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Issue No. 26 – September 4, 2020

State Legislature

  • The California State Legislature adjourned for the year leaving many people hanging. A resumption of the $600-a-week unemployment benefits was one among many relief proposals that never materialized. Calmatters asks, what’s next?
  • A day before the expiration of the state’s eviction moratorium, the California legislature passed compromised legislation that extends bare-bones protections through January 31. Under AB 3088, signed on into law on Monday, tenants cannot be evicted for any rent missed between March 1 and September 1, and are protected through February 2021 provided they pay 25% of their rent and file a statement that they were financially impacted by COVID-19. Per Governor Newsom, AB 3088 still offers stronger protections than the surprising federal eviction moratorium issued by the CDC on Tuesday, so the CDC order would have no effect in the state.
  • Despite majority approval in polls, millions in the streets and a Democratic supermajority, the California State Legislature only passed incremental police reform while shooting down more ambitious legislation. Using the Sept. 1 deadline and aggressive lobbying to control legislators overwhelmed by multiple crises, police unions were successful in preventing SB 731, a bill that would have created a process to decertify violent cops, from ever reaching a vote. A bill that would require officers to intervene when their colleagues used excessive force, and one that would open up more police records to the public, were also beaten back.
  • In the middle of a housing crisis, SB 1120 would allow most single-family homes to be converted into duplexes. It was likely to have passed, but inexplicably was introduced to the Assembly too late by Speaker Anthony Rendon and its vote will be delayed until the next legislative session.
  • AB 3121, which will establish a task force to make recommendations for what form reparations should take in the state of California, was passed, and now heads to the governor to sign.

City Politics

  • Furloughs for over 15,000 city workers are coming after the Los Angeles city council voted to declare a fiscal emergency. The furloughs will require city workers to take 18 unpaid days off, amounting to a 7% pay cut. Councilmember Mike Bonin proposed an amendment that would have city negotiators first meet with the L.A. Police Protective League, to try and negotiate a delay in their scheduled raises and bonuses, potentially allowing the city to stave off the furloughs. His motion failed 9-3, with Nithya Raman’s opponent, David Ryu, not even showing up for the vote.
  • Los Angeles schools will now be able to reopen for a limited number of special ed and ESL students, though it will still be up to local districts whether or not they want to take advantage of this new policy.

Police Violence and Community Resistance

  • A gang of Sheriff’s Deputies called The Executioners has long been reported as operating within the Compton Sheriff’s station. Now, a whistleblower within the department has testified that Miguel Vega, the Compton deputy who shot and killed Andres Guardado, was an Executioners prospect.
  • Protesters involved in three demonstrations over the past month have filed a federal civil rights suit against Los Angeles County Sheriff Alex Villenueva and the County of Los Angeles for the use of “indiscriminate and unreasonable force” in the treatment of protesters, withholding access to water, keeping protesters detained in unventilated spaces without masks, and other tactics “designed to punish protesters.” Complaint here.
  • photo-essay in L.A. Taco documents the “all hands on deck” demonstration demanding justice for Dijon Kizzee, who was killed by sheriff’s deputies this week in South Los Angeles.

Climate

  • The Los Angeles Times reviews the findings of the UC Berkeley Center for Labor Research and Education’s recently-released 636-page report on policies the state might employ in order to integrate economic and workforce development into major climate policies and programs and help achieve California’s major climate goals. “But don’t call it a “green jobs” report.”

Elections

  • In response to public outrage many curtailments of the postal service planned by the Trump administration have since been abandoned. California’s attorney general will now seek the immediate reversal of all changes the administration had already put in place.
  • The labor-backed, statewide campaign to win passage of Proposition 15 in November stepped-up on Wednesday with the launch of the official campaign. The Schools and Communities First coalition dropped two TV ads (‘Collar‘ and ‘What Matters Most‘) to mark the beginning of a campaign that is expected to be bitterly opposed by some of the most reactionary sections of capital in California. To overcome these forces and galvanize a broader, anti-austerity movement in California, DSA’s ‘Yes on 15’ campaign also announced their next steps in the fight to win the $12 billion a year for public schools and local services that Prop. 15 would generate. On Labor Day at 11:00 am DSA-LA and unionists will be meeting at Burbank USD and then driving onto Walt Disney Company HQ to demand the passage of Prop. 15 and a just recovery for workers – join here!
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Issue No. 25 – August 28, 2020

Black Lives Matter

  • Reporting by Yahoo News recounts the intense two days that led to a wildcat strike in the NBA. The action was initiated by the Milwaukee Bucks in response to the police killing of Jacob Blake in Kenosha, WI, and then led by players on the Lakers and Clippers.
  • What do the owners of basketball teams have to do with protesting police violence? Clippers owner Steve Ballmer’s organization, the Ballmer Group, has provided $750,000 to the LAPD’s community safety partnership (CSP). This is the type of police program Mayor Garcetti touts as “reform,” but which #Defund activists decry as responding to over-policing with more policing. To understand how CSP is just another way police tighten control over communities, watch this People’s City Council video. If you question whether many professional athletes would bother to draw these distinctions, the official demands of the Baltimore Ravens, released yesterday, may be worth your time.
  • Just hours after the NBA meeting, BLM protesters were kettled by LAPD in the 3rd St. tunnel after the police declared that their makeshift shields were illegal weapons. Meanwhile, the city of Beverly Hills has taken the extraordinary step of filing misdemeanor charges against 25 protesters for “curfew violations” related to a peaceful protest on June 26.
  • In a process accelerated by protests held in response to the recent killing of Anthony McClain by Pasadena police, Pasadena City Council passed legislation to create a Police Commission that will attempt to provide law enforcement oversight. An editorial written by the president of NAACP Pasadena considers what this legislation accomplishes, and some of the steps it fails to take.
  • An editorial in the Sacramento Bee, widely circulated on Twitter, runs down all the common-sense police reforms the Democratic-controlled state legislature is failing or has failed to pass. Reporting in the LA Times observes the power police unions have to water down reform legislation.

Housing Justice

  • In April a federal judge ordered the city of LA to suspend the confiscation of “bulky items” belonging to the unhoused, ruling that the summary destruction of property likely violated due process. The latest round of CARE+ sweeps around “bridge” housing violated that order. Now, attorneys representing Koreatown-based advocacy group Ktown For All, have asked the city to be held in contempt, and for fines of $45,000 to be imposed.
  • Tweets from the Services Not Sweeps coalition recount the successful interruption of a morning sweep in Hollywood by a blockade of protesters. The coalition moved the unhoused residents impacted by the sweep into a hotel for two nights, challenging Mayor Eric Garcetti, Los Angeles Homeless Services Director Heidi Marston, and Councilmember Mitch O’Farrell. “If we can do it, why can’t [they]?”
  • Mayor Eric Garcetti’s “A Bridge Home” program has not met goals in moving program participants into permanent housing. A survey of three PATH bridge housing shelters found that after over a year in operation, only 24% of program exits were into permanent housing.

Transit

  • The High Desert Corridor freeway was envisioned as an 8-to-10-lane freeway, until Climate Resolve and others won a legal settlement that forced Caltrans to shelve the project. The Metro Planning and Programming Committee has approved diverting some of that funding to high-speed rail — specifically, the development of a 54-mile intercity rail service between Palmdale and Apple Valley, site of the future western terminus of the XpressWest project (connecting Las Vegas with Southern California).
  • This week The Metro Board of Directors will consider awarding key contracts for the Sepulveda Transit Corridor Project — a proposed above-ground rail or subway system between the San Fernando Valley and Los Angeles International Airport. This is the first time Metro has tried this kind of public-private partnership on a large scale.
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Issue No. 24 – August 21, 2020

Coronavirus Response

  • The California Judicial Council’s statewide eviction moratorium is set to expire on September 1. The state’s legislative branch, though controlled by Democratic supermajorities in both houses, has been unable to move forward on meaningful legislation to address tenant relief in the fall.
  • At this week’s meeting of Metro’s Operations, Safety, and Customer Experience Committee a planned vote on whether to cut bus service hours by 20% was cut for time. The item was postponed to next Thursday. The advocacy group Streets For All is encouraging those who oppose a cut to bus service to attend that meeting and give public comment.
  • There has been some positive news on the COVID-19 front: active hospitalizations in Los Angeles County have dropped below 1,400 and health officials say that there has finally been a decline in the infection rate among Black and Latinx residents, though they are still higher than that of white residents. Should this trend continue, officials say that LAUSD schools could begin the process of reopening, though school board member Jackie Goldberg has stressed the importance of having a testing and tracing program in place across the district before any applications are considered.

Labor

  • In the wake of last week’s California court decision classifying Uber and Lyft drivers as employees rather than “independent contractors,” as well as those companies’ resulting threats to shut down operations in the state, an appeals court has given the companies until early September to determine how to comply with the order. In the interim, the hundreds of thousands of employees of the companies will continue to be classified as contractors, even as both companies continue to fight against the order.

Climate

  • California is scrambling to keep up with 367 new fires that have broken out over the past week, and the state is running out of resources. Firefighting crews are depleted due to the coronavirus outbreak, which hit California prisons hard. The state depends on its inmates, who are paid $1/hour, to fight fires. Twelve firefighter camps have been forced into quarantine, and only half of the authorized “inmate crews” are available. Right now, about 6,900 firefighters are deployed. Gov. Newsom is planning to hire 858 additional seasonal firefighters through October, and the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection is seeking to bring in hundreds more from out of state, which will require heightened safety precautions.
  • Rising seas are threatening California’s shoreline, farmers, and also areas once considered less vulnerable to flooding — like Marin City, a predominantly Black and working-class community.  California scientists and urban planners say that lawmakers “cannot afford to defer all preparation” until after the state recovers from the COVID-19 pandemic, and predict that the sea could rise more than 6 inches in just the next decade.

Police Violence and Community Resistance

  • From Garcetti to Hertzberg to Lacey, protesting in front of city officials’ houses has become common in SoCal in 2020. Less common is when those officials actually open their doors and respond. Pasadena Mayor Terry Tornek did just that when BLM protesters gathered at his house in the name of Anthony McClain, who was killed by Pasadena police this week. The mayor promised them that he would bring a proposal to the city council on Monday for a police oversight commission. That proposal has been criticized by officials and activists alike, who say it does not go far enough.
  • Councilmember Herb Wesson has called for an investigation into the “swatting” hoax that sent armed police officers to Black Lives Matter – Los Angeles co-founder Melina Abdullah’s house last week. Abdullah described what happened to The Nation.

Elections

  • ICYMI: Here is a finalized list of all the propositions that will appear on California ballots statewide this November.
  • The Trump administration has backed away from many of its more egregious curtailments of the United States Post Service, but it’s unclear if the related multi-state lawsuit against the administration, joined by California, will continue. Testifying before Congress today, Postmaster General Louis DeJoy said that the mail sorting machines removed under his leadership will not be reinstalled.
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Issue No. 23 – August 14, 2020

Local Politics

  • The state Democratic Party is divided between those who want to fund pandemic relief and other social services with taxes on corporations and the wealthy, and those like Democratic State Senate Majority Leader Bob Hertzberg, whose stimulus package relies on funding from “complex financial mechanisms and vouchers” and hypothetical federal loans from the Trump administration.
  • In the aftermath of corruption probes that have implicated two sitting councilmembers in pay-to-play real estate deals, the City Council voted to initiate the process of establishing an Office of Anti-Corruption and Transparency, and to establish an inspector general for land use and development.
  • Los Angeles will soon begin its redistricting process, which happens every ten years. An op-ed in the Los Angeles Times explains how the past decade’s corruption within the City Council is linked to the redistricting that occurred ten years ago. Activist pressure has resulted in what should be a more transparent process this time around.

Labor

  • A landmark ruling from the California Superior Court compels Uber and Lyft to reclassify their drivers from independent contractors to employees. This will entitle California drivers to health insurance, worker’s comp, and other benefits. Uber and Lyft have already initiated a capital strike in response, threatening a shut down of operations in California if the ruling isn’t somehow reversed. Proposition 22 — a November ballot measure funded in large part by Uber, Lyft and Door Dash — would change the law to allow the companies to continue treating their gig-worker employees as independent contractors.

Climate

  • Environmental activists are regrouping after AB 345 — which would require a mandatory setback distance between fossil fuel production operations and homes, schools or hospitals — failed 5–4 in a contentious committee vote last week. The lack of such environmental protections in California means the state lags behind states such as Texas and North Dakota; while the majority of people living in close proximity to drilling are Black, Brown, or Indigenous.
  • The sec­ond largest teach­ers’ union in the coun­try passed a res­o­lu­tion in sup­port of the Green New Deal this July. In These Times checked in with the AFL-CIO to spell out what obstacles remain to this support spreading to the broader labor movement, where job security is a concern.
  • The Trump administration is not alone in ignoring science in service of capital. City Council District 4 candidate Nithya Raman called out the Los Angeles City Council for voting 12–1 in favor of relaxing pollution-reduction requirements at the Port of LA for China Shipping despite opposition from the NRDC and the California Air Resources Board.

Police Violence and Community Resistance

  • At a dystopian press conference, the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department attempted to rationalize the killing of Andres Guardado by sheriff’s deputies… by noting that the location of the shooting had previously been the scene of unrelated violent crime. A department spokesperson theorized that the deputies who killed Guardado were “probably drawn to that location in being proactive.” A lawyer for the Guardado family called out this narrative as “nothing more than an attempt to justify the killing of this young man.”
  • At a press conference earlier this week, Compton Mayor Aja Brown called on the state’s attorney general to investigate allegations of excessive force and discriminatory policing at the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department Compton station: “We demand the same treatment that deputies provide to the residents of Malibu, Rancho Palos Verdes and other affluent communities.” The deputies who killed Andres Guardado worked in the Compton station.

Housing Justice

  • On July 29 the City Council voted in favor of resuming sweeps of unhoused encampments around “bridge housing” shelters, a process that had been suspended as a result of the pandemic. Mitch O’Farrell voted in favor of sweeps, but insisted that they be referred to as “deep cleans,” as the approach would be “very very compassionate” and take care to focus on cleaning without displacing anyone. Monitors from Street Watch LA observed a scheduled sweep in O’Farrell’s district, which their coverage demonstrates was undertaken without proper notification. Unhoused residents who did not happen to be around during the sweep had their tents destroyed.
  • Relatedly, a detailed article on michaelkohlhaas.org demonstrates, using many internal emails from within Los Angeles’ municipal government, how these sweeps get initiated, commonly without any checks or balances.
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Issue No. 22 – August 7, 2020

Coronavirus: Resurgence and Response

  • Time is running out in both Sacramento and Washington, DC, to save tenant and unemployment protections. Talks between top Democrats and Republicans are going nowhere, and California legislative leaders are asking the state judicial board to extend their eviction ban through September 5 to give them time to pass legislation to protect millions of tenants.
  • The recent resurgence of coronavirus in Los Angeles County has hit especially hard in the predominantly Latinx hub cities of Southeast LA, driven by the “huge blind spot” in pandemic response that failed to protect workers.
  • Los Angeles County has resumed the enforcement of evictions, following similar actions in Orange and San Bernardino counties. A planned round of lockouts will be enforced by the sheriff’s department, with the “currently highlighted” eviction orders limited to those that predated the shelter-in-place order. “How do they expect people to shelter in place if they have no place to shelter?” asked tenants’ rights activist Elena Popp.
  • Los Angeles County has not met thresholds set by the California Department of Public Health that would allow schools to apply to reopen. A waiver process was being developed that would allow certain schools to reopen if they demonstrated a broad base of community and labor stakeholder support, but it can only be put into effect if the number of coronavirus cases in the county drops below 200 per 100,000. It’s still at 355.

Labor

  • After a yearlong standoff and collective action, the Writers Guild of America has reached an agreement with ICM Partners that will make ICM the second of the “Big 4” talent agencies to end the predatory, but long-standing, industry practice of negotiating packaging fees.
  • A new LA Times report shows that Cal/OSHA, the safety board meant to protect the state’s workers, hasn’t even been able to protect its own employees. Anonymous staffers say the organization is not providing testing or other COVID safety measures in its offices, and depleted ranks have left Cal/OSHA without a bilingual inspector or enough staff to do in-person inspections.

Climate

  • Despite demands from environmental groups and frontline activists, the California Senate Committee on Natural Resources voted 5–4 against passing AB 345, a bill that would require the CA Natural Resources Agency to adopt an environmental justice program and require buffer zones between oil wells and at-risk areas like schools and homes. Public comment preceding the bill’s hearing was flooded by callers who work in the oil and energy industries. The bill will be reconsidered for a final vote on August 12.

Elections

  • Black Lives Matter-LA will now have the chance to take their case directly to voters, as the County Board of Supervisors approved 4–1 to add the Reimagine LA Initiative to the November ballot. The initiative would permanently shift 10% of the county’s unrestricted funding — approximately $1 billion — away from law enforcement and toward programs like community counseling, mental health services, youth development programs, and affordable housing.
  • The husband of Los Angeles District Attorney Jackie Lacey will face assault charges related to his pointing a gun at Black Lives Matter activists in March.
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Issue No. 21 – July 31, 2020

Housing Rights

  • Despite objections from activists and community members, the Los Angeles City Council voted 10–4 to resume sweeps of the “Special Enforcement and Cleaning Zones” created around shelters associated with Mayor Eric Garcetti’s A Bridge Home program. The Bureau of Sanitation had ceased these operations in March due to the pandemic and the recommendation of public health officials that unhoused people be allowed to remain in place.
  • Kristy Lovich, a Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority supervisor who has pushed in recent weeks for the homeless agency to sever ties with law enforcement, was fired for undisclosed reasons this week. Lovich has spoken out against LAHSA’s reliance on police to do enforcement sweeps, accusing the agency and city council of reneging on a promise last fall to allow service workers (instead of police) to take the lead on interactions with unhoused Angelenos.

Police Violence and Community Resistance

  • Mayor Eric Garcetti joined with other city officials to announce the expansion of the Community Safety Partnership, a unit of the police that focuses on building relationships between law enforcement and the communities they police. Though conceived as a reply to protests against police violence, the move is opposed by many activists. “We absolutely want the things that were raised — tutoring, field trips, recreation programs. I’m a mom, I want those things. But those services cannot and should not be offered by police,” said BLM-LA co-founder Melina Abdullah.
  • Protesters from various organizations, including BLM-LA, gathered in Westwood on Sunday to show solidarity with activists in Portland. This comes after recent reports from Portland of brutal crackdowns and the removal of protesters by federal agents in unmarked vans.
  • ICE’s “Citizen’s Training” program has been flooded with false applications. The program, which offers “scenario-based” training to civilians, has been criticized as an “armed vigilante” group. Organizations such as Never Again encouraged people to flood the database in order to delay the project, even reaching out to K-pop fans. The first Citizen’s Academy was offered during the Obama administration.
  • A veteran LAPD SWAT sergeant has filed a whistleblower lawsuit against the department, claiming that leaders of the SWAT division “glamorize the use of lethal force, and direct the promotions of officers who share the same values while maligning the reputations of officers who do not.”
  • Three LAPD officers have been charged with falsifying records and obstructing justice, as evidence surfaced that they falsely portrayed people as gang members or associates on field interview cards. Field interviews of gang members are used as a measure of productivity for officers, which can incentivize false reports; over 20 more officers are still under investigation. District Attorney Jackie Lacey announced this week that her office would review hundreds of cases involving the three charged officers.
  • Unite Here Local 11, which represents Cristobal Guardado — the father of Andres Guardado, the eighteen-year-old whom the sheriff’s department shot and killed on June 18 — has called for the resignation of Sheriff Alex Villanueva. The letter, signed by 60 organizations including BLM-LA and the American Civil Liberties Union, declares, “You have dramatically exacerbated [the department’s] problems by undermining basic mechanisms of accountability and civilian oversight at every turn. This historic moment demands that you recognize when it is time for you to go — and the time is now.”
  • This pressure on Sheriff Villanueva mounts as his attitude toward LA County’s Board of Supervisors has grown increasingly toxic and strange.

Climate

  • As climate activists call for a total phaseout of fossil fuels, SoCalGas is being investigated by the Public Advocates Office to determine whether the utility has used ratepayer dollars to support pro-gas advocacy and lobbying. In response to questions from the consumer watchdog, SoCalGas has acknowledged lobbying government officials for policies that would result in more natural-gas-fueled vehicles and has also acknowledged charging its customers for some of that lobbying.

Labor

  • By a margin of 97%, childcare workers for low-income families on public assistance voted to join Child Care Providers United, a union formed in a partnership of SEIU and AFSCME. These workers, mostly women of color, are heavily reliant on state aid, and many effectively make less than minimum wage.

Elections

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Issue No. 20 – July 24, 2020

Local Politics and Community Actions

  • The LA County Board of Supervisors passed a sweeping motion intended to make anti-racism a core principle of all county-level policy-making and operations. Titled “Establishing an Antiracist Los Angeles County Policy Agenda,” the motion will now enter a planning stage, to determine what an anti-racist policy agenda would look like in practice. The motion passed 5–0 to some fanfare, with all five supervisors offering extended remarks on the importance of the work this motion initiates.
  • The Board of Supervisors also passed a motion to put the priorities of the county’s budget to a public vote this November. The motion, drafted in partnership with justice activist coalition Reimagine LA, urges the creation of a ballot measure requiring the county to allocate at least 10% of its unrestricted fund to “community investment and alternatives to incarceration.” This measure passed 4–1 after heated debate. Los Angeles County Sheriff Alex Villanueva called into the meeting and said the measure represented “[police] defundment in disguise.”
  • Over 200 people, including LA City Councilmember Herb Wesson, attended a recent outdoor town-hall-style event aimed at urging City Hall to shift nonviolent 911 calls from the LAPD to unarmed specialists in areas such as mental health. The event was held by the People’s Budget LA coalition, led by Black Lives Matter-Los Angeles. BLMLA co-founder Melina Abdullah pointed out the “strange” shift since the recent protests where the City Council is now actively collaborating with community groups.
  • Councilmember John Lee is being pressured to disclose whether he is the one referred to as “City Staffer B” in the corruption investigation against his predecessor and former boss Mitchell Englander. The Northridge East Neighborhood Council has passed a resolution formally asking for a response from Lee whether he is included in the investigation. This is not the first time a neighborhood council within Lee’s district has pressed this issue.
  • Community fridges are being added to Los Angeles neighborhoods in order to battle food insecurity during the Covid-19 pandemic. More than 60 organizers have partnered with businesses in the area to open and maintain the fridges.

Police Violence and Mass Incarceration

  • Activists marched and gathered at the Silver Lake Trader Joe’s to demand justice for Mely Corado, who was shot and killed by an LAPD officer almost two years ago while she was working during a shootout at the grocery store. Family members called for the police officers who killed her to be charged.
  • With the COVID-19 crisis in the California prison system continuing to escalate, the federal judge overseeing litigation regarding the treatment of incarcerated people within the system has ordered the state to set aside 100 beds for coronavirus patients at each of its 35 prisons. Advocates for inmates’ rights have argued that, given the rate of infections, 100 beds is not enough.
  • The FBI has announced it is initiating a review of the killing of Andres Guardado by a Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputy.
  • The California Department of Justice released a report showing that, while 2019 marked a 55-year low in the state’s number of felony cannabis arrests, there were still racial disparities in how the laws were enforced. Latinx people accounted for 41.7% of all arrests and Black people accounted for 22.3%.
  • Public protests have urged a halt to “Prison-to-ICE” transfers, or the practice of releasing immigrants who have completed their incarceration straight into the custody of Immigration and Customs Enforcement for deportation. Advocates for Immigrants’ rights are arguing that former prisoners should instead be released to their families.

Climate

  • Fifteen states, along with Washington, DC, have formed a coalition to jump-start production of electric trucks, buses and vans, with a goal of having all new sales of those vehicles be electric by 2050 — with an additional benchmark of 30% by 2030. LA Metro will complete electrification of the G Line in the San Fernando Valley at the end of 2020, six months later than expected. Metro has set a goal of transitioning its entire bus fleet from natural gas to electric by 2030.

Labor

  • An SEIU-organized nationwide “Strike for Black Lives” saw robust participation by Angeleno workers, with a caravan of hundreds of cars and trucks passing through South Los Angeles on Monday, bearing banners calling for both economic and racial justice and calling attention to the demands of “essential workers” in the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Issue No. 19 – July 17, 2020

Coronavirus: Resurgence and Response

  • Los Angeles may be on the brink of shutting down again as coronavirus cases and hospitalizations surge to record levels in the county and across California. The surge began in late May as California allowed businesses to reopen, mass protests took place, and quarantine fatigue led to less adherence to social distancing. While many workplaces in LA have seen outbreaks, cases have been concentrated at food processing and distribution facilities, manufacturing facilities, garment factories and wholesale warehouses. County health officials have said that these locations are not enforcing proper safety guidelines such as social distancing, face coverings and regular sanitation.
  • The California Department of Public Health has adjusted its recommendations for how COVID-19 tests should be allocated. Whereas the guidelines used to recommend that tests be available to all who want one, the new guidelines recommend that they only be available to those who show symptoms or who work in high-risk settings. Los Angeles County, meanwhile, has added testing sites in areas that have been hit hardest by the pandemic.

Police Violence and Mass Incarceration

  • After ongoing outcry and pressure from families of incarcerated people and activists due to the increasing outbreak of COVID-19 in the state prison system, Governor Gavin Newsom has approved three separate efforts to reduce the prison population by 8,000 by the end of August. Ten of the state’s 35 prisons currently have outbreaks, and San Quentin alone has over 1000 coronavirus cases.  
  • A federal judge issued a tentative ruling largely upholding the ban on private prison contracts in California. Two separate lawsuits, one brought by a Florida private prison company and the other by the Trump administration, both allege that California Assembly Bill 32, which bans new for-profit detention contracts and calls for phasing out existing facilities by 2028, violates the federal government’s right to enforce detention in California. The ruling is expected to be the beginning of a long court process.
  • Alex Villanueva’s chief of staff, Capt. John Burcher, was removed from his position and reassigned after making social media posts in which he said that Andres Guardado, the 18-year-old shot in the back and killed last month by a sheriff’s deputy, “chose his fate.” The attorneys for Guardado’s family have pointed to this incident as further evidence that the sheriff’s department should not be conducting the investigation into the shooting, and have continued to call for an independent outside inquiry.

Climate

  • President Trump unilaterally rolled back the 50-year-old National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) on Wednesday, accelerating federal approval for projects like pipelines, chemical plants, highways and waste incinerators. The 1970 law changed environmental oversight in the United States by requiring federal agencies to consider whether a project would harm the air, land, water or wildlife, and giving the public the right of review and input. Environmental groups immediately promised legal challenges, saying the regulatory rollbacks threaten public health and make it harder to combat climate change. Some have called it “the single biggest giveaway to polluters in the past 40 years” and “a blatant attempt to silence the working class communities of color who are resisting the expansion of fossil fuel infrastructure into their communities.”
  • A state fire department investigation has found that Pacific Gas & Electric’s equipment caused last year’s Kincade fire. The fire lasted for nearly two weeks and burned 77,758 acres, causing thousands of Northern Californians to flee their homes. Last month PG&E pleaded guilty to 84 criminal counts of manslaughter in connection to the 2018 Camp fire.

Labor

  • Garment workers are getting sick at factories participating in the city’s LA Protects scheme, which enlists local businesses to fast-track production of face masks. There have been hundreds of cases and multiple deaths so far; workers have described cramped working conditions and lax enforcement of safety guidelines.
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Issue No. 18 – July 10, 2020

Local News

  • An independent autopsy requested by the family of Andres Guardado has found that the 18-year-old was shot five times in the back by a Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputy. The sheriff’s department had previously placed a “security hold” on the report from the LA County coroner’s office; however, today the coroner’s office released the document, which also determined that the cause of death was five fatal gunshot wounds in the back.
  • The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors voted to take the next step in shutting down Men’s Central Jail in downtown Los Angeles. The jail, which is run by the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, has long been criticized for its inhumane conditions. Its closure — without plans for a replacement facility — was framed by the board as representing a “reduced reliance on incarceration.”
  • In the trade unions of the film production industry, there is a growing sentiment in favor of expelling police unions from labor partnerships. Rank-and-file members of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees and the Screen Actors Guild have been leading the charge.
  • Of the 18 million calls to the LAPD logged over the past decade, only 1.4 million — or 8% — were for violent crimes. Nearly half of those calls were officer-initiated calls for perceived violations like traffic stops, which are disproportionately called on Black and Latinx drivers and pedestrians.
  • Coronavirus tests, once available to all who requested them in Los Angeles. But testing sites are now being overwhelmed by the number of requests in the county. As the infection rate rises, tests at many facilities are being restricted to those who are feeling symptoms; requests now must be made days in advance. City council candidate Nithya Raman has criticized Mayor Eric Garcetti and city leadership for abandoning the cautious approach they took at the start of the pandemic and for rushing too quickly into reopening businesses.
  • The Emergency Renters Relief Program will start taking applications on July 13. The program sets aside $103 million — mostly from federal stimulus funds — to cover up to $1,000 a month per household, in the form of direct payments to landlords. Applicants must meet eligibility requirements and demonstrate an economic or health impact from COVID-19. As council president Nury Martinez acknowledged, “demand will be high,” and the current model of tenant relief will require billions more in federal aid. The deadline to apply is July 17.
  • The Los Angeles teachers union is advocating that school campuses remain closed for the upcoming fall semester and that distance learning continue. This is not in line with the current position of Gov. Gavin Newsom, who has said that schools should be available for in-person learning “to the greatest extent possible.” Meanwhile, the burdens that distance learning places on working families are explored here and elsewhere.
  • California legislators will not return to the capitol next week, due to concerns over coronavirus. Several staffers and lawmakers have tested positive.
  • Farm workers are continuing to protest in light of employees testing positive for coronavirus. According to United Farm Workers, 78 farm laborers employed by Primex Farms in Wasco, CA, have been infected with the Coronavirus. Primex released a statement acknowledging positive cases and closed their work location for about two weeks. Primex Farms has not confirmed whether workers would be paid for hours lost during the shutdown.
  • The University of California will join Harvard and MIT in suing the Trump administration over its ruling forcing international students to attend in-person classes in order to remain in the country. Immigration and Customs Enforcement announced this week that failure to attend in-person classes could result in removal proceedings.
  • Gov. Newsom’s oil and gas regulatory agency approved 12 new permits this week for fracking in Kern County, which already suffers from some of the poorest air quality in the nation. Newsom has additionally approved drilling permits for more than 1,400 new oil and gas wells. “Approving these permits is especially dangerous now,” Hollin Kretzmann from the Center for Biological Diversity pointed out, as “multiple studies have shown air pollution increases our vulnerability to coronavirus.”
  • The California Transit Association has started a lobbying and ad campaign requesting $3 billion in funding relief from the state for local transit authorities. The CTA warns that such a bailout is necessary to avoid permanent cuts in bus services, particularly in vulnerable communities.
  • Plans to construct a high-speed electric rail line between Las Vegas and California took another step forward. CalTrans has formally leased right of way adjacent to Interstate 15 to XpressWest, in accordance with plans to build a 170-mile electric passenger rail system running between the Las Vegas Strip and San Bernardino County. While the western terminus of the line is located 90 miles northeast of downtown Los Angeles, other construction projects may eventually link it to Union Station.
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Issue No. 17 – July 3, 2020

Local News

  • Congress’ first-ever committee dedicated exclusively to climate change released a 538-page action plan Tuesday, stating that California and other US states face “an existential threat” from climate change and require robust government response. The report calls for 12 pillars of action, including reducing carbon pollution, making communities more resilient to the impacts of climate change and building a more equitable energy economy. Specific targets include bringing the US to net zero emissions by 2050 and delivering $8 trillion in health and climate benefits. Locally, it calls for the creation of “clean energy” jobs, a field in which more than 100,000 workers in California have been laid off due to the coronavirus pandemic, and recommends timely action on several California-introduced climate bills, including the Wildfire Defense Act and the West Coast Ocean Protection Act.
  • Fossil fuel and utility companies are attempting to use COVID-19 to request delays in regulations. On Monday, state oil and gas regulator CalGEM blocked Southern California Gas Co.’s effort to delay required safety testing at the company’s Aliso Canyon storage field, citing the COVID-19 pandemic and associated stay-at-home orders. The Aliso field was the site of a record-setting gas leak that spewed more than 100,000 tons of heat-trapping methane into the atmosphere and sickened residents of the nearby Porter Ranch neighborhood. 
  • The state of California has passed a budget that attempts to address the economic impact of the continuing COVID-19 crisis. While school funding remains level with last year, many payments are being delayed, with local districts having to plug the gaps in the interim. Restrictions on drawing from the state’s welfare assistance program are being eased. Additional funds have been earmarked for converting hotels into housing for the unhoused ($550 million to purchase and renovate, another $50 million to counties for operation), and reducing business tax breaks is a component in reducing the budget shortfall. Newsom’s campaign promises of a single-payer healthcare system, walked back even before the current crisis, have been essentially abandoned despite a Democratic supermajority in the state government.
  • The Los Angeles Board of Education voted 4–3 in favor of a 35% reduction to the budget of the Los Angeles School Police Department (LASPD). Following a week of sustained pressure from activists groups, including Black Lives Matter-LA and LA Students Deserve, board members compromised by folding elements of the motions proposed last week into an amendment to this year’s budget. The amendment cuts the LASPD budget by $25 million, restricts officers from wearing uniforms and limits them to the perimeters of school campuses. A task force convened by Superintendent Austin Beutner, thought after last week’s impasse to be taking over the issue of police reform, will now play catch-up in studying how best to implement the board’s decision. The commander of the LASPD resigned the following the day.
  • As protests continue against the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department’s killing of Andres Guardado, the Los Angeles Times has sued the department for withholding public records related to deputy misconduct in violation of the recently passed California Public Records Act. The suit comes as the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training has refused to publish information on the surveillance technology it uses, citing copyright laws. Andres Guardado’s family is also demanding that the results of his autopsy be released.
  • Citing cost, California is halting its plans to expand COVID-19 testing into rural towns and urban neighborhoods — right as cases and hospitalizations surge in the state.
  • Black and Latinx Angelenos have double the mortality rate from coronavirus as white residents. In addition to disproportionately working in low-wage front-line jobs at higher risk of exposure to the virus, Black and Latinx residents face health challenges caused by structural racism, limited access to healthcare, and chronic stress.
  • Asian American Californians have reported over 800 incidents of racist verbal abuse, shunning and physical assaults since the beginning of the pandemic.
  • In the same week that construction crews at SoFi Stadium finished raising a 2,200-ton video screen over the field, nearby residents are organizing to prevent landlords from pushing them out with escalating rent. The Lennox-Inglewood Tenants Union has accused landlords of renovating empty units near the Rams and Chargers’ new stadium to attract new tenants while disregarding units — held by long-standing tenants of color — that have fallen into disrepair. “The big capitalists saw Inglewood, and they saw money signs,” said one organizer. “It was always the plan to get long-time tenants out, Black and brown, poor and low-income tenants out, and get a different demographic with a different income bracket in here.”
  • Members of the Kumeyaay Nation, which spans both sides of the California–Mexico border, physically blocked construction of the border wall on Monday. Community members are protecting ancestral lands from desecration and are demanding an immediate halt to construction of the wall on Kumeyaay land.
  • More than 900 coronavirus cases have been diagnosed in the last two weeks alone at San Quentin state prison, bringing the total number of cases to over 1,100 infected out of the 3,700 people being held at the prison. The new outbreak began after a transfer of 121 inmates from the California Institute for Men in Chino, a prison with an existing coronavirus outbreak. The transfer has been denounced by public health officials.