ORLANDO, Fla. — Universal Orlando unveiled a new multi-day ticket option on Thursday morning, which gives guests access to all four of its theme parks.
What You Need To Know
Universal Orlando unveiled a new multi-day ticket option, which gives guests access to all four of its theme parks
The ticket offers access to Universal Studios Florida, Universal Islands of Adventure, Universal Volcano Bay and the new Universal Epic Universe
Park officials also shared that, for a limited time, guests can purchase the new six- or seven-day ticket for the price of a five-day ticket
The new ticket, which park officials say is designed to “complement its evolution into a weeklong vacation destination,” offers six or seven days of park-to-park access to Universal Studios Florida, Universal Islands of Adventure, Universal Volcano Bay and the new Universal Epic Universe, Universal officials stated.
Park officials also announced that, for a limited time, guests can purchase the new six- or seven-day ticket for the price of a five-day ticket.
The new multi-day ticket, available to U.S. residents, can be paired with a “special, value-driven hotel offer” with a $300 hotel dining credit when booking a stay of five nights or longer at Universal Cabana Bay Beach Resort, Universal Aventura Hotel, Universal Stella Nova Resort and Universal Terra Luna Resort.
ORLANDO, Fla. — IMMERSE is like an arts playground where you and your family can get as interactive as you want. With 160 artists and organizations applying, the bar is high.
Creative City Project began in 2012 as a group of artists performing on street corners and in plazas around downtown Orlando. The event was renamed IMMERSE at the beginning of 2017.
IMMERSE kicks off in a few days, meaning 10 Orlando city blocks will be peppered with interactives, engagements, attractions and experiences.
Cole NeSmith is the founder. “It really is that embodiment of how art brings people and culture together,” he said.
Cole gave a tour of around Architects of Air. It’s an impossible-to-miss inflatable attraction set up on the Seneff Arts Plaza in front of the Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts. A British arts organization created the walk-through inflatable structures that are “kind of modeled after stained glass in a cathedral.”
IMMERSE and its multi-sensory arts playground runs this Friday, Feb. 20, through Sunday, Feb. 22, 2026. Most of IMMERSE — presented by AdventHealth — remains free and open to the public, but some of the experiences are ticketed.
Scattered showers around the SoCal area remained until Wednesday afternoon and will continue, creating a stronger storm
Southern California is expected to briefly dry up before heading into another rainstorm within the coming week.
Forecasters predicted this storm to be “fast-moving” but strong. The storm exited the area much earlier than was predicted. However, there is a lot more rain that is expected to come for the region.
Temperatures will begin to warm up starting Thursday and ending on Saturday. This makes for a few sunny days before we head into another rainstorm that is set to begin on Sunday.
This forecast calls for much colder and stronger rainfall. It is expected to last up until Wednesday, with a possibility of snow in the higher regions.
Different Region Forecast:
Los Angeles and Orange Counties can expect around a 70% chance of morning showers with temperatures between 53 and 64 degrees.
Valleys and the Inland Empire can also expect a 70% chance of rain with a high of 63 degrees and a low of 53.
Desert areas will be getting a 40% chance of rain with wind gusts. Palm Springs will get as high as 72 degrees, with other areas remaining between 57 and 47 degrees.
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Mountain areas will receive a high of 42 degrees and reach a low of 25. Some areas are expected to get 0.1 to 1 inch of rain with a possibility of 3 inches of snow in the higher elevations.
Orange County health officials are warning of another possible measles exposure after a confirmed case visited Disneyland last month.
The OC Health Care Agency on Saturday said an individual who was infectious with measles visited Disneyland Park on Thursday, Jan. 22 from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., and Disney California Adventure Park from 3 p.m. until closing.
Anyone who was at those locations during the listed times may be at risk of developing measles symptoms between seven and 21 days after exposure, officials said.
The warning follows a measles exposure notice issued last week involving an international traveler who passed through Los Angeles International Airport and later visited Disneyland Park and Disney California Adventure Park on Wednesday, Jan. 28.
Health officials urged people who are not fully vaccinated or who are unsure of their immunity status to contact a healthcare provider about receiving the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine.
“There are populations who cannot receive the measles vaccine — whether due to age, health conditions or allergies,” said Dr. Anissa Davis, Orange County’s deputy health officer. “Those individuals may face significantly higher health risks when exposed to the virus.”
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 733 measles cases have been confirmed across 20 states nationwide this years as of Feb. 5.
Symptoms typically include fever, cough, runny nose and red eyes, followed by a rash that begins on the face and spreads to the body, the agency said.
Health officials advised anyone who develops symptoms to stay home and call a medical provider before seeking care to avoid exposing others.
Authorities Wednesday urged bank customers to be extra vigilant when using outdoor ATMs after foreign nationals were arrested for running a distraction theft operation to steal victims’ ATM cards and PIN codes.
Three Romanian nationals were arrested last month as investigators tracked them down for a scheme from November 2025, the Orange County Sheriffs Department said.
The suspects worked as a team and followed a potential victim to the ATM on Santiago Boulevard in the city of Villa Park, according to investigators.
Surveillance video from the alleged crime scene shows, as the victim is finishing his transaction with his ATM card still being in the machine, one of the suspects appears to drop crash at the victim’s feet, get his attention and make him pick up the money.
As the victim is distracted for a few seconds, the second suspect appears to swap the victim’s ATM card with a fake one, the video shows. The suspects then used the stolen ATM card and PIN code to get cash and make purchases, the sheriff’s department said.
After the victim reported the crime, the sheriff’s department launched a months-long investigation, concluding there was a pattern of distraction thefts happening in Orange, Los Angeles, San Bernardino, San Francisco and Sacramento counties,
“The suspects typically follow the victim to the parking lot and attempt to distract them by dropping cash on the ground and insisting it belongs to the victim,” the sheriff’s department in a statement. “This ultimately causes enough of a distraction to allow the suspects to steal the victim’s debit card and make numerous bank withdrawals prior to the victim having knowledge of the theft of the debit card.”
The three people arrested for the November theft was identified as Romita Achitei, 61, Paul Agafitei, 43, and George Asafiei, 46, They are facing multiple felony charges, including grand theft, identity theft and forgery.
Criminals who conduct distraction theft operations often rehearse their routines in advance so they could be convincing to their potential targets, the investigators added. And their crime scenes can be beyond outdoor ATMs as they may try to steal victims’ PIN codes at grocery stories or retailers.
Orange County authorities urged people to cover the keypad while using ATMs or debt card machines while being wary of strangers.
“If someone approaches you, make sure to keep your distance and do not allow any stranger within arm’s reach,” the sheriff’s department said
Anyone who may have been victimized in distraction thefts was asked to call the OC Sheriff’s Department at 714-647-7000.
A sly senior feline who wedged itself into a brick-sized hole beneath a Seal Beach home’s fireplace was rescued by a team of Orange County Fire Authority personnel.
Franny, a senior cat around 9 to 11 years old, “decided to play a game of hide-and-seek” shortly after being adopted by its new family, OCFA said. After the cat got into the hole, its owners were unable to help her out, so they called firefighters.
Engine 44 responded to the scene and were able to safely get the cat out after several careful attempts.
“We’re happy to report Franny is doing well and settling back in at home, hopefully staying out of tight spaces moving forward.
OCFA took Franny’s rescue operation as opportunity to remind the public that Animal Control can be contacted during urgent matters so appropriate resources can be deployed.
🐾 A Purr-fect Rescue in Seal Beach 🐾
A Seal Beach family’s happy day of rescuing a senior cat yesterday took an unexpected turn when “Franny,” estimated to be 9–11 years old, decided to play a game of hide-and-seek, crawling into a hole about the size of a brick beneath the >> pic.twitter.com/sRYpQhM7eG
Three men from the San Fernando Valley suspected of a series of burglaries in the Newport Beach area were taken into custody Wednesday.
The suspects are believed to be connected to a transnational organized residential theft ring that operated in the Newport Beach area over the past few months, police said.
The men allegedly went to the Shady Canyon area of Irvine on Jan. 10, conspiring to burglarize a house. They were allegedly witnessed on surveillance video jumping over a fence carrying backpacks, police said.
Detectives determined that the men’s theft operation was disrupted before the burglary occurred. “The suspects then traveled to the Turtle Rock area, where prior burglaries had occurred. There, they were seen walking into an open space and crouching in nearby bushes before fleeing the area at a high rate of speed in a vehicle,” according to a statement from the Irvine Police Department.
Detectives from the Newport Beach Police Department, with help from Irvine Police Department investigators, collaborated on a joint investigation that led to the arrest of all three suspects on Wednesday.
Investigators identified the suspects as John Brayan Soliz-Reinoso and Francisco Alegria, both 32-year-olds from Reseda, along with 22-year-old Daniel Mejias-Reinoso of Northridge, according to the Irvine Police Department.
Anyone with additional information regarding the burglaries was urged to email Irvine Police Department detective Mike Ward at mward@cityofirvine.org. Newport Beach Police Department Joshua Granger can be reached at jgranger@nbpd.org.
ORANGE CITY, Fla. — Wednesday marks the 40th anniversary of one of the darkest days for NASA — the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster.
All seven astronauts on board were killed when the shuttle broke apart 73 seconds after lifting off from Kennedy Space Center on Jan. 28, 1986.
What You Need To Know
Wednesday marks 40 years since the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster on Jan. 28, 1986
Just over a minute after lifting off, the Challenger broke apart, killing all seven astronauts on board
Volusia County resident and space enthusiast Jeffrey Ault, who captured it all on his Super 8 camera, says he remembers the tragedy like it was yesterday
Many people across Florida and the country watched as it all unfolded, including Volusia County resident Jeffrey Ault, who says he remembers that day like it was yesterday.
Ault was one of many on the shoreline of the Banana River near Port Canaveral who were watching the launch live that day.
He says he was the only person to have shot it all on a Super 8 movie camera.
Although Ault says it was a memorable January day, it was for all the wrong reasons.
Challenger crew members: Michael J. Smith, front row left, Francis R. “Dick” Scobee, Ronald E. McNair; Ellison S. Onizuka, back row left, S. Christa McAuliffe, Gregory B. Jarvis, and Judith A. Resnik. On Jan. 28, 1986, they lost their lives when the space shuttle Challenger blew up after liftoff. (NASA)
Like many space enthusiasts, Ault says he followed the Apollo program and built rocket models ever since he was a kid. So, to witness a tragedy like the Challenger explosion was devastating for him.
It was also his first time seeing a launch in person.
One thing that Ault says he remembers very clearly is how cold it was that day.
He says the launch had been delayed several times because of weather concerns, and that he didn’t know whether it was going to happen.
Even though the Challenger launch resulted in tragedy, Ault says a lot still can be learned from it to this day.
“I think the space program — back with the Apollo program, the Space Shuttle program — brought Americans together, brought people from all over the world together,” he says. “And hopefully, as we move forward, maybe we could get some of that unity and positive feeling back throughout this country.”
Ault says he will never forget the speech that then-President Ronald Reagan made in honor of those who died in the tragedy, and to remind Americans what astronauts put on the line every time they go into space.
“You really have to give credit to the masterminds, the engineers who work on this, and then the brave astronauts that are putting their lives at risk for this travel,” Ault says. “And the Challenger taught us that it is very dangerous.”
To keep their memories alive, the NASA Day of Remembrance ceremony is held every year around the time of the Challenger disaster. This year, it took place on Jan. 22.
The event serves to memorialize the lives lost not only in the Challenger tragedy, but the seven astronauts who died aboard the Space Shuttle Columbia, which broke up during re-entry on Feb. 1, 2003, and the three astronauts from Apollo 1, who died when a fire broke out in their capsule during preflight testing on Jan. 27, 1967.
ORANGE CITY, Fla. — Wednesday marks the 40th anniversary of one of the darkest days for NASA — the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster.
All seven astronauts on board were killed when the shuttle broke apart 73 seconds after lifting off from Kennedy Space Center on Jan. 28, 1986.
What You Need To Know
Wednesday marks 40 years since the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster on Jan. 28, 1986
Just over a minute after lifting off, the Challenger broke apart, killing all seven astronauts on board
Volusia County resident and space enthusiast Jeffrey Ault, who captured it all on his Super 8 camera, says he remembers the tragedy like it was yesterday
Many people across Florida and the country watched as it all unfolded, including Volusia County resident Jeffrey Ault, who says he remembers that day like it was yesterday.
Ault was one of many on the shoreline of the Banana River near Port Canaveral who were watching the launch live that day.
He says he was the only person to have shot it all on a Super 8 movie camera.
Although Ault says it was a memorable January day, it was for all the wrong reasons.
Challenger crew members: Michael J. Smith, front row left, Francis R. “Dick” Scobee, Ronald E. McNair; Ellison S. Onizuka, back row left, S. Christa McAuliffe, Gregory B. Jarvis, and Judith A. Resnik. On Jan. 28, 1986, they lost their lives when the space shuttle Challenger blew up after liftoff. (NASA)
Like many space enthusiasts, Ault says he followed the Apollo program and built rocket models ever since he was a kid. So, to witness a tragedy like the Challenger explosion was devastating for him.
It was also his first time seeing a launch in person.
One thing that Ault says he remembers very clearly is how cold it was that day.
He says the launch had been delayed several times because of weather concerns, and that he didn’t know whether it was going to happen.
Even though the Challenger launch resulted in tragedy, Ault says a lot still can be learned from it to this day.
“I think the space program — back with the Apollo program, the Space Shuttle program — brought Americans together, brought people from all over the world together,” he says. “And hopefully, as we move forward, maybe we could get some of that unity and positive feeling back throughout this country.”
Ault says he will never forget the speech that then-President Ronald Reagan made in honor of those who died in the tragedy, and to remind Americans what astronauts put on the line every time they go into space.
“You really have to give credit to the masterminds, the engineers who work on this, and then the brave astronauts that are putting their lives at risk for this travel,” Ault says. “And the Challenger taught us that it is very dangerous.”
To keep their memories alive, the NASA Day of Remembrance ceremony is held every year around the time of the Challenger disaster. This year, it took place on Jan. 22.
The event serves to memorialize the lives lost not only in the Challenger tragedy, but the seven astronauts who died aboard the Space Shuttle Columbia, which broke up during re-entry on Feb. 1, 2003, and the three astronauts from Apollo 1, who died when a fire broke out in their capsule during preflight testing on Jan. 27, 1967.
A Huntington Beach resident who’s been documenting the number of crashes that have happened along a busy intersection near his home is pushing for changes to improve safety.
In just the past three years, 11 crashes have been recorded on State Route 39 near the intersection of Beach Boulevard and Taylor Drive in Huntington Beach, according to police. One of those crashes resulted in a fatality and seven of them caused injuries to those who were involved.
Craig McCoy, who lives in the area, said the numerous crashes have left him and his neighbors apprehensive. As a result, the Orange County man has taken matters into his hands by tracking the crashes with his home surveillance camera in hopes it will push authorities to make appropriate changes.
“I put up a camera for my front yard, and then the company that makes security cameras came out with one that zooms in,” McCoy said. “So, I said, ‘Perfect, there’s a bunch of accidents in front of my house. Let me just point it to the intersection and see what happens.’”
The videos, which were recorded over a two-year period, show drivers attempting to make a left turn onto Taylor Street. Those drivers are often met with cars driving southbound and northbound on SR-39 at high speeds.
“It’s technically 40 to 45 through here, but the regular flow of traffic is 50 or 60, sometimes faster,” McCoy said. “People can’t typically account for that when they are trying to make left turns and that is typically how those accidents happen.”
McCoy said he reached out to the city for help but was told that because SR-39 is a state highway, it’s under state jurisdiction. He added that he was able to reach Caltrans and was told the agency recently completed a review of the area and the road. It said it was waiting for those findings to see if the agency can move forward with any changes.
Foodies will be flocking to the Disneyland resort this weekend for the kickoff of the festival season and a chance to sample a dozen new food and drink items from the Lunar New Year menu with a Sip & Savor pass.
The 2026 Lunar New Year event will run on Friday, Jan. 23 through Feb. 22 at Disney California Adventure.
The Asian-inspired food festival pays tribute to Chinese, Vietnamese and Korean traditions with a lineup of multicultural live entertainment and Disney characters dressed in festive attire.
The six festival marketplace booths will once again include Bamboo Blessings, Wrapped in Love, Lucky 8 Lantern, Red Dragon Spice Traders, Prosperity Bao & Bun and Longevity Noodle Co.
Sip & Savor passes available during the 2026 Lunar New Year food festival at Disney California Adventure. (Courtesy of Disneyland)
DCA restaurants offering new Sip & Savor menu items during the Lunar New Year festival will include Aunt Cass Cafe, Boardwalk Pizza & Pasta, Cozy Cone Motel, Hollywood Lounge, Lamplight Lounge, Lucky Fortune Cookery, Paradise Garden Grill, Smokejumpers Grill and Studio Catering Co.
The 2026 Sip and Savor pass with six digital coupons good for individual items at marketplace booths and select restaurants throughout the festival will cost $49 ($46 for Magic Keyholders).
Mulan’s Lunar New Year Procession during Lunar New Year at Disney California Adventure on Tuesday, Jan. 23, 2024, in Anaheim, CA. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Let’s take a closer look at all the new food and drinks available with the Sip and Savor pass during Disney’s Lunar New Year festival.
Marketplace Booths
Sip & Savor passes can be used for most of the new and returning food and nonalcoholic beverages at the Lunar New Year festival marketplace booths along the DCA parade route.
This year’s festival marketplace menu lineup will be dominated mostly by returning favorites — with only two new food items and one new nonalcoholic drink.
Five-Spice Popcorn Chicken available at Bamboo Blessings marketplace booth during the 2026 Lunar New Year food festival at Disney California Adventure. (Courtesy of Disneyland)
Bamboo Blessings
Five-Spice Popcorn Chicken with sweet chile-garlic sauce
Guava Dragon Fruit Sparkler made with lemonade, sparkling mineral water, guava and dragon fruit syrups and a frozen dragon fruit garnish
Japchae Noodles available at Longevity Noodle Co. marketplace booth during the 2026 Lunar New Year food festival at Disney California Adventure. (Courtesy of Disneyland)
Longevity Noodle Co.
Japchae Noodles with kalbi short rib
DCA Restaurants
Festival-goers looking for something new to eat with their Sip & Savor passes will have to try the tasting-size portions at select restaurants and vending carts throughout DCA.
Crispy Fried Chicken Bao available at Cozy Cone Motel during the 2026 Lunar New Year food festival at Disney California Adventure. (Courtesy of Disneyland)
Cozy Cone Motel
Cars Land
Crispy Fried Chicken Bao coated in sweet chile sauce with cucumbers, carrots and sesame seeds served in a soft bao bun
Tteokbokki Rice Cakes available at Hollywood Lounge and Studio Catering Co. during the 2026 Lunar New Year food festival at Disney California Adventure. (Courtesy of Disneyland)
Hollywood Lounge and Studio Catering Co.
Hollywood Land
Tteokbokki rice cakes with gochujang sauce topped with cheese, sesame seeds and green onions
Grilled Lemongrass Pork Belly Skewers available at Paradise Garden Grill during the 2026 Lunar New Year food festival at Disney California Adventure. (Courtesy of Disneyland)
Paradise Garden Grill
Paradise Gardens Park
Grilled Lemongrass Pork Belly Skewers served with fried garlic rice, pickled carrots and daikon radish with a side salad
Bulgogi Fries with marinated beef, kimchi, cucumber, mozzarella cheese and gochujang aioli topped with sesame seeds and green onions
Bulgogi Fries available at Smokejumpers Grill and Paradise Garden Grill during the 2026 Lunar New Year food festival at Disney California Adventure. (Courtesy of Disneyland)
Smokejumpers Grill
Grizzly Peak
Bulgogi Fries with marinated beef, kimchi, cucumber, mozzarella cheese and gochujang aioli topped with sesame seeds and green onions
Pandan Cheesecake available at Boardwalk Pizza & Pasta during the 2026 Lunar New Year food festival at Disney California Adventure. (Courtesy of Disneyland)
Boardwalk Pizza & Pasta
Paradise Gardens Park
Pandan Cheesecake with brown butter graham crust, coconut whipped topping and strawberry jam
Strawberry Green Tea Bread Pudding available at Aunt Cass Cafe during the 2026 Lunar New Year food festival at Disney California Adventure. (Courtesy of Disneyland)
Aunt Cass Cafe
San Fransokyo Square
Strawberry Green Tea Bread Pudding with green tea creme anglaise and whipped topping
Almond Cold Brew with orange cold foam
Mango Milk Tea available at Lucky Fortune Cookery during the 2026 Lunar New Year food festival at Disney California Adventure. (Courtesy of Disneyland)
Lucky Fortune Cookery
San Fransokyo Square
Mango Milk Tea with brown sugar tapioca spheres topped with pineapple cold foam
The Feng Li Su Churro available at the Hollywood Land Churro Cart during the 2026 Lunar New Year food festival at Disney California Adventure. (Courtesy of Disneyland)
Hollywood Land Churro Cart
Feng Li Su Churro rolled in shortbread sugar topped with pineapple jelly and cherry-flavored popping pearls
Spicy Pork Belly Grilled Cheese available at Studio Catering Co. during the 2026 Lunar New Year food festival at Disney California Adventure. (Courtesy of Disneyland)
More New Food
A handful of new Lunar New Year food items will not be available with the Sip & Savor pass.
Chef’s Special with Mongolian Beef (Lamplight Lounge)
Coconut Pandan Donuts (Lamplight Lounge)
Vietnamese Coffee Roulade (Paradise Garden Grill)
Year of the Horse Bread (Aunt Cass Cafe, Cozy Cone Motel and Boudin Bread Cart)
Guava Cocktail available during the 2026 Lunar New Year food festival at Disney California Adventure. (Courtesy of Disneyland)
Cocktails & Beer
The rest of the new items on the Lunar New Year menu will be filled out with several dozen cocktails, spiked coffees, beers and seltzers. Sip & Savor passes can’t be used on alcoholic drinks.
ORLANDO, Fla. — Starting Feb. 1, travelers without a REAL ID or acceptable form of identification could face extra screening and a $45 fee at TSA checkpoints.
A process called ConfirmID may add up to 30 minutes to security screening for some passengers.
What You Need To Know
TSA’s Confirm ID process begins Feb. 1 for travelers without REAL ID or acceptable identification
The process can add up to 30 minutes to security screening and includes a $45 fee
TSA says 94% of passengers already present acceptable identification
For a full list of acceptable forms of identification and more information on REAL ID requirements, click here.
The TSA’s ConfirmID process is used when a passenger arrives at an airport checkpoint without a REAL ID or another acceptable form of identification.
“You need ID to identify yourself. I don’t want to be on a plane with people they don’t know,” said traveler Tee Hollis.
Travelers who go through ConfirmID are subject to additional ID verification and enhanced screening, which TSA says can cause significant delays.
“With all the security we go through. It better be safe,” said traveler G.Q. Renfro.
TSA warns that the ConfirmID process can take up to 30 minutes and may cause missed flights if passengers don’t arrive early.
“The good news is that right now across the country, 94% of passengers who are coming through the checkpoint do have some form of acceptable ID. Most are presenting either a REAL ID from their state or a U.S. passport,” said Daniel Velez, TSA spokesperson for Florida.
TSA emphasizes that passengers with a REAL ID or another approved form of identification do not need to use ConfirmID.
“We’re trying to ensure that we’re keeping our skies safe from terrorists and any nefarious actors,” Velez said. “So we have to confirm everybody’s identification that gets onto an aircraft. And the majority of the country right now is doing so. As I mentioned, 94% of people are showing us some form of acceptable ID.”
TSA says travelers can check with their state DMV if they’re unsure whether their ID is REAL ID compliant.
TSA says the $45 fee ensures that non-compliant travelers, not taxpayers, cover the cost of processing travelers without acceptable IDs. For a full list of acceptable forms of identification and more information on REAL ID requirements, click here.
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla – Duke Energy announced Wednesday it is dropping storm recovery charges for customers a month earlier than originally scheduled.
The utility company said storm cost recovery charges were results of costs associated with the company’s approximately $1.1 billion response to hurricanes Debby, Helene and Milton.
What You Need To Know
Duke Energy announces early removal of storm recovery charges for customers
Duke said storm cost recovery charges were results of costs associated with the company’s response to hurricanes Debby, Helene and Milton
Customers can expect a $33 reduction on the monthly bills to start
Residential customers can expect an approximately $33 reduction on their monthly bills, when compared to January, for every 1,000 kilowatt-hours (kWh) of electricity they use.
Commercial and industrial customers’ monthly bills will be lowered between 9.6% and 15.8%, also when compared to January, though the specific impact will vary depending on several factors.
“We understand all of our customers have been affected by the rising costs of living, many may be facing financial challenges, and some are even having to decide which bills they can afford to pay every month,” said Melissa Seixas, Duke Energy Florida state president. “It was important to us that our customers get this significant rate relief as soon as possible while we continue to deliver the safe, reliable power they expect and deserve.”
Duke officials also said additional savings are on the way.
In March, residential customers will experience another approximately $11 decrease (per 1,000 kWh) on their monthly bills, creating a total $44 decrease.
Duke Energy Florida supplies electricity to 2 million residential, commercial and industrial customers across 13,000-square miles in west central Florida, including Orlando, St. Peterburg and Clearwater.
A man accused of ambushing and fatally stabbing his ex-girlfriend’s new boyfriend has been extradited to Orange County to face a murder charge after eight years on the run in Mexico, authorities said.
Humberto Rodriguez Martinez, 39, is accused of working with a friend to kill his romantic rival outside his ex-girlfriend’s apartment in 2017, according to the Orange County district attorney’s office. Martinez is a Mexican citizen and was in the U.S. illegally at the time of the killing, prosecutors said.
Prosecutors charged Martinez in 2017 with the murder of 32-year-old Daniel Reyes, as well as with felony enhancements for allegedly lying in wait and for using a knife. But for years police were unable to arrest him.
Martinez’s car was recovered in San Diego, while he remained wanted on a $2-million warrant.
His friend, Adan Zapot-Leyva, was arrested two days after the attack and later sentenced to 15 years to life after pleading guilty in 2023 to one felony count of second-degree murder.
Mexican authorities, working with the U.S. Marshals Service, tracked down Martinez in 2024 in Mexico, where he was arrested at the request of the U.S.
On Dec. 4, he was extradited to the U.S. and homicide detectives from the Anaheim Police Department took him into custody at Los Angeles International Airport. He pleaded not guilty to murder on Tuesday and is being held without bail.
“This arrest does not undo the pain the victim’s family has endured, but it reinforces our commitment and promise to our community: We will never stop working until justice is served,” Anaheim Police Chief Manny Cid said in a statement.
Prosecutors accuse Martinez of carrying out a deliberate, jealousy-driven murder plot.
Martinez shared two children with his ex-girlfriend and they were co-parenting for several months after they broke up. On Oct. 17, 2017, Martinez and Zapot-Leyva went to the woman’s apartment to watch the children while she went to work, prosecutors said.
She returned home around 8:30 p.m. and the men left the apartment. About 30 minutes later, her new boyfriend arrived, prosecutors said.
Early the following morning, Anaheim police officers responded to the intersection of Santa Ana and Helena streets after witnesses reported seeing two men chasing Reyes and one of them stabbing him. Reyes died at the scene.
Zapot-Leyva later told authorities that he and Martinez had watched the apartment for several hours because they knew that Reyes was inside, according to his 2023 plea agreement obtained by City News Service.
The ex-girlfriend had called Zapot-Leyva to ask where he and Martinez were and, in a “deliberate trick,” Zapot-Leyva told her they had left the area hours ago, according to the plea agreement. The goal was to fool Reyes into thinking it was safe to exit the apartment.
Once he did emerge, the men chased him down and attacked him, and Martinez stabbed him 10 times, Zapot-Leyva told authorities, according to the plea deal.
Reyes begged them to stop, saying “please don’t … I have children,” according to the plea deal.
“The pursuit of justice will never be derailed by time or distance,” O.C. Dist. Atty. Todd Spitzer said in a statement Friday. “We are grateful for the incredible work of our investigators and prosecutors and of our partners, both domestic and international, for their assistance in tracking down a wanted [murder suspect] and bringing him back to Orange County.”
Both tickets can be upgraded with the Park Hopper, Park Hopper Plus or Water Parks & Sports options, according to park officials.
Disney also shared that special room offers are available for Florida residents, which include saving up to 30% at select Disney Resorts Collection hotels this spring and up to 35% on rooms at select Disney Resort hotels this summer. View additional details about the Disney hotel offers.
American Reich: A Murder in Orange County, Neo-Nazis, and a New Age of Hate
By Eric Lichtblau Little Brown and Company: 352 pages, $30
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Have you heard of Orange County? It’s where the good Republicans go before they die.
It should come as no surprise that Orange County, a beloved county for the grandfather of modern American conservatism, Ronald Reagan, would be the fertile landscape for far-right ideology and white supremacy. Reaganomics aside, the O.C. has long since held a special if not slightly off-putting place, of oceanfront leisure, modern luxury and all-American family entertainment — famed by hit shows (“The Real Housewives of Orange County,” “The O.C.” and “Laguna Beach,” among others). Even crime in Orange County has been sensationalized and glamorized, with themes veneered by opulence, secrecy and illusions of suburban perfection. To Eric Lichtblau, the Pulitzer Prize winner and former Los Angeles Times reporter, the real story is far-right terrorism — and its unspoken grip on the county’s story.
“One of the reasons I decided to focus on Orange County is that it’s not the norm — not what you think of as the Deep South. It’s Disneyland. It’s California,” Lichtblau says. “These are people who are trying to take back America from the shores of Orange County because it’s gotten too brown in their view.”
His newest investigative book, “American Reich,” focuses on the 2018 murder of gay Jewish teenager Blaze Bernstein as a lens to examine Orange County and how the hate-driven murder at the hands of a former classmate connects to a national web of white supremacy and terrorism.
I grew up a few miles away from Bernstein, attending a performing arts school similar to his — and Sam Woodward’s. I remember the early discovery of the murder where Woodward became a suspect, followed by the news that the case was being investigated as a hate crime. The murder followed the news cycle for years to come, but in its coverage, there was a lack of continuity in seeing how this event fit into a broader pattern and history ingrained in Orange County. There was a bar down the street from me where an Iranian American man was stabbed just for not being white. The seaside park of Marblehead, where friends and I visited for homecoming photos during sunset, was reported as a morning meet-up spot for neo-Nazis in skeleton masks training for “white unity” combat. These were just some of the myriad events Lichtblau explores as symptoms of something more unsettling than one-offs.
Samuel Lincoln Woodward, of Newport Beach, speaks with his attorney during his 2018 arraignment on murder charges in the death of Blaze Bernstein.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
Lichtblau began the book in 2020, in the midst of COVID. He wanted to find a place emblematic of the national epidemic that he, like many others, was witnessing — some of the highest record of anti-Asian attacks, assaults on Black, Latino and LGBTQ+ communities, and rising extremist rhetoric and actions.
“Orange County kind of fit a lot of those boxes,” Lichtblau says. “The horrible tragedy with Blaze Bernstein being killed by one of his high school classmates — who had been radicalized — reflected a growing brazenness of the white supremacy movement we’ve seen as a whole in America in recent years.”
Bernstein’s death had been only two years prior. The Ivy League student had agreed to meet former classmate Woodward one evening during winter break. The two had never been close; Woodward had been a lone wolf during his brief time at the Orange County School of the Arts, before transferring due to the school’s liberalness. On two separate occasions over the years, Woodward had reached out to Bernstein under the pretense of grappling with his own sexuality. Bernstein had no idea he was being baited, or that his former classmate was part of a sprawling underground network of far-right extremists — connected to mass shooters, longtime Charles Manson followers, neo-Nazi camps, and online chains where members bonded over a shared fantasy of harming minorities and starting a white revolution.
“But how is this happening in 2025?”
These networks didn’t appear out of nowhere. They had long been planted in Orange County’s soil, leading back to the early 1900s when the county was home to sprawling orange groves.
Mexican laborers, who formed the backbone of the orange-grove economy (second to oil and generating wealth that even rivaled the Gold Rush), were met with violence when the unionized laborers wanted to strike for better conditions. The Orange County sheriff, also an orange grower, issued an order. “SHOOT TO KILL, SAYS SHERIFF,” the banner headline in the Santa Ana Register read. Chinese immigrants also faced violence. They had played a large role in building the county’s state of governance, but were blamed for a case of leprosy, and at the suggestion of a councilman, had their community of Chinatown torched while the white residents watched.
Gideon Bernstein and Jeanne Pepper Bernstein, center, parents of Blaze Bernstein, speak during a news conference after a 2018 sentencing for Samuel Woodward at Orange County Superior Court.
(Jeff Gritchen/Pool / Orange County Register)
Leading up to the new millennium brought an onslaught of white power rock coming out of the county’s music scene. Members with shaved heads and Nazi memorabilia would dance to rage-fueled declarations of white supremacy, clashing, if not worse, with non-white members of the community while listening to lyrics like, “When the last white moves out of O.C., the American flag will leave with me… We’ll die for a land that’s yours and mine” (from the band Youngland).
“It’s come and gone,” says Lichtblau, who noticed these currents shifting in the early 2000s — and over the years, when Reagandland broke in certain parts to become purple. Even with sights of blue amid red, Trump on the landscape brought a new wave — one that Lichtblau explains was fueled by “claiming their country back” and “capturing the moment that Trump released.”
It can be hard to fathom the reality: that the Orange County of white supremacy exists alongside an Orange County shaped both economically and culturally by its immigrant communities, where since 2004, the majority of its residents are people of color. Then again, to anyone who has spent considerable time there, you’ll notice the strange cognitive dissonance among its cultural landscape.
It’s a peculiar sight to see a MAGA stand selling nativist slogans on a Spanish-named street, or Confederate flags in the back of pickup trucks pulling into the parking lots of neighborhood taquerias or Vietnamese pho shops for a meal. Or some of the families who have lived in the county for generations still employing Latino workers, yet inside their living rooms Fox News will be playing alarmist rhetoric about “Latinos,” alongside Reagan-era memorabilia proudly displayed alongside framed Bible verses. This split reality — a multicultural community and one of the far-right — oddly fills the framework of a county born from a split with its neighbor, L.A., only to develop an aggressive identity against said neighbor’s perceived liberalness.
It’s this cultural rejection that led to “the orange curtain” or the “Orange County bubble,” which suggest these racially-charged ideologies stay contained or, exhaustingly, echo within the county’s sphere. On the contrary, Lichtblau has seen how these white suburban views spill outward. Look no further than the U.S. Capitol insurrection on Jan. 6, also the book’s release date.
While popular belief might assume these insurrectionists came from deeply conservative areas, it was actually the contrary, as Lichtblau explains. “It was from places like Orange County,” he says, “where the voting patterns were seeing the most shift.” Some might argue — adamantly or reluctantly — that Jan. 6 was merely a stop-the-steal protest gone wrong, a momentary lapse or mob mentality. But Lichtblau sees something much larger. “This was white pride on display. There was a lot of neo-Nazi stuff, including a lot of Orange County people stuff.”
As a society, it’s been collectively decided to expect the profile of the lone wolf killer, the outcast, wearing an identity strung from the illusions of a white man’s oppression — the type to rail against unemployment benefits but still cash the check. Someone like Sam Woodward, cut from the vestiges of the once venerable conservative Americana family, the type of God-fearing Christians who, as “American Reich” studies in the Woodward household, teach and bond over ideological hate, and even while entrenched in a murder case, continuously reach out to the victim’s family to the point where the judge has to intervene. The existence of these suburban families is known, as is the slippery hope one will never cross paths with them in this ever-spinning round of American roulette. But neither these individuals nor their hate crimes are random, as Lichtblau discusses, and the lone wolves aren’t as alone as assumed. These underground channels have long been ingrained in the American groundscape like landmines, now reactivated by a far-right digital landscape that connects these members and multiplies their ideologies on a national level. Lichtblau’s new investigation goes beyond the paradigm of Orange County to show a deeper cultural epidemic that’s been taking shape.
Beavin Pappas is an arts and culture writer. Raised in Orange County, he now splits his time between New York and Cairo, where he is at work on his debut book.
A woman whose body was pulled from the Santa Ana River in Orange County on New Year’s Day has been identified as 39-year-old Alejandra Ramirez Torres, coroner’s officials said. Her body had been carried by the river’s current from Santa Ana to Fountain Valley before it could be retrieved by fire crews.
Ramirez Torres was the mother of two daughters, ages 11 and 16, according to a GoFundMe page created by her relatives.
Orange County fire officials said crews responded to 911 calls before noon Thursday after bystanders reported seeing a body in the river near Warner Avenue and Harbor Boulevard.
Some 60 firefighters responded to the scene, including swift-water rescue teams. They found Ramirez Torres’ body south of the river’s juncture with the 405 Freeway, north of the Gisler Avenue river trail in Costa Mesa, about 1.5 miles from where witnesses first saw the woman.
A ladder truck was used to lower a rescuer to the water and retrieve Ramirez Torres, who was pronounced dead at the scene, officials said.
“This sudden and heartbreaking loss has deeply affected our family. We are doing everything we can to support Alejandra’s girls as they face an uncertain future without their mother,” states the GoFundMe page, which relatives said was set up to cover the costs of Ramirez Torres’ funeral and provide support for her daughters.
The woman was a possible transient at the time of her death, Orange County Sheriff’s Department spokesperson Sgt. Lizbeth Gwisdalla confirmed Friday to the Daily Pilot.
How and why she entered the river was not known.
Cardine writes for The Times’ sister publication the Daily Pilot.
ORLANDO, Fla. — At the request of several states across the country that filed Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) food restriction waivers, the government is implementing one change set to impact millions, whether they like it or not.
SNAP will now ban certain items from eligibility for purchase with benefits. It’s a costly change, according to the Associated Press — one that could initially cost grocery retailers in the United States $1.6 billion, and then $759 million annually if it continues.
What You Need To Know
As of Jan. 1, five states implemented changes to what can be purchased with SNAP
Items like soft drinks, candy, prepared/processed desserts and energy drinks are now banned from being purchased with SNAP benefits in five states and will be banned in other states later in the year
The five states already implementing the changes are Iowa, Indiana, Utah, Nebraska and West Virginia. Florida will begin the ban on April 20, 2026
According to the USDA, the initiative is an effort to tackle obesity and “Make America Healthy again”
Effective Jan. 1, five states began restricting SNAP recipients from purchasing items like soft drinks, energy drinks, candy and certain prepared foods.
According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), Iowa, Indiana, Nebraska, West Virginia and Utah are leading the way on the effort, but 18 additional states — including Florida — have also made the request to change their state SNAP agency’s restrictions. Florida is among more than 12 states that will see those changes implemented later this year.
The changes are part of the government’s efforts to tackle the obesity epidemic and push to “Make America Healthy Again.” The SNAP food restrictions waiver allows state SNAP agencies a two-year period to experiment with changes that also could improve the efficiency of the program.
According to the Healthy SNAP Florida website, the changes will be implemented in the state on April 20, and will promote healthy food options for families by prohibiting the purchase of products that are considered bad for consumers.
The National Retail Federation, according to AP, predicts the change initially will result in longer lines at grocery stores as people adjust to what they can and cannot buy.
It could also result in consequences for retailers if they do not comply. The USDA stated there will be a 90-day grace period at first, followed by a warning for the first offense. After that, retailers could lose their authorization to accept SNAP benefits and would have to reapply and undergo an administrative review.
The changes apply to in-store purchases and grocery delivery services.
Firefighters in Orange County are investigating the cause of a house fire that forced a couple and another adult to evacuate their home early Tuesday morning.A neighbor captured video of the intense flames and alarms blaring through the neighborhood. “I was asleep, and then my wife came running in, says, told me to get up,” said Ricky Shrock, one of the homeowners.Another neighbor, Brian Arrington, described the scene, saying, “We saw flames probably 15 to 20 feet in the air. We were worried about maybe embers flying over and hitting our roof.”Inside the burning home on Corbett Road were three adults. “When I opened the door, was nothing but smoke. We had to get out of the house,” Shrock said.Even after firefighters arrived, flames continued to shoot through one part of the roof. The homeowners, Ricky and Pepper Shrock, suspect the fire started in the garage but are unsure of the exact cause. “I could smell something. And I thought it was the heater at first, and then I looked around the room and it was a little foggy,” Pepper Shrock said.In the daylight, the damage was evident, with a boat outside the garage and the family’s Christmas canes still lining the driveway. The side of the home showed a stark contrast where black charred marks met the wall’s white paint.”Thirty years in this neighborhood. Thank God we had some good neighbors that brought us jackets and robes because we didn’t have anything,” Pepper Shrock said. Neighbors surrounded the couple, offering blankets in the cold as they watched firefighters work through their home and belongings.As she tried to process the events, Pepper, a fourth-grade teacher, expressed her concern, saying, “My only concern is I don’t want to freak out my students.”Now, just before school resumes, the family is left to pick up the pieces of their longtime home.
ORANGE COUNTY, Fla. —
Firefighters in Orange County are investigating the cause of a house fire that forced a couple and another adult to evacuate their home early Tuesday morning.
A neighbor captured video of the intense flames and alarms blaring through the neighborhood.
“I was asleep, and then my wife came running in, says, told me to get up,” said Ricky Shrock, one of the homeowners.
Another neighbor, Brian Arrington, described the scene, saying, “We saw flames probably 15 to 20 feet in the air. We were worried about maybe embers flying over and hitting our roof.”
Inside the burning home on Corbett Road were three adults.
“When I opened the door, was nothing but smoke. We had to get out of the house,” Shrock said.
Even after firefighters arrived, flames continued to shoot through one part of the roof. The homeowners, Ricky and Pepper Shrock, suspect the fire started in the garage but are unsure of the exact cause.
“I could smell something. And I thought it was the heater at first, and then I looked around the room and it was a little foggy,” Pepper Shrock said.
In the daylight, the damage was evident, with a boat outside the garage and the family’s Christmas canes still lining the driveway. The side of the home showed a stark contrast where black charred marks met the wall’s white paint.
“Thirty years in this neighborhood. Thank God we had some good neighbors that brought us jackets and robes because we didn’t have anything,” Pepper Shrock said.
Neighbors surrounded the couple, offering blankets in the cold as they watched firefighters work through their home and belongings.
As she tried to process the events, Pepper, a fourth-grade teacher, expressed her concern, saying, “My only concern is I don’t want to freak out my students.”
Now, just before school resumes, the family is left to pick up the pieces of their longtime home.