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LAHSA releases unhoused census results + vicious heat

Thorn West: Issue No. 125

State Politics

  • With the legislative session closed, here is everything that passed and awaits the governor’s signature or veto.
  • President Biden endorsed AB 2183, the California bill that would enable union organizing among farm workers. The bill passed through the Legislature last week, but Governor Newsom already vetoed an earlier version of this same bill and has yet to sign this one. Biden’s surprise endorsement is speculated to be political gamesmanship aimed at Newsom, a potential 2024 primary challenger.
  • Newsom did sign AB 257, which would establish a Fast Food Council to regulate wages at large chain restaurants. The restaurant industry is fighting back, and announced intentions to put a referendum on ballots overturning the law, which now may not be able to go into effect until the referendum is resolved. Via Who Gets the Bird, more labor analysis on the impact of this measure.

Health Care

  • The newly developed COVID vaccine that is more effective against the prevalent BA.4 and BA.5 subvariants of the omicron strain is now available in Los Angeles County to all adults. Book an appointment here, or through most major pharmacy chains. Vaccines remain free of cost.

Housing Rights

  • After several delays, LAHSA has released a census report on the county’s unhoused population, for the first time since COVID began. The numbers reveal a 4.1% increase in the total population in LA County, and a 1.7% increase in the city of Los Angeles, with continued overrepresentation of Black and Latine people among the unhoused. This represents a smaller increase than in previous years, largely attributed to a slower rate of people falling into homelessness. County representatives suggest that this is likely due to COVID-related assistance programs and eviction protections.
  • The Housing Committee of the Los Angeles City Council will discuss ending COVID-related eviction protections at its next meeting, following the Housing Department’s fulfillment of a request for a report, which recommends that most citywide eviction protections sunset on December 31, 2022.
  • Knock LA continues its in-depth reporting on the West Los Angeles Veterans Affairs Campus, where many tiny homes developed for unhoused veterans remain empty. A fire destroyed several of these homes this week, though no one has been reported injured.

Environmental Justice

  • The record-breaking heat wave that has gripped California since last week may finally end, with a dramatic near-miss hurricane. The heat also caused record-breaking power-usage that prompted an emergency request urging Californians to conserve power “if health allows,” or rolling blackouts would be ordered. This warning effectively curbed consumer usage, averting the need for drastic action.
  • Curbed uses the heat wave as a prompt to talk about lack of shade on LAUSD campuses. LA Taco reports on industrial pollution at Jordan High School in Watts, where students report being advised not to drink the water.

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City, County aim to strip eviction protections + Sheriff raids home of political enemies

Thorn West: Issue No. 126

State Politics

  • This Saturday and Sunday in Los Angeles, the California Reparations Task Force will be holding its first public meeting since the release of their interim report in June. The task force’s final recommendations are still scheduled to be delivered in July of 2023. this weekend’s agenda here.

City Politics

  • Marilyn Flynn, the USC dean who was facing corruption charges alongside suspended councilmember Mark Ridley-Thomas (as his co-defendant), has agreed to plead guilty. Ridley-Thomas’ trial was scheduled for November 15. Pending the outcome, he would either be reinstated or a special election will be called to fill his seat, currently filled by appointment.

Housing Rights

  • Despite recent reports suggesting that state protections during the pandemic were instrumental in slowing the growth of houselessness in Los Angeles, this week on back-to-back days the county Board of Supervisors and City Council Housing Committee (in a particularly chaotic and contentious meeting) set in motion rollbacks of tenant protections that may go into effect at the end of the year.
  • As expected, Governor Newsom signed CARE Court into law. Newsom dismissed the coalition of activists who oppose the program, which facilitates the state forcing people experiencing mental health issues into carceral forms of care, as “groups … holding hands talking about the way the world should be.” CalMatters details the massive tasks that lie ahead if the law is actually to be put into practice.
  • Los Angeles County has settled its part of a lawsuit initiated by a coalition of landlords and business owners frustrated with the city’s failure to control the presence of unhoused people in Downtown Los Angeles. The city settled several months ago, agreeing to build more temporary shelters, which the county has now agreed to partially fund.
  • Nice interview with a volunteer from KTown for All, discussing the state of services for unhoused people in Los Angeles.

Police Violence and Community Resistance

Los Angeles County Sheriff’s deputies executed search warrants at the homes of Supervisor Sheila Kuehl and Civilian Oversight Commissioner Patti Giggans, who have both been outspoken critics of LASD. Attorneys have challenged the legality of the warrant, which was issued by a judge with a close relationship with LASD. This is part of a pattern of the LASD under Villanueva using its power to harass critics, including the families of victims of LASD killings. Bad.

Incarceration

  • The ACLU has filed for an emergency order that would force the county to improve “barbaric” conditions at the Inmate Reception Center of the LA County jail, where people are held while awaiting trial.

Environmental Justice

  • Last weekend’s heavy rains caused significant mudslides in burn-scarred areas of the San Bernardino mountains. There has been one confirmed fatality.
  • KQED writes about the success of an innovative and volunteer-powered response to a failing water system in Allensworth, a historically Black community in California’s Central Valley.

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CARE Court passes with overwhelming support + VISION Act falls a few votes short

Thorn West: Issue No. 124

State Politics

  • The two-year state legislative session closed this week amid a flurry of activity. When the Legislature returns it will have many new members. CalMatters tracks, with more below.
  • Despite substantial public support, the VISION Act, which would prevent prisons from transferring incarcerated people who have completed their sentence to ICE for deportation, failed by three votes in the Senate, after being approved in the Assembly. Statement from the ICE Out of California coalition here.
  • SB 1338, also known as “CARE Court,” passed on Wednesday. The bill makes it easier to coerce people with mental health disabilities into treatment, and is targeted at the unhoused. The bill also contains a TBD plan to manifest the massive amount of resources that would be needed to treat so many new patients. It passed unanimously in the Senate and 62–2 in the Assembly despite overwhelming opposition from disability rights and civil liberties groups.

City Politics

  • The contentious fight to fill the council seat in CD 10 escalated quickly, as this week City Council President Nury Martinez agendized a series of motions to rapidly appoint Heather Hutt. A minority of councilmembers advocated for a more transparent and deliberative process delaying the approval, but that resistance collapsed Friday, and Hutt’s appointment passed 12–2 with only Councilmembers Mike Bonin and Monica Rodriguez opposed.

Labor

  • AB 2183, which would allow farm workers to vote by mail in union elections, has passed through the Legislature and to the governor to sign. Last year Newsom (who owns vineyards) vetoed an earlier version of the bill, citing “procedural issues.” This year, in support of the bill, a group of farm workers marched from Kern County to Sacramento and are holding a vigil until the governor signs.
  • The Legislature has passed AB 257, a bill creating a council to regulate wages and working conditions for all California workers in large fast food chains. Read a little more about AB 257 — the first bill of its kind nationwide — in the context of sectoral bargaining here.
  • AB 1577, which would allow workers in the Legislature the right to collectively bargain, passed through the senate, but was blocked from a vote in the assembly by the Assembly Public Employment and Retirement Committee.

Housing Rights

  • The Legislature overwhelmingly approved an amendment repealing Article 34 of the state charter, which requires onerous local elections to approve any form of public housing. The bill, widely understood to have been originally pushed by racist segregationists, is among the last laws of its kind on a state charter. In Los Angeles, many council districts are nearing the limits of affordable housing authorized in the last Article 34 citywide ballot measure, and the city failed to put reapproval on the ballot. The amendment will still need to be approved by the public in 2024.

Environmental Justice

  • Temperatures will continue to reach triple digits in many areas of the state through Labor Day, breaking records and straining the power grid. In Los Angeles, the city has opened very few cooling centers to help unhoused and other vulnerable people manage the heat, and many libraries are closed for Labor Day. The Kenneth Mejia campaign provides some analysis and calls attention to some programs that are providing mutual aid.
  • Citing searing summer temperatures and expected energy shortages, California lawmakers approved legislation aimed at extending the life of the state’s last-operating nuclear power plant. The Diablo Canyon plant — the state’s largest single source of electricity — had been slated to shutter by 2025. The New York Times covers this and other California climate bills from the busy week.
  • A fire ignited just after noon on Wednesday and has spread to cover 5,2000 acres near Castaic, in Los Angeles County.

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Governor vetoes overdose prevention pilot program

Issue No. 122

State Politics

  • Governor Newsom vetoed a pilot program for safe-injection sites to prevent drug overdoses. The veto is being covered nationally, widely interpreted as an attempt to cater to moderates and Republicans in advance of a presidential run. The pretext for the veto was that the program as designed had a dangerously broad scope, even though it was only slated to run for five years in three cities.
  • Newsom did sign a law giving more latitude to legislative bodies to remove members of the public from meetings for being “disruptive.”
  • And, with the state legislative session ending on August 31, CalMatters looks at which bills will have their fate come down to the wire, and which have already been placed in the suspense file.

City Politics

  • Herb Wesson has officially resigned as interim councilmember in CD 10. Los Angeles City Council President Nury Martinez quickly drafted (and scheduled) a motion to appoint Heather Hutt, Wesson’s appointed district caretaker. Though there had been some local support for appointing Hutt, simply to fill the seat, this Our Weekly editorial argues that giving the seat to “the appointee of an appointee” is undemocratic. A competing motion earlier today from Councilmembers Bonin, Harris-Dawson, and Rodriguez calls for a more transparent process.

Labor

  • After a years-long battle with ownership, workers at Chateau Marmont have voted to unionize with Unite Here Local 11!
  • The Observer takes a deeper look at the organizing that led to the strippers at Star Garden voting to unionize with Actors Equity, contextualizing it within the history of sex worker organization.

Transportation

  • Thanks to the hard work of signature gatherers, Healthy Streets LA, a measure which compels the city to comply with its own frequently ignored street safety guidelines, will be on the ballot in 2024. City Council had a window to directly approve the measure, making it effective immediately, but though councilmembers spoke extensively in support of the measure’s goals, they voted unanimously against approval, in favor of a competing measure that has yet to be drafted. Streetsblog LA has the details.

Police Violence and Community Resistance

  • A jury awarded $31 million to Vanessa Bryant and Christopher Chester in their lawsuit against Los Angeles County. The suit was for damages caused by employees of the county sheriff and fire department sharing photos of the deceased victims of the helicopter crash that killed family members of Bryant and Chester. The court found that sheriff’s deputies habitually share the photos of deceased people.

Environmental Justice

  • On Thursday, the California Air Resources Board adopted the world’s most stringent rules for transitioning to zero-emission vehicles –– all new cars, pickup trucks, and SUVs must be electric or hydrogen by 2035.
  • A proposal circulated Friday by California Democratic legislators would reject Governor Newsom’s plan to extend the lifespan of the state’s last operating nuclear power plant — and instead spend over $1 billion to speed up the development of renewable energy.
  • In 2023, residents of Imperial County are projected to experience 102 “dangerous” days with a heat index exceeding 100, according to nonprofit First Street Foundation’s peer-reviewed model.
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Gascón recall fails + Healthy Streets LA qualifies for ballot

Issue No. 121

City Politics

  • A united front of unhoused people and advocates once again obstructed a vote to expand 41.18 zones. This week, Los Angeles City Council escalated the confrontation with the public, bringing riot police to the meeting, ejecting people for going over their public comment time, and clearing the chambers when activists shouted down councilmembers. Two arrests were made and a bobblehead fell off of a desk. The motion passed 11–3 again, with only the three councilmembers opposed staying in chambers through the recess. In the aftermath, numerous councilmembers who voted for the (likely unconstitutional) measure lashed out, as if their own choices had been exonerated, or at least made immaterial, by the breach in decorum, and they could safely focus only on what they felt had been done to them. @UnrigLA makes the valuable point that the most recent council, chaired by Herb Wesson, though ideologically similar, was able to gracefully hear out criticism.
  • In an interview in Capital and Main with incoming councilmember Eunisses Hernandez talks about her plans once she is seated in December, and touches on 41.18 and the protests: “I’m an organizer. My background is in trying to persuade and move the government to do the right thing. Part of that has been to stop meetings. It’s a tactic.”
  • Activists were able to dismantle a significant length of the fence around Echo Park Lake, repurposing it as a statement on behalf of community self-determination. It was reconstructed as a fence the next day. At a CD 13 candidate forum, DSA-LA–endorsed challenger Hugo Soto-Martinez and Councilmember Mitch O’Farrell discussed the fence, along with other issues related to the environment.
  • DSA-LA members have voted to endorse an additional round of candidates and ballot measures for the November elections! These are: Estefany Casteñeda for Centinela Valley Union HS District Board Member, Ricardo Martinez for La Puente City Council, Rocio Rivas for LAUSD School Board, and the Los Angeles City ballot measure United To House LA.
  • The Empowerment Congress West Area Neighborhood Council voted to request that Heather Hutt, who currently serves as the “caretaker” of CD 10 but is not able to vote along with city council, be officially appointed to the seat. CD 10 has been largely without representation since the indictment of Mark Ridley-Thomas and subsequent court intervention blocking the interim appointment of Herb Wesson. The Los Angeles Sentinel is covering.
  • The second attempt to put a potential recall of Los Angeles District Attorney George Gascón on ballots has failed. Whistleblowers in the recall committee have alleged that personnel systematically forged signatures on unsigned attestation forms.

Labor

  • The dancers at Star Garden, a Los Angeles strip club, have filed a petition to unionize with Actors’ Equity, which represents stage performers. The petition follows months of protests staged outside the club after a number of workplace safety concerns went unaddressed.

Transportation

  • The Healthy Streets L.A. initiative has officially qualified for the 2024 ballot! If approved by the public, this would compel the city to comply with its own Mobility Plan, installing bike and bus lanes whenever it repaves streets. The city council, in response, has drafted its own watered-down version of the measure. Streetsblog LA compares the two, while Streets For All, which drafted the ballot measure, urges the public to support the original version in the critical next few weeks with the following tool kit.
  • A ban on cars along a dangerous stretch of road in Griffith Park, piloted after the death of a cyclist, has now been made permanent.

Environmental Justice

  • A NASA-funded study published on Monday showed that “dry lightning,” or lightning without rain, has been a driver of the increasingly destructive California wildfires, and is more likely to occur under climate change conditions.
  • Governor Gavin Newsom sent a memo to the heads of both California legislative chambers pushing legislators to enact a slate of proposals strengthening the state’s climate goals. But with the legislative session ending on August 31, there is some question as to whether the governor’s goals are realistic.
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Public occupies City Council, disrupting vote on 41.18 expansion

Issue 120

City Politics

  • L.A. Taco breaks down a report on how the city spent its $1.28 billion in federal COVID relief, finding that it largely was used to pay salaries for government employees, with the biggest chunk taken by the LAPD. The report itself describes the disbursement as “allocated in support of initiatives that will directly benefit Los Angeles communities.”
  • It’s official: the LA County Board of Supervisors voted 4–1 to put a measure on the November ballot that would give a 4/5 majority of the Board the power to remove the sheriff. Ordinance here.
  • Knock LA continues their reporting on the decision to reinstate cash bail in Los Angeles County, having just heard back on a records request into the secretive Bail Committee that makes these decisions behind closed doors.

Healthcare

  • The Board of Supervisors declared a local state of emergency to combat the spread of monkeypox. Though the order will allow the accelerated distribution of vaccines, dosages remain in short supply. The portal to schedule a vaccine appointment has been closed since Tuesday; you can sign up here to be notified as that changes.

Housing Rights

  • Pete White of Los Angeles Community Action Network (LACAN) talks about the numerous shortcomings of Project Roomkey, the COVID-related emergency program to use hotel rooms as temporary shelter for unhoused people. It ends in September, despite the fact that very few project participants have been able to take the next step into permanent housing, and many are unsure if they’ll have a place to go.
  • Los Angeles City Council held another vote on the proposed escalation of 41.18 anti-sit/lie/sleep enforcement. After Councilmembers Mike Bonin and Nithya Raman spoke against the motion, the public in attendance, essentially unanimous in opposition, chanted over Councilmember Joe Buscaino, the motion’s author. In response, the council called recess. With chambers to themselves, those remaining, most of them unhoused people and advocates, held an extended “public comment” session for people who had not gotten a chance to speak during the original public comment lottery. After an hour the space was ceded back to the council, who voted on their motion before a largely empty house. It passed 11–3 with Councilmember Marqueece Harris-Dawson joining the opposition. “I don’t think it’s constitutional,” he said of the blanket ban. This was expected to be the last of several votes on this measure, but a last-minute amendment means it will need another vote, scheduled for Tuesday. Entire session live-tweeted by Jon Peltz here.

Labor

  • In July the city passed an ordinance guaranteeing a $25 minimum wage for healthcare workers in private hospitals. The healthcare industry is attempting to overturn this via a public ballot measure being framed as pro-worker. SEIU is urging people to be extra careful not to sign the petition for this anti-worker ballot measure; if the measure even gets on the ballot, it will delay the implementation of the pay increase until November.

Environmental Justice

  • Governor Gavin Newsom pressured lawmakers to approve an energy plan that aimed to expedite and streamline construction of new clean energy facilities. Included is a controversial clause that lets developers bypass local permitting, and leaves rural populations out of the conversation for projects planned in their counties.
  • The Klamath River wildfire has claimed two more lives, raising the death toll to four in the state’s largest blaze of the year.
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Goalposts adjusted for mask mandate

Thorn 119

State Politics

  • The current state legislative session will close on August 11, leaving the fate of several bills with a dwindling window of time to be passed. Streetsblog Cal urged support for AB 2438, which aligns transportation policy with climate goals. A reader brought our attention to AB 2632, which significantly regulates the use of solitary confinement in California prisons. Both bills have passed the Assembly but need to be passed in the state Senate by the deadline.

Healthcare

  • A Los Angeles County indoor mask mandate, scheduled to go into effect today, has instead been paused. The county has been in a “high” state of community transmission for two weeks, triggering a mandate according to the CDC’s revised guidelines. The County Board of Health has pointed to a recent decline in hospital infection rates to explain the reversal.

Police Violence and Community Resistance

  • A town hall was convened on Zoom to address widespread concerns about the LAPD shooting of Jermaine Petit, who was unarmed and was shot in the back. LAPD representatives were unable to coherently answer community questions about the incident and abruptly ended the Zoom. Petit has inexplicably been charged with felony assault with a deadly weapon. Knock LA has been covering.
  • On Monday, Sheriff Alex Villanueva was again scheduled to testify before the Civilian Oversight Commission about deputy gangs. He once more canceled his appearance at the last minute, this time refusing to comply with his subpoena until a list of formal demands were met, including the right to cross-examine witnesses.

Housing Rights

  • With a crowd of protesters outside Los Angeles City Hall to denounce the City Council’s proposed expansion of 41.18 anti sit/lie/sleep zones, the vote was continued until August 2.
  • Council also discussed the Declaration of Local Emergency, which is currently one of the only things preventing a flood of evictions in Los Angeles, and which must be extended monthly. The council voted to extend for another month, but Counclimember Bob Blumenfeld pulled the item for discussion and spoke ominously about the need for an “exit strategy” for “mom and pop housing providers.”

Labor

  • Frequently, newspapers devoting disproportionate attention to property crimes are asked why they don’t report on wage theft committed by employers. This week, CalMatters did some reporting on wage theft.

Transportation

  • LAPD shutdowns and councilmembers bickering over graffiti: agony over the new Sixth Street Bridge continued to deepen and intensify this week. L.A. Taco recaps from a community perspective.

Environmental Justice

  • Reuters published an investigation focused on the radioactive contamination from Santa Susana Field Lab just outside LA, but also broadly surveying the way corporations such as Boeing are granted “conservation easements,” which critics see as a tool for companies to limit their toxic waste cleanup responsibility.
  • The LA Times interviewed Max Gomberg, who this month resigned in protest from the California State Water Resources Control Board over Governor Newsom’s inaction in combating the state’s worsening drought.
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41.18 expansion + 20th LAPD shooting

Issue No. 118

City Politics

  • CD 10 is once again without representation in city council, as a judge has reinstated a temporary injunction preventing Herb Wesson from serving as interim replacement for former council member Mark Ridley-Thomas, who faces corruption charges. Plaintiffs in CD 10 allege that Wesson is specifically ineligible to serve as he is a termed-out city council member.

Healthcare

  • Los Angeles County is slowly expanding the availability of its store of monkeypox vaccine, though eligibility is still narrowly restricted.

Housing Rights

  • The Los Angeles City Council will vote next Wednesday on whether to make every school and daycare center in the city an automatic 41.18 anti-sit/lie/sleep zone. The original 41.18 revisions represented a drastic curtailment of the freedom of movement for unhoused people; nevertheless, while they provided a mechanism for implementing exclusionary area around schools, it requires some outreach to any unhoused people who will be affected, and cannot be implemented preemptively. The Kenneth Mejia campaign has a map which visualizes the scope of the 41.18 expansion. Toolkit for contacting your councilmember here, from the Services Not Sweeps coalition.
  • The Guardian spoke to residents living in an encampment in the extreme heat of the Mojave Desert, many of whom were displaced by aggressive anti-encampment measures in the nearby city of Lancaster.

Police Violence and Community Resistance

  • In San Bernardino, police officers shot a 23-year-old Black man in the back, killing him. Security camera footage appears to show two officers driving an unmarked car pulling over, and one officer opening fire within seconds of exiting the vehicle, hitting Robert Adams as he attempts to flee. Family members of the victim are calling for murder charges to be filed against the officer.
  • In Leimert Park, LAPD officers shot a man in the back — he was later revealed to have been unarmed. A piece of scrap metal from inside a car door was recovered from the scene. An LAPD press report has claimed that the victim had “pointed” it at the officers, but police have not released any bodycam footage. It was the 20th LAPD shooting of the year.

Transportation

  • When the 6th Street Bridge reopened earlier this month, pedestrian and cyclist activists were disappointed by its poorly protected bicycle lanes and general “freeway vibes.” This week an accident sent cars crashing into both bike lanes. Curbed surveys the missed opportunities, which may not be too late to correct.

Environmental Justice

  • Yet another mountain lion has been killed on the 101 Freeway, the deadliest freeway for the species. The death of P-89, who was 2 years old, came just one day before the National Park Service marked the 20-year anniversary of its study focused on the endangered local population of big cats. (Meet them all here.)
  • The California Department of Pesticide Regulation has proposed rules to restrict four closely related neonicotinoid chemicals, which are highly potent pesticides that harm bees, birds, and other creatures.
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Conformity in mayoral race + Starbucks closes unionized stores

Thorn West: Issue No. 117

City Politics

  • DSA-LA Convention is this Saturday! All members in good standing can attend and help select organizational priorities for the upcoming year from a list of proposals. RSVP here!
  • Mayoral candidate Karen Bass had endorsed Faisal Gill for city attorney. Today, her opponent, Rick Caruso, called a press conference to denounce this endorsement on the basis of Gill’s proposal to steer misdemeanor offenders into diversionary programs. Bass immediately withdrew her endorsement of Gill and adopted Caruso’s position. Gill’s response here.

Housing Rights

  • The Mayfair Hotel, one of the remaining participants in Project Roomkey, is exiting the program on July 15. One of Project Roomkey’s goals was to transition participants into permanent housing, but few if any of the formerly unhoused people being evicted from the Mayfair have been given that option. Statement from LACan; statements from displaced Mayfair residents.

Labor

  • In a letter to workers, Starbucks announced that it would be closing 16 stores nationwide, including six in Los Angeles, confusingly citing concerns over worker safety. A statement from Starbucks Workers United PDX associates the closures with retaliation against unionization efforts at Starbucks stores. Two of the closed stores had successfully unionized. More from the Guardian.
  • This week, food and beverage workers at Dodger Stadium, represented by Unite Here Local 11, voted 99% in favor of a strike in advance of this weekend’s All-Star Game. Since that authorization, contract negotiations have progressed and are further enough along that workers have agreed not to strike this weekend.

Police Violence and Community Resistance

  • A county charter amendment giving the County Board of Supervisors the power to remove the sheriff has been approved by the board and is on course for the November ballot. It would still leave in place the larger issue, a 1980 state law that requires that all county sheriffs have law enforcement officer experience. A proposed law to change this has quietly died in the state legislature.
  • A random 5% sample of signatures on the petition to recall District Attorney George Gascon met the minimum threshold necessary for a full vetting of all signatures. The roughly 78% validation rate in the sample would not quite be enough to get the petition on the ballot.

Environmental Justice

  • A city council ordinance would see Los Angeles joining other cities in no longer issuing permits for new gas stations nor allowing existing sites to add fuel pumps.
  • At least 30 oil wells belonging to five different companies were found to have been leaking gas in recent weeks, according to the Geologic Energy Management Division of the California Department of Conservation (CalGEM). The state agency did not disclose data from their readings, but initial reports of the leak said some wells were releasing methane at a concentration of 50,000 parts per million — a level that can be explosive, environmental groups say. 
  • Los Angeles’ water use in June 2022 was down compared to June 2021. While this is the second month in a row this has been true, experts say this progress is too slow, and “much more needs to be done to help people understand the severity of the drought.” The LA Times has built a tracker that allows the public to explore the amount of water usage in their district.
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Gascón recall submits signatures + Ballot measure to remove sheriff

Thorn West: Issue No. 116

Coronavirus and Relief

  • Los Angeles County is projected to cross the threshold of 10 COVID-related hospitalizations per 100,000 citizens by the end of next week. Seven days at that level of infection would, theoretically, trigger an indoor mask mandate. These thresholds were revised by the CDC in February to only trigger upon hospitalization rate, rather than case rate, and so the mask mandate is now being used as more of a last resort than a preventive measure.

City Politics

  • DSA-LA is in the news, as part of the LA Times’ election roundup in “a city where progressive Democrats and, in some races, Democratic Socialists made trailblazing gains in down-ballot contests.” 
  • As a mayoral candidate, Gina Viola did not compromise her progressive values, and her primary success may have exceeded the expectations of some. Will Rep. Karen Bass, who has run a conservative campaign so far, be willing or able to earn their support in the general election? The LA Times speculates.
  • A protest outside (recently converted Republican) mayoral candidate Rick Caruso’s mansion in Brentwood aimed to draw attention to his past support of many anti-abortion politicians, as well as his role covering up abuse at USC.

Police Violence and Community Resistance

  • 717,000 signatures were submitted in the effort to recall District Attorney George Gascón. An 80% signature validation rate would be needed in order for the recall to qualify for the ballot — a plausible, but challenging, threshold to meet in the context of the several other recent right-wing tries at reversing elections. Meanwhile, in San Francisco, Mayor London Breed has appointed Brooke Jenkins, a prosecutor who quit her job to support the recall of Chesa Boudin, as interim district attorney.
  • On Tuesday, the County Board of Supervisors will vote to place on the November ballot a charter amendment empowering the board to remove the Los Angeles County sheriff with a 4/5 vote. The amendment is supported by Check the Sheriff LA, which has championed the idea from the beginning, as well as ACLU SoCal and many other advocacy groups. Tuesday’s agenda here.
  • Knock LA analyzes the slow implementation of Measure J, the ballot measure approved in 2020 that requires 10% of the county budget be dedicated to alternatives to incarceration.

Labor

  • A ballot measure that would raise the minimum wage in California to $18 an hour by 2026 failed to gather enough signatures in time to make the ballot in 2022, but appears to have qualified for 2024.
  • Music supervisors, who curate and negotiate licenses for all the previously recorded music in movies and television, have one of the only non-unionized jobs in the entertainment industry. Yet after 75% of their guild signed union cards to become part of IATSE, the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers refuses to recognize them. Via DSA-LA Hollywood Labor, their efforts to be recognized continue, and they are gathering signatures on a petition showing public support.

Environmental Justice

  • ​​LAist reports on the July 4 fireworks, which will likely result in the worst air quality LA will see all year.
  • The unprecedented drought in the Southwest could lead to prolonged crop failures and a crumbling of social norms, the LA Times reports. Aridification, defined as the process of prolonged, severe droughts, could lead to the abandonment of thriving cities.