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A Silent Killer Behind Bars

Activists take to the streets, courts to protect the incarcerated from COVID-19

By Terelle Jerricks, Managing Editor

Few know it, but San Pedro is home to one of the hottest COVID-19 hotspots in the nation. That’s why a week before Mother’s Day, more than a dozen family members and friends of inmates at the Terminal Island Federal prison picketed outside the facility’s gates, to demand better treatment for their loved ones. Few local residents know that this prison exists right across the main channel from the rest of the town, nor that terminal Island is considered “East San Pedro” both historically and by federal authorities. So most of the cases reported are attributed to San Pedro infection numbers reported daily by LA County.

According to the Bureau of Prisons, more than half of the 1,042 inmates at the federal correctional facility have tested positive for the coronavirus. As of May 10, a total of 693 inmates and 15 staff members have tested positive for COVID-19. Seven inmates have recovered from the disease while six inmates have died.

It has been reported that the inmates have been locked down in their cells without the ability to make phone calls since the middle of April. Prison officials have said prohibiting phone and internet use was necessary to prevent the spread of the virus.

The family members who were demonstrating have said that the prison guards have threatened the inmates with solitary confinement in a special housing unit for asking for help from the outside or refusing to work in the kitchen.

“Family members deserve to know the health of their [relatives] inmates at Terminal Island,” Rep. Nanette Barragán said.

This is especially true considering COVID-19 is so widespread at the facility. Barragán referenced news reports of families not hearing about the status of inmates until they are very sick. This is not acceptable, the congresswoman said.

Barragán noted that while a number of families have reached out to her office, she’s not sure if any of them were among the protesters at the Terminal Island prison on May 2.

But of the calls that her office received, many were from family members requesting welfare checks on their relatives and reporting they were unable to communicate with inmates via telephone or email and want information.

“Many are concerned because they said their inmates are medically vulnerable, with asthma and high blood pressure,” Barragán said.

Some family members called Barragán’s office to lobby U.S. Attorney General William Barr to expand the home confinement order to include inmates at Terminal Island. The order to which Barragán was referring was a March 26 memo Barr sent to the Federal Bureau of Prisons.

In the memo were a set of guidelines and criteria by which to determine the eligibility of inmates for home confinement, which included: age and vulnerability to COVID-19, security level of the facility holding the inmate, with priority given to inmates in low and minimum security facilities, good behavior, an inmate’s score on the risk assessment test Prisoner Assessment Tool Targeting Estimated Risk and Needs and the presence of a reentry plan among other criteria.

Others who have called Barragán’s office called to complain about the conditions in which infected inmates are held.

One family member called to report that about  60 inmates were recently relocated to a very unsanitary warehouse without heat, hot water or air conditioning, as well as only three showers and three toilets, Barragán said.

She reported that the family alleged there was constant leaking due to holes in the ceiling and that animals, such as rats, bats, pigeons, skunks, cockroaches and raccoons have free reign in the facility.

Barragán has queried the Bureau of Prisons and the warden for the Terminal Island facility about the conditions in the prison, but the answers have been few and unsatisfying.

LA County jails not much better

As problematic as the federal prisons are, the Los Angeles County jails may not be much better. Last month, several vulnerable incarcerated people in Los Angeles County jails along with a coalition of activists called COVID-19 Rapid Response sued Los Angeles County and Sheriff Alex Villanueva about failures to safeguard the health of inmates during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The litigants are demanding that the sheriff implement constitutionally mandated procedures to protect prisoners from contracting COVID-19, and to comply with guidelines issued by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and California Department of Public Health. Activists hope Los Angeles will take actions to mitigate the spread of the virus and release people at high risk for serious illness or death in the event of COVID-19 infection due to age or underlying medical conditions.

Rodney Cullors is one of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit that was filed on Friday April 24. The 58-year-old, who was in Men’s Central Jail at the time the suit was drafted, suffers from hypertension, heart problems, spinal damage requiring use of a wheelchair, bipolar disorder and manic depression. Plaintiff Jessica Haviland is a 39-year-old woman who was in the custody of Century Regional Detention Facility and had been exhibiting symptoms of COVID-19 and was not tested. Other plaintiffs are in similar situations.

In the complaint, the coalition cited epidemiological research that “during pandemics, jail facilities become ‘ticking time bombs’ as ‘many people are crowded together, often suffering from diseases that weaken their immune systems, form potential breeding grounds and reservoirs for diseases.”

The lawsuit goes on to say that although the California Department of Public Health issued a guidance about novel coronavirus, or COVID-19, for California prisons recommending the provision of sanitization supplies for prisoners to clean their cells and masks to symptomatic prisoners, increased cleaning of common spaces and social distancing of six feet; these measures have not prevented the virus from spreading in California prisons.

As of April 23, a total of 149 prisoners and at least 105 staff in the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation facilities tested positive. News media reported that in April in the California prison system, within the course of just more than a week, the number of prisoners testing positive for COVID-19 grew by 700% and the number of staff testing positive nearly tripled.

Funny Numbers and Nagging Questions

The Bureau of Prisons says it has begun daily testing and testing of asymptomatic inmates at its prisons in order to keep up with the rapidly evolving nature of the public health crisis. As a result, it said its data reflects an increase in the number of COVID-19 positive tests. As of last count, there are 51 Bureau of Prison facilities and 22 residential reentry centers with confirmed active cases of the coronavirus.

By the bureau’s count, the Lompoc, Calif. Facility, with 842 inmates and 11 staff members testing positive for the virus, had the highest rate of infection out of all the federal prisons in the United States, but the Terminal Island facility is one of the deadliest, tied for second with Butner Medium Security Prison in Butner, N.C., and Oakdale Prison in Oakdale, La. The prison with the most COVID-19 deaths thus far is Elkton Prison in Lisbon, Ohio.

But a scroll down the list shows the number of infections quickly dwindling from three digit numbers to the single digits after 17 prisons or residential reentry centers out of more than 80 bureau facilities. Some of these places are in counties with the highest per capita infection rates in the country.

Yazoo City, Miss. has one inmate and five staff members infected with COVID-19.

Aliceville FCI in Aliceville, Alaska has seven infected inmates and no infected staff members.

Brooklyn MDC in Brooklyn, N.Y. has no infected inmates but 17 infected staff members, six inmates recovered from COVID-19 and 20 staff members recovered from the virus.

In each of these cases, the per capita infection rate in their respective counties exceeds the national average.

Three weeks after Attorney Gen. William Barr’s memo, the bureau’s results are modest: the number of people allowed to serve the rest of their sentences in home confinement went up by only 1,027 under the new guidance set out by the attorney general. This is about half of 1 percent of the more than 174,000 people in the bureau’s custody at the start of the month, according to data obtained from the bureau and Congress. One of those was President Trump’s former lawyer and fixer, Michael Cohen. He was released early from federal prison and moved to home confinement because of the coronavirus pandemic, according to a person familiar with the matter.

The Marshall Project, a nonprofit journalism outlet about criminal justice, reported last month that in one recent court filing, prosecutors unsuccessfully opposed the release of a man from Oakdale prison, in Louisiana, arguing in part that the bureau was taking sufficient care of prisoners there — even after the virus had killed five men.

In a separate case, a judge labeled the Bureau of Prisons’ process “Kafkaesque,” and said it prevented many releases. Critics, including groups advocating for mass releases to reduce prison outbreak of the virus, have called the implementation of Barr’s memo confusing and chaotic.

Update: As of May 13, there are 140 inmates and 15 staff members who are infected. There have been seven inmate deaths and no staff deaths. Five-hundred-and-sixty-two inmates and no staff have recovered from COVID-19, a day after Rep. Barragan visited Terminal Island prison.

Cruisin’ For COVID

By James Preston Allen, Publisher

SAN PEDRO — At about 6 p.m. May 8, several dozen cars and motorcycles started to gather and cruise along Pacific avenue between 17th Street and 6th Street. It was the very first day that the COVID-19 Stay-at-Home orders were starting to be lifted, allowing flower shops, book and record shops and clothing stores to provide “curbside pickup” like restaurants have been doing since March 19. This however looked like a celebration. But it was a protest. Social distancing and masks were not prevalent.

They were greeted by several patrol cars and motor units from the Los Angeles Police Department and at least one California Highway Patrol unit. The street was blocked off between 9th and 11th Streets forcing the lowrider crowds to park at the Bank of America and the AutoZone lots, where the gathering continued without the cruising.

The parade of classic cars, souped up Chevys and other hot rods made for a traffic jamb of noise and exhaust that caught residents by surprise. The past 60 days have seen such limited traffic on this avenue and even up the freeways that it seemed like another world and not in Los Angeles. Residents along Pacific Avenue complained about the noise and exhaust fumes and police responded by blocking Pacific. This appeared to be an attempt to limit the amount of cruisers and traffic in the area. This did not have the desired effect.

Cars and motorcycles ended up parking up and down Pacific from about 3rd to 12th streets with groups of onlookers gathering in several parking lots. The largest crowd was seen at the Bank of America parking lot where at least 100 people gathered with no social distancing and many not caring to at least wear a face covering. There didn’t appear to be any arrests nor incidents coming out of this cruise night but there did seem to be an air of elation that the lockdown was partially lifted and that some people had had enough sitting on their couches for the last two months. This event ended by 9 or 10 p.m. that evening.

White Point Demonstration Fizzles

The following day, May 9, at the entrance to Royal Palms Beach at the southern end of Western Avenue a very small group of eight or more people who were calling the lockdown “unconstitutional” and waving American flags assembled at about noon. This uprising seems to have been organized on a Facebook page that members mistakenly thought would go viral. They were wrong. Even in this part of San Pedro, which has the highest number of conservative voters and is one of the few precincts in San Pedro that actually voted for Trump in 2016, people were not convinced of the rightness of this event.

Unlike Huntington Beach, in Orange County, the week before where some 1,500 protesters showed up waving flags and demanding “their constitutional rights” to go to the beach or surf, San Pedro doesn’t seem to be under the same impression or interpretation of civil liberties during a pandemic. And it seems that those who regularly grouse about the “illegality” of Gov. Gavin Newsom’s COVID-19 orders on Facebook pages like San Pedro Political Sense had the sense not to show up. Again, no arrests were made nor citations given by the handful of LAPD officers who stood guard at the entrance at White Point.

Another such demonstration won’t be necessary. Los Angeles County is planning on opening some beaches May 15 for passive recreation. White Point Nature Preserve was open right across the street on this day with social distancing guidelines.

— Chris Villanueva contributed to this report and supplied photos

COVID-RELATED STRIKES HIT WASHINGTON’S APPLE SHEDS

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

By David Bacon

https://capitalandmain.com/covid-related-strikes-hit-washingtons-apple-sheds-0514

https://davidbaconrealitycheck.blogspot.com/2020/05/covid-related-strikes-hit-washingtons.html

Demands for safer working conditions and extra hourly hazard pay during the pandemic are powering a strike wave in the Yakima Valley.

This week the COVID-related strike in Washington state’s Yakima Valley quadrupled in size, as workers walked out at three more apple packinghouses. More than a hundred stopped work on May 7 at Allan Brothers Fruit, a large apple growing, packing and shipping company in Naches, in Central Washington. On May 12 they were joined by 200 more workers, who walked off the job at the Jack Frost Fruit Co. in Yakima, and at the Matson Fruit Co. in Selah. The next day another 100 workers walked out at the Monson Fruit packing shed, also in Selah.

At the center of the stoppages are two main demands for those who decide to continue working during the pandemic: safer working conditions and an extra $2 an hour in hazard pay.

Apple sheds line the industrial streets of Yakima Valley’s small towns. Inside these huge concrete buildings, hundreds of people labor shoulder-to-shoulder, sorting and packing fruit. If someone gets sick, it can potentially spread through the workers on the lines, and from them into the surrounding towns. Although packinghouse laborers are almost entirely immigrants from Mexico, their families comprise the stable heart of these areas. Most have lived here for years. Jobs in the sheds are a step up from the fields, with year-round work at 40 hours per week.

This part of agribusiness is by far Central Washington’s largest employer, and the industry has successfully fought off unions for many years. The virus may change that, however, if the strike wave becomes the spark for creating a permanent organization among these workers. It is undoubtedly what the companies fear when they see workers stop the lines, and even more so, when they see farmworker union organizers helping to sustain the walkouts.

* * *

“The most important demand for us is that we have a healthy workplace and protection from the virus,” said Agustin Lopez, one of the strike leaders at Allan Brothers. “Fourteen people have left work over the last month because they have the COVID-19. So far as we know, the company isn’t paying them. We need protections at work, like adequate masks, and we want tests. How do we even know if any of us have been infected if there are no tests?” (Allan Brothers Fruit did not respond to phone and email requests for comment for this story.)

He charges that Allan Brothers didn’t disinfect the plant and stop production when the workers got sick. One worker, Jennifer Garton, told the Yakima Herald, “They are not doing what they’re saying they’re doing,” and that workers only heard about the cases of COVID-19 in the plant through their own conversations.

According to Lopez, at the end of April the workers sent an email to company managers, asking for better conditions, extra pay, and the right to take off work. “People were taking their vacations or sick leave or anything they could to stay home. The company said that if we had worked for five weeks we could stay home, but they wouldn’t pay us. We’re only making minimum wage, so how could we do that? And we have no guarantee we would even have our jobs back if we don’t come in to work now.”

In response to the demands, he says the company offered to buy the workers lunch. Over a hundred workers rejected that and struck the company.

The shed of another Yakima packer, Roche Fruit Company, did stop work in April to disinfect the plant, after two workers had become infected. Roche employees then also demanded hazard pay in a message to managers. When the company offered an additional $200 per month, the laborers stopped work after lunch on May 11. After an hour of bargaining, the company offered them $100 per week instead, and they went back to work. Operations manager Alfonso Pineda said the company had already planned to give workers “gratitude pay” for working in difficult circumstances.

“At the heart of the dissatisfaction of all these workers is the fact they are essential workers, but their pay does not reflect that,” says Edgar Franks, the political director of the new union for Washington farm workers, Familias Unidas por la Justicia. He explains that workers from both Roche and Allan Brothers got in touch with them when they were getting ready to strike. “The walkouts then started after management refused to raise their wages. At Roche, when union organizers and leadership arrived, management quickly relented. This is the power of the presence of the union.”

* * *

But fear is driving the strikes, even more than wages. After walking out of the packing plant, workers at Jack Frost stood in a big circle six feet apart while Claudia, a striker, explained that they were fighting for the health of their whole community. “We want everyone to have a health examination, including our children and other people possibly affected,” she declared. “We want it for our whole family, because we know the virus doesn’t just stay in the plant. It’s outside too.”

At the rally in front of the Allan Brothers packinghouse, another woman said the same thing: that the biggest question was whether they could work without getting sick. “We have people who have been affected in this shed,” she told Yakima city councilwoman Dulce Gutierrez. “We want the company to guarantee that there are no more people who have the virus here at work, so that we can protect ourselves and our families.”

The working conditions themselves are responsible for much of the danger, and Franks says the companies have not been responsive. “Ever since the governor’s order [mandating physical distancing and safe conditions], a lot of the safety measures haven’t reached the workers inside. The workers are elbow-to-elbow on the line, packing the fruit going through there. Workers got sick, and they’re concerned that no one is looking after them or the well being of their family and friends still inside.”

Agustin Lopez has lived in the Yakima Valley and worked in its sheds since 1985. His experience has made him cautious, therefore, about predicting whether workers will decide if a permanent union is the answer to their problems. But when he looks at the waves of people leaving the apple sheds, each company encouraging the next one, he thinks change is not just possible, but happening around him. “This connection between us is something new,” he says, “and there are people out here from lots of the plants. Maybe we are actually a federation.” The answer will be determined by the strike, he believes. “If the companies are willing to negotiate, we’ll listen to what they have to say. And if not, then we will continue with our strike.”

THE REALITY CHECK – David Bacon blog
http://davidbaconrealitycheck.blogspot.com

By David Bacon
https://capitalandmain.com/covid-related-strikes-hit-washingtons-apple-sheds-0514
https://davidbaconrealitycheck.blogspot.com/2020/05/covid-related-strikes-hit-washingtons.html

Demands for safer working conditions and extra hourly hazard pay during the pandemic are powering a strike wave in the Yakima Valley.

This week the COVID-related strike in Washington state’s Yakima Valley quadrupled in size, as workers walked out at three more apple packinghouses. More than a hundred stopped work on May 7 at Allan Brothers Fruit, a large apple growing, packing and shipping company in Naches, in Central Washington. On May 12 they were joined by 200 more workers, who walked off the job at the Jack Frost Fruit Co. in Yakima, and at the Matson Fruit Co. in Selah. The next day another 100 workers walked out at the Monson Fruit packing shed, also in Selah.

At the center of the stoppages are two main demands for those who decide to continue working during the pandemic: safer working conditions and an extra $2 an hour in hazard pay.

Apple sheds line the industrial streets of Yakima Valley’s small towns. Inside these huge concrete buildings, hundreds of people labor shoulder-to-shoulder, sorting and packing fruit.  If someone gets sick, it can potentially spread through the workers on the lines, and from them into the surrounding towns.  Although packinghouse laborers are almost entirely immigrants from Mexico, their families comprise the stable heart of these areas. Most have lived here for years. Jobs in the sheds are a step up from the fields, with year-round work at 40 hours per week.

This part of agribusiness is by far Central Washington’s largest employer, and the industry has successfully fought off unions for many years. The virus may change that, however, if the strike wave becomes the spark for creating a permanent organization among these workers. It is undoubtedly what the companies fear when they see workers stop the lines, and even more so, when they see farmworker union organizers helping to sustain the walkouts.

*   *   *

“The most important demand for us is that we have a healthy workplace and protection from the virus,” said Agustin Lopez, one of the strike leaders at Allan Brothers. “Fourteen people have left work over the last month because they have the COVID-19. So far as we know, the company isn’t paying them. We need protections at work, like adequate masks, and we want tests. How do we even know if any of us have been infected if there are no tests?” (Allan Brothers Fruit did not respond to phone and email requests for comment for this story.)

He charges that Allan Brothers didn’t disinfect the plant and stop production when the workers got sick. One worker, Jennifer Garton, told the Yakima Herald, “They are not doing what they’re saying they’re doing,” and that workers only heard about the cases of COVID-19 in the plant through their own conversations.

According to Lopez, at the end of April the workers sent an email to company managers, asking for better conditions, extra pay, and the right to take off work. “People were taking their vacations or sick leave or anything they could to stay home. The company said that if we had worked for five weeks we could stay home, but they wouldn’t pay us. We’re only making minimum wage, so how could we do that? And we have no guarantee we would even have our jobs back if we don’t come in to work now.”

In response to the demands, he says the company offered to buy the workers lunch. Over a hundred workers rejected that and struck the company.

The shed of another Yakima packer, Roche Fruit Company, did stop work in April to disinfect the plant, after two workers had become infected. Roche employees then also demanded hazard pay in a message to managers. When the company offered an additional $200 per month, the laborers stopped work after lunch on May 11. After an hour of bargaining, the company offered them $100 per week instead, and they went back to work. Operations manager Alfonso Pineda said the company had already planned to give workers “gratitude pay” for working in difficult circumstances.

“At the heart of the dissatisfaction of all these workers is the fact they are essential workers, but their pay does not reflect that,” says Edgar Franks, the political director of the new union for Washington farm workers, Familias Unidas por la Justicia. He explains that workers from both Roche and Allan Brothers got in touch with them when they were getting ready to strike. “The walkouts then started after management refused to raise their wages. At Roche, when union organizers and leadership arrived, management quickly relented. This is the power of the presence of the union.”

  *   *   *

But fear is driving the strikes, even more than wages. After walking out of the packing plant, workers at Jack Frost stood in a big circle six feet apart while Claudia, a striker, explained that they were fighting for the health of their whole community. “We want everyone to have a health examination, including our children and other people possibly affected,” she declared.  “We want it for our whole family, because we know the virus doesn’t just stay in the plant. It’s outside too.”

At the rally in front of the Allan Brothers packinghouse, another woman said the same thing: that the biggest question was whether they could work without getting sick. “We have people who have been affected in this shed,” she told Yakima city councilwoman Dulce Gutierrez. “We want the company to guarantee that there are no more people who have the virus here at work, so that we can protect ourselves and our families.”

The working conditions themselves are responsible for much of the danger, and Franks says the companies have not been responsive. “Ever since the governor’s order [mandating physical distancing and safe conditions], a lot of the safety measures haven’t reached the workers inside.  The workers are elbow-to-elbow on the line, packing the fruit going through there.  Workers got sick, and they’re concerned that no one is looking after them or the wellbeing of their family and friends still inside.”

Agustin Lopez has lived in the Yakima Valley and worked in its sheds since 1985. His experience has made him cautious, therefore, about predicting whether workers will decide if a permanent union is the answer to their problems. But when he looks at the waves of people leaving the apple sheds, each company encouraging the next one, he thinks change is not just possible, but happening around him. “This connection between us is something new,” he says, “and there are people out here from lots of the plants. Maybe we are actually a federation.” The answer will be determined by the strike, he believes. “If the companies are willing to negotiate, we’ll listen to what they have to say. And if not, then we will continue with our strike.”
 

Los Angeles County Beaches Reopen For Active Recreation – Visitors Must Follow New Restrictions

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LOS ANGELES – Los Angeles County announced the re-opening of its beaches as of May 13 for individual sports, exercise and similar physical activity. Permitted activities include walking, running, swimming and surfing. Face coverings are required at all times on the beach and around other people, unless in the water and the county urges everyone to stay at least six feet apart to physically distance from other visitors. Once finished with an activity, all beachgoers are asked to head home.

For now, parking lots, piers, boardwalks and biking paths will remain closed. Sunbathing, group sports, large gatherings, beach chairs, coolers and umbrellas are not allowed to help ensure proper physical distancing. If anyone headed to the beach feels sick or lives with someone who is sick, they are being asked to stay home.

Download LA County Lifeguard Pono Barnes Beach Reopening PSA in ENGLISH (Credit LA County): https://vimeo.com/417827870

Download LA County Lifeguard Marco Rodriguez Beach Reopening PSA in SPANISH (Credit LA County: https://vimeo.com/417828268

Download LA County Beach B-Roll (Credit LA County): HERE, www.tinyurl.com/Beaches-phase-1-opening

Find beach rules here: beaches.lacounty.gov/la-county-beach-rules/

Tennis Courts, Equestrian Centers, Community Gardens and Other Amenities Open May 15 With Restrictions

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LOS ANGELES – The Los Angeles County Department of Parks and Recreation or LA County Parks, May 15, will begin reopening tennis and pickleball courts, equestrian centers, BMX bike areas, trap, and skeet/archery ranges, model airplanes, and community gardens, based on “Stage Two” of the reopening plan for the County of Los Angeles. LA County Parks has modified its operations to reopen these amenities with strict health guidelines to help prevent the spread of COVID-19.

LA County Parks is taking precautions to ensure the health and safety of park guests, visitors, team members, and the community and it continues to assess operations daily in consultation with the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health on necessary safety requirements.

Specific restrictions and safety guidelines required at these park amenities in accordance with the health officer order include, but are not limited to:

Tennis and Pickleball Courts

Physical distancing of six (6) feet must be maintained at all times.

Only singles play will be permitted.

Each participant must bring their own bucket of balls with their initials on each ball. Participants will only be permitted to handle their own tennis and pickleball balls.

Participants will be required to wear face coverings at all times except during play.

Bring water and hand sanitizer or disinfecting wipes to wash and sanitize hands frequently.

A maximum of one-hour play will be allowed on heavy traffic days.

Private lessons are allowed using proper physical distancing techniques. Both the student and instructor will be required to wear face coverings. No lessons involving two (2) or more tennis or pickleball students are allowed.

Payment of any fees shall be done on-line and/or utilizing an outdoor facing window or door.

Equestrian Centers

Physical distancing of six (6) feet is required at all times.

Face coverings are required at all times while in the common areas, including, without limitation, parking lots and stables.

Face masks are not required during riding so long as physical distancing is maintained.

Facility operator and staff shall wear a face covering and gloves at all times.

Rides (Horse string) will be a single file and a maximum of four (4) riders at a time while practicing physical distancing. This is for trail use only.

Private horse lessons will require proper physical distancing, and both instructors and students must wear face coverings at all times.

Lessons shall be a maximum of two (2) participants at a time and conducted in a round pen. Round pen must be large enough to allow for physical distancing during lessons.

Maximum number of riders in a round pen shall be determined by the size of the pen. At all times, round pens must be large enough to allow for physical distancing.

Only one (1) horse and one (1) boarder will be allowed within the wash racks at a time.

All boarders must use their own wash rack supplies, and hoses will be sanitized regularly.

Payment of any fees shall be done on-line and/or utilizing an outdoor facing window or door.

BMX Bike Areas

Physical distancing of six (6) feet is required at all times.

Face coverings will be required at all times.

Facility operator shall ensure that the entrance to the BMX Areas and/or Bike Park is single file – one participant at a time allowing for a six (6)-foot distance between participants.

No rentals will be offered.

Private lessons will be allowed while practicing physical distancing. There shall be no lessons involving more than two (2) people.

No tournaments will be allowed.

Doors, entrances, and/or gates shall remain open during regular operational hours.

Payment of fees shall be done on-line and/or utilizing an outdoor facing window or door.

Food and beverage will be grab and go and will follow the Los Angeles County Public Health Order and protocols.

Archery, Trap and Skeet, and Outdoor Recreation Shooting Ranges

Face coverings will be required at all times.

Physical distancing of six (6) feet is required at all times.

Facility operator shall place delineators at sports stations to create a six (6)-foot distance between participants.

No rentals will be offered.

Safety equipment (such as foam earplugs, safety glasses) shall be disposable.

Private lessons will be allowed while practicing physical distancing. There shall be no lessons involving more than two (2) people.

No tournaments will be allowed.

Doors, entrances, and/or gates shall remain open during normal operational hours.

Payment of fees shall be done on-line and/or utilizing an outdoor facing window or door.

Food and beverage will be grab and go and will follow the Los Angeles County Public Health Order and protocols.

Model Airplane Areas

Physical distancing of six (6) feet is required at all times.

Face coverings are required at all times.

No group gatherings are allowed.

No tournaments are allowed.

Participants may only touch and handle their own model airplanes and gear.

Community Gardens

Face coverings are required at all times.

Physical distancing of six (6) feet is required at all times.

Volunteer events will not be allowed to avoid group gatherings.

Maximum number of participants in the garden at one time shall be determined by the size of the community garden and the number of plots.

Bring hand sanitizer or sanitizing wipes, or a Ziploc bag with soapy water and a washcloth. Wash your hands before and after you go to the garden.

Gloves are required while conducting gardening, including while handling tools and equipment.

Remove all personal items and trash before leaving the garden.

Details:https://parks.lacounty.gov/covid-19.

Durden and Ray

San Pedro artist, Ann Weber’s 8×8 foot sculpture, YOLO, 2014, found cardboard, staples, polyurethane. Weber has also hung 4 large scale sculptures from the rafters of her house.

We Are Here, Here We Are

Durden and Ray presentsWe Are Here / Here We Are, a Los Angeles County-wide exhibition of nearly 100 artists that explores our innate desire for connectivity through sensation. Due to the constraints of the COVID-19 lockdown, the artists in this exhibition have chosen public spaces to display their work — from Santa Monica to the East Side and from the San Fernando Valley to Long Beach. The location of each piece will be posted on aGoogle Mapthat allows the exhibition to be explored virtually or in real life.

“To participate in this exhibition is a Gift,” Weber said. “To myself, my neighbors and the art community. It’s so embracive. Even the cops slow down as they drive by and give a thumbs up. Some people ask the proverbial “What the Hell is It” question and others fall all over themselves to let me know they know what art is. It’s hard to feel sad when there’s a giant sculpture in the front yard, where you would least expect it.”

Ann Weber’s sculpture can be seen at the corner of 24th and S. Grand Ave. in San Pedro

We are here.

While the world turns inward more than any other point in our lifetimes, we are paradoxically more connected with each other than ever through the use of social media, digital technology, video conferencing, and telecommunication. But as the streets remain empty, the restaurants and coffee shops remain closed, and the houses of social engagement remain shuttered, we are rediscovering “real life” through our homes, our neighborhoods and ourselves. As the digital world feeds our need to connect through sight and sound, we are experiencing a severe disconnect from the other sensory functions of touch, taste, and smell, yearning for experiences that happen through tactility, sensation, randomness, and place, which are currently only possible in real life.

Here we are.

The artists in the exhibition have chosen unorthodox alternatives to a traditional gallery setting, using a wide variety of media interventions in neighborhood alleyways, yards, trees, bushes, on rocks, fences, telephone poles, and other publicly accessible areas, while honoring social distancing mandates. The works inWe Are Here / Here We Areare ephemeral in nature: vulnerable to the elements and to those who might destroy or confiscate them. Their resilience shows an innate desire to be present in the real world and to be seen as an individual amongst a larger collective peer group, despite all odds.

To experience the exhibition:Click on the link to Durden and Ray’s personalizedGoogle Map, which displays the coordinates of each work, a photograph of the piece in-situ, as well as a brief description that provides some context. A small placard is available at each site and provides some information about each piece, as well as a QR code that links to the map with more information about the show and other works in the neighborhood.

Participating artists include:Luciana Abait, Kim Abeles, Abel Alejandre, Sophia Allison, Ismael de Anda III, Susan Arena, Dawn Arrowsmith, Carl Baratta, Maura Bendett, Andrea Bersaglieri, Arezoo Bharthania, Dave Bondi, Gavin Bunner, David Buckingham, Jennifer Celio, Chenhung Chen, Helen Chung, Dave R. Clark, Andrew Philip Cortes, Sydney Croskery, Joe Davidson, Dani Dodge, Jeanne Dunn, Marielle Farnan, Roni Feldman, Susan Feldman, Sarajo Frieden, Josh Friedman, Steven Fujimoto, Kiyomi Fukui, Yvette Gellis, Makenzie Goodman, Mark Steven Greenfield, Kio Griffith, Jennifer Gunlock, Jenny Hager, Stephanie Han, Michelle Carla Handel, Pete Hickok, Carmine Iannaccone, Bryan Ida, Nancy Ivanhoe, Kiel Johnson, Flora Kao, Cody Lusby, Constance Mallinson, Joel H. Mark, Anne Martens, Ryan McCann, Amanda Mears, Brenna Ivanhoe Metter, Cynthia Minet, Megan Mueller, Thomas Müller, Hagop Najarian, Michael Nannery, Khang Nguyen, Rebecca Niederlander, Dakota Noot, Sean Noyce, Labkhand Olfatmanesh, Duane Paul, Snezana Saraswati Petrovic, Elizabeth Preger, Mei Xian Qiu, Jenny Rask, Jaklin Romine, Colin Roberts, Michael Rollins, Liza Ryan, Stephanie Sabo, Samuel Scharf, Sonja Schenk, Greg Schenk, Kristine Schomaker, Adam Scott, Stephanie Sherwood, Dimitra Skandali, Marla Smith, Adam Stacey, Curtis Stage, Katie Stubblefield, Ami Tallman, Camilla Taylor, Chris Trueman, Katya Usvitsky, John Waguespack, Ryan Russell Ward, Curtis Weaver, Ann Weber (San Pedro local), Tracey Weiss, Julie Whaley, Valerie Wilcox, Steven Wolkoff, Alison Woods, Paul Woods, Jody Zellen, plus many more.

Dates: Through June 20
Hours:Dawn-dusk, every day, unless noted
Various locations:Please consult the Google Map
Website:We Are Here / Here We Are Microsite

Long Beach Opera’s New Programming Keeps the Music Coming During COVID-19

By Greggory Moore, Curtain Call Columnist

In the time of COVID-19, opera has been deemed inessential. Worse yet, given the large number of people required to mount most productions ― to say nothing of the audience ― it’s downright dangerous.

But because deprivation of art is a danger to the soul, the last thing Long Beach Opera wants to do is remain idle. Thus was born Artist Afternoons, a weekday series of live talk/variety shows where members of the extended Long Beach Opera family can not only continue to ply their trade ― for both themselves and for opera-lovers locked away from live performance ― but potentially expand the connection between opera and the outside world.

Artist Afternoons is the brainchild of Jenny Rivera, Long Beach Opera’s new CEO/artistic director. 

I came up with the idea as a way to give some artists a chance to be creative and have some paid work during this time where so many are both out of work and feeling depleted creatively,” she says, “and also to bring joy and inspiration to [people. …] We pride ourselves at Long Beach Opera on creating the intimate connections between artists and audiences at our live performances. It is my belief that even though [right now] we are apart, we must continue to find ways to forge these connections, as they are essential to our humanity during times of crisis.”

The series began on Monday, May 4, with “Latin Heat,” hosted by fiery soprano Catalina Cuervo from her parents’ house Medellín, Columbia, where she was visiting when the lockdowns came. Confined away from her stateside home and husband, Cuervo spoke openly about her fear and depression at the onset of the pandemic, including over what it means for the opera world in the foreseeable future. Her own LBO debut, for example ― the lead role in Robert Xavier Rogríduez’s Frida, originally slated for late June ― has been cancelled.

“Every cancellation [that came] started breaking my heart,” she related, “and all of a sudden I found myself really struggling to sing. Not even a note would come out.” But she feels grateful for and reinvigorated by the Artist Afternoons opportunity. “This [show] might be something simple,” she said, “but to me it means everything because it gave me back my will to sing, to create, to make music.”

Her joy in song was obvious in her completely unaffected performances, which she performed to backing tracks (basically opera karaoke by a singer with the necessary chops). There was a drollness in the complete informality of her set-up (she noted this was something of a test run and subsequent episodes will be more polished), including a precious stretch during her closer (“Yo soy María” from Ástor Piazzolla’s tango opera María de Buenos Aires) where she self-consciously waited through an instrumental passage until the vocal came back around. 

Baritone Andy Wilkowske, whose “Wilkowske or WON’Tkowske” fills the Tuesday slot, came out of the gate May 5 with a show programmed so thoroughly that it perfectly fit the current trend of late-night talk shows done by their hosts at home. A fairly seamless mixture of live and pre-recorded portions, segments included an interview with opera director Crystal Manich (with whom in a COVID-19less world he would be in Virginia working on a André Previn’s operatic adaptation of A Streetcar Named Desire), acoustic covers of The Smiths’ “Please Please Please Let Me Get What I Want” and Bruce Springsteen’s “Born to Run” (the latter with adorable cameos by his two children as they sporadically danced into frame from either side), 90 seconds of dad jokes (played to his expressionless, sunglasses-clad daughter), mixed drink of the day (a Boulevardier), and a tour of The Force-Star Hotel, an outdoor diorama composed of Star Wars figures and the logic of childhood. 

Wednesday are being held down by “Covi Cabin Productions” with Suzan Hanson, a sensational soprano who’s appeared in over 30 LBO productions, while the Thursday slot belongs to “Cedric & Ash in the House,” featuring gregarious tenor Ashley Faatoalia and bass-baritone Cedric Berry, both of whom starred in LBO’s world premiere of The Central Park Five, which was recently awarded a Pulitzer Prize. Additionally, every other Friday will feature “LB…Oop,” featuring bass-baritone Darrell Acon ― also a Central Park Five star ― and soprano Joanna Ceja, who appeared in LBO’s original production of Frida in 2017.

Of the five shows that make up the programming of Artist Afternoons, Wilkowske’s is the one that will most appeal to people to whom opera is a completely foreign language (you might enjoy “Wilkowske or WON’Tkowske” even if you detest opera). But there’s isn’t a show in the bunch that doesn’t provide ease of access for the uninitiated, because each relies more on the personality of its host(s) than on the artform they love. 

“[Aside from] the goal [of] bringing together artists who have a need and a desire to create with those people who have a need and desire to experience and be uplifted by creativity,” says Rivera, “it’s also an opportunity for patrons to see the many talents ― in addition to singing and performing ― that I know so many opera singers happen to be blessed with.”

To open his first show, Andy Wilkowske sang Schubert’s “An die musik” with timely new lyrics penned by Kelley Rourke: 

In times like these, I fear for what might be coming […]

The human heart can lose its way in isolation

But there is power in the simplest sound

Artist Afternoons is here to harness that power and to connect opera performers, opera lovers, and neophytes in new ways. Live streams can be viewed via Long Beach Opera’s Facebook page Monday through Thursday at 4 p.m. and every other Friday at 6 p.m.; and past shows are archived at Long Beach Opera Online. The series runs through June 24.

Supreme Court Oral Argument: President Trump’s Financial Records

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Supreme Court Oral Argument on Congressional Subpoenas for President Trump’s Financial Records

The Supreme Court hears oral argument via teleconference due to the coronavirus pandemic. This oral argument involves consolidated cases dealing with congressional subpoenas to third party companies for President Trump’s financial records.

Round UP of Community Resources and Information in Response to COVID-19

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From narrowing the digital divide to the DMV extending certain registration fees, here is a roundup of resources and information to help as we work to maintain balance during this time of COVID-19

Ipad Donations Allow Isolated COVID-19 Patients to Virtually Visit Loved Ones

LOS ANGELES – The Los Angeles County Department of Health Services (DHS) announced May 7, the donation of 300 iPads to its four hospitals to facilitate patient-family communication during the COVID-19 pandemic. The gift is through a partnership with the Annenberg Foundation, Brilliant Corners, and the Los Angeles County Center for Strategic Partnerships..

The donation provides 300 iPads to be used in DHS hospitals to ensure patients and their families are able to connect, despite restrictions in access to the hospital. A second donation, by MobileDemand, provides rugged, protective healthcare iPad cases with an adjustable easel attached, to protect against damage and loss.

Los Angeles County Department of Health Services (DHS) annually provides direct care for 600,000 unique patients through its four hospitals – LAC+USC Medical Center, Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Olive View-UCLA Medical Center, and Rancho Los Amigos National Rehabilitation Center – and network of community partner clinics.

Details: www.dhs.lacounty.gov.

COVID-19 Resource Hub

LOS ANGELES – To help Los Angeles residents and businesses get through the coronavirus pandemic, Controller Galperin released a comprehensive COVID-19 Resource Hub that gathers the latest federal, state and local data, information and services. The hub includes a dashboard illustrating the impact of the coronavirus on L.A. neighborhoods, along with a map showing how stimulus checks will be distributed locally, and contains hundreds of resources organized into 16 categories — for employees and job seekers, freelancers, renters, small business owners, immigrants and much more.

Details: https://lacontroller.org/covid19resourcehub/

CPUC Moves to Help Close Digital Divide for Students

SAN FRANCISCO – The California Public Utilities Commission, May 7, largely adopted suggestions put forward by The Greenlining Institute to use $5 million from the California Advanced Services Fund to bolster Department of Education efforts to close the digital divide for California students. The funding, estimated by Greenlining to be enough to fund about 16,000 laptops or internet hotspots, comes as the COVID-19 pandemic has turned the gap in online access into an emergency.

In March, with both K-12 and higher education moving online as a result of the pandemic, the commission asked for input as to how to use the CASF, originally created in 2007 to help bridge the digital divide, to help mitigate the crisis. Greenlining and others urged that the most effective and efficient approach would be to use the money to expand existing efforts to provide laptops or hotspots rather than to create a new program.

The full text of the resolution can be found on the CPUC’S website, www.docs.cpuc.ca.gov .

Details: www.greenlining.org.

Online Portal Helps Parents Find Local and Convenient Child Care Options

SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom April 30, announced a new portal to help parents, including essential workers and vulnerable families, find safe, reliable and accessible child care options.

The new portal enables parents to enter their location and the type of care they need, instantly receiving a list of local center-based and family child care programs. The list of open licensed child care programs will include health and safety information, age of children accepted, capacity, availability, hours, and contact information for the program and local Child Care Resource and Referral agency. The Child Care Resource and Referral agencies can answer general questions, including those about child care subsidies.

Details: covid19.ca.gov/childcare

DMV Offers Relief to ID Cardholders, Vehicle Owners and Businesses

SACRAMENTO- Gov. Gavin Newsom, April 29, signed an executive order which states the California Department of Motor Vehicles is: waiving late fees and penalties for vehicle registration renewals due between March 16 and May 31, and paid within 60 days of the original expiration date. The requirement to have current license plate stickers is also waived for vehicles with registration expiring between March 4 and June 30, 2020.

The DMV is extending identification cards expiring on or after March 4, to be valid through June 22. It is also temporarily suspending for 60 days the requirement to submit a transfer of ownership within 10 days for vehicle transfers occurring on or after March 4, and the requirement to register a vehicle acquired or previously based outside of California within 20 days once registration becomes due.

The DMV is allowing temporary operating permits that expire on or after March 4, to be valid another 60 days from April 29.

DMV is lengthening motor carrier permits expiring in March, April and May 2020 to June 30, 2020.

Service Workers Remain Jobless as COVID-19 Continues

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Economic crisis slams Harbor Area gig musicians and waiters.

By Julissa Casillas, Editorial Intern

Like many Americans in this COVID 19 pandemic, Chandler Leighton is finding herself stretching an inexistent paycheck and singing the blues. The 25-year-old alternative songstress recently found her filling out an unemployment application for the first time. 

“I still don’t believe it,” said Leighton, a Torrance native. “I’m jobless and it’s not only affecting me financially but mentally as well, and I’m trying to stay positive but it’s a fucked up situation that I have no control over.” 

Leighton worked at a bar in Venice called Neighbor for the past year while she was hustling on the side for her singing career. Neighbor is a Californian-inspired New American bistro with seasonal fare and a breezy back patio. Leighton loved working there. She loved the vibes and being able to meet people that would come by for a drink. 

Leighton had to move back home with her parents because the landlord would not give them a delay in payment, the only other option was to move in with her boyfriend and his roommates but there isn’t enough space there for her, her parents’ house was the next thing. She isn’t working right now she is getting assistance from her parents and using some of the money saved up to pay for bills and other personal needs.

After COVID -19 hit and serious actions were being reinforced Leighton and other bartenders were left jobless. The manager at the bar has not paid them for their last month of work. She hasn’t seen her tip money as of March 2 and the check from the company bounced back. Leighton is fighting for the money she earned.

Since 1982 the United States has already seen a jump in people applying for unemployment benefits as the pandemic results in mass layoffs. For the week ending March 14, unemployment claims spiked by 70,000 to 281,000.  As of April 2, the Labor Department said that 6.6 million people have filed for unemployment. As of April 4, the jobless rate is higher than it was during the Great Depression with 13% and raising. 

In California even if you are still working part-time, you may be eligible for unemployment benefits, depending on your earnings and your situation. California has several programs that offer “partial” unemployment benefits: A portion of the benefit you would receive if you were fully unemployed, reduced to take into account your earnings. If you have fewer hours or you are working part-time and cannot find additional work, you may be eligible for partial unemployment benefits. 

There are several qualifications that may make a person eligible for assistance. A worker may be underemployed or working part-time as the only alternative to being laid off or made redundant. A person who lost his or her full-time job or even one of two part-time jobs and was only able to find part-time or temporary work may also meet the requirements to receive benefits.

Eligibility for partial unemployment benefits is determined by state law. Although benefit eligibility varies, most states agree that a worker who voluntarily chooses to cut back on hours or work part-time is not eligible for partial unemployment benefits. If you have recently lost your job look into filing for unemployment even if you are part-time.

Businesses are also trying to survive.

“The way we are surviving or should I say trying to survive is on customers coming in and ordering,” said a female waiter at an Olive Garden in Carson, who asked that her name not be published. 

“We do get many people to call in to-go orders because some people aren’t going to cook because they might have jobs that are necessary right now and don’t have the time or others who don’t know how to cook and need help. Since it’s only to-go we don’t need a lot of staff so that helps out to not spend money and less inventory is being shipped or deceived because of the situation.

“Balance is the main thing and also we just started selling our wine for to-go so that also helps.” As the big food chains are struggling to survive the small ones are hoping for the best and they come out on top when all this ends.

“I’m not sure the exact procedures or what they have planned, but what we’ve been doing is taking it day by day, seeing who can get called in and trimming down hours [so] we can still stay in business while not losing our jobs,” said Justice Ulmer, a server at Milanas, a pizza eatery in Long Beach.

To show support for local small businesses during these tough times, people call in an order for take-out and help spread the word for them. 

“To support small businesses the best way to go is to call for take-out and ask about specials because most places are having them to keep the business going,” ” said San Pedro Brewery Co. owner James Brown. “We already were busy with take-out before the COVID 19 but calling and placing an order always helps.”  San Pedro Brewing offers American cuisine with hand-crafted ales and lagers, a perfect way to try to make the best of this quarantine.