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LA Animal Services Has Opened Community Pet Food Pantry

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LOS ANGELES — LA Animal Services announced the opening of the Pet Food Pantry June 8, The pantry will provide a resource for low-income residents of Los Angeles experiencing financial hardship who need assistance to feed their animal companions. Residents interested in participating in the Pet Food Pantry must be the pet’s owner, and will need to register by going online to obtain an appointment at one of two locations: Chesterfield Square or East Valley. If you are unable to go online, call the Pet Food Pantry line for Chesterfield Square at 213-326-2788 or the Pet Food Pantry line for East Valley at 213-264-8985 to register and make an appointment.

 If you would like to contribute to the Pet Food Pantry, LA Animal Services is accepting donations of unopened pet food, both bags and canned. Monetary donations may also be made directly to support the Pet Food Pantry by clicking here.  https://licensepet.com/wl3/don/lactwd/801

The Pet Food Pantry will be open every 2nd and 4th Monday of the month, from 10am to 2pm, and will be located in the following LA Animal Services Center locations.

Participants will be required to provide the name, weight, sex, and animal license number (when applicable) of their animal companion when they register and make an appointment in one of two locations: Chesterfield Square or East Valley. 

If your pet is unaltered, pet owners may obtain a discount or FREE spay/neuter voucher, and will be advised that the pet must be altered in order to continue to receive food from the Pet Food Pantry.

Participants will receive a one-gallon bag of dog or cat food per pet. Limit one participant per household for up three cats and/or dogs per household. (LAMC 53.50).

Pet food pick-up from the Pet Food Pantry will be by appointment only. To ensure the safety of our staff and volunteers, social distancing will be observed and face masks will be required.

Gov. Newsom and First Partner Siebel Newsom Announce New and Expanded Support for Victims of Domestic Violence

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SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom and First Partner Jennifer Siebel Newsom May 29, announced a series of new initiatives to support victims of domestic violence amidst the COVID-19 pandemic. The series of initiatives includes $5 million in state funding, a new partnership to secure private funding with $3 million in seed funding, an executive order to help ease the financial strain on domestic violence service providers, and new private sector partnerships to support survivors fleeing violence.

Crisis hotlines, women’s shelters, and public safety officers are reporting a higher number of calls and reports of domestic violence across California since the COVID-19 outbreak and the issuance of the stay-at-home orders.

Between Feb. 24 and May 19, there were a total of 8,371 calls to the National Domestic Violence Hotline from California.

Anyone experiencing domestic violence should call the state’s 24-hour hotline (800-799-7233) or the national hotline (800-799-SAFE).

The Governor announced the following new initiatives:

Text to 911:

Cal OES’ Public Safety Communications branch has rolled out the “text-to-911” capability throughout the state, allowing individuals to text ‘911’ for emergency services. As of May 29, 75 percent of California’s population can actively send texts to 911, including almost every major metropolitan area.

In addition, Cal OES will enable “text from 911” capabilities at all public safety answering points in the state — allowing 911 dispatchers to text a caller back in the event their call is disconnected.

Additional Funding:

The week of May 25, Gov. Newsom signed an executive order to ease financial burdens on domestic violence centers. The order waives a requirement for domestic violence centers to provide a 10 percent match in funds.

The state is directing $5.3 million in existing Victims of Crime Act funds to three coalitions to support efforts related to the COVID-19 pandemic: (1) $3 million to California Partnership to End Domestic Violence; (2) $1.6 million to California Coalition on Sexual Assault; and (3) $721,337 Children’s Advocacy Centers of California. These coalitions will distribute funds to local victim service providers.

The federal COVID-19 package included $45 million in funding for Family Violence Prevention and Services grants, with $4,154,993 to California.

In addition to the state funding, the Women’s Foundation of California has committed to working with the state to raise private funds that support domestic violence organizations and, in the longer-term, strengthens organizations centering on gender in California’s economic recovery plan. The Women’s Foundation has a goal of raising an additional $42 million by the end of 2020.

Free Accommodations and Free Transportation:

The state is partnering with the California Partnership to End Domestic Violence (CPEDV), Airbnb and Uber to provide free accommodation, for up to 30 days and transportation to victims of domestic violence.Reservations will be conducted in a manner that protects both the anonymity and privacy of the victim

Also in partnership with the state and CPEDV, Uber is providing 3,000 free rides in Los Angeles and San Francisco to transport victims of domestic violence to safety during shelter in place with a plan to offer additional free rides statewide.

Gov.Newsom Signs Executive Order on Actions in Response to COVID-19

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SACRAMENTO — Governor Gavin Newsom, May 29, issued an executive order extending authorization for local governments to halt evictions for renters impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, through July 28.

The order also addresses a variety of issues in response to the pandemic, by extending the waiver permitting the Department of Motor Vehicles to allow for mail-in renewals of driver’s licenses and identification cards, and waiving certain programmatic and administrative requirements that restrict child care and afterschool programs from serving children of essential infrastructure workers.

In addition, the order allows individuals enrolled in teacher preparation programs during the 2019-20 school year to obtain their preliminary credential without a teaching performance assessment, if the individual was unable to complete that requirement due to a COVID-19 school closure. Under the order, individuals otherwise eligible to obtain certain teaching or education specialist credentials or enroll in teacher preparation programs are permitted to do so without passing certain assessments, for which testing was suspended due to the statewide stay-at-home order.

Details: newsom-executive-order 

Preparing Los Angeles County for the Closure of the State’s Youth Prison System

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LOS ANGELESThe Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors, May 26, unanimously approved a motion by Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas, co-authored with Supervisor Sheila Kuehl, which asked the County to begin to immediately prepare for the transition of youth who would have been committed to the state youth prison system, the Division of Juvenile Justice (DJJ), to instead be in Los Angeles County’s care. The motion requests that the County of Los Angeles (County) begin the planning process to transform its juvenile justice system, and determine if an entity other than the Probation Department can be responsible for the custody and rehabilitation of youth previously sent to DJJ.

This motion follows Gov. Gavin Newsom’s announcement as part of the State’s revised 2020-21 budget, that the DJJ will be closing. Starting January 2021, DJJ will no longer admit new youth; instead admitted youth will be housed at the county level. This move by the Governor is intended to help close a historic budget deficit created by the COVID-19 crisis, as well as to keep youth closer to their communities and families in the name of rehabilitation. Counties have a short timeline – just over six months – to prepare for this increased responsibility.

Oakland Caravans in Protest

OAKLAND, CA – 31MAY20 – Thousands of people participate in a caravan of over 2000 cars from the Port of Oakland, to protest the police murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis, and African American and people of color killed by police.

To see a full set of photos, click here:https://www.flickr.com/photos/56646659@N05/albums/72157714533842187

Apple Shed Strikes Win Recognition, and the Fight Goes On

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Strikers at Allan Brothers. (Photo by Xolotl Edgar Franx)

By David Bacon
Labornotes, 6/2/20
https://davidbaconrealitycheck.blogspot.com/2020/06/apple-shed-strikes-win-recognition-and.html
https://labornotes.org/2020/06/apple-shed-strikes-win-recognition-fight-goes

Thirty four workers at the apple packing shed that sparked a wave of strikes in central Washington went back to work on Monday with a written agreement recognizing their workers’ committee, Trabajadores Unidos por la Justicia (Workers United for Justice). Of the 115 workers at Allan Brothers who walked out May 7, the 34 stayed out for the full 22 days, during which hundreds of other workers struck at six additional sheds in the area.

According to Agustin Lopez, a leader of the movement who’s worked in the valley since the mid-1980s, “The most important thing to us is that the company is recognizing our committee as the representative of all the workers. Under the agreement we will continue negotiating for salary increases, better working conditions, and health protections. The agreement means that our rights as workers are respected.”

The shed strike wave was touched off by the impact of the coronavirus on the hundreds of people who labor sorting fruit in Yakima Valley’s huge packinghouses. While their numbers are smaller than the huge workforce of thousands who pick the fruit in the summer and fall, the shed workforce occupies a strategic place in this system of agricultural production. The virus has spread more widely here than in any other county on the Pacific Coast, with an infection rate of about 500 per 100,000. As of June 1 Yakima County had 3,891 COVID-19 cases and 90 deaths. Twenty-four percent of people tested have been infected, and the local hospital system is at capacity with few beds available.

“The most important demand for us is that we have a healthy workplace and protection from the virus,” Lopez explained at the start of the conflict. “Fourteen people have left work over the last month because they have the COVID-19.”

During harvest time, trucks from the orchards haul loads of apples and cherries picked by thousands of farmworkers, laboring for the big growers of the Yakima Valley. After the fruit is cooled and stored, orders from the grocery chains are filled by workers, mostly women, standing shoulder-to-shoulder in front of fast-moving conveyor belts. As apples and cherries sweep past, they sort it and send it on to other workers who wash and pack it, and eventually load it onto trucks. By the time it appears on the shelves of supermarkets around the country, the fruit has passed through many working hands.

Packinghouse laborers are almost entirely immigrants from Mexico, and most of the sorting jobs on the lines are done by women. Their families make up the working-class backbone of the small towns of Yakima Valley. Most have lived here for years. Jobs in the sheds pay minimum wage, but they’re are a step up from the fields because they offer year-round work at 40 hours per week.

While their numbers are smaller than the huge workforce of thousands who pick the fruit in the summer and fall, the shed workforce occupies a strategic place in this system of agricultural production.

REACHED OUT TO UNIONS

When the workers stopped work at Allan Brothers, demanding better safety precautions and $2/hour in hazard pay, they reached out to Dulce Gutierrez, who represents the Washington Labor Council in the Yakima Valley. Gutierrez in turn contacted Washington State’s new union for farmworkers, Familias Unidas por la Justicia (Families United for Justice), at its office in Burlington on the coast. Ramon Torres, FUJ president, and Edgar Franks, political director, went to Yakima, where they’ve spent the last month supporting the strikers.

The first company to settle was the Roche Fruit Company, after a lunchtime walkout, bolstered by the presence of FUJ organizers, got the owners to increase a hazard pay offer of $200 per month to $100 per week. Strikes then followed at Jack Frost Co., Matson Fruit Co., Monson Fruit Co., Hanson Fruit Co., and Columbia Reach Pack.

To protect workers’ organizing rights, Columbia Legal Services and FUJ’s lawyer, Kathy Barnard from the labor law firm of Barnard Iglitzin & Lavitt, filed unfair labor practice charges against Allan Brothers. The workers’ committee charged that managers interrogated workers about their strike activity, threatened them with discipline if they joined the strike, increased wages for non-strikers in an effort to buy their loyalty, and disciplined an employee who brought water to the picketers. (The recognition agreement did not include an agreement by the workers to drop the charges.)

The company barred strikers’ vehicles from its parking lot, but the COVID-distanced picket line at Allan Brothers held up even under threats. Sheriff deputies arrested one man who told strikers that he planned to return with a gun and shoot them. In response, two workers, Maribel Medina and Cesar Traverso, began a hunger strike on May 19, after reading Cesar Chavez’s “Farmworkers’ Prayer.”

DELIVERY TO THE CAPITOL

When growers proved recalcitrant despite the pressure, workers increased it by going to the state capitol in Olympia on May 26. There they delivered 200 complaints against Allan Brothers to the Department of Labor and Industries, and held a noisy rally outside the home of Democratic Governor Jay Inslee. “The companies thought they could contain this,” Franks explained, “but it put a lot of pressure on them and made the strike a statewide issue.”

One worker, Julietta Pulido Montejano, from Columbia Reach Pack, told state officials, “We are on strike demanding protections from COVID 19. We want the company to respect social distancing, and to provide us with daily masks. We want to be able to take care of ourselves so we can go back to our families and not get them sick.” Thirty-one workers at Columbia Reach Pack have tested positive for the virus.

COMPANIES START TO CAVE

On May 22 the companies began to seek agreement, when the owner of Monson Fruit signed a written recognition of the workers’ committee, providing better health protections against the virus and $1/hour in hazard pay. Workers there then returned to work. Workers also went back at Jack Frost Co. with a promise of an increase they have yet to receive, but without a written agreement.

At Matson Fruit the workers’ committee was presented with a written agreement. “But when they saw it set up a company union,” Franks said, “they rejected it, and they’re still on strike and talking.” At Columbia Reach Pack the company seems unwilling to negotiate, workers charge, and over 50 remain on strike.

At Allan Brothers, while the agreement was signed and workers went back to work, committee members acknowledge that the conflict has not really ended. “Our fight continues,” said one committee member, Romina Medina. “But this agreement shows that we can still make important achievements after 22 days without working, without money and enduring intimidation, because we did not give up.”

At Allan Brothers the Trabajadores Unidos por la Justicia committee accepted the $1/hour wage increase offered by the company, and that had been accepted at Monson Fruit. That
$1/hour raise expires at the end of July, when the company has agreed to negotiate over wages. Agustin Lopez said, “We are sure that we will achieve all our demands, because we will return with strength to the negotiating table then.”

Torres believes that workers learned enough about collective action that they will be prepared to fight when the day comes. “It had a big impact on them,” he says, “since it was the first time they’d done anything like this. They are building a base, and learning how to organize collective action to fight inside the workplace.”

Gutierrez says that winning health protections inside the sheds is a critical victory, given the dangers of the coronavirus: “There’s been progress made at all the warehouses with sanitation and safety. That is already a victory for every huelga [strike].”

TAKING OVER CITY COUNCIL

The strikes are partly a product of political changes sweeping central Washington. Gutierrrez herself ran on a slate of progressive candidates who gained a majority on the Yakima City Council in 2015. She won 84 percent of the vote and became the first Latina elected to the body. That election, in turn, was the result of a voting rights suit that overturned Yakima’s old citywide election system and ended decades of grower control of it.

Nevertheless, apple shed workers still confront an entrenched anti-union industry. Its biggest players, Stemilt Fruit Co. and Zirkle Fruit Co., bring thousands of H-2A guest workers into Washington every year for the apple harvest in late summer and the fall. They have a long history of fighting unions and dominate the agricultural labor policies of the state government, even in Democratic administrations.

Longtime farmworker organizer Rosalinda Guillen, executive director of the organization Community to Community, cautions, “This country gets its food supply on the backs of people who these companies treat as expendable. That hasn’t changed at all.


Los Angeles County Imposes Third Night of Curfew

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Los Angeles County will be under a countywidecurfew that runs from 6 p.m. today, June 2, 2020, through 6 a.m. on Wednesday, June 3.

The curfew does not apply to individuals voting in Special Elections occurring today in the City of Commerce and in El Rancho Unified School District in Pico Rivera. In both elections, all voters were mailed ballots and theLos Angeles County Registrar-Recorder/County Clerkhas one mobile vote center in each jurisdiction that has been open daily since Saturday and will be open today until 8 p.m. Poll workers are also exempt from the order.

This is the third night of a countywide curfew ordered to protect public safety.

The County curfew applies to every municipality in Los Angeles County, but cities can implement stricter curfews based on their local needs. Please check with your local city to determine if they have implemented stricter curfews.

In addition to voters and poll workers being exempt, the countywide curfew does not apply to the following: peace officers; firefighters; National Guard or other military personnel deployed to the area; emergency medical services personnel; individuals traveling to and from work; individuals working on a public work of improvement construction project; credentialed media representatives involved in news gathering; people experiencing homelessness and without access to a viable shelter; and individuals seeking medical treatment.

The following cities have already implemented stricter curfews:

Visitlacounty.gov/emergencyfor the most up-to-date information.

Virtual Breakout During the Outbreak

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Enjoy an immersive experience at 7 p.m., June 6, when listeners can live-stream soundpedro2020schizophonia for free, beginning with a live kick-off and Earmaginations videos. At 7:30pm the community is invited to create a virtual breakout during the outbreak by livestreaming sound art from porches, windows and balconies in a simultaneous community sound event. Sound works by various artists will be continuously released throughout the month of June, concluding with a SynthLab online dance party on at 7 p.m., June 30

At 7:30 p.m. on June 6, virtual attendees are invited to:

Stream audio at soundpedro.org

Play speakers from windows, porches, yards, balconies, etc.

Collaborate with neighbors in a socially-distant sound art block party

Stream anywhere-even from your car! Create your own soundscape!

Share your audio-visual experience using #soundpedro #soundpedro2020

Soundpedro is produced by the Long Beach artist group FLOOD in partnership with Angels Gate Cultural Center.

Details: www.soundpedro.org

Federal Authorities in Los Angeles Responding to Looting and Other Criminal Acts Unrelated to Peaceful Protests

LOS ANGELES – In the wake of widespread looting and arson across the Southland, federal law enforcement officials are working closely with local authorities to identify instances in which criminals unrelated to legitimate protestors may be subject to federal prosecution.

At the direction of Attorney General William P. Barr, the United States Attorney’s Office and the FBI are employing the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF) to identify organizers, instigators and participants in serious criminal activity. Federal authorities are also coordinating federal resources with state and local partners, and will consider bringing federal criminal cases where appropriate.

“The outrage and meaningful protests resulting from the death of George Floyd are completely understandable. We support and will protect those who wish to demonstrate peacefully,” said United States Attorney Nick Hanna. “But some have chosen to act with violence by destroying property, ransacking businesses and setting fires. The criminals who have caused havoc in neighborhoods across Southern California appear to be exploiting a situation in which other citizens are exercising their First Amendment rights to assemble and express their viewpoints. We are confronting this outlaw behavior by providing federal resources and working closely with local police to identify cases in which federal charges could be appropriately filed.”

“The FBI supports and works diligently to safeguard legitimate protests and Constitutionally-protected free speech,” said Paul Delacourt, the Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI’s Los Angeles Field Office. “The FBI does not tolerate crossing the legal line into criminal activity at the expense of innocent citizens and business owners, and we will work with our local partners to pursue federal prosecution, where warranted.”

The FBI is asking members of the public to provide information that could be used to help identify actors who are actively instigating violence in the wake of Mr. Floyd’s death. The FBI is accepting tips and digital media depicting violent encounters surrounding the civil unrest that is happening throughout the country. If you witness or have witnessed unlawful violent actions, you are urged to submit any information, photos or videos that could be relevant at fbi.gov/violence. You may also call 1-800-CALL-FBI (800-225-5324) to report tips and/or information.

Long Beach and San Pedro Farms Feed the Needy During COVID-19 Crisis

It’s a big world, so perhaps there’s an urban farmer or three out there who is in it solely for the money. Talk to enough urban farmers, though, and you come away feeling these are people who do it for the love of food ― good food, fresh food, healthy food, real food. They love food but not the status quo of quantity over quality; of ridiculously complex, petroleum-guzzling supply chains; of mass-produced, preservative-laced, nutritionally dubious foodstuff.

They know there’s a better way, and they do what they do to prove it, to be part of the solution, providing not only quality food directly to their communities but creating an example for others to follow. Yes, they’d like to make money ― a necessary evil in this world ― but that’s not what drives them.

No surprise, then, that despite their own difficulties, urban farmers in our area have been volunteering time, labor, and of course food to help those most in need during the COVID-19 crisis.

A few Long Beach farms are targeting aid to specific vulnerable populations. The Growing Experience, for example, didn’t have to look far to find a way to step up. A seven-acre farm and community garden located in the Carmelitos Public Housing Development in North Long Beach, Growing Experience staff have been providing bags of produce to seniors within Carmelitos ― and doing so in the absence of any extra funding.

“Initially the L.A. County Development Authority [which oversees Carmelitos] wanted to stop all operations completely,” says Program Manager Holly Carpenter. “However, our staff pushed to be open to give away [our produce. …] We have been operating on reduced staff hours so we had to cancel our CSA [Community Supported Agriculture] veggie box orders during this time, [but] we set-up a quick pick-up right in front of the Carmelitos Senior Center, which allows residents with mobility issues to only have to come a short distance or have a neighbor pick up a bag for them.”

The Growing Experience is able to give away 30 bags of produce per week, each containing six items that may include collard greens, green onions, swiss chard, beet greens, beets, turnips, oranges, lemons, limes, salad mix, artichokes, broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, avocados, and eggs. Carpenter looks forward to giving away even more.

“We are hoping to resume to full-time [operations] soon,” she says. “However, until [then] we are limited in our ability to grow and produce more bags to give away. […] We don’t know how long we will be maintaining this ― it depends on when our management decides we can resume our normal CSA and produce sales. But for the time being, I see us continuing through June.”

In March, Farm Lot 59, a half-acre food oasis in Central Long Beach, launched a Farm-to-Family Program for the Elizabeth Anne Seton Residence (better known as “Seton House”), which offers emergency shelter to families, pregnant women, disabled, and elderly persons experiencing homeless.

“With our restaurant partners shuttered, we designed a program to make the best use of our harvest to meet the immediate needs of our community,” says Farm Lot 59 founder Sasha Kanno. “Together with Chef Eugene Santiago of Baryo, we […] are providing 120 healthy, fresh, organic meals per week for residents and staff of Seton House. […] We have secured funding to continue this program through June 8, and we are actively seeking additional donors to extend the program.”

Meanwhile, Long Beach Organic, a nonprofit dedicated to “locat[ing] urban vacant lots from public and private owners and turn[ing] them into beautiful community gardens for local and sustainable food production,” is donating additional produce from their eight gardens to the food pantry operated by Cal State Long Beach.

“In the midst of our own semi-shutdown, the Long Beach Organic board decided to dedicate more of our produce ― about 100 pounds per week so far ― to the food bank [as a replacement for] our usual round of spring/summer projects: community work days, cooking and gardening classes, kids’ program, fundraising dinners, etc., all of which are cancelled during the shutdown,” says Joe Corso, the nonprofit’s garden director. “We [gardeners] can still work with each other with social distancing and benefit the community in a badly needed way.”

Corso says the extra food is the result of “those who can to donate each week. The gardeners at our various gardens leave produce on Thursdays. I drive around and take it to the Zaferia Junction Garden, where a few volunteers wash, sort, and bag it. Mark [Smerkanich, an LBO volunteer] picks it up on Friday morning and drives it to the school. We have managed to do all this with proper social distancing. As the program expands it will involve more volunteers and drivers.”

Long Beach Organic has also expanded the number of charity plots at their gardens, converting formerly empty plots and community areas into designated plantings for the Beach Pantry, work they were able to effect in part due to a $1,500 grant they received from the Long Beach Community Foundation’s Coronavirus Relief Fund. “These new plantings will bear much more produce in the coming months, and our gardeners will also be able to share their summer bounty as the season progresses,” Corso says.

In San Pedro, Feed & Be Fed reports they are delivering about 10 pounds of produce from their small 6th Street garden each week to those in need ― particularly seniors and disabled persons ― and to San Pedro Meals on Wheels. “And as our spring harvest comes in, we anticipate being able to offer small bags of produce to our larger community,” says board member Christian Guzman, who adds that a second garden (currently being built in northwest San Pedro) “will probably have a crop for harvest at the end of summer.”

On the other hand, Green Girl Farms has focused on fostering food self-sufficiency in San Pedro.

“Out of concern for our volunteers and clientele, we closed the farm to the public when the shelter-in-place orders took effect,” says founder Lara Hughey. “At the beginning of the order, we were in the process of removing spent winter crops and replacing them with summer crops, so did not have food to sell or donate. Instead we’ve been donating seedlings and seeds so that our community can be growing their own food.”

Hughey says the giveaways, which are announced via Green Girl Farms email and social media, generally take place at least twice a month, with members of the public pre-ordering their seeds/seedlings of choice to ensure minimal contact during curbside pick-up. “So far we have given away over 700 seedlings and nearly 500 packets of seeds,” she reports.

Food self-sufficiency is also the thrust of North Long Beach Victory Garden’s efforts ― not only during the crisis, but going forward into better days. Over the last couple of months this offshoot of the University of California Master Gardener Victory Garden Program has given away over 2,000 seedlings they received from the Fullerton College horticulture program and Seeds of Hope.

“The [giveaways] this spring were directly focused on fulfilling the increase in the numbers of people wanting to grow fruits and veggies as COVID-19 kept them at home,” says Master Gardener Jeff Rowe. “[…] I set a goal of fostering the creation of 1,000 backyard farms in Long Beach.”

In addition to growing food, in normal times the North Long Beach Victory Garden offers free vegetable- and fruit-growing classes, which Rowe says are currently being brought into the virtual world for home consumption.

“Several Master Gardeners from Los Angeles County are working feverishly to convert the Victory Garden curriculum to an online package so we can expand our ability to teach people how to become backyard farmers,” he says. “[…] In a sense, everything we’ve been doing at the North Long Beach Victory Garden was a preparation for [COVID-19] ― to get people to become more self-sufficient and to experience the taste thrill of eating freshly harvested food.”

COVID-19 has created a new normal, one that in the short term is causing some among us to struggle with the most basic of needs: food. Our urban farms are not only addressing this struggle in the short term, but also attempting to make increased food self-sufficiency a part of our new normal, a shift that will stand us in good stead in good times and bad.

If you are in need of food, desire more information, or want to volunteer or donate to one of the urban farms/gardens profiled in this article…:

THE GROWING EXPERIENCE

750 Via Carmelitos, Long Beach 90805

(562) 984-2917; holly.carpenter@lacda.org

https://growingexperiencelb.lacda.org/

FARM LOT 59

2714 California Ave., Long Beach 90755

https://www.farmlot59.org/

LONG BEACH ORGANIC

(562) 438-9000; info@longbeachorganic.org

http://longbeachorganic.org/

NORTH LONG BEACH VICTORY GARDEN

6509 Gundry Ave., Long Beach 90805

https://www.facebook.com/NLBVictoryGarden/

FEED & BE FED

429 W. 6th St., San Pedro 90731

c.louis.guzman@gmail.com

https://www.feedandbefed.org/

GREEN GIRL FARMS

390 W. 14th St., San Pedro 90731

https://www.facebook.com/greengirlfarms/