Sunday, October 12, 2025
spot_img
spot_img
Home Blog Page 537

Long Beach Announces COVID-19 Vaccination Plan

LONG BEACH — On Dec. 10, the City of Long Beach announced its vaccination plan. 

The first shipment of vaccines will be arriving before the end of this month and will include 3,900 Pfizer doses, and then in early January, 11,600 Moderna doses will also arrive. Our team has acquired all the necessary refrigeration infrastructure and is ready to go.

The first residents to get the vaccine in group A will include:

Healthcare workers in hospitals

Residents and staff at nursing and long term care facilities

Paramedics and EMT personnel

Second to receive the vaccine will be our healthcare workers in clinics and public health departments. And third to receive the vaccine will be our dental and key pharmacy personnel.

In group B are all essential workers in education and schools, grocers, public safety officers, transit workers and other essential workers.

And group C will include residents over 65 and other residents with critical care needs. All of these populations should be vaccinated in spring 2021.

Vaccinations for the general public, which will occur at the city’s current testing centers, will likely start in late spring. And if the federal government and the state are able to acquire more vaccine doses this timeline could be expedited.

Details: longbeach.gov/covid19

Enroll in CSUDH Fundamentals of Information Literacy, Spring 2021

This course explores many topics related to information literacy, the set of skills associated with how to find, use, and evaluate information. No expensive textbook required – all materials are freely provided as a zero-cost course.

This 3-unit class meets the General Education requirements for Area E: Lifelong Learning.

Professor Withorn will provide weekly activities (short readings, videos, and podcast segments, tutorials) and assignments with due dates in Blackboard that you can complete at your own pace. CSUDH Library faculty have chosen class materials and activities to spark curiosity and encourage dialogue between the instructor and your classmates.

Find LIB 151 (Class Number 25821), taught online asynchronously Jan. 25 through May 25, 2021 by Prof. Withorn in the class schedule

Details: www.libguides.csudh.edu/blog 

First Asian American Justice to Serve on Fourth District Court of Appeal

0

Judge Truc T. Do nominated by Gov. Newsom

SACRAMENTO – Gov. Gavin Newsom Dec. 8, announced his historic nomination of Judge Truc T. Do to serve as an Associate Justice of the Fourth District Court of Appeal, Division One. If confirmed, Judge Do will be the first Asian American Justice in the court’s history.

Judge Do was also the first Vietnamese-American judge ever appointed to the San Diego County Superior Court when she was appointed by Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. in 2018.

Judge Do, 49, of San Diego, has served as a Judge at the San Diego County Superior Court since 2018. She was a Partner at Jones Day from 2014 to 2018 and at Munger, Tolles and Olson from 2009 to 2014. Judge Do served as a Deputy District Attorney at the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office from 1999 to 2009 and was an Associate at Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton from 1997 to 1999. She earned a Juris Doctor degree from Stanford Law School.

Judge Do fills the vacancy created by the retirement of Justice Gilbert Nares. This position requires confirmation by the Commission on Judicial Appointments, which consists of Chief Justice Tani Cantil-Sakauye, Attorney General Xavier Becerra and Senior Presiding Justice Manuel A. Ramirez. The compensation is $245,578. Judge Do is a Democrat.

Effective Immediately, LASD Relaxes Parking Enforcement in Unincorporated LA County Areas

The recent stay-at-home order issued in early December,highlighted again the need for additional parking across Los Angeles County. In a reprieve, the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department parking enforcement will temporarily relax parking enforcement, effective immediately, to help cope with parking availability.

Temporary relaxed enforcement in the unincorporated areas of Los Angeles County will include:

Street sweeping:  All streets with posted signs for street sweeping will not be enforced. 

Expired registration:  Vehicles with expired registration will not be cited for 5204 (a) CVC; registrations expired in excess of six months and will not be towed.

Enforcement in the unincorporated areas of Los Angeles County will continue for blocking fire hydrants, red zone parking and/or fire lane, handicap parking violations, blocking driveways, parked vehicles which disrupt the flow of traffic, metered parking in business districts.

Black Friday’s Amazon Blackout and other Local Briefs

 Economist Yanis Varoufakis called for a one-day boycott of Amazon.

INTERNATIONAL— Greek-Australian economist Yanis Varoufakis called for a one-day boycott of Amazon on this past Black Friday, Nov. 27, in an online video where he asked viewers to not even visit the site on its busiest day of the year.

Groups of trade unionists, environmental activists, privacy campaigners and tax justice advocates also planned coordinated actions against the company’s sites and supply chain. #MakeAmazonPay actions took place across 15 countries, the U.S., Mexico, Brazil, the Philippines, Germany and Poland.

Amazon’s success during the COVID-19 pandemic has inflated its share price and increased the wealth of its chief executive Jeff Bezos, by $70 billion.

“By boycotting Amazon you will be adding your strength to an international coalition of workers and activists,” Varoufakis said. “Amazon is not a mere company. It is not merely a monopolistic mega-firm. It is far more, and far worse than that. It is the pillar of a new techno-feudalism.”

Black Fridays actions were planned to initiate a campaign against Amazon’s record on workers’ rights, environmental impact, work with police and immigration authorities, tax avoidance, and privacy invasions of privacy through its growing range of internet-connected devices.

The campaign is assembled by Progressive International, a global initiative of progressive groups, politicians and intellectuals, including Varoufakis, Noam Chomsky and Bernie Sanders, and UNI Global, a trade union federation representing 20 million workers.

Further, thousands of Amazon workers and social and climate justice groups participated in a global action on Black Friday, demanding fairer wages, hazard pay during the pandemic, and for Amazon to start paying taxes. Protesters are also demanding that the company commit to better environmental practices and to allow workers to unionize.

No Rent Hikes At Port of L.As Warehouse No. 10

SAN PEDRO — The director of media relations at the Port of Los Angeles, Philip Sanfield Dec. 4, reported that the port is in discussions with Crafted, the permanent indoor weekend market located at warehouse No. 10, about its lease. Rumors have circulated that the port was seeking to raise rents both there and at Brouwerij West which sits across from Crafted. However, Sanfield said the port is not seeking to raise the rent the permanent market is currently paying or to change the terms of the lease that was agreed upon in 2015.

The Harbor Commission has recently received letters submitted from Crafted vendors, concerned citizens, artists, neighborhood council members and business owners to dissuade the port from potentially raising rents which were said to be triple the current rates. RLN contacted the operators of Crafted but did not hear back from them by the time of publishing. 

Belmont Shore Protests Restaurant Closures

LONG BEACH— More than 200 protesters marched, Dec. 2, in Long Beach in protest of outdoor dining closures enacted by new COVID-19 restrictions. The march, starting at 2nd Street and Pacific Coast Highway, then went through Naples to the Belmont Shore area at Nieto Ave., where it concluded in front of a Chase Bank. 

Long Beach has its own health department and has typically aligned its orders similar to those of Los Angeles County, which has sparked local business owners to assert that the city should act independent of the county. Meanwhile, Long Beach again fell in line with the county Dec. 1, announcing a ban on all gatherings except for protests and religious services. The updated health order went into effect Dec. 2. 

Health officials from both Los Angeles city and county have said in-person dining has been restricted because it is considered one of the riskiest activities. The decision came in response to the increasing daily average of new coronavirus cases and hospitalizations.

However, financial relief may be on the way in Long Beach. On Nov. 30, Long Beach Mayor Robert Garcia announced a proposal for a $5 million resiliency fund for restaurants, breweries and bars in Long Beach that have been forced to close in-person dining because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Long Beach City Council will consider the resiliency fund at its Dec. 8 meeting. The fund, If approved, would start with $5 million and may be increased depending on need and available federal stimulus money.

Community Equity Fund Launched In Regions Most Impacted By COVID-19

LOS ANGELES — L.A County launched the County COVID-19 Community Equity Fund to help slow the spread of COVID-19 in communities disproportionately impacted by the virus. Fifty-one community-based organizations, or CBOs, will receive funding to provide a range of services, including outreach, education, case investigation and contact tracing. They also will help individuals who live in hard-hit neighborhoods connect with health and social services.

The goal of the Community Equity Fund is to reduce the disproportionate impact of COVID-19 in LA County by partnering with organizations and providing them with funding, training and technical assistance. The organizations will raise awareness in their communities on how to prevent spreading COVID-19 and will connect residents to health care, social services and COVID-19 testing when necessary.

POLA And IBM To Create Cyber Resilience Center

LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles Board of Harbor Commissioners has approved an agreement with International Business Machines Corporation (IBM) to design and operate a Port Cyber Resilience Center (CRC) at the Port of Los Angeles. Focused on detecting and protecting against malicious cyber incidents potentially impacting cargo flow, this first-of-its-kind system is also expected to greatly improve the quality, quantity and speed of cyber information sharing within the Port community.

Governor Releases Master Plan for Early Learning and Care: California for All Kids

0

SACRAMENTO — On Dec. 1, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced the release of the Master Plan for Early Learning and Care: California for All Kids. The plan provides a roadmap for building a comprehensive and equitable early learning and care system over the next decade. The plan will help the state better understand the crisis families, children and early learning and care providers are facing amid the COVID-19 pandemic. It identifies key policy goals to ensure that all young California children can thrive through access to early learning and care programs. The goals include universal preschool, enhanced workforce development and equitable career pathways for educators and caregivers, and funding reforms to promote equitable access to high-quality early learning and care. 

The plan’s first steps recommend providing relief to parents, quality care for children and stability to child care providers as the state rebuilds an early learning and care system.  

The plan outlines specific recommendations including:

Details:www.Early-Learning-and-Care-Making-California-For-All-Kids-

Gov. Newsom Announces Launch Of CA Notify

0

SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom today announced the statewide launch of CA Notify, a new digital tool that will help reduce the transmission of COVID-19. Starting Dec. 10, Californians can opt in to receive COVID-19 notifications informing them if they have been exposed to someone who has tested positive for the virus. CA Notify is a digital tool that protects privacy and security – it does not collect device location to detect exposure and does not share a user’s identity. The tool was developed in partnership with Google and Apple and piloted with the help of the University California, San Diego and the University of California, San Francisco.

Starting Dec. 10, Californians can enable CA Notify in their iPhone settings or on Android phones by downloading the CA notify app from the Google Play Store.

Full Compliance Alongside Straight-Forward Safety Measures Are Necessary to Slow the Surge

LOS ANGELES — Daily case numbers are unlike any ever seen in L.A. County. Activities people were able to do just a couple of weeks ago now present too much risk for virus transmission.

There are 2,988 people with COVID-19 hospitalized with 24% of these people in the ICU. The number of people hospitalized with COVID-19 has surpassed all-time highs every day since Dec. 1, and has increased nearly every day since Nov. 1. 

As of Dec. 6, the Southern California region has 10.9% staffed adult ICU capacity remaining.

As hospitalizations increase sharply, their remaining capacity is becoming a concern. Increased cases in the community directly translates to higher case numbers among healthcare workers. As of Dec. 7, Public Health has reported an additional 1,745 new cases among healthcare workers — more than twice the number reported last week and the highest weekly number ever reported.

Testing results are available for nearly 3,930,000 individuals with 11% of all people testing positive. Today’s test positivity rate is 11.6%. One month ago, on Nov. 7, the test positivity rate was 5%. 

As of Dec. 6, the State’s new stay at home order is in effect in Southern California and will remain in effect for at least three weeks. The order prohibits private gatherings of any size, closes sector operations, limits occupancy at various businesses, and requires 100% masking and physical distancing. The order also includes the following:

 

Gatherings of any size are prohibited.

Critical infrastructure, like public transportation and businesses that keep our utilities running, remain open.

Worship services and political expression continue to be permitted outdoors, with face coverings and distancing requirements.

Schools that have previously reopened for either high-need students or through the waiver program can remain open.

All retail can remain open, but these businesses must operate at 20% occupancy or below at all times.  Stand alone grocery stores where the principal business activity is the sale of food may operate at 35% capacity.

On-site consumption of food, beverages and alcohol at any business is not permitted.

Hotel and lodging entities are not permitted to accept out-of-state, non-essential reservations are not permitted unless the reservation is for the minimum period of quarantine and that person is quarantining at that lodging.

 

Businesses still open include:

Essential critical infrastructure including government, healthcare, courts, food and agriculture production, communications, and essential manufacturing

Grocery stores, retail stores and shopping centers (all at very limited occupancy)

Restaurants for take-out and delivery only

Outdoor fitness facilities

Parks and trails

Day care and schools

Health care facilities, including clinics and dental offices; everyone should continue to seek needed healthcare.

 

Businesses that must temporarily suspend operations include:

Cardrooms

Wineries, breweries, distilleries except for retail

Museums, botanical gardens, zoos, aquariums

All Personal care including hair salons, barbershops, and nail salons

Playgrounds

Family entertainment centers

 

L.A. County has asked local business partners to take extra steps to be fully compliant with the safeguards and modifications set forth in the stay at home order and existing Public Health protocols. Public Health’s compliance teams are visiting businesses across the county daily. During recent business compliance checks only 59% of businesses inspected were in full compliance with required safety protocols. www.publichealth.lacounty.gov/media/Coronavirus/locations

To date, Public Health identified 457,880 positive cases of COVID-19 across all areas of L.A. County and a total of 7,936 deaths. Upon further investigation, 57 cases reported earlier were not L.A. County residents.