Friday, October 10, 2025
spot_img
spot_img
Home Blog Page 526

POLA To Reward Container Terminals For Higher Truck Productivity

SAN PEDRO — The Port of Los Angeles announced Jan. 19, that it is launching a new incentive program to move trucks faster and more efficiently through its terminals. The Port’s Truck Turn-Time and Dual-Transaction Incentive Programs offer terminal operators two ways to earn financial rewards: one for shortening the time it takes to process trucks dropping off and/or picking up cargo, and the other for trucks handling both transactions in the same trip.

Drayage trucks handle approximately three-quarters of all import and export containers moving through the Port. In recent months, imports have dominated the flow of cargo, draining the market of containers needed for exports. The imbalance has also reduced the number of chassis in circulation, caused inbound containers to stack up on terminals, and slowed the movement of trucks in and out of terminals.

Under the new incentive program approved by the Los Angeles Harbor Commission, terminals that improve truck turn times by 5% to 20% can earn between 50 cents and $2.75 per loaded or empty Twenty-foot Equivalent Unit (TEU), the standard measure for intermodal containers. The rate of the reward increases on a sliding scale as terminals improve turn times. If a terminal averages turn times of 35 minutes or less in a given month, it will earn the top rate of $3 per loaded or empty container.

Additionally, terminals can earn between 40 cents and $1.40 per loaded TEU when at least half of all trucks calling their facilities drop off one container and depart with another on the same trip. The percentage is based on the number of dual transactions out of all gate moves for the month. Like the turn-time incentive, the rate of the reward increases as the terminal’s percentage of dual transactions grows.

Both incentive programs begin Feb. 1 and are based solely on TEUs handled by truck. Incentives will be paid monthly as long as the program remains in effect. For the first year of the program, the Port’s cost is estimated at $7.5 million. To participate, container terminals must opt in and provide additional details on truck moves. The data will be collected and processed by the Port Optimizer™, the tool the Port uses to keep its supply chain partners current on the status of cargo before it arrives, so terminals, trucking companies, railroads and others can plan and allocate resources in advance. No proprietary information is shared.

Former L.A. City Councilman Mitch Englander Ordered to Serve 14 Months in Federal Prison for Scheming to Obstruct Corruption Probe

LOS ANGELES – Former Los Angeles City Councilmember Mitchell Englander was sentenced Jan. 25, to 14 months in federal prison for his conduct surrounding his obstruction of a public corruption investigation into his acceptance of gifts – including $15,000 in cash – from a businessman during trips to Las Vegas and Palm Springs in 2017.

         Englander, 50, of Santa Monica, was sentenced this morning by United States District Judge John F. Walter, who noted that Englander’s “elaborate and clandestine scheme” to cover up his conduct has “undermined the public trust.” In declining Englander’s request for probation, Judge Walter stated that “justice [was] owed to society.” In addition to the prison term, Judge Walter ordered Englander to pay a $15,000 fine.

         At the conclusion of this morning’s two-hour hearing, Englander became the first person to be sentenced in relation to Operation “Casino Loyale,” the ongoing corruption investigation into Los Angeles City Hall that has also led to criminal charges against former City Councilmember Jose Huizar and 10 other defendants. Englander, who represented Los Angeles City Council District 12 in the San Fernando Valley for more than seven years before resigning at the end of 2018 with almost two years left on his term, pleaded guilty last July to one count of scheming to falsify material facts.

         Englander schemed to cover up cash payments, expensive meals, escort services and other gifts offered to him from an individual identified as Businessperson A, who sought to increase his business opportunities in the city. From August 2017 until December 2018, Englander knowingly and willfully falsified and concealed material facts pertaining to the federal public corruption investigation. Specifically, Englander covered up facts that he had accepted items of value during June 2017 trips to Las Vegas and Palm Springs and that he directed a witness to lie to and mislead federal investigators.

         Englander, while serving as a city councilmember and a reserve officer with the Los Angeles Police Department, “illicitly cashed in on his status as a purported public servant in casino bathrooms and through VIP bottle service, luxury dinners, and behind hotel room doors,” prosecutors wrote in a sentencing memorandum. “Over numerous incidents of escalating corruption and self-preservation, [Englander] sold out both oaths, cheaply and repeatedly.”

                 On at least three occasions, Englander attempted to coordinate statements he made to the FBI and federal prosecutors with Businessperson A, and Englander counseled Businessperson A how to lie to and mislead the FBI agents and federal prosecutors conducting the public corruption investigation.

         Englander also made false statements to the FBI and federal prosecutors on three separate occasions in 2017 and 2018.

         Englander was the first person to be charged in relation to Casino Loyale, the ongoing corruption investigation being conducted by the FBI and the United States Attorney’s Office that has focused on a wide-ranging “pay-to-play” scheme in which developers bribed Los Angeles city officials to secure official acts to benefit their real estate projects. A total of nine individuals and two businesses have now been charged as a result of this investigation, including Huizar, who is the lead defendant in a sweeping racketeering indictment that alleges he agreed to accept at least $1.5 million in illicit financial benefits while serving as the leader of a criminal enterprise. A jury trial for Huizar and several other defendants is currently scheduled for June 22 before Judge Walter.

         In addition to Englander, several individuals charged in the investigation have pleaded guilty and await sentencing later this year. Two corporate entities have entered into non-prosecution agreements and collectively have paid $2.25 million.

Any member of the public who has information related to this or any other public corruption matter in the City of Los Angeles is encouraged to send information to the FBI’s email tip line at pctips-losangeles@fbi.gov or to contact the FBI’s Los Angeles Field Office at 310-477-6565.

Governor Newsom, Legislative Leaders Issue Statement on Eviction Moratorium Extension

SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom, Senate President pro Tempore Toni Atkins and Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon Jan. 25, have issued a joint statement on the extension of the eviction moratorium to protect Californians impacted by COVID-19.

The statement said, in part: 

“Today, we are announcing an agreement to extend the eviction moratorium in California through June 30, 2021 – protecting tenants and small landlords from losing their housing as the nation continues to confront the pandemic. We are also moving forward as quickly as possible to deploy California’s share of the latest federal stimulus bill – ensuring that up to $2.6 billion in renter aid is administered quickly, equitably and accountably.”

The statement continued, noting that the critically needed federal funds, which are targeted to the most at-risk households with unpaid back rent, will help tenants stay afloat during and after this pandemic. Income-qualified tenants and their landlords can choose to receive direct rental assistance in exchange for forgiving prior rental debt.

Phony Inquest in Guardado Murder by LA Cops

0

On Jan. 18, retired Judge Candace Cooper who had been assigned to preside over the inquest into the Andres Guardardo police shooting ended it, gaining no more information than when it began. Deputies involved in the shooting, Miguel Vega and Chris Hernandez, again sought Fifth Amendment protections as they declined to answer questions where the answers might incriminate them. 

Andres Guardado was an 18 -year old Los Angeles man shot several times in the back and killed by Los Angeles County Deputy Sheriff Miguel Vega in Gardena on June 18, 2020. Guardado was working outside as an unlicensed plain clothes security guard at an auto-body shop. The police killing generated weeks of large protests.

A Sheriff’s Department spokesman said each person made the decision on the advice of his legal counsel, not at the direction of Sheriff Alex Villanueva. Legal experts said the move shows a refusal by the Sheriff’s Department to cooperate in a proceeding that Villanueva dismissed in a radio interview as a “circus stunt.”

At the coroner’s inquest, the first of its kind in nearly 30 years, Kevin Young, a deputy medical examiner, testified that the location of the five bullet wounds indicated Guardado had his back to the gun when he was shot, and that he could have been on his knees or lying prone on the ground. A toxicology report found no drugs or alcohol in his system.

The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors recommended the inquest amid nationwide protests over police brutality, with Guardado’s shooting reigniting calls for accountability and transparency within the department. Neither of which has happened.

Guardado’s  family filed a wrongful death suit against the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department and accused Villanueva of being aware of the deputy gangs and Vega’s and Hernandez’s possibile affiliation with them– gangs known as the Executioners and/or the 3,000 Boys’. Whistleblower, Deputy Art Gonzalez, affirmed the family’s accusation in a June 23 video deposition. Gonzalez testified that 15 deputies at the Compton station — where Vega and Hernandez were assigned — belonged to the gang.

Members of the gang have matching skull tattoos. According to Gonzalez, the gang “celebrates” deputy-involved shootings by drinking and getting the tattoos.

Vega and Hernandez are also facing kidnap charges for their role in harassment and victimization of 24-year-old Jesus Alegria. The “above the law” cops face criminal charges and a civil lawsuit for kidnapping and then lying to cover-up their actions.

Officials for the sheriff’s department have refused to explain why it took more than two months to open an investigation into the cop’s criminal acts and eight months before Vega and Hernandez had their badges taken. Details of the incident and other violent and illegal cops’ actions were reported in detail by the Los Angeles Times..

Sheriff Villanueva’s failure to remove the officers after the Alegria kidnapping meant that they were on the street to ultimately kill Guardado. Indeed, they are still being paid by the LASD. 

Backed by ongoing national protests and on-line protest events, anti-police brutality activists and others have demanded that Vega and Hernandez be jailed. The latest such event was a Jan. 17 virtual protest over Zoom which was then live streamed over Facebook. The protest was essentially a protest-informational that included the leader of the Breonna Taylor Defense Committee,Tia Edison. Edison reported that two community activists who had taken videos of Louisville cop brutality have been murdered by the police in separate incidents over the past month. Activists are calling for the end of “blue immunity.”

Andrew Pulley, on-online protest organizer told this reporter, “We cannot stop our massive, peaceful and legal street protests until all the cold cases around the country have been reopened and responsible cops jailed. Cops kill 1,000 Black, Brown, white and native peoples every year. There should be no special rights for cops or “qualified immunity.”

The inadequate response and implicit cover-up by the courts in Guardado’s murder is an ominous sign that Vega and Hernandez, like so many others, will be set free with only a slap on the wrist.

Health Care Providers are Getting Richer from Covid Testing

0

Back in July of 2020, the Peterson Center on Healthcare and the Kaiser Family Foundation released a little noticed report on COVID-19 test prices outside of Medicare and paid special attention to the lack of federal price diagnostic and other related tests and visits. 

Peterson-KFF found that despite the CARES Act requirement for prices to be posted, COVID-19 test prices on nearly 24% of the hospital websites examined were missing. For those that did have publicly available price information, COVID-19 diagnostic tests ranged from $20 – $850 per single test, not including the price of a provider visit, facility fee, specimen collection, or any other test that may have been included during testing. These services may be covered by insurance, but it is not guaranteed for all patients. Some patients may be billed for testing-related care from the hospital, a provider, or the insurer. The uncertainty around what patients will be charged for health care services contradicts federal attempts at price transparency. 

Confirmation of an active SARS-CoV-2 infection (the virus that causes COVID-19) is done via tests that use molecular “PCR” amplification and antigen-based lab technology. Data from 78 hospitals with listed prices yielded 134 distinct prices for diagnostic tests. The prices ranged between $20 – $850 per diagnostic test, with a median of $127. About half of test charges (51%) were priced between $100-$199, and nearly one in five (19%) were priced above $200. Websites of 102 different non-governmental adult hospitals for 50 states plus Washington D.C.  were used by Peterson-KFF to collect prices for COVID-19 diagnostic and antibody tests.

The price of diagnostic tests can vary based on the type of test performed, where it is processed, the manufacturer, and Center for Disease Control affiliation. Hospital prices for laboratory tests developed by the CDC were generally lower than for other non-CDC tests, and tests utilizing high throughput technology – allowing for faster analysis of samples – were priced higher.

Related costs 

Aside from the cost of a diagnostic test itself, hospitals are billing for specimen collection and office visits, whether in-person or through telemedicine. In most cases, the total cost of care for a test and its related services is not easily distinguishable on hospital websites. However, 13 hospitals clearly posted the list price for specimen collection, which ranged from $18- $200. 

Price for Antibody Tests

Antibody tests look for antibodies created by the immune system in response to an infection, and for the most part are used to signify a prior infection, rather than diagnosing a current one. Prices for antibody tests ranged between $36 – $300, with 82 percent of posted prices below $150. 

Many privately insured patients who do receive full coverage for COVID-19 testing as intended under the law may see the impact of testing costs reflected in their premiums for the following year. Other patients might not be protected from receiving bills for COVID-19 testing or testing-related services. In addition to the test itself, patients may incur charges for related services, including the visit (in-person or telehealth) during which the patient is evaluated, the collection of test specimens and other diagnostic tests or procedures ordered to confirm COVID-19 or rule out other possible conditions. These prices can also be high and unpredictable.

These issues with healthcare costs are not new. The cost of medical care has been notoriously hidden in the U.S. Both insured and uninsured patients only find out the full cost after they’ve received bills for their care. Hospitals and insurers have historically kept their negotiated rates secret, allowing the same provider to charge different rates for the same service.

Alabama Amazon Workers to Vote on Union in Midst of Warehouse Health Care Crisis

0

By Mark Friedman, RLNews labor reporter

On Jan. 14, Human Impact Partners and the Warehouse Workers Resources Center released a new public health study report highlighting Amazon’s inhumane working conditions and lays out how California policymakers can improve conditions for workers.

The Public Health Crisis Hidden in Amazon Warehouses report found that Amazon workers are facing a triple threat to their health, including:

  • Nearly double the national average rate of warehouse workplace injury
  • Chronic stress from the workload and work quota system
  • Risk of contracting chronic and infectious disease due to lack of restroom access and inadequate COVID-19 protections”

The report’s authors recommend that Amazon:

  • discontinue inhumane production practices that utilizes technology to force human workers to keep the same pace as a robot at Amazon’s fulfillment centers.
  • Be made to ensure working conditions are within an ergonomic framework
  • Implements stronger COVID-19 precautions at all Amazon warehouses and for subcontracted delivery drivers, including unlimited time for hand washing, proper and regular sanitizing of workstations, and accessible restrooms for drivers

Workers and delivery drivers paid the price for Amazon to rake in nearly $100 BILLION in 2020 alone. The report sheds light on what Amazon warehouse workers face every day: Physical injuries trying to meet quotas. Punishment for “time off task”, while only allowed six-minute breaks. Now, stress from fear of COVID-19.

Amazon has fired workers like labor organizer Chris Smalls from their Amazon’s JFK8 production warehouse in New York for organizing to protect employees facing infections on the job and challenging Amazon’s inaction.  

Chris Smalls told RL that the “TCOEW (The Committee of Essential Workers) stands in solidarity with the Amazon workers unionizing in Alabama. Their fight is not about money or benefits, it’s about safety, respect, redressing issues. It’s about having someone on your side. We believe everyone should have the right to have a voice.”

About 6,000 workers at the Bessemer, Alabama fulfillment center will vote in February on whether to join the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union (RWDSU). Amazon is the second largest employer in the U.S. with 1 million full- and part-time employees, behind Walmart and is non-union with the exception of some of their European workforce.

Amazon’ management opposes the mail-in vote, despite the surge of COVID-19 cases nationally and within their warehouses. Amazon admitted in October that 19,816 of its U.S. employees have tested positive or are presumed positive for COVID-19 with figures presumably higher now with the national surge of infections. Hypocritically they want it in person, and at the same time continue to deny their employees PPE, “hero” pay, and harass workers taking sick time off.

“We face outrageous work quotas that have left many with illnesses and lifetime injuries,” the union said on the site. “With a union contract, we can form a worker safety committee, and negotiate the highest safety standards and protocols for our workplace.” said the union website.

Francis Joseph Brown 1932-2021

0

Two roads diverged in a wood, and I-

I took the one less traveled by-

And that has made all the difference

Robert Frost’s “The Road Not Taken”

The loving family of Frank Brown, a resident of the Palos Verdes Peninsula for 52 years, shares of Frank’s passing in mid January 2021. His nearly 89 years of living were filled with raising a family, military and community service, worldwide travel, a love of humor, writing, singing, and dancing. He was articulate, a master at public speaking, radio show broadcasting, producing films for the Air Force, and was always approachable and kind to those around him.

He will be remembered as a devoted husband to his loving wife Pat Brown of almost 65 years and father to six children: Francine Howard (Jeff Howard & son Wil), Nicole Brown (Pat Shaw & daughters Callahan & Reilly Brown), Christine Brown, and James Brown. His grandchildren Rachael Eddy (Eric and children Ethan and Logan), Matthew Ferris, Callahan Brown, Reilly Brown, and Wilson Howard. Daughters Leslie Ferris passed away in 2001 and Louise in 2014. Frank is also predeceased by his father, Joseph Francis, mother Louise (McGonigle), brother Jack and sister, Mildred. Frank leaves behind many more close relatives and friends.

Frank was born in Winthrop, Mass., and grew up in Boston. He graduated with an undergraduate degree from the school of public relations and communications at Boston University. He also made time for sports and lettered in crew at BU. Frank was the consummate gentleman learning from his father early on to respect the ladies in his presence by tipping his hat, opening doors, pulling out their chairs and assisting them with their coats. These practices (save the hat tipping) continued even in his final years with Alzheimer’s. It is how he was wired! At the same time, he recognized that all men (and women) are created equal and encouraged his five daughters and son to pursue whatever they wanted in life saying, “you can be anything you want to be.” He valued education and completed two master’s degrees from Boston University and a master’s degree from the USC film school all while on active duty with the Air Force and being a devoted husband and full-time father! His educational role modeling resulted in his own children excelling academically and many professionally as entrepreneurs.

Residents of the Peninsula will remember Frank fondly as the Society Editor of the Palos Verdes Peninsula News where he and Pat, as a team, covered a wide variety of events on the Peninsula for many years and increased the community’s knowledge of programs available to(Frank)(Frank) those on the Hill. His wonderful wit came through in the numerous columns he wrote throughout the years which are available at the PV Library on microfiche.

A memorial celebrating Frank’s life will be planned in the future.

Random Letters: 1/21/21

0

Vaccinate Everyone Now

As LA County continues to vaccinate healthcare workers, this message needs to get out loud and clear: If a provider has unused vaccines at the end of the day and no healthcare workers are available, they can and SHOULD use them to vaccinate other people. Under no circumstance should a vaccine dose go to waste.

I am advocating that LA County create a “standby list” for residents who are 65 and older. That way, if or when there are leftover doses, clinics can call these people and get them vaccinated as soon as possible.

This past week, over 2,000 people died in LA County. The vast majority were over the age of 65.

The best thing we can do for our healthcare workers and our overloaded hospitals is to vaccinate the general public as quickly as possible, starting with our most vulnerable residents.

Janice Hahn, District 4 Los Angeles County Supervisor


Cold War Red Baiting

If we are going to get to the “truth” about 1/6, we are going to have to look at our extremists Cold War politics over the past many decades. Besides Trump flags that day on the Capitol steps, there was one lone white sign. It read: “The true hidden enemy is Communism.” Trump fanatics are virulently anti-communist. They see it everywhere, they will take up arms against it, they will lie about it, and they will decide for you that you are “Better dead than Red.” Has this not been actual U.S. policy for decades?

I have been red-bated all my life. I believe in-and work for-world peace not world war, equality between the races, economic fairness and sustainability, education and healthcare for all, and a vibrant, intelligent culture. If those values are “communist”, then it would appear that the American “anti-communist” movement all these decades has a lot to answer for, not me or my “fellow travelers” in these causes.

Our organization has sought justice for Latin America in the light of America’s violent “anti-communist” policies. We are now working on a Cold War Truth Commission. We seek to give voice through public Testimonials to those effected or traumatized by the U.S. Cold War, at home and abroad. This issue can no longer be ignored in America. It is literally on the steps of our Capitol.

The question remains, of course, can Americans now handle the truth?

Rachel Bruhnke, Board President, Witness for Peace Southwest, San Pedro


Defending Sedition in D.C.

Does anyone else see what’s going on here? Hundreds of thousands of people flooded the streets of D.C. to demonstrate their outrage over credible concerns about our electoral processes. And what happens? A few hundred rush the steps of Congress to raise hell within the guts of our government. The outcome is that everyone in power, left and right, as well as their media pulpits and puppets unify in righteous outrage over the actions of those few hundred … while the protests of the remaining hundreds of thousands become completely ignored!  As for the concerns over election issues … all gone. The storming of Congress dominates. The alarm has been raised, and it’s not Paul Revere alerting the colonists. It’s the other way around. Actions must be taken by all parties on both sides of the aisle to put an end to such an uprising. The status quo must be preserved! Allow the citizens to hold fast to their precious votes while the machine manipulates their thoughts and perhaps even the counts. This was a set up, plain and simple, orchestrated by powerful entities that have one agenda in mind, recovering power lost to the Trump presidency. It’s the only thing that makes sense. And if I’m wrong, millions are wrong with me. Even Fox news has joined the chorus of establishment caterwauling. Four dead in DC! Buried is the information that three out of the hundreds of thousands present succumbed to medical emergencies. And the woman shot was an apparently unjustified discharge of a DC police officer’s service pistol.

And OMG! …”at least 70 unrest-related arrests were made” and “47 because of curfew violations”! Curfew violations! If you don’t believe that Americans are getting played by a massive power conglomerate, then you need to wake up now.

Daniel Breckenridge, Oklahoma


Mr. Breckenridge,

There was an attempt to steal this election and it is clear now that it was by your Dear Leader who was working to do this and inspiring his loyal followers, inciting them to acts of insurrection and sedition.  If you haven’t read 18 U.S. Code CHAPTER 115— TREASON, SEDITION, AND SUBVERSIVE ACTIVITIES  I suggest you and your friends do so now. To which section 2383 reads:

Whoever incites, sets on foot, assists, or engages in any rebellion or insurrection against the authority of the United States or the laws thereof, or gives aid or comfort thereto, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than ten years, or both; and shall be incapable of holding any office under the United States.

I dare to say that your continued defense of these rebels is an act of treason in and of itself. And it is my deepest desire that all who knowingly acted to overthrow the government of the United States of America be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.

Although I am not a fan of capital punishment, I would make an exception in this case.

James Preston Allen, Publisher


Honoring King’s Legacy

As the pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church where Martin Luther King Jr. once served, I know this: This MLK Day, more than anytime before, his teachings and the legacy he left behind for all of us is precisely what this nation needs to begin the difficult process of unifying.

During this harrowing month, in which our democratic institutions were tested, we once again witnessed two vastly different systems of justice in action — making this day for reflection, remembrance, and activism all the more important.

As Martin Luther King Jr. once said, “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.” Well, we saw firsthand just how true that is not only a few weeks ago, but over these past four years.

With the upcoming historic presidential inauguration of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris, I hope that you will take a moment to reflect on the hard work that brought us to this moment. And I hope that you will remember that we all stand on the shoulders of giants like Martin Luther King Jr., who stood steadfast in his relentless pursuit of justice.

Just two days from now, folks across the country and around the world will not only witness the swearing-in of Joe Biden — but of Kamala Harris, the first African-American and South-Asian female Vice President in the history of the United States of America. Soon after, we’ll get to work bringing compassion and justice back into our policy and begin the hard work of building back better.

On this critical day of reflection, reverence, and celebration, we must recommit to our fight to form a more perfect union. As Democrats and as Americans, we must also be relentless in our pursuit of justice and continue working to create an America that represents all of us. Today, and every day, our fight for justice continues.

Rev. Raphael Warnock, U.S. Senator-Elect, Georgia

The Dark Arts of Winter Mushroom Gardens

0

As the dark days of the year chase us indoors, we look for ways to stay connected to the earth. Seed catalogs, house plants, frozen broccoli from last year’s garden– all reminders that life goes on, and will come back around.

Let’s add mushrooms to the list of wintertime ways to plug into the cycle of life. They can be grown anywhere, which is why small mushroom farms are sprouting up everywhere, like mushrooms after a rain, connected via a large subterranean brain.

At the farmer’s market a few months back, I bought mushrooms from a serious-looking grower with a stand full of differently shaped and colored shroomage. They were displayed in baskets like floral arrangements, each type of mushroom with a different shape and color, including lion’s mane, chestnut and several varieties of oyster. The mushroom grower was noticeably cleaner than the dirt farmers, and after I learned a bit more about mushroom farming, that made sense.

Mushrooms, the fruiting bodies of underground fungal mycelia, don’t need light to grow, which makes them an obvious part of a well-rounded winter garden, and also a bit more of a science project. Family farms, you could argue, are kind like a giant compost pile, where bacteria move freely from dirt to compost to crops. This is not an unsafe situation, as bacteria and fungus spores are everywhere, and we live with them – a truth that is especially obvious on the farm. But mushroom growers, while riding the same chaotic life-forces, must be vigilant against contamination, so the wrong spores don’t take hold. While a farmer plants seeds in dirt that is essentially an extension of the compost pile, a mushroom grower inoculates substrate under aseptic conditions.

There is an important distinction, he shared, between commercial mushroom varieties like white button and portobello, which both belong to species agaricus, and the varieties that most small growers like himself prefer. Agaricus grows on compost, which could be made of a lot of different things, including manure, which raises the question of where the manure was collected. If it’s from the stable at a track where the racehorses do their business, there could be antibiotics, steroids and other chemicals. Whether the nitrogen comes from manure or chemical urea, using compost adds uncertainty.

Our mushroom grower only works with mushrooms that grow on sawdust-based “woody substrates,” which are dirt free, which explains why he looked cleaner than his dirt-farming neighbors.

As we paid, my son asked if the mushrooms could be eaten raw.

“I believe mushrooms should be cooked to do justice to their flavors, and also to make their nutrients more accessible,” said the grower. “Mushroom cells have rigid walls that keep the nutrients from being absorbed, but heat will break down these walls and release the nutrients.”

He added, “If you want more of a raw feel to the mushrooms, he suggested, give them a light sauté in oil or butter with white wine or balsamic vinegar, and serve them on a salad, where you can still feel that raw freshness while also accessing all of the nutrients.” 

I was looking to serve my mushrooms with meat, so I wanted something lustier. I ended up cooking them in butter, with minced onions and nutmeg, deglazing alternatively with dry sherry and chicken stock, and finishing with a squeeze of lemon and some drops of cream. I cooked them with sliced button mushrooms to bulk it up, like I always do with precious or semiprecious fungal fruiting bodies. You end up with more and it won’t dilute the flavor.

Last fall, he began selling mushroom growing kits at the indoor farmers market. The rough size and shape of a loaf of bread, these logs of compressed wood chips and mushroom mycelia are wrapped in plastic and ready to sprout when spritzed. They are fun and satisfying to grow, like any garden. You watch it develop and change, and you get so many mushrooms. We brainstormed for friends to give kits to as presents.

Wherever you are, locally grown mushrooms and grow kits are probably available at the local farmers market. So keep your eyes peeled. They will brighten your winter.

On the longest, darkest night of the year, we left grow kits on the doorsteps of friends. A few weeks later, a jar of mushroom pate showed up on our own doorstep, made by one friend who had successfully grown and harvested her own mushrooms from the kit. She said the recipe came to her in a dream, which seems fitting. These are, after all, the days of darkness. And these are the dark arts.


Peyla’s Dream Pate

Smooth, thick and meaty without the aid of cream cheese, this pate is lovely on toast or crackers. If you don’t have a food processor and have to chop, you might not achieve pate status. In that case, call it a mushroom salad. Makes about a cup

½ pound of oyster or chestnut mushrooms

3 cloves of garlic, chopped coarsely

¼ cup olive oil

½ teaspoon each of salt and pepper

3 tablespoons fresh lemon juice

1 teaspoon lemon zest

½ cup chopped green onions

Toss the mushrooms in the olive oil, salt, pepper and garlic, and bake at 375˚ for 15 minutes. Let cool. Add the lemon and onion, and puree in a food processor or by chopping. The blender makes it too smooth.

State of POLA Addresses COVID-19, Emissions

The Port of Los Angeles hosted its annual State of the Port address on Jan. 14. In previous years, the port charged exorbitant fees to hear the address. Because of the pandemic, this year, it was virtual and free. 

Gene Seroka, executive director of the port, largely focused on the impact COVID-19 had on the port during 2020. In particular, the port’s moving of containers, which is its primary economic driver, was erratic. 

“By May of 2020, our volume had plunged nearly 19%,” Seroka said. “In the second half of the year, American consumer demand created a pandemic-induced buying that our economy has never seen before.”

The amount of containers that the port moved in the second half of 2020 increased by almost 50%. The port handled almost twice as much cargo the week before Christmas of 2020 than it did during that same period in 2019. 

In total, the port moved 9.2 million twenty-foot equivalent units during 2020, which is slightly below 2019. However, 2020 was the port’s fourth highest ranking year in terms of cargo volume. 

Seroka praised the ILWU’s handling of the swings in cargo volume. By August, the port was down nearly 234,000 labor shifts. But when the pendulum swung in the other direction, the ILWU members picked up the slack. 

While the moving of cargo volume broke several records over the last few months, most of the port’s other areas of business declined, including cruises, waterfront businesses and vehicle import volumes.

Seroka said the biggest reduction in business was in exports. 

“Rarely have we seen a time when only 1 in 4 containers returning to Asia was loaded with cargo,” Seroka said. 

Seroka argued that the port serves the economy and said that the port will accelerate economic recovery. He said the port will do this by getting more money from the government. 

“Over the last decade, federal investment in West Coast ports has trailed other coasts by a margin of 10 to one,” Seroka said. “That needs to change. Working with the ILWU, PMA [Pacific Maritime Association] and other West Coast ports, we will marshal a coalition to fight for our fair share of funding.”

Seroka did not specify why the port needs extra funding when it continues to break records in terms of cargo volume. He said the port will also help the economy by aligning policies, programs and investment on exports.

“Everyone benefits when we make it easier for American businesses to access foreign markets, create economic opportunity and reduce their carbon footprint,” Seroka said. 

He said that the port’s capacity to handle large amounts of cargo quickly was key to its competitiveness. Operational inefficiency hurts the port, and the executive director said that everyone involved needed to take steps to move faster, including stakeholders in the supply chain community and policy makers.

During the presentation, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti briefly spoke, commending Seroka’s work as chief logistics officer for Logistics Victory Los Angeles, or LOVE LA, which was started during the pandemic to stockpile personal protective equipment, or PPE, for workers and hospitals. 

“To date, LOVE LA has provided more than 4.6 million units of PPE to three dozen LA area hospitals, and 150 skilled nursing facilities,” Garcetti said.

Seroka said that at the beginning of the pandemic, the PMA and ILWU quickly came up with protocols for sanitizing terminal and telecommunications equipment. However, since liquid sanitizer was scarce, they had to rely on the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, which supplied 1,400 gallons of industrial bleach. Construction and maintenance workers diluted the bleach to standards set by the Center for Disease Control and Prevention, and delivered them to the marine terminals in the port. 

Seroka also spoke of new digital tools to track port data, such as the Port Optimizer data portal, as well as the Control Tower. These tools help with efficiency, but the port has a more sinister problem related to data — the weaponization of port data.

“Since the pandemic began, cyber intrusion attempts on our IT system have nearly doubled to 45 million per month,” Seroka said. “Our cyber security safeguards protect us against those intrusions, but other maritime institutions have suffered costly and debilitating attacks.” 

To fight these attacks, the port has a cyber resilient center run by International Business Machines Corp., IBM.

Seroka did not mention that the port charged Carlos Saldana, ILWU casual, with 20 counts of cyber harassment — even though he did nothing of the sort. The only thing Saldana did was attend a protest in person with signs that mocked the harbor commissioners who approved the automation of Pier 400. The case was quietly dismissed in November 2020, after Saldana spent more than $10,000 defending himself.

Seroka also spoke of the port’s clean air action plan, and the advancements the port made on it in 2020. The port’s goals include zero emissions terminal equipment by 2030, and a zero-emissions drayage truck fleet by 2035. 

To that end, the port is currently involved in 16 demonstration projects and is testing 134 units of advanced equipment, including 78 zero-emissions trucks. 

“After more than a decade of proofs of concept, we’re starting to have real discussions with truck manufacturers about what it will take to make a zero-emissions equipment market right here in Los Angeles,” Seroka said. 

However, such a change will not be cheap. Transitioning to zero-emissions trucks will cost more than $10 billion, which does not include the cost of installing infrastructure to support those trucks, such as charging stations. 

The port doesn’t know how to actually meet its own deadline in terms of zero emissions, so it sent out a request for information to private companies in October. The port wants help with how to accelerate the development of zero-emissions technology and other organizations had until Jan. 14 to respond. With any luck, other entities will be able to help the port do what critics say it should already be doing.