ReportWire

Tag: Pasadena

  • As Lenten season approaches, US Catholics straddle faith, advocacy, politics

    [ad_1]

    On Ash Wednesday, Feb. 18, Southern California Catholics, and Christians of multitude denominations, will wait in line to get a smudge of ashes on their foreheads, and be reminded that they are sinners, yes, who can redeem themselves if they, as Los Angeles Archbishop José Gomez said in a recent homily, become “people who heal, make peace, and bear witness to his love.”

    But for the millions of faithful in the archdiocese and at parishes and houses of worship from Orange County to Riverside all the way to Gomez’s downtown L.A. cathedral, the first day of Lent finds many in crisis: those undocumented in fear of or already in detention; those working to support them and their families; and Catholics who continue to support the Trump administration’s policies on immigration, abortion and same-sex marriage.

    Still some Christians will enter this liturgical season grappling with deeply-held beliefs they say run counter to the government’s massive effort under the Trump administration to deport millions of immigrants in the U.S. illegally.

    While that effort, federal officials say, has resulted in mass arrests of the most violent of criminal undocumented immigrants, it has also resulted in fear and anger over the actions of a federal dragnet that immigrants, their advocates and many religious leaders say has tipped too far into violence and cruelty.

    Lent arrives as federal agents continue their actions, and many in local Southern California cities push back.

    Gomez exhorted Catholics to “help America recover her soul,” during his homily at the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels on Feb. 4, during a Holy Hour of Prayer for Peace in response to the shooting death by immigration agents of nurse Alex Pretti in Minnesota.

    Archbishop Jose Gomez calls for a holy hour of Peace to renew the nation, emphasizing prayer as a vital step to healing a world wounded by division and violence on Wednesday, February 4, 2026. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

    Isaac Cuevas, director of immigration and public affairs for the archdiocese, heard Goméz call for upholding the rights and dignity of everyone in the United States and not “based on the color of our skin, or the language we speak, or for not having the proper documents.” He also voiced his support for the Dignity Act (HR 4333) in limbo in Congress.

    When the Trump administration ramped up its immigration enforcement in Los Angeles last June, Cuevas said there was no question what the church’s response would be.

    “We understood clearly that our role was to accompany, to inform, and to support. That has taken shape through ‘Know Your Rights/Risk’ efforts, connecting families with trusted legal support, organizing prayer opportunities, and preparing clergy and parish leaders to respond pastorally if situations arise.”

    “The Church’s engagement in public life really begins with our mission, not politics,” Cuevas said. “Our role is to uphold the dignity of every human person and to accompany those who are vulnerable. At times that includes speaking into public policy, especially when laws or enforcement practices impact families, human dignity, or the common good.”

    Unlike its Episcopal kin, whose social justice arm, Sacred Resistance, has been in the forefront of anti-ICE vigils and protests, Catholic leaders’ primary work remains pastoral, Cuevas said.

    “We walk with people, provide resources, and help form consciences rooted in Catholic social teaching,” he said.

    In these days where many in the community feel vulnerable that teaching goes beyond dogma into concrete action, such as standing with neighbors who are afraid, and responding with faith, not fear, Cuevas added.

    In his Lenten message this year, Bishop of the Diocese of San Bernardino Alberto Rojas, invited people to pray “with your strength and sincerity” for people who are suffering.

    He said the treatment of immigrants happening now is a “violation of human dignity.”

    “While we as a Church do not condone unlawful entry into the country, the brutal way authorities are enforcing the law is unacceptable and does not recognize immigrants as human beings, much less as the children of God that they are.”

    A season of fear

    Fresh off marching with students who walked out of school recently in protest of the raids, Father Francisco Gómez, pastor of Our Lady of Soledad Parish in Coachella, is expecting a busy Ash Wednesday this year. But it’s the immigration raids themselves that have caused so much fear and anxiety among his parishioners that he thinks it’s likely his parish will not see numbers like last year — 10,000 strong who came to be marked with ash on their foreheads.

    “It’s precisely because of the fear,” he says, as he reflects on the beginning of Lenten season in which many are anxious about immigration actions that have roiled communities.

    Instead, his church has created little packets so people can observe Lent at home. There’s a little guide with prayers and readings, and a tiny bag with ashes inside.

    Gómez has faith they’ll get to those people who are too afraid to physically go to church in person to receive the ash. Perhaps someone’s neighbor will deliver a packet. A family, a friend. Those packets will get to people who need them, he said.

    Ash Wednesday packets that Our Lady of Soledad in Coachella has prepared for parishioners who cannot make the Ash Wednesday Mass in person. (Courtesy, The Rev. Francisco Gómez)
    Ash Wednesday packets that Our Lady of Soledad in Coachella has prepared for parishioners who cannot make the Ash Wednesday Mass in person. (Courtesy, The Rev. Francisco Gómez)

    Gómez enters the season highly attuned to the symbols of Lent, precisely because of the immigration raids that have stirred his community and the nation. He’s also thinking about the impact on a democracy, one where he never thought he’d see such violence amid mass immigration operations.

    “The primary symbol of Lent is the desert,” Gómez said, noting the nexus between the ancient tradition of 40 years in the wilderness to get to the promised land and the 40 days Jesus is said to have spent in the desert. “The journey of those 40 years is a journey of being in a place of slavery to being in a place of freedom.”

    His message is that those being persecuted can also see themselves in a Christ who suffered, from a public who condemned him to his journey to crucifixion.

    “Yet, there is a resurrection. There will be a resurrection,” he said.

    Over the past year, Gómez said has seen the struggle play out in his community. And as a season of fasting, abstinence, prayer and almsgiving descends, he’s sensitive to the impacts.

    “The cracks that I see are people hovering on the edge of despair,” he said, reflecting on the stress of potential arrest or deportation. “People who are considering suicide. Domestic violence. Students not going to school. Those are the cracks that I see.

    “On the other side, I see solidarity. Neighbors who get groceries, helping others, creating spaces where people can talk out their fears.”

    Prayer is ‘not passive’

    Pasadena’s Clergy Community Coalition, made up of 200 church and community leaders, have regularly shown up at rallies and protests organized by No Kings, Indivisible and the National Day Laborer Organizing Network (NDLON).

    Sacred Resistance, the social justice arm of the Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles, is supporting 60 families impacted by the ICE raids, and members accompany people to immigration proceedings, show up in court and detention centers, and organize public, peaceful actions to confront dehumanizing immigration policies, said Rev. Canon Jaime Edwards-Acton.

    It’s a fight for the long haul, he added.

    “We are a people of faith and conscience, standing together against injustice. Rooted in our call to resist evil and protect the vulnerable, we support immigrants, refugees, and marginalized communities through advocacy, accompaniment, and action.”

    Diocese of San Bernardino Bishop Alberto Rojas places ashes on the forehead of a church member Wednesday, Feb. 22, 2023, during a Mass in the chapel at Our Lady Queen of Peace Catholic Cemetery in Colton. For Christians, Ash Wednesday begins the season of Lent that leads to Easter. (Photo by Watchara Phomicinda, The Press-Enterprise/SCNG)
    Diocese of San Bernardino Bishop Alberto Rojas places ashes on the forehead of a church member Wednesday, Feb. 22, 2023, during a Mass in the chapel at Our Lady Queen of Peace Catholic Cemetery in Colton. For Christians, Ash Wednesday begins the season of Lent that leads to Easter. (Photo by Watchara Phomicinda, The Press-Enterprise/SCNG)

    For Catholics, Cuevas said there are both simple and meaningful ways to respond, especially during Lent, with its three pillars of prayer, fasting and almsgiving.

    “Prayer is central, but it is not passive,” he said. “We are encouraging people to stay informed, support reputable organizations providing legal and humanitarian assistance, accompany families when appropriate, and advocate in ways that are grounded in charity and truth. Even small acts of solidarity, like helping a family access resources or simply showing up with compassion, can make a real difference.”

    Cuevas said his work brings him face to face with Catholics impacted by immigration enforcement who are looking to the church as a place of refuge and trust.

    “There is deep gratitude for the church’s presence, but also an honest desire for continued accompaniment and clarity,” he said. “People want to know they are not alone, and that their church will continue to walk with them in both word and action.”

    Catholic groups that have long championed migrants, refugees and asylum-seekers include CLINIC, or Catholic Legal Immigration Network, Inc., and Catholic Charities of Los Angeles. LA Voice, a multi-faith group that organizes people “to reflect the dignity of all people,” and it often works with the archdiocese, as well as more than 500 congregations in 18 counties and 28 cities.

    A church’s role in American life

    Gómez, of Coachella, said he’s been pleased to see the Catholic Church’s stance on the immigration actions sweeping the region and the nation. But he noted that there is much work to do.

    That includes continuing to reach out across divides in a polarized nation.

    “The church is not against immigration enforcement but it will always be against violence,” he said.

    The shooting deaths by federal agents of Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis may have prompted a “real sense of questioning” that it’s gone too far, he said.

    But even as church leaders urge compassion, this year’s Lenten season coincides with a political and cultural battle over immigration policy playing out from the Capitol to Southern California.

    White House Press Secretary Katherine Leavitt, herself a practicing Roman Catholic, said during an October press briefing, that “I would reject there is inhumane treatment of illegal immigrants in the United States under this administration,” adding that the Biden administration’s more lax border security policy was a form of inhumane treatment of immigrants.

    President Donald Trump himself has often spoken fondly of Catholics. A majority of American Catholics — nearly 60% — supported him for the office.

    But on Friday, more than 40 Catholic Democrats in Congress released a statement listing ideals from Catholic social teaching they say informs their considerations of immigration policy.

    “First, we affirm that people have the right to migrate to sustain their lives and the lives of their families,” the statement reads. “Sacred Scripture consistently reminds us of our obligation toward the vulnerable and displaced. Jesus himself identifies with the migrant when he says, ‘I was a stranger and you welcomed me.’”

    The statement came after House Speaker Mike Johnson defended Trump’s mass deportation agenda early this month. Citing Bible verses about a nation’s borders, critics called out Johnson, a Baptist, for espousing a dangerous Christian nationalism.

    Rep. Ted Lieu, D-Torrance, signed the statement with other California Democrats, including Reps. Nancy Pelosi, Robert Garcia of Long Beach, Sam Liccardo of San Jose, Gil Cisneros of Covina and Nanette Barragan of San Pedro.

    “As a Catholic, I follow Jesus’ teachings in Matthew 25:35,” Lieu said, referring to the Bible verse that begins, “For I was hungry, and you gave me food.”

    “I believe in Christ’s teachings of advancing the common good by protecting the most vulnerable and individuals in need,” Lieu continued. “The Trump Administration has failed in these endeavors for those seeking refuge by exhibiting indifference and cruelty. We must continue to embrace ideals of justice, mercy, and human dignity while tackling the challenges of immigration.”

    That congressional rebuke of Johnson comes after similar calls from U.S. religious leaders.

    Protesters march as they pray and sing from a Catholic church to Montebello City Park, as a sign of solidarity with immigrant families impacted by ICE enforcement in Montebello on Aug. 7, 2025. (Connor Terry, Contributing Photographer)
    Protesters march as they pray and sing from a Catholic church to Montebello City Park, as a sign of solidarity with immigrant families impacted by ICE enforcement in Montebello on Aug. 7, 2025. (Connor Terry, Contributing Photographer)

    On Jan. 28, Archbishop Paul S. Coakley, president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, and considered a conservative leader, called for the Trump administration to be “generous in welcoming immigrants,” and encouraged other leaders to pray “for reconciliation where there is division, for justice where there are violations of fundamental rights, and for consolation for all who feel overwhelmed by fear or loss.”

    Three Catholic cardinals protested Trump’sforeign policy on Jan. 19.

    More than 150 Episcopal bishops on Jan. 31 called for the suspension of ICE and Border Patrol operations in Minnesota and anywhere in the country militarized enforcement is in place. Addressing the American people, the leaders encouraged people to use their community power, financial power, political power and knowledge to show up for each other and their neighbors.

    Irreconcilable differences?

    Sociologist Richard Wood, president of the Institute for Advanced Catholic Studies at USC, said both the Biden and current Trump administrations have included substantial numbers of Catholics in cabinet-level leadership positions, with the Biden administration encompassing slightly more.

    “Nonetheless, both administrations experienced tensions with the Catholic Church — Biden especially around issues of gender and sexuality, abortion, and American support for the brutal Israeli assault on Gaza in response to the brutal Hamas assault of Oct. 7, 2023; Trump especially around immigrant rights, threats to Greenland, and attacks on democratic institutions,” Wood said.

    Among the Catholics in the second Trump administration: Vice President J.D. Vance, Leavitt and Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

    But having the first American Pope lead the world’s Catholics takes away an oft-used excuse that a Pope “just doesn’t understand America,” supporters said, and lends his criticism of the Trump presidency more weight. Pope Leo XIV was born Robert Francis Prevost in Chicago in 1955.

    White House spokeswoman Taylor Rogers brushed away the Pope’s criticism of Trump and pointed to the president’s support among Catholics, saying in a Politico, that “in just 10 short months, the president has delivered unprecedented victories for Catholic Americans.”

    Pope Leo XIV holds his weekly general audience in the Paul VI Hall at the Vatican, Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)
    Pope Leo XIV holds his weekly general audience in the Paul VI Hall at the Vatican, Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)

    Pope Leo has not backed down, saying two months ago, at an address at the Vatican, that “ever more inhuman measures are being adopted —even celebrated politically — that treat these ‘undesirables’ as if they were garbage and not human beings.”

    What the effect this divide between the White House and the Vatican can be seen in recent polling data that show large declines in support of Trump administration policies on immigration among both Catholics and Evangelical Christians, Wood said.

    But both political parties have elements in them with real issues with religion and secularism, he added.

    “The Democratic Party, because significant sectors of the party see religion as a problem and embrace a narrowly secular worldview that sees no value in religion, almost a kind of ‘secular fundamentalism,” he said. “And the Republican Party, because significant sectors affirm a worldview that falls well outside of traditional religious respect for the common good, the human dignity of all, and a reasonable level of civility in public life and diplomacy.”

    Meanwhile, Gómez, the Coachella priest, who belongs to a congregation of missionaries in the Catholic Church who work with the poor in the U.S. and Latin America, readies for Ash Wednesday.

    As he prepares, he is reflecting on a mission that relentlessly serves the poor and the persecuted – which in this moment means meeting a moment to serve immigrants.

    “We have pledged our lives to those who stand on those margins. And those on the edge of death,” he said.

    [ad_2]

    Anissa Rivera, Ryan Carter

    Source link

  • Eliot Arts Magnet, other displaced PUSD schools, remain without permanent home

    [ad_1]

    Even more than one year after her Eliot Arts Magnet classroom was destroyed in the Eaton fire, Mary Herrera nearly daily goes through a mini-emotional rollercoaster.

    She’ll remember a folder filled with letters that her students have written her in her 20 years of teaching. And then she realizes she left that at Eliot.

    “Every day, you still notice new things that you have lost or didn’t know you had left at work,” Herrera said.

    Her place of work for the last three years was consumed by the catastrophic blaze.

    The Eliot Art Magnet School auditorium along Lake Avenue in Altadena on Friday, Jan. 10, 2025. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

    Since Jan. 7, 2025, Eliot has been housed at McKinley School in Pasadena and will be for the foreseeable future. Eliot and the handful of other campuses relocated due to the fire remain displaced from their home sites.

    As the one-year anniversary of the Eaton fire passed this week, with it came the realization of settling in to temporary campuses for the longer haul.

    Herrera said she and her colleagues have experienced the last year in stages of acceptance. The first four months teachers grappled with the reality that their school and all their stuff was gone. The following few months the realization that this would be her classroom for awhile, but still a hesitance to fully settle in.

    “Honestly, in the last month it has felt like a whole new realization that this is where we’re going to be,” Herrera said. “I’m going to teach here at this school for the next, what, five years at a minimum.”

    Eliot teachers described their students as being crammed into a small number of classrooms and separate from the McKinley campus. Teachers shared the frustration over a lack of support from the Pasadena Unified School District when their new McKinley home is across the street from the PUSD central office.

    Teachers said they’ve relied on community donations and Amazon wish lists to fill in the supply gap left by what some feel is a lack of district support.

    “I don’t know how they can treat people who have had everything taken from them like that,” Herrera said.

    Eliot teachers and staff have been waiting months to use portable rooms being installed at McKinley. The promises of when they would be usable started in the months following the fire and continue today and they are not ready.

    McKinley officials could not be reached for comment.

    Bungalows are being built for Eliot Arts Magnet at McKinley School in Pasadena where they have temporarily relocated to after their school was damaged in the Eaton fire. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
    Bungalows are being built for Eliot Arts Magnet at McKinley School in Pasadena where they have temporarily relocated to after their school was damaged in the Eaton fire. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

    PUSD officials did not respond with an estimated time when teachers could move in. They did confirm that all schools that were displaced by the fire have not returned to their original campuses.

    The district suffered damage or complete loss to five of its nine elementary and middle schools, all in Altadena. Eliot moved to McKinley, Aveson School of Leaders moved from its Noyes Elementary School campus to the Cleveland campus, Odyssey Charter South moved from the Edison Campus to the Arts Center and Rosebud Academy moved from Loma Alta Elementary School to Don Benito.

    Mandi Holmes, a parent at Aveson, said students continue to be using combined classrooms at their relocated site.

    “We have no idea what is happening with our campus or any plans PUSD has for us, if any,” Holmes said in an email.

    Eliot Arts Magnet middle school at 2184 Lake Ave, Altadena has debris removed on Thursday, Aug. 14, 2025. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
    Eliot Arts Magnet middle school at 2184 Lake Ave, Altadena has debris removed on Thursday, Aug. 14, 2025. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

    During its debris removal operation, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers prioritized PUSD campuses and removed more than 174 tons of debris from campuses. Eliot represented one of the final debris removal projects the Corps of Engineers completed in Altadena.

    While those campuses were destroyed in the fire, Altadena Arts Magnet did not suffer fire damage, but its students have been relocated to Allendale due to Altadena Arts’ proximity to the destroyed properties.

    It was a year of upheaval for PUSD students at school and at home. According to the district, nearly 75% of PUSD’s 14,000 students evacuated during the fire and almost half of the district’s employees.

    In addition, more than 980 families and 120 employees lost their homes in the fire.

    District spokesperson Hilda Ramirez Horvath said the Board of Education adopted a resolution to rebuild Eliot and that the other impacted campuses will be part of the Superintendent’s Facilities Advisory Committee, which launches this year.

    According to the district, the committee will provide, “coordinated, transparent and strategic oversight of the district’s long-range facilities planning and bond programs.”

    “The Eaton Fire destroyed or significantly damaged five of our district sites, and it is vital that we align our bond and facilities planning to this new reality,” Superintendent Elizabeth Blanco said in a statement. “This council ensures that every decision we make moving forward is transparent, data-driven, fiscally responsible, and aligned with our mission and community values.”

    Herrera lost her home in the fire along with about a third of her students a handful of her Eliot colleagues

    Despite the relocation and subsequent hurdles of the past year Herrera said Eliot students have continued to push forward and stayed positive throughout.

    “I think we’re building a really special place and it would be so nice if the district let us know that they thought we were special, too,” Herrera said.

    In addition to being a PUSD teacher on and off for about 15 years, Herrera is also a PUSD parent. Her daughter attends Altadena Arts Magnet, whose campus survived the fire but whose students have been relocated to the vacant Allendale campus due to the need for smoke remediation at Altadena Arts.

    Herrera said Altadena Arts students have limited a play area space and lack basic playground equipment like a swing set or monkey bars.

    Loma Alta Park, they rebuilt their whole park and had a grand opening,” Herrera said. “People are there as we speak playing on it right now, and this district could not get a swing set put in?”

    [ad_2]

    David Wilson

    Source link

  • SoCal Wildfires: How You Can Help

    [ad_1]

    As Southern California marks the first anniversary of the Eaton and Palisades fires, we continue to track ways people can help those impacted by these disasters.

    If you are a SoCal wildfire survivor, aid is still available in your area.

    Here is a list of organizations working to provide help to those impacted by last January’s wildfires:

    American Red Cross-Wildfire Relief
    The organization has hundreds of volunteers in Los Angeles to assist with emergent needs of those displaced by the fire. The Red Cross provides emergency relief to residents and families impacted by disasters, providing meals, medical care and a safe place to shower and sleep.
    Click here to learn more.

    Baby2Baby
    The nonprofit is taking monetary donations to provide diapers, clothes and basic necessities for children living in poverty. More than a million supplies have already been delivered through 470 community partners.
    Click here to learn more.

    CAL FIRE Benevolent Foundation
    The foundation provides funding for firefighters and their families to help them recover from injuries and hardship.
    Click here to learn more.

    California Fire Foundation
    The California Fire Foundation works with community-based organizations and local fire agencies to offer financial support for residents who are impacted by the fires.
    Click here to learn more.

    Direct Relief
    Direct Relief responds each year to wildfires throughout the Western U.S., and in its home state of California. During fire responses, Direct Relief provides N-95 masks, medicine, and other resources to healthcare agencies and first responders in wildfire-affected communities across California. 100% of donations to Direct Relief’s wildfire response fund directly support efforts to assist individuals impacted by fires in Palisades, Altadena, and across California, providing critical aid where it’s needed most.
    Click here to learn more.

    Global Empowerment Mission
    The Global Empowerment Mission works to provide emergency aid supplies to those in need, such as nonperishable food items, hygiene products and water. They also provide generators, medical supplies and temporary shelters.
    Click here to learn more.

    Habitat for Humanity
    Habitat for Humanity of Greater Los Angeles (Habitat LA) has a long history of helping families rebuild their lives after a disaster. In response, Habitat LA is ready to ReBUILD LA to assist these families in rebuilding their homes, providing essential supplies during this time of crisis, and restoring their lives.
    Click here to learn more.

    Los Angeles Fire Department Foundation
    The Los Angeles Fire Department Foundation is a nonprofit organization that provides vital equipment for firefighters and funds programs that are critical to help the agency continue to protect communities and save lives.
    Click here to learn more.

    Los Angeles Regional Food Bank
    One in four people in Los Angeles County experiences food insecurity, but for every dollar you donate, four meals are distributed to hungry children, seniors and families. Your support, whether through volunteering or donating, can make an immediate difference.

    SoCal Fire Fund
    A coalition including Creative Artists Agency (CAA) Foundation, global relief organization CORE and the LAUSD Education Foundation are asking for donations to provide flexible funding assistance for those impacted by the SoCal fires.
    The fund will help people and families secure immediate needs like food, medical care and transportation, in addition to offering case management and resources for well-being and transitional education.
    Click here to learn more.

    Copyright © 2026 KABC Television, LLC. All rights reserved.

    [ad_2]

    KABC

    Source link

  • Pasadena Jewish Temple marks Eaton fire anniversary on ‘hallowed ground’

    [ad_1]

    There was none of the strong winds that whipped embers into hungry flames at the place where the Pasadena Jewish Temple and Center once stood. But on Tuesday night, on the eve of Jan. 7, about 400 people gathered under big white tent on North Altadena Drive, the first time the synagogue’s congregants have been together at the site.

    “Tonight is our time to grieve for the loss we endured one year ago,” the temple’s Rabbi Joshua Ratner said. “This space is for all of us to mourn together, pay tribute to those we lost, and acknowledge the depth of our sorrow.”

Ratner, who began his tenure at the temple in July, invited his congregation to rededicate the hallowed ground of their longtime sanctuary in many ways, including collecting colored stones to place at a Tree of Life, collecting testimonials of memories from the old campus, and having congregants grow trees that they can later replant when the synagogue and campus is rebuilt in three to four years.

The communal memorial gathering marks the one-year anniversary of the Eaton fire, which burned thousands of homes and killed at least 19 people.

Los Angeles County Supervisor Kathryn Barger, who received an award at the event, acknowledged the next day’s anniversary will be a difficult one for her, even as she thanked the Jewish community for making her a better leader.

“Tonight, I look at this as a time of hope, of what can be done when we work together,” she said.

Mournful Kaddish were sung to tally the losses: the synagogue and campus, including the B’nai Simcha Community Preschool, which served 400 families, and the original building, which was constructed in 1941. About 15 member families lost their homes in the blaze, and many remain displaced.

“Many people haven’t even been able to handle driving by before tonight,” Melissa Levy, executive director of the temple, said of the temple’s 430 member units, which include individuals or families. The sacred space they knew looks different now, she added, but they can look at it as a clean slate.

Without its buildings, congregants celebrated Shabbat at donated spaces, such as Mayfield Senior School in Pasadena, before renting offices at First United Methodist Church in Pasadena. The preschool has found new quarters at Frostig School down the street from their original site. Jewish holidays were celebrated in members’ homes or rented locations such as Caltech in Pasadena.

Cantor Ruth Berman Harris, her husband and a team of temple members saved the temple’s 13 Torah scrolls the night the blaze exploded. The Torah scrolls are now safely in the keeping of the Huntington Library in San Marino.

According to the Jewish Federation Los Angeles, between 45,000 and 59,000 Jewish households were affected bv the fires, or a total of about 147,000 people. The federation raised just over $9 million for its Wildfire Crisis Relief Fund, with about 70% of that total coming from out of state donors.

Theresa Brekan of Pasadena, is the operations manager for the temple. Her job now includes juggling two sites and any rentals they need for events and programs. Returning to the cleared lot of the temple for the first time since the fires, Brekan said she got chills.

“There were so many memories in this place, and I can still feel the love,” she said.

[ad_2]

Anissa Rivera

Source link

  • 2026 Rose Parade: Road closures, parking and rules you should know

    [ad_1]

    Traffic on Colorado Boulevard in Pasadena will be replaced by barbecues, folding chairs and coolers starting Wednesday night ahead of the 137th Tournament of Roses Parade on New Year’s Day.

    That means road closures, traffic congestion and lots of people. A forecast of rain is adding another layer of complexity for campers and parade-goers.

    Before the petals hit the metal, here’s what you should know:

    Street closures

    The 5.5-mile parade route begins on Orange Grove Boulevard, then turns east onto Colorado for the bulk of the trek before ending at Sierra Madre Boulevard.

    Street closures will begin at 10 p.m. on New Year’s Eve, and roadways will reopen at 2 p.m. on New Year’s Day:

    • Officials will block traffic on Colorado, the main leg of the parade route.
    • All north-south roads intersecting the route between Del Mar Boulevard and the 210 Freeway also will be closed to traffic over that time period.
    • Sierra Madre Boulevard will be closed to southbound traffic for the duration.

    A midnight 5K race will add another layer of overnight restrictions.

    Beginning at 11 p.m. Wednesday, cross-traffic will be shut down at multiple intersections between Pasadena and Hill avenues, including El Molino, Fair Oaks, Marengo, Los Robles, Lake and Wilson avenues. Those intersections will reopen once the race concludes.

    Race staging will begin even earlier. Streets along Colorado Boulevard from St. John Avenue to De Lacey Avenue, and from Marengo Avenue to Euclid Avenue, will close at 6 p.m. Wednesday.

    Getting to the parade

    The parade kicks off at 8 a.m. and runs for two hours.

    Officials recommend avoiding driving to the event. Metro’s A Line (Gold) runs along the parade route and provides access to multiple viewing areas.

    For those who do drive, plan to get there early. Campers and overnight spectators will set up on sidewalks along the parade route beginning Wednesday morning. The Pasadena Department of Transportation “strongly” advises parade-goers park before 6 a.m. the day of the event. Rose Bowl parking can be pre-purchased.

    Drivers trying to get around the closures are encouraged to use Walnut Street or the 210 Freeway for east-west travel north of Colorado Boulevard, and Del Mar Boulevard or Cordova Street to the south. The 134 Freeway is also an option.

    For information on towed vehicles on New Year’s Day, call (626) 577-6426 between 5 p.m. Wednesday and 6 p.m. Thursday.

    Rules of the road

    Rain is expected for this year’s Rose Parade, but umbrellas are not permitted along the parade route because they block the view for others. Wear a rain rain jacket or poncho instead.

    Camping is permitted along the parade route beginning Wednesday. All items, including blankets, chairs and bags, must remain on the curb until 11 p.m.

    After that time, spectators may move forward to the blue “honor line” chalked on the road but not beyond it.

    Tents, bonfires and fireworks are not allowed.

    With temperatures dipping, campers are urged to use weather-rated sleeping bags. Small, professionally manufactured barbecues are allowed, as long as they are elevated at least a foot off the ground, placed at least 25 feet from buildings, and accompanied by a nearby fire extinguisher.

    Questions about closures or access can be directed to the visitor hotline at (877) 793-9911 or found online.

    [ad_2]

    Gavin J. Quinton

    Source link

  • AIDS Healthcare Foundation will celebrate its legacy of food relief at the New Year’s Rose Parade

    [ad_1]

    You may not be too familiar with LA County Assessor Jeffrey Prang. You’ve probably never heard of the office of the LA County Assessor, or you might only have a vague notion of what it does.

    But with a career in city politics spanning nearly thirty years, he’s among the longest-serving openly gay elected officials in the United States, and for his work serving the people of Los Angeles and championing the rights of the city’s LGBTQ people, the Stonewall Democratic Club is honoring him at their 50th Anniversary Celebration and Awards Night Nov 15 at Beaches Tropicana in West Hollywood.

    Prang moved to Los Angeles from his native Michigan after college in 1991, specifically seeking an opportunity to serve in politics as an openly gay man. In 1997, he was elected to the West Hollywood City Council, where he served for 18 years, including four stints as mayor.

    “I was active in politics, but in Michigan at the time I left, you couldn’t really be out and involved in politics… My life was so compartmentalized. I had my straight friends, my gay friends, my political friends, and I couldn’t really mix and match those things,” he says.

    “One of the things that was really impactful was as you drove down Santa Monica Boulevard and saw those rainbow flags placed there by the government in the median island. That really said, this is a place where you can be yourself. You don’t have to be afraid.” 

    One thing that’s changed over Prang’s time in office is West Hollywood’s uniqueness as a place of safety for the queer community. 

    “It used to be, you could only be out and gay and politically involved if you were from Silver Lake or from West Hollywood. The thought of being able to do that in Downey or Monterey Park or Pomona was foreign. But now we have LGBTQ centers, gay pride celebrations, and LGBT elected officials in all those jurisdictions, something that we wouldn’t have thought possible 40 years ago,” he says.

    Prang’s jump to county politics is emblematic of that shift. In 2014, amid a scandal that brought down the previous county assessor, Prang threw his name in contention for the job, having worked in the assessor’s office already for the previous two years. He beat out eleven contenders in the election, won reelection in 2018 and 2022, and is seeking a fourth term next year.

    To put those victories in perspective, at the time of his first election, Prang represented more people than any other openly gay elected official in the world. 

    Beyond his office, Prang has lent his experience with ballot box success to helping get more LGBT people elected through his work with the Stonewall Democrats and with a new organization he co-founded last year called the LA County LGBTQ Elected Officials Association (LACLEO).

    LACLEO counts more than fifty members, including officials from all parts of the county, municipal and state legislators, and members of school boards, water boards, and city clerks.  

    “I assembled this group to collectively use our elected strength and influence to help impact policy in Sacramento and in Washington, DC, to take advantage of these elected leaders who have a bigger voice in government than the average person, and to train them and educate them to be better advocates on behalf of the issues that are important for us,” Prang says.

    “I do believe as a senior high-level official I need to play a role and have an important voice in supporting our community,” he says. 

    Ok, but what is the LA County assessor, anyway? 

    “Nobody knows what the assessor is. 99% of people think I’m the guy who collects taxes,” Prang says.

    The assessor makes sure that all properties in the county are properly recorded and fairly assessed so that taxes can be levied correctly. It’s a wonky job, but one that has a big impact on how the city raises money for programs.

    And that wonkiness suits Prang just fine. While the job may seem unglamorous, he gleefully boasts about his work overhauling the office’s technology to improve customer service and efficiency, which he says is proving to be a role model for other county offices.

    “I inherited this 1970s-era mainframe green screen DOS-based legacy system. And believe it or not, that’s the standard technology for most large government agencies. That’s why the DMV sucks. That’s why the tax collection system sucks. But I spent $130 million over almost 10 years to rebuild our system to a digitized cloud-based system,” Prang says.

    “I think the fact that my program was so successful did give some impetus to the board funding the tax collector and the auditor-controller to update their system, which is 40 years behind where they need to be.”

    More tangible impacts for everyday Angelenos include his outreach to promote tax savings programs for homeowners, seniors, and nonprofits, and a new college training program that gives students a pipeline to good jobs in the county.

    As attacks on the queer community intensify from the federal government, Prang says the Stonewall Democrats are an important locus of organization and resistance, and he encourages anyone to get involved.

    “It is still an important and relevant organization that provides opportunities for LGBTQ people to get involved, to have an impact on our government and our civic life. If you just wanna come and volunteer and donate your time, it provides that, if you really want to do more and have a bigger voice and move into areas of leadership, it provides an opportunity for that as well,” he says.

    [ad_2]

    Kristie Song

    Source link

  • Their templed destroyed in Eaton fire, a Pasadena Jewish community holds vigil after Australia’s anti-Semitic attack

    [ad_1]

    1 of 6

    Cantor Ruth Berman Harris, Rabbi Jill Gold Wright, Melissa Levy and Rabbi Josh Ratnerwill (l-r) of the Pasadena Jewish Temple & Center gather to light the third Hanukkah candle during a ceremony and vigil as they stand in solidarity with the victims of the antisemitic mass shooting in Australia in Pasadena, CA Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2025.(Photo by Andy Holzman, Contributing Photographer)

    Expand

    Members of the Pasadena Jewish Temple and Center gathered at the First United Methodist Church in Pasadena on Tuesday, Dec. 16, to light the third Hanukkah candle and stand in solidarity with the victims of the anti-Semitic attack at Bondi Beach in Australia.

    The shooting at the Hanukkah celebration on Dec. 14 left 15 people dead, the youngest of whom was 10 years old, and another, a grandfather of 11 who survived the Holocaust.

    Rabbi Joshua Ratner led the gathering, held where the congregation meets after the January’s Eaton fire destroyed their synagogue and school.

    Temple families, their allies and partners held the first community Hanukkah candle lighting on Saturday, Dec. 14, in Sierra Madre, since losing their campus.

    Temple leaders said they will hold other Hanukkah gatherings for different age groups throughout the eight days of the Festival of Lights.

    Reflecting on Hanukkah, Ratner said the essence of the holiday is to remind people of their capacity to lights in the world. “It’s precisely at this time that Hanukkah calls on us to assert our capacity to light up the night.”

    [ad_2]

    Anissa Rivera

    Source link

  • Rose Bowl Quarterbacks Club welcomes Warren Moon, Anthony Munoz

    [ad_1]

    PASADENA — It was a gathering of some mighty football talent at the Rose Bowl.

    Anthony Munoz, a California High School Football Hall of Fame member, and Pro Football Hall of Fame member; and Warren Moon, Pro Football Hall of Fame member, Canadian Football Hall of Fame member, and 1978 Rose Bowl Game MVP, were guests of Rose Bowl Quarterbacks Club on Thursday, Nov. 20, at the Bowl’s East Locker Room.

    Announced earlier this year, the Rose Bowl Quarterbacks Club, under the management of the Rose Bowl Legacy Foundation, has entered its 80th year of operation, offering an array of events.

    NFL greats Warren Moon and Anthony Munoz were guests at the Rose Bowl Quarter Backs Club breakfast on Nov. 20, 2025. (Courtesy, Rose Bowl Stadium)

    The Club, a longstanding community organization dedicated to honoring the spirit of football at all levels, brings together fans, athletes, coaches, and supporters who share a passion for  the game, the Pasadena community and the Bowl’s tradition.

    Munoz and Moon were the the culmination of a six-event speaker series at the iconic Rose  Bowl Stadium.

     

    [ad_2]

    Staff report

    Source link

  • Judge Denies TRO in Rose Bowl Lawsuit Against UCLA

    [ad_1]

    The Rose Bowl’s request for a restraining order was not granted as a judge claimed there was no imminent danger of UCLA leaving the venue

    Yesterday, a judge denied a request by the City of Pasadena and the operators of the Rose Bowl for a temporary restraining order (TRO) that would bar UCLA’s football team from playing its home games at any other venue in Los Angeles or Orange counties and from trying to terminate its Rose Bowl lease. The paperwork for this restraining order was submitted on Monday, in an attempt to prevent the stated actions from occurring while a lawsuit against UCLA and the UC Regents is pending. The RBOC and the City of Pasadena sued in late October, seeking to enforce the terms of their lease agreement, which consists of UCLA playing football at the Rose Bowl until 2044, as it seemed the Rose Bowl was looking to move operations to SoFi Stadium.

    Judge James C. Chalfant explained his decision, “At this stage, it is denied from lack of an emergency”, because there was no evidence of an immediate emergency, as UCLA has made no progress in moving to SoFi. In most cases, judges only award a TRO when, among other factors, there is a risk of irreparable injury and immediate harm, which the judge did not find this time. However, he mentioned that the plaintiffs could reapply for an injunction at a later time after both parties obtain more evidence, which the Plaintiffs have made clear they will do, so UCLA could still lose at a later stage. 

    UCLA agreed with the Judge’s decision as Mary Oskao, UCLA Vice Chancellor for Strategic Communications, stated, “while we continue to evaluate the long-term arrangement for UCLA football home games, no decision has been made,” mirroring UCLA’s original response to the lawsuit. 

    The Plaintiffs and their lawyers expressed their gratefulness to the judge because, although he did not award the TRO as “no emergency exists” with no actual movement from UCLA, he “concluded there is real and concrete evidence of injury and irreparable harm to the City not compensable to money damages alone” that would occur should UCLA abandon the Rose Bowl.

    How the lawsuit will work out is still unclear, as both the City of Pasadena and the Rose Bowl believe “UCLA has confirmed its imminent departure, ” which would breach the specific performance provision in their lease. The remedy for such a breach would be a court order mandating UCLA remain at the Rose Bowl until 2044, when the lease is up, as monetary damages would not be substituted for the money they may lose. In the past, specific performance clauses have not always been effective, as they did not prevent the New Orleans Jazz from moving to Utah, the Cleveland Browns from moving to Baltimore, or the Seattle Supersonics from moving to Oklahoma City. But they have been successful in keeping the New York Jets, New York Yankees, and Minnesota Twins from playing home games elsewhere, so only time will determine which category UCLA will fall under. 

    [ad_2]

    Taylor Ford

    Source link

  • More than 100 firefighters battle hazardous blaze at General Motors in Pasadena

    [ad_1]

    More than 100 firefighters and a hazardous materials team were working Wednesday night to combat a fire involving lithium ion batteries and prototype cars at General Motors’ design studio in Pasadena, authorities said.

    At one point, a firefighter was trapped in the structure amid the ferocious blaze and sent out a mayday call.

    The Pasadena Fire Department responded to the fire in the 600 block of Sierra Madre Villa Avenue at 5:50 p.m., according to department spokesperson Lisa Derderian. The incident was declared a four-alarm fire — signifying a catastrophic blaze that requires the mobilization of significant fire department resources — due to the scale of the structure and the hazardous materials involved.

    A firefighter is among dozens battling a fire Wednesday at the General Motors design studio in Pasadena.

    (Hon Wing Chiu / For The Times)

    “This is one of the largest structure fires we’ve had in Pasadena in many, many years,” Derderian said.

    Preliminary reports indicated that lithium ion batteries and concept cars burned inside the building; however, the incident remained active Wednesday evening, and the cause of the fire is under investigation, she said. Some of the burned cars appeared to be gasoline-powered vehicles.

    It took firefighters more than an hour to track down the source of the blaze as thick smoke engulfed the 149,000-square-foot campus. General Motors invested more than $71 million in 2021 to build the three-building facility as a new base for its Advanced Design Center.

    The blaze is challenging to combat as crews cannot use water to extinguish lithium ion battery fires. Doing so can cause a destabilizing chemical reaction, leading more batteries to catch fire or explode.

    “Firefighters on scene have trained in scenarios like this, but it does put a different twist on extinguishing fires,” Derderian said.

    Large lithium ion battery fires can take several hours or even days to render safe.

    Firefighters are seen at the General Motors design studio after a fire on Wednesday

    The fire burned lithium ion batteries and concept cars at the General Motors facility, officials said.

    (Hon Wing Chiu / For The Times)

    When one battery cell overheats, it can trigger a chain reaction where nearby cells also overheat. This reaction releases heat and toxic gases and can continue deep inside the battery pack long after visible flames are put out.

    There was a mayday call when a firefighter became trapped inside the fire-engulfed building Wednesday evening. But fire crews were able to locate him and pull him out of the structure without injuries.

    “He did not wish to be transported [to a hospital], but it was a very scary few minutes there until they determined that he was OK,” Derderian said.

    Fire crews are searching the entire campus to ensure there is no one else trapped inside, she said. Crews will remain on scene overnight as they continue to deal with the hazardous materials involved in the blaze.

    [ad_2]

    Clara Harter

    Source link

  • High school football: Early look at the scores from Friday’s Week 8 games

    [ad_1]

    An early look at the scores from the high school football games Friday, Oct. 17.

    We will publish a complete list of final scores at the end of the night.

    FRIDAY’S RESULTS

    CIF-SS

    Mission Viejo 34, San Clemente 16

    St. Francis 38, Alemany 6

    St. Paul 35, St. Pius X-St. Matthias 34

    Leuzinger 47, Culver City 7

    Inglewood 21, Mira Costa 17

    Corona del Mar 21, Villa Park 3

    San Juan Hills 47, Newport Harbor 10

    Westlake 29, Newbury Park 23

    Thousand Oaks 21, Rio Mesa 13

    St. Anthony 29, La Salle 0

    Crespi 31, Salesian 16

    Tustin 51, El Modena 7

    Capistrano Valley 41, Trabuco Hills 7

    Huntington Beach 21, Foothill 14

    Crean Lutheran 56, La Habra 21

    West Ranch 21, Castaic 19

    Hart 42, Canyon Country Canyon 6

    Bishop Amat 30, Loyola 14

    Chaminade 37, Serra 27

    Sierra Canyon 45, Notre Dame/SO 10

    Lakewood 3, Millikan 0

    Long Beach Wilson 22, Long Beach Poly 21

    West Torrance 50, Beverly Hills 0

    North Torrance 34, Peninsula 21

    Redondo Union 47, Santa Monica 7

    La Canada 14, Monrovia 0

    Bonita 31, Claremont 7

    Charter Oak 41, Los Osos 20

    Orange Lutheran 63, JSerra 23

    St. John Bosco 27, Santa Margarita 14

    West Covina 28, Baldwin Park 20

    Northview 42, San Dimas 7

    L.A. CITY

    Arleta 42, Verdugo Hills 21

    Sun Valley Poly 34, Monroe 14

    Granada Hills 46, Chatsworth 17

    El Camino Real 41, Cleveland 21

    Birmingham 69, Taft 14

    [ad_2]

    Staff report

    Source link

  • “No Kings Day” Protests Planned Nationwide Oct. 18

    [ad_1]

    The second “No Kings Day” will take place on Oct. 18. This is in response to an increasingly authoritarian regime, protestors say

    A series of “No Kings Day” demonstrations are set to take place nationwide on Saturday, Oct. 18. The protests are organized as a response to what activists describe as the Trump administration’s increasingly authoritarian tactics.

    “On October 18, millions of us are rising again to show the world: America has no kings, and the power belongs to the people.” No Kings organizers wrote on their website.

    They further entail how to register and find nearby events taking place.

    This movement is a follow-up to June’s protest, which coincided with President Donald Trump’s birthday and a grand military parade in Washington, D.C.

    While the protestors attempted to make their protest peaceful, police responded to the scene with tear gas and crowd-control tactics, according to Associated Press.

    This protest is spearheaded by the 50501 Movement, which frames itself as a coalition rejecting concentrated power and authoritarian leadership. The name references “50 states, 50 protests, one movement.”

    “This isn’t just politics.” No Kings organizers said. “It’s democracy versus dictatorship. And together, we’re choosing democracy.”

    Protest locations in Southern California include Huntington Beach, Pasadena, Orange County, Inglewood and more. To get the full list of cities, visit the No Kings protest website here.

    [ad_2]

    Cristal Soto

    Source link

  • Jane Goodall Dies at 91: Pioneering Scientist & Conservation Icon

    [ad_1]

    The beloved environmental leader, whose groundbreaking research with chimpanzees grew into a global movement for conservation, was scheduled to speak to more than 1,000 students in Pasadena before her passing

    Credit: Araya Doheny/Getty Images for Sierra Club

    The world has lost one of the most iconic voices for science and the environment.

    Dr. Jane Goodall, the influential primatologist and activist whose work changed our understanding of chimpanzees and us as humans, passed away at the age of 91 while on her tour in California due to natural causes..

    Her passing marks the end of her extraordinary journey. Yet it also carries deep impact. Goodall spent her final days doing what she has done for more than six decades – traveling the globe, sharing her message, and inspiring the next generation to act. She was scheduled to appear in Pasadena this week for more than 1,000 students from schools across Los Angeles. 

    The Scientist Who Redefined Humanity

    In 1960, young Jane Goodall traveled all the way to Tanzania to study wild chimpanzees. At the time, she had little scientific knowledge. She was just a young woman with a notebook, a pair of binoculars, and a passion for what she does.

    What she discovered amazed the world.

    She discovered chimpanzees using sticks to dig termites out of the ground, as well as hugging one another to show affection, and even fighting in ways that looked oddly familiar to humans. These observations proved that humans were not the only species capable of making tools, showing affection, or getting into conflict.

    Her work did not just change science textbooks – it changed the way people thought about animals, and about ourselves. Goodall showed that the line between humans and other species wasn’t as defined as we once believed it to be.

    LOS ANGELESCredit: Getty Images for Sierra Club

    From Scientist to Global Advocate

    Goodall’s adventures in the forests of Africa were only the start of her journey.

    She soon realized that to protect chimpanzees meant protecting their habitats and bringing awareness to the world about the threats they face.

    In 1977, she founded the Jane Goodall Institute to continue her work with chimpanzees and to teach the world about her work and why it is important. A few years later, she launched Roots and Shoots, a youth program that has since spread to more than 60 countries around the globe. Their mission there was simple – give young people the tools they need to improve their communities and protect the planet.

    Over the years, she became an important activist as much as she was a scientist. She traveled to lecture halls, conferences, and even classrooms to urge people to rethink the way they move through life. She encouraged people to think differently about the way they eat, shop and treat the world. 

    In 2002, she was named a UN Messenger of Peace, a role that gave her an even bigger platform to share her messages of hope for the future.

    A Cultural Icon

    Goodall was also more than just a researcher and activist. She became a cultural figure recognized around the world. She appeared in documentaries, wrote more than two dozen books, and inspired many films. Her soft voice, gentle mannerisms, and quiet determination stood out in our noisy world.

    She never lectured with anger, but rather appealed to the people’s sense of compassion and responsibility. That approach made her one of the most respected and admired influential figures of her time.

    A Local Chapter in Her Global Mission

    Her devotion to young minds was clear even in her final days. Just before her death, Goodall was planning an upcoming visit to EF Academy in Pasadena. The event, called TREEAMS (trees and dreams), was planned as a ceremony with more than 1,000 students from across Los Angeles. Together, they were set to launch a student-led movement to plant 5,000 trees in Los Angeles over the next several years.

    Goodall was scheduled to deliver the keynote speech, answer questions from students, and take part in the tree planting ceremony. It was the kind of event she loved the most – a chance to inspire kids to care for the planet and believe in themselves and their ability to change it. 

    Although she never made it to Pasadena, the project itself now feels like a fitting tribute to her. The students will go and plant trees, carrying forward the very work she has dedicated her whole life to.

    Her Long Lasting Legacy

    Goodall’s death on tour feels symbolic of her character. She never stopped moving, never stopped educating audiences both big and small, and never stopped working for the furniture she believed in. She often said that “every individual matters, every individual has a role to play, every individual makes a difference.”

    That belief defined her life. From the forests of Tanzania to classrooms in Los Angeles, she carries the same message with her. We are all a part of nature, not separate from it, so it is our duty to care for it.

    Her loss leaves a hole in our world, but her life’s work remains a blueprint for what comes next. 

    She has inspired generations of people, from scientists, activists, students and everyday people who are now the ones who must continue her legacy. In every tree planted, every child who looks at the world with curiosity and compassion, Goodall’s spirit lives on within them.

    She showed us what is possible in this world when kindness and courage guide us. And even in death, her voice continues to echo, asking us all to protect the planet we share.

    [ad_2]

    Melissa Houston

    Source link

  • Photos: Check out Friday night’s Week 4 high school football action

    [ad_1]

    Take a look at some of the Southern California News Group’s top photos from the Week 4 games Friday, Sept. 19.

    1 of 42

    Jordan Johnson (5) of Thousand Oaks brings down Simi Valley’s Quentin McGahan (17) during their game at Simi Valley High School Sep. 19, 2025.(Photo by Andy Holzman, Contributing Photographer)

    Expand

    xxx

    [ad_2]

    Staff report

    Source link

  • Wedbush Securities joins downtown L.A. exodus, opting for smaller, more flexible office in Pasadena

    Wedbush Securities joins downtown L.A. exodus, opting for smaller, more flexible office in Pasadena

    [ad_1]

    One of downtown Los Angeles’ familar tenants is pulling up stakes as the office rental market continues to contract from shrinking occupancy stoked by the pandemic.

    Financial services firm Wedbush Securities has begun its move from a prominent office tower to Pasadena, where it will occupy much smaller offices meant to accommodate employees who now work remotely much of the time.

    The firm is leaving behind Wedbush Center, which overlooks the Harbor Freeway and sports two signs on top bearing the company name. Wedbush has been headquartered in the Wilshire Boulevard building since 2001 and its lease expires next year.

    “It’s a big deal, a very big decision for the firm,” President Gary Wedbush said of the move. “The pandemic and COVID created a different kind of office for us.”

    With most employees required to be in the office only a third of the time, Wedbush is creating an office oriented toward shared workspaces that can be used as needed by various employees instead of assigned desks, he said.

    The move was also influenced by the changed nature of downtown’s financial district since thousands of office workers departed during the COVID-related shutdown and probably won’t return again in pre-pandemic numbers. Many shops and restaurants remain closed and office tenants have said the streets feel less safe than they used to.

    Although Wedbush said “downtown has been fantastic for us,” other locations have become more attractive. “There are places like Pasadena that seem to have recovered more fully from the pandemic than downtown Los Angeles has. That was a part of the decision-making” to move.

    The firm leases more than 100,000 square feet at Wedbush Center but will occupy about 20,000 square feet in an office complex on Lake Avenue in one of Pasadena’s leading commercial districts.

    “The amenities on Lake Avenue are fantastic,” Wedbush said. “Casual restaurants to really fine dining, fitness centers — it just had everything.”

    Wedbush’s move, which will take place formally in the first half of 2025, reflects a trend that has been affecting downtown and much of Los Angeles County for the last few years, real estate brokerage CBRE said in a recent report on office leasing.

    “The Greater Los Angeles office market continued its search for the bottom” in the third quarter, CBRE said, as both tenants and landlords “navigate the ongoing supply and demand imbalance exacerbated by the shift to hybrid and remote work.”

    Companies adapting to new work models are leaving behind large chunks of office space, and the change is particularly noticeable downtown, where CBRE said overall vacancy is more than 30%, triple the amount considered to be a healthy balance between tenant and landlord interests.

    Wedbush Securities’ shift to hybrid work, with people in the office some days and not others, created the chance to make a different kind of office with a smaller footprint and more shared spaces to collaborate or work away from a traditional desk, Wedbush said.

    About 70% of the office will be considered “hotel” space where employees can choose a workstation on days they are present while the remaining 30% will be offices for financial advisors and others who need privacy to meet with clients.

    A stark difference will be that the shared workstations will be around the windows with views of the city and the offices will be in the center of the building. In the old arrangement, individual offices were much larger and occupied the prime space along the windows, Wedbush said.

    One of the two floors Wedbush Securities leased in Pasadena has a rooftop deck that Wedbush plans to make into an outdoor office space with conference tables, workstations where people can plug in their computers and places to unwind.

    “It’s not just going to be a couple of tables and umbrellas,” he said. “The opportunity to build out this new space was a big driver in us moving out of our building that we’ve loved for so, so many years.”

    Wedbush Securities was co-founded in 1955 by Wedbush’s father, Edward, in Los Angeles and now has close to 900 employees in 28 cities across the country, Wedbush said. “We’re really proud of our Los Angeles legacy.”

    Wedbush’s decision to dramatically shrink its headquarters underscores not only the continued struggles of the office rental market in the wake of the pandemic but broader vulnerabilities in commercial real estate throughout L.A. County.

    A report released by real estate services firm NAI Capital said that in the third quarter of 2024, Los Angeles County’s commercial real estate market experienced a sharp 18.4% year-to-date decline in sales volume and a rise in real estate cap rates, a metric used to estimate an investor’s rate of return based on the income that the property is expected to generate.

    It may be a low point in the real estate cycle for property sales, NAI Capital Chief Executive Chris Jackson said.

    “With cap rates on the rise, California regulations, and high interest rates throughout 2024, the commercial real estate market took a bit of a dip” with office properties “hit particularly hard,” Jackson said. “However, with interest rates expected to decline more substantially in 2025, we anticipate a significant rebound in real estate sales.”

    Sales are being further limited by taxes and government fees, particularly Measure ULA, the property transfer tax in Los Angeles that took effect in 2023, the report said. Dubbed the “mansion tax,” Measure ULA imposed a 4% tax on real estate transactions over $5 million and a 5.5% tax on those exceeding $10 million. In June, those thresholds increased to $5.15 million and $10.3 million.

    The tax has contributed to a nearly 40% year-over-year drop in sales of office, retail, industrial and multifamily properties, or $1.9 billion below last year’s total, the report said.

    [ad_2]

    Roger Vincent

    Source link

  • Police looking for information after fatal hit-and-run in Pasadena

    Police looking for information after fatal hit-and-run in Pasadena

    [ad_1]

    The Pasadena Police Department is looking for answers after someone killed a pedestrian by hitting him with a truck and fled the scene.

    The collision took place at 100 Southmore in Pasadena at around 6:09 a.m. on August 8.

    Nearby surveillance footage captured a lifted, dark-colored pickup truck involved in the crash. The truck struck the man who was riding on a motorized cart as he was using the crosswalk.

    The suspect did not stop and render aid after hitting the man, leaving the scene immediately in their truck. The victim was transported to a nearby hospital by ambulance, but he later succumbed to his injuries.

    The Pasadena PD reported the incident to its Facebook page:

    Anyone with information on the collision is encouraged to contact Officer Bearor with the Crash Reconstruction Team at 713-540-5879 or via email here.

    Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.

    [ad_2]

    Michael Horton

    Source link

  • Suicide prevention net on Golden Gate bridge cut deaths in half last year, officials say

    Suicide prevention net on Golden Gate bridge cut deaths in half last year, officials say

    [ad_1]

    While still under construction, the suicide prevention net on the Golden Gate Bridge showed significant results in 2023 and is expected to continue to reduce deaths this year, officials said.

    Last year, officials recorded 14 confirmed suicides from the bridge, down from an annual average of 30. This year, the number is expected to be even lower, according to the Golden Gate Bridge, Highway and Transportation District.

    The net is made of “marine-grade stainless steel netting installed 20 feet below the sidewalks on the bridge and extending out 20 feet over the water,” the district said in a written statement.

    At a commemoration ceremony held in mid-July, local leaders spoke about the multiyear project that began in 2018 and was completed in early 2024.

    The net was originally scheduled to be completed in 2021, but infighting between builders and the government caused delays and cost overruns.

    “The Golden Gate Bridge is a source of immense pride to San Francisco — but for too many families in our community, the bridge has also been a place of pain,” said former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who has represented San Francisco for 37 years. “With the completion of a suicide deterrent system for the Golden Gate Bridge, we are providing a critical second chance for troubled individuals.”

    Ultimately, the project cost about $224 million, the transportation district said — well over the 2014 estimate of $76 million when it was approved but also much less than the $398 million figure cited in a 2022 lawsuit between contractors and the district.

    Suicide prevention and crisis counseling resources

    If you or someone you know is struggling with suicidal thoughts, seek help from a professional and call 9-8-8. The United States’ first nationwide three-digit mental health crisis hotline 988 will connect callers with trained mental health counselors. Text “HOME” to 741741 in the U.S. and Canada to reach the Crisis Text Line.

    The net’s purpose is to deter would-be jumpers and save those who do jump from death. Still, being caught by the net “is designed to be painful and may result in significant injury,” the transportation district said.

    A 2017 study in Switzerland found that barriers and nets on bridges reduce suicides by up to 77%. In Pasadena, the City Council is considering suicide prevention barriers on the Colorado Street Bridge, according to Pasadena Now.

    At the Golden Gate Bridge ceremony, Kymberlyrenee Gamboa spoke about the loss of her 18-year-old son, who jumped from the bridge in 2013.

    The project’s completion “brings a profound sense of hope and healing in knowing that future families may be spared from enduring such a devastating loss,” she said.

    [ad_2]

    Terry Castleman

    Source link

  • Useful tips on how to sort through storm debris during cleanup

    Useful tips on how to sort through storm debris during cleanup

    [ad_1]

    HOUSTON – The Houston OEM has provided several useful tips on how to separate debris after a severe weather event.

    Many residents in the Houston area and Harris County are left to clean up debris after Hurricane Beryl struck Southeast Texas on Monday. While many are trying to figure out what to do next, the Houston OEM recommends separating debris into six categories and where to place debris for pick up.

  • Debris should be placed curbside, without blocking the roadway or storm debris.

  • Any debris placed from the sidewalk toward your property will not be picked up.

  • Placing debris near or on trees, poles, or other structures makes removal difficult. This includes fire hydrants and meters.

  • If you don’t have a sidewalk, ditch, or utility line in front of your home, place debris at the edge of your property before the curb.

  • Normal household trash: Will not be picked up with debris as part of this program. Residents should continue to follow normal garbage removal schedule.

  • Vegetable debris: Leaves (do not place in bags), logs, plants and tree branches, etc.

  • Construction and demolition debris: Building materials, carpet, drywall, furniture, lumber, mattresses, pluming, etc.

  • Appliances and white goods: Air conditioners, dishwashers, freezers, refrigerators, stoves, washers, dryers, water heaters, etc.

  • Electronics: Computers, radios, stereos, televisions, other devices with a cord.

  • Household hazardous waste: Cleaning supplies, batteries, lawn chemicals, oils, oil-based paints and stains, pesticides, etc.

  • [ad_2]

    Brittany Taylor

    Source link

  • Pasadena’s Ambassador Auditorium, ‘Carnegie Hall of the West,’ goes up for sale

    Pasadena’s Ambassador Auditorium, ‘Carnegie Hall of the West,’ goes up for sale

    [ad_1]

    The storied Ambassador Auditorium in Pasadena, which was long considered one of the region’s top classical music venues, is for sale after being owned by a local church for the last two decades.

    Harvest Rock Church is asking $45 million for the 1,200-seat auditorium near the Old Pasadena district that has also hosted jazz greats including Ella Fitzgerald, Dave Brubeck and Dizzy Gillespie. It has been called “the Carnegie Hall of the West” by fans.

    The evangelical Christian Harvest Rock Church is based on the property and uses the auditorium for services. It also rents the venue to the Pasadena Symphony and the Colburn Orchestra as well as other performers that the church finds compatible with its religious mission.

    The church recently paid off its mortgage on the property, Pastor Che Ahn said, and decided to sell it to make a move to a bigger facility somewhere in the Los Angeles region.

    The lobby of the Ambassador Auditorium in Pasadena includes a chandelier composed of 100 custom bulbs and 1,390 crystals in three tiers of polished bronze.

    (Ambassador Foundation of Pasadena)

    “We’re hoping that someone will buy it to really restore it to the original purpose and intent of that building,” he said.

    The Ambassador Auditorium was intended to be a showplace for live performances when it opened in 1974. The Times called it “A new Taj Mahal for the arts.”

    It was also the centerpiece for Ambassador College, operated by the Worldwide Church of God on a 40-acre campus near the intersection of Colorado and Orange Grove boulevards that has been largely redeveloped in recent years.

    Harvest Rock Church and Maranatha High School bought a 13-acre portion of the campus site with five buildings including the auditorium from Worldwide Church of God in 2004 for an undisclosed amount. The auditorium controlled by Harvest Rock Church is assessed at $13.5 million, public records show.

    Ambassador College founder Herbert W. Armstrong was a televangelist who set out to call attention to his ministry by building a lavish auditorium where he could broadcast services and host high-profile nonreligious events, including an opening performance by the Vienna Symphony Orchestra on April 7, 1974.

    The auditorium made a big impression on local music aficionados, said Donna Perlmutter, who was a music critic at the Los Angeles Herald Examiner newspaper when it debuted.

    “We were, at the time, bowled over by the presence of it,” she said. “It was to compare with any marvelous auditorium in Europe.”

    That it had been created by a bombastic radio and television evangelist known for making dark end-times prophesies seemed unusual, she said.

    “It was almost comical to think of who it was who erected this magnificent place,” Perlmutter said of Armstrong. “It was such a weird juxtaposition.”

     The stage of the Ambassador Auditorium in Pasadena.

    Jazz greats who have performed in the 1,200-seat Ambassador Auditorium in Pasadena include Ella Fitzgerald, Dave Brubeck and Dizzy Gillespie.

    (Ambassador Foundation of Pasadena)

    The acoustics are “optimal,” she said. “It bears a bright, undistorted sound. No singer could want more.”

    The hall’s design by the architectural firm Daniel, Mann, Johnson & Mendenhall (DMJM) strived for a mid-century version of glamour, with a main lobby chandelier composed of 100 custom bulbs and 1,390 crystals in three tiers of polished bronze.

    Finishes include walls of Brazilian rosewood and rose onyx, African shedua wood railings and ceilings adorned with hand-rolled 24-carat gold leaf.

    The auditorium is set in a 500,000-gallon water pond that holds a 37-foot solid bronze egret sculpture designed by British sculptor David Wynne, who also famously made a bronze sculpture of the Beatles’ busts in 1964 and is said to have introduced them to Maharishi Mahesh Yogi.

    Potential buyers of the auditorium include the city of Pasadena, private investors, or a group of investors seeking “to acquire a landmark with profound historical significance,” said real estate agent Isidora Fridman of Compass, who has the listing with Lauren Rauschenberg. The property at 131 S. St. John Ave. will officially go on the market July 9, Compass said.

    [ad_2]

    Roger Vincent

    Source link

  • Blaze Pizza to Leave Its Pasadena HQ

    Blaze Pizza to Leave Its Pasadena HQ

    [ad_1]



    Blaze Pizza to Leave Its Pasadena HQ – Los Angeles Business Journal


















    Home Food Blaze Pizza to Leave Its Pasadena HQ

    Keerthi Vedantam Author

    [ad_2]

    staff-author

    Source link