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Tag: Kia Forum

  • As SNAP benefits lapse, thousands show up to Southern California food banks

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    On Saturday morning, Genaro Alfonzo pulled up to the Kia Forum in Inglewood wearing his Dodgers hat and jersey, with a flag for his Boys in Blue flapping from a Toyota pickup truck.

    But the morning after his beloved Dodgers won Game 6 of the World Series against the Toronto Blue Jays, Alfonzo was not happy. It was nearly 11 a.m., and the 70-year-old had not yet eaten.

    “Just this,” he said, tearing up as he held up a blue plastic coffee cup, half empty. “I’m not working. My wife’s not working — there’s no work. The market is expensive.”

    Alfonzo was among thousands of people who showed up to a drive-through food distribution event Saturday at the Kia Forum put on by the Los Angeles Regional Food Bank on the first day of a lapse in funding for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP.

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    It was the first day of the month — the first day of a pause in federal food assistance for millions of low-income Americans, including 5.5 million Californians, because of the government shutdown that began Oct. 1.

    On Friday, two federal judges, in separate rulings, ordered the U.S. Department of Agriculture to begin using more than $5 billion in contingency funds for SNAP during the government shutdown. But they gave the agency until Monday to figure out how to do so.

    Although the orders were a win for people who rely on SNAP, they did not mean that recipients would be spared a lapse in food aid. Over the weekend, state and local food banks scrambled to prepare for a deluge of need.

    People pick up food distributed by Noel Community Organization

    People pick up food distributed by Noel Community Organization at the Lily of the Valley Church of God In Christ Saturday in Long Beach.

    (Eric Thayer/Los Angeles Times)

    California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta — whose office helped bring about a lawsuit by a coalition of Democrat-led states against the Trump administration over the food aid cutoff — said Thursday that a ruling in the states’ favor would not mean SNAP funds would immediately be loaded onto CalFresh and other benefit cards.

    “Our best estimates are that [SNAP benefit] cards could be loaded and used in about a week,” he said, adding that “there could be about a week where people are hungry and need food.” For new program applicants, he said, the delay could be even longer.

    On Saturday, amid gray skies and fog, scores of volunteers for the Los Angeles Regional Food Bank gathered outside the Forum to serve Angelenos looking to stock their shelves and refrigerators for what could become the longest shutdown since 2018, when the government was shut down for 35 days.

    Volunteers disbursed food containers for about 5,000 vehicles, according to the food bank. Each offering had items for about 40 meals, with whole grains, fresh produce, tortillas, canned tuna, yogurt and frozen chicken.

    “This is what large-scale disaster relief looks like,” said Michael Flood, chief executive of the food bank. “It’s about getting as much as possible out to as many people as possible — safely and in a short time.”

    Fueled by bins of snacks — chips, oranges and bottled water — many volunteers expressed enthusiasm for the long day ahead.

    “I’m just happy to be here — it’s a great opportunity to help people,” said Jordan Diaz, 35.

    Ron Del Rio, 54, said he was happy to help but angry about the circumstances.

    “It’s frustrating and heartbreaking to see people who are hungry,” he said. “It’s just so unsettling that it has to be this way. Why are there 5,000 cars coming through here in a country that is so rich?”

    Norma White gives Dario Medina a free haircut

    Norma White gives Dario Medina a free haircut as people wait to pick up food distributed by Noel Community Organization at the Lily of the Valley Church of God In Christ Saturday in Long Beach.

    (Eric Thayer/Los Angeles Times)

    About 600,000 SNAP recipients live in Los Angeles, according to Mayor Karen Bass, who said in a statement Friday that “no one in Los Angeles should have to worry about putting food on the table because of circumstances beyond their control.”

    For volunteer Diane Jackson, 72, loading up cars with boxes of fresh produce hit close to home. Her son had been in line to receive food earlier that morning.

    “He has 7 children!” she said. “He made sure to come out here. I’m so glad they’re here — it feels good.”

    Volunteers were greeted with fist bumps, air kisses and shouted thank yous.

    As she waited in line, Maxx Bush, 79, who lives near the Forum, said she was angry because people’s incomes are not increasing, even as groceries, housing, insurance, medication, gasoline and other necessities are becoming more expensive.

    “Our elected officials are letting us down because we vote and put these people in office, and they tend to get a personal vendetta going with each other and forget about the main thing, which is the people.”

    In their opposition to states’ request for a temporary restraining order requiring the disbursement of contingency funds, attorneys for the USDA argued that the $5.25 billion is reserved “in the event of natural disasters and other uncontrollable catastrophes” and could cause more disruptions later. The emergency funds will not cover the roughly $9 billion required for all November benefits, according to the USDA.

    Last week, Gov. Gavin Newsom activated the National Guard to help package food and directed $80 million to food banks to stock up. More than 63% of SNAP recipients in California are children or elderly people, Newsom’s office said.

    “I have instructed our lawyers to ask the Court to clarify how we can legally fund SNAP as soon as possible,” President Trump said in a post on Truth Social on Friday. “It is already delayed enough due to the Democrats keeping the Government closed … it will BE MY HONOR to provide the funding.”

    On Saturday, Bonta snapped back.

    “The Trump Admin CHOSE to withhold food assistance from people in need. They CHOSE to let people go hungry and now are only changing their tune thanks to lawsuits,” Bonta said on X. “It should have never gotten this far in the first place.”

    Two people leave a food distribution site Saturday in Long Beach.

    Two people leave a food distribution site Saturday in Long Beach.

    (Eric Thayer/Los Angeles Times)

    Around noon on Saturday, the parking lot at the Forum was a cacophony of sound: car engines rumbling, car stereos blasting music, fire engines blaring in the distance, children shrieking, airplanes roaring en route to nearby LAX.

    Rayvone Douthard, 51, picked up food in a white Nissan truck with his windows down and stereo blaring a cover by the band Tierra of the 1967 song “Together.” Douthard, a DJ who wore a brightly colored tie-dye T-shirt, said he received federal food aid and was concerned about the delay in funding.

    “It’s not right,” he said. “Donald Trump needs to stop what he’s doing. Everyone needs food.”

    Then he turned his music up again.

    “But I feel positive about this,” he said, gesturing at the bustling parking lot. “Everybody working together. Like the song says!”

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    Deborah Vankin, Jasmine Mendez

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  • Forum Bound: Haim Heads Home with the I Quit Tour – LAmag

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    The Valley-raised sister trio perform in Los Angeles on Oct. 9

    Valley Girls: Alana, Danielle and Este Haim shot the album art for I Quit at Steamer Cleaners on Ventura Boulevard in Sherman Oaks.
    Credit: Terrence O’Connor

    Eight days before the start of the I Quit Tour, Haim is still figuring out its set list.  

    “It’s 24 songs, but I think it might be cut down,” Alana Haim divulges to Los Angeles. “I wouldn’t quote me on that. It’s a lot because this is our fourth album, so we’re trying to fit as many songs as we can.”  

    Alana, Danielle and Este Haim —known collectively and professionally as the rock band Haim (pronounced HY-im) — kicked off summer with the release of I Quit, a 15-track self-reclamation manifesto turbocharged, in particular, by being freed from draining relationships. The new LP comes five years after the band’s acclaimed third album, Women in Music Pt. III, for which Haim became the first all-female rock group ever to earn a Grammy nomination for Album of the Year.  

    The sisters are on the road this fall in support of I Quit, taking the Los Angeles natives across the U.S. and around the U.K. by the end of October, with a Halloween finale set for Glasgow. The North American leg wraps on Oct. 11 in Santa Barbara, just ahead of the Oct. 17 theatrical release of The Mastermind, in which Alana stars alongside Josh O’Connor.  

    “We made a very long album, and I think we always just have a lot of fun taking our old songs and refreshing them to fit into this new album,” Alana says. “It’s constantly changing. We had a set list yesterday, and then it got changed this morning.”  

    When the I Quit Tour kicks off on Sept. 4 in Philadelphia, the band has curated a 21-song performance that celebrates their latest album, while also making room for fan favorites like “My Song 5,” “Gasoline,” “The Wire” and “Want You Back.”  

    The show begins with “Gone,” the I Quit opener powered by a “Freedom! ‘90” sample. “I’ll do whatever I want… Now I’m gone, quick as a gunshot,” sings Danielle, who —ahead of the tour — namechecks the song as the new track she most looks forward to performing.  

    Este favors “Relationships,” during which the text of bad relationship stories unfurled on screen while they played a string of summer shows overseas. The camaraderie of dating nightmares continues with the headlining tour, for which the band has asked fans to send their own experiences via Instagram DM for the chance to be the nightly “Relationships girl,” a moment during the song that the camera zeroes in on a dancing fan — middle fingers up, encouraged. Night one of the tour featured their mom, Donna Haim. 

    “I feel like this whole album cycle, we’ve really opened up about our dating horror stories, and it’s just honestly extremely comforting to know that all of our fans, have gone through similar, if not even crazier, circumstances when it comes to dating,” Alana says. 

    Amid the catharsis and connection, Haim delivers an expert rock show. Creating one, after all, is their favorite part of the album cycle process. “This album is so rock forward,” Alana explains. “It really was just bass, guitar, drums and then going from there. So, translating it from album to stage has been the greatest joy because it’s just so effortless. So, we’re really trying to showcase melting your face off.” 

    Haim I Quit 2025Credit: Heidi Stanton

    Haim brings the I Quit Tour to Los Angeles on Oct. 9 at the Kia Forum, one of the venues the sisters didn’t sneak into while growing up in the Valley. That was reserved for places like the old Universal Amphitheatre and Hollywood Bowl, where they played on their last headlining tour.  

    “I’ve been to so many shows at the Bowl throughout my life. There were moments on our set,” Danielle remembers of the 2022 show, “it felt like everyone was on their feet. And that, to me, was huge because it’s such a huge venue… That was a real accomplishment.” 

    “It’s such an honor to play the Forum,” Alana also says. “We were lucky enough to see Prince play the Forum, and to be able to play in the same place that I saw Prince — it hasn’t really hit me yet.” 

    Haim has long touted The Purple One as an inspiration. Following Prince’s sudden death, the trio paid homage with an electric “I Would Die 4 U” cover during their tour throughout the late spring of 2016. They also point to his influence on their use of drums and variety of genres. “When we saw him perform, it felt like we were watching an alien,” Este remembers. “It just didn’t make sense how talented he was. Just he felt so otherworldly and like we were watching something so [of the] future.” 

    Second time may be the charm for Haim. In 2020, following the release of WIMP III, the band was supposed to headline at the Forum. When live music came to a halt because of the onset of COVID-19, they instead set the music video for “Don’t Wanna” in the venue parking lot, which sees the sisters walking, then running, across the arena parking lot.  

    “We were born and raised in L.A., and we would play in the Valley to like two people,” Alana says. “Now, on our fourth album, to play the Forum is insane, and we’re just forever grateful that we have the opportunity to do it.” 

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    Haley Bosselman

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