Sunday, October 5, 2025
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Action Delayed as Questions Cloud Emissions Control System Grant

“This is a really good project,” Port of LA Director of Environmental Management Chris Cannon told POLA’s board at its Aug. 5 meeting. He was talking about a proposed at-berth emissions capture-and-control system for tanker vessels, and requesting $333,334 as the port’s contribution to secure a $9.5 million grant from the California Air Resources Board.

But two long-time community environmental activists raised strong objections, and the board postponed action, seeking more information before reaching a decision.

At issue is both the capability of the company receiving the grant, STAX Engineering, which has never built anything before, as well as the selection process involved in choosing it over a competitor, AEG, whose AMECS system has been in use for years, and for whom members of the STAX team had previously worked.

Jesse Marquez, executive director of the Coalition For A Safe Environment, gave a glimpse into the South Coast Air Quality Management District’s sudden, unexplained, last-minute shift from initiating the grant process with AEG, to selecting STAX and then scrambling to make it look more qualified. He listed a number of additional problems as well. “Part of the technology they are using was stolen from their prior employer — three of the STAX engineering owners or principals are ex-employees of AEG and ACTI [AEG’s predecessor], so there’s a legal conflict right there,” Marquez said.

“What is the rationale of giving $10 million of public funds to a company that has never made anything?” asked Janet Gunter. “Its competitor, AMECS, offers a proven trusted system for less than half, and is currently being assisted and supported through reorganization by WBCT [actually LBCT], the largest terminal operator in the U.S.” She also raised numerous conflict of interest questions, and stressed that the Port of Long Beach had tabled consideration of its financial support.

“The two speakers make some excellent points,” Commissioner Diane Middleton said. “I’m very concerned whether or not a contract is going to a company that may not be able to execute it, and I don’t want to be cavalier and say, ‘Not our problem! We didn’t hire them.’”

“We don’t know much about STAX,” Commissioner Ed Renwick said. “There’s just a lot of unknowns. The last thing I want is to approve something that we haven’t vetted.”

In the end, the board voted unanimously to table the matter, pending further information regarding the questions raised.

The Port of Long Beach is scheduled to consider the matter on Aug. 23.

Anger Management and Homelessness

Buscaino staff keep getting into physical confrontations with homeless rights activists

As Joe Buscaino pursues a kinder, gentler homeless sweeps agenda to become the next mayor of Los Angeles, his staff looks increasingly like the brutish, thuggish bullies of people without homes that his campaign has been characterized to be.

On Aug. 16, Buscaino announced his plan to introduce a resolution the next day that would prohibit sidewalk camping around every Los Angeles Unified School District in the City of Los Angeles. He made the announcement outside Larchmont Elementary School in Council District 13. This is the second anti-camping motion that has been introduced to the city council in as many weeks.

Buscaino said he chose this location because their classes start on Wednesday while most other schools started Tuesday. He said he did not want to be disruptive on the first day of school.

StreetWatch LA, a community activist group opposed to the recent ordinance change that would make it easier to arrest homeless individuals who refuse to go into offered housing and restrict camping in public spaces, was accosted by Buscaino’s senior aide and communications director, Branimir Kvartuc.

The kerfuffle began when Kvartuc grabbed the sign of a woman standing near the councilman. That resulted in some pushing and shouting as the councilman told Kvartuc to “back off.”

Reportedly, Kvartuc later said his intention was to move the sign so it wasn’t blocking Buscaino’s face during the news conference. He explained that the sign broke when the woman jerked back from him grabbing it. The confrontation disrupted and ended the news conference with the councilman left at the podium.

The homeless advocate holding the sign, who identified herself as Stevie, said the incident symbolizes Buscaino’s aggressive approach to the city’s homelessness issue.

“A representative for Joe Buscaino pulled down my sign and on many cameras pushed me,” Stevie said. “And then the press conference ended, because he assaulted me.”

“It’s more violence from Joe Buscaino. It’s what we’ve come to expect. Joe Buscaino loves to displace people and loves to be violent. Whether it’s what we saw today or the violence of criminalizing poverty and homelessness.”

Stevie later filed a battery report with the Los Angeles Police Department. The LAPD is investigating the incident.

Jacob Haik, left, aide to Joe Buscaino, watches as senior aide and communications director, Branimir Kvartuc confronts Jeffrey Perez de Leon, a StreetWatch LA activist. Photo from StreetWatchLA’s twitter page.

This isn’t the first time Kvartuc had to be told to calm down. A similar scenario went down a few months ago on April 15, in which fellow Buscaino aide, Jacob Haik, had to diffuse a Kvartuc tirade against StreetWatch LA.

The 5’9 Kvartuc got on his tippy-toes to force a much taller StreetWatch LA activist and Los Feliz resident, Jeffrey Perez de Leon, back. Kvartuc was apparently working on a campaign ad near an encampment on Berendo in Los Feliz far from his own backyard in the 15th District.

Perez de Leon said StreetWatch LA had been watching over the encampment’s residents in light of efforts to shut the site down regardless of whether the residents got help and shelter or not.

When he saw Buscaino filming what looked like a promo for his campaign, Perez de Leon’s only thought was to call Buscaino out on using his neighborhood as a backdrop for his campaign for homeless sweeps.

Eventually, a police officer who pulled up in a squad car diffused the situation with Haik’s help.

Napoleon Complex and short man jokes aside, these videos seem to show that it takes very little to provoke Kvartuc.

Visit www.randomlengthsnews.com to see the two altercations.

Random Happening: Funkalicious – Keep It Hot Concert

The Warner Grand Theater will be hosting the band Funkalicious, a band billing itself as the new generation of funk. The band was founded around 2005 by Fred & “Freddy Sweet” Iiams, who had a vision for how a funk band in the 21st century should sound. Freddy Sweet got together with a bunch of his friends and started gigging around.

Eventually Funkalicious started to open for major recording artists such as Lakeside, Club
Nuevo, Slave, Klymaxx, Eric Benét, Tank, Howard Hewett, Rose Royce, The Delfonics, Troop, The Mary Jane Girls, Jon B. and many many others.

Funkalicious is a crowd pleaser whose costumes and roll bounce skating references funkadelic 70s. Funkalicious draws from the musical influences: Parliament Funkadelic, Earth, Wind & Fire, The BarKays, The Commodores, Cameo, Rick James, Zapp, Teena Marie, James Brown, George Duke, Rose Royce, Heat Wave, War, and many other legendary funk bands.

This eclectic band continues to mesmerize audiences wherever it performs with their colorful alter-egos and showmanship.

With 30,000 CDs sold and an enthusiastic fan base of more than 20,000 it’s easy to see how Funkalicious fans have filled popular venues such as Morongo Casino Club Vibe, Club Nokia, Hollywood Live, Hollywood Park Casino, Universal City Walk Summer Concert, KJLH Taste of Soul Concert, Sacramento CalExpo State Fair, Santa Barbara’s Earl Warner Fair, among many others.

Bringing a righteous balance of nostalgia and new world funk, Funkalicious hits the stage
unleashing high energy, funky and soulful sounds exhilarating crowds onto their feet. A
Funkalicious performance is an unforgettable journey into the legendary past while it ushers fan’s into the future of funk.

With host Jammin Jay Lamont and special guest Klymaxx featuring Cheryl Cooley, this show promises to bring nothing but the heat and pure funk from start to finish.

Funkalicious – Keep It Hot Concert

Time: 7 p.m. Aug. 28
Cost: $25 to $40
Details: 800-595-4849; https://www.tix.com/ticket-sales/garrettmanagementgroup/6726/event/1233422
Venue: The Warner Grand Theatre, 478 W, 6th St., San Pedro

Ten Candidates Qualify for Special Election to Fill Two Vacancies

Ten candidates are competing to fill two vacancies in Carson’s city government — the fourth district’s council seat and the position of city clerk — in a special election in November. The openings were created when former fourth district representative Lula Davis-Holmes was elected mayor and ex-city clerk Donesia Gause-Aldana resigned to become city clerk in Riverside.

The fourth district is in the southern part of Carson, with the exception of a long finger that stretches from 223rd Street to Turnmont encompassing the South Bay Pavillion, the fourth is bordered by Main Street to the west, Lomita boulevard to the South and the Union Pacific rail line to the east.

The winner among the five candidates will complete the final three years of Davis-Holmes’ term. Only one has experience as an elected official in Carson — Michael Mitoma, CEO of Parking Space Technology, LLC, who served on the city council from 1987-1997. The others — Freddie Gomez, Arleen Rojas, Isais Pulido, and Dr. Sharma Henderson — are taking their first shot at municipal politics.

Gomez has resided in Carson for 50 years. He is a director of client engagement and navigation services for the nonprofit organization Homeless Healthcare Los Angeles. He says that residents deserve humble, honest and committed leaders who will listen, learn and lead based on the best interests for the people of Carson.

Pulido was born and raised in Carson. With a MBA in Business Administration, he currently works alongside the council as an aide doing casework, community relations and resolving constituent service requests. He says that he stands for public safety first, protecting children and senior citizens

Rojas is a graduate of Carson High School and is with the Los Angeles Police Department.

Henderson will give it another go after unsuccessfully running for a council seat in 2018.

Of the five candidates running for city clerk, only Vera DeWitt has experience in Carson government; more than 30 years ago she served five years on the city council, the last in 1992. The other city clerk candidates are Jeffry Caballero, Myla Rahman, Monette Gavino and Falea’ana Meni.

Caballero is a federal tax and immigration attorney, although he passed the Uniform Bar Exam for the Vermont State Bar, he is not licensed in California. Caballero claims the UBE allows him to practice immigration law in California, but the exam’s website does not list California as one of the jurisdictions the exam is accepted.

Meni ran for mayor in the most recent election and will be running for city clerk now. Monette Gavino, a special education teacher who was employed with the city in the past will be running as well. District Chief of Staff Myla Rahman who has been working for the state legislature for almost eight years now will also be running.

Update

City Clerk candidate Jeffry Caballero contacted RLn to clarify the confusion regarding his license to practice law in California. We elected to include the entirety of his clarification:

I believe the article still reflects the original statement published yesterday. I also think whoever called me misunderstood what I said. But my intention here is to rectify any misunderstanding and ensure that accurate information is provided to the public. I apologize for the complexity of the issue. Most people don’t understand how attorney licensing works.

What I was trying to convey is that those who passed the UBE have the opportunity to be admitted to the bar of over 36 states that have adopted the UBE. Admission to state bars means that the attorneys may practice both state and federal law within that state. The second part is that those licensed in any U.S. jurisdiction (or state) may practice federal law in any state, such as California, as long as they don’t engage in state law practice. State law practice requires licensing in the local state. That is why the California State Bar stated that “attorneys who practice only federal law, such as immigration, may practice in California but be licensed in another state.” This includes me. I am a federal law practitioner in California. Therefore, I am an attorney in California practicing federal law with a license from another jurisdiction (i.e. VT), which is permissible under California law. The link is provided in other emails.

Further, out-of-state attorneys would not appear on the California State Bar’s website because the local state bar does not include names of attorneys licensed in other jurisdictions. The California State Bar instead instructs people wishing to verify the attorney’s license to contact the out-of-state bar for verification of the attorney’s license. Moreover, the fact that an attorney is licensed in another state or jurisdiction does not negate a person’s status as an attorney, regardless of where they are located.

All attorneys regardless of where they are licensed go through the same rigorous educational process and testing, which is graduating from American Bar Accredited (ABA) law school, passing a bar exam, and passing the character and fitness investigation to ensure that the attorney is fit to serve the public. Additionally, I expect to be California licensed as well before the end of the year.

I hope this clarifies the confusion and the article is edited to reflect accurate information. Again, I apologize for any confusion.

RLn staff reached out to the California Bar Association, and they had the following to say:

We cannot speak to the individual’s license status in Vermont, and we cannot verify the truth of all the statements of the individual you describe and quote. However, this is what is stated on our website with regard to practice in California:

In some instances, attorneys who are properly licensed and in good standing in another state are allowed to practice in California. For example, attorneys who practice only federal law, such as immigration, may practice in California but be licensed in another state. In those instances, you can make sure they are licensed by asking for their bar license number and state and looking them up in the directory for that state.

With that said, Caballero’s name was not listed among the attorneys in the state of Vermont in good standing as of April 9. 2021. According to a scanned results letter he had posted online, Caballero passed the Uniform Bar Exam and received the results in April. That could very well explain why his name is absent from the attorneys in good standing list as of April 9. 2021.

Caballero’s clarification and RLn response will be printed in the Letters section of RLn’s print edition.

 

 

How California’s Top Democrats Paved the Way for a Republican Governor This Fall

Four weeks from now, a right-wing Republican could win the governor’s office in California. Some polling indicates that Democrat Gavin Newsom is likely to lose his job via the recall election set for Sept. 14. When CBS News released a poll on Sunday, Gov. Newsom’s razor-thin edge among likely voters was within the margin of error. How this could be happening in a state where Republicans are only 24 percent of registered voters is largely a tale of corporate-friendly elitism and tone-deaf egotism at the top of the California Democratic Party.

Newsom has always been enmeshed with the power of big money. “Gavin Newsom wasn’t born to wealth and privilege but as a youngster he was enveloped in it as the surrogate son of billionaire Gordon Getty,” longtime conservative California journalist Dan Walters has pointed out. “Later, Getty’s personal trust fund managed by Newsom’s father provided initial financing for business ventures that made Newsom wealthy enough to segue into a political career as a protégé of San Francisco’s fabled political mastermind, Willie Brown.” In 1996, as mayor, Brown appointed Newsom to the city’s Parking and Traffic Committee. Twenty-five years later, Newsom is chief executive of a state with the world’s fifth-largest economy.

Last November, Newsom dramatized his upper-crust arrogance of “Do as I say, not as I do.” Photos emerged that showed him having dinner with a corporate lobbyist friend among people from several households, all without masks, in a mostly enclosed dining room — at an extremely expensive Napa Valley restaurant called The French Laundry — at a time when Gov. Newsom was urging Californians to stay away from public gatherings and to wear masks. The governor’s self-inflicted political wound for hypocrisy badly damaged his image.

After deep-pocketed funders teamed up with the state’s Republican Party to circulate petitions forcing a recall election, initial liberal optimism gladly assumed that the GOP was overplaying its hand. But the recall effort kept gaining momentum. Now, there’s every indication that Republicans will vote at a significantly higher rate than Democrats — a fact that speaks not only to conservative fervor but also to the chronic detachment of the state’s Democratic Party from its base.

Newsom’s most fervent boosters include corporate interests, mainline labor unions and the California Democratic Party. Just about every leader of the CDP, along with the vast majority of Democrats in the state legislature, is pleased to call themselves “progressive.” But the label is often a thin veneer for corporate business as usual.

For instance, the CDP’s platform has long been on record calling for a single-payer healthcare system in California. Such measures passed the legislature during the time when Republican Arnold Schwarzenegger was governor from 2003 to 2011, and he surprised no one by vetoing the bills. But the heavily-Democratic legislature has obliged the latest two Democratic governors, Jerry Brown and Newsom, by bottling up single-payer legislation; it’s been well understood that Brown and Newsom wanted to confine the state party’s support for single-payer to lip service.

In the same vein, the CDP’s current chair, Rusty Hicks, signed a pledge that the state party would not accept fossil-fuel money. But he went on to do exactly that to the tune of several hundred thousand dollars.

As an elected member of the California Democratic Party’s central committee during the last decade, I’ve often witnessed such top-down maneuvers. Frequently, the CDP’s most powerful leaders are in a groove of thwarting the progressive aspirations of the party’s bedrock supporters — and blocking measures that would materially improve the lives of millions of Californians.

“This is what happens when the culture of high-priced consultants and cult of personality meets a corporate-controlled legislature and party,” said Karen Bernal, a Sacramento-based activist who chaired the CDP’s large Progressive Caucus for six years. She told me: “The campaign promises and vows of support for progressive policy are revealed to be nothing more than performative, while the hopes and dreams of the party’s progressive base are sent to die in committee and behind closed doors. The end result is a noticeable lack of fight when it’s most needed.”

Now, with the recall election barreling down on the state, the routinely aloof orientation of the state party’s structure is coming back to haunt it. Overall, the CDP’s actual connections to grassroots activists and core constituencies are tenuous at best, while Newsom comes across as more Hollywood and Wall Street than neighborhood and Main Street. No wonder Democrats statewide are less energized about voting on the recall than Republicans are.

If Newsom loses the recall, his successor as governor will be determined by who gets the most votes on “part 2” of the same ballot. In that case, you might logically ask, isn’t the “part 2” winner a safe bet to be a Democrat in such a heavily Democratic state? Actually, no.

On the theory that having any prominent Democrat in contention would harm his chances of surviving the yes/no recall vote on the ballot’s “part 1,” Newsom and party operatives conveyed to all of the state’s prominent Democrats: Don’t even think about it.

The intimidation was successful. Not a single Democrat with substantial name recognition is on “part 2” of the ballot, so no reasonable safety net contender exists if the recall wins. As a result, Newsom’s replacement looks as likely to be an ultra-right Republican as a Democrat. And if the replacement is a Democrat, it would almost certainly be a highly problematic fellow — a financial adviser and YouTube star named Kevin Paffrath, whose grab bag of ideas includes a few that appeal to Democrats (like marriage equality, higher teacher pay and promotion of solar and wind farms) but features a lot of pseudo-populist notions that would do tremendous damage if implemented.

Paffrath’s proposals, as described by the Southern California News Group, seek “to make all coronavirus safety measures optional, to ditch income tax for anyone making less than $250,000, to use the National Guard to get all unhoused Californians off the streets and to give trained gun owners more rights.” As a clue to the inclusivity of the “centrist solutions” that Paffrath says he’s yearning for, he introduced himself to voters with a video that “features clips from Fox News and from conservative media host Ben Shapiro.” Recent polling shows the 29-year-old Paffrath neck and neck with the front-running Republican on the ballot — bombastic Trumpist talk-show host Larry Elder.

Whether Newsom will remain governor past mid-autumn now looks like a coin flip. And what’s at stake in the recall goes far beyond California — in fact, all the way to the nation’s capital.

California’s 88-year-old senior senator, Dianne Feinstein, is widely understood to be in poor health and suffering from cognitive decline as she — with increasing difficulty — navigates the U.S. Senate, now evenly split between the two parties. Under state law, if she dies or otherwise leaves her seat vacant, the governor gets to appoint the replacement. In a worst-case scenario, a Republican becomes governor when the recall election results are certified in October and thus for at least 14 months would have the power to select Feinstein’s replacement, thereby making Mitch McConnell the Senate majority leader.

Given the looming political dangers, Sen. Feinstein should resign so that Gov. Newsom could appoint a Democratic replacement. But such a selfless move by Feinstein is highly unlikely. Despite all the talk about loyalty to their party and determination to defeat the extremism of the Republican Party, corporate Democrats like Newsom and Feinstein routinely look out for number one. That’s how we got into this ominous recall mess in the first place.

____________________________

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.

Information About Booster Shots For Long Beach Residents

The federal government has announced that starting late September, booster shots will be made available to those who initially received the Moderna or Pfizer vaccines eight months after their second dose. Mayor Garcia said that Long Beach is planning for this major effort and is committed to making these shots available to all residents and workers in the weeks ahead.

The Long Beach Health Department will be providing detailed information in the weeks ahead about how to get your booster shot. A full statement from the Health Department is available here.

Long Beach For those who are immunocompromised, booster shots are available now and information about how to get a booster shot is available here.

It is expected that people who received the Janssen (Johnson & Johnson) vaccine also will likely need a booster shot in the future, but that is still being determined. That information will be shared when it becomes available.

Details: 562-570-4636; longbeach.gov/vaxlb

L.A. Fleet Week 2021 Cancelled Due to Delta Variant

On Aug. 18, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti notified the Third Fleet and Region Southwest the postponement of L.A. Fleet Week 2021 until Memorial Day weekend 2022.

“Our teams have been collaborating to make Los Angeles Fleet Week (LAFW) a world class event,”said Garcetti in a released statement. “Ultimately, in consultation with Third Fleet, Navy Region Southwest, Los Angeles Department of Public Health, and my staff, I have made the difficult decision to postpone LAFW Memorial Day Weekend 202(1).”

Garcetti continued:

With the current uncertainty caused by the COVID-19 Delta variant, this postponement is best for the health and safety of the thousands of Angelenos who were expected to attend LAFW and of our Sailors, Marines, Coast Guardsmen, and their families, our nation’s most precious resource.

The news came from the Port of Los Angeles.This will be the second year in a row that Fleet Week was cancelled due to Covid.

Though Fleet Week has been cancelled, many of the events scheduled for First Thursday and Labor Day weekend will go on, including the following:


First Thursday ArtWalk

The planned welcome party for the sailors of the Third Fleet and Region Southwest will now just be a party of Art Walk attendees enjoying live music featuring Mike Watt and the second men and Dave Widow and the Lineup on 6th Street and Mesa. The food trucks will still be on the perimeter of the ArtWalk and the guided ArtWalk tours will continue on, starting at at 6 p.m. in The Artistry Lounge at 491 West 6th Street.Open galleries include: The National Watercolor Society, Gallery Azul and POLA-HS Pixels Creative Space.

Time: 6 – 9 p.m. Sept. 2
Cost: Free
Details: ArtWalk Tour tickets, https://www.eventbrite.com/e/guided-in-person-first-thursday-artwalk-tour-tickets-166394844459
Location: Downtown San Pedro


LA Harbor Peace Week 2021

A week of activities in San Pedro as an alternative to the normalization of war during the U.S. military’s “LA Fleet Week.” Instead, we promote the solutions of peace in the world and in our towns.

Time: Aug. 31 – Sept. 6.
Cost: Free
Details: Contact/get involved; 310-971-8280; sojournerrb@yahoo.com
Locations: Various

Peace Week kick off press conference/MFS “Leaving Afghanistan: War was never the answer.”
Time: Aug. 31, 4 to 5 p.m.
Location: 5th St. and Centre Ave., with a march to the U.S.S Iowa afterward.


Festival of Sail at the LA Waterfront

The 3-day 2021 Festival of Sail in San Pedro during Labor Day Weekend will have nonprofits, institutions, agencies and industries showcasing their opportunities for youth education, careers and community involvement. The festival will include Harbor education sails, sunset sails, free deck tours and booth activities.
Time: CANCELLED

Cuts Hurt, Music Helps Love’s Labour’s Lost

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Shakespeare by the Sea has made an art of fitting their namesake’s plays into a runtime of almost exactly two hours. They’re so consistent on this score that if they did Hamlet I’d fully expect it to come in at that length, despite meaning they’d be reducing it by literally half.

While that would be way too little of Hamlet (to my mind the Bard’s best, with nary a wasted word), on the whole I’ve been relatively content with their truncated takes, on occasion even finding these to be improvements.

Unfortunately, Love’s Labour’s Lost is an exception, with cuts to the subplot leaving the overall action a bit lacking.

Taken as a whole, there isn’t much to LLL’s plot. The King of Navarre (Mateo Mpinduzi-Mott) and a three of his most scholarly buds have sworn to lock themselves away from the world — and women in particular (quite a distraction to young men, you know) — for three years, during which time they’ll dedicate themselves to academics. Bad timing, though, because the Princess of France (Angel Dumapias) and her comely BFFs are due in court any minute now on a diplomatic mission to sort out a financial dispute (the details of which are inconsequential). Naturally, each guy falls for a gal, a fact they all try to hide from their fellows. Standard Shakespearean hijinks ensues, including mistaken identity and the haughty being brought low.

There are two problems with Shakespeare by the Sea adapting this one for the park. First, while Shakespeare’s plays are always steeped in archaic language, LLL’s got more than its fair share — and a liberal sprinkling of Latin, to boot — despite being a farce, meaning that a lot of jokes are lost in translation.

Perhaps more problematic, though, is where they’ve focused their edits: the Don Armado subplot. Armado (Cylan Brown) is one of the Bard’s standard comedy tropes: a holier-than-thou pedant who’s the butt of many jests and ultimately gets his comeuppance. Although he’s not as developed as, say, Twelfth Night’s Malvolio, Don Armado is important enough to the story arc for Shakespeare to make him the star of the play’s final scene, literally giving him the last word.

Shakespeare by the Sea has gutted this from the final scene, along with otherwise reducing his and his companions’ roles, allowing the main plot to plod along without all of its intended diversions; and defanging the funny from the finale.

For all that, Shakespeare by the Sea has added an element that pays off handsomely. Don Armado’s page, Moth, is another standard trope: the servant who’s cleverer than his boss. But Moth also sings for his supper, a role that is greatly expanded in this production, with Mickey Tron and her ukulele performing about a half-dozen numbers, including “Holding Out for a Hero” and “La Vie En Rose”. They may not have much to do with the plot, but they break up the action nicely.

Most impressive is her closer, “A Year and a Day”, which directly references LLL’s plot and whose melody is so well crafted I would not believe Tron penned it exclusively for this production were I not assured otherwise. I can’t locate the song online — including on Tron’s own website — so as of now your only chance to hear it is to go to Point Fermin Park this weekend.

Outside of that, this is standard-issue Shakespeare by the Sea: straightforward, minimalist production (though informed by a Roaring ‘20s sensibility, for some inscrutable but harmless reason); a competent cast top to bottom; and the silly turned up to 11. Not all of Love’s Labour’s Lost is here, and you won’t understand everything that is, but it’s a lovely atmosphere in a lovely setting. And you’ll be humming “A Year and a Day” all the way home.

Shakespeare by the Sea does Love’s Labour’s Lost at Point Fermin Park (807 W. Paseo Del Mar, San Pedro) only thrice more: Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m., Sunday at 7 p.m. Cost is free (donations gratefully accepted). For more details, visit shakespearebythesea.org or call (310) 217-7596.

Regarding Current Events in Afghanistan

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From Director General Ruth A. Wong, Brigadier General, US Air Force (ret)

As people witness the sad and troubling turn of events unfolding in Afghanistan, these events may affect war-era veterans in many ways—some may be feeling a range of emotions in connection to the war(s).

Support is available

If you would like to speak to someone, contact:

Veterans Crisis Line at 1-800-273-8255 and Press 1 or Text: 838255 or via the web at https://www.veteranscrisisline.net/

Women Veterans Hotline at 855-829-6636; or contact the Vet Center Call Center: 877-WAR-VETS (927-8387)

If you live in Los Angeles County and need resources, contact the Veterans Peer Access Network at 1-800-854-7771 and press *3 or click here: https://dmh.lacounty.gov/veterans/

Veterans may contact a Military & Veterans Affairs Veteran Service Officer directly by calling (877) 4LA-VETS, (213)765-9680 or (213) 765-9681 or via e-mail at outreach@mva.lacounty.gov

Please reach out to veterans you know and let them know they are valued.

Los Angeles County Health Officer Order Modified to Require Masking at Outdoor Mega Events

The Los Angeles County Health Officer Order has been modified to require universal masking at outdoor mega events regardless of COVID-19 vaccination status. Masks are required to be worn by everyone at all times except when actively eating or drinking at these events. Outdoor mega events are outdoor events with crowds greater than 10,000 attendees and include music or food festivals, car shows, large endurance events, marathons, parades, sporting events and concerts.

As the highly infectious Delta variant continues to spread, wearing masks regardless of vaccination status indoors and in crowded settings, including at outdoor mega events, reduces the risk of being infected with and transmitting COVID-19. Emerging data affirms that fully vaccinated people are well protected from severe infections with Delta variants. Although fully vaccinated people are less likely to become infected than unvaccinated people are, they can become infected and transmit infection to others.

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 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.