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Marymount California University Announces New Trustees

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Rancho Palos Verdes — On June 18, two new members were appointed to the Marymount California University Board of Trustees: Mike Lansing and Juan Yñiguez.

Both Lansing and Yñiguez have served on the university’s long-range planning committee.

Since 1995, Lansing has served as the executive director of the Boys and Girls Club of the Los Angeles Harbor.

Mike Lansing.

Lansing has 18 years of teaching experience and more than 20 years of youth advocacy. In 1999, Lansing was elected to serve on the Los Angeles Unified School District Board of Education, representing District 7. He was re-elected in 2003 and served until 2007.

Building Better Business Paradigms for All Kinds of Green

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By Greggory Moore, Contributing Writer

Pine Ave. Pour, which happens in downtown Long Beach this Saturday, was to have been the first event in “Party on Pine” series, monthly events orchestrated by a new breed of local difference-makers. But the Green Prix, an eco-friendly alternative to the Grand Prix happening seven blocks away, came first. The stars simply aligned differently, an alignment exemplifying a local greenthink that isn’t about just environmentalism or money: it’s about both.

Cursed Play Comes to San Pedro

By John Farrell, Curtain Call Writer

Perhaps the actors are right.

Macbeth, one of Shakespeare’s greatest plays, has long been cursed, according to the traditions of the theatrical profession. It is calledThe Scotch Playonstage, because any actor mentioning the play’s real name will meet with disaster. The play is not mentioned by its character. Lines from it are not quoted (except in rehearsal) and there are elaborate rituals to purify anyone who offends those sort-of-sacred rules.

Maybe that explains the fate ofMacbeth, Swiss-American composer Ernest Bloch’s only opera, premiered in 1910 and hardly heard since. It has never been performed in its entirety in the United States. It recently had its American when Long Beach Opera is presented the opera at the World Cruise Terminal underneath the Vincent Thomas Bridge in San Pedro.

Zone Code Reform Site Launched

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LOS ANGELES – Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa recently announced the launch of the Zoning Code reform website, “Re:Code LA.”

The new website launch comes in conjunction with the first comprehensive update of the existing Zoning Code since 1946. As a key component of the city’s Development Reform Initiative, the website is a step toward improving Los Angeles’ Zoning Code to reflect the needs of businesses and residents

Re:Code LA, the development reform initiative, is a five-year program that will create a modernized and comprehensible Zoning Code for Los Angeles. The project aims to establish a new code with clear, predictable language that offers a wider variety of zoning options and more community planning tools to better address neighborhood concerns and improve the quality of life in every community. A simplified review process will replace the outdated complicated review process and better facilitate projects consistent with the vision for Los Angeles’ neighborhoods and the city’s general plan, making development more predictable throughout the city.

The website launched will allow Angelenos to stay involved during the five-year Zoning Code reform process. Community members can use the website to access public documents regarding the Zoning Code reform including project summaries and a calendar of events of meetings, hearings and workshops they can attend to be part of the process. The public is also encouraged to use the website to participate in the reform process using the commenting and posting features and social media connectivity for sharing through Facebook and Twitter.

 

Representatives Vote to Deregulate Overseas Swaps

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Washington, D.C. — On June 12, the House of Representatives voted 301-124 to pass the “Swaps Jurisdiction Certainty Act,” a bill that would create new requirements for the Dodd-Frank rule-making process and limit regulation of U.S. banks on derivatives transactions known as swaps.

The bill would direct the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and the Securities and Exchange Commission to issue rules jointly on cross-border derivatives trades by U.S. financial institutions.

The SEC recently issuedruleson cross-border trades that would allow overseas branches of U.S. banks to be exempt from U.S. regulations when conducting swaps transactions that only involve non-U.S. dealers. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission is pursuing tougher rules on cross-border swaps that would require overseas branches of U.S. banks to follow U.S. regulations when conducting all swaps transactions. The Swaps Jurisdiction Act wouldforcethe Commodity Futures Trading Commission to weaken its rule in order to match the SEC’s rule exempting cross-border swaps from U.S. regulations.

According to an analysis fromBloomberg News, more than half of all derivatives trades by the biggest American banks are conducted by overseas affiliates.

The bill is supported by the American Bankers Association, the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, and opposed by Americans for Financial Reform, the AFL-CIO, and Public Citizen, among others.

Data:MapLight analysis of campaign contributions to members of the House from interests supporting or opposing the Swaps Jurisdiction Act from Jan. 1, 2011 – Dec. 31, 2012. Contributions data source:OpenSecrets.org

  • House members voting ‘YES’ received, on average,102 percent more moneyfrom interest groups supporting the bill than house members voting ‘NO.’
  • House Democrats voting ‘YES’ received, on average,75 percent more moneyfrom interest groups supporting the bill than house Democrats voting ‘NO.’
  • House member Scott Garrett (R-NJ), bill sponsor, received$416,249from supporting interests.

A link to this story can be foundhere.

In May, the House Financial Services Committee approved six bills that would roll back pieces of the Dodd-Frank Act designed to improve regulation of the derivatives market. The most contentious of the bills, H.R. 992, would repeal most ofSec. 716of the 2010 financial reform bill, Dodd-Frank, which requires banks to spin off their derivatives activities into separate affiliate institutions that do not have access to federal bank subsidies. Many financial reform advocates consider Sec. 716 to be Dodd-Frank’skey measurefor preventing public subsidies of speculative derivatives trading.

A link to the money and vote analysis for H.R. 992 can be foundhere.

Note: Bank of America, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, and Citigroup collectively hold 93.2 percent ($208 trillion in notional value) of all derivatives contracts.

 

Marine Research Center Funding Announced

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SAN PEDRO — On June 17, Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa unveiled the name and major funding image012commitment for the Marine Research Center, at Berth 58 in San Pedro.

The center is a collaborative public and private partnership to transform the 100-year-old port pier. The 28-acre City Dock No. 1, just south of Ports O’Call, will feature seawater labs, offices, classrooms, lecture halls, interpretative center, support facilities and space for a seawater wave tank. Phase 1 of the projects will cost about $155 million, with a 2018 completion goal.

This new urban marine research and innovation center will bring together researchers and scientists from Southern California’s major colleges and universities, government agencies and industries to collaborate on new ideas and technologies to help better respond to global and national ocean-related problems. The entire project is estimated to cost $500 million, with completion over a 15- to 20-year timeframe.

Summer Youth Opportunities, NWSPNC Vacant Board Seat

July 6
NWSPNC Vacant Board SeatScreen shot 2013-06-14 at 5.15.36 PM
Filing deadline for the Northwest San Pedro Neighborhood Council is July 6.
The board member selection will take place July 8 at the regular board meeting.

Summer Youth Employment Registration
Apply now for the Los Angeles 2013 Summer Youth Employment program for 14 to 21 year olds. The program provides work experience for 6 weeks during the summer. Youths are paid $8 an hour and work about 120 hours.
Details: www.summerjobsla.com

Bank of America NEI Student Leader Program
Apply now for the Bank of America Student Leader Program.
Since the program’s inception in 2004, Bank of America has recognized more than 1,400 student leaders as exemplary high school students with a passion for helping their communities. Los Angeles will select 10 students to participate. Those selected student leaders will participate in a paid summer internship with a designated local nonprofit organization where they experience first-hand how they can help shape their communities-now and in the future. They will also participate in a transformative six-day, all-expense paid Student Leadership Summit in Washington, D.C.
Details: http://tinyurl.com/BofAStudentLeaders

Pay As You Earn
Recent college graduates with federal student loans can apply to lower their monthly payments using the Pay As You Earn plan. This new repayment plan has a lower monthly cap than the more widely availabe Income-Based Repayment (IBR) plan. Pay As You Earn also provides forgiveness after 20 years of payments rather than 25 years in IBR.
Details: http://younginvincibles.org

Bike Lanes Upset Residents

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By Joseph Baroud, Editorial Intern

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About 240 miles of bicycle lanes were added throughout Los Angeles within the past two-and-a-half years, but the ones on Westmont and Capital drives in San Pedro have residents up in arms.

So what went wrong? Installing the bicycle lanes on Westmont and Capital drives has meant the removal of a vehicular lane on each side of the street. Instead of the street maintaining two lanes that vehicles can travel on each side, it’s now reduced to one.

This has resulted in an increased amount of traffic congestion during drop-off and pick-up hours from Dodson Middle School, atop of the street.

John Ljubenkov (July 17, 1946- March 25, 2013)

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By Gretchen Williams, Contributing Writer

Editor’s Note: In correction of the print edition of this story, Peter Ljubenkov is John Lubenkov’s nephew.

Hurricane Gulch was gusting 20 knots at Cabrillo Beach. I headed up the hill, using the stairs at the foot of 39th Street to hoof it to Pacific Avenue. I did not know that I was about to encounter another hurricane in human form. It was the summer of 1968, and I was 13–a volunteer at Cabrillo Beach Museum.

John Ljubenkov was a one-man picket line in front of tiny Point Fermin Market, representing Cesar Chavez and the United Farm Workers Union demonstrating against scab table grapes and lettuce. John was studying biology and zoology at Long Beach State but his natural exuberance and insatiable curiosity made classes his own forum for discussion, as he had absorbed the information long before. He was interested in everything, including politics and was known throughout his lifetime for his outspoken opinions. He supported the farm workers drive to organize the UFW and wanted his neighbors to support them as well. Point Fermin was a small but vital part of the grape strike effort.

Seeking Justice

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Senate Republicans have blocked Obama’s judicial appointments to an unprecedented degree—and workers’ rights have been targeted. On June 4, Obama started fighting back.

By Paul Rosenberg, Senior Editor

On June 4, President Barack Obama took the unprecedented step of announcing the simultaneous nomination of three justices to fill vacancies on the Washington D.C. District Court, the second highest court in the land.

Obama nominated Patricia Millett, Nina Pillard and Robert Wilkins.