Sunday, October 12, 2025
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Gipson Showcases Key Bills and Their Impact on Californians

 

Last month, Assemblymember Mike Gipson celebrated the signing into law five major bills he authored, at the Student Union at Los Angeles Harbor College. The event highlighted the impact the bills will have on the everyday lives of Californians.

The press conference honored partnerships that enabled Gipson to get the legislation signed into law. Gipson told his audience that his office listened to the constituents in 2024, and replied “We got you.”

The bills that were passed were AB1879 (Wet Signatures), AB2181 (Court Schools), AB2975 (Metal Detectors), AB2984 (D’Ancee’s Law), and AB3085 (Street Racing).

Los Angeles County Assessor Jeffrey Prang gave Gipson an assist by explaining that the Wet Signature assembly bill allows the public to sign state property tax forms with electronic signatures. The bill authorizes electronic signatures instead of manual, facsimile, or other signatures as long as certain requirements are met. A digital signature is a more secure type of electronic signature that uses encryption and a unique digital certificate issued by a trusted authority (e.g., DocuSign, Adobe Sign). It ensures the signature is authentic, tamper-proof and legally binding. Digital signatures are often required for government, legal, or high-security documents. Prang said this assembly bill allows for any property tax document requiring a taxpayer’s signature to be electronically signed by the taxpayer, and not just via a digital signature.

AB2181 expands opportunities for juvenile court school pupils to stay in high school to complete local graduation requirements and engage in A-G courses (courses that California students must complete to be eligible for admission to the University of California and California State University systems), dual enrollment, and career technical education opportunities. In short, AB2181 allows system-impacted youth to stay in school longer if they choose.

AB2975 (Metal Detectors) mandates that Cal/OSHA requires hospitals to use metal detectors to screen and identify instruments “capable of inflicting death or serious bodily injury” at the main public entrance, the entrance to the emergency department and the entrance to labor and delivery.

Image022 1
Assemblymember Mike Gipson signs AB2975 (Metal Detectors) Bill
Photo courtesy of Gipson’s office.

Two nurses, Guillermo Mendoza Lujan and Brittany Brandon, spoke on this assembly bill, explaining that hospital personnel will feel safer and that medical care will improve. Lujan noted that nurses are the ones who must check a patient’s belongings and screen for weapons, a task that could sometimes take up to an hour. Brandon, a union steward, added that this is a union-supported law. This comes as violence against healthcare workers is on the rise. KNX News reported in June 2024 that the bill would also require hospitals to document and retain “any written record of any violent incident against a hospital employee” for five years.

Under this bill, hospitals must also assign personnel, other than healthcare providers, to monitor and operate the devices. These personnel must receive at least eight hours of training on the detectors, de-escalation and implicit bias. The California Association of Highway Patrolmen president, Jake Johnson, spoke about Assemblymember Gipson.

Before discussing AB2984, D’Ancee’s Law, Johnson recounted his long relationship with the reserve police officer-turned assemblyman and said officers respect Gipson for standing by his principles, even when they disagree.

Johnson noted that D’Ancee’s Law was born from tragedy, alluding to when Gipson’s son, D’Ancee, was killed in a 1989 hit-and-run collision. Gipson has worked to remove the statute of limitations on hit-and-runs since 2015 when then-Gov. Jerry Brown signed his first bill into law. It allowed charges within one year of identifying a suspect, as long as it was within six years of the crime. Gipson hopes this prevents cold cases from closing and brings justice to mourning families.

AB3085 (Street Racing) expands the authority of law enforcement to impound a vehicle involved in street racing for up to 30 days upon a magistrate’s order even if the vehicle isn’t found until later. Specifically, a notice of the impoundment will be sent by electronic means with the consent of the defendant. It also requires the person or agency who executed the warrant or court order to receive notice of the post-storage hearing within 48 hours of impoundment.

Gipson closed the press conference by extending deep gratitude to all those who helped him get these bills passed. He also encouraged people to participate in the upcoming annual 65th Autism 5K run/walk on April 12, from 8 to 11:30 a.m. The assembly member added that this run is the reason local parks are friendly for children with autism. The run/walk starts at Wilmington Waterfront Park on C Street, in Wilmington.

Portions of press conference: https://tinyurl.com/Gipson-bills

Community Announcements: Library Reopening, Learn About Care Court & Medical Debt Relief Updates

Local Library Reopens

San Pedro Regional Branch Library is set to reopen on April 7.

The library will be holding a grand reopening celebration at the branch on April 12.

at 12 p.m.

Venue: San Pedro Library, 931 S. Gaffey St., San Pedro

 

Learn How Care Court is Working in LA County

It has been 15 months since the Board of Supervisors launched CARE Court in LA County, a state mandated program that aims to better help people experiencing homelessness who are living with serious mental illness.

CARE Court is based in the Norwalk Courthouse and allows a family member, roommate, first responder, or healthcare professional to petition a judge to help get someone with untreated schizophrenia into treatment and housing. For too long, there was no one to turn to when someone was sick and suffering and it has only fueled the homelessness crisis.

CARE Court is still new and too few people know about it and are using it. The board is holding a town hall on April 4 to get feedback directly from family members who have submitted petitions to CARE Court, first responders, city officials and homeless outreach providers.

Come learn more about CARE Court and share your thoughts on how it can work better.

Details: Learn more about how to file a CARE Court petition, https://tinyurl.com/LA-County-Care-Court

 

Learn About the Medical Debt Relief Program

The Department of Public Health has partnered with the nonprofit Undue Medical Debt to provide medical debt relief for low-income Los Angeles County residents with unpaid medical bills. Residents do not need to apply for the Medical Debt Relief Program. Those meeting the program’s eligibility requirement will receive a letter from LA County and Undue Medical Debt notifying them of their debt cancellation.

Details: https://tinyurl.com/LACO-Medical-Debt-relief

 

LASD is Asking for the Public’s Help Locating At-Risk Missing Person Daniel Peter Chavez Carson

 

Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department missing persons unit is asking for the public’s help locating at-risk missing person Daniel Peter Chavez. He is a 76 year-old male Hispanic who was last contacted on March 28 at 5:15 p.m. on the 21000 block of South Figueroa, in the city of Carson.

Daniel is 5’09” tall, 160lbs, with brown eyes, gray hair, and with missing fingers on his right hand. He was last seen wearing a brown beanie, black puffer jacket, pink shirt, and dark sweats.

Daniel is diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. Mr. Chavez’s family is concerned for his wellbeing and asking for the public’s help.

Anyone with information about this incident is encouraged to contact the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department’s missing persons unit at 323-890-5500 or, anonymously at 800-222–8477 http://lacrimestoppers.org

Stand Together! Join TRAA and Others at the Hands Off! Rally on April 5

Join at Torrance City Hall April 5 to help stop the destruction of the EPA and other institutions. Indivisible and other organizations have organized an event to tell the Administration to keep their “Hands Off” all the things Americans need. Care for the EPA? Protect our air, water and food quality? Keep the FAA funded so our planes can fly safely? Keep our National Parks, Monuments and Forests open? How about PBS and NPR? Or Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid? If any of these are important to you then show your support on April 5. This is one of many Hands OFF! rallies scheduled across the country. All are welcome. Bring your friends, and spread the word by posting the news on your social media.

Time: 12 to 2 p.m., April 5

Details: website and sign-up form

Venue: Torrance City Hall

Trump’s cruel rampage: why?

While Trump makes friends of enemies and vice versa internationally, at the heart of his pro-billionaire strategy is the demoralization of U.S. workers, including immigrants. He seeks to make the working class powerless to resist his onslaught on behalf of the top 1%.

By Andrea Bauer, April 2025

https://socialism.com/fs-article/trumps-cruel-rampage-why/

It’s perfectly understandable that people in the U.S. are tuning out the news these days. Chaotic mass firings, survival programs like Social Security and Medicaid in jeopardy, the Constitution being shredded: who wants to watch a real-life horror show?

What people do not get from the mainstream media purveyors of doom is a real explanation of why this is happening. Is there a motive to the madness?

The point is fear

Thousands of government employees have already lost their jobs and tens of thousands are living in the shadow of the ax. (See “Attacks on federal workers are an injury to all.”)

Sudden unemployment and the financial hardship that comes with it is devastating. Also hurtful is the cavalier and humiliating way the layoffs are being imposed. Donald Trump and his hatchet man Elon Musk are treating productive, longtime public staffers as just so much trash.

What is the purpose of such cruelty?

Uruguayan author and social justice champion Eduardo Galeano has said about torture, “The purpose is not getting information. It’s spreading fear.” The same is true about Trump’s firing of huge swaths of the workforce. It’s not about efficiency. It’s about spreading terror.

Trump’s goal is to get workers used to the arbitrary and inhumane exercise of power. To strip away any expectation that government exists to help them. And to soften them up for an even more extreme form of social control if the ruling class comes to believe this is necessary.

The U.S. is not yet under fascist rule. But Trump is encouraging the advance of fascist groups, and he and outfits like the Proud Boys are “standing by.”

Hand in hand with Trump’s campaign against ordinary workers is his purge of top leaders in the FBI, CIA, and military. Trump wants the whole government subservient to him to carry out his mission — protecting and enlarging the profits of billionaires — without impediment.

A fatally troubled economy

Consumer confidence and spending in the U.S. are falling, prices are still rising, unemployment is ticking upward, and the stock market is vacillating wildly, with huge drops based on Trump’s tariff chaos. Talking heads are beginning to raise the specter of recession.

In many other countries the situation is worse. Growth is stagnant in Europe; Germany, the region’s biggest economy, is especially struggling. (See “German far right surges with anti-migrant racism.”) Growth is slowing even in China.

Capitalism’s problems are not transitory, but built in. The profit system relies above all on the ability to expand. But today it is coming up against the barriers of finite resources and finite markets.

Decades of neoliberalism — “free” trade, deregulation, privatization, a race to the bottom in the areas of wages and labor and environmental protections — haven’t solved the problem. This failure means stepped-up international competition, from trade wars to hot wars.

Because of his extremism and his evil-clown persona, Trump can seem like a political outlier. His goal, however, is the same as every other president since the U.S. rose to global dominance: vie to keep the country on top. This explains his aggressively “America First” international policies, even though they will provoke still more economic problems. Whatever one might say about Trump’s intelligence, he understands that capitalism is a game of winners and losers.

Moreover, the ruling class is facing political challenges as well as economic ones. Class conflict has been rising since the militant, women-led, successful teacher strikes in Southern “red states” in 2018. So has popular discontent, exemplified by the massive Black Lives Matter protests against police violence after George Floyd’s murder in 2020. Strikes and labor organizing have increased dramatically over the past five years.

Trump’s illegal and undemocratic attacks aim to pulverize opposition from any quarter, from labor or feminist or LGBTQ+ activists to defenders of Palestine or voting, civil, and immigrant rights. But history shows that repression generates resistance. Trump is playing a dangerous game.

How did we get here?

First, let’s note that capitalist democracy is not “democracy” — at least not in the abstract or idealized way it’s presented to us. It’s democracy within the framework of class rule — meaning that ordinary people have only those rights that won’t upset the status quo.

On top of that, in a decades-long trend, the executive branch has been amassing greater power at the expense of the other branches of government. Handwringing over the “imperial presidency” is, unfortunately, nothing new — although Trump is pushing the limits beyond anything seen before.

Also leading to this crisis point is the lack of an independent political voice for working people. Life without a labor party means that voters’ only choices are Democrats or Republicans. Thus “lesser evil” politics prevail time and again while workers’ conditions worsen — until an angry and disenchanted portion of the electorate is ready to accept the promises of a strongman to come to their rescue.

There is no reason to despair. Workers and oppressed people have incredible untapped power. Alongside the multitude of legal challenges to Trump’s outrages — from his vicious deportations to his sellout of Ukraine — are the rumblings of a grassroots resistance. This is where the fight will be won, with the aid of democratic united fronts that bring together people of different political persuasions in the pursuit of a common working-class goal: dump Trump and stop fascism.

Finally, one more takeaway from this debacle: reforms are fragile. If we the majority want a good life on a planet that can sustain us, revolutionary change is the only answer.

 

St. Mary Medical Center Grants Over $200,000 to Support Local Nonprofits Through Community Health Initiative

 

LONG BEACH— March 28, 2025 – Dignity Health – St. Mary Medical Center or SMMC hosted its annual community grant awards luncheon this week, reaffirming its commitment to improving health and well-being in the greater Long Beach area. The event, held at the hospital, showcased SMMC’s dedication to addressing the health needs of the community. During the luncheon, the hospital awarded more than $200,000 to three local nonprofits, further supporting initiatives that positively impact the region.

“A core element of our mission is giving back, and we take pride in sustaining our support for organizations that go the extra mile to address the diverse needs of our community,” said Carolyn Caldwell, Hospital President and CEO. “These collaborations empower us to take on the intricate health and human challenges faced by our Long Beach community.”

First, Long Beach Rescue Mission received funding to support its continued operations, which include providing shelter, food, and essential services to individuals experiencing homelessness. The mission offers a range of programs aimed at helping individuals rebuild their lives, including job training, addiction recovery support, and educational resources. The second grantee, Mental Health America of Los Angeles, received funding for its HealthLink program. This program provides comprehensive mental health services and support to individuals who are uninsured or underinsured, helping to improve access to essential care. The third recipient, Precious Lamb Preschool, was awarded a grant to support the continuation of essential services for families experiencing homelessness in Long Beach. These services include grief counseling workshops for parents facing homelessness, as well as trauma-informed workshops for staff.

“Through our investments in these organizations, we aim to cultivate a sense of inclusion and comprehensiveness,” continued Caldwell. “Our objective is to provide the community with the necessary resources and support essential for leading healthy, prosperous lives, while also minimizing the likelihood of significant future health interventions.”

Dignity Health’s community health improvement grants program has awarded over $100 million to support health improvement projects since its inception in 1991. This long-standing initiative has been instrumental in addressing the diverse health needs of communities across the region.

Details: https://www.dignityhealth.org/about-us/community-health

Senate Judiciary Chair Tom Umberg Responds to Anaheim Stadium Audit

 

(Sacramento, CA) – Senator Thomas J. Umberg (D-Santa Ana), Chair of the California Senate Judiciary Committee, issued the statement below in response to findings released March 27 from the California State Auditor regarding the City of Anaheim’s lease agreement with the Angels ownership.

“This audit confirms what we have long suspected. The Angels have been operating under a sweetheart deal, negotiated and signed by previous city officials, that in no way, shape, or form benefits the residents of Anaheim. In fact, it may put them at risk of physical harm.

The audit uncovered that, unbelievably, the worse the Angels do, the less they need to pay in rent (the city’s share of revenue is tied to attendance). The failure of the Angels to put a decent product on the field means that the city is basically paying the Angels to play baseball in their stadium.

To add insult to injury, the city has no authority to inspect the stadium for health and welfare, public safety, or earthquake standards. A safety inspection hasn’t occurred in over 30 years.

It’s clear that compared to other California cities that own professional sports facilities (San Diego, Santa Clara), the former city council of Anaheim was railroaded by the Angels for decades.

The value of the land where the stadium sits is substantial. Any discussions of further lease extensions with a losing sports franchise that refuses to publicly associate their name with Anaheim while exploiting the city and endangering its residents should be dramatically reshaped.

I look forward to working with the current mayor and city officials to help put this relationship on more solid footing — complete with transparency, maximized revenue sharing, and harm mitigation to the actual owners of the Anaheim stadium — the city’s residents.”

The audit was requested by Senator Umberg and Assemblymember Avelino Valencia in August of 2024 (attached) in response to federal criminal indictments surrounding the attempted sale of Anaheim Stadium.

Mayor Bass Unveils Upgraded MyLA311 System for City Services

 

LOS ANGELES – Mayor Karen BassMarch 28 announced the launch of a new MyLA311 system, which aims to make Los Angeles cleaner and safer with improved city services. The new system will make it easier for more Angelenos to get graffiti removed, potholes filled and abandoned couches removed from the curb.

Angelenos can download the new app here. A video tutorial / b-roll about how to use the new MyLA311 system is available here.

Residents can still call 311, but the app and website are faster and easier to use. 311 operators will also be using a new and improved system. The new platform will offer 86 different types of service request types, including 15 new and 25 consolidated service request types.

Mayor Bass called for the modernization of the MyLA311 system in her fifth executive directive, which focused on making it easier for Angelenos to get basic city services. The new MyLA311 system delivers better customer service, provides more communication about the status of requests and streamlines processes within city departments.

The new MyLA311 system replaces an outdated app and web page that is years past its lifecycle, creating technical issues and glitches that impacted the platform’s functionality and caused outages.

Improvements to the MyLA311 System Include:

Easier to Request Services

  • App and website adds new features including chat, uses photos and image recognition to better identify, confirm and communicate the type of service requests. This helps ensure that service requests are referred to the correct department for completion and makes it easier for departments to refer to outside agencies as needed.
  • Enhances the customer experience for requests submitted through the platform, with improved notifications for service completion
  • Leverages Google mapping to “drop a pin” to auto-populate the service request location, which is helpful when an address is unavailable (parks, along the LA River, alleys, etc.).
  • New ability to report accessibility service requests that were previously unreportable through the outdated 311.

Improves Customer Service

  • Surveys users to measure customer satisfaction and make improvements.
  • Increases language access by making 311 available in 243 languages.
  • Creates new ability to “Follow” or “Subscribe” to a service request and receive email notifications on the progress of your request.
  • Be informed when others have made the same service request at the same location.
  • Features an enhanced “Knowledge Base” for self-service users to find information and answers on their own.

Details:The MyLA311 App Tutorial

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xrQ7UuKoTn8

LA Sues Group for $62M Over Short-Term Rental Violations, Price Gouging

 

Los Angeles — City Attorney Hydee Feldstein Soto March 28 announced that her office has filed a civil enforcement action against a group of individuals and their related companies accusing them of operating a sprawling illegal multi-million dollar rental property scheme and violating the city’s short-term rental ordinance (“STR Ordinance”). In addition, the defendants exploited vulnerable Angelenos by illegally raising the price of their rental properties in the wake of the wildfires, violating California’s Anti-Gouging Law.

Feldstein Soto’s lawsuit, filed for violations of California’s Unfair Competition Law (“UCL”), seeks a permanent injunction barring the individuals and their associated companies from engaging in short-term rental activity in the city, except that which is authorized by the STR Ordinance, a permanent injunction barring them from engaging in price gouging, restitution to tenants impacted by the illegal activity, and tens of millions of dollars in civil penalties.

“The scale of the alleged activity – the illegal short-term rentals and the wildfire-related price gouging – is outrageous,” said Hydee Feldstein Soto, Los Angeles City Attorney. “The defendants not only exacerbated a severe housing shortage but took advantage of Angelenos at their most vulnerable time. California has clear laws to protect renters from such unscrupulous actions for a reason, and I will always enforce these laws to safeguard our communities.”

Feldstein Soto’s lawsuit accuses the group of advertising and engaging in the short-term rental of dozens of properties for thousands of rental nights without city-required permits, including rent-stabilized units that cannot legally be used as short-term rentals. The defendants allegedly used deceptive tactics, including fake host identities, and falsely advertised properties as being located outside of the City in Beverly Hills and West Hollywood to evade enforcement and continue profiting illegally.

According to the complaint, the defendants include:

  • Akiva Nourollah;
  • Micah Hiller;
  • Haim Amran Zrihen;
  • Rachel Florence Saadat;
  • Hiller Hospitality LLC, a California limited liability company;
  • Hiller Hospitality Group LLC, a California limited liability company;
  • 1070 Bedford LLC, a California limited liability company;
  • Red Rock 70 LLC, a Nevada limited liability company registered with the California Secretary of State to do business in California; and,
  • Coastal Charm LLC, a Nevada limited liability company registered with the California Secretary of State to do business in California.

In December of 2018, the city enacted the STR Ordinance to address the negative consequences of short-term rentals, which include the reduction of housing stock, increased nuisance activity, and a potential negative impact on neighborhood quality of life. The STR Ordinance went into effect on July 1, 2019, and prohibits any person from offering, advertising, booking, facilitating, or engaging in short-term rental activity in a manner that does not comply with the STR Ordinance.

Feldstein Soto encourages Angelenos who believe they are victims of price gouging to let the City know by submitting this complaint form or calling 311. Reports may be filed anonymously. She also encourages Angelenos to visit the LA City Emergency Management Department for the latest recovery resources.

The Public Rights Branch within the City Attorney’s Office is managing this litigation.

Case #25STCV07712

The People of the State of California vs. Akiva Nourollah, Micah Hiller, Haim Zrihen, Rachel Saadat, Hiller Hospitality LLC, Hiller Hospitality Group LLC, 1070 Bedford LLC, Red Rock 70 LLC, and Coastal Charm LLC.

Link to press release online: https://shorturl.at/KEv2X

L.A. County Public Defender Condemns Sheriff’s Use of Faulty DNA Kits

LA County Public Defender Ricardo D. García issued the following statement on the LA County Sheriff’s Department’s use of faulty DNA kits:

“The Sheriff’s Department’s use of faulty DNA testing kits for several months impacts the integrity of the entire prosecution of a criminal case. This is a problem that has a far-reaching impact on countless pending and adjudicated cases. This kind of negligence is a violation of due process and further erodes trust in the entire criminal legal system.

It is another stark reminder of why the death penalty can never be justified. If we cannot trust the criminal legal system to handle DNA evidence properly, we certainly cannot trust life or death decisions that come from it. Faulty DNA kits have long fueled wrongful convictions, and when the punishment is death, those mistakes can never be undone.”