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Issue No. 9 – May 8, 2020

Local News
After renewed national outcry, a white father and son in Georgia have been arrested and charged with murder and aggravated assault in the killing of Ahmaud Arbery, a 25-year-old black man. Arbery was jogging in his neighborhood when he was confronted and killed in what Arbery’s father and others have called a modern-day lynching. A newly released video shows Gregory McMichael and his son Travis waiting with guns in a pickup truck blocking the road when Arbery approached, and they immediately attacked him as he tried to avoid them. The shooting occurred on February 23, but no charges were initially brought, with the first assigned prosecutor recusing herself due to McMichael being a former employee of her office. The second prosecutor also recused himself, after a month on the case, due to a complaint by Arbery’s family that his son worked in the prosecutor’s office where McMichael used to work. Prior to his recusal, the second prosecutor sent a letter to the police department saying there was insufficient probable cause for an arrest. The killing of Arbery occurred just three days prior to the eighth anniversary of Trayvon Martin’s death. The US food supply system has been upended by the Coronavirus as huge shifts have resulted in a massive increase in food bank use at the same time that produce rots in fields and meat processing plants close. The existing system that linked farmers, meat processors, truckers, food distributors, restaurants, grocers and food banks collapsed when restaurants were forced to close, which sharply decreased overall demand. Now grocers are passing on less food as they struggle to keep pace with bulk purchases by customers; other sources, such as leftover food from movie productions, have also vanished. The result is desperation, with food distribution points that give directly to hungry Californians seeing their supplies exhausted minutes after opening.
Local News
Carlos Ernesto Escobar Mejia, a detainee in San Diego, became the first to die of COVID-19 while in ICE custody. His death occurred just one day after the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals overruled a US District judge’s ruling to decrease the population at California’s Adelanto ICE processing facility, one of the largest immigrant detention facilities in the country, to a level that would allow the remaining detainees to maintain a social distance of six feet from one another. Eduardo Robles-Holguin became the sixth inmate to die from COVID-19 at Terminal Island prison in San Pedro, and family members of inmates took to the streets outside the prison to demand justice and safety for incarcerated people. Terminal Island is the location with the largest outbreak of COVID-19 in the federal prison system, with 620 inmates and 15 staff members infected as of May 5. Video footage of an LAPD officer brutally and repeatedly punching a man during an arrest in late April in Boyle Heights has sparked widespread outrage and condemnation, and activists are calling on District Attorney Jackie Lacey to prosecute the officer. The LAPD announced they would conduct an internal review after the video footage spread online this week. The officer has been involved in three prior on-duty shootings. DSA-LA’s Street Watch coalition organized with unhoused activist Davon Brown to seize a hotel room in the DTLA Ritz-Carlton and demand that Mayor Garcetti follow through and commandeer empty hotel rooms to provide safe shelter for the unhoused during the pandemic. The Ritz-Carlton gets $270M in taxpayer subsidies and yet at least 900 rooms remain empty. The LA City Council has so far voted only to publicly identify hotels that have refused to take part in Project Roomkey, a joint effort by the state, county and city to shelter the county’s unhoused in vacant hotel rooms. The program, which is restricted to only the elderly and “medically vulnerable,” aims to find rooms for 15,000 of the county’s estimated 60,000 unhoused. But as of yet, rooms have been found for only 1,800, the program is voluntary, and some hotels have resisted participating.Meanwhile, outside of Los Angeles, several hotels that have willfully participated in Project Roomkey have faced pushback from neighbors and from their own municipal governments. Judges permitted Los Angeles County to issue restraining orders against the cities of Bell Garden and Norwalk, both of which had attempted to prevent hotels from taking part in the program. In Covina, protesters chanting “not in my neighborhood” and “safety first” were ultimately successful in convincing a local hotel owner to back out. Rent strikes are spreading in Los Angeles and across the country as economic desperation compounded by the pandemic further worsens the housing crisis and radicalizes tenants. Membership in the LA Tenants Union has more than doubled since the start of the crisis, and most of their now 8000 members participated in a citywide rent strike on May 1. These strikes are estimated to be the largest since the 1930s. According to one estimate, the federal government could expand existing housing subsidy programs to cover all qualified low-income renters and those newly eligible due to the pandemic for just $100 billion a year, a mere fraction of the trillions handed out by Congress to large corporations in the series of bailout bills passed already. The LA City Council unanimously passed a measure that will allow tenants to sue landlords who violate the city’s eviction rules for those affected by COVID-19. The measure allows judgments of $10,000–$15,000 to tenants of these “unscrupulous” landlords. Tenants will still be required to pay back all missed rent within a year of the end of the emergency. Council President Nury Martinez presented this measure as the last word on rent relief from the city. “While we have done everything that we can, neither the mayor [nor] the Los Angeles City Council has the legal authority or the financial ability to do more,” she asserted in a speech following Mayor Garcetti’s signing of the bill into law. Frustrations continue to grow as many more file for unemployment. California’s Employment Development Department says it has processed 3.5 million claims since mid-March. 2.7 million claims have been filed in the last month, and the state has decided to waive certification requirements until further notice. This comes as news breaks today that US unemployment has reached 14.7% and that 20.5 million jobs were lost in April alone.

Businesses in LA County such as “car dealers and other types of brick-and-mortar stores — including florists and those that sell toys, music, books, clothing and sporting goods” are reopening today with curbside pickup. Officials caution that this is not a return to normal, as LA County accounts for over half of the COVID-19 deaths in California.
Elections
Ahead of the May 12 special election to replace Katie Hill in Congressional District 25, Democrats argued that black voters are being disenfranchised by the unbalanced placement of voter centers. “Lancaster is the single most diverse part of the district, and yet the nearest voting center is nine miles away,” said LA County Democratic Party Chair Mark J. Gonzalez.
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Issue No. 8 – May 1, 2020

Happy May Day!
Happy May Day to all the comrades in struggle today! DSA-LA’s Political Education Committee shares this short pamphlet of assorted May Day histories, memories, and songs compiled as both a celebration of our radical tradition and as a call to commit (and recommit) to our collective fight for an ambitious and emancipatory political horizon. As Martha Foley says in these pages, “We are not alone! There are others, many, many others and we triumph!” Solidarity forever!
Local News
California is facing a record low turnout in 2020’s census. With conventional canvassing and door knocking impossible, advocates worry about undercounts in vulnerable communities. You can take the census online here. On April 28th, International Workers Memorial Day, Trump used the Defense Production Act to compel meat processors across the country to stay open, or reopen, despite the plants being the site of some of the highest rates of COVID-19 transmission nationwide. The United Food and Commercial Workers International Union reported the same day that at least 20 meat processing plant workers had died and 5000 had been hospitalized or were showing symptoms of the virus. In addition to forcing these plants to stay open at the expense of workers’ lives, Occupational Safety and Health Administration and the Labor Department are vowing that the federal government will defend employers against worker lawsuits over workplace exposures during the pandemic. The move comes at a time when some state governments are also signaling to workers that they will lose continuing unemployment benefits if they decline to return to their workplace out of concern for their health and safety. Immigrant detainees at ICE detention centers continue to report being on hunger strike for their release and for protections against COVID-19 as the number of confirmed cases among detainees and employees grows daily. Incarcerated immigrants at Otay Mesa, site of the largest outbreak of any detention center nationwide, report that ICE is massively underreporting cases in detention. ICE has tested only 705 out of 30–40,000 detainees as of this week, with 60% of those tested coming back positive. Thus far, 70% of federal prison inmates tested have been positive for COVID-19. A federal judge this week upheld Trump’s recent executive order that uses nativist arguments of “protecting American workers” during the pandemic to bar green cards for many for a period of 60 days or more. Administration officials have indicated to supporters in private calls that the order is a preview of more long-term restrictions to immigration. According to the Asian Pacific Policy and Planning council, more than 1,100 physical and verbal attacks against Asian Americans have been documented since late March across 46 states, with women more likely to be targeted than men. Activists in California are calling on county supervisors to denounce discrimination and hate crimes targeting Asian Americans during the COVID-19 pandemic. In March, the FBI issued an intelligence report warning of an increase in hate crimes “based on the assumption that a portion of the US public will associate COVID-19 with China and Asian American populations.” Echoing historical xenophobic and racist tropes used against Asian Americans and communities of color, President Trump, other politicians, and media figures have repeatedly used the phrase “China virus” to refer to the pandemic rather than the terms “coronavirus” or “COVID-19” used by public health officials. Incidents can be reported to Stop AAPI Hate hereSome law enforcement agencies are publicly pushing back against the Judicial Council’s April 6 emergency bail schedule, which lowers bail for low-level crimes to $0 statewide in an effort to reduce crowding in jails and combat the spread of COVID-19. “These misguided judges and the professional apologists for criminals saw an opportunity to utilize COVID-19 to advance their dangerous views on incarceration,” said the head of the San Jose police union. In November, California will vote on SB-10, which will eliminate cash bail permanently and replace it with a risk-based system. A Northern California police officer is under investigation after a viral video of the officer punching a 14-year-old African American boy while pinning him to the ground was released by the boy’s family, creating nationwide outrage. Tanya Faison, founder of Black Lives Matter Sacramento, noted that this was the third encounter in the past year in the Sacramento area that involved police officers over-policing children of color. In June, Sacramento police officers put a spit hood on a 12-year-old boy, and in July, three 13-year-old boys were held at gunpoint by a Sacramento police officer, Faison said. This week the California Labor Secretary has created a separate portal for the Pandemic Assistance Program. Self-employed and gig workers can now apply for $600 a week and receive compensation for any wages lost or diminished since March 29. Many are still struggling to access the original EDD Unemployment website, and although the state has planned to hire more staff, 43% of those who have already applied are waiting to receive benefits. Conservative groups have filed a lawsuit against Governor Gavin Newsom, after Newsom’s announcement on April 15 that the state would allocate $75 million in aid for undocumented immigrants as part of a plan to provide $125 million in aid for those without legal status. The plan, allocating $500 per adult, would be financed partly by NGOs. This does not cover even basic necessities in Los Angeles, where the average rent alone is $2,375 for a one-bedroom apartment. Governor Gavin Newsom detailed four stages for California to begin loosening stay-at-home orders. The first phase, which we are currently in, involves the state increasing its testing, contact tracing, stores of personal protective equipment, and hospital surge capacity, while also having essential workplaces make physical and workflow adaptations and encouraging behavioral changes by individuals. Hitting benchmarks here will enable Phase 2, which allows for lower-risk sectors to gradually reopen with modifications that maintain social distancing guidelines, including some retail stores, manufacturing sites, offices where telecommuting is not possible and some public spaces like parks and trails. This phase will also require wage replacement, to allow sick workers to remain at home. Phase 3 will allow for the reopening of higher-risk workplaces, while Phase 4 will mark the end of stay-at-home orders and permit the reopening of the highest-risk events, like large-scale concerts, conventions and live-audience sports. To achieve Phase 4 will require coronavirus therapeutics to be in place. Beginning May 4, LA City Council will resume weekly meetings on Tuesdays and Wednesdays. 
Elections
The California Attorney General’s office is reviewing whether Los Angeles County District Attorney Jackie Lacey’s husband should be charged with a crime. David Lacey pointed a gun at Black Lives Matter activists outside the Lacey home on March 2, prior to the primary election. Jackie Lacey is in a runoff election with challenger George Gascon; primary election results at the precinct level are now mapped here.
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Issue No. 7 – April 24, 2020

DSA-LA ORGANIZING PROFILES:

STREETWATCH VICTORY!
What is Streetwatch? Streetwatch began in 2017 as a project of the DSA-LA Housing & Homelessness (H&H) committee, inspired by and trained by the amazing organizers in the Los Angeles Community Action Network (LA CAN), who began their “Community Watch” program in 2006, and won several lawsuits against the city. Streetwatch member Jed Parriott, who is also a member of LA CAN, noticed that those lawsuits ended in settlements that only applied to Skid Row, and realized there was a need for a similar program that gathered evidence of the city’s harmful practices throughout LA. The Streetwatch group quickly grew into a big part of the work of the H&H committee. Streetwatch teams are now active in Echo Park, Hollywood, Westside, SF Valley, Koreatown and Downtown LA, with a newly formed South Bay team in progress. Streetwatch co-founded a citywide coalition that calls for Services Not Sweeps, which has now inspired the similar Solutions Not Sweeps in San Francisco and works closely with Ktown for All.A Major Legal Victory Streetwatch was there when Janet Garcia, a housecleaner, had all her work supplies thrown away by the city as she was using a nearby restroom, and has seen the city do this countless times. Janet Garcia and seven other unhoused people in different locations agreed to sue the City of LA. Members of LA CAN, Streetwatch, Ktown for All and lawyers at Legal Aid Foundation offered to negotiate with the city, and spent eight months trying to come to an agreement out of court. The city refused to offer meaningful concessions and the negotiations failed, so lawyers at Legal Aid filed the lawsuit, which challenges the city’s municipal code 56.11, one part of which allows the city to immediately trash anything they consider a “bulky item.” People living through these dehumanizing sweeps get no warning and no clear instructions on what is and is not bulky. The court ruled on April 13 that this part of the city code is likely unconstitutional, so the City of LA must immediately stop enforcing it. The lawsuit continues against other aspects of LAMC 56.11, but this is a huge victory for Janet Garcia and everyone else who has had their rights violated because they cannot afford a roof over their heads. DSA-LA was instrumental in the work that allowed this lawsuit to go forward; without Streetwatch we would not have had the leverage to get this result. In 2019, LA CAN presented DSA-LA with a “Freedom Now” award. We are proud of our work to bring together housed and unhoused people across the city, fighting against capitalism together — which continues with our #NoVacancyCA campaign!
LOCAL NEWS
Hundreds of immigrant detainees report being on hunger strike to demand protections against COVID-19 at three ICE detention facilities in California — Adelanto, Mesa Verde and Otay Mesa. At Otay Mesa, site of the second-worst outbreak in ICE detention, 42 detainees and eight ICE employees have been confirmed positive for the virus as of April 22; ICE has confirmed 287 detainees and 35 employees in their facilities testing positive nationwide. Detainees at Otay Mesa report that employees of the private prison company Core Civic, which runs the facility, attempted to force them to sign a release form — written only in English — in exchange for a single surgical mask that they are expected to use for a period of 15 days. Those who refused to sign and protested were pepper sprayed. Detainees at other ICE facilities nationwide have described similar abuse as they have advocated for themselves in light of the risks of the pandemic. On April 20, a federal judge ordered ICE to review the custody of every at-risk person in detention nationwide and consider their release, saying that the government’s failure to protect them from the risks of COVID-19 “likely exhibited callous indifference to [their] safety and wellbeing.”  144 people incarcerated by the state of California have tested positive for COVID-19 as of April 22, as have 97 Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation employees. The first confirmed death of an incarcerated person in a California state prison came Sunday in San Bernardino County. Meanwhile, Lompoc, CA, is the site of the worst outbreak of COVID-19 in a federal prison in the US; 69 incarcerated people and 25 employees have tested positive there. Research suggests that mass incarceration will be a major driver of COVID-19 infection rates and fatalities. The United States incarcerates more people than any other country on earth and also leads the world in COVID-19 cases. An epidemiological study released in collaboration with the ACLU this week finds that models projecting 100,000 COVID-19 deaths in the United States have failed to account for mass incarceration as a vector of infection, and estimates that an additional 100,000 people could die unless drastic decarceration is undertaken.  A coalition of more than 50 Black Los Angeles–based community leaders issued 55 immediate and long-term demands in light of COVID-19 and rates of Black death, stating that “Interlocking economic, political, and social injustices collide with long-standing patterns of medical racism to make COVID-19 a Black issue that demands a response specific to the needs of the Black community” and highlighting that “Black people are dying at two-three times our population share from COVID-19. In Los Angeles County, the rate of Black death is twice our population share, with Black people constituting 9% of the County population, but 17% of the COVID-19 deaths. With nearly 900,000 Black residents in the County and 403,000 Black residents in the City (the eighth-highest number of any city in the United States), what happens in Los Angeles has serious national implications. While several initiatives have been launched nationally, state-wide and locally, none speak to the particular needs of the Black community.”  The coronavirus pandemic continues to place a spotlight on the devastating impact of air pollution on the human body, with severe cases of COVID-19 being linked to high air pollution. Scientists have recently detected coronavirus on particles of air pollution, and are investigating if this may increase the distance that the virus can travel. Even before the pandemic, air pollution was considered the largest environmental risk factor for disease in the US. Communities of color are particularly impacted by pollution due to higher rates of pollution and decades-long disparities in healthcare systems. The result is that African-American children are “500 times more likely to die from asthma than white children, and have a 250 percent higher hospitalization rate for the condition.” In Wisconsin, African-Americans are just 6% of the population but account for half of the COVID-19 deaths, and “in New York City, Hispanic people represent 29 percent of the population, and 34 percent of the city’s deaths — the largest percentage by race.” The impact of pollution goes far beyond being associated with severe cases of COVID-19. Studies have indicated links between high pollution and long-term health impacts such as increased likelihood of developing high blood pressure, asthma, diabetes, dementia and Alzheimer’s disease, and negative impacts on fetal birth weight.  At Wednesday’s Los Angeles City Council meeting, a bid to blanket ban all evictions for the duration of the Coronavirus emergency failed, by a vote of 6–7. A measure already passed in March banned evictions of tenants who had been impacted by the pandemic, but Councilmember Mike Bonin, one of the sponsors of the blanket ban, echoed objections that the earlier law forced tenants to demonstrate loss of income, and allowed unscrupulous landlords to strong-arm tenants unsure of their rights. The city attorney, again present at council in an emergency capacity, reiterated concerns that a blanket ban would exceed the city’s authority and open the city to lawsuits. These concerns were cited by the measure’s opponents, including Councilmember Mitch O’Farrell, who called the process a “charade” and specifically chastised the legal advocacy group Public Counsel — which had released analysis arguing the city indeed had the legal authority to enforce an eviction moratorium — for offering “false hope.” The legality of such a measure remains in dispute. Councilmember Gil Cedillo reassured the council that the knowledge that the City of Los Angeles would not be going much farther than it had to protect renters would bring people “peace.” The City Council passed a measure voicing support for combined relief for renters and property owners at the state and federal level, and moved over a million dollars into a fund that would provide assistance to renters. A similar fund established in Santa Clara quickly ran through 11 million dollars in March. A study found that people “experiencing homelessness are twice as likely to be hospitalized with COVID-19 and two to three times more likely to die than the general population.” Getting into a shelter may not help, as outbreaks are developing in some — and a new UC Berkeley study shows “high-density congregate settings” to be unsafe even if operators follow social distancing guidelines. A better solution is to use single-occupancy hotel rooms, but, as of Tuesday, LA County has leased just 2500 and fewer than 750 are occupied, vastly below the city’s 60,000 homeless residents. Efforts to expand the use of hotels is being met with resistance from local residents. A drive-through protest of stay-at-home orders was held by right-wing group “Operation Gridlock” in Downtown Los Angeles, but was sparsely attended. The Los Angeles Times plans to stop publishing three community newspapers: the Glendale News-Press, Burbank Leader and La Cañada Valley Sun. “The three titles, while journalistically sound, are operating at significant losses,” the paper explained in a note to readers.
ELECTIONS
DSA-LA member and city council candidate Nithya Raman — an urban planner who has focused on urban poverty, housing and homelessness and is endorsed by DSA-LA in the ongoing race for City Council District 4 — published an op-ed criticizing the City Council for cracking down on unlicensed street vendors, writing that “in an environment of near-universal desperation like this one, getting relief requires a loud voice to make your needs heard. Unfortunately, those who need the most help right now are often people we’ve forced into the shadows all along. The faces of LA’s shadow food economy are its street vendors. There are about 50,000 street vendors operating in Los Angeles, 10,000 of whom sell food. Many are undocumented. Many are refugees, whose families came here fleeing violence in Central America. Many are seniors. 80 percent are women of color…Los Angeles has never done right by its vendors. This crisis was an opportunity to make up for decades of cruelty — to give neighborhood vendors the opportunity to serve food safely and legally, and help fill the gaps left by dried-up supply chains and shuttered restaurants. Instead, the city has done the opposite. We’ve failed them again.”
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Issue No. 6 – April 17, 2020

LOCAL NEWS

  • The coronavirus pandemic is having a devastating and disproportionate impact on black communities, and black pastors and activists representing communities from Los Angeles to Philadelphia are decrying disproportionately high death rates among African-Americans and demanding immediate action, including data on COVID-19 deaths by race and access to treatment. “Blacks often live in communities with less access to high-quality, affordable healthcare. This limits testing and treatment which results in more severe cases and deaths,” said the Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II, president and senior lecturer of Repairers of the Breach. Due to persistent systemic racism, black communities are more likely to suffer from pre-existing conditions and unequal access to healthcare, black workers are more likely to hold jobs deemed essential and black people are disproportionately incarcerated in a prison system that is unsanitary and makes social distancing impossible. Environmental racism is also contributing to deaths, with polluted low-income neighborhoods in Los Angeles being especially impacted. A week after the California Department of Public Health began collecting statewide data on how COVID-19 infections and deaths break down by race, the partial data released has shown that African-Americans, who make up 6% of the state’s population, currently account for 7% of infections and 11% of the 750 deaths, with a hospitalization and ICU rate 2.5x higher than those of white Californians. This disparate impact is also reflected in health data from the 2009 H1N1 pandemic in which black people suffered the highest rates of severe illness and death. On April 14 the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors ordered LA County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer to provide a breakdown of county data within 14 days, including an analysis of testing and COVID-19 fatalities by race, ethnicity and age group.
  • Both Mayor Garcetti and Governor Newsom rolled out frameworks this week that will be used to determine when businesses and public spaces will be allowed to reopen. Both plans call for a stronger, more widespread system for testing and isolating coronavirus cases as well as strengthening hospital infrastructure to deal with future surges in infections. However, there is still no timeframe on when the lockdown may be eased or when businesses and public spaces will be able to reopen; we will all have to adjust to a new normal. LA County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer says that retail stores, which will be the first to reopen, will have to put a limit on how many are in the store at any one time. Museums and cultural centers will likely have to do the same, and concerts and sporting events may not return until sometime next year. Talk of reopening might be very premature, as The Atlantic reports that growth of COVID-19 testing, critical to reopening the country, has stalled in the past two weeks.
  • Three weeks after the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act was signed into law, Americans have begun to receive their $1200 payments. About 60 million checks have already gone out to those who filed their 2018 or 2019 tax returns with direct-deposit information. A second round, in approximately one week, will reach Social Security recipients who did not file tax returns but provided direct-deposit information in other forms. A third round in the first week of May will cover those who are receiving the money by check.
  • After an ongoing outcry from activists and residents for more relief for renters, a plan to give Los Angeles renters $1000 a month for three months was approved unanimously by the LA County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday. Under the plan, the county will use federal assistance money received in the recent stimulus, coupled with private funding, to provide rent aid to households that will not need to be paid back. Meanwhile California renters including sick, elderly and pregnantresidents continue to face evictions from landlords, highlighting the need for greater protections for renters and gaps in existing protections.
  • The LA mayor’s office created a program that randomly awards a prepaid debit card of up to $1500 to residents, but the application website crashed after a crush of 56,000 applications on the first day. To be eligible for what’s being called the Angeleno card, residents’ income must have been below the federal poverty line before the stay-at-home order was issued last month or they must have fallen into “deeper hardship” with their income reduced by at least 50%. Eligible applicants will be placed in a lottery. On Tuesday, after the application web page melted down and phone lines crashed, Garcetti told desperate residents not to “worry if you’ve not gotten through because there are two more days still.”
  • Amid reports from food banks of massive increases in usage, crops are being left to rot and thousands of gallons of raw milk dumped, while lines and demand at Southern California food banks are at historic levels. There has been a 49% increase in food distributed by the Los Angeles Regional Food Bank, which serves about 600 agencies across the region. Without the demand from restaurants, farmers say there is not a market for the produce and food banks cannot cover the cost of the labor needed to harvest it.
  • Scientists have concluded that man-made global warming is responsible for at least half of a historic drought hitting California and western states that is turning into one of the deepest megadroughts in 1200 years. UCLA scientist Daniel Swain highlighted the significance of the results, saying it provides evidence “that human-caused climate change transformed what might have otherwise been a moderate long-term drought into a severe event comparable to the ‘megadroughts’ of centuries past.”

ELECTIONS

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Issue No. 5 – April 10, 2020

LOCAL NEWS

  • Governor Gavin Newsom announced that 2.3 million unemployment claims have been processed in the last four weeks. Many newly unemployed workers are struggling to access benefits as phone lines are overwhelmed during the daily four-hour window provided by the Employment Development Department. In response, state lawmakers have called to extend the hours. Other weaknesses in the system have also been exposed: California’s unemployment benefits have not kept up with inflation, and limited reserves mean that the state will likely have to borrow from the federal government to pay out the massive increase in claims. Starting Sunday, weekly benefits will increase by $600, funded by the federal stimulus relief package. However, the state has not yet been able to develop a mechanism for distributing benefits to the newly expanded pool of workers eligible for unemployment, which includes people who are self-employed, temporary workers, part-time workers, freelancers, contract workers, and gig economy workers.
  • With coronavirus spreading at a San Diego detention center, the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency says it will review cases for release nationwide. This may be too little too late for some high-risk detainees who have been placed in close proximity to other potentially infected detainees due to an ICE practice known as “cohorting.” If one detainee in a unit tests positive for the virus, then all of the other detainees in that same unit become “cohorts” and are isolated together, which means that someone could avoid being infected by the initial positive carrier only to be placed together with others who are potentially contagious for two weeks. Then if another cohort tests positive, the clock is reset and the detainees must weather another 14-day period. Detainees say the practice of cohorting is particularly anxiety-inducing for those with conditions that make them susceptible to severe COVID-19 symptoms.
  • California officials are looking at some measures to ease overcrowded prisons as more prison officials test positive for coronavirus. These potentially include 6-month early release for thousands of inmates, setting bail at zero for misdemeanor and lower-level felony offenses, and the expansion of video and phone use to ensure defendants are not held in custody without timely hearings.
  • While the Bay Area has prohibited almost all residential and commercial construction, most of California is continuing with construction projects amid the pandemic, with Governor Gavin Newsom saying that a wide ban like in the state of New York is not necessary. Robbie Hunter, the head of the Building and Construction Trades Council of California, which represents 460,000 workers and 60,000 apprentices, backed Newsom, saying “We are used to serious training for different scenarios — and we have applied everything we’ve got on this.” Despite their assurances, at least one worker has tested positive at the construction site for the SoFi Stadium, the future home of the NFL’s Chargers and Rams, and another is suspected positive. One worker said “If our safety was the most important thing, they wouldn’t have us out here,” while another said “Everyone is a little nervous, but we need the money.”
  • “President Newsom” was briefly trending on Twitter this week, following an interview with Rachel Maddow in which the governor announced that California had procured a monthly supply of 200 million N95 respiratory and surgical masks through negotiations with “a consortium of nonprofits.” Newsom later announced that California was able to loan 500 ventilators to states that were desperately undersupplied due to COVID-19. This led to some controversy within the state, where some counties are still concerned about their lack of ventilators on hand during a week when California anticipates a potential surge of cases. “It did catch us off guard,” said Kevin Jeffries, Riverside County’s district supervisor. “Our request [for ventilators] through the state and feds have not been filled and our attempt to purchase them on the market has not been successful.”
  • After arriving on March 27, the Mercy, a massive floating hospital “carrying 1,000 beds, a crew of 800, 12 operating rooms, labs, pharmacy, and radiological equipment,” has treated just 31 patients, none of whom are COVID-19 patients. According to its captain, this is by design, with the ship currently testing the system in place so that it can act as a release valve for local area hospitals should they begin to see a surge in coronavirus cases. If necessary, the ship may shift to treating only coronavirus patients.
  • As programs that provided home health aides and other services have been forced to close by the COVID-19 pandemic, many families have had to start caring for severely disabled loved ones on their own. Caretakers for people with developmental disabilities are not specifically included in Newsom’s 14-page order enumerating who is and isn’t an essential worker. Students with disabilities— especially those in minority communities — have struggled similarly with a loss of their safety nets as an effect of district-wide school closures.
  • Local officials are beginning a crackdown on those who violate the state’s stay-at-home order, with Los Angeles arresting and fining individuals and filing criminal charges against businesses that refuse to close. Amid worries that cases may begin to surge in Los Angeles in the coming weeks, Barbara Ferrer, director of the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, said that the city’s ability to manage the surge will depend on residents adhering to guidelines. The maximum penalty for a violation is a $1,000 fine and up to six months in jail.
  • A nonprofit named Shared Harvest — founded by doctors Nana Afoh-Manin, Joanne Moreau, and Briana DeCuir — launched a pop-up coronavirus testing site in Culver City last week to serve uninsured and underinsured residents of Los Angeles. Despite the high costs of testing, they plan to expand the service. “The only way we are going to make sure that no individuals are left behind is to get into the community, meet them where they are, and provide the services they need so that we can stop this virus,” said CEO Afoh-Manin.
  • Coronavirus may exacerbate existing problems in the housing market in California, further driving up the cost of affordable housing, which in some counties has already reached the eye-popping sticker price of $1.1 million per unit. With over a million California residents recently having lost their jobs, the current 1.3 million shortfall in affordable housing units is likely to get even worse. Meanwhile, cities face a potentially devastating loss of tax revenue, which will leave them with even less money to finance affordable housing.
  • April 1, for many, was the first time their rent was due since COVID-19 cost them their employment, leading to uncertainty for many who will struggle to afford their rent. This week a patchwork of efforts at the state and local level sought to address this. At the April 7 meeting of the Los Angeles City Council, Councilmember Mike Bonin put forth a motion that would reclassify rent as “consumer debt,” which would mean that unpaid rent, though it would still need to be repaid, could no longer lead to an eviction. The motion will be considered at a later meeting. At the county level, supervisors Janice Hahn and Hilda Solis proposed an emergency rent-assistance program for up to $1,000 a month for three months to renters affected by the coronavirus pandemic. The strongest protection for tenants happened at the state level, as the Judicial Council adopted an emergency court rule that effectively — though not literally — prevents all evictions until 90 days after the governor lifts the state of emergency. None of these measures offer rent forgiveness, and all would leave tenants responsible for repaying back rent at some later date when they will again be vulnerable to eviction. Meanwhile, landlords are finding various ways of strong-arming and deceiving tenants into paying rent.
  • In an effort dubbed Project Roomkey, Los Angeles County officials will work with the state government and Federal Emergency Management Agency to utilize currently vacant hotel and motel rooms to house some of the county’s unhoused residents. Officials say that 1,340 beds will be available by next week. Their goal is to eventually reach 15,000, which would help just a quarter of the city’s 60,000 homeless, many of whom are considered highly vulnerable to the coronavirus. This effort is in conjunction with the city converting recreation centers into emergency shelters, with 563 beds installed at 13 locations so far.
  • A federal judge excoriated Los Angeles officials after he found that over 80% of handwashing stations in Skid Row were without water, leaving its vulnerable population without one of the key defenses to contracting coronavirus. In response, Mayor Eric Garcetti pledged to have the stations refilled daily. The Legal Aid Foundation has further argued that the 410 handwashing stations around Los Angeles are inadequate for meeting the public health crisis. Food supplies for the unhoused are also being jeopardized due to hoarding and the economic downturn, as staples become hard to get and food pantry operations are disrupted.
  • California has issued its first fracking permits since July 2019, a move Jamie Court of Consumer Watchdog criticized, saying, “With the entire state shut down and kids out of school, what purpose could approving these fracking permits have now other than to do a solid for the oil industry when no one is watching.”

ELECTIONS

  • Senator Bernie Sanders has suspended his presidential campaign, leaving former Vice President Joe Biden as the presumptive nominee and President Donald Trump’s general election opponent. While falling short of the nomination, Sanders had a transformative effect on national politics, raising vast sums of money exclusively through small-dollar donors and dramatically shifting the policy debate toward previously unthinkable initiatives such as Medicare for All, a $15 minimum wage, and free public college and student debt forgiveness. Biden, in an attempt to win over the Sanders coalition, has recently announced proposals such as lowering the Medicare eligibility age from 65 to 60 and means-tested student debt forgiveness.
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Issue No. 4 – April 3, 2020

LOCAL NEWS

  • The coronavirus crisis has put strain and increased scrutiny on California’s prisons and jails, as an inmate and four employees at Los Angeles County jails have tested positive. Inmates at Men’s Central Jail say that hygiene supplies have run out and many inmates have resorted to using bed sheets as toilet paper. In response, 3,500 California inmates have been released statewide in an effort to decrease the prison population, and the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors has approved an order for the County Public Health Department to review conditions in the prisons, with plans to release more inmates. Last week, roughly 10% of Los Angeles County’s inmate population was released. 
  • Tracking of positive tests in each Los Angeles neighborhood reflects that the highest number of positive tests are in Pacific Palisades and Beverly Hills, while South Los Angeles has noticeably fewer positives. Wealthy neighborhoods are getting better access to testing; clinics in poorer neighborhoods like Saint John’s Well Child and Family Center are only getting dozens of tests for a patient pool of thousands. Los Angeles is suffering from the same shortfall in coronavirus testing capability that is hampering efforts to combat the pandemic across the U.S. Major problems include testing sites lacking basic materials such as swabs and many hospitals having to send their tests offsite, which can cause days-long delays of results. The delay renders the data “relatively useless” to officials, because it means the data cannot be used to trace an infected person’s contacts to stop the spread. Los Angeles County’s coronavirus testing coordinator said the “failure was federal, state and local. We all failed.”
  • Measures taken by California Governor Gavin Newsom to protect renters are so weak that even the L.A. Times Editorial Board has called his executive order “flimsy,” saying the so-called moratorium on evictions is really just a delay. Evictions can still be initiated now due to non-payment and then enforced after May 31. Furthermore, the onus is placed on renters to prove in writing that their non-payment is related to COVID-19, which could be particularly difficult for undocumented workers or micro-entrepreneurs, such as street vendors, who do not have traditional proof of income. All missed rent also must be repaid in full. Newsom has the power to prevent all evictions, but is choosing not to.
  • In a marathon 11-hour City Council online Zoom meeting last Friday, the Los Angeles City Council passed a round of emergency measures intended to add protections for renters and workers at large businesses struggling during the pandemic. The city now requires businesses with over 500 employees to provide 80 hours of paid leave that workers can use to recover from COVID-19 or to care for their family. This category of employers had been exempted from the federal coronavirus sick leave bill signed into law on March 18. The council also passed a watered-down motion that expands the length of time renters can pay back rent that goes unpaid during the coronavirus outbreak — from the six months originally proposed by Mayor Eric Garcetti to a year. It should be noted that eight of the 15 councilmembers are disclosed rental property owners, some of whom even still voted to strengthen protections for renters. The eviction moratorium failed by one vote, with Paul Krekorian and Curren D. Price Jr. recusing themselves. Price owns more properties than any other councilmember, with 13 units. The moratorium as it stands now would put a halt to all evictions and late fees for tenants that are impacted by COVID-19, until the emergency declaration is lifted, including commercial tenants.
  • L.A. Times beat reporters David Zahniser and Emily Alpert Reyes have outlined the wide-reaching extent of the federal investigation that brought the downfall of former councilmember Mitchell Englander. Englander admitting last week to having taken envelopes full of cash in casino bathrooms is merely the latest cartoonish example of public grift. Englander was accompanied by current councilmember John Lee on the trip where the cash was handed over, though Lee claims innocence. Councilmember Jose Huizar had his home raided by the FBI in 2018 in connection to a political fundraiser.
  • Militancy is rising among California’s tenants as they are pushed to the brink of survival by the coronavirus crisis. While advocacy coalitions such as Healthy LA (which includes DSA-LA and other partners) are pushing elected officials to do more with policies such as rent freezes and rent forgiveness, people are taking matters into their own hands with rent strikes and the Reclaiming Our Homes movement. For answers to common questions about what to do if a tenant cannot pay rent or receives an eviction notice due to coronavirus, see here.
  • Public transit routes are being reduced or suspended throughout Southern California due to coronavirus, and the Beverly Hills City Council and Metro are moving to speed up construction on the Purple Line subway extension during the lull in congestion. Metro has also expanded its Mobility on Demand program to cover trips to grocery stores, pharmacies, and medical facilities. 
  • Power plant operator AES Corp. has finalized an agreement to sell 51 acres of Redondo Beach waterfront property to real estate developer Leo Pustilnikov, including a commitment to shut down the gas-fired power plant on the site by 2023. Redondo Beach officials and activists are pushing to shutter the plant this year, after years of debate over the fate of the power plant. State policy has mandated that coastal power plants either close or stop the destructive process of using ocean water for cooling, and AES Corp. had been scheduled to shut down the plant by the end of 2020. However, the California Public Utilities Commission proposed extending the closure deadline for four coastal power plants in November of 2019. Local officials are pressing the State Water Resources Control Board to reject the extension, with Redondo Beach Mayor Bill Brand commenting that “[the plant] emits tons of fine particulate emissions, volatile organic compounds, nitrogen oxides and greenhouse gases every year it operates…there are 21,000 people living within one mile of the power plant.” Meeting the state’s target of 100% clean electricity by 2045 would likely require a total or near-total phaseout of gas. 

ELECTIONS

  • Certified election results from the March 3 primary were released on March 27. Nithya Raman, who is a member of and endorsed by DSA-LA, will advance to a runoff with incumbent David Ryu for the Los Angeles City Council’s Fourth District; DSA-LA member and school board incumbent Jackie Goldberg was victorious with 58% of the vote in L.A. Unified District 5; and Los Angeles District Attorney Jackie Lacey will compete in a runoff against former San Francisco D.A. George Gascon.
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Issue No. 3 – March 27, 2020

LOCAL NEWS

  • The Senate and House have passed the coronavirus bailout bill, which will be signed into law by Donald Trump. Media focus has been placed on topline numbers and provisions that will bring relief to working Americans, through direct cash payments and expanded unemployment benefits (including for gig workers), and to small businesses, including loans that convert into grants when the money is spent on payroll, rent or utilities. However, this coverage is deceptive in its failure to point out that the scale of assistance provided to working Americans and small businesses is dwarfed by that being provided to huge corporations: the total amount provided for unemployment benefits, direct cash payments, and small business loans accounts for $900 billion of the bailout, while corporations have access to $4.5 trillion. The latter figure is being reported as merely $500 billion for corporations, but $454 billion of that money is being used to capitalize a lending program by the Federal Reserve, which can then loan out 10 times that amount, resulting in the $4.5 trillion number. 
  • Mechanisms for delivering the $900 billion will likely result in long delays for those most desperately in need: the cash payments rely on direct deposit info already being on file with the IRS, or else there could be a wait for months for a check in the mail that may be sent to an old address; unemployment claims will be administered by states, which may not be able to efficiently handle the huge influx of requests; and the small business loans are to be administered by a notoriously ineffective agency (the Small Business Administration), while loopholes in the legislation allow large businesses — including potentially Trump’s own hotels — to get some of the money. There is also no effective oversight of the $4.5 trillion corporate bailout, with Secretary of the Treasury Steve Mnuchin being placed in charge and granted broad powers to waive potential restrictions. As a reminder, prior to becoming treasury secretary, Mnuchin was CEO of OneWest Bank, which in the aftermath of the 2008/9 financial crisisengaged in “ruthless foreclosure practices, ranging from locking out one homeowner during a Minneapolis blizzard to foreclosing on another over a 27-cent payment shortfall.”
  • On Monday, Governor Gavin Newsom announced that California is expected to face shortages of 17,000 hospital beds, as well as hundreds of millions of protective masks and gloves for health care workers. Some counties face shortages of the swabs that are currently necessary to test for COVID-19. The attempt to meet this shortfall, and to plan for an expected increase in patients, has consisted of an urgent, but patchwork, collection of efforts from state, county, and municipal governments, along with support from the private sector.
  • California has received over 1 million claims for unemployment benefits in the last 12 days. Entertainment industry workers may be eligible for additional assistance.
  • Local union leaders are asking for more protections for grocery workers after other states including Minnesota and Vermont have reclassified grocery store employees as emergency workers, enabling them to access additional benefits such as free childcare. “Our workers need first priority when it comes to testing, leaves, and childcare,” says John Grant, president of the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union local 770, which represents over 20,000 grocery store workers in Los Angeles, Ventura, Santa Barbara, and San Luis Obispo counties. As grocery store workers are increasingly placed at risk of contracting COVID-19, the union is reaching out to Governor Gavin Newsom’s office to seek reclassification.
  • In a video statement on Monday, Superintendent Austin Beutner announced that L.A. Unified schools will remain closed until May 1. Instruction will move online until school campuses can reopen. Beutner has authorized $100 million in emergency spending, and requested an emergency appropriation of “$500 per student” from state legislatures to balance the district’s budget. Expenses brought on by the pandemic include the costs of ensuring every student has access to a computer and an internet connection. L.A. Unified is also providing meals to all who ask at 60 “grab-and-go” distribution centers throughout the city. “I wish I could start by telling you it will all be back to normal sometime soon,” said Beutner in the video statement. “But that is not the case.”
  • State and local officials are warning that the worst is yet to comefor coronavirus in California. As of today, LA County has 1,230 cases and 21 deaths. LA Mayor Eric Garcetti said a large influx could be just 6–12 days away and that residents should be “prepared for a couple months” with the current lockdown in place.
  • In response to video of Los Angelenos gathering in crowds in the city’s beaches and parks, often making no efforts to practice social distancing, Mayor Eric Garcetti has closed all beach parking lots in Venice and Santa Monica, and banned recreational sports in city parks. In addition, city-owned golf courses have been closed, as have many hiking trails. The mayor tweeted: “That doesn’t mean gather elsewhere. This is serious. Stay home and save lives.”
  • Climate advocates, environmental groups and renewable energy companies are criticizing a plan approved by the California Public Utilities Commission “that aims to cut power-plant emissions by about 25% over the next decade — a slower pace than those emissions fell during the previous decade.” The commission rejected an alternative plan to cut emissions in half, and climate advocates believe the current plan will jeopardize the state’s ability to meet the goal enshrined in state law to reduce economy-wide pollution 40% below 1990 levels by 2030. Climate and labor groups had appealed to Governor Gavin Newsom to intervene, however the Governor’s office did not respond to a request for comment. In light of the COVID-19 crisis, renewable energy advocates are arguing for more rapid action so that clean energy construction can provide an opportunity for economic stimulus and job creation.
  • After pleading guilty to 84 counts of involuntary manslaughter in the 2018 Camp Fire, which killed 85 and destroyed 18,000 buildings in Paradise, CA, Pacific Gas & Electric plans to pay $4 million in fines and penalties out of the $13.5 billion Fire Victim Trust created during bankruptcy proceedings. During the investigation of the Camp Fire, “investigators found that PG&E workers had failed to do climbing inspections on many of its grid towers, including the century-old tower where equipment failed the morning of Nov. 8, 2018.” Community members and local elected officials are arguing that the judge overseeing the utility’s bankruptcy should rule against this use of the fire victims’ fund.
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Issue No. 2 – March 20, 2020

LOCAL NEWS

  • Yesterday, Governor Gavin Newsom ordered all Californians to stay at home, marking the first statewide mandatory restrictions on life in California since the outbreak of COVID-19 as 20 people have died in the state and more than 1000 tested positive. The restrictions still allow for people to travel to “gas stations, pharmacies, grocery stores, farmers markets, food banks, convenience stores, takeout and delivery restaurants, banks and laundromats” and to “leave their homes to care for a relative or a friend or seek healthcare services.” The order also does not apply to workers in what are considered to be critical infrastructure sectors such as healthcare, transportation, energy, and others. No time limit has been placed on the stay at home order and failure to abide by the order could result in being charged with a misdemeanor.
  • The state legislature has also been shut down. Prior to departing, lawmakers approved a plan for $500 million to help hospitals in the state prepare for an onslaught of infected coronavirus patients with another $500 million ready if needed. The money will be used to purchase additional ventilators and medical equipment as well as aid for nursing homes, seniors and child care facilities. 
  • Los Angeles County and city officials also issued sets of restrictive orders. The city order requires all non-essential businesses to close and bans public and private gatherings of any size outside of a single home, with Mayor Eric Garcetti advising city residents to stay at home except for essential needs. Link above includes further details on what Angelenos are allowed to do and what is considered to be an essential service. The city order will stay in effect until at least April 19. 
  • Despite the spread of coronavirus, ICE remains active in Southern California, continuing to make arrests. This is part of a national sweep that the Latinx and Chicanx activist group Mijente has denounced as “reckless.” While ICE indicated on Wednesday that it would “exercise discretion to delay enforcement actions until after the crisis,” ICE activity in the midst of the crisis is not ceasing, and ICE detention facilities remain deeply unsanitary, facilitating the spread of disease. 
  • The US and Mexico have reached an agreement to restrict all non-essential travel across the border. This comes after the US State Department advised US citizens to avoid all international travel yesterday.
  • Updated COVID-19 statistics can be found here for LA County and here for nationwide & global data. 
  • Mayor Garcetti and the L.A. City Council are rolling out some protections against evictions and foreclosures, with City Hall issuing an executive order banning late fees and evictions during the lockdown. A citywide rental assistance fund will also be created while landlords and mortgage-holders will have to work out a payment plan. Gov. Newsom, meanwhile, is being criticized for not providing clearer guidelines from the state government on evictions, leaving it to cities and counties to enforce eviction protection. 
  • Following the lead of the the Moms 4 Housing action in which unhoused mothers occupied a vacant house in Oakland to fight for housing as a human right, a group of unhoused and housing-insecure mothers, families, and activists have formed Reclaiming Our Homes and have occupied 12 vacant publicly owned houses in El Sereno, with the support of the Alliance for Californians for Community Empowerment and DSA-LA. Under increased threat from COVID-19, Reclaiming our Homes activists “are calling on state and local governments to use all publicly owned vacant homes, libraries, recreation centers and other properties to house people immediately.”
  • A second charge has been filed in the ongoing corruption probe into the Los Angeles City Hall and real estate development, with a political fundraiser pleading guilty to federal bribery charges. The Councilmember in question has remained anonymous in the court filings, however based on details provided, the recipient of the bribe is likely Councilman Jose Huizar. A search warrant filed in 2018 indicates agents are seeking “evidence of potential crimes including bribery, kickbacks, extortion and money laundering involving more than a dozen people, including Huizar, Councilman Curren Price and a handful of council aides and political appointees.” 

ELECTIONS

  • As of the most recent update on Tuesday, Jackie Lacey has less than 49% of the vote and challenger George Gascon has climbed to slightly above 28%, with 64,000 votes remaining to be counted in the Los Angeles District Attorney’s race. For Lacey to avoid the runoff she would need 53,000 votes from the remaining ballots, meaning that the runoff is almost certain at this stage in the vote count. 
  • There are votes still being counted in the narrow District 12 City Council race, with challenger Lorraine Lundquist now just 803 votes behind incumbent John Lee, who is now ensnared in the FBI investigation into his former boss and City Council predecessor, Mitchell Englander. Lee confirmed that he was on a trip with Englander to Las Vegas where a businessman allegedly offered Englander cash and other gifts. 
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Issue No. 1 – March 13, 2020

LOCAL NEWS

  • California has been in a state of emergency over COVID-19 since March 5. There are 32 confirmed cases in Los Angeles County at press time, though the real number is undoubtedly far higher. The Los Angeles Unified School District will close all schools as of Monday. Mayor Garcetti has recommended canceling events of over fifty people; the city has curtailed travel on official business; and the city has seen a series of cultural events and institutions close down or be postponed. UCLA and USC have ended in-person classes, joining Caltech, CSU-Long Beach, and Pepperdine. 
  • The statement from DSA on COVID-19 can be found here
  • City Councilman John Lee (CD-12) is facing calls to resign after his former boss and the man who he replaced on the city council Mitchell Englander surrendered to federal authorities for “criminal charges of obstructing a federal investigation into allegations that he accepted cash, hotel rooms, costly meals and the services of a female escort during 2017 trips to Vegas and Palm Springs from an unnamed businessman.” Lee was chief of staff to Englander and accompanied him on the trip to Las Vegas, but claims he was not aware of his boss’ activities and did not say whether he is “City Staffer B,” who is identified in the federal indictment as receiving some of the same perks as Englander. News of the charges emerged after Lee narrowly secured a majority on March 3rd to avoid a runoff in November.
  • State Sen. Scott Wiener, the San Francisco lawmaker behind the defeated SB50 housing bill, is trying again with a new bill that he calls a “light touch” approach. The new bill, SB902, would push for more residential units in single-family neighborhoods without local government approval and would provide incentives for larger cities to allow for 10-unit projects.
  • The California Labor Commission’s office hit the owners of a KBBQ chain with a $2.1 million fine over wage theft. An investigation into Genwa restaurants found that workers were not allowed rest or meal breaks and that many of them were not paid minimum wage or shorted on overtime pay while working 11-hour shifts. The Los Angeles Times’ Frank Shyong published a column last July about the poor conditions for restaurant workers throughout Koreatown. 
  • Neighborhood organizations in Bel-Air are preparing to take action against L.A. Metro in an effort to stop plans to build a rail line through the Sepulveda Pass that would connect the Orange Line in the San Fernando Valley to the Expo Line between Santa Monica and Culver City and the extended Purple Line at UCLA. The Bel-Air Association Board is calling for “continued financial support” and is “prepared to wage war and protect our land and property values.”

ELECTIONS

  • Bernie Sanders has received 210 out of California’s 415 delegates, with 22 delegates remaining to be allocated. Block-by-block results from the state’s 58 counties are viewable on this map, which will be updated until the count ends.
  • DSA-LA member and DSA-LA endorsed candidate Nithya Raman is headed for a November runoff with incumbent David Ryu, after gaining 39.44% of the vote in the Los Angeles City Council’s 4th District. As Los Angeles municipal elections now coincide with the November presidential election date, the campaign will continue for an unprecedented eight months. 
  • Los Angeles District Attorney Jackie Lacey appears to be headed for a runoff election in November after her share of votes fell below 50%. She is expected to run against former San Francisco District Attorney George Gascon, who leads public defender Rachel Rossi with 27.6% of the vote to 22.4%. The county registrar is updating the vote count today. 
  • big win for Measure R, co-written by the Reform L.A. Jails Committee, which provides stronger civilian oversight by allowing the Sheriff Civilian Oversight Commission to investigate misconduct using subpoenas and requires the development of a plan to reduce the jail population.
  • Proposition 13, a $15 billion bond measure that would have funded school construction has been defeated. The CA School Boards Association believes a major factor in its defeat was voters confusing it with the 1978 Prop 13 that severely limited property tax increases. 
  • California and Los Angeles once again suffered debilitating problemson election day last week as “[i]nadequate staffing, poor communications and balky technology” resulted in voters waiting longer than four hours in some cases. The problems this year are consistent with previous years in California as well as issues experienced in multiple other states this year. 


DSA-LA
http://www.dsa-la.org/