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Western States Pact Urges Federal Support for States and Cities Responding to COVID-19 Pandemic

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SACRAMENTO — In a letter to Congressional leadership May 11,, governors and legislative leaders from five western states requested $1 trillion in direct and flexible relief to states and local governments in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic in order to preserve core government services like public health, public safety and public education, and help people get back to work.

 The letter is below.

 Dear Speaker Pelosi, Leader McConnell, Leader McCarthy and Leader Schumer: 

 It is now clear that COVID-19 will be with us for the foreseeable future, and the worst of its economic impact is yet to come. Our states are on the front line against the virus while at the same time leading our states’ recovery. Each of us has seen first-hand how COVID-19 has caused a national recession that we are seeing play out in our states – resulting in a record amount of lost wages and business failures, spiraling unemployment and substantial, unplanned COVID-19-driven costs.

We deeply appreciated the quick financial assistance you provided workers, small business people and those who have been displaced by this crisis. But now, however, our states will be forced to make deep cuts to programs that help those same individuals without similar relief efforts for state and local governments. Even states that began the year in a strong fiscal position are facing staggering deficits amid growing costs of responding to the crisis. With unemployment projected to surpass that of the Great Recession, we are facing unprecedented and ongoing economic challenges.

Without federal support, states and cities will be forced to make impossible decisions – like whether to fund critical public healthcare that will help us recover, or prevent layoffs of teachers, police officers, firefighters and other first responders.  And, without additional assistance, the very programs that will help people get back to work – like job training and help for small business owners – will be forced up on the chopping block.

That’s why we are respectfully, and urgently, requesting $1 trillion in direct and flexible relief to states and local governments. Though even this amount will not replace the decline in revenue that we forecast, it will make a meaningful difference in our ability to make-up for COVID-19 revenue losses. This aid would preserve core government services like public health, public safety, public education and help people get back to work. It would help our states and cities come out of this crisis stronger and more resilient.

Red and blue states alike all are faced with the same COVID-19 math, as are Democratic and Republican mayors across our states. The moment requires unprecedented partnership from all of us – across every level of government and across party.  

 We urge you to take swift action to help states and local governments provide core government services for American families.

 Sincerely,

 Gavin Newsom

Governor of California

 Toni Atkins

President Pro Tempore of the California State Senate

Anthony Rendon

Speaker of the California State Assembly

 Marie Waldron

Minority Leader of the California State Assembly  

 Jared Polis

Governor of Colorado

 Leroy Garcia

President of the Colorado State Senate

 Steve Fenberg

Majority Leader of the Colorado State Senate

 KC Becker

Speaker of the Colorado House of Representatives

 Alec Garnett

Majority Leader of the Colorado House of Representatives

 Kate Brown

Governor of Oregon

 Tina Kotek

Speaker of the Oregon House of Representatives

 Peter Courtney

President of the Oregon Senate

 Steve Sisolak

Governor of Nevada

 Nicole Cannizzaro

Majority Leader of the Nevada Senate

 Jason Frierson

Speaker of the Nevada State Assembly

 Jay Inslee

Governor of Washington

 Andy Billig

Majority Leader of the Washington State Senate

 Laurie Jinkins

Speaker of the Washington House of Representatives

 cc: California congressional delegation

cc: Colorado congressional delegation

cc: Oregon congressional delegation

cc: Nevada congressional delegation

cc: Washington congressional delegation

Golf Courses and Trails Reopen, Parks Open Mother’s Day

Los Angeles County Golf Courses and Trails Reopen Saturday, May 9; Parks Reopen Mother’s Day, Sunday, May 10

The Los Angeles County Department of Parks and Recreation (LA County Parks) will reopen its golf courses and trails on Saturday, May 9. Local, community, and regional parks will stay open on Sunday, May 10. LA County Parks invites the public to safely enjoy its parks, golf courses, and trails by following guidelines and precautions to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

LA County Parks is taking precautions to ensure the health and safety of park guests, team members, and the community remains the top priority upon reopening. LA County Parks will launch a park monitor program at golf courses, trails, and local and regional parks with high visitors to remind players, visitors, and trail users of physical distancing and no group gathering requirements that remain in place. Staff training, prominent signage, and operations protocols are also part of the department’s necessary preparation and deployment for reopening.

The development of these protocols comes after consultation with the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, and input from the Golf Re-Opening Task Force and the Countywide Trail Re-Opening Task Force consisting of Local, State and Federal Parks and Recreation organizations and trail managing partners. Adherence is critical to safely operate these open facilities so the community can enjoy the emotional and physical benefits provided by golf and trails.

As COVID-19 is a fluid crisis with rapid changes affecting park facilities, LA County Parks continues to assess operations daily in consultation with the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health on necessary safety precautions.

While LA County Parks’ golf courses and trails will reopen, there are specific restrictions and safety guidelines that the public must follow in accordance with the health officer order. These include, but are not limited to, the following:

Golf Courses – Reopening on Saturday, May 9

  • Golf courses are open for regular play of no more than 4 players per tee time. Tee times will be at least 10 minutes apart. No tournaments or group play.
  • Physical distancing of 6 feet always required. No group gathering allowed on the course or in the parking lot.
  • Online reservations and payment recommended. Golf courses will accept payment online, and only by debit, credit, or gift card in person.
  • Push carts and walking recommended. Golf carts are limited to single riders.
  • Rental golf clubs and push carts are not available.
  • Bring your own water. Drinking fountains are closed.
  • Golfers may not touch, remove or adjust the flagstick during their round. Course green cups are touchless. Rakes, ball washers, benches, divot boxes, and sand bottles will be removed.
  • Driving ranges open. The one-hour time limit may be enforced. Practice putting and chipping greens remain closed.
  • Clubhouses and pro shops remain closed. Restaurants and cafes open for take-out only.

Trails – Reopening on Saturday, May 9

  • Trail users are encouraged to check the Trails LA County website prior to visiting trails for updated lists of open trails, safety guidelines, notifications, and up-to-date information. The trail’s website offers information for over 600 miles of trails, including trails managed by partner agencies that residents can visit and experience the wonderful outdoors.
  • Download the Trails LA County mobile app before heading out for real-time updates and offline location tracking and trail information to explore the extensive trail network within our diverse landscapes across the County.
  • Do not visit public trails and trailheads if feeling sick and/or exhibiting any symptoms of illness.
  • Follow all posted regulations at trails and trailhead facilities.
  • Physical distancing of 6 feet always required. No group gathering allowed on trails or in the parking lot.
  • Limit visits to members of your household only.
  • Everyone needs a face covering at the trailhead/parking lots and on any trails where there are other groups of people nearby.
    • Infants and children under the age of 2 should not wear cloth face coverings. Those between the ages of 2 and 8 should use them but under adult supervision to ensure that the child can breathe safely and avoid choking or suffocation. Children with breathing problems should not wear a face covering.
  • Consider avoiding popular locations that are prone to crowds.
  • Alert trail users of your presence and step aside to let others pass.
  • Bring water, hand sanitizer, and/or disinfecting wipes to wash or sanitize hands frequently.
  • Practice the leave-no-trace principles on the trails to protect park staff and wildlife, (take your trash).

Mother’s Day – Parks stay open, botanic gardens closed on Sunday, May 10

  • Local, community and regional parks will remain open on Mother’s Day, Sunday, May 10, for passive use, such as walking, jogging, and leisure time outdoors for individuals or families.
  • Botanic gardens will be closed Sunday, May 10.
  • Since the holiday is one of the busiest days of the year, LA County Parks reminds all park guests that physical distancing is required, and group gatherings are prohibited by the health order.

For more information on closures and changes in response to COVID-19, visit the LA County Parks website at https://parks.lacounty.gov/covid-19.

About LA County Parks and Recreation

The Los Angeles County Department of Parks and Recreation manages 183 parks and operates a network of 9 regional parks, 38 neighborhood parks, 20 community parks, 15 wildlife sanctuaries, 8 nature centers, 41 public swimming pools, more than 200 miles of multi-use trails for hiking, biking, and horseback riding, and the largest municipal golf system in the nation, consisting of 20 golf courses. The department also maintains four botanical centers: The Los Angeles County Arboretum and Botanic Garden, the South Coast Botanic Garden, Descanso Gardens, and Virginia Robinson Gardens. The department also owns and operates the iconic Hollywood Bowl and John Anson Ford Amphitheatre which are jointly managed with the Los Angeles Philharmonic Association, providing County residents with valuable entertainment and cultural resources.

Summers are Tomatoes and Popsicles

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By Jordan Darling, Editorial Intern

I used to love summer. I loved the sunshine, the blue skies and the endless possibilities that freedom and imagination could bring. I loved summers and I loved my grandfather — the two went hand in hand. Summers with grandpa meant big red tomatoes pulled fresh from the vine,  popsicles on the front porch paired with deep discussions about life and the state of the world. 

At 2, I was grandpa’s shadow. At 3, I thought grandpa could cure anything. At 7, I thought he was Santa. At 11, he was the smartest person alive, and at 14, my world came crashing down. 

My mom said Alzheimer’s. I said it wasn’t true. Then he forgot my name for the first time. I ran up the front steps of the worn red brick house that I knew so well and there he was, dependable as a sunrise on the chair just outside the door. A green work shirt and a black corduroy cap with Alaska embroidered on the front. The pins that he collected glinted in the afternoon sun, it seemed so normal. I rambled and he was quiet, a look of confusion was where a look of understanding used to be. My stomach dropped. This wasn’t right and then he said it, “What’s your name?” 

With Alzheimer’s, there are good days and bad ones. When it’s good, it’s great. There is clarity in their eyes and you can almost pretend they aren’t slipping away bit by bit. When it’s bad, you don’t recognize them anymore. 

“I always knew first thing in the morning if it was going to be a good day or a bad day if his eyes were clear it would be a good day if they were cloudy it would be a bad day,” my mom Kristen Burns-Darling said. People suffering from Alzheimer’s or dementia can become very agitated and sometimes volatile. There can be a lot of confusion and certain things can tip them into episodes.  

Alzheimer’s can be broken up into three progressive stages according to alz.org. With early-stage Alzheimer’s the person can still function on their own. They might have some memory lapses like remembering names. My little sister was born before the diagnosis and my grandpa had a hard time remembering her name. Once, my grandpa was on the phone with one of my great-aunts and he had to ask me what the baby’s name was. Jami was probably six-months-old at the time. 

Middle-stage Alzheimer’s is the longest period sometimes lasting for years. This can come with the inability to remember information, they need more help to function and they can have personality changes that can come with delusions and compulsive behaviors. 

At this point, my grandpa would shred napkins or tissues, he would become very agitated and often angry especially with my older brother. My brother looks quite a bit like my grandpa’s father who walked out on their family after my grandpa was born and there was still resentment and he would take it out on my brother. 

There were times he would mistake my mom for my grandma Barbara who passed away in the ’70s and then he would think that my little sister was my mom as an infant. There were still good days at this point, passing moments of clarity that I didn’t realize was that precious. 

Finally, the late-stage of Alzheimer’s, this is the end. They need round the clock care; they can’t communicate in the way they did before the personality changes. There were days I would come home from school or practice and I would spend an hour convincing him to drink the high protein shake, Ensure, so he wouldn’t starve. The nurse was there every day, providing the care that my mom and I couldn’t. In this stage, they can become very vulnerable to infections and other complications. This is the point where we lost him. 

When the diagnosis came out, he deteriorated quickly. And it was not just his mind. His body began to shut down too. The last six months of his life were the worst six months of mine. 

“I did not understand what I was asking of my family or myself when we moved home to take care of my father,” my mom said. “I did not understand the sacrifice I was asking of my husband and my kids. I would do it over but I wish I was better educated in what it would be and what it would look like.” 

 I knew every line on my grandpa’s face, every wrinkle, each expression, down to a mole in the middle of his forehead where it met the bridge of his nose. I knew my grandpa until Alzheimer’s crept into our lives and changed what I knew. 

Alzheimer’s affects more than five million people, according to alz.org. It is the sixth leading cause of death in the United States, and between 2000 and 2018, deaths relating to Alzheimer’s increased 146 percent. 

I lost my grandpa on Aug. 20, 2011. It was a Saturday morning. Gram and I were in judo. It was gray outside. It felt like it had been that way all summer. The receptionist at the gym bustled into the room and immediately made his way to my grandmother. She made eye contact with me from across the room and I felt a tightness in my chest, my heart dropped and I knew. 

For the next week, my world was foggy. I received, “I’m so sorry…” “Your grandpa was a good man…” “He really loved you…” in various combinations, over and over again. I was reminded that he was “in a better place,” that he was “no longer sick,” or that “he must be dancing in heaven.” I smiled and nodded blindly accepting the hugs and pats on the shoulder. He was laid to rest a few days later.

I sat outside the church on the day of the funeral and just picked at the grass. It was sunny and warm, not a cloud in the sky. I wanted rain and clouds. I wanted the world to be angry too. I sang the Marine Corps Hymn, I heard my voice echoing off the church walls I never looked up. This was the very first song he ever taught me.  

Grandpa always talked to me like an equal. We often would dig up new projects from the depths of the garage where they had been collecting dust. My grandpa was a Texas native, a product of the 1930s who believed the greatest calling was serving your country. He was an old fashioned man with old fashioned values who reminded me that I was capable of anything. He was my best friend. 

After the funeral, I sat on the well-worn brick of the back patio and stared. I went back to the day I planted my first tomato plant. I sat on the ground with a pot between my legs, there was more soil on me than in the pot, but I was doing my best to complete my task. Grandpa sat back in an old wooden chair, his hands resting on his cane as he nodded his head and gave out instructions on the best way to care for the plant I was transplanting.

 I smiled at the memory and tilted my head back to catch the afternoon rays on my face and I just let the tears run. The sliding glass door slid open and my grandmother sat down next to me. She didn’t need to say a word she felt it as deeply as I did. All I wanted was to go back to summers with fresh tomatoes and melted popsicles. 


What To Do For Your Loved One

Alzheimer’s is a degenerative disease that affects a person’s memories and brain functions, according to the Alzheimers Association. If you believe that your loved one may be suffering from the disease here are things you can do.

* Talk to your loved ones and other close family and friends about your concerns.

* Convince your loved one to see a physician for a proper diagnosis, you can not make them but you can voice your concerns.

* Once you have a diagnosis, educate yourself on the best option for you and your loved one, if a care facility is the best option then take your time to find the right one in your area.

* If you choose to become a primary caregiver be as educated as possible. The Alzheimer’s Association offers resources for caregivers including learning opportunities. https://tinyurl.com/yc3wsg32

* Visit them as much as possible, keep them involved, and try to help them maintain some independence.


“If they start seeing the forgetfulness they need to reach out to their primary physician to be properly diagnosed [then] search for help,” said Ivonne Meader, owner and manager of Mom and Dad’s House based in Long Beach. “[There are] wonderful organizations to support caregivers and family, Alzheimer’s Orange County, Alzheimer’s Los Angeles, and Alzheimer’s Association. They are set up for 24/7 phone calls, training opportunities, education, and access to the latest research.”


The Fight for Bernie Delegates Is Escalating — and Could Help Beat Trump

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By Norman Solomon

The Presumptive Nominee seems to be in trouble. Reuters just released a national poll showing that “Joe Biden’s advantage over President Donald Trump in popular support has eroded in recent weeks” — and the contest is “essentially a toss-up.” In a half-dozen key swing states, Biden is only up by an average of 4 percent. Even among the Democratic faithful, enthusiasm for Biden is low. Among the young, it’s been close to nonexistent.

The myth that Trump will defeat himself expired the night before Hillary Clinton gave her concession speech. Yet it persists as Democratic Party power brokers and many pundits go easy on Biden and humor his repeated boast that “I’ll beat him like a drum.” Biden remains firmly stuck in a mindset that makes it highly unlikely he can incentivize the big turnout of progressive voters that’s needed against Trump. That mentality goes unchallenged in standard corporate-media framing, which evades basic political realities of economic inequality.

Using a common bromide from mainline journalists, the Washington Post reported on Tuesday that “Democrats have been split since 2016 over whether energizing black voters or winning over some white working-class voters in the industrial Midwest represents the best shot for the party in November.” That kind of either/or framing was rejected – and somewhat transcended — by the Bernie 2020 campaign. For good reason. As pollster Stanley Greenberg has emphasized, the Democratic Party doesn’t have a “white working-class problem” — it has a working-class problem.

The perception that the party is in the pocket of the rich has damaged support and undermined voter turnout from working-class people of all races. As a thoroughly corporate politician, Biden is ill-positioned to change that perception. But if the 2020 Democratic National Convention (likely virtual rather than in-person) can move the party in progressive directions, the chances of effectively deflating Trump’s phony pseudo-populism would improve.

That’s where Bernie delegates can come in.

Of course, the Biden team would like the national convention to be a smoothly corporate affair without appreciable leverage from progressive forces in terms of deciding on party rules and the platform. Whether Biden can stifle those forces may depend on whether the Sanders campaign can win enough delegates in upcoming primaries to reach the 25 percent threshold that’s required for bringing proposals to the entire convention.

Right now, with 20 primaries still to come, surpassing the 25 percent mark is certainly within reach. While the official Sanders campaign has nearly disbanded, some grassroots Bernie supporters are continuing or restarting their work. In many states, the Our Revolution organization is assisting local activists to get out the Bernie vote. The potentially historic significance of such efforts got a boost this week when a federal judge reinstated New York’s Democratic presidential primary set for June 23. The court reversed a state board of elections decision to cancel that primary — a

decision widely understood to be at the behest of the state’s establishment-oriented Democratic governor, Andrew Cuomo.

The court ruling, U.S. News & World Report noted, “allows Bernie Sanders to secure more delegates — and more influence — ahead of the Democratic National Convention.” Meanwhile, three groups — People for Bernie Sanders, RootsAction.org (where I’m national director), and Progressive Democrats of America — have just launched a new campaign called Once Again. The goal is to help activists mobilize in upcoming primary states and win a new wave of Sanders delegates.

“Bernie’s campaign has suspended, but the movement to fight for the Bernie platform must go on,” said Claire Sandberg, who was national organizing director for the Bernie 2020 campaign.

Sandberg added: “People who recognize the urgency of issues like ending the wars, canceling student debt, and enacting Medicare for All and a Green New Deal must work together to ensure progressive voters make their voices heard in the remaining primaries. It’s also vital that Bernie supporters rally behind down-ballot progressive candidates, whose fortunes may be determined by small margins. For those reasons, I support this effort to mobilize Bernie supporters to cast their ballots through the end of the primary.”

Former Bernie 2020 national co-chair Nina Turner, who also spoke on a Once Again kickoff livestream on May 5, summed up: “We have had enough of the status quo policies that do not change the material conditions for the poor, working poor and middle class in this country. We intend to keep pushing for a government that works for everyone.”

Corporate media and powerful Democrats are eager to portray the 2020 Democratic presidential race as a thing of the past. But progressive activists have some very different ideas.

______________________________

Norman Solomon is co-founder and national director of RootsAction.org. He was a Bernie Sanders delegate from California to the 2016 Democratic National Convention. Solomon is the author of a dozen books including “War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death.”

Stage Two – Opening Restrictions

LA County Golf Courses And Trails Reopen May 9; Parks Remain Open Mother’s Day, May 10 

LOS ANGELES – As COVID-19 is a fluid crisis with rapid changes affecting parks facilities, the Los Angeles County Department of Parks and Recreation (LA County Parks) continues to assess operations daily in consultation with the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health on necessary safety precautions. Based on Stage Two of the reopening plan for the County of Los Angeles, LA County Parks has modified its operations to begin the multi-phased approach to public access of golf courses and trails, May 9.

LA County Parks is taking precautions to ensure the health and safety of park guests, team members, and the community remains the top priority upon reopening. LA County Parks will launch a park monitor program at golf courses and trails to remind players, visitors, and trail users of physical distancing requirements that remain in place. Staff training, prominent signage, and operations protocols are also part of the department’s necessary preparation and deployment for reopening.

The development of these protocols comes after consultation with the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, and input from the Golf Reopening Task Force and the Countywide Trail Reopening Task Force consisting of Local, State and Federal Park and Recreation organizations and trail managing partners. Adherence is critical to safely operate these open facilities so the community can enjoy the emotional and physical benefits provided by golf and trails. 

While the golf courses and trails will reopen, there are specific restrictions and safety guidelines that the public must follow in accordance with the health officer order. These include but are not limited to, the following: 

Golf Courses – Reopening on Saturday, May 9

-Golf courses are open for regular play of no more than 4 players per tee time. Tee times will be at least 10 minutes apart. No tournaments or group play.

-Physical distancing of 6 feet always required. No group gathering allowed on the course or in the parking lot.

-Online reservations and payment recommended. Golf courses will accept payment online, only by debit, credit or gift card.

-Push carts and walking recommended. Golf carts are limited to single riders.

-Rental golf clubs and push carts are not available.

-Bring your own water. Drinking fountains are closed.

-Golfers may not touch, remove or adjust the flag stick during their round. Course green cups are touchless. Rakes, ball washers, benches, divot boxes and sand bottles will be removed.

-Driving ranges open. One-hour time limit may be enforced. Practice putting and chipping greens remain closed.

-Clubhouses and pro shops remain closed. Restaurants and cafes open for take-out only.

Trails – Reopening, May 9

Trail users are encouraged to check the Trails LA County website at www.trails.lacounty.gov for updated guidelines, notifications, and up-to-date information prior to visiting trails. The trails website offers information for over 600 miles of trails that residents can visit and experience the wonderful outdoors.

-Download the Trails LA County mobile app before heading out for real-time updates and offline location tracking and trail information to explore the extensive trail network within our diverse landscapes across the County.

-Do not visit public trails and trail heads if feeling sick and/or exhibiting any symptoms of illness.

-Follow all posted regulations at trails and trail head facilities

-Physical distancing of 6 feet always required. No group gathering allowed on trails or in the parking lot.

-Limit visit to members of your household only.

-Trail users over the age of 2 are required to wear face coverings at trail heads, parking lots and while on the trail.

-Consider avoiding popular locations that are prone to crowds.

-Alert trail users of your presence and step aside to let others pass.

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

-Practice the leave-no-trace principles on the trails to protect park staff and wildlife.

Mother’s Day – Parks stay open, May 10

Local, community and regional parks, botanic gardens (except Descanso Gardens) will remain open on Mother’s Day, May 10, for passive use, such as walking, jogging, and leisure time outdoors for individuals or families. Since the holiday is one of the busiest days of the year, LA County Parks reminds all park guests that social distancing is required and group gatherings are prohibited by the health order.

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

Fight the virus with permanent, supportive, public housing

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End Homelessness Now-LA (EHN-LA) is a broad based community campaign that promotes large-scale, permanent, supportive public housing as the solution to the homelessness catastrophe. As the housing crisis is now compounded by the COVID-19 pandemic, EHN-LA’s demand that government-owned vacant or underused property be re-purposed into such housing is more urgent than ever.

Today, EHN-LA is alarmed that government officials at all levels are focusing most of their efforts on temporary shelters and short-term leases of hotel and motel rooms. Putting hundreds of cots together in recreation centers and other large rooms only invites further spread of the disease. Dumping people out of temporary rooms after the worst of the crisis passes would be obscenely cruel. Governments should purchase or otherwise take over hotels and motels for permanent public housing.

The COVID-19 pandemic has brutally revealed that a system based on every business out to make the highest possible profit is categorically incapable of meeting human needs. Just as we need a universal, public healthcare system run by its workers, we need permanent housing that exists outside of the chaos of the private market. Profits should not be the motive force for who’s housed and who isn’t.

EHN-LA member Claudia Brick said, “The City should absolutely be its own developer– the same as they do when they build a firehouse or a community center. Public money must be spent on public projects and run by public employees, including those with lived experience who know what it takes to become successfully rehoused. Public ownership and management could get the job done better, faster, and at a much lower cost.”

Over three years ago, Los Angeles voters passed Proposition HHH to tax themselves $1.2 billion to build 10,000 apartments. The city is squandering that money to enrich private developers and landlords who now may produce fewer than 6,000 units costing over $500,000 each. Worse yet, this housing is not permanent. Its private owners only have to agree to provide the very-low-rent housing for 55 years, after which they can charge whatever they want. We are now seeing thousands of apartments built in the 1980s with 30 year covenants revert to market rate rent and displace their elderly and low income renters.

Therefore, EHN-LA calls on city, county, state, and federal governments to immediately:

1 Open and retrofit all of their empty and underused buildings for permanent public housing where people can protect themselves in separate spaces now and in the future.

2 Quickly build permanent supportive public housing on large vacant lots, using modular and other innovative construction that costs only 20% of what the city is spending with the HHH funds. Instead of finishing a giant stadium that may not host sports events for years, construction should be redirected to housing.

3 Turn parking lots and other vacant space into trailer parks with utility hookups where trailers, RVs, and even cars that are being lived in can gather in safe areas with centralized services. Then, keep those trailer parks open for permanent low-cost housing. Zerita Jones, EHN-LA and LA Tenants Union organizer, points out that such parks could provide decent homes costing less than $60,000.

4 Eliminate all zoning and planning barriers to immediate implementation of the above demands. The health and housing emergency demands immediate action. EHN-LA has searched an entire database of the city’s posted surplus and underused properties and driven endless miles looking for appropriate sites for housing.

The old County General Hospital at 1200 State Street, mostly vacant since 2008, could house close to 1,000 people. The county is looking into it, but no housing has materialized

The Veterans Administration campus in west LA has several large buildings previously used for housing and offices that could house hundreds. They also have expansive green space where tents and vehicles could safely camp

There are vacant libraries and fire houses, of 4,400 to 12,000 square feet, that are located throughout the city. Though they are small, repurposing plans could be replicable, thereby saving time and money in moving forward.

Several large vacant lots could be used for modular and other innovative housing at 20% of what the city is paying for the HHH projects. One 121,000 square foot lot at 60th and S. Western could house hundreds. Larger lots at Wall and Slauson (7 acres), Clovis Ave, south of E 108 th St (434,409 square feet), and 7600 Tyrone Ave, Van Nuys (753,136 square feet) could house thousands.

In 2014, the Port of Los Angeles identified 390 acres of vacant property potentially available for lease. These properties should also be considered for both emergency and long-term public housing.

In many other countries, large scale public housing prevents homelessness. Los Angeles has much to learn from them and should follow their lead.

Our New Reality, A Message From Eric Garcetti

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COVID-19 response update video https://www.facebook.com/MayorOfLA/videos/652702358669069/

From the moment COVID-19 arrived in Los Angeles, I’ve been as clear as possible about the magnitude of the challenge we face — and the steps and sacrifices required to get through this crisis. I promised you the facts, the data, and the unvarnished truth about the dangers of this virus.

And I’ve been so proud of the way Angelenos have responded. You’ve stayed home. You’ve changed your routines. You’ve helped your kids enter a new world of distance learning. You’ve put off family gatherings and celebrated holidays virtually. And if you’re an essential worker, you’ve gone above and beyond to serve us all.

None of this has been easy. The path forward will be long and winding. And we will continue to face a hard truth: COVID-19 is not going away soon.

 

But let there be no doubt: your actions have saved lives. And we need to keep at it.

Together with the County, I announced that I will modify the city’s Safer at Home order. This does not mean life is going back to the way it was before the pandemic.

Until there is a vaccine or effective treatment, this virus will remain a threat to everyone. You still need to stay home, wear face coverings, and refrain from gatherings with anyone who doesn’t live in your home. These measures remain as important as ever.

But we also must learn how to live with this new reality and find ways to begin to safely and slowly lift restrictions, guided by science and data — making minor and deliberate adjustments over an extended period of time.

The City of Los Angeles will take a gradual and staged approach to our response, working with leaders across the region and listening to public health experts. This approach will enable us to carefully make changes, monitor risks and needs, and adjust our approach as needed.

On Friday, May 8th, this process will begin: florists, toy stores, music stores, bookstores, clothing and sporting goods stores may offer curbside pickup only. Car dealership showrooms may open. And starting Saturday, you’ll be able to return to golf courses, trailhead parks and trails — except Runyon Canyon, which will remain closed. Face coverings are required for anyone using trails or golf courses.

Remember: we originally closed hiking trails when they became too crowded to be safe, and if we see people failing to keep their distance, wear face coverings, and follow the rules, we will be forced to close them again.

Meanwhile, all other Safer at Home restrictions –– include the closures at our beaches, park sports facilities and recreation centers –– remain in place.

 

We are taking this process one step at a time. Here’s what that will look like:

The first stage — where Los Angeles has been over the last several months — is crisis management mode, which has the goal of saving as many lives as possible.

The second stage –– which we will enter on Friday –– aims to transition Angelenos back to a “new reality,” with a slow rollback of some restrictions, while ensuring that there are adequate safety measures in place.

In the third and fourth stages, the City will transition to a state of monitoring, and aim to lift additional restrictions.

In order to move to a new stage, our city must reach key milestones, based on metrics and tracked by data. If the metrics are trending in the wrong direction, restrictions will return. Every decision will be based on an assessment of the risk to our communities and the capacity of our medical systems to respond.

You’ll be able to track the status of these indicators, a description of the phases, and the steps we’re taking on our COVID-19 response website.

This process will not always be straightforward. We may step forward, step backward, or pause — depending on the public health indicators. We are now in a world more complex than we could have ever imagined, facing a virus that remains dangerous to all of us. And it will take many steps to bring us to safety.

But I will be here for you. Angelenos will be there for each other with courage, generosity, and L.A. Love –– and we will get there together.

Amazon Exec: ‘I Quit in Dismay’

“Working at Amazon is nice, but living with a clear conscience is better,” said a prominent vice president who resigned from the company’s cloud division Friday. This followed international protests at Amazon warehouses.

The high-ranking software engineer, Tim Bray, said he was leaving over the company’s firings of warehouse workers who spoke up about unsafe working conditions during the COVID-19 pandemic. 

[See exclusive RLN interview with fired national leader, Chris Smalls  https://www.randomlengthsnews.com/2020/05/05/chris-smalls-ny-amazon-organizer)]

Bray also mentioned the firing of two Amazon corporate employees who pressed the company over its environmental impact.

– Amazon says these employees were fired for violating company policies, not their activism. Bray thinks otherwise, describing the activist firings as “designed to create a climate of fear.” 

See his whole letter: https://www.tbray.org/ongoing/When/202x/2020/04/29/Leaving-Amazon

Announcement of the 2020 Pulitzer Prize Winners

Winner of the Pulitzer in Music which premiered at The Warner Grand Theatre in San Pedro

The Central Park Five, by Anthony Davis

Premiered on June 15, 2019 at the Long Beach Opera, a courageous operatic work, marked by powerful vocal writing and sensitive orchestration, that skillfully transforms a notorious example of contemporary injustice into something empathetic and hopeful. Libretto by Richard Wesley.

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The 2020 Pulitzer Prize winners in 15 Journalism and seven Book, Drama and Music categories were announced on Monday, May 4 at 3 p.m. Eastern. A Special Citation was also awarded.

The Board also announces the election of its two co-chairs: Stephen Engelberg, Editor-in-Chief, ProPublica, and Aminda Marqués Gonzalez, President, Publisher and Executive Editor, Miami Herald. Both Engelberg and Marqués Gonzalez are entering their ninth year as Pulitzer Prize Board members.

The 2020 Prize winners are:

Journalism

Breaking News Reporting

Staff of The Courier-Journal, Louisville, Ky.

For its rapid coverage of hundreds of last-minute pardons by Kentucky’s governor, showing how the process was marked by opacity, racial disparities and violations of legal norms. (Moved by the jury from Local Reporting, where it was originally entered.)

Investigative Reporting

Brian M. Rosenthal of The New York Times

For an exposé of New York City’s taxi industry that showed how lenders profited from predatory loans that shattered the lives of vulnerable drivers, reporting that ultimately led to state and federal investigations and sweeping reforms.

Explanatory Reporting

Staff of The Washington Post

For a groundbreaking series that showed with scientific clarity the dire effects of extreme temperatures on the planet.

Local Reporting

Staff of The Baltimore Sun

For illuminating, impactful reporting on a lucrative, undisclosed financial relationship between the city’s mayor and the public hospital system she helped to oversee.

National Reporting

T. Christian Miller, Megan Rose and Robert Faturechi of ProPublica

For their investigation into America’s 7th Fleet after a series of deadly naval accidents in the Pacific.

Dominic Gates, Steve Miletich, Mike Baker and Lewis Kamb of The Seattle Times

For groundbreaking stories that exposed design flaws in the Boeing 737 MAX that led to two deadly crashes and revealed failures in government oversight.

International Reporting

Staff of The New York Times

For a set of enthralling stories, reported at great risk, exposing the predations of Vladimir Putin’s regime.

Feature Writing

Ben Taub of The New Yorker

For a devastating account of a man who was kidnapped, tortured and deprived of his liberty for more than a decade at the Guantanamo Bay detention facility, blending on-the-ground reporting and lyrical prose to offer a nuanced perspective on America’s wider war on terror. (Moved into contention by the Board.)

Commentary

Nikole Hannah-Jones of The New York Times

For a sweeping, deeply reported and personal essay for the ground-breaking 1619 Project, which seeks to place the enslavement of Africans at the center of America’s story, prompting public conversation about the nation’s founding and evolution.

Criticism

Christopher Knight of the Los Angeles Times

For work demonstrating extraordinary community service by a critic, applying his expertise and enterprise to critique a proposed overhaul of the L.A. County Museum of Art and its effect on the institution’s mission.

Editorial Writing

Jeffery Gerritt of the Palestine (Tx.) Herald Press

For editorials that exposed how pre-trial inmates died horrific deaths in a small Texas county jail—reflecting a rising trend across the state—and courageously took on the local sheriff and judicial establishment, which tried to cover up these needless tragedies.

Editorial Cartooning

Barry Blitt, contributor, The New Yorker

For work that skewers the personalities and policies emanating from the Trump White House with deceptively sweet watercolor style and seemingly gentle caricatures. (Moved into contention by the Board.)

Breaking News Photography

Photography Staff of Reuters

For wide-ranging and illuminating photographs of Hong Kong as citizens protested infringement of their civil liberties and defended the region’s autonomy by the Chinese government.

Feature Photography

Channi Anand, Mukhtar Khan and Dar Yasin of Associated Press

For striking images of life in the contested territory of Kashmir as India revoked its independence, executed through a communications blackout.

Audio Reporting

Staff of This American Life with Molly O’Toole of the Los Angeles Times and Emily Green, freelancer, Vice News

For “The Out Crowd,” revelatory, intimate journalism that illuminates the personal impact of the Trump Administration’s “Remain in Mexico” policy.

Public Service

Anchorage Daily News with contributions from ProPublica

For a riveting series that revealed a third of Alaska’s villages had no police protection, took authorities to task for decades of neglect, and spurred an influx of money and legislative changes.

Letters, Drama and Music

Drama

A Strange Loop, by Michael R. Jackson

A metafictional musical that tracks the creative process of an artist transforming issues of identity, race, and sexuality that once pushed him to the margins of the cultural mainstream into a meditation on universal human fears and insecurities.

History

Sweet Taste of Liberty: A True Story of Slavery and Restitution in America, by W. Caleb McDaniel (Oxford University Press)

A masterfully researched meditation on reparations based on the remarkable story of a 19th century woman who survived kidnapping and re-enslavement to sue her captor.

Biography

Sontag: Her Life and Work, by Benjamin Moser (Ecco)

An authoritatively constructed work told with pathos and grace, that captures the writer’s genius and humanity alongside her addictions, sexual ambiguities and volatile enthusiasms.

Poetry

The Tradition, by Jericho Brown (Copper Canyon Press)

A collection of masterful lyrics that combine delicacy with historical urgency in their loving evocation of bodies vulnerable to hostility and violence.

General Nonfiction

The Undying: Pain, Vulnerability, Mortality, Medicine, Art, Time, Dreams, Data, Exhaustion, Cancer, and Care, by Anne Boyer (Farrar, Straus and Giroux)

An elegant and unforgettable narrative about the brutality of illness and the capitalism of cancer care in America.

The End of the Myth: From the Frontier to the Border Wall in the Mind of America, by Greg Grandin (Metropolitan Books)

A sweeping and beautifully written book that probes the American myth of boundless expansion and provides a compelling context for thinking about the current political moment. (Moved by the Board from the History category.)

Music

The Central Park Five, by Anthony Davis

Premiered on June 15, 2019 at the Long Beach Opera, a courageous operatic work, marked by powerful vocal writing and sensitive orchestration, that skillfully transforms a notorious example of contemporary injustice into something empathetic and hopeful. Libretto by Richard Wesley.

Fiction

The Nickel Boys, by Colson Whitehead (Doubleday)

A spare and devastating exploration of abuse at a reform school in Jim Crow-era Florida that is ultimately a powerful tale of human perseverance, dignity and redemption.

Special Citation

Ida B. Wells

For her outstanding and courageous reporting on the horrific and vicious violence against African Americans during the era of lynching.

The citation comes with a bequest by the Pulitzer Prize board of at least $50,000 in support of her mission. Recipients will be announced at a later date.

Mexican Border Workers Strike Against COVID, But the U.S. Keeps the Factories Open

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By David Bacon, TruthOut, 5/4/2020
https://truthout.org/articles/following-mexicos-worker-strikes-the-us-steps-in-to-keep-border-factories-open/
http://davidbaconrealitycheck.blogspot.com/2020/05/following-mexicos-worker-strikes-us.html

A street in a barrio of maquiladora workers. David Bacon

In Washington, D.C., President Trump is trying his best to reopen closed meatpacking plants, as packinghouse workers catch the COVID-19 virus and die. In Tijuana, Mexico, where workers are dying in mostly U.S.-owned factories (known as maquiladoras) that produce and export goods to the U.S., the Baja California state governor, a former California Republican Party stalwart, is doing the same thing.

Jaime Bonilla Valdez rode into the governorship in 2018 on the coattails of Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador. And at first, as a leading member of López Obrador’s MORENA Party, he was a strong voice calling for the factories on the border to suspend production.

López Obrador himself was criticized for not acting rapidly enough against the pandemic. But in late March, in the face of Mexico’s rising COVID-19 death toll, he finally declared a State of Health Emergency. Non essential businesses were ordered to shut their doors, and to continue paying workers’ wages until April 30.

Bonilla’s Labor Secretary Sergio Martinez applied the federal government’s rule to the foreign-owned factories on the border, producing goods for the U.S. market. Again, only essential businesses would be excepted.

When news spread that many factories were defying the order to close, Bonilla condemned them. “The employers don’t want to stop earning money,” he said at a news conference in mid-April. “They are basically looking to sacrifice their employees.” But now, a month later, he is allowing many non-essential factories to reopen.

Explaining the about-face are two competing pressures. At first, workers in the factories took action to shut them down, a move widely supported in border cities. But as the owners themselves resisted, they got the help of the U.S. government. The Trump administration put enormous pressure on the Mexican government and economy, vulnerable because of its dependence on the U.S. market.

Now as the factories are opening again, the deaths are still rising.

Strikes Start in Mexicali

Although Baja California is much less densely populated than other Mexican states, it’s now third in the number of COVID-19 cases, with 1,660 people infected. Some 261 have died statewide, and 164 in Tijuana alone. That’s more deaths than 131 in neighboring San Diego, a much larger metropolis. Fifteen percent of those with COVID-19 in Tijuana die, while only 3.5 percent die in San Diego. As is true everywhere, with the absence of extensive testing, no one really knows how many are sick.

In Tijuana, most who die are working-age. Since one-tenth of the city’s 2.1 million residents work in over 900 maquiladoras, and even more are dependent on those factory jobs, the spread of the virus among maquiladora workers is very threatening.

Alarm grew when two workers died in early April at Plantronics, where 3,300 employees make phone headsets. Schneider Electric closed when one worker died and 11 more got sick. Skyworks, a manufacturer of parts for communications equipment with 5,500 workers, admitted that some had been infected.

In the growing climate of fear, workers began to stop work. In Mexicali, Baja California’s state capital, workers struck on April 9 at three U.S.-owned factories: Eaton, Spectrum and LG. Protesters said the companies were forcing people to come to work under threat of being permanently fired, refusing to pay the government-mandated wages and failing to provide masks to workers. The factories were forced to close by the state government.

Work then stopped at three more factories – Jonathan, SL and MTS. There, the companies offered bonuses of 20-40 percent if workers would stay on the job, but employees rejected the offer. One striker, Daniel, told a reporter for the Mexican newspaper La Jornada, “We want health – we don’t want money, or bonuses or even double pay. We just want them to comply with the presidential order that nonessential factories close, and to pay us our full salary.” Jonathan makes metal rails for machine guns and tanks for U.S. companies. Workers denied company claims that they made “essential” telecommunications equipment, a common claim by factories that want to stay open.

A young worker pulls plastic parts from a plastic molding machine which will be assembled into coathangers for the garment industry, in the Tijuana, Mexico, maquiladora of Plasticos Bajacal. Workers tried unsuccessfully to organize an independent, democratic union there. David Bacon

The Organization of the Workers and Peoples, a radical group among maquiladora workers in Baja California, reported a week of work stoppages at Skyworks, and a strike at Gulfstream on April 10. At Honeywell Aerospace, workers began shutting down production on April 6. “The company then laid off 100 people without pay, and fired four of them,” said Mexicali worker/activist Jesus Casillas. Honeywell closed for a week, and then reopened.

As the strikes progressed, workers reported the death of two people in Clover Wireless’s two plants that repair cellphones. They were closed for one shift, and then started up again. Finally, on April 14, a general strike was called by Mexicali maquiladora workers, and supported by the state chapter of the New Labor Center, a union federation organized by the Mexican Electrical Workers Union.

The Factories Don’t Actually Close

Companies that said they were closing never really did, workers charged. “They’d close the front door and put a chain on,” Casillas explained. “Then they bring workers in through the back door. They’d call the workers down to the factory, and would tell them that if they didn’t go back to work, they’d lose their jobs permanently.”

Elsewhere on the border, workers also complain about being forced to work. Company scofflaws even included breweries. In the rest of Mexico, beer began to disappear from store shelves as a result of López Obrador’s order, shuttering breweries because alcohol production was not deemed “essential.” Modelo and Heineken, two huge producers, complied. Constellation Brands’ two enormous breweries in Coahuila, which make Corona and Modelo for the U.S. market, did not.

On May Day, a Facebook post even showed workers at the Piedras Negras glass plant that makes the bottles for Constellation Brands lined up without masks. A message from a worker, Alejandro Lopez, charges, “We ask for masks and they deny us, like they do with [sanitizing] gel, which they only give us at the [brewery] entrance, and that’s it.” The response posted by the plant human relations director, Sofia Bucio, says the company does everything required, and then goes on to berate the worker: “We didn’t go take you out of your house and force you to work with us, right?… If you don’t like the measures IVC [the glass company] is taking, the doors were wide open to let you in when you came here, and they’re the same to let you out.”

In border cities across the Rio Grande from Texas, other factories that wanted to stay open said they’d let workers worried about the virus stay home, but only at 50 percent of their normal wages. “People can’t possibly live on that,” charged Julia Quiñones, director of the Border Women Workers Committee. Since López Obrador ordered a raise a year ago, the minimum wage on the border has been 185.56 pesos ($7.63) per day. Fifty percent of that, in Nuevo Laredo, would barely buy a gallon of milk (80 pesos).

“There’s no other work the women can do in town,” Quiñones explained. “In the past, some workers crossed the border to earn extra money by donating blood. But the border is now closed, even for those that have visas. They can’t sell things in the street because of the lockdown. The only option is to work.”

One worker told her, “It is better to work at 100 percent, even if we’re risking our lives, than to be at home with 50 percent.”

Meanwhile, work stoppages spread to other border cities, as the death toll rose. Lear Corporation, which employs 24,000 people making car seats in Ciudad Juárez, closed its 12 plants there on April 1. Lear had more COVID-19 fatalities than any company on the border. It won’t cite a number, and says it only learned of the first death on April 3. By the end of April, however, 16 Lear workers were dead from the virus, 13 from its Rio Bravo factory alone.

As other plants continued operations despite a death toll, strikes broke out. On April 17, workers struck at six maquiladoras, demanding that the companies stop operations and pay workers the government-mandated wages. Twenty people in the city had died by then, including two workers at Regal Beloit (a coffin manufacturer), and two workers at Syncreon, according to protesters. At Honeywell, 70 strikers said the company hadn’t provided masks, and had forced people with hypertension and diabetes to show up for work.

The Electrolux plant stopped work on April 24 after two workers, Gregoria González and Sandra Perea, died. Two weeks earlier, workers there had protested the lack of health protection. When workers finally stopped working, the company locked them inside and later fired 20. One told journalist Kau Sirenio, “The company wouldn’t tell us anything though we all knew that we were working at the risk of getting infected. They waited until two died before they closed, and fired those who protested the lack of safe conditions. They still say their operation is essential, but you can see how little they care about the lives of the workers.”

In Juárez, the mayor closed the city’s restaurants but allowed the maquiladoras to keep running. When workers at TPI Composites began their protest, the city police were even called out against them. Nevertheless, in Juárez and other border cities throughout April, the pressure of workers did succeed often in forcing the government to demand compliance from the companies.

The U.S. Intervenes

At the end of April, the U.S. government intervened on behalf of the owners of the stalled plants. The Trump administration is set on protecting the new United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement set to go into effect on July 1. While the agreement has theoretical protections for worker health and safety, there is no expectation that it would be invoked to ensure that plants remain shut until the COVID-19 danger recedes. Instead, its purpose is to protect the chains of supply and investment between Mexico and the U.S., especially involving factories on the border.

“You can imagine how desperate we are, since we’re so poor, and without a law to protect us. Here, if you have no money, the government won’t enforce the law. We really have very good laws in Mexico, but a very bad government.” Veronica Vasquez spoke these words in the middle of a dusty street in Tijuana. “Companies come to Mexico to make money. They think they can do anything they want with us because we’re Mexicans. Well, it’s our country, even if we’re poor. Not theirs.” David Bacon

López Obrador’s order classified as “essential” only companies directly involved in critical industries such as health care, food production or energy, and excluded companies that supply materials to factories in those industries. But from the beginning, many maquiladoras claimed they were “essential” anyway because they supplied other factories in the U.S. Luis Hernandez, an executive at a Tijuana exporter association, admitted, “Companies have wanted to use the ‘essential’ classifications of the U.S.”

The military-industrial complex has a growing stake in border factories, which exported $1.3 billion in aerospace and armament products to the U.S. in 2004, climbing to $9.6 billion last year. To defend that huge stake, Luis Lizcano, general director of the Mexican Federation of Aerospace Industries, told the Mexican government it had to give Mexico’s defense industry the “essential” status it enjoys in the U.S. and Canada.

Pentagon Undersecretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment Ellen Lord announced she was meeting Mexican Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard to urge him to let U.S. defense corporations restart production in their maquiladoras. “Mexico right now is somewhat problematical for us, but we’re working through our embassy,” she said. She later announced her visit had been successful.

Using the language of the Trump administration, U.S. Ambassador Christopher Landau played down the risk to workers. “There is risk everywhere but we don’t all stay at home out of fear that we’re going to crash our cars,” he said in a tweet. “Economic destruction also threatens health…. On both sides of the border, investment = employment = prosperity.”

Finally, on April 28, Baja Governor Bonilla bowed to the pressure and ordered the reopening of 40 “closed” maquiladoras. According to Secretary of Economic Development Mario Escobedo Carignan, they are now considered part of the supply chain for essential products. “We’re not in the business of trying to suspend your operations,” he told owners, “but to work with you to keep creating jobs and generating wealth in this state.”

Given that many “closed” factories in fact were operating already, Julia Quiñones said bitterly, “This is what always happens here on the border. The companies break the law, and then the law is changed to make it all legal.” And Mexico’s federal government itself has begun to back down as well, announcing three days after a U.S. request that it will allow the many enormous auto plants in Mexico to restart their assembly lines once automakers restart them north of the border.

The announcements didn’t indicate that Mexico had flattened the coronavirus infection curve or that the factories were now safe. In one 24-hour period, from April 29 to 30, the number of cases per million people went from 138 to 149. A million workers labor in over 3,000 factories on the border. The virus has already led to numerous deaths among them, and if all factories resume production while it still rages, the death toll will surely rise.

Luis Hernández Navarro, editor at Mexico’s left-wing daily, La Jornada (no relation to the Tijuana businessman), reminded his readers that the catastrophic spread of the virus in Italy was caused by the continued operation of factories in Lombardy until it was too late.

“The maquiladora industry has never cared about the health of its operators, just its profits,” he wrote recently. “Their production lines must not stop, and in the best colonial tradition, Uncle Sam has pressured Mexico to keep the assemblers operating…. The obstinacy of the maquiladoras makes it likely that the Italian case will be repeated here.”


TAKE A VIRTUAL TOUR OF THE EXHIBITION – IN THE FIELDS OF THE NORTH
at the History Museum of Tijuana

HAGA UN RECORRIDO VIRTUAL DE LA EXPOSICIÓN – EN LOS CAMPOS DEL NORTE
en el Museo de Historia de Tijuana

https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=659536991515786


TARTINE HARDSHIP FUND
Newly organized Tartine Bakery workers in the Bay Area need your help and assistance! This fund, supported by the International Longhsore and Warehouse Union, will help hose workers unable to collect unemployment insurance.


The exhibitions in the following list were scheduled before the current COVID-19 crisis. Public gatherings are not now taking place and these exhibitions have now been postponed or rescheduled.

Stay healthy!

DOCUMENTING RESISTANCE –
Community Organizing Beyond the Farmworkers’ Movement
Photographs by David Bacon

February 18 – March 27
Powell Library Rotunda, UCLA
Los Angeles, CA

IN WASHINGTON’S FIELDS: Photographs by David Bacon

February 1-May 10, 2020
Washington State History Museum
1911 Pacific Ave., Tacoma, WA

IN THE FIELDS OF THE NORTH / EN LOS CAMPOS DEL NORTE

March 15, 2020 – June 21, 2020
Los Altos History Museum, Los Altos
March 21, 2021 – May 23, 2021
Carnegie Arts Center, Turlock

MORE THAN A WALL – THE SOCIAL MOVEMENTS OF THE BORDER

August 29,, 2020 – November 29,, 2020
San Francisco Public Library

DEPORTATIONS

April 10, 2020 – May 1, 2020
Uri-Eichen Gallery, Chicago


In the Fields of the North / En los Campos del Norte
Photographs and text by David Bacon
University of California Press / Colegio de la Frontera Norte
302 photographs, 450pp, 9”x9”
paperback, $34.95 (in the U.S.)

order the book on the UC Press website:
ucpress.edu/9780520296077
use source code 16M4197 at checkout, receive a 30% discount

En Mexico se puede pedir el libro en el sitio de COLEF:
https://www.colef.mx

Los Angeles Times reviews In the Fields of the North / En los Campos del Norte – click here


“The Criminalization of Migration: A Socialist Perspective” with David Bacon and Rafael Pizarro.
http://ouleft.org/wp-content/uploads/David-Bacon-The-Criminalization-of-migration.mp4

A video about the Social Justice Photography of David Bacon:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/14TvAj5nS08ENzWhw3Oxra4LMNKJCLF4z/view


En los campos del Norte documenta la vida de trabajadores agrícolas en Estados Unidos –
Entrevista con el Instituto Nacional de la Antropologia y Historia
http://www.inah.gob.mx/es/boletines/6863-en-los-campos-del-norte-documenta-la-vida-de-trabajadores-agricolas-en-estados-unidos

Entrevista en la television de UNAM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xdSaBKZ_k0o

David Bacon comparte su mirada del trabajo agrícola de migrantes mexicanos en el Museo Archivo de la Fotografia
http://www.cultura.cdmx.gob.mx/comunicacion/nota/0038-18

Trabajo agrícola, migración y resistencia cultural: el mosaico de los “Campos del Norte”
Entrevista de David Bacon por Iván Gutiérrez / A los 4 Vientos
http://www.4vientos.net/2017/10/04/trabajo-agricola-migracion-y-resistencia-cultural-el-mosaico-de-los-campos-del-norte/

“Los fotógrafos tomamos partido”
Entrevista por Melina Balcázar Moreno – Milenio.com Laberinto
http://www.milenio.com/cultura/laberinto/david_baconm-fotografia-melina_balcazar-laberinto-milenio_0_959904035.htmlDie Apfel-Pflücker aus dem Yakima-Tal
http://www.nrhz.de/flyer/beitrag.php?id=23990

EN LOS CAMPOS DEL NORTE: Farm worker photographs on the U.S./Mexico border wall
http://us7.campaign-archive2.com/?u=fc67a76dbb9c31aaee896aff7&id=0644c65ae5&e=dde0321ee7
Entrevista sobre la exhibicion con Alfonso Caraveo (Español)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lJeE1NO4c_M&feature=youtu.be


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


Books by David Bacon

The Right to Stay Home: How US Policy Drives Mexican Migration (Beacon Press, 2013)
http://www.beacon.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=2328

Illegal People — How Globalization Creates Migration and Criminalizes Immigrants (Beacon Press, 2008)
Recipient: C.L.R. James Award, best book of 2007-2008
http://www.beacon.org/Illegal-People-P780.aspx

Communities Without Borders (Cornell University/ILR Press, 2006)
http://www.cornellpress.cornell.edu/book/?GCOI=80140100558350

The Children of NAFTA, Labor Wars on the U.S./Mexico Border (University of California, 2004)
http://www.ucpress.edu/book.php?isbn=9780520244726

En Español:

EL DERECHO A QUEDARSE EN CASA (Critica – Planeta de Libros)
http://www.planetadelibros.com.mx/el-derecho-a-quedarse-en-casa-libro-205607.html

HIJOS DE LIBRE COMERCIA (El Viejo Topo)
http://www.tienda.elviejotopo.com/prestashop/capitalismo/1080-hijos-del-libre-comercio-deslocalizaciones-y-precariedad-9788496356368.html?search_query=david+bacon&results=1

For more articles and images, see http://dbacon.igc.org and http://davidbaconrealitycheck.blogspot.com
and https://www.flickr.com/photos/56646659@N05/albums