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Unvaccinated People More than 29 Times More Likely to be Hospitalized with COVID-19

A new Centers for Disease Control and Prevention or CDC report stated Los Angeles County data shows that the COVID-19 infection rate among unvaccinated persons was 4.9 times and the hospitalization rate was 29.2 times the rates of fully vaccinated people in Los Angeles County on July 25, 2021.

Public Health analyzed data for laboratory-confirmed cases of COVID-19 reported from testing laboratories and from the California Immunization Registry 2 or CAIR2. The report showed fully vaccinated people with COVID-19 infection were significantly less likely than unvaccinated persons to be hospitalized, to be admitted to an intensive care unit, to require mechanical ventilation, or to die from COVID-19 infection.

The CDC report describes age-adjusted infection and hospitalization rates between May 1, 2021 and July 25, 2021 by vaccination status.

The findings in this report are similar to those from recent studies indicating that COVID-19 vaccination protects against severe COVID-19 in areas with increasing prevalence of the SARS-CoV-2 Delta variant. The reports highlight that efforts to enhance COVID-19 vaccination coverage, in coordination with other prevention strategies, are critical to preventing COVID-19–related hospitalizations and deaths.

Many vaccination sites across the county, including all the County-run sites, are also offering third doses of vaccine to eligible immunocompromised people. To find a vaccination site near you, make an appointment at vaccination sites, and much more, visit: www.VaccinateLACounty.com (English) and www.VacunateLosAngeles.com (Spanish). If you don’t have internet access, can’t use a computer, or you’re over 65, you can call 1-833-540-0473 for help finding an appointment, connecting to free transportation to and from a vaccination site, or scheduling a home-visit if you are homebound.

Details: www.publichealth.lacounty.gov.

California Legislature Approves Bill to Expedite Compensation Protections for Student Athletes

Senate Bill 26, authored by Senator Steven Bradford (D-Gardena) and Senator Nancy Skinner (D-Berkeley), and co-authored by Senator Scott Wilk (R-Santa Clarita) Aug. 25, passed the California Senate after clearing the Assembly on Aug. 19.

SB 26, known as the Fair Pay to Play Act 2.0, advances the effective date of the Fair Pay to Play Act in SB 206 (2019) from Jan. 1, 2023 to Sept.1, 2021.

SB 206 was the first law in the nation to give student athletes the right to compensation for their name, image, and likeness, allowing them to earn money from sponsorships, endorsements and other activities. SB 26 extends the protection of student athletes to include compensation for their reputation in addition to their name, image, and likeness. The Bill further expands entities covered under the Fair Pay to Play Act to include the California Community Colleges.

Since the passage of SB 206, over 30 other states have initiated plans to introduced similar laws to SB 206. About 17 states have enacted similar laws, and eight states have them going into effect on July 1, 2021 (including Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, and New Mexico, Ohio, and Texas).

The National College Athletic Association’s (NCAA)’s Division 1 Council voted in late June to allow student athletes to earn money for autograph signings, personal appearances, endorsements, and social media platforms. In the 2017 fiscal year, the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), which operates as a nonprofit organization, reported $1.1 billion in revenue.

Earlier in June, the Supreme Court ruled in National Association of Intercollegiate Athletic Association v. Alston, that the NCAA does not have blanket authority to deny the rights of college athletes when it comes to just compensation, and doing so would violate antitrust laws. In October 2020, the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics voted to let players earn money for public appearances and endorsements. Schools have already started to partner with companies to help athletes navigate the landscape of NIL.

SB 206 authored by Senator Skinner and Senator Bradford, allows athletes to earn money using their name, image and likeness or NIL without the compensation affecting their scholarship eligibility or ability to play sports. It also prohibits athletic associations, conferences, and others with authority over college sports including the National College Athletic Association (NCAA) from preventing students from using their NIL. Before the law, the stance from the NCAA was that student athletes should only be allowed to receive scholarships and stipends for living costs, and that they should not financially benefit from their talents or fame.

SB 26 will next be sent to Governor Gavin Newsom for his signature.

Terminal Island Water Reclamation Plant Reports Release of Acidic Treated Wastewater into the Ocean

Unrelated to Bacterial Levels at Cabrillo Beach

On Aug. 25 about 1p.m., the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health or Public Health received a report from the California Office of Emergency Services or Cal OES that approximately 400,000 gallons of acidic treated wastewater had been released into the 1-mile outflow due to a maintenance flush at the Terminal Island Water Reclamation Plant in San Pedro, near the breakwater and the Los Angeles Lighthouse.

Yesterday’s release affected pH levels near the site of the incident, but due to the distance of the outflow or pipe and ocean currents, LASAN or LA Sanitation & Environment reported via telephone Aug. 26, that water pH levels were within the acceptable pH range of 6.5-8.5 at Cabrillo State Beach. It should be noted that this release of treated wastewater did not cause yesterday’s Public Health Ocean Water Use Warning notification for Inner Cabrillo Beach in San Pedro, which has had bacteria levels that exceeded State standards for the past five days.

Public Health tested the ocean waters in the surrounding areas and concluded that pH levels were normal. Beachgoers are still advised to stay out of the water under current warning notification until testing by Public Health indicates bacterial levels have returned to within State standards.

Muntu Davis, MD, MPH, Los Angeles County health officer said while this incident did not cause water quality to exceed acceptable levels, Public Health will continue warning beach goers when water quality levels exceed health standards

Barbara Romero, Executive Director of LASAN which runs the Terminal Island plant said that there is no cause for alarm and at no time did this incident pose a threat to the public nor impact the existing bacterial level at the beach.

Recorded information on beach conditions is available 24- hours a day on the County’s beach closure hotline: 1-800- 525-5662. Information is also available online at our website: PublicHealth.LACounty.gov/Beach/.

LASD Assists Redondo Beach PD With Officer Involved Shooting At Torrance Blvd.

Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department Homicide Bureau detectives are continuing to assist the Redondo Beach Police Department with an attempted murder/Officer-Involved Shooting investigation.

The incident occurred Aug. 25, 2021 about 8:20 p.m. at the Redondo Beach Pier, 100 block of west Torrance Blvd., Redondo Beach.

Detectives have learned that officers assigned to the Redondo Beach Police Department responded to the location regarding a gunshot victim call and an active shooter. Upon their arrival, the officers located two victims, one male Hispanic juvenile suffering from a gunshot wound to the lower torso and a male Hispanic adult also suffering from a gunshot wound to the lower torso.

Both victims were transported to a local area hospital where they were treated for non-life threatening injuries and are in stable condition.

Officers located the suspect, who was armed with a handgun and a knife. When the officers attempted to detain the suspect, an Officer-Involved Shooting occurred. The suspect was struck in the upper torso and pronounced dead at the scene.

No officers or additional civilians were injured during the incident. A handgun and knife were recovered at the scene. The investigation is on-going and there is no other information available at this time.

Anyone with information about this incident is encouraged to contact the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department’s Homicide Bureau at 323-890-5500.

For anonymous line dial 800-222-8477, or by use the website http://lacrimestoppers.org

Port Hosts Sept. 1 Pier B Rail Facility Meeting

The Pier B On-Dock Rail Support Facility project team will update the public on the status of the Port of Long Beach project during a virtual community meeting Sept. 1.

Register here.

You can join this virtual meeting from a computer, phone or other mobile device. A recording of the meeting will be posted at www.polb.com/PierB for those unable to participate. Requests for translation must be received by Aug. 27. Call Veronica Quezada at (562) 283-7722 or email at veronica.quezada@polb.com for translation or assistance registering for the event.

Comuníquese con Veronica Quezada al (562) 233-7980 o por correo electrónico a veronica.quezada@polb.com antes del viernes 27 de agosto para obtener servicios de interpretación o asistencia con el registro.

The planned Pier B On-Dock Rail Support Facility is the centerpiece of the Port of Long Beach’s $1 billion rail capital improvement program. It will shift more cargo to “on-dock rail,” where containers are taken to and from marine terminals by trains. Moving cargo by on-dock rail is cleaner and more efficient, as it reduces truck traffic. No cargo trucks will visit the facility. Instead, smaller train segments will be brought to the facility and joined together into full-sized trains.

Construction is set to begin in 2023. The first arrival, departure and storage tracks are expected to be completed in 2024, with additional tracks coming online in 2030, followed by project completion in 2032. View the project fact sheet and more information at the project page.

Time: 10 a.m. Sept. 1

Details: Register: www.polb.webex.com/pier-b-rail-facility-meeting

What the US Didn’t Learn in Afghanistan, According to the Government’s Own Inspector General

A lacerating report this week was the 11th in a clear-eyed series that revealed the US failure to reconstruct Afghanistan over two decades. Why didn’t anyone heed the inspector general’s warnings?

by Megan Rose for ProPublica

The chaotic collapse of the Afghan military in recent months made starkly clear that the $83 billion U.S. taxpayers spent to create and fund those security forces achieved little. But a new report this week by the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction also reveals the depths of failure of the United States’ entire 20-year, $145 billion effort to reconstruct (or construct, in some cases) Afghanistan’s civil society.

John Sopko, the special inspector general since 2012, has long chronicled the government’s miscalculations. In his latest lacerating assessment, he concluded that “the U.S. government continuously struggled to develop and implement a coherent strategy for what it hoped to achieve.” The U.S. effort was clumsy and ignorant, the report says, calling out the hubris of a superpower thinking it could reshape a country it didn’t understand by tossing gobs of money around.

Read more at: https://www.propublica.org/article/what-the-us-didnt-learn-in-afghanistan-according-to-the-governments-own-inspector-general?utm_source=sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=dailynewsletter&utm_content=river-links

Federal Grand Jury Expands RICO Indictment Against MS-13

Nine new defendants and a series of previously uncharged murders are included in a federal grand jury indictment unsealed Aug. 24, that significantly expands a wide-ranging racketeering indictment targeting an arm of the MS-13 transnational street gang.

The 18-count Third Superseding Indictment, which was unsealed following the arrests of four defendants this week, alleges that members and associates of MS-13 murdered 11 people, five of whom were hacked to death with machetes or knives in the Angeles National Forest. The indictment, which was filed Aug. 5, adds nine defendants to the previous version of the indictment and nearly doubles the number of charged murders.

Mara Salvatrucha was formed in Los Angeles in the mid-1980s, and the street gang now comprises tens of thousands of individuals in at least 10 states and several Central American countries, notably El Salvador. In the mid-1990s, Mara Salvatrucha became associated with the Mexican Mafia and added the number 13 to its name (“M” is the 13th letter of the alphabet). To become a new member of a Mexican Mafia-affiliated gang, an individual underwent a 13-second beating by other members of the gang.

This case focuses on MS-13 Los Angeles’ Fulton clique, a particularly violent subset of MS-13 that operates in the San Fernando Valley and has been bolstered by an influx of young immigrants from Central America.

In addition to murders previously charged in this case the new indictment charges the January 2019 murder of a man who was fatally shot in a remote area near Santa Clarita and whose remains were not recovered until the Tick Fire burned the area 10 months later.

According to the new indictment, all 11 murders are alleged to have been committed “for the purpose of gaining entry to and maintaining and increasing position in MS-13 Los Angeles.”

The 111-page Third Superseding Indictment names 31 defendants, 21 of whom are charged with conspiring to violate the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations or RICO Act. The RICO charge alleges nearly 300 “overt acts,” including acts involving murder, drug trafficking and extortion.

The new indictment was unsealed just before scheduled arraignments for three new defendants who were taken into custody in the Los Angeles area. The fourth new defendant was arrested in Colorado. Two new defendants were already in federal custody, and three new defendants were already in state custody.

The RICO case is the product of an investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Los Angeles Police Department, and the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.

Pfizer COVID-19 Vaccine Receives Full Approval from FDA; Healthcare Facility Vaccine Verification Compliance Begins

On Aug. 23., the U.S. Food and Drug Administration or FDA approved the license for the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine for the prevention of COVID-19 disease in individuals 16 years of age and older. The Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine continues to be available under emergency use authorization or EUA for those 12 through 15 years old and for a third dose in certain immunocompromised individuals. The licensing approval was announced after another thorough evaluation of safety and effectiveness data by a panel of scientific and medical experts. FDA-approved vaccines undergo the agency’s standard process for reviewing the quality, safety and effectiveness of medical products.

Also today, acute care and long-term care facilities, high-risk congregate facilities, and other healthcare facilities must be in full compliance with the State’s order that requires these facilities to verify the vaccine status of all workers. The State order also requires compliance with respirator and masking mandates and screening testing. And, by Sept. 30, healthcare workers are required to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19.

 

Anyone 12 and older living or working in L.A. County can get vaccinated against COVID-19. Many vaccination sites across the county, including all the County-run sites, are also offering third doses of vaccine to eligible immunocompromised people.

To find a vaccination site near you, make an appointment at vaccination sites, and much more, visit: www.VaccinateLACounty.com (English) and www.VacunateLosAngeles.com (Spanish). If you don’t have internet access, can’t use a computer, or you’re over 65, you can call 1-833-540-0473 for help finding an appointment, connecting to free transportation to and from a vaccination site, or scheduling a home-visit if you are homebound. ,

Details: www.publichealth.lacounty.gov.

Vaccinated Continue to be Protected from COVID-19

Los Angeles County continues to see broad protection from the vaccines against negative health outcomes from COVID-19.

The data shows as of Aug. 7, unvaccinated younger adults between the ages of 18 to 49 were 25 times more likely to be hospitalized than vaccinated adults of the same age, with a rate of 20 hospitalizations per 100,000 people.

Meanwhile, unvaccinated older adults 50 and over were nearly 12 times more likely to be hospitalized than vaccinated adults 50 and over, with a rate of 59 hospitalizations for every 100,000 people.

Unvaccinated adults ages 18 to 49 have a death rate of 0.9 per 100,000 people, and there were virtually no deaths in vaccinated members of this age group. Meanwhile, adults over 50 who are unvaccinated have a death rate of 5.9 per 100,000 people, and were 17 times more likely to die as a result of COVID-19 than vaccinated adults over 50 who had a rate of 0.35 per 100,000 people.

L.A. County continues to offer COVID-19 vaccines at many different sites across the county that have weekends and evening hours. Anyone 12 and older living or working in L.A. County can get vaccinated against COVID-19. Many vaccination sites across the county, including all the county-run sites, are also offering third doses of vaccine to eligible immunocompromised people.

Vaccinations are always free and open to eligible residents and workers regardless of immigration status. To find a vaccination site near you, make an appointment at vaccination sites, and much more, visit: www.VaccinateLACounty.com (English) and www.VacunateLosAngeles.com (Spanish). If you don’t have internet access, can’t use a computer, or you’re over 65, you can call 1-833-540-0473.

Details: www.publichealth.lacounty.gov

Will Senate Democrats Stoop to Confirming Rahm Emanuel as Ambassador?

When President Biden announced late Friday afternoon that he will nominate Rahm Emanuel to be the U.S. ambassador to Japan, the timing just before the weekend was clearly intended to minimize attention to the swift rebukes that were sure to come.

The White House described Emanuel as having “a distinguished career in public service,” but several progressive Democrats in Congress quickly went on the attack. “This is a travesty,” Rep. Mondaire Jones tweeted. “Senators of good conscience must not vote to confirm him.” Another African-American representative, Cori Bush, said that Emanuel “must be disqualified from ever holding an appointed position in any administration. Call your Senator and urge them to vote NO.”

The response from Rep. Rashida Tlaib was pointed: “If you believe Black lives indeed matter, then the Senate must reject his appointment immediately.” Tlaib accompanied her tweet with a link to an article that The Nation magazine published in the fall of 2018, when Emanuel was nearing the end of his eight years as Chicago’s mayor, with this sum-up: “The outgoing mayor’s legacy will be defined by austerity, privatization, displacement, gun violence, and police brutality.”

All three congressmembers mentioned Emanuel’s responsibility for the notorious cover-up of the Chicago police shooting of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald. For 13 months, during his campaign for re-election in 2015, Mayor Emanuel’s administration suppressed a ghastly dashboard-camera video showing the death of McDonald, an African American who was shot 16 times by a police officer as he walked away.

After Emanuel emerged as Biden’s likely choice for the ambassador job a few months ago, longtime Chicago journalist and activist Delmarie Cobb wrote a scathing assessment of his mayoral record. While mentioning that Emanuel “closed 50 public schools in predominantly Black and brown neighborhoods,” Cobb also pointed out that “he closed six of 12 mental health clinics in these communities.” She added: “Now, who needs access to mental health care more than Chicago’s Black and brown residents who are underserved, underemployed and under constant threat of violence?”

Emanuel’s dreadful record as mayor of Chicago was in keeping with his entire career, spanning several Machiavellian decades that included stints as a member of Congress, a high-level aide for Presidents Clinton and Obama, and an investment bank director using his connections to make $18 million in two and a half years. Emanuel cemented his reputation as a combative and powerful player in the Clinton White House, pushing through policies that harmed the working class and people of color, including the NAFTA trade deal, the infamous 1994 crime bill and punitive “welfare reform.”

That Biden has now chosen Rahm Emanuel to be the U.S. envoy to Japan — the world’s third-largest economy — is, among other things, a distinct presidential middle finger to the constituency that gave him the highest proportion of support among all demographic groups in last year’s general election: Black voters.

High-profile corporate Democrats were quick to lavish praise on the Emanuel nomination. Both of the Democratic senators from Illinois helped lead the testimonials. Dick Durbin said in a statement that Emanuel “has a lifetime of public service preparing him to speak for America.” Tammy Duckworth chimed in, saying that his “years of experience make him well suited to represent the United States of America in this important role.”

Meanwhile, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi blew hazy blue smoke to an absurd degree, declaring: “In the House and, indeed, across the nation, Rahm Emanuel is known and respected by all for his relentlessness and track record of success. His great experience, from the U.S. House to the White House, will serve our nation well, as he works to deepen one of our nation’s most important alliances, champion American interests abroad and advance regional security and prosperity.”

After the nomination announcement, the Chicago Sun-Times reported that “the Biden administration is apparently willing to spend some domestic political capital with an Emanuel nomination,” and the newspaper noted that “progressives mounted a drive to block the nomination of Emanuel.” That drive, being coordinated by my colleagues at RootsAction.org, has already generated several thousand individual constituent emails to senators urging them to oppose the nomination. As RootsAction co-founder Jeff Cohen told the Sun-Times, “the #RejectRahm/‘NoToRahm’ campaign has virtually organized itself.”

A coalition of 20 organizations, mostly national while including several Chicago-based groups, has launched a grassroots campaign so that every senator will hear from constituents urging a “no” vote on Emanuel. In June, 28 victims and relatives of victims of police violence in Chicago released a joint statement, along with a poignant video, denouncing Emanuel and decrying the prospect that he’ll be rewarded with an ambassador post.

Despite the pressure for party-line conformity, Democratic support for the nomination could fracture in the Senate. Replying to letters from constituents urging him to oppose Emanuel for ambassador, Oregon Sen. Jeff Merkley — who sits on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee — seemed responsive.

“I have heard from Oregonians who are concerned about certain aspects of Mr. Emanuel’s record during his tenure as Chicago’s mayor, in particular his administration’s response to the tragic shooting of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald, a Black teenager who was killed by Chicago police in 2014,” Sen. Merkley wrote. He added that “at a time of a national conversation about police accountability and combatting systemic racism, there is so much more that we can and must do to address racism and discrimination in our law enforcement practices. … Please be assured that I will keep your views in mind should Mr. Emanuel’s nomination come before the Senate for consideration.”

Merkley is one of 11 Democrats on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, which will convene a public hearing with Rahm Emanuel before voting on his nomination. Whether Merkley and other senators will be open to preventing an Ambassador Emanuel from going to Tokyo is unclear at best. But it’s possible.

____________________________

Norman Solomon is the national director of RootsAction.org and the author of many books including War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death. He was a Bernie Sanders delegate from California to the 2016 and 2020 Democratic National Conventions. Solomon is the founder and executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy.