle service there, given the cutting-edge nature of their menu.

When I first looked at the menu, it immediately struck me as a curated culinary experience. And of course, when I visited the restaurant, my expectations were confirmed, from the paintings on the wall, the seated area in the corner that looked like you’d see it at a home. The dining experience offers high-end comfort foods from the Mediterranean Sea to the Pacific Rim.

The concept is the brainchild of Satori Aten and Chef Alex Schwartzman, who wanted to create a restaurant that defied typical genre boundaries.

“We talked about how it’s always focused on one specific kind of food,” Satori explained. “We wanted to offer different types of food from different parts of the world.”

Her five-year-old son, Neon, was another reason she wanted a restaurant that catered to such diverse palettes. She exposed him to a variety of cuisines and dishes from an early age.

“He’ll ask for sashimi or shrimp and scallops. But then the next day, he might want an empanada because I fed him a lot. We always made sure he had an advanced palette.

“So it’s just kind of like being able to tap into different cultures from people who might come from this area, who might come from that area, but still, we can offer them something.”

Schwartzman brings 23 years of experience in the food service industry. He was the opening chef at Baran’s 2239 and later worked at Salt & Pearl and Montauk, both located in Redondo Beach. His resume also includes time with the King’s Seafood Company, where he developed his skills at Fish Camp and Water Grill in downtown Los Angeles. Most recently, he served as executive chef at Pier House in Venice Beach.

For chef Alex and Tori, the Neon Sun is a passion project that’s forced them to work multiple jobs to see this vision through.

But her desire from the start was to create a space where great art, great food and community exist.

“We got the food part, we got the art part down. I’m just dying for the community [part now],” Satori said.

Then Elisa Palacios applied to become a server at Neon Sun. Tori hired her on the spot. They worked and they vibed together. Then out of the blue, “What if during the day, since you guys aren’t using the space, I did a coffee shop?” Palacios asked.

Satori collaborated in the past with providers who used her kitchen for juicing and brought on folks who hosted poetry slams and open mics at the restaurant. So Palacios’ idea was music to Satori’s ears, and Sunken City Coffee was born.

Neon Sun isn’t just another trendy spot — it’s a community-driven, globally inspired gathering place where food, art and culture intersect. Whether you’re craving wagyu poke, warm cabbage salad, or a shot of espresso from Sunken City Coffee, the experience promises to nourish more than just your appetite.

 

Sunken City Coffee

Not Just Coffee: A Third Space for San Pedro Locals

Elisa Palacios said the idea for Sunken City Coffee began while working remotely and struggling to find a quiet space to focus.

“I get distracted very easily,” she said. “I loved Sacred Grounds, but I wanted to move around sometimes so it didn’t feel like the same day over and over again.”

Incidentally, Sunken City Coffee opened the same week Sacred Grounds closed.

While she appreciated Sirens for its lively energy and Distrito for its coffee, both places felt too busy or too small for working long hours.

She and a few friends often found it hard to locate a calm, welcoming spot where they could settle in without pressure. That search inspired her to create a different kind of space — one built around comfort and calm.

Before Sunken City, Palacios ran a pop-up at Feed and Be Fed, the garden church on Sixth Street. She served coffee and baked goods during Little Sprouts, a Friday morning program where parents and children ages 0 to 6 played in the garden.

“The idea was to bring something fun and fuel the moms,” she said. That pop-up, with its “communal coffee culture in nature,” planted the seed for something more lasting.

Palacio later connected with Tori Aten and Chef Alex Schwartzman of Neon Sun. When they discussed expanding the restaurant’s hours, Palacio pitched her coffee concept. Since Neon Sun already had an espresso machine, launching Sunken City Coffee inside the space came naturally.

“Tori embodies the décor — it literally looks like your living room,” Palacio said. “It’s homey and comfortable.”

Now open six days a week during breakfast and lunch hours, Sunken City keeps its menu simple: espresso, Americano, iced coffee, and lattes. Palacio makes all syrups and pastries herself, allowing her to rotate weekly specials based on seasonal ingredients and inspiration.

“It’s just our basics,” she said. “Every week I come up with something new — whatever I’m feeling.”

While many coffee shops prioritize rare beans and extensive menus, Palacio said most customers want something familiar: a good cup of coffee, a treat and a calm space.

“There’s a handful of people who park their behinds in a seat and work for a couple of hours,” she said. “That’s what I wanted — somewhere people can hang out and not feel rushed.”

Her definition of success isn’t a long line out the door. It’s a slow, steady flow of people throughout the day.

“They stay a little, then leave. Someone else comes in and stays a little,” Palacio said. “It’s easier to manage, and it doesn’t feel overwhelming.”

 

Environmentalists Warn

 

Build Back Better” Blocked by State’s New Building Standards Freeze

The climate of climate policy has been bleak in California, says Bill Magavern, policy director for the Coalition for Clean Air. But there are still major changes moving through the legislature that could offer hope, says Sherry Lear, with 350 Southland Legislative Alliance, a regional group affiliated with 350.org.

“This continues to be a very challenging year for air/climate advocacy,” Magavern said. “The Trump Administration is attacking California’s protections, the state budget is in deficit, and most California elected officials seem to be in retreat mode when it comes to public health.”

Yet, “This is a very intensive climate legislative session,” Lear told Random Lengths. “There are a lot of bills related to climate issues,” including tangentially, “a lot off bills regarding homeowners insurance because of the fires,” But her group has focused a lot on bill related to the utility system, including the first legislation they’ve ever sponsored, which would move the state to a performance-based system that could both encourage renewable energy and save ratepayers money.

Regulatory standards are “the foundation of California’s efforts to clean up the air,” complemented with “incentive funds to advance the technology and turn over fleets more quickly,” Magavern said. And both are under attack.

California’s standards for cleaner cars, trucks, and heavy-duty vehicles are provided for via waivers in the Clean Air Act, and on April 22, Republicans ignored the Senate Parliamentarian to repeal the clean car waiver, leading Governor Gavin Newsom to immediately announce that California would sue to block the repeal. Meanwhile, House Republicans passed Trump’s murder budget, which includes repealing hundreds of billions of dollars in incentive funds provided in the Inflation Reduction Act.

Without these regulations and funds, California will violate the Clean Air Act for failing to meet air quality standards. Which could be the point, “You couldn’t put it past the Trump administration to want to make it impossible for California to attain the standards, and then on the other hand, penalize the state for not attaining those standards,” Magavern said. In fact, “During Trump one they were already making noises about that.”

At the same time, California’s budget deficit means cutbacks in state incentive funding.

“When it comes to heavy-duty transportation, state incentives have been greater than any money we got from the federal government.” When the state budget was in surplus, there was substantial funding, but “now that has been trimmed, way, way back,” along with “funding for the charging and fueling infrastructure.”

There’s also a broader retreat mode that Magavern mentioned. “I would point to the effort to reauthorize cap and trade without any reforms, which is the governor’s position, which is driven by his fear of anything that could be criticized as raising costs, particularly gas prices,” he said. Adding, “ I would point to the failure of some of the more far-reaching climate legislation that was introduced in the legislature this year.” A prime example would be SB 222, which would have empowered California residents and insurers to hold fossil fuel corporations financially liable for their contribution to climate disasters. It died in the Senate Judiciary Committee.

And there are problematic bills, such as SB 34 by San Pedro Sen. Laura Richardson, “to try to restrict the South Coast air districts’ ability to do an indirect first review rules for the ports, which is something is been needed for a long time,” Magavern said.

But despite the fate of SB 222, another far-reaching bill is still alive, if uncertain at press time.

The Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act (SB 684 in the Senate and AB 1243 in the Assembly) would “Require fossil fuel polluters to pay their fair share of the damage caused by greenhouse gases,” specifically companies responsible for at least a billion metric tons globally between 1990 and 2024. Funds would go to help pay for climate disasters like the L.A. Wildfires, as well as to finance projects such as installing solar panels in low-income communities. Similar funds have already been established in New York and Vermont.

It’s “an important bill with a huge coalition behind it,” Lear said, with “petitions, meetings with legislators, rallies, even showing up outside legislators’ offices.” It’s facing “stiff opposition” from industry, “as one would expect,” she said, and supporters “are still rallying to get enough votes to get it out of committee.” While “normally there would be more concern,” she said, “the time guidelines to get a bill out of the first house don’t apply to an urgency bill.”

But it also requires a two-thirds majority, “Two-thirds is a very steep hill to climb,” Magavern said. But it could always be converted into a two-year bill. “We often see that the most ambitious bills do not make it through in the first year of a legislative session and do become two-year bills,” he said. “If you look at AB 32, SB 32. A lot of the major climate bills have been the case with them.”

There are a number of important utility-related bills, including ones influenced by the wildfires.

SB 500, introduced by Sen. Henry Stern, the first bill ever sponsored by 350 Southland, is particularly far-reaching in scope. It would begin restructuring how investor-owned utilities work in California, initiating the process of moving them from a cost-plus “cost of service model” to a performance-based model. The existing model, which has produced significant rate increases, and “encourages the utilities to build giant projects without any oversight on costs, without any assurance that these are the most effective ways to get electricity or power to the customers,” Lear explained.

The model made sense when California first wanted to build out its utility system to create the infrastructure that we now have in place. SB 500’s performance-based regulation would modernize things “by creating some more transparent benchmarks” using metrics serving the goal we have today. “You could have affordability and cost control, you could have reliability, you could have resilience. You could know how much green energy you are producing,” she said.

Under this system, Lear explained, “The utilities have to say, ‘Here’s our plan and this is how we’re going to meet it, and if they meet it, there’s a reward. If they don’t meet it, they’re actually penalized,” which is something new. “There’s no penalty system right now.” While California is often cited as a policy leader, 17 other states already have some sort of performance-based regulation, “most notably, Illinois has had it since 2011. It’s been very successful,” she said. Hawaii’s more recent adoption in 2021 resulted in “$25 million in cost reductions, and electricity rates for four of the islands decreased from 2023 to 2024,” she reported, adding, “We’re not seeing decreases here.”

Another utility reform bill they’re supporting is SB 332, “Which is by Sen. [Aisha] Wahab, the Investor-Owned Utilities Accountability Act, that is a direct response to the wildfires,” Lear said. “It’s asking to make investor-owned utilities or IOUs more responsible and accountable to consumers, not only in the rates that they are charging, but in the way that they manage their systems and how safe they are.”

A mid-April press release from the Center for Biological Diversity provided more detail:

The bill would: cap rate increases; prevent utility disconnections for vulnerable ratepayers; reduce ratepayer contributions to the Wildfire Fund and increase corporate utilities’ responsibility for the fund; require audits and replacement of dangerous equipment in high fire-risk areas; require proposed executive compensation to be contingent on safety metrics; and fund a feasibility study to determine what form of utility best serves ratepayers.

“People are really angry with investor-owned utilities,” Lear said. This is one bill is one reflection of that, translated into concrete policy changes..

Two other utility-related bills that 350 Southland supports would add new features to the existing policy landscape. AB 740 would add virtual power plants (VPPs) as an official part of California’s energy portfolio. Explaining the concept, Lear said, “You can look at on-site batteries, or rooftop solar, or distributed energy storage as themselves a power plant. If the power goes out, resources are available to keep the power running.” For example, with bidirectional charging, “the power from the battery in your car can then run your house.” It’s “a different way of looking at creating energy sources,” she said. “You want to encourage distributed energy resources, you want to encourage rooftop solar, you want to encourage energy battery storage, as opposed to encouraging just building more and more iwire transmission from other states, which in and of themselves have proven to be a cause of fires.”

Second is AB39, the Local Electrification Planning Act, from Assemblymember Rick Zbur. “This bill requires cities and counties to include in their general plan EV chargers and building electrification opportunities,” Lear said. “One of the biggest pushes by environmentalists is to get off of natural gas and to move towards electrification because electrification, you at least have a chance that it will be powered by renewable energy such as geothermal, wind or solar.”

Another questionable utilities bill is SB 540, “called the pathways bill, which is essentially a grid regionalization bill… it will put California’s energy into at Western State energy market,” Lear said. It’s being introduced by Senate leadership and has strong support, but there’s also strong environmental opposition. “Seven of our 350 groups in the state of California are strongly opposed,” Lear said, “especially under the Trump administration, because instead of having California having an independence over its energy market, it would fall under for under the Trump” administration, which is “trying to decimate clean energy and and prop up the coal industry.” While Lear thinks that supporters are well-meaning, they’re not being realistic to surrender state power at this time.

But another utilities bill Lear describes as “really horrible” is AB 942. It would break long-standing contracts with rooftop solar customers who bought systems under state-mandated agreements guaranteeing fair terms for 20 years. Contracts would be invalidated if houses were sold. “California is effectively taking away equity from the state’s lowest-income homeowners – the very people who didn’t have cash to buy their solar system outright but rather entered into a long-term financial arrangement under terms set by the state,” a coalition of more than 90 groups wrote in a letter of opposition.

“Utility companies want to charge you for energy; they don’t want to reward you for giving them energy into the grid,” Lear said. “They will take your energy, but then they will also charge you a minimum, and that is discouraging people from doing rooftop solar, even though we now have mandates for rooftop solar. So there are very inconsistent things happening.”

Underscoring just how inconsistent, a recent study found that California’s two million rooftop solar customers saved all ratepayers $1.5 billion in 2024 alone by reducing the need for costly utility infrastructure upgrades.

Another bill opposed by many, if not all, environmental groups is AB 306, which will freeze state building standards at the 2025 level until 2031. This is hardly the time to freeze the development of better standards “to make buildings safer, to encourage more resilient buildings.” It’s a defensive, counter-productive response to the wildfires. “This is the time to make sure that when you’re building things back your building them correctly by your building them with the correct type of materials that are more fire resistant” as well as energy-efficient, “so that you’re not putting such a heavy strain on the grid, and other things that lead to the problems that were having,” Lear said. “So it’s not just build back, it’s build back better.”

“We are seeing more bills this year to roll back the standards that are protecting our air and climate or to just make it harder to adopt such standards in the future,” Magavern summed up. And there’s “a lot of skittishness among the state politicians” being driven by concerns about affordability.

“We absolutely agree. Affordability is important,” he said. But “What a lot of these officials are missing is how to actually deliver affordability,” meaning “cars that don’t run on gasoline…homes that are properly weatherized or decarbonized… particularly for low and moderate income Californians. That’s who we think should be getting the incentive money…. That’s what our officials should be focused on. Instead, they’re using affordability as a club to defeat efforts to hold the big polluters accountable. Protecting the profits of the oil companies does not help the average consumer.”

This ties directly back to SB 500, 350 Southland’s bill to shift to performance-based utility regulation. If a similar shift could cut costs in Hawaii by $25 million in one year, imagine what it could do here in California.

Power In Visibility


Japanese American Buildings on Terminal Island Make National Trust’s Endangered List


By Emma Rault, Community Reporter

The two surviving buildings from the Japanese American fishing village on Terminal Island have made it onto the National Trust for Historic Preservation’s 2025 list of America’s 11 most endangered historic places.

For nearly forty years, the trust has used this annual list to draw attention to important historic sites that are under acute threat. Almost all of the featured sites have gone on to be saved, said National Trust President and Chief Executive Carol Quillen at a webinar about the Japanese buildings held on May 7, the day the list came out.

“There’s power in visibility,” she said.

The announcement came just a few months after CD 15 Councilmember Tim McOsker nominated the two store buildings for LA landmark status, and almost a year to the day since Random Lengths sounded the alarm about the Port of LA’s proposal to demolish them.

The webinar, hosted by the LA Conservancy, told the story of Tuna Street and what makes it so important.

While many people associate Terminal Island mainly with sprawling container yards, it was once home to a thriving community of more than three thousand Japanese Americans, who played a pivotal role in the city’s booming tuna industry. The men fished, the women worked long hours at the canneries, while children went to elementary school on the island or took the ferry across to mainland San Pedro for high school.

Fish Harbor, as it was known, had a Shinto shrine, churches, gathering halls, its own baseball team, and a bustling commercial thoroughfare on Tuna Street.

All of that came to an abrupt halt after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. Japanese Americans were scapegoated, wrongly accused of being spies, and imprisoned in concentration camps like Manzanar in California’s Owens Valley.

The residents of Terminal Island were evicted at gunpoint in February 1942, forced to leave their homes within 48 hours. Soon after, the village was almost totally razed by the US Navy. “It was the only Japanese community where the built environment was almost entirely destroyed,” said Donna Reiko Cottrell, Vice President of the Terminal Islanders Association.

This makes it all the more remarkable that the two structures on Tuna Street — what used to be the dry-goods store Nanka Shoten, built in 1918, and the A. Nakamura Co. grocery store, built in 1923 — have survived.

When Port’s plans to demolish them came to light, the Terminal Islanders Association — an organization made up of some 200 survivors and descendants of the Japanese fishing village — jumped into action. They set up a dedicated preservation committee and partnered with the National Trust and the LA Conservancy to explore ways to save and revive the buildings, for example by turning them into a museum.

Paul Hiroshi Boyea, a third generation — or sansei — Japanese American who spearheads the preservation committee, said the structures “represent family, history, and culture. This is an American story that no one should ever forget.”

“The buildings prove to others that we lived there. That many people lived there,” said former Terminal Island resident Alice Nagano, 90, in a written statement shared at the webinar.

The LA landmark nomination initiated by Councilmember McOsker — an important first step in saving the buildings — will move on to a final vote by the City Council later this year.

The Murder Budget

 

Trump’s ‘Big Beautiful Bill’ Slashes Aid for the Poor to Enrich the Ultra-Rich

On May 22, House Republicans voted to give Elon Musk a massive tax break at the cost of thousands of American lives, leading critics to label it “the murder budget.”

Trump’s congressional lackeys have taken his advice, calling the “Big Beautiful Bill,” presumably because of all the goodies in it for Trump and his allies. But whatever you call it, it directly contradicts Trump’s campaign promises last year.

“Medicare, Medicaid, none of that stuff is going to be touched,” Trump said during the campaign. “We’re going to love and cherish Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, we’re not going to do anything with that.” He was smart to say that. A Data For Progress poll found that support for cutting Medicaid doesn’t exceed 15% in any congressional district in America.

But with Trump pushing hard, Republicans in Congress are poised to pass the mother of all reverse Robin Hood budgets, transferring more than a trillion dollars from the pockets of poor and working-class Americans into the bank vaults of the rich and super-rich. Medicare, Medicaid and SNAP (food stamps) will all face drastic, unprecedented cuts, millions of Americans will lose health insurance, and thousands upon thousands will die, leading some to call it a murder budget. “Hospitals in your districts will close. Nursing homes will shut down,” Democratic House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries warned. “People will die.”

The bill will add approximately $3.8 trillion to federal deficits, driven in large part by $5 trillion in tax cuts over ten years, overwhelmingly favoring the wealthy. “The $121 billion in net tax cuts going to the richest 1 percent next year would exceed the amount going to the entire bottom 60 percent of taxpayers (about $90 billion),” according to the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy. But most of the latter would be canceled out by tariffs. The bottom 40% would see net losses.

But that’s relatively good news.

Medicaid cuts of roughly $700 billion will result in the loss of coverage by somewhere between 9.7 million and 14.4 million people, according to a state-by-state projection from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. (Millions more will lose coverage as private marketplace tax credits expire.) Loss of life can be projected based on a new study by economists at Harvard and the University of Pennsylvania, which found that Medicaid expansion under Obamacare saved 27,400 lives between 2010 and 2020, while states that failed to expand Medicaid missed the chance to save 12,800 more lives. Exact figures are impossible to estimate, but thousands will surely die as a direct result of this bill. And while lives lost are the starkest measure of the murder budget’s cruelty, the hardship imposed is far more widespread.

In addition to the Medicaid cuts of roughly $700 billion, cuts to SNAP will come close to $300 billion (with 3.2 million people losing benefits), and cuts to Medicare (required by law because of the increased deficit) will top $500 billion. The cuts will have severely damaging ripple effects as well. The combination of closed rural hospitals and reduced agricultural income from SNAP will hurt Trump-supporting rural communities especially hard.

At the same time, deficits will soar and long-term investments in a carbon-free future — largely centered in Trump-supporting red states — will be terminated, essentially ceding the energy future to China, while a $350 billion cut from education and workplace training further undermines future economic growth. These combined with Trump’s hostility to higher education, science, foreigners, and the rule of law — made manifest in a barrage of executive actions — strike a deadly blow at long-term pillars of American prosperity, while Trump remains obsessed with false images of America’s past.

Sadistic Zombie Ideas Behind The Murder Budget

“Its cruelty is exceptional even by recent right-wing standards,” Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman wrote on Substack, but what’s notable is “its reliance on claims we know aren’t true and policies we know won’t work — what some of us call zombie ideas. … Think of what we’re seeing as the attack of the sadistic zombies.”

The two chief zombie ideas he cited are that tax cuts for the rich will fuel an economic boom, and that those receiving government support are unworthy malingerers who should just get a job. Both have been repeatedly refuted, only to rise again from the dead. Most conclusively, a 2020 study using data from 18 industrial nations since the 1970s found “strong evidence that cutting taxes on the rich increases income inequality but has no effect on growth or unemployment.”

Work requirements to exclude the unworthy are more varied in form, but the only direct parallel is unambiguous. When Arkansas implemented the first-ever work requirements in Medicaid in 2018, a study in the New England Journal of Medicine found that it “was associated with significant losses in health insurance coverage in the initial 6 months of the policy but no significant change in employment.” [Emphasis added]

As for those who lost coverage, “Nearly all of the people who lost coverage had met the requirements,” professors Pamela Herd and Donald Moynihan noted in a recent New York Times op-ed. “They simply couldn’t manage the paperwork to prove it.”

Combined, the two zombie ideas equate to saying that the way to grow the economy is to take money from the poor and give it to the rich. Unsurprisingly, it just ain’t so. The Wharton School Budget Model finds that as a result, “The average wage falls slightly in 10 years.”

But there’s more to the zombie attack than just those two key zombie ideas Krugman cites, destructive and dangerous as they may be. Trump has his own idiosyncratic zombie ideas with impacts going well beyond the budget bill, and the net result could well end up turning America into a shattered zombie shell of itself.

Killing The Geese That Lay America’s Golden Eggs

Combine Trump’s zombie tariff idea with his love of coal, and his belief that manufacturing jobs are intrinsically better than other jobs — ignoring the role of industrial unions in making them so — and you have a recipe for utterly disastrous economic policy, with the budget bill and his tariffs as two main pillars, but a lot of other shabby scaffolding as well.

The murder budget’s rollback of Joe Biden’s green energy tax incentives would be economically disastrous, according to analysis from Energy Innovation published in Forbes. The bill would “grind our economy to a halt by stealing 830,000 jobs by 2030, costing America more than $1 trillion in GDP by 2034, and increasing power prices 50% by 2035,” they reported.

Another key sector threatened by Trump, the tourism industry, is facing “an unprecedented decline in tourism revenue in 2025,” according to analysis from the World Travel & Tourism Council (WTTC), in partnership with Oxford Economics. The industry is poised to lose approximately $12.5 billion in revenue this year alone, which represents a staggering 22% drop from the 2019 pre-pandemic peak. That’s no drop in the bucket, since the industry contributes directly and indirectly to 9% of the nation’s gross domestic product.

Trump’s hostility to higher education, with massive cuts in the budget following early cuts by executive order, strikes at one of America’s key, generations-long economic advantages. Tellingly, the only tax actually raised on the wealthy in the bill targeted college endowments, whose largest single purpose is to support student aid. “The endowment tax effectively funnels charitable gifts from donors to the federal government without doing anything beneficial for students, and is a tax on scholarships, research, and charitable giving,” the American Council on Education said in a letter to Speaker Mike Johnson and Minority Leader Jeffries that 17 other educational organizations co-signed.

Higher education is considered the 10th-largest U.S. export, per the Bureau of Economic Analysis. International students contributed more than $44 billion to the U.S. economy last year, more than the total value of America’s telecommunications and information services exports.

Almost simultaneously, the Trump administration sought to expel all international students from Harvard — roughly a quarter of its student body. Harvard professor of medicine Jeremy Faust appeared on MSNBC to put the attack on Harvard’s international student community in a broader context.

“Nobel Prizes is a good way to understand the ripple effects of the community. The United States has what, 4% of the world’s population, but we have over 40% of the Nobel Prizes in Medicine and Physiology in the last century,” Faust said. “We [Harvard] may be the focus today, but we are just the emblem of the entire system that works. The system that says, we develop the best scientists and we attract the rest, and then we put it in the system that has public and private collaboration, that has results.”

Afterwards, Faust wrote on Substack, “I do hope to return to the airwaves to describe more of the research that has been affected by the Trump administration’s shortsighted, DOGE-driven cuts that threaten to end a century of American dominance in biomedical and scientific research.”

Another nearly-simultaneous Trump action was to declare a 50% tariff on the European Union, starting June 1 — a month earlier than the 90-day negotiating period he previously announced. Another MSNBC guest, University of Michigan economist Justin Wolfers, explained how profoundly counterproductive this was. “Right now, any manufacturing company in the world can buy precision German machinery without a 50% markup. Any company can do that except those in the United States. See what that’s done with American competitiveness right there?” he asked.

Trump has subsequently backed away again, delaying the EU tariffs until July 9, again swapping one kind of uncertainty for another, leading to another wave of stories about near-term economic consequences.

But as Wolfers noted in that interview, economists ask bigger questions, “We ask what makes some countries rich, like the United States, and some countries poor, like Argentina? Well, in fact, Argentina used to be rich a hundred years ago. It was one of the richest countries in the world. It was set to be as rich as any of us,” he said. But, “They put in place a set of political institutions that basically meant they were unable to provide the guideposts for stable economic policy and the guideposts for businesses to invest.” He went on to say, “We don’t spend enough time talking about which could undermine the state of the economy, not next year in a possible recession, but for our kids. And the effects here are huge. Realize that some countries are 50 times richer countries. And those differences aren’t about differences in the weather. They’re about economic structures.”

But sound economic structures are the last thing on Trump’s mind. On the evening after the House passed the murder budget, Trump hosted a party for 220 buyers of his meme coin, which had netted Trump-affiliated businesses $312 million from crypto sales and $43 million in total fees, according to a Washington Post analysis. Meme coins “have limited or no use or functionality,” the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission said in February, a view that Trump himself shared until very recently. Last year, he said cryptocurrencies seem “like a scam” and have values that are “based on thin air.”

Now, however, they’re a major source of Trump’s wealth, with his low-information supporters once again footing the bill. In early February, a New York Times analysis found that early traders made massive profits — more than $109 million in one case, while more than 810,000 had suffered $2 billion in losses after its price crashed. In short, it’s the same sort of reverse Robin Hood wealth transfer found in his beloved “Big Beautiful [Murder] Bill.”

Gov. Newsom Announces Appointments

 

SACRAMENTO — Gov. Gavin Newsom May 22 announced the following appointments:

Nicole Thibeau, of Los Angeles, has been reappointed to the State Board of Pharmacy, where she has served since 2021. Thibeau has been director of Pharmacy Services at the Los Angeles LGBT Center since 2013. She was the pharmacist in charge at Target Pharmacy from 2012 to 2013. Thibeau was the pharmacist in charge at CVS Pharmacy from 2009 to 2012. She earned a Doctor of Pharmacy degree from Massachusetts College of Pharmacy. This position does not require Senate confirmation, and the compensation is $100 per diem. Thibeau is a Democrat.

Seyron Foo, of Los Angeles, has been reappointed to the Board of Psychology, where he has served since 2017. Foo has been senior program officer at the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation since 2022, where he was previously senior advocacy officer from 2020 to 2022. He held several positions at Southern California Grantmakers from 2016 to 2020, including vice president of public policy and government relations, director of public policy and government relations, and senior manager of public policy and government relations. Foo was a senior policy analyst for the director’s office at the City of Long Beach Public Works Department from 2015 to 2016. He was a David M. Wodynski memorial fellow at the Long Beach city manager’s office from 2014 to 2015. Foo held multiple positions for Senate Majority Leader Ellen M. Corbett in the California State Senate from 2009 to 2012, including legislative aide and Senate fellow. Foo earned a Master in Public Affairs degree from Princeton University and a Bachelor of Arts degree in Rhetoric and Political Science from University of California, Berkeley. This position does not require Senate confirmation, and the compensation is $100 per diem. Foo is a Democrat.

SoCal Grocery Store Workers Announce Unfair Labor Practice Strike Authorization Votes

 

LOS ANGELES — United Food and Commercial Workers or UFCW Locals 324 and 770, together representing over 30,000 grocery workers, May 28 announced they will be scheduling unfair labor practice or ULP strike authorization votes next week following labor violations by Kroger and Albertsons throughout negotiations that have prevented workers from getting the fair contract they deserve.

The UFCW Local 324 and 770 Bargaining Committee said the following:

“When we started negotiating with Kroger and Albertsons on a new contract in February, we came to the table willing to put in the time and work to get a fair deal. But instead of working with us towards a reasonable contract, our employers would rather disrespect us to our faces, offer proposals that grossly underestimate our value and their wealth, and engage in multiple labor violations.

“Kroger and Albertsons’ unfair labor practices, from unlawful surveillance of members that have been active in the contract campaign, interrogation of workers at actions, threats, to retaliation for union activity, are nothing more than an attempt to strong-arm us into accepting an offer that is far less than what we deserve.

“Everyone deserves fair negotiations without fear of retaliation. We deserve fully staffed stores and fair pay that reflects our work. No one deserves to be bullied at work. By violating our rights, Kroger and Albertsons are making it harder to serve our customers and keep our stores running. That’s why we’ve been forced to take this Unfair Labor Practice strike authorization vote.

“Moving forward, we will continue to stand together with our fellow UFCW members, our customers, and our communities as we take this important next step in making our voices heard.”

UFCW members at Ralphs, Albertsons, Vons, and Pavilions in Southern California will start taking unfair labor practice strike authorization votes the first week of June. The results of the strike authorization votes will be announced after voting ends and our members are informed on June 11, 2024.

ABOUT GROCERY WORKERS RISING

Grocery Workers Rising is 65,000 essential grocery workers across Southern California rising up for what they deserve. Visit the campaign at www.groceryworkersrising.org.

These workers are employed at Ralphs, Albertsons, Vons, Pavilions, Stater Bros., Gelson’s and Super A stores. Their current contract expired on Sunday, March 2, 2025.

These 65,000 grocery workers make up the largest union grocery contract in the nation, are rising up and fighting for:

  • Living wages
  • Affordable healthcare benefits
  • A reliable pension
  • More staffing and better working conditions for a better customer experience

Tens of thousands of additional union workers at Kroger and Albertsons –the parent companies of Ralphs, Albertsons, Vons, and Pavilions– have contracts that have recently expired and could soon take strike authorization votes. If approved, these actions would bring over 100,000 Kroger and Albertsons workers to the brink of a strike at the same time, creating a major labor disruption for two of the nation’s largest grocery chains this summer, their busiest season of the year.

 

Murder Investigation – 200 Block of Pacific Coast Highway, LB

 

Homicide detectives are investigating the murder of a male adult that occurred on May 27, in the 200 block of East Pacific Coast Highway.

About 10:59 p.m., officers responded to a shots call. Upon arrival, officers located a male adult with a gunshot wound to the upper body. Officers rendered medical aid until being relieved by Long Beach Fire Department personnel who determined the victim deceased at the scene.

Homicide detectives are investigating the motive and circumstances leading up to the shooting. Detectives are working to identify a possible suspect(s).

The identity of the victim is being withheld pending notification of the next of kin by the Los Angeles County Department of the Medical Examiner.

Anyone with information regarding the incident is urged to contact homicide detectives Leticia Gamboa and Oscar Valenzuela at 562-570-7244. Anonymously at 800-222-8477, www.lacrimestoppers.org.