Registered nurses at Keck Hospital of USC and USC Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center in Lincoln Heights began walking the picket line at 7 a.m. outside the Keck facility at 1500 San Pablo St. About 1,800 nurses are set to take part in the strike, which will last for 24 hours, according to the California Nurses Association/National Nurses United.
“We are the frontline nurses of Keck Medicine of USC, caring for patients from across Los Angeles and beyond — your friends, your family, your neighbors, your loved ones,” Jeong-A Cha, a Keck USC registered nurse, said in a statement.
“Every day and every night, we give our hearts, our skill, and our strength to heal our community,” Cha said. “But today, we are being asked to jeopardize the very lives we swore to protect. Keck USC nurses are working under unsafe staffing conditions that violate the most basic standards of patient care.”
Keck Medicine officials said its facilities “will remain open and fully staffed with doctors, nurses and all other clinical professionals” during the strike, “as we continue our commitment to exceptional patient care and safety.”
“We pride ourselves in consistently upholding state-required nurse staffing ratios,” Keck officials said in a statement. “Importantly, our current contract proposal includes an increase in resource staff so nurses can more properly rest and recharge during their shifts.
“We remain committed to negotiating in good faith and look forward to collaborative discussions with CNA to reach agreements that are fair, provide competitive pay and benefits, and reflect our dedication and support of our staff.”
The union contends that a lack of resources at Keck and Norris facilities resulted in more than 10,000 missed meal breaks and 4,000 missed rest breaks in 2024, with 4,631 missed meal breaks as of July of this year, and 2,210 missed rest breaks.
“The break relief situation is currently very dire, with nurses working up to 10 hours without a break to use the restroom or drink water,” USC Keck registered nurse Rudy Cuellar said in a statement released by the union. “Adequate staffing of resource nurses would correct this problem, but management has been unwilling to provide the adequate staffing of resource nurses that would correct this problem. As a result, they are compromising our ability to provide excellent patient care.”
USC Keck and Norris nurses have been in labor talks with USC since May, according to the union. The nurses held an informational picket on July 24 and voted to authorize a strike on Aug. 22.
The Los Angeles City Council voted Tuesday to formally codify an existing rule requiring landlords to file eviction notices with the city, a procedural step that aims to improve enforcement of tenant protections and spot patterns of evictions.
Under the newly adopted ordinance, landlords must submit a copy of any written notice ending tenancy to the Los Angeles Housing Department (LAHD) within three business days of serving the tenant. The amendment, originally drafted by the City Attorney’s Office in April, specifies that notices must be submitted either electronically or using a form approved by the LAHD and the City Attorney.
City officials and housing advocates say the rule is part of a broader push to increase transparency around evictions and ensure renters aren’t being forced out of their homes illegally.
In a statement, Sharon Sandow, director of communications for the city’s Housing Department, said the amendment requires landlords who don’t file eviction notices online to instead mail the notice along with an LAHD Eviction Filing Cover Sheet.
“This ensures that LAHD receives all necessary tenant information directly from the landlord,” she said. “Tenant information is essential for providing tenants with valuable renter protection and referrals to appropriate legal services, thereby safeguarding tenant rights.”
Larry Gross, executive director of the Coalition for Economic Survival, a longtime tenants’ rights nonprofit, praised the move, saying it strengthens tenant protections and enables groups like his to help tenants fight unlawful evictions.
“Tenants are in some cases unaware that they’re being evicted, until they get the notice to appear in court,” Gross said. “So landlords play a lot of games with these notices and this will hold them accountable.”
He also connected the ordinance to broader tenant protection infrastructure, like the city’s Right to Counsel Program, which provides eligible tenants with free legal representation.
“ It goes hand in hand with the city’s commitment to funding Right to Counsel,” Gross said, “to ensure that tenants, particularly low-income tenants, are represented with legal representation when they have to fight an eviction in courts.”
But landlord groups criticized the move as overly burdensome. Daniel M. Yukelson, executive director and CEO of Apartment Association of Greater Los Angeles, said the measure adds yet another layer of bureaucracy for landlords already grappling with complex rules.
“The city is doing everything in its power to make it more difficult for property owners to collect legally owed rent or deal with problems that tenants are causing, whether they be conducting criminal activity, destroying property, creating a nuisance,” he said.
Yukelson said that under the city’s eviction-filing rules, even small technical errors, such as forgetting to list the number of bedrooms, or failing to submit the required forms within three business days, can allow a tenant to raise an affirmative defense in court. That means a judge could delay or dismiss the case, forcing landlords to start the eviction process from the beginning.
“ Believe me, evictions are a last resort in any situation,” he said. “They’re very costly and time-consuming and nerve-wracking for property owners to go through, so nobody wants to do it. And the city is just creating even more burdens on property owners through this latest action. It is basically death by a thousand cuts.”
The item passed Tuesday without discussion. The updated ordinance amends sections 151.09 and 165.05 of the Los Angeles Municipal Code to clarify how landlords must comply with the city’s eviction filing rules, which was enacted in January 2023 as part of a broader package of pandemic-era tenant protections.
This rule applies to all written notices terminating a tenancy for at-fault reasons, including those for nonpayment of rent, lease violations, nuisance complaints or other tenant misconduct under the city’s Rent Stabilization and Just Cause ordinances.
Notices for no-fault evictions — such as owner move-ins or demolition — must be filed separately through a Declaration of Intent to Evict, which includes an application fee and paid relocation assistance to the tenant.
The LAHD maintains a searchable database of notices filed under the ordinance, which tenants can use to check whether their landlord has complied. If a landlord fails to file the notice properly or on time, tenants may be able to raise an “affirmative defense” in court — a factor that can delay or even derail the eviction process.
In a July 2023 report, LAHD noted that while it had received roughly 40,000 eviction notices since the rule took effect, many were submitted on paper, creating backlogs and straining staff capacity. To streamline the process and bolster enforcement, the department recommended a technical amendment requiring landlords to either upload notices electronically or submit them on a standardized form approved by LAHD. Tuesday’s vote codified that recommendation.
Held just a few miles from the still-operating Southern California Gas Company storage site, the event drew around 45 people, including residents, advocates and elected officials. UCLA scientists presented new findings linking the blowout to increased rates of low birth weight among babies born to mothers exposed during the months-long gas leak.
A graphic is displayed during a town hall meeting on the 10-year anniversary of the Aliso Canyon blowout in Porter Ranch Sunday, Oct. 26, 2025.(Photo by Andy Holzman, Contributing Photographer)
Matt Pakucko, president and co-founder of Save Porter Ranch, speaks during a town hall meeting on the 10-year anniversary of the Aliso Canyon blowout in Porter Ranch Sunday, Oct. 26, 2025.(Photo by Andy Holzman, Contributing Photographer)
Deirdre Bolona hangs signs as she prepares for a town hall meeting with local residents on the 10-year anniversary of the Aliso Canyon blowout in Porter Ranch Sunday, Oct. 26, 2025.(Photo by Andy Holzman, Contributing Photographer)
Community members applaud a speaker as they attend a town hall meeting on the 10-year anniversary of the Aliso Canyon blowout in Porter Ranch Sunday, Oct. 26, 2025.(Photo by Andy Holzman, Contributing Photographer)
Signs are displayed as community members listen to a speaker during a town hall meeting on the 10-year anniversary of the Aliso Canyon blowout in Porter Ranch Sunday, Oct. 26, 2025.(Photo by Andy Holzman, Contributing Photographer)
Dr. Jeffrey Nordella speaks during a town hall meeting on the 10-year anniversary of the Aliso Canyon blowout in Porter Ranch Sunday, Oct. 26, 2025.(Photo by Andy Holzman, Contributing Photographer)
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A graphic is displayed during a town hall meeting on the 10-year anniversary of the Aliso Canyon blowout in Porter Ranch Sunday, Oct. 26, 2025.(Photo by Andy Holzman, Contributing Photographer)
Among those in attendance was Sandi Naiman, a Porter Ranch resident who has lived for more than four decades near the gas wells. On the day of the blowout, she recalled spending hours with her then two-year-old grandson at a nearby park, unaware that methane was spewing into the air above them.
“I didn’t know the blowout was happening, they didn’t tell us for three days,” she said.
Naiman and her husband, then 65 and 66, briefly relocated to a hotel in Woodland Hills, but ultimately returned to their home due to age and caregiving responsibilities. Both have since battled cancer, she said, as have many of their neighbors.
“We’re waiting for the cancer study to see if that had an impact on us,” she said.
When asked whether her questions were answered at Sunday’s event, Naiman said, “As best they could be. I’m hoping to get more information from the health study.” Still, she added: “I wish they would close this down. They promised us that they would close it down and they didn’t.”
The Oct. 23, 2015 rupture of the SS-25 well released more than 100,000 metric tons of methane — the largest known gas leak in U.S. history. It took nearly four months to plug.
In 2019, Governor Gavin Newsom directed the California Public Utilities Commission to expedite the closure of the Aliso Canyon facility, building on a 2017 plan under then‑Governor Jerry Brown to phase out the site by around 2027. But ten years after the blowout, the site remains open — and community members say their concerns have not faded.
Deirdre Bolona, another longtime resident and cofounder of Aliso Moms Alliance whose home sat three blocks from the underground gas facility, said, “We want to know what is going to happen.”
Bolona said her father, who also lived nearby, died of kidney cancer after the blowout. She fears for her children’s long-term health.
“We were all there through it and I’m just worried about them all, about what’s coming for us,” she said. “I can’t wait to see the rest of the results and hopefully more health information so we can make good decisions on how to prevent what a lot of people have in our community.”
Helen Attai, another longtime advocate, described the toll on her and her family. She said a close family friend, a young woman with cystic fibrosis, saw her condition rapidly worsened after the blowout and died at 28.
“I have seen my family suffer. I’ve seen my neighbors suffer,” she said. “This is all wrong, I’d like to see justice.”
Those questions — about health, prevention and accountability — were central to Saturday’s event, which featured updates from UCLA researchers conducting a state-funded study on the blowout’s long-term effects.
Christina Batteate, the study’s deputy project manager, highlighted one of the latest results: Women exposed to the blowout during the later stages of pregnancy had a nearly 50% higher likelihood of giving birth to low birth weight babies.
When researchers divided the 10-kilometer impact zone into three segments — west, central and east — they found the risk varied significantly by location. The western segment saw a 130% higher rate of low birth weight, compared to 64% in the central zone. The pattern closely mirrors the direction of the methane gas plume, which satellite imagery showed drifting southwest from the underground facility shortly after the 2015 blowout.
The UCLA team also previewed a forthcoming study using satellite and infrared imagery, which tracked the methane plume up to 10 kilometers downwind. That helped researchers refine who was most exposed, a key factor in guiding long-term health assessments, Batteate said.
Unlike most studies, which typically release results at the end, the team has been sharing preliminary findings with residents through community meetings.
“When we have community meetings, we make sure that everybody knows these are preliminary results, they are subject to change,” Batteate said. “But given how long the community has waited for answers, we felt that it was very critical for them to have our preliminary findings as soon as they’re released.”
The next community meeting — the sixth hosted by the UCLA team — is scheduled for 6 p.m. on Nov. 18 at the Vineyard Porter Ranch community room, the same location as Sunday’s event. A Zoom option will also be available.
U.S. Rep. Brad Sherman, D-Sherman Oaks, who has long called for the facility’s closure, spoke at the event and criticized SoCalGas for failing to develop alternatives.
“Southern California Gas Company has done nothing for 10 years to figure out how to have a resilient, reliable, natural gas system for L.A. County and close this down,” he said in an interview. “Instead, they just went back to business as usual.”
State Assemblymember Pilar Schiavo also stopped by the event, and mayoral candidate Asaad Alnajjar, a member of the Porter Ranch Neighborhood Council, made remarks during the program.
Several residents expressed frustration over what they saw as years of broken promises and political inaction, particularly about long-standing calls to close the facility.
“There is a strong call, just throughout the community, to shut down Aliso Canyon, that is undeniable,” said Andrea Vega, a local organizer with nonprofit Food & Water Watch. “It’s easy to just feel like nothing’s ever going to change. But through community power, we can absolutely bring about change.”
Their names hardly do them justice: Mother Dragon, Fish, Two-Headed Dragon, Starfish, Octopus and Tripod.
Six colorful, whimsical, playground sculptures surrounding Legg Lake within the expansive Whittier Narrows Recreation Area in South El Monte have become beloved park icons for kids and adults alike for more than six decades.
Back in the 1960’s a sculptor named Benjamin Dominguez created several works of art inspired by fantasy sea creatures that were placed in playgrounds all around Whittier Narrows Recreation Area park on Oct. 24, 2025 in South El Monte, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)
Back in the 1960’s a sculptor named Benjamin Dominguez created several works of art inspired by fantasy sea creatures that were placed in playgrounds all around Whittier Narrows Recreation Area park on Oct. 24, 2025 in South El Monte, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)
Back in the 1960’s a sculptor named Benjamin Dominguez created several works of art inspired by fantasy sea creatures that were placed in playgrounds all around Whittier Narrows Recreation Area park on Oct. 24, 2025 in South El Monte, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)
Back in the 1960’s a sculptor named Benjamin Dominguez created several works of art inspired by fantasy sea creatures that were placed in playgrounds all around Whittier Narrows Recreation Area park on Oct. 24, 2025 in South El Monte, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)
Back in the 1960’s a sculptor named Benjamin Dominguez created several works of art inspired by fantasy sea creatures that were placed in playgrounds all around Whittier Narrows Recreation Area park on Oct. 24, 2025 in South El Monte, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)
Back in the 1960’s a sculptor named Benjamin Dominguez created several works of art inspired by fantasy sea creatures that were placed in playgrounds all around Whittier Narrows Recreation Area park on Oct. 24, 2025 in South El Monte, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)
Back in the 1960’s a sculptor named Benjamin Dominguez created several works of art inspired by fantasy sea creatures that were placed in playgrounds all around Whittier Narrows Recreation Area park on Oct. 24, 2025 in South El Monte, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)
One of the crowd-sourced photos turned in to LA County Department of Arts and Culture by a county resident. (images courtesy of LA County Department of Arts and Culture
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Back in the 1960’s a sculptor named Benjamin Dominguez created several works of art inspired by fantasy sea creatures that were placed in playgrounds all around Whittier Narrows Recreation Area park on Oct. 24, 2025 in South El Monte, CA. (Photo by John McCoy, Contributing Photographer)
In order to find out more about them, the Los Angeles County Department of Arts and Culture is asking the public to send them their personal photos of themselves and their children or grandchildren playing on the sculptures, captioned with memories of a mid-century era when parks intertwined public art, interactivity and a child’s imagination.
“Depending on the response, how many photos we receive, we will have a phase two to determine creative ways to share them with the public,” wrote Laleña Vellanoweth, the county’s civic art conservation and collections manager in a statement released Thursday, Oct. 23.
Erica Rojas was in the park on Friday, Oct. 24 with her husband. They were training their dogs to walk and behave on the trails, when Rojas noticed the theme of ocean life after passing by the Octopus and Two-Headed Dragon sculptures.
“I love any artist that has inspiration from both land and sea,” she said.
The county’s project has two parts: conservation and historical research, Vellanoweth wrote.
The department is bringing on apprentices to comb through the photos, people’s comments and dig out letters and other records for clues on how the sculptures got here and why. They will also digitize and catalog the data. Conservation goals include: upkeep of the outdoor artworks that are subject to wear-and-tear, weather and seismic activity.
The outdoor, interactive artworks were designed by Mexican artist Benjamin Dominguez (1894-1974). He studied art at Academia de Artes Plasticas at the University of Mexico and graduated in 1925. He perfected a centuries-old faux-bois craft, known as “concrete wood” while at the university and used it to create these unique park sculptures.
Dominguez emigrated to the United States at age 62 and was commissioned to make tiger and lion enclosures at a zoo in El Paso, Texas. But he first began building his concrete-and-steel sea creatures at a park in Las Vegas, which was recently bulldozed to make room for a development. All the sculptures were destroyed.
In 1961, Dominguez was commissioned to make the six playground sea creatures for Whittier Narrows park by Frank G. Bonelli, the father of parks and recreation in LA County and a former county supervisor. A nature park in San Dimas bears his name.
“We noticed that the Dominguez sculptures at Vincent Lugo Park has tons of historical information and wanted to create that type of archive for our sculptures,” wrote Vellanoweth.
The county has consulted with Eloy Zarate, a history professor at Pasadena City College and co-founder of the San Gabriel-based Friends of La Laguna. The group raised $1.1 million to restore the La Laguna playground art, which includes a lighthouse with a slide kids love to go down. As a child, he played on the interactive sculptures in San Gabriel where he grew up, he said.
“We are the ones that brought Benjamin Dominguez to life. We said, ‘Hey, this guy was important,” said Zarate.
He said the six Whittier Narrows sculptures are similar to the ones Dominguez designed in Las Vegas, especially Mother Dragon, her yellow-orange body dotted with blue spikes and surrounded by red-and-white mushrooms.
Zarate has offered to write the nominating papers for the Whittier Narrows artworks so they can be accepted on the National Register of Historic Places.
“That is one of the last things we will do,” he said, noting the 20 years he and his group have given to preserving the artist’s unique playground artworks.
Besides San Gabriel and Whittier Narrows park, the third place where his work is preserved is Atlantis Play Center in a park in Garden Grove, at 13630 Atlantis Way, Zarate said. That park features Sandy Sea Serpent, with its tail winding up a hill that kids slide down. “All these structures are meant to be played on,” Zarate said.
His works in these parks represent “a rare example of handcrafted, mid-century playgrounds, when parks were designed to be creative and interactive rather than standardized,” wrote the Los Angeles Conservancy.
The works at Legg Lake were preserved in 2015 through the support of then L.A. County Supervisor Gloria Molina, according to the inscription on the informational display in front of one of the sculptures. It concludes by saying Dominguez’s works are an example of the contributions made by immigrants to Southern California.
In today’s political climate, in which ICE raids are resulting in the arrest of hundreds of immigrants, including those undocumented who’ve made a living and raised a family in Southern California for decades, the recognition of Dominguez at an L.A. County park is made more meaningful, Zarate said.
He hopes the county in its crowd-sourcing effort will acquire many photos, letters and documents relating to the Whittier Narrows park artworks.
“It is important particularly in today’s environment to understand people who come to this country and work, who give a significant amount to the country they’ve settled in,” Zarate said.
One can’t go into Whittier Narrows park without noticing the iconic serpent, or the octopus, for example, which are closer to the entrance on Santa Anita Avenue and the Pomona (60) Freeway.
“I mean, they are part of the park, and you recognize it,” said Armando Salcido on Friday, Oct. 24. Salcido and a friend were heading to get a closer look at some of Dominguez’s other sculptures scattered within the vast county park. “It is the first time I’ve seen the dragon. It’s really nice.”
For questions or for help converting your physical images into digital images or submitting over 10 images, contact Danielle Galván Gomez, civic art registrar, at dgalvangomez@arts.lacounty.gov.
Submission deadline is Dec. 12 at 11:59 p.m. Pacific Standard Time.
A new kind of financing mechanism approved by the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday will keep future property tax revenues within unincorporated Altadena, instead of flowing into the county’s general fund.
Why is that earmark important?
Because the county will use these local funds to pay for replacing damaged Altadena infrastructure such as streets, curbs, sewer lines, street trees, as well as rebuilding Farnsworth Park, the Altadena Senior Center and the Eaton Canyon Nature Center all vaporized by the Eaton fire in January.
Some of these potential projects are aimed at repairing the hidden destruction caused by the extensive and severe firestorm that demolished 9,400 structures including homes, businesses, schools, parks and government buildings.
The county estimates the toll amounts to $2 billion in infrastructure damage — and that includes public parks — as a result of the fire. Without replacing them, the town of Altadena would never come back to life.
To get what’s called tax increment financing, the board approved formation of the Altadena Wildfire Recovery Infrastructure Financing District. The District hopes to raise $500 million over 50 years to use toward projects approved by a five-member Public Financing Authority or PFA.
The PFA would be made up of three Los Angeles County Supervisors and two public members. The first to join so far is Fifth District Supervisor Kathryn Barger, who represents Altadena. The rest will be appointed by the county’s Chief Executive Office. Anyone from the public interested in joining should contact the county CEO, said Barger.
“This is just one more tool we are using to rebuild — especially on the infrastructure side,” said Barger in an interview on Wednesday, Oct. 22.
“This is clearly a vehicle that would be beneficial, especially as it relates to infrastructure needs in Altadena,” she added.
Closed since the Eaton fire, Charles S. Farnsworth County Park, also known as Farnsworth Park, is a Los Angeles County park in Altadena. The park was photographed on Wednesday, Oct. 21, 2025. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Michele Zack, Altadena historian and author of historical books on the town, said the new financing district would help with not just replacing Farnsworth Park, but rebuilding it back better.
“You might be able to finance a watershed management project at the park. To try to build in more climate resiliency,” she said on Wednesday. The watershed management at the park had consisted of sandbags, she said. She’d like to see the park used for underground storage of rainwater and mountain runoff.
The new financial district falls under state law that allows creation of Enhanced Infrastructure Financing Districts (EIFDs) or Climate Resilience Districts (CRDs), which usually take one to two years to get started.
Creation of this district got a boost from the state Legislature. Senate Bill 782 from State Sen. Sasha Perez, D-Pasadena, allowed for a new take on these financial instruments, called Disaster Recovery Districts. The bill, passed by the Legislature and signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom last week, shortens the time needed to form a district to only a few months.
“This new law provides a streamlined option for cities and counties to establish these districts whose revenues will be dedicated to repairing, rehabilitating, or replacing disaster-damaged infrastructure and to projects such as economic recovery initiatives, resiliency enhancements, small business support, and workforce development programs, while maintaining strong public oversight,” said Perez in a statement on Wednesday.
The county has already established the tax base year of 2024-2025. Any increases in property taxes in Altadena after that is the increment, or difference. That is the money that will go to the Altadena Wildfire Recovery Infrastructure Financing District.
Governing this new district is the PFA, which should be up and running by the first week in December, said Anish Saraiya, aide to Barger who is also a civil engineer. It’s first task is to approve an infrastructure financing plan that allows the county to freeze the tax increment on Altadena properties, he said.
“We need an incredible amount of resources immediately to help us rebuild almost $2 billion dollars worth of damaged infrastructure,” said Saraiya.
Since tax increment monies take awhile to flow, the district will buy bonds to raise capital quickly, he said. “You access the financial markets to issue bonds, to accelerate the funding you need.”
Infrastructure projects will be the District’s main goal. But even with $500 million, it will not be enough to meet the $2 billion need.
Barger said to fill in gaps, she’s looking at philanthropic donations, especially for rebuilding a new Eaton Canyon Nature Center. The L.A. Dodgers Foundation helped fund the rebuilding of Loma Alta Park, she noted.
“Infrastructure includes parks because they are a vital part of Altadena,” Barger said.
Zack said she expects many from Altadena would be interested in serving on the new authority. “For those two community positions there will be a lot of jockeying,” she said.
A Los Angeles jury has awarded $6 million to a former Cal State San Bernardino administrator who alleged she was subjected to “severe or pervasive” gender harassment that her attorneys claim is systemic across the Cal State system.
Attorney Courtney Abrams, who represented Anissa Rogers, the former associate dean at Cal State San Bernardino’s Palm Desert campus, said in a statement that the jury award Monday, Oct. 20, represented “a resounding rejection of CSU’s long-running denials of gender bias within its ranks.”
“Dr. Rogers stood up not only for herself, but also the other women who have been subjected to gender-based double-standards within the Cal State system,” Abrams said following the three-week trial before Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Maurice Leiter.
Problem ‘systemic’
Rogers and Clare Weber, the former vice provost at the Palm Desert campus, sued Cal State San Bernardino President Tomas Morales, Jake Zhu, the former dean of the Palm Desert campus, and the Board of Trustees of the California State University system, which comprises 23 campuses statewide and is the largest four-year public university system in the United States, employing nearly 56,000 faculty and staff.
DAVID BAUMAN — STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Cal State San Bernardino President Tomas Morales, on Wednesday, Mar. 16, 2016.
The lawsuit, filed in March 2023, alleged a pattern and practice of discrimination and sexual harassment against female employees in the CSU system in violation of the state’s Equal Pay Act. Rogers and Weber claim they were either forced to resign or fired for speaking out against mistreatment of and pay disparity for female employees.
“This case exposed what women inside Cal State have been saying for years: the mistreatment of women within the Cal State system is not just a series of one-off incidents; the problem is systemic and structural,” said Andrew Friedman of Helmer Friedman, an attorney who represented Rogers in the lawsuit.
In an email Tuesday, Oct. 21, CSUSB spokesman Alan Llavore said: “We were disappointed by the verdict reached by the jury (Monday) morning, and we will be reviewing our options to assess next steps.” He declined further comment.
Officials at the California State University Office of the Chancellor in Long Beach also declined to comment.
Forced out
Rogers, who was hired as associate dean at the Palm Desert campus in August 2019, alleged in the lawsuit that on Oct. 15, 2021, she fielded multiple complaints from female employees who attended a “coffee with the dean” meeting Zhu hosted in which two male department heads berated a female administrator for about a half-hour. Zhu allegedly witnessed the conduct but did nothing.
Rogers confronted Zhu about what happened the same day after hearing about it from the other employees who attended the meeting. Zhu, according to the lawsuit, subsequently targeted Rogers for termination, pretextually complaining about vacation time she took and for attending an event at her daughter’s college that he initially approved.
On Jan. 1, 2022, Rogers, according to the lawsuit, was “constructively terminated” when she was forced to resign her position.
Evidence presented at trial showed that in addition to Rogers, several other current and former CSUSB employees brought forth complaints that Zhu treated women worse than men, but neither the university’s human resources department nor its Title IX offices ever launched an investigation into the allegations, said David deRubertis of The deRubertis Law Firm in Studio City, who served as the lead trial attorney for Rogers.
Weber alleges in the lawsuit that she wrote to Morales in July 2022 raising concerns that female vice provosts at the university were being paid less than their male counterparts. She said she was one of the lowest paid vice provosts in the CSU system, despite her large assignment portfolio. She called the alleged practice “highly offensive, totally discriminatory, and retaliatory.”
Weber, according to the lawsuit, asked Morales to put an end to the alleged practice and requested an investigation into her concerns. The next day she was fired.
Zhu retires
Two months after Rogers and Weber filed their lawsuit, CSUSB announced Zhu was retiring, commending him for, among other things, being “instrumental in moving the Palm Desert campus forward” and growing the campus to meet the needs of students in the Coachella Valley.
Zhu testified during trial that his retirement was unrelated to the lawsuit, and that he wanted to take care of his ailing mother and spend more time with his children, who were getting older, deRubertis said.
He said evidence at trial showed that allegations of female employee mistreatment by Zhu were brought up during a faculty meeting at the Palm Desert campus on Sept. 20, 2022, and that CSUSB Provost Rafik Mohamed and Morales already were planning to replace him due to so-called “leadership issues” before Zhu decided to retire.
Problems ignored
DeRubertis argued during trial that the gender-based mistreatment of Rogers was “an inevitable result” after CSUSB ignored a climate survey suggesting a culture of fear, intimidation, gender-based mistreatment and bullying at the university. The survey recommended that the university adopt an anti-bullying policy and an audit of HR practices and policies.
Morales acknowledged during trial that neither recommendation was implemented, deRubertis said.
The no-confidence vote and faculty senate resolution was a point of contention in the lawsuit, which described the resolution as “scathing.” It noted that within there years of Morales’ appointment as university president, 89% of the faculty, staff and administrators who were surveyed reported that the climate had become worse, and that Morales had failed to implement the bulk of the recommended changes.
“President Morales continues to be unwilling to acknowledge the severity of the problems of fear and distrust among employees,” according to the lawsuit.
Weber’s case, which was separated from Rogers’ case at trial, is expected to go to a jury next year.
A United Airlines flight from Denver to Los Angeles was forced to divert to Salt Lake City last week after the aircraft’s window cracked midair, officials said.
Flight 1093, a Boeing 737 Max 8, was about 180 nautical miles southeast of Salt Lake City on Thursday, Oct. 16 when the crew decided to divert due to a crack in one layer of the plane’s multilayer windshield, according to The Aviation Herald, a website that publishes reports about commercial aviation accidents and incidents.
The aircraft landed safely in Salt Lake City about 50 minutes after departure. There were approximately 134 passengers and six crew members on board.
“On Thursday, United flight 1093 landed safely in Salt Lake City to address damage to its multilayered windshield,” a United Airlines representative told KTLA on Sunday. “We arranged for another aircraft to take customers to Los Angeles later that day and our maintenance team is working to return the aircraft to service.”
KTLA reported that social media users shared photos appearing to show the pilot with cuts on his forearm, though the station said it had not independently verified the images.
A replacement aircraft, a Boeing 737 Max 9, later flew the passengers to Los Angeles, arriving about six hours behind schedule. The original jet remained grounded in Salt Lake City for roughly 26 hours after the diversion, according to Aviation Herald.
The incident remains under review.
It came just a day after Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s plane was forced to make an unscheduled landing in the United Kingdom on Oct. 15 due to a cracked windshield, according to the Associated Press.
A Pentagon spokesperson said the landing was carried out “based on standard procedures,” and all aboard were safe. The aircraft, a U.S. Air Force C-32, a modified Boeing 757, had been en route from a NATO meeting in Brussels to the United States when it began broadcasting an emergency signal and descended.
In February, a similar issue occurred aboard another C-32 carrying Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Idaho Sen. Jim Risch, when that plane returned to Washington about 90 minutes into the flight due to a windshield issue, the AP reported.
Los Angeles County eligible voters who want to vote in the Nov. 4 statewide election must be registered to vote.
The last day to register is Monday, Oct. 20. That is the deadline not only to register to vote, but also to receive a vote-by-mail ballot for the Nov. 4 Statewide Special Election.
Voter registration applications are available at most government buildings, including libraries, the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) and also at the LA County Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk offices throughout the county.
Also, registering to vote can be completed online by going to: LAVOTE.GOV.
If any voters miss the deadline for registration, they won’t get a vote-by-mail ballot. But they can still vote in person at any of the Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk vote centers beginning Oct. 25. There are 251 Vote Centers that will be open. Their hours are: 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. On Election Day, Vote Centers will be open 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.
If you’ve already registered, you should have received a mail-in ballot. After completing the ballot, it can be sent via mail, or deposited into one of 418 ballot official drop boxes or left at a vote center. The drop boxes will remain open through Election Day.
Voters will decide during the special election whether to approve or reject Proposition 50, which would redraw congressional districts mid-decade to give California Democrats an opportunity to pick up five more House seats in next year’s midterm election. The effort, led by Gov. Gavin Newsom, is in response to a similar gerrymandering effort by Texas Republicans hoping to ensure that the GOP retains control of the House in 2026.
Voters can request to receive their materials in their preferred language by returning the Language Request Form on the back of the Sample Ballot Book, or by calling 1-800-815-2666, option 3. Spanish-speaking voters may also call 213-358-2701 for direct assistance, the Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk reported.
San Gabriel Valley Habitat for Humanity Thursday, Oct. 16, began framing the walls for what will be the new home of Kenneth and Carol Wood, an Altadena couple who lived in the community for more than 40 years before the Eaton fire destroyed their home and the homes of their adult children.
It’s the first home Habitat for Humanity will rebuild in Altadena since the fire.
While a series of speakers that included Rep. Judy Chu, D-Pasadena, spoke Thursday morning about the impact of the milestone, a small team of construction workers began prepping the first phase of construction.
Wong said there’s no time to waste for what Habitat’s goals.
“As you can tell, construction crew doesn’t really care what we do, they’re moving forward,” Wong said. “The reason why is we’ve got a really tight schedule. It is our goal to make sure that they are home for the holidays.”
Habitat for Humanity volunteers work to rebuild a home destroyed by the Eaton Fire on E Pine St. in Altadena on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025. (Photo by Hans Gutknecht, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Habitat for Humanity volunteers work to rebuild a home destroyed by the Eaton Fire on E Pine St. in Altadena on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025. (Photo by Hans Gutknecht, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Habitat for Humanity volunteers work to rebuild a home destroyed by the Eaton Fire on E Pine St. in Altadena on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025. (Photo by Hans Gutknecht, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Habitat for Humanity volunteers work to rebuild a home destroyed by the Eaton Fire on E Pine St. in Altadena on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025. (Photo by Hans Gutknecht, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Habitat for Humanity volunteers work to rebuild a home destroyed by the Eaton Fire on E Pine St. in Altadena on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025. (Photo by Hans Gutknecht, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Habitat for Humanity volunteers work to rebuild a home destroyed by the Eaton Fire on E Pine St. in Altadena on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025. (Photo by Hans Gutknecht, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Habitat for Humanity volunteers work to rebuild a home destroyed by the Eaton Fire on E Pine St. in Altadena on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025. (Photo by Hans Gutknecht, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Habitat for Humanity volunteers work to rebuild a home destroyed by the Eaton Fire on E Pine St. in Altadena on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025. (Photo by Hans Gutknecht, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Habitat for Humanity volunteers work to rebuild a home destroyed by the Eaton Fire on E Pine St. in Altadena on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025. (Photo by Hans Gutknecht, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Habitat for Humanity volunteers work to rebuild a home destroyed by the Eaton Fire on E Pine St. in Altadena on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025. (Photo by Hans Gutknecht, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Habitat for Humanity volunteers work to rebuild a home destroyed by the Eaton Fire on E Pine St. in Altadena on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025. (Photo by Hans Gutknecht, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Habitat for Humanity volunteers work to rebuild a home destroyed by the Eaton Fire on E Pine St. in Altadena on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025. (Photo by Hans Gutknecht, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
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Habitat for Humanity volunteers work to rebuild a home destroyed by the Eaton Fire on E Pine St. in Altadena on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025. (Photo by Hans Gutknecht, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Starting Thursday until Saturday afternoon the construction team and volunteers will be setting up pre-built walls, installing the roof framing and plywood sheeting on the walls.
Kenneth Wood knew people were going to come out to help build his new home but seeing them in action Thursday filled him with appreciation.
“It’s like something that I had heard that would happen, but I’d never seen it,” Wood said. “It’s one thing to hear it and something else to see it and so it’s almost beyond words.”
Wood said living at the foot of the San Gabriel Mountains for more than 40 years went beyond his dreams as a child of just being able to see mountains someday.
“I didn’t know if I’d ever live here again,” Wood said. “So to be here, I call it a dream come true.”
Carol Wood said the goal from the beginning was to stay and rebuild in Altadena.
“I don’t know anywhere else I want to go, that was the thought,” Wood said. “Now, how it was going to be possible is another story, but as far as our wish, our hearts were to stay in Altadena.”
That’s where Habitat came into play. The Wood home is the first of 25 rebuilds with the goal of being completed in the next 12 months, Wong said. The Altadena Builds Back Foundation, a creation of the Pasadena Community Foundation, is funding 22 of the 25 rebuilds thanks to a $4.55 million grant.
Wong said while the first batch of homes being rebuild is a start, it’s not enough.
“We need to be doing 25 houses a month,” Wong said. “We need to get things geared up, we need to build things up. Only with all of your support that we will get there. It’ll take us a little while to ramp up but we will get there.”
Construction Director Brian Stanley walked a group of about 60 volunteers through the safety procedures on the work site. Stanley said despite Mother Nature and some mishaps getting all the materials to Altadena putting them a few days behind schedule, the Habitat team would not be deterred.
“This is the last of the old-fashioned barn raisings right where the community gets together, volunteers just to help out,” Stanley said.
Habitat will need about 60 volunteers every day until the target date of completion — around the week of Thanksgiving.
As the frames of the home’s walls were stood up, Stanley said the foundations of future home rebuilds were being laid around Altadena.
Victoria Knapp encouraged the gathered volunteers by explaining the gravity of the work they were about to undertake.
“Your work here matters,” Knapp said. “It matters to me and it matters to Altadena and it matters to the Wood family. So, with that, let’s get building.”
Nonprofit organization Foothill Catalog Foundation helped design the building plans for the Wood’s home and for some of the other planned rebuilds in coordination with Habitat for Humanity.
The catalog includes pre-approved home designs for fire survivors to pick from to speed up the rebuilding process and make it more affordable. The Wood family project is a three-bedroom, two-bathroom 1,160- square-foot home. In the catalog, their home design is called “The Lewis.”
Stanley said prior construction experience is not necessary to be a Habitat volunteer.
“Our staff acts as teachers through the process, and we provide the tools and we do everything we can to keep them safe and so it’s on the job training so to speak,” Stanley said. “So just enthusiastic willingness to help the community is what is really needed.”
Wong said people can help Habitat reach its goals through volunteering their time, money or materials and can visit sgv.habitat.org for more information. He said it’s not too late for fire survivors to apply for the rebuilding program.
“We’re beginning to see the light,” Carol Wood said. “At first it’s like everything is gone, everything is dark, what do we do, where to we go? You just feel out of it. To see everyone working together, coming together to help us it’s so wonderful.”
A live-fire beach assault that will include amphibious vehicles, aircraft, and Navy ships to commemorate the Marines’ 250th anniversary on Saturday at Camp Pendleton will be conducted off one of the base’s many training ranges and not cause road closures, Marine officials said.
The mock assault dubbed: America’s Marines 250: From Sea to Shore – A Review of Amphibious Strength.– which will be held in conjunction with a program expected to include comments from Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, Navy Secretary John C. Phelan and Gen. Eric Smith, the Commandant of the Marine Corps — will be held off Red Beach, which lies on the coastal side of the 5 Freeway.
Comments Wednesday by Gov. Gavin Newsom on X: “Donald Trump and JD Vance think that shutting down the I-5 to shoot out missiles from ships is how you respect the military,” caused public concern, with some media outlets reporting that a possible closure of the busy 5 Freeway is being considered for parts of Orange and San Diego counties from Friday to Saturday.
“All training events will occur on approved training ranges and comply with established safety protocols,” Lt. Col. Lindsay Pirek, a spokesperson for the I Marine Expeditionary Force overseeing the planning, said late Wednesday. “No public highways or transportation routes will be closed.”
“In advance of the training event and demonstration, we conducted a detailed risk assessment,” she added. “All participants will be briefed, medical, fire, and emergency assets will be on site, and multiple rehearsals will be conducted. All air, surface, and ground movements are scripted and rehearsed in accordance with standard operating procedures and established safety checklists.”
Metrolink, however, will not be operating some of its trains that cross the base on Saturday.
“Only OC Line train 1668, the final southbound train of the day, is anticipated to complete its normal route from LA Union Station to Oceanside,” the agency said in a press release.
A request for comment on the situation was placed with the offices of Newsom and Caltrans.
Following the live-fire demonstration, a community Beach Bash will take place at Del Mar Beach, where thousands of military personnel, families, and guests are expected to gather.
“The force training activities planned ensure our readiness to defend the Homeland and protect our nation’s interests abroad against emergent and unprecedented challenges today and in the years ahead,” Pirek said. “The capabilities demonstration will feature integrated Navy and Marine Corps operations across air, land, and sea.”
The White House Production Office will capture the Amphibious Capabilities Demonstration for inclusion in a national primetime broadcast on Nov. 9, ensuring Marine Corps contributions to America’s 250th birthday are highlighted for audiences across the nation.
Los Angeles County officials voted Tuesday to declare a state of emergency that gives them power to provide assistance for residents they say have suffered financially from ongoing federal immigration raids.
The move allows the LA County Board of Supervisors to provide rent relief for tenants who have fallen behind as a result of the crackdown on immigrants.
The immigration raids that ramped up over the summer have spread fear in immigrant communities, prompting many to limit their outings. Federal agents have rounded up immigrants without legal status to be in the U.S. from Home Depots, car washes, bus stops, and farms. Some U.S. citizens have also been detained.
The local state of emergency can also funnel state money for legal aid and other services.
Funds for rent will be available to people who apply via an online portal that would be launched within two months, Supervisor Lindsey Horvath’s office said. The motion could also be a first step toward an eviction moratorium, but that would require a separate action by the supervisors.
Landlords worried it could be another financial hit after an extended ban on evictions and rental increases during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The declaration was passed by a 4-1 vote, with Supervisor Kathryn Barger opposing.
Horvath and Supervisor Janice Hahn said the raids have spread fear and destabilized households and businesses. In late August, there were more than 5,000 arrests in Los Angeles as part of the crackdown. About a third of the county’s 10 million residents are foreign-born. Several cities in the region canceled their Fourth of July celebrations and summer movie nights as families stayed home due to safety concerns.
Since June, the Los Angeles region has been a battleground in the Trump administration’s aggressive immigration strategy that spurred protests and the deployment of the National Guards and Marines for more than a month.
“We have residents afraid to leave their homes, we have constituents contacting my office because their family members never came home and they don’t know if they’ve been taken by ICE or where they’ve been taken,” Hahn said. “We have entire families who are destitute because their fathers or mothers have been taken from their work places and they have no way to pay their rent or put food on their table.”
Last week the five-member board voted 4-1 to put the declaration up for a vote at its regular Tuesday meeting. The sole “no” vote also came from Barger, who argued that the immigration raids did not meet the criteria of an emergency and that it could be unfair to landlords.
“I’m sure we’re going to be challenged legally,” Barger said. The county’s eviction moratorium during the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in multiple lawsuits.
Several people said they were against the emergency declaration if it would lead to an eviction moratorium during the public comment portion of Tuesday’s vote.
Landlords are “still reeling” from the COVID-era freezes that cost them “billions of dollars in uncollected rent and prohibited annual rent increase,” said Daniel Yukelson, CEO of the Apartment Association of Greater Los Angeles.
He said housing providers are sympathetic to tenants and their family members affected by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement activities. But, he said, the association isn’t aware of anyone unable to pay rent due to immigration enforcement.
“If local jurisdictions once again allow rent payments to be deferred due to ICE enforcement activities, this will lead to the further deterioration and loss of affordable housing in our community,” Yukelson said Monday.
HAWTHORNE — A man was shot to death Sunday at or near a bar in Hawthorne.
The shooting was reported at 7 p.m. Sunday in the 13700 block of South Inglewood Avenue, according to the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, which sent homicide detectives to the scene to assist the Hawthorne Police Department in its investigation. The shooting location is north of Rosecrans Avenue and east of the 405 Freeway.
The man was pronounced dead at the scene.
KCAL reported the victim was shot in the head by a suspect or suspects, who fired from a vehicle from outside The Greatest bar.
No descriptions were immediately available of the involved parties.
The relics of St. Thérèse of Lisieux are displayed inside the National Shrine of the Little Flower Basilica on Wednesday, Oct. 1, 2025, in Royal Oak, Michigan. (National Shrine of the Little Flower Basilica via AP)
The Rev. John Bettin, rector of the National Shrine of The Little Flower Basilica, looks Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2025, at a relic of St. Thérèse of Lisieux inside the basilica in Royal Oak, Michigan. (AP File Photo/Mike Householder)
A relic of St. Thérèse of Lisieux, pictured in a book of Catholic saints, can be viewed at the El Carmelo Retreat House in Redlands on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. (Photo by Mark Acosta, The Press-Enterprise/SCNG)
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The relics of St. Thérèse of Lisieux are displayed inside the National Shrine of the Little Flower Basilica on Wednesday, Oct. 1, 2025, in Royal Oak, Michigan. (National Shrine of the Little Flower Basilica via AP)
At El Carmelo, people can venerate the relic, which consists of remains inside a container, at the retreat center’s chapel from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. There is no admission fee.
Guests can park around the neighborhood or at Eastside Christian Church,1000 Roosevelt Road. Visitors may walk up the main drive — about a quarter-mile uphill trek — to the retreat chapel, or take shuttles that will be available.
There will be partial closures on Highland Avenue, and between Roosevelt Street and Cimarron Street, to allow for foot traffic.
At 7 p.m., a closing blessing will be held before the relic is removed from the site, organizers said. The retreat center and its gardens will be adorned with hundreds of roses, commemorating “The Little Flower” who loved Jesus.
St. Thérèse’s relic also visited the Carmelite-run retreat house 25 years ago, in 2000 — during the last Jubilee Holy Year in the Catholic Church — garnering thousands of visitors, organizers said.
“You feel close to God at El Carmelo,” said Tammy McCarty, chairman of the relics committee and the El Carmelo auxiliary. “It will be amazing to see how people feel when they come to see her relic.”
The Rev. Jose Luis Ferroni, a Carmelite friar and member of the relics committee, called the visit of St. Thérèse’s relic a “spiritual, miraculous cultural event” for Redlands. He hopes that visitors will leave feeling “showered and renewed.”
“In a time like this, it’s a breath of fresh air, to bring peace to each and every one of us, to our world,” Ferroni said. “Her message is very simple: Have gratitude and surrender. As Thérèse says, it doesn’t matter what you do for God — God does not look for great things that you do, but for the love that you do them.”
A cool ocean breeze and dark sky provided the backdrop for runners and cyclists tackling the 41st annual Long Beach Marathon on Sunday morning, Oct. 5.
Thousands of people were scattered along Shoreline Drive to watch the event, taking photos with their friends and family as the participants made their way through the 26.2-mile marathon.
The Long Beach Marathon is one of the city’s largest annual events, which also includes a half-marathon and a bicycle tour through the coastal metropolis. The event was once again sold out this year, with about 25,000 people participating.
This year’s winners had a mix of familiar and new faces in the local running community. Fountain Valley resident Esteban Prado, 25, came in first in the men’s full marathon in a time of 2 hours, 26 minutes and 31 seconds. Last year, Prado came in second in the half marathon. Second place went to Ethan Widlansky, 25, from Santa Monica, and Kevin Quinteros Lopez, 25, from Fontana, came in third.
“I feel good; my goal today was just to get a long run,” Prado said in an interview, “so it was good to find myself in the lead, and the crowd was amazing here. You can’t beat it – roads and the morale were perfect. I would do this one again.”
Being able to complete a marathon, he said, takes consistency and perseverance.
Runners cross the finish line of the 41st Long Beach Half Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners cross the finish line of the 41st Long Beach Half Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners cross the finish line of the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners cross the finish line of the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners cross the finish line of the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Paige Moore, of Palos Verdes, wins the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners cross the finish line of the 41st Long Beach Half Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
JaQuavious Harris wins the 41st Long Beach Half Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Paige Moore, of Palos Verdes, wins the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners take off at the start of the 41st Long Beach Half Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
JaQuavious Harris, second from left, leads the field from the start to win the 41st Long Beach Half Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Esteban Prado, of Fountain Valley, wins the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners make their way through the Marina during the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners cross the finish line of the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Maria Galvan cheers for David at the start of the 41st Long Beach Half Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Lauren Charlton, of Santa Ana, wins the 41st Long Beach Half Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Paige Moore, of Palos Verdes, wins the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Esteban Prado, of Fountain Valley, wins the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Esteban Prado, of Fountain Valley, wins the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Paige Moore, of Palos Verdes, wins the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners make their way through the Marina during the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Esteban Prado, of Fountain Valley, wins the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners take off at the start of the 41st Long Beach Half Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
A sold-out field of 25,000 runners participate in the 41st Long Beach Marathon and Half Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners make their way through the Marina during the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners take off at the start of the 41st Long Beach Half Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners make their way through the Marina during the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Anthony Reyes family cheers at the start of the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners make their way through the Marina during the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Paige Moore, of Palos Verdes, wins the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Mayor Rex Richardson talks to the media during the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Mayor Rex Richardson talks to the media during the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners make their way through the Marina during the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners take off at the start of the 41st Long Beach Half Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Mayor Rex Richardson talks to the media during the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Esteban Prado, of Fountain Valley, wins the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners make their way through the Marina during the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners hydrate at a water station during the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners hydrate at a water station during the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners take off at the start of the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners hydrate at a water station during the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners hydrate at a water station during the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Jessica Susolik and Deanna Seery came from Newport Beach to cheer for the runners of the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners take off at the start of the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
The family of Cameron Keith and his twin sister Delaine prepare to cheer for their runners at the start of the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Raymond Ko cheers on his daughter Jaqueline and son-in-law Brian at the start of the 41st Long Beach Half Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners hydrate at a water station during the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Mayor Rex Richardson talks to the media during the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners make their way through the Marina during the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Anthony Reyes family cheers at the start of the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners take off at the start of the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners line up at the start of the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners make their way through the Marina during the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners take off at the start of the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners line up at the start of the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Cara Burke cheers for her friend Miguel at the start of the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Legacy runners, Kenneth Williams, left, George Wallins and John Sumpter, right, line up at the start of their 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Legacy runners, Kenneth Williams, left, George Wallins and John Sumpter, right, line up at the start of their 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners take off at the start of the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
Runners line up at the start of the 41st Long Beach Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
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Runners cross the finish line of the 41st Long Beach Half Marathon on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
“Anytime I’m able to run a marathon, it’s always fun,” Prado added. “The crowd is amazing; the volunteers being out here so early and cheering for you, you can’t beat it.”
A first-time marathon runner took the gold for the women’s full marathon. Paige Moore, 24, from Ranchos Palos Verdes, came in first in a time of 2 hours, 55 minutes, and 12 seconds. Salena Gallardo Domingues, 30, from Redondo Beach, came in second, and Hope Stark, 22, from Colorado Springs, Colorado, came in third.
Moore said that she did not anticipate taking the win on Sunday. Even though she isn’t a stranger to long runs, this was, after all, her first marathon.
“I didn’t even think I was going to get under three hours,” she said. “I was just trying to finish, but I surprised myself. I had a lot of fun runners and motivators along the way, so that really helped me keep momentum.”
If people get inspired to participate in marathons or even half-marathons, Moore said, consistency is key.
“It doesn’t matter how far you go, just have fun,” she added. “It’s a lot of fun meeting everyone and having a great time.”
Many have been inspired to take part in Long Beach’s annual event. More than 25,000 people participated in the Long Beach Marathon events throughout the race weekend, organizers said. Participants also enjoyed the marathon’s beer garden, vendor booths and photo opportunities.
Some participants, such as the Legacy Runners, have participated in the marathon for several years. For others, it was their first time taking on the 26.2-mile challenge.
“I’m nervous; all the feelings are rushing in that I’m doing this for the first time,” Rodrigo Ochoa, 23, from Chino Hill said on Sunday morning.
Ochoa and his father were waiting for the Metrolink at the Willow Street Station to get downtown for the marathon. Running is something that he started doing because Ochoa likes that it is a challenging-yet-healthy habit.
“I know that once I’m at the starting line,” he said, “all those nerves will disappear.”
While 6,000 people took part in the full marathon, 14,000 runners participated in the half-marathon, event announcers said. The 13.1-mile half-marathon began 90 minutes after the full one, which started at 5 a.m.
Jaquavious Harris, 28, from Murray, Utah, won among the men, while Salvador Capetillo, 27, from Flagstaff, Arizona, came in second and Xavier Smith, 25, from Lake Forest finished third. On the women’s side, 25-year-old Lauren Charlton from Santa Ana placed first, 25-year-old Hannah Chau from Huntington Beach placed second and 28-year-old Katie Alvarenga from Northridge came in third.
The top three male and female finishers in the marathon and half-marathon will receive prize money. First place will receive $1,000, second place will get $500 and third place will receive $250.
Some runners participate for other reasons, such as raising funds for charities and nonprofits.
Kelsey Sandoval, for example, was running the half-marathon to raise money for the American Cancer Society. With many of her family members being affected by cancer and being BRCA2-positive herself – meaning Sandoval is at risk of being diagnosed with cancer – running for this cause was significant to the 38-year-old Long Beach resident.
“I just wanted to do it to raise money for everybody in my family, my friends and their families that have been affected by cancer,” she said.
Motive Sports – the event organizer – partners with the American Cancer Society to raise funds from each of the race events, and this year raised $1 million for the organization, according to Dan Cruz, spokesperson for the Long Beach Marathon.
Throughout the day, thousands of spectators crowded the start and finish line along Shoreline Drive to support family members, loved ones and friends with posters and banners. People would yell encouragement to runners as they passed by. Many held flowers, snacks or even an extra pair of shoes to give to their runners once they finished.
Seated comfortably in a lawn chair along the course was Justine Mora, 21, from Montana, who was supporting her boyfriend, Jorge Salas, who was running the full marathon for the first time.
“I’m really excited and nervous for him right now,” Mora said. “This is one of his life goals, so we’re excited for him to accomplish that.”
The couple’s plans for the rest of the day, similar to many of the thousands of participants, were to eat and sleep after the race – and, of course, celebrate.
While some runners wore pain on their faces as they finished, many also said they felt a sense of relief. Runners waved to their families, loved ones and friends who were waiting for them on the sidelines. The runners also congratulated each other for the milestones they had achieved — many even beating their personal records.
“It was brutal, but I hit a personal record, so that’s great,” said Victor Hernandez, 34, from Lakewood. “Even though it’s hard, you enjoy it. Once you finish, you feel relaxed and accomplished, and even start appreciating the good morning and good weather.”
Even though the events are different, everyone says they participate to have a fun time.
“It is physically and mentally hard, but at the end of the race, the most important thing is to have fun,” said Alejandra Lopez, 31, from Huntington Park, who finished her second half-marathon but first in Long Beach. “Enjoy being in the moment and be proud that you finished.”
LOS ANGELES — A Fashion District wholesaler and two of its executives have been sentenced for ducking more than $8 million in customs duties and using a cross-border money laundering system to avoid reporting over $17 million in suspected narcotics proceeds, federal authorities said Tuesday.
The three defendants were found guilty in Los Angeles federal court in October 2024 of dozens of felonies.
On Monday, C’est Toi Jeans Inc., which imported apparel from China and other nations and exported clothing to customers in Mexico, Central America and South America, was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Mark Scarsi to five years of probation and ordered to submit to federal monitoring. The judge also fined CTJ $11.5 million and ordered it to pay more than $15 million in restitution.
Si Oh Rhew, 71, of La Cañada Flintridge, CTJ’s president and a 75% owner of the company, was sentenced to eight years and seven months in federal prison, fined $8 million, and ordered to pay more than $19 million in restitution.
Lance Rhew, 38, of downtown Los Angeles, Si Oh Rhew’s son, a CTJ corporate officer and owner of another Los Angeles-based company that did business as CTJ, was sentenced to seven years in federal prison, fined $500,000, and ordered to pay restitution.
The case outlined in a 49-page indictment filed in December 2020 resulted from an operation in which law enforcement swarmed the 100-block hub of the West Coast apparel industry, executing dozens of search warrants as part of an investigation into money laundering and other crimes at Fashion District businesses.
During one of those searches at a downtown condominium linked to the defendants in the CTJ case, authorities seized more than $38.3 million in cash, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.
The jury found CTJ and Si Oh Rhew guilty of two conspiracies and multiple counts of failure to file report of currency transaction over $10,000 in a trade or business. The panel also found all three defendants guilty of three counts of entry of falsely classified goods, three counts of entry of goods by means of false statements, three counts of passing false and fraudulent papers through a customhouse, and two counts of international promotional money laundering, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.
CTJ was found guilty of an additional two concealment money laundering counts involving drug proceeds. Si Oh Rhew was found guilty of an additional two counts of aiding, assisting and procuring the filing of a false tax return. Lance Rhew was found guilty of one additional count of aiding, assisting and procuring the filing of a false tax return. Lance Rhew was also found guilty of one conspiracy count.
The first scheme involved the avoidance of customs duties and tariffs by purchasing garments from overseas manufacturers, including from China, but then submitting false information to U.S. Customs and Border Protection that understated the true value of the items being imported in the United States, prosecutors said.
As a result, the import duties owed on the shipments were lowered, causing about $8.4 million in unpaid tariffs and duties that should have been paid, prosecutors said.
In the second scheme, the Rhews used CTJ “to receive large amounts of bulk United States currency, including from narcotics proceeds, as payment for outstanding merchandise orders from customers in Mexico and elsewhere,” according to the indictment.
The jury heard that CTJ accepted large cash payments of up to $70,000 even after the law enforcement action targeted their businesses in 2014. The defendants failed to file currency transaction reports, which are required for any transaction involving more than $10,000 in cash, and concealed the cash receipts from an accountant who prepared their taxes, which led the Rhews to fraudulently omit more than $17 million in gross sales from tax returns filed with the Internal Revenue Service, evidence shows.
The jury found the defendants not guilty of several additional criminal counts, including two counts of concealment money laundering for CTJ and several counts of failure to file a report of a currency transaction in a nonfinancial trade or business for Lance Rhew.
The Trump administration has restored almost all of the 500 National Institutes of Health grants it suspended at UCLA in July in response to a federal judge’s order last week.
Attorneys in the U.S. Department of Justice submitted a court-mandated update on the status of the grant restorations Monday evening. They report that the National Institutes of Health, or NIH, has restored all but nine grants to UCLA health science researchers, though that figure may be even smaller.
In response to a similar court order in August, the federal National Science Foundation restored 300 grants it had suspended in July.
The restorations cap a remarkable turnaround for UCLA, which lost access to more than $500 million in research in July after the Trump administration froze 800 science grants to the esteemed public university. The National Science Foundation and National Institutes of Health accused UCLA of tolerating antisemitism as part of their justification for the grant funding freezes. Those claims followed months of efforts at the university to implement the recommendations of a task force on antisemitism that campus administrators appointed to examine bias at the school.
The science grants pay for research into life-saving drugs, dementia, heart disease in rural areas, robotics education and a vast array of science inquiries across the country. They help propel the country’s research enterprise and are the top source of federal research grants at the University of California. The UC system has battled the Trump administration over various efforts to slash its funding since President Donald Trump’s second term began. Science funding is also a key source of income and training for graduate students, who are the next generation of publicly funded academics. Still, UCLA and the rest of the UC remain in the hot seat as the system contends with settlement demands from Trump that amount to $1.2 billion. Trump sought that settlement over a litany of accusations, including that the campus tolerates antisemitism.
More than 600 Jewish faculty, students, staff and alumni of the University of California wrote in a public letter that stripping funding in response to those claims is “misguided and punitive.”
“Cutting off hundreds of millions of research funds will do nothing to make UCLA safer for Jews nor diminish antisemitism in the world,” the public letter says. A coalition of UC faculty and staff have sued to halt Trump from pursuing his settlement demands. The California federal judge who ordered the grants returned to UCLA, Rita Lin, has issued a string of decisions since June that have restored hundreds of other research grants from multiple agencies across the UC system. Her injunction last week is preliminary and the trial is ongoing. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has upheld some of her other preliminary injunctions that forced the Trump administration to restore scores of science, humanities and environmental research grants.
Lin last week also ordered the Department of Defense and Department of Transportation to restore grants to at least several dozen UC researchers, not just those at UCLA. Attorneys for the government say they need more time — until Oct. 10 — to bring back the defense grants, but said funding for all the terminated defense grants will be restored. Lin is also the judge in the Trump settlement lawsuit.
This story was originally published by CalMatters and distributed through a partnership with The Associated Press.
The Los Angeles City Council delayed a vote Friday on City Attorney Hydee Feldstein Soto’s request to hire a “monitor” who would track the city’s progress and use of funds under a federal lawsuit settlement requiring 12,915 shelter beds by June 2027.
The City Council is expected to revisit the matter Wednesday. Feldstein Soto has proposed contracting with former City Controller Ron Galperin and data analyst Daniel Garrie to serve jointly as the monitor in the L.A. Alliance case.
In June, a federal court judge determined that the city failed to meet its obligations under a settlement agreement with the L.A. Alliance for Human Rights. U.S. District Judge David Carter ordered city officials to provide an updated plan detailing how it will create 12,915 beds for homeless residents within two years.
In court documents, Carter wrote that the city has shown “a consistent lack of cooperation and responsiveness — an unwillingness to provide documentation unless compelled by court order or media scrutiny.”
The judge had previously threatened the city with appointing a receiver to oversee homeless funding and enforce compliance with the settlement, as requested by plaintiffs. Carter ultimately declined to do so, describing such action as a “last resort.”
However, Carter did institute a “monitor” to oversee compliance, who would “ask the hard questions on behalf of Angelenos,” the judge had written in his order.
The city is expected to submit their bed plan and name a monitor as ordered by Carter no later than Oct. 3.
The case started in March 2020 when L.A. Alliance — a coalition of business owners and residents of the city and county — filed a complaint in Los Angeles federal court against the city and Los Angeles County accusing them of not doing enough to address homelessness.
A judge signed off on a settlement in September 2023 in which the county agreed to supply an additional 3,000 beds for mental health and substance abuse treatment by the end of next year and subsidies for 450 new board-and-care beds. The L.A. Alliance filed papers alleging the city was not meeting its obligations.
An independent court-ordered assessment filed in March was unable to verify the number of homeless shelter beds the city claimed to have created.
Los Angeles Mayor Karen announced on Tuesday that her administration has reached a deal with labor unions that averts all remaining layoffs in the city’s fiscal budget, resolving one of the most contentious issues in this year’s budget cycle.
The agreement marked a sharp reversal from Bass’ original FY 25-26 budget proposal in April, which included more than 1,600 layoffs to address the city’s budget shortfall. The deal averts those cuts entirely, ending weeks of uncertainty for city workers and preserving public services that had been at risk.
“This is not about numbers on a spreadsheet, this was always about protecting our skilled city workforce who have trained for years and honed their craft,” Bass said at a press conference in downtown Los Angeles, where she was joined by city leaders and representatives from several municipal employee unions.
A Los Angeles Zoo employee monitors tree trimming at the LA Zoo on Tuesday, Sept. 23, 2025. On Tuesday Mayor Karen Bass announced a labor agreement that averts the previously proposed layoffs in the City of LA’s 2025-2026 budget. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
A Los Angeles Zoo employee at the LA Zoo on Tuesday, Sept. 23, 2025. On Tuesday Mayor Karen Bass announced a labor agreement that averts the previously proposed layoffs in the City of LA’s 2025-2026 budget. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Los Angeles City workers repair a sidewalk at Victory and Western avenue on Tuesday, Sept. 23, 2025. On Tuesday Mayor Karen Bass announced a labor agreement that averts the previously proposed layoffs in the City of LA’s 2025-2026 budget. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
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A Los Angeles Zoo employee monitors tree trimming at the LA Zoo on Tuesday, Sept. 23, 2025. On Tuesday Mayor Karen Bass announced a labor agreement that averts the previously proposed layoffs in the City of LA’s 2025-2026 budget. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Bass’ original $14 billion budget proposal had included 1,647 layoffs and the elimination of more than 1,000 vacant positions as part of a plan to address a $1 billion budget deficit.
A revised version adopted by the City Council in May — and signed by Bass in June — saved roughly 1,000 jobs by trimming proposed increases to the Fire Department, scaling back LAPD hiring plan and shifting some positions off of the general fund. But several hundred jobs remained at risk until this week’s announcement.
According to the mayor’s office, those remaining layoffs were ultimately avoided through a combination of negotiated labor agreements, department transfers and creative staffing alternatives.
City Administrative Officer Matt Szabo said that after the revised budget was adopted in June, 614 employees still faced potential layoffs. His office worked with labor groups to calculate the savings required to keep those workers on the payroll, then helped broker agreements to meet those targets, including changes to overtime policies, unpaid holidays and staff reassignments.
About 250 of the at-risk employees worked in civilian roles at the Los Angeles Police Department. To save those positions, the Los Angeles Police Protective League, which represents sworn officers, agreed to let its members voluntarily receive overtime as paid time off, reducing LAPD overtime expenses and avoiding civilian layoffs within the department.
For the remaining 300 or so employees, the city partnered with civilian unions to expedite transfers into vacant positions and secure commitments for up to five unpaid holidays in the latter half of the fiscal year.
Two major labor groups — the Coalition of L.A. City Unions, which represents more than 20,000 city workers, and the Engineers and Architects Association, which represents over 6,000 technical and professional staff — agreed to the unpaid days.
Those days are February 9, March 27, April 6, May 22 and June 22. The final number of unpaid days will depend on how many employees remain to be transferred into funded roles by the end of 2025.
Additional savings came from shifting employees from at-risk positions into vacant or specially funded roles — including transfers to departments such as the Port of Los Angeles, Los Angeles World Airports, and the Department of Water and Power, which operate outside the city’s general fund and have more flexible funding sources.
“Our members secured a historic agreement that will avert layoffs and establish a joint effort with the city to increase revenues, to protect and restore our city services,” said David Green, president and executive director of SEIU Local 721, which represents 11,000 city employees.
Marlene Fonseca, executive director of the Engineers and Architects Association, recalled reaching out Monday to a member who had recently been laid off but was slated to return thanks to the agreement. He had planned to attend the press conference but was unexpectedly hospitalized over the weekend.
“Had we not had this agreement, he would be facing a medical crisis with no health insurance,” Fonseca said. “This is the real human difference that solidarity makes.”
The mayor’s announcement comes months after a contentious budget season that drew pushback from several City Council members and employee unions.
In the council’s first vote on the revised budget, Councilmembers John Lee, Traci Park, and Monica Rodriguez voted no, citing concerns about cuts to public safety. The budget passed on a second vote, 11–2, with Lee and Park maintaining their opposition. Rodriguez and Nithya Raman were absent.
“I commend the collaborative efforts that led to this result, and I’m especially proud that the LAPD civilian positions previously identified for elimination were saved,” Lee said in a statement Tuesday. “These professionals are essential to the department and to keeping our communities safe.”
Some community leaders and neighborhood council members welcomed the news, saying it was a relief for both workers and for residents who rely on city services.
Lionel Mares, a member of the Neighborhood Council Budget Advocates, who spoke on his own behalf, said, “I have been urging the Los Angeles City Council and Mayor to save city employees from potential layoffs, because at this critical moment in our city we need to preserve city services, especially for low-income communities and neighborhoods.”
Mihran Kalaydjian, president of the Winnetka Neighborhood Council, said the agreement would benefit city workers and called it “a courageous step by the mayor.”
While the agreement resolves immediate concerns over layoffs, Szabo said his office remains cautious about the city’s financial outlook amid falling revenues and global trade uncertainty. His office plans to release its first quarterly budget report in October.
“But as of now, the $1 billion deficit was closed, and as this budget is implemented, we are projecting a structural balance in the following fiscal year, along with surpluses in years three and four,” he said.
On Monday, it was announced that less than a week after “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” was indefinitely suspended by ABC, the network has agreed to bring the show back, beginning Tuesday, Sept. 23. Naturally, politicians and celebrities are hopping on social media (and even late night shows) to weigh in on the turn of events.
“It’s always nice to start the show with some good news,” Stephen Colbert began his monologue on “The Late Show” Monday night.
“Well, just a few hours before we taped this broadcast, we got word that our long national late night-mare is over, because Disney announced that Jimmy Kimmel Live will return to air on ABC! Wonderful news for my dear friend Jimmy and his amazing staff. I’m so happy for them, plus, now that Jimmy’s not being canceled, I get to enjoy this again,” he said, grabbing the Emmy award he nabbed this month. “Once more, I am the only martyr in late night, unless CBS—you want to announce anything?”
Last week, Nexstar Media Group Inc. announced it was nixing “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” from its ABC affiliate stations for the “foreseeable future” after Federal Communications Commission Chair Brendan Carr implied the FCC would take regulatory action in response to Kimmel’s remarks in the wake of Charlie Kirk’s death.
The suspension was met with mixed reviews. While some cheered the swift action against Kimmel, others showed up in large numbers to protest outside the studio where “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” is broadcast, as well as Disney Studios in Burbank and Disneyland in Anaheim. Others took to social media to announce they were boycotting ABC and canceling their Disney+ and Hulu subscriptions. Many public figures voiced their support for Kimmel and his staff, with over 400 actors, musicians and directors signing an open letter with the ACLU calling out the decision to pull Kimmel’s show from the air as a violation of the First Amendment.
After several days of meetings and negotiations with Disney executives, it was announced on Monday that “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” would return on Tuesday.
“Last Wednesday, we made the decision to suspend production on the show to avoid further inflaming a tense situation at an emotional moment for our country. It is a decision we made because we felt some of the comments were ill-timed and thus insensitive,” a statement from Disney read. “We have spent the last days having thoughtful conversations with Jimmy, and after those conversations, we reached the decision to return the show on Tuesday.”
Many denounced the return of “Jimmy Kimmel Live!”, citing an imbalance in right versus left cancel culture.
Former Fox News host Megyn Kelly wrote, “Must be nice to be a leftist. ‘Cancellation’ lasts 5 nights and you’re right back under klieg lights. On the right you’re underground.” When the show had first been taken off the air, Kelly had commented on social media, “Just think for a minute about the amount of IRATE mail/viewer feedback they must have gotten to do this.”
Actor Rob Schneider posted on X, “I just found out that ABC/Disney is ALSO Bringing back ROSEANNE BARR for HER tv show!! Just kidding! ABC/Disney would NEVER bring back a conservative?! . . . “
And Ann Coulter also added her two cents, posting on X, “ABC execs prove they are NOT cowards by caving in 10 seconds to left-wing pressure.”
On the flipside, Luke Skywalker himself (Mark Hamill) shared an image on BlueSky that Kimmel was back with the caption, “Meltdown on “Truth” Social in 5… 4… 3… 2…”
Comedian Ellen DeGeneres shared the headline from Deadline about Kimmel’s return, noting in her caption that she couldn’t wait to hear Kimmel’s monologue on Tuesday.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom quoted a post from Dylan Byers, a Senior Correspondent at Puck, who shared the news. Newsom added his response, “Thank you to everyone but @BrendanCarrFCC. This is a win for free speech everywhere.”
Celebrities who’d appeared on “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” also weighed in.
Actor John Stamos shared two images of himself appearing on Kimmel’s show on Instagram, including one when he appeared alongside comedian Don Rickles. “Comedy has always pushed boundaries, but I wonder how someone like Don would navigate the world today – where every word is weighed, replayed, and judged in real time,” wrote Stamos in the caption. “What I do know is that he made people laugh, and laughter is something we could all use a little more of right now.”
Actor Patton Oswalt shared an image of the headline of Kimmel’s return as well as a video of him appearing on the show, riding a horse onto the stage with the caption “Hark! I bring good news!”
Star of the ABC hit “Scandal,” Kerry Washington, posted on Threads, “Jimmy Kimmel LIVEs on!!! Grateful to everyone who spoke UP. Welcome back friend.”
And Democratic Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer also weighed in, posting, “This is about fighting for free speech and against these abuses by Donald Trump and Brendan Carr.”
Andrew Kolvet, a spokesperson for Turning Point USA, the organization founded by Charlie Kirk, shared on X, “Disney and ABC caving and allowing Kimmel back on the air is not surprising, but it’s their mistake to make. Nextstar and Sinclair do not have to make the same choice.”
As of Monday afternoon, Sinclair announced that when “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” returns to ABC on Tuesday, they will not be airing it on their affiliate stations. Instead, the broadcaster will use the time slot to air local news. In their original press release on Sept. 17, they stated that the suspension was “not enough,” calling on Kimmel to “issue a direct apology to the Kirk family” and “make a meaningful personal donation to the Kirk Family and Turning Point USA.”
The group had previously announced that they would be airing a Charlie Kirk memorial special in Kimmel’s timeslot on Friday, Sept. 19, but their ABC affiliates instead broadcast a rerun of ‘Celebrity Family Feud.’