Saturday, October 4, 2025
spot_img
spot_img
Home Blog Page 477

L.A. County Sees Increase in COVID-19 Outbreaks

The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health or Public Health is currently investigating 55 ongoing outbreaks; a 25% increase from the 44 ongoing outbreak investigations reported a month ago.

While the increase in outbreak investigations is concerning, Public Health notes the number of outbreaks is still much lower than the 1,130 outbreak investigations that were reported in mid-February.

Of the outbreak investigations reported today, 20% are related to outbreaks in non-healthcare and non-residential workplaces.

The best protection against COVID-19 for workers is to be fully vaccinated. Because of increased transmission of COVID-19 and circulation of the highly transmissible Delta variant in L.A. County, Public Health encourages everyone who is not vaccinated and are eligible to get vaccinated, to get vaccinated as soon as possible. Public Health encourages everyone unvaccinated for COVID-19 to get fully vaccinated as schools and colleges start for the 2021 -2022 school year. If you begin your two-dose series for the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines this week, it will allow enough time to be fully protected by the start of the school year. For all of the vaccines, you are only considered fully protected two weeks after all doses are complete.

Public Health has confirmed 1,059 new cases of COVID-19. The number of cases and deaths likely reflect reporting delays over the weekend. Today’s reported COVID-19 death occurred in a person between the ages of 50 and 64 years old. To date, Public Health identified 1,258,685 positive cases of COVID-19 across all areas of L.A. County and a total of 24,543 deaths.

There are 372 people with COVID-19 currently hospitalized. Testing results are available for nearly 7,120,000 individuals with 16% of people testing positive. Today’s daily test positivity rate is 2.8%.

Visit: www.VaccinateLACounty.com (English) and www.VacunateLosAngeles.com (Spanish) to find a vaccination site near you, to make an appointment at vaccination sites, and much more. 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. Vaccinations are always free and open to eligible residents and workers regardless of immigration status.

Details: www.publichealth.lacounty.gov.

 

California Roars Back: Gov. Newsom Signs Historic Education Package to Reimagine Public Schools

SACRAMENTO – Gov. Gavin Newsom today signed a key component of his $123.9 billion Pre-K and K-12 education package that was developed through collaboration with the Legislature, providing an unprecedented level of school and student funding to transform the state’s public schools into gateways of equity and opportunity. The Governor’s plan supports the potential of every California student by achieving universal transitional kindergarten for four-year-olds by 2025, expanding afterschool and summer programs, providing universal free school nutrition, increasing the number of well-prepared staff per pupil, and creating full-service community schools to support the mental and social-emotional well-being of students.

Numerous studies show that children who attend preschool have enhanced brain development and improved learning outcomes as they begin their academic journeys. Under AB 130, California will provide free, high-quality, inclusive pre-kindergarten for all four-year-olds, beginning incrementally in 2022-23 and with full implementation anticipated by 2025-26.

The legislation signed today invests:

  • $3 billion to convert thousands of school sites into full-service community schools, with expanded learning time, family engagement and wraparound health, mental health and social services.
  • $1.8 billion in ongoing funds for summer and after-school programs at all schools serving the highest concentrations of vulnerable students, growing to $5 billion by 2025.
  • $2.9 billion to match well-prepared teachers with the most vulnerable students, including $500 million in grants for teachers who commit to high-need schools and $250 million to attract expert teachers to high-poverty schools.
  • An ongoing increase of $1.1 billion to improve staff-to-student ratios at all schools serving the highest concentrations of vulnerable students, including up to five additional counselors, nurses, teachers or paraeducators at each school.
  • $490 million to support the construction and renovation of state preschool, transitional kindergarten and kindergarten facilities, culminating in $2.7 billion in ongoing funds starting 2025-26 for universal Pre-K for all four-year-olds with the adult-to-student ratio cut in half (1:12).
  • $650 million in ongoing funds by 2022-23 to support universal free school nutrition, including access to two free meals every day for all students, and $150 million to improve kitchen infrastructure and nutritional training.
  • Over $1.5 billion in ongoing and one-time increases to special education funding, including $260 million for early intervention for preschool-aged children.

The legislation also ensures all schools return to offering full in-person instruction. As students return to full-time, in-person instruction in the upcoming school year, California’s schools have access to unprecedented resources to implement safety measures and expand programs to address the social-emotional and academic needs of students.

Details: http://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov.

Big Valley: California Proud Boys use secretive network to promote ‘their white supremacist agenda’ — and go largely unscathed

 

for Raw Story

https://www.rawstory.com/proud-boys-california/

Nationally, the Proud Boys organization is being tested by the ongoing prosecution of some of its top leaders for conspiracyin the assault on the US Capitol and internal dissension over therevelationthat its chairman is a longtime federal informer.

But as the weight of state prosecution and media scrutiny bears down on the national leadership, the organization remains active and viable in many parts of the country — an indication that the future of the violent nationalist gang in the Biden era might focus on deepening engagement with local fights rather than highly publicized national-scale operations. California’s Central Valley, where a 275-mile span of Highway 99 from Sacramento to Bakersfield allows members from various Proud Boys chapters to reinforce each other in varied local confrontations with leftist adversaries, provides one example.

This is the first in a four-part series focused on post-Jan 6. MAGA activity in California’s San Joaquin Valley. You can read other installments in the series here.

Alliances forged by Proud Boys with both local GOP activists and law enforcement have been challenged by the fallout over Jan. 6, but not completely undone, and in some cases new ties have blossomed. And while dozens of Californians have been charged in the breach of the Capitol, Proud Boys in the Central Valley have remained largely unscathed by the prosecutions, with the exception ofRicky Christopher Willden, a Madera County member with a history of clashing with leftists who was arrested by the FBI on June 30.

While continuing to forge ties with GOP activists, law enforcement and an anti-LGBTQ crusader, Proud Boys in the Central Valley have interjected themselves in an array of local fights, including opposing police accountability and joining forces with an annual “Straight Pride” rally in Modesto, and counter-protesting residents trying to preserve an LGBTQ-friendly theater in Fresno. They provided security for the Recall Gavin Newsom event in Bakersfield in February. Further south, in Orange County, Proud Boys joined a May 11 protest outside the Los Alamitos USD School Board to oppose adoption of new “social justice standards.”

“There was a widespread belief that the legal crackdown would really hamper the group in its ability to organize or lead to its demise,” said Cassie Miller, a senior research analyst at the Southern Poverty Law Center. “The problem is this group is so massive and well networked and there are so many chapters across the country that have autonomy that its network and organizing model have stayed in place. We’ve continued to see them involved in local organizing, much as in the past. There’s been some strategic shift. People are interested in running for office. But they’re still holding public rallies that descend into violence.”

Miller said California has been a Proud Boys stronghold, along with the Pacific Northwest and Florida, for a number of years, and those same places continue to see the most activity.

Willden, a fixture at confrontations with leftists in Sacramento and Los Angeles, and in Portland, Ore.,reportedlyused the Christian fundraising app GiveSendGo to raise $1,300 for himself and 12 other Proud Boys from California to travel of the Jan. 6 “Save America Rally” in Washington DC. Eddie Block, a Proud Boy from Madera who relies on a wheelchair for mobility due to a disability, was also in Washington on Jan. 6. Block is well known among both far-right activists and antifascist researchers for live-streaming Proud Boys rallies on his YouTube channel. Block and Willden had traveled together at least once prior to the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol: When the Proud Boys rallied in Portland on Oct. 2 to try to pressure law enforcement to crack down on Black Lives Matter protesters, Block filmed Willden while saying, “This is my boy, Chris. He’s here from Fresno. He came with me. He’s taking care of me.”

Block’s video of Proud Boys leading a march on Constitution Avenue to the Capitol before Trump’s speech at the Ellipse on Jan. 6 was mined by amateur researchers to identify participants in the siege. FBI agentsraidedBlock’s house and seized electronic devices on Jan. 22. Blocks’ video is widely cited in charging documents against Proud Boys leadersJoe Biggs,Ethan Nordean,Zach RehlandCharles Donohoe, who were indicted for conspiracy to interfere with the electoral certification, and also in government filings for six other Proud Boy defendants facing separate conspiracy charges who were from the Kansas City chapter and from Arizona. Nearly six months after the initial Proud Boys arrests, Willden was arrested by the FBI at his home in Oakhurst, in the Sierra foothills. The government alleges that Willden was part of a large crowd at the east door of the Capitol when it was forced open, and that publicly available video shows him “spraying an unknown substancefrom a green can toward police officers” guarding the door.

Judges have cited danger to the community in their decisions to keep top Proud Boys leaders in pre-trial detention. In comments from the bench during a June 23 detention hearing for Charles Donohoe, president of the North Carolina Piedmont chapter, Judge Timothy Kellymade it clearthat he views the Proud Boys as posing not only a risk to the government, but to the community at large.

“There is significant evidence of a leadership role, significant evidence that Mr. Donohoe was part of a network,” Kelly said. “Mr. Donohoe has the capability to assist in events that produce violence. He’s now shown the capability to produce violence, whether against law enforcement or other civilians. These capabilities on behalf of Mr. Donohoe and his cohorts remain.”

Once primarily a concern for local antifascist and Black Lives Matter protesters — and extremism researchers — the Jan. 6 siege telegraphed the Proud Boys’ reputation for violence across the country as a national security threat. But the public relations liability of Jan. 6 has had little, if any, discernible impact on Proud Boys’ activities in the Central Valley.

Proud Boys from the Central Valley and Fresno chapters showed up in force and wearing their traditional black and yellow colors at two city council meetings in Modesto last month.

“Shame to allow these Proud Boys in the city council meeting because, you know what… on January 6ththey attacked our Capitol, the hallmark of our democracy,” a speaker identified only by the initials “PB,” told council during the public comment portion of the meeting on June 22.

Proud Boys in the council chamber jeered and responded with their customary salute: “Uhuru!”

“They’re just here to divide and conquer our community,” the speaker continued. “You know what? They talk about Bill of Rights and Constitution and all this nonsense, but they’re bringing hate. They’re bringing an agenda of hate and bigotry, advancing their white supremacist agenda.”

Invideoof the meeting, other audience members can be heard yelling out, “Proud Boys are Nazis,” and, “Proud Boys, leave right now. You’re not welcome in our community.”

At one point, when an argument broke out between Proud Boys and residents calling for police accountability, Mayor Sue Zwahlen ordered the meeting into recess to restore order, and interim Chief Brandon Gillespie had to admonish Proud Boys and their allies to stop interrupting the brother of a man who was killed by a Modesto police officer while he was addressing council.

During an April 1 interview on the “Rebel Radio Now” podcast, Fresno Proud Boys chapter President Mark Mazzola suggested to host Todd Cotta that no Proud Boy has ever committed a criminal offense.

“In fact, I can’t remember a single time I’ve ever seen a Proud Boy get involved with something that was a criminal offense,” Mazzola said. “People want to talk about the march on DC at the Capitol building; I don’t remember seeing a single Proud Boy wearing a Perry out there.” (Proud Boys Chairman Enrique Tarrio instructed members to not wear their traditional black and yellow color, which are incorporated into the Fred Perry polo shirts customarily worn by members, on Jan. 6.)

Cotta, a former Fresno County sheriff’s deputy who ran unsuccessfully for California State Assembly last year, tossed Mazzola a softball question, using scare quotes to signal his shared disdain for the government’s effort to hold the Jan. 6 rioters accountable.

“In thatsiegeon the Capitol, that was not a Proud Boys function?” Cotta asked.

“Not as far as I’m aware of,” Mazzola responded.

The relationship between the Proud Boys national organization and local chapters appears to be a subject that members are reluctant to discuss.

During a second episode devoted to the Proud Boys, on April 21, Cotta asked another Fresno member nicknamed Guyo how the national organization was functioning.

“We work through our ways,” Guyo responded. When Cotta tried to elicit more, Guyo deflected: “We have a network. We just don’t necessarily talk about it.”

During the April 1 podcast, Cotta shared with Mazzola and the sergeant at arms for the Fresno chapter — a man with the nickname Chongo — that the Proud Boys earned his admiration when he heard about members responding toa man using an Airsoft gun to shoot marbles at Trump supportersat an event in Bakersfield where Cotta appeared as a speaker last October. Cotta said Proud Boys members chased the man down and detained him until police could make an arrest.

During the interview, Cotta expressed concern that the Proud Boys need to clean up their PR.

“The misinformation that is coming out about you guys is intentional,” he told Mazzola and Chongo. “And you guys really have a challenge ahead of you. Even the 1 percenters and the bike guys, the [Hell’s Angels] and those guys, they had to do their little toy runs and all those other things.” He added a caveat that he’s wary of outlaw bikers, and doesn’t lump the Proud Boys into the same category.

“But what you guys have to do is separate yourself from what you’re saying,” Cotta continued. “Just a quick search on Google, they are 100 percent trying to crush you guys. And you guys have to figure out a way to combat that.”

Backlash in the immediate aftermath of the Jan. 6 insurrection local Republican organizations to distance themselves from the Proud Boys, whose function as a de facto GOP security force was cemented when Trump said, “Proud Boys — stand back, and stand by,” during his Sept. 29, 2020 debate with Joe Biden.

Proud Boy Jeffrey Perrine, who was elected to the Sacramento Republican Party Central Committee in March 2020, wasoustedfrom the party in February 2021. Party leaders called for Perrine’s resignation after being confronted with avideofrom a 2018 rally in Portland that shows Perrine saying: “All the illegals jumping across the border, we should be smashing their heads into concrete, separate them from their kids, making sure they’re not with pedophiles and child molesters, people like the left.”

Notwithstanding Perrine’s departure from the Sacramento County Republican Party, the gap between the Proud Boys and the nationalist, conspiracy-minded base of the GOP has all but vanished.

Jorge Riley, a GOP activist from Sacramento who bragged about occupying House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office during the Jan. 6 siege on the US Capitol, was forced toresign from his positionwith the California Republican Assembly, an organization that works to elect GOP candidates. Released from custody with pending federal charges, including obstruction of an official proceeding and disorderly conduct, Riley not only appears to be unrepentant, but has openly flaunted his connections to the Proud Boys. Appearing alongside Perrine and far-right live-streamer Josh Fulfer at a Recall Newsom rally in Sacramento in early March, Rileysaysin the video: “I may or may not have rubbed my butt on Nasty Pelosi’s desk.”

In keeping with the Proud Boys’ lack of remorse for their role in the Capitol insurrection, harassment and violence directed at leftist counter-protesters has also carried over from the period before Jan. 6.

Upwards of 50 Proud Boys from the Fresno, Modesto and Bakersfield chapters showed upreportedlywearing ballistic vests and carrying hunting knives and mace to oppose local residents protesting the pending sale of the Tower Theatre to a conservative church in April.

During the confrontation, a pregnant woman protesting against the sale was shoved to the ground, said Jaguar Bennett, a spokesperson for the Save the Tower Theatre Demonstration Committee. No arrest has been made in the assault on the pregnant woman, but Marcus Kelly, 43, was arrested for possessing pepper spray as a convicted felon, according to a localreport. Police reportedly said Kelly got in a fight with someone at the protest, and that he was seen talking and standing with the Proud Boys, but that he denied any affiliation.

Flanked by the police chief and members of Fresno City Council, Mayor Jerry Dyerdenouncedthe Proud Boys during an April 14 press conference.

“I don’t have an issue at all talking about the Proud Boys,” Dyer said. “I think the fact they are going out there dressing in the manner in which they do, in a very intimidating factor, the fact that they have made intimidating comments to people who are out there, the fact that one of them pushed a pregnant woman this Sunday, which is absolutely uncalled for. If denouncing that behavior, denouncing that organization, if that is what is called for, then I believe each and every one of us city leaders have done that and will do that. They have no place in the city of Fresno, if they are going to be creating a divide, as they have. The vast majority of these individuals, if not all of ’em, are not even from the city of Fresno. Yet they come into our community and they try to create a divide. We are one Fresno, and that’s exactly what we stand for. And when people come to Fresno, and think they can intimidate and divide this community, they’re absolutely wrong.”

Since his arrest in Fresno on April 11, Kelly has racked up a new charge for assault and battery, unlawful use of pepper spray and felony child endangerment following a road rage incident in Seal Beach on June 14. According to a statement posted on the Facebook page of the Seal Beach Police Department, Kelly followed the other driver, who had pulled off Pacific Coast Highway and stopped his car on a side street. The police said Kelly pulled up alongside the other driver’s vehicle and sprayed bear spray into his vehicle.

“Three people inside the victim’s vehicle, including one child, were exposed to the bear spray,” the police said. “The victims all suffered injuries, including eye and skin irritation. When officers responded to the scene, they were also affected by the residual spray in the air and on the victims. The victims were treated by Orange County Fire Authority personnel.”

In Modesto, a man who identified himself as Steve, complained to city council about being harassed by Proud Boys as they sat behind him during the June 22 meeting.

“I was called a homophobic slur, so I don’t know where you get the idea that these guys are not homophobic,” Steve said. “Also, outside this very building they physically swarmed around me to intimidate and harass me, although I repeatedly told them to get away from me.

“But I would like to introduce you to your new friends, the Proud Boys,” he added with mounting frustration.

“Uhuru,” the Proud Boys saluted in unison.

“Because if you don’t fight it and you don’t stand up against this hate group, which did participate in the insurrection at the Capitol, then what are you even here for?” Steve continued. “Modesto is located within the United States of America. That is a big issue.”

This is the first in a four-part series focused on post-Jan 6. MAGA activity in California’s San Joaquin Valley. You can read other installments in the series here.

Foodie Life

Post-Lock Down Culinary Festivals on the Rebound

Over the past several years, the Queen Mary Events Park was the go-to location for a number of different food festivals and competitions, including the Delicious Chili & Brewfest, which featured a chili cookoff and Southern California’s best brewed beer and the West Coast BBQ Classic, which also featured the best brews in Southern California. The pandemic,with the enforcement of preventive lockdown measures, changed all of it, and for other longtime food and beverage events to bounce back may take awhile.

But a few of them will be happening this summer and into the fall. Coffee World, a pop-up museum about coffee that opened in January 2019, at the Del Amo Shopping Center in Torrance will reopen on July 17.

It was only supposed to stick around for six months to test its viability, but managed to survive the COVID lockdown. The pop-up museum has a Japanese kawaii culture celebrating coffee. The exhibit takes the visitor on a journey of coffee from farm to cup with 10 interactive and jaw-dropping installations.

Details: www.coffeeworld.co/

During the first week of August, Long Beach Food & Beverage, a California registered 501(c)3 non-profit, will spend the first week in August paying homage to America’s original culinary sweetheart: the hamburger. The offerings are going to be wide and diverse, from house made sauces to traditional sesame seed buns and American cheese, hearty veggie and vegan renditions and even burgers topped with Hot Cheetos, Fritos, mac ‘n cheese, truffles and even gold leaf.

Long Beach Burger Week will feature $5, $10, $15 and $20 one-of-a-kind burgers at 34 participating restaurants (as of this publication) across the city. More could be added to the list. It’s an opportunity to support restaurants in Long Beach during this critical time while you get to eat, drink, and try new places. Featured eateries will offer a Long Beach Burger Week special with dine-in, to-go and delivery options available depending on the restaurant. This should be a hint to other cities looking to give restaurateurs a boost.

Details: www.burgerweeklb.com

Later this summer, Aug. 21, is the 10th Annual Taste of Brews LB, which will be returning to the Lighthouse Park. This event infuses dozens of craft beers and select hard ciders, seltzers and kombucha along with SoCal’s premier mobile restaurants, all at an amazing ocean-front venue.

Details: http://tasteofbrews.com

The Thrill of the Grill

Grilled pizza does not sound like the highest use of a grill or a pizza. Wouldn’t the bottom of the crust burn into a blackened crisp long before the cheese melts? Luckily, nobody told Johanne Killeen and George Germon, two art students from Providence, Rhode Island. They’d met while working for Dewey Dufresne, a young chef with a big future of his own. In 1980 they opened Al Forno, which means “from the oven,” an unlikely name for the birthplace of the world’s first non-baked pizza. It sprang from the fact that their new restaurant space came with a grill. They wanted to use it, and their signature margherita pie became that grill’s reason why.

In those days, dishes like “pesto” were exotic, and the married chef/owners had to contract with a local farm in order to get enough basil. They credit Dufresne for their focus on quality ingredients cooked simply. As for the pizza, it succeeded despite the obvious reasons why it shouldn’t have. Or perhaps these hurdles are what sculpted the pizza into the work of art it is. The crust — or my version, anyway — comes out puffy, crunchy, crispy, chewy and cracker-like, with a charred but hopefully not burnt bottom and smoky flavor.

While Germon and Killeen were inventing local grilled pizza in Providence, I was a mere 50 miles away, eating oven-baked pizza from Armando’s in Cambridge, quite certain that pizza couldn’t possibly get any better.

“Eating at Al Forno was something that rich people did,” recalls my friend Michele, who grew up near Providence but never dined there. “It’s where my aunt’s boyfriend took her on fancy dates.” Michele recently introduced me to this legendary pizza, which she has been making all spring and debuted to her friends on Memorial Day. The core trick is to flip the pizza after grilling one side, and put the toppings on the cooked side. This flipping solves the problems presented by grilled pizza. The cheese melts. The extra-oily, extra-thin crust cooks quickly, all the way through, with no gooey inside to worry about. And it won’t stick to the grill.

At Al Forno you could, and still can get, toppings like nettle pesto, fried calamari, peaches and prosciutto to name just a pinch of them, constrained only by the chef’s whimsy. The home grill master can do the same with the ever unfolding bounty of summer. Once you get the hang of grilling a pizza, the precooked crust becomes a blank slate for whatever seasonal and creative toppings you can imagine. But none of Al Forno’s specials ever supplanted the simple margherita, topped with a juicy tomato sauce with herbs and the occasional pungent intrusion of half-cooked garlic, all held together by cheese.

You could grill yourself a lovely pizza with a hunk of store-bought dough, a jar of sauce, and a bag of shredded cheese. But there’s levels to this. Once you get the basic hang of grilling pizza, you can progress to thinking about toppings. And some day, perhaps, you’ll be ready to contemplate dough mixing. I am not there myself, but luckily I can get decent pizza dough at my local store. Without the fuss of crust, we can focus on toppings and grilling. We have all summer to figure out the dough.

Grilled Margherita ala Al Forno

The Al Forno margherita pizza is a great, simple place to embark upon the path of grilled pizza, and Germon and Killeen were not shy about discussing the pie that put them on the map.

I have read every one of their interviews on their margherita pizza that I could find. It changed over the years, so what I have here is something in the middle, with my own adaptations for the Weber grill that I use at home.


Makes one medium-sized pizza that serves two:

4 pounds hardwood charcoal

1 ball of pizza dough, 14-16 ounces

¼ cup extra virgin olive oil

1 clove garlic, pressed, grated, crushed or minced

3 ounces grated fontina cheese

1 ounce grated Romano cheese

½ cup chopped basil

½ cup chopped parsley

1 tablespoon chopped fresh thyme

14 ounces of canned whole tomatoes, hand crushed

½ teaspoon salt

¼ teaspoon black pepper

1 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes


Place the dough ball in a bowl and let it sit for about an hour. If it rises, punch it down and pack it back into a ball. Then pour the oil over it, and roll it in the bowl of oil to coat it all around, and leave it to soak. Light the coals. When they are about halfway ready, spread them evenly about 5 inches below one side of the cooking grate.

Remove the dough and place it on the back of a cookie sheet. Use your fingers to press and stretch it into an oblong shape about the size of the pan, and about ¼-inch thick. It’s OK if some parts are thick and others thin. That’s part of the art. If you stretch the crust so thin that a hole opens up, don’t try to patch it. This is an artist pizza. Just don’t add any toppings to that negative space and you’ll be fine. Add the minced garlic to the bowl with the remaining oil. Hand crush the tomatoes and mix in the basil, thyme and parsley.

When the coals are a bit past their prime and not burning quite so aggressively, lift the crust by two points on the same edge and toss it onto the hot side, like you’d whip a fresh sheet onto a bed.

After about a minute on the grill it should start to puff up. Carefully tug up on an edge and peek at the underside. After another 30 seconds, before it blackens, grab the edge and flip the crust onto the cool side of the rack. (It’s impossible to give exact cooking times because they depend on the heat of your coals and their distance from the grill.)

While it’s still piping hot, immediately brush or rub the newly-browned side of the crust with the garlic oil. Sprinkle on the fontina and Romano cheeses, and spoon on the crushed tomatoes and herbs in dispersed little piles. Sprinkle the salt, pepper and pepper flakes over the pizza.

With tongs or carefully with your fingers, slide the pizza onto the hot side, over the coals. Cook it as long as you can, ideally about four minutes, without smelling any burning crust. If it starts to blacken, pull it to the non-hot side of the grill and put the lid on until the cheese melts. Cut into pieces with cooking scissors and serve.

My Recycled Life — Coming Home to Reuse, Recycle, Sell, Keep, Giveaway and Reduce

A surviving daughter is dedicated to integrating recycling, reducing, and reusing into our urban and suburban California lifestyles

Although some may brand my parents hoarders, I wouldn’t — neither lived the kind of lifestyle seen on TV reality shows and news features, where homes are literally knee-deep in trash. My mother and father were products of the Great Depression where nothing got thrown away if it was “still good,” like Jeff Foxworthy’s description of a “redneck” as someone who keeps the old non-working TV around because the wood’s still good. Both my parents also were truly great procrastinators, their living spaces full of multiple projects that never got done.

Hoarding and collecting is to an extent subjective, depending somewhat on what we do with our acquisitions once they enter our lives. My mother watched in horror what happened after the elderly couple next door to her died within a few months of each other. Their daughter parked a giant truck-sized dumpster in front of the house and threw what looked like the home’s entire contents into it and everything got hauled away to enter the waste stream. I assured my mother I’d never do that.

When my father was facing his last days, I persuaded him to let me put the contents of his apartment in storage, telling him I’d find him another apartment where he and a caregiver might live comfortably for the remainder of his life. Part of me knew it was a lie and he’d never leave the care facility, but the other part of me knew there was no predicting the future and maybe, just maybe, he might live long enough for me to get him into his “own home” one last time. Once he died, my focus shifted to reducing, recycling, and reusing what he left me. That’s become one of my ongoing projects — and not one I procrastinate about, either.

When my mother entered a care facility in July 2019, I told her I’d sell my mobile home, move into her home so she could come home and I’d be her caregiver. I set my timeline to move in September but she died that August. I moved from my single-wide one-bedroom mobile home, which seemed so small, to a three-bedroom house that seemed so large, until I took stock of everything that was crammed into it. My mother’s closets weren’t even like Fibber McGee’s on that old radio show, because when I opened the door, the contents were too tightly crammed for anything to fall out. I integrated reducing, reusing and recycling what my mother left behind into my lifestyle, which has been pro-environmental since back before the first Earth Day.

I may be leading a lifestyle dedicated to recycling, reusing and reducing, but I’m also recycling a life — or two or three. In months to come, I’ll be offering guidance for leading a “recycled” life, specially tailored for our local urban lifestyle.

Random Letters: 7-8-21

0

Critical Race Theory

Before the hysteria over critical race theory, it was a war on “wokeness”; before that, it was a crusade against “political correctness”; before that, it was a battle against the “reverse racism” of affirmative action; before that, it was a feverish panic over an earlier iteration of “political correctness”; before that, it was a life-or-death struggle against the evils of “multiculturalism” … The right has long perfected the art of manufacturing fake boogeymen to justify cultural backlash and political crackdowns that do real harm. The pattern is clear, it’s predictable, and it’s consistent—because it works. Just look at how effortlessly conservative political figures and pundits mobilized their base over the past year to fear and fight the “threat” of critical race theory. In so doing, the right-wing outrage machine is sustaining the deep cultural resentments that made Trumpism attractive in the first place, even if Donald Trump himself is currently out of power and out of the limelight.

Maximillian Alvarez,Editor in Chief, Real News Network, Baltimore, MD


A Willful Ignorance of Impending Doom

As we witness the grim outcome of the collapse of the Surfside condo building and its 160-plus deaths, we understand the willingness to play down warnings that preceded the catastrophe. It is sad, indeed.

I cannot help but reckon back to the unfathomable “acknowledged” danger posed to “thousands” of residents in the Los Angeles harbor area from over 25 Million gallons of highly explosive butane and propane gases that continues to be stored in their literal backyard for almost 50 years now! These storage tanks were built “without building permits” in 1973 for a projected life span of 25 years, and to an Earth Quake substandard of 5.5 mag. while sitting in a EQ Fault zone of mag. 7.4! This prolonged extraordinary willful ignorance to disregard public safety is intolerable and unacceptable in light of the overwhelming scope of disaster that this storage facility represents. Yet, here we sit on the precipice of doom under the most vulnerable of conditions possible.

Renown forensics risks professor, Bob Bea, has repeatedly warned of our government’s persistence to disregard obvious hazards due to; hubris, arrogance, indolence, ignorance, and greed. Employing these traits will ultimately guarantee disaster….sooner or later. The Plains All American Pipeline owned, Rancho LPG LLC facility represents the poster child for his testimony. The catastrophe here awaits. The threat does not get any more obvious than this.

Janet Schaaf-Gunter, San Pedro


Specter of Racism Haunts SCIG Railyard Project

Thank you for your public service in reporting on yet another dishonest Environmental Impact Report perpetrated by the Port of Los Angeles. There was zero mention of this in either the Daily Breeze or the Los Angeles Times. The quotes from the community members make the case better than I ever could.

The San Pedro and Peninsula Homeowners Coalition put the Port on notice almost 20 years ago of its responsibility to consider Environmental Justice in its project planning. The Port has resolutely ignored that requirement from that day to this. Perhaps now, at long last, enough pressure will mount to force the Port to live up to its responsibilities to the public.

I also note “POLA Sets Western Hemisphere Record, Seroka Honored” With every increase in container throughput comes the accompanying increase in toxic diesel pollution. Mr. Seroka would do well to devote less energy to increasing toxic throughput and more to alleviating [the] health crisis so movingly described by those quoted in your article.

Noel Park, Rancho Palos Verdes

LA City Council Seeks New Law to Prevent Public Encampments

Buscaino’s Anti-camping ordinance passed 13-2

Los Angeles City councilmembers Joe Buscaino and John Lee took action to force a vote by the full city council on a draft anti-camping law that has been stalled in committee since November 2020. The city’s current anti-camping ordinance, which has not been enforced during the COVID-19 pandemic, prohibits tents during daytime hours, from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. On June 9, Buscaino requested that the council amend the mayor’s Declaration of Local Emergency and resume enforcement of the current anti-camping ordinance.

The rarely-used procedure under Council Rule 54 requires the council at the next regular meeting to vote on pulling the draft law from committee for immediate consideration by the full city council.

“With over half of all fires related to homelessness, completely blocked sidewalks, and a sharp increase in crime associated with street encampments, it is unconscionable for this city council to adjourn for a month-long recess without considering this important ordinance that will restore rules and order to our shared public spaces,” said Councilmember Buscaino. “Public Safety is the core responsibility of local government and we are failing to protect both the unhoused and the housed. Allowing unmitigated encampments on our streets and sidewalks is not compassionate, it’s reckless.”

The draft ordinance, which was referred to the Homelessness & Poverty Committee on Nov. 30, 2020, would restrict sitting, lying, sleeping, and the placement of tents or personal property on streets and sidewalks:

Random Lengths News asked all the declared Council District 15 candidates for their response to this action. These are a few of the responses.


Bryant Odega, Harbor Gateway

Wage Stagnation Needs to Be Addressed

The proposed legislation would make it illegal to be unhoused and to refuse an offer of shelter in Los Angeles. This legislation criminalizes homelessness, a strategy that wastes millions of city dollars that we, the taxpayers, pay.

Proposals like this promote the myth that people are homeless by choice, not the result of the city’s failure to expand available housing for those experiencing homelessness. Public officials have stated that there are not enough available beds to support Los Angeles’ unhoused populations. The L.A. City Council needs to prioritize building housing projects for all of the unhoused instead of criminalizing homelessness. The criminalization of homelessness, rather than solving this humanitarian crisis along with its root causes (ex: skyrocketing rent, insufficient public housing units) is one of the reasons I’m running for Los Angeles City Council District 15 in 2022. We need evidence-backed, community-centered solutions that prioritize care — not criminalization.

These ordinances constitute cruel and unusual punishment and violate basic human rights. Judges have ruled that enforcing the bans on sitting and sleeping in public violate the Eighth Amendment’s cruel and unusual punishment clause. Despite these rulings, Los Angeles continues to criminalize the homelessness crisis. This is counterproductive toward reducing homelessness.

  • Unhoused deaths represent 11% of all deaths in LA, despite representing only 1% of the overall L.A. population.
  • Unhoused deaths are twice as likely to be male and Black.
  • Unhoused people were over two times more likely to have died from accidental and preventable causes compared to housed populations.

Clearing encampments causes people to disperse throughout the community breaking connections with service providers. This increases infectious disease spread. So increased enforcement will lead to more unhoused deaths. Los Angeles is set to become the City with the highest homeless mortality rate.

For the above reasons, I strongly oppose the passage of Council file: 20-1376 and urge others to do the same.

Citation: https://tinyurl.com/unhoused-deaths-la-county


Christian Louis Guzman

First and foremost, the housing and homelessness crisis is overwhelmingly caused by the difference in wage growth and housing cost growth over the past several decades. People simply cannot afford to sustainably and comfortably live in this city while working an entry level or even some mid level jobs. Look into the gap in wage increases and housing increases. My website has some references at www.clgforthepeople.com/.

This wage stagnation needs to be addressed by the city, county, state and federal level in the form of a jobs guarantee with a living wage.

Until that is a reality, passing this law would be a severe disservice to our city, because it would cover up and mask this real failure in our economic system.

In addition, until wages actually allow for people to afford housing, we also need a housing guarantee for all and this must also be coordinated between city, county, state and national governments.

Housing and jobs guarantees must also be coupled with services to bring people back into society with dignity.

Once every single person in our diverse and talented city is offered a living wage job, housing and social services, then I would support the council motion. I do believe the public has a right to utilize our streets, sidewalks and other public rights of way in a safe and sanitary condition. I am an avid walker and biker and sometimes it is hard to get around without colliding into unsanitary refuse.

Our families and we should not be afraid of our own streets. But to enact such a rule as proposed by Buscaino and Lee, before a jobs and housing guarantee would not address the root cause of homelessness. It would shift the blame onto our houseless neighbors as if it is their choice and personal fault to be on the streets. This is not the case for 40,000 of our people who are houseless. Urban camping might be a choice for a small and even visually obvious minority. But most want a chance to live in a home and contribute meaningfully to their communities. I have met these people and broken bread with them at the Garden Church in San Pedro and near the municipal building in Wilmington. Our houseless neighbors have goals, joys and problems as our housed-neighbors do.

We must work on these issues before passing any kind of camping restrictions like the one so proposed by Buscaino and Lee. It will be a difficult discussion and even more difficult action, but to not have it or do it, is to push the problem down the road and lead to more tension.

Addition/clarification:

Although the ultimate goal is to house every one in stable housing with supportive services, I do see the utilization of appropriate government/public owned land and buildings as a very short term solution to house people. This would also need to be in place before an urban camping ban such as the one proposed is enacted.

I will say that it is the economical and ethical thing to house people instead of leaving them out on the streets. The costs to emergency healthcare, sanitation and law enforcement will all decrease once we house people; city taxpayers will save money.


Tim McOsker

I support the intent of the motion, because of the great urgency of the homeless crisis. We need to stop just talking about solutions, now is the time to act. The Council needs to adopt an ordinance that is fair to the unhoused and housed alike.

First, we must never make it a crime to be poor or unhoused. We have to lead with compassion and haste to build both shelter and permanent housing. It is not compassionate to leave people on the street.

Nor is it fair to any Angeleno — housed or unhoused — to allow encampments to prevent passage on sidewalks, block entrances to properties, prevent access to parks or beaches, or to surround the very shelters that currently serve the unhoused who, we all hope, are in transition to permanent housing.

Editorial Note: All of the CD15 candidates who have filed at this point were offered the space to comment on Buscaino’s anti-homeless ordinance; no responses were received from Shannon Ross, Danielle Sandoval or Lamar Lyons.

IBU Challenged By Industry-wide Asset Swaps

The Jankovich Co. sale to TJC LLC was just one instance of consolidation among many that has happened in recent years — disruptions that are increasingly impacting wages and labor contracts.

This past May, members of the ILWU’s marine division — the Inlandboatmen’s Union, or IBU, and ILWU Locals 13, 63, 94, 63 OCU, the Pacific Coast Pensioners Association, Federated Auxiliary 8 and the International Organization of Masters, Mates and Pilots, or MM&P, rallied outside Westoil Marine Service on Terminal Island over such issues.

The biggest news to happen in fuel transhipment news was the asset exchanges by two large national marine transportation corporations — Saltchuk Marine and Centerline Logistic and its impact on labor contracts. Both Saltchuk and Centerline come from old family owned companies.

The asset exchange has upended scores of contracts worked by IBU, MM&P and the Sailors Union of the Pacific maritime workers while weakening the Southwest Marine Pension Trust.

The maritime unions charge that Saltchuk and Centerline have used the asset exchange as an opportunity to replace longstanding contracts with the IBU and the MM&P with a substandard agreement with company-friendly, Seafarers International Union that undermines the standards for fair wages and benefits previously set by the IBU and MM&P collective bargaining agreements.

In December of this past year, Saltchuk Marine announced that it acquired eight ship assist tugs owned by Centerline Logistics and operated in the Pacific Northwest and California. Centerline Logistics, in turn, purchased six bunker barges operated in California from Foss Maritime, a subsidiary of Saltchuk. A bunker barge is like a floating petrol station. The bunker barge pumps fuel oil into the ship’s storage (bunker) tanks.

The effect of this deal had an immediate impact on mariners from Los Angeles and Long Beach to San Francisco. In Los Angeles and Long Beach Foss Maritime terminated 21 employees who worked on its bunker barges. The collective bargaining agreement with MM&P, who represented the mariners, was voided as were contributions to the Southwest Marine Pension Trust. In San Francisco, roughly the same number of employees represented by the Sailors Union of the Pacific also lost their jobs when Foss Maritime stopped its operations.

Sly Hunter, regional representative for MM&P, was quoted in the ILWU newspaper, The Dispatcher, that on the day after Christmas, he received a call from Foss Maritime stating that it had sold its bunker barge business and that the contract which had two-and-a-half years left on it and employed 21 of their members was gone. The company was sold to Centerline Logistics, which then created a subsidiary, called Leo Marine. Centerline Logistics claimed that MM&P didn’t have jurisdiction. The transaction also impacted 55 IBU members working for the Centerline-owned Westoil/Millennium when Centerline’s Millennium-branded tug operation was sold to Saltchuk operation. Instead of folding the six bunker barges and the contracts it acquired from Foss into its existing marine fueling companies including Westoil, Centerline gave the contract and barges to its newly created subsidiary, Leo Marine Services, leaving many of the IBU mariners who manned both the Millennium tugs and the Westoil barges without work. All that remains now for the 55 workers at Westoil are contracts from two smaller customers.

NWSPNC President, VP Lose Re-Election

After ousting two of its highest-ranking and longest-serving leaders, the Northwest San Pedro Neighborhood Council will complete its overhaul and perhaps signal a new course on July 12, when board members elect a new president and vice president.

Ray Regalado, NWSPNC’s president for eight years, and Laurie Jacobs, whose vice presidency was part of nine years of board service, learned they had lost on June 30, when the Department of Neighborhood Empowerment released official results of the election. But those outcomes only confirmed preliminary counts.

“I wasn’t surprised,” Regalado said. “You never know what’s going to happen in this type of a process.”

Regalado received 70 votes to finish third in the race for two Park Western area seats behind Craig Goldfarb (102) and Dan Dixon (89). Jacobs received 65 votes, and finished fourth in a race for three at-large seats, losing to Angela Sumner (92), Cynthia Gonyea (86), and Gwen Henry (76).

Regalado also serves as a commissioner for the Board of Neighborhood Commissioners, or BONC. He works full time and his responsibilities as president and commissioner — as well as COVID-19 restrictions and his recovery from knee surgery — prevented him from doing a lot of campaigning.

“The president has a lot of responsibility on their shoulders to make sure that all the meetings are taking place, that everyone is doing what they need to do to represent the community, not their own personal agenda,” Regalado said. “It’s really a full load.”

Jacobs did not do a lot of campaigning either, as she also works full time and had a lot of meetings to attend as vice president, as well as outreach chair. She used social media and called people but did not go door-to-door. She put a slate together, which is a list of candidates that endorse each other.

“Any time I campaigned, I campaigned for other people too,” Jacobs said. “It’s not about me; it’s about the collaborative effort. So, it was extremely disappointing that someone didn’t understand how a slate works and tried to use that against me, calling it manipulative.”

Jacobs was referring to a flyer that was distributed that said she was trying to manipulate the board, and that she wanted to elect the people on the slate so that they would vote her way.

“Once I saw that someone had the time to do … a negative campaign, I wasn’t going to play that game,” Jacobs said.

She instead focused on her own experience and the work she has done for the board when she campaigned.

Board member John DiMeglio was not included on Jacobs’ slate, but he made a slate of his own with Goldfarb and two other people, all of whom were elected. DiMeglio did lots of campaigning, which helped him get re-elected, but he said he did not even speak to half the people he knew.

DiMeglio had several criticisms with the board, including the proposed properties the board has approved for construction. He said that even if the other two neighborhood councils in San Pedro do not approve a project, Northwest usually will. He owns an apartment building in San Pedro, and when he built it, he had to include two parking spaces per unit — while some modern projects do not even have half of that.

DiMeglio said he is one of the few dissenting voices on the board and that the rest of the board members tend to vote together. He said that it has been him against the whole board in the past, and that he had trouble getting motions passed.

Jacobs said that the city did not run the elections well. Because of the pandemic, it was all vote-by-mail, but stakeholders had to request ballots and send pictures of their IDs to prove they lived within each council’s boundaries. Jacobs said that some people received ballots after voting was already over.

Jacobs said that while she is disappointed that she was not re-elected, she is not going anywhere and she will continue to do community work. She runs a girl scout troop and she is an analyst for the South Bay Cities Council of governments working on using Measure 8 funds to help homeless people.

“I’m also the outreach chair; I run events; I’m on the budget and finance committee; I’m on the executive committee,” Jacobs said. “So, maybe a step back … is a good thing for me at this point.”

Regalado would not rule out running for the board again in the future once a seat is available — but he stressed he would only do so if he felt the board needed it.

“I have a certain skill set that has lent to … an effective neighborhood council running, where there has been very little controversy, where there has been very little contentious opportunities … for people to lash out,” Regalado said. “If I were to see that happening to our neighborhood council, which has avoided that over these last many years, I may decide to try to go back. But I mean if things are all … working so that people are being heard, people are being treated equitably and everyone is doing the job they’re elected to do, then why would I do that?”

One of the things Regalado has done as president is to build relationships with outside parties, including with people from the city. Regalado’s philosophy is to listen to his constituents and represent them, putting aside his own feelings.

“It’s a matter of just being able to be at the table, to have these discussions and to be able to address the needs of the people that you represent,” Regalado said. “That’s the important part of this kind of work. Unfortunately, there are some people who feel that … the work is needed around what they want to see.”

Regalado may not be on the board anymore — but he’ll still be involved in the council as a BONC commissioner. He represents region 12, which includes all the neighborhood councils in the Harbor Area.

“I still need to be able to clearly understand what’s happening within our region of neighborhood councils,” Regalado said. “My responsibility to neighborhood councils doesn’t end when that new board, new leadership is selected. It allows me to just get deeper into my other responsibilities as a commissioner.”