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Tag: south bay

  • Bay FC mounts late comeback, falls to Washington Spirit in front of record crowd at Oracle Park

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    SAN FRANCISCO — Bay FC put up a good fight in the second half, but it was unable to catch up to the Washington Spirit in the two teams’ showcase game at Oracle Park in San Francisco.

    In front of an NWSL-record announced crowd of 40,091 fans, Bay FC fell down three goals but rallied to make a game of it late. Kelli Hubly’s second-half goal gave Bay FC hope, but Washington hung on to win 3-2.

    Washington (9-4-4) built its first-half lead with goals by Kate Wiesner and Croix Bethune, plus an own goal by Hubly in stoppage time.

    Racheal Kundananji responded with Bay FC’s first goal even later in stoppage time, a header in the fifth minute of added time that gave Bay FC needed hope heading into the halftime break.

    Bay FC goalkeeper Jordan Silkowitz (29) fights for the ball against the Washington Spirit’s Gift Monday (21) during the first half of an NWSL match at Oracle Park in San Francisco, Calif., on Saturday, Aug. 23, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 

    Then Hubly really gave Bay FC’s record home crowd a reason to believe in the 54th minute, heading home a corner kick from Alyssa Malonson to bring Bay FC within a goal.

    Bay FC (4-8-5) generated a number of late chances and was generally on the front foot for the rest of the game, but the hosts were unable to equalize and reward their home fans with a result.

    Check back for updates to this story.

    Bay FC celebrates their second goal scored by Bay FC's Kelli Hubly (11) against the Washington Spirit during the second half of an NWSL game at Oracle Park in San Francisco, Calif., on Saturday, Aug. 23, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
    Bay FC celebrates their second goal scored by Bay FC’s Kelli Hubly (11) against the Washington Spirit during the second half of an NWSL game at Oracle Park in San Francisco, Calif., on Saturday, Aug. 23, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 
    Bay FC fans celebrate a goal by Bay FC's Racheal Kundananji (9) against the Washington Spirit during the first half of an NWSL game at Oracle Park in San Francisco, Calif., on Saturday, Aug. 23, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
    Bay FC fans celebrate a goal by Bay FC’s Racheal Kundananji (9) against the Washington Spirit during the first half of an NWSL game at Oracle Park in San Francisco, Calif., on Saturday, Aug. 23, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 
    The Bay FC takes on the Washington Spirit during the first half of an NWSL game at Oracle Park in San Francisco, Calif., on Saturday, Aug. 23, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
    The Bay FC takes on the Washington Spirit during the first half of an NWSL game at Oracle Park in San Francisco, Calif., on Saturday, Aug. 23, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 
    Fans celebrate the second goal scored by Bay FC's Kelli Hubly (11) against the Washington Spirit during the second half of an NWSL game at Oracle Park in San Francisco, Calif., on Saturday, Aug. 23, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
    Fans celebrate the second goal scored by Bay FC’s Kelli Hubly (11) against the Washington Spirit during the second half of an NWSL game at Oracle Park in San Francisco, Calif., on Saturday, Aug. 23, 2025. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 

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    Christian Babcock

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  • San Jose schools’ new buildings provide lessons in history

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    Hillbrook School — a Los Gatos-based institution that goes back 90 years but is just in its third year of high school — cut the ribbon on a new classroom building in downtown San Jose on Friday that is steeped in history.

    The three-story brick-and-sandstone Moir building at 227 N. First St. is a real beauty from 1894, with a massive skylight that rains sunshine into its interior and charming bay windows. It was one of the original work-live buildings downtown, with tenants who lived on the upper floors running businesses out of the storefronts on the ground floor. It served as a hotel for most of its life and, most recently, housed the offices of the Robinson & Wood law firm.

I’m glad that instead of building something brand new — which it could have done pretty much anywhere — Hillbrook decided to bring its students to downtown San Jose and specifically to two historic but vacant buildings near St. James Park that required millions of dollars of renovation.

“That was a very intentional decision to have a school in downtown San Jose and have this idea of the city as a classroom,” Head of School Mark Silver said. “We have these two buildings, which represent 70,000 square feet, but we have a classroom that is an entire city.”

Having both that building and the old San Jose Armory on North Second Street transformed into classrooms, maker spaces, art studios and a gym should keep those spaces vibrant for decades to come. While they’ve been modernized inside, the exteriors have kept their classic charm.

“The historical character of the building has been updated but hasn’t been lost,” Silver said. “The idea of bringing a historical building back into use is one of the most green and sustainable things you can do. Our ability to take these two buildings and reenergize them is a huge benefit to the city, and it’s a huge benefit to us.”

Hillbrook’s already been a good neighbor, helping to host the National Night Out event for the residents in surrounding buildings this month and asking the relatively new Hobee’s restaurant on North Second Street to provide its student meals. Of course, there’s another historic structure — the dilapidated First Church of Christ Scientist — between Hillbrook’s two buildings. Wouldn’t it be great if the school found a way to make that part of its campus, too?

CELEBRATION BELLS: Meanwhile, Bellarmine College Prep had its own dedication event Wednesday for the Wade Academic Center, a 43,000 square-foot building with 21 classrooms, a courtyard and and administrative offices. While this is an entirely new campus building, Bellarmine — which celebrates its 175th anniversary in 2026 — still paid homage to the school’s history.

The Wade Academic Center at Bellarmine College Prep in San Jose was dedicated Aug. 20, 2025. (Sal Pizarro/Bay Area News Group)
The Wade Academic Center at Bellarmine College Prep in San Jose was dedicated Aug. 20, 2025. (Sal Pizarro/Bay Area News Group) 

It’s named after the Rev. Gerald Wade, Bellarmine’s former president and chancellor emeritus, and his parents, lifelong Santa Clara resident Clara Wade and Walter Wade, whose family had deep roots in Alviso.

And in a touching gesture, the school’s Class of 1983 raised money to dedicate a classroom in honor of Rev. Peter Pabst, the chancellor of Cristo Rey San Jose Jesuit High School. Pabst taught at Bellarmine in the mid-1970s and when he returned to campus from 1981 to ’83. They were among the hundreds of donors who contributed to the capital campaign, “Legacy, Inspiration, Innovation.”

An interior hallway in the Wade Academic Center at Bellarmine College Prep, which was dedicated Aug. 20, 2025, welcomes students in several languages. (Courtesy of Craig Cozart Photography)
An interior hallway in the Wade Academic Center at Bellarmine College Prep, which was dedicated Aug. 20, 2025, welcomes students in several languages. (Courtesy of Craig Cozart Photography) 

To fit the new building on campus, Bellarmine could have gone the easy route and torn down everything in its way. But instead of demolishing the 109-year-old Berchmans Hall, the school moved it, with plans of repurposing it for for offices and a welcome center.

CHAMBER’S SMOKIN’ BBQ: There were more than 850 movers and shakers at the San Jose Chamber of Commerce’s annual barbecue Thursday evening at History Park in San Jose, but the sweltering temperature kept the moving and shaking to a minimum.

People flocked to grab a popsicle from Paleta Planeta, which normally serves up its artisan Mexican frozen treats from its storefront on Fourth and Santa Clara streets, and the booth staffed by downtown accounting firm PP&Co., which was pouring ice-cold Moscow Mules in light-up plastic cups shaped like a boot. (And for those not feeling the love for Moscow these days, they also had bourbon and tequila versions.)

As predicted, the Waymo self-driving car was a hit with the crowd, and — also as predicted — it did not move nor was a start date announced for San Jose service. But testing continues and sooner or later, we won’t have to drive ourselves around town.

PROVIDING A BOOST: Rigo Chacon, who was the longtime face of KGO-TV’s newscasts in the South Bay, founded his scholarship program Abrazos & Books in 1990 to help Santa Clara County students in need. But he says the program is going through its toughest fundraising period in its 35-year history, and he hasn’t been able to promote it as much as he’s recovering from major back surgery.

Chacon launched a GoFundMe last fall to raise $15,000 but it lost steam about six months ago with only about 40 percent of the goal raised. With the start of the school year, he’s hoping there are more generous folks out there with education on their minds. You can find out more about the campaign at www.gofundme.com/f/support-rigo-chacons-legacy-of-giving.

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Sal Pizarro

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  • Letters: Let’s invest in the Bay Area’s greatest asset: nature

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    Submit your letter to the editor via this form. Read more Letters to the Editor.

    Invest in Bay Area’s
    greatest asset: Nature

    Re: “Bay Area needs unity to solve its problems” (Page A9, Aug. 17).

    I second Russell Hancock’s recent call for bold regional leadership in this period of “federal ruckus.” As climate impacts intensify, California must act now to build climate resilience for tomorrow — and for future generations.

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  • Tesla is slow in reporting crashes and the feds have launched an investigation to find out why

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    By BERNARD CONDON, Associated Press

    NEW YORK  — Federal auto safety regulators are investigating why Tesla has repeatedly broken rules requiring it to quickly tell them about crashes involving its self-driving technology, a potentially significant development given the company’s plans to put hundreds of thousands of driverless cars on U.S. roads over the next year.

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    Associated Press

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  • COVID forces San Jose’s City Lights Theater to end its season early

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    To borrow a phrase from the Go-Go’s 1980s heyday, “What a bummer.”

    A COVID-19 resurgence among its cast forced City Lights Theater Company in San Jose to cancel this weekend’s final performances of its summer musical, “Head Over Heels.” The show, effervescing with the music of the iconic ’80s band, was also City Lights’ last show of the season, so there goes that.

    City Lights Executive Artistic Director Lisa Mallette says keeping the cast, staff and audiences healthy comes first, but it has to be quite frustrating every time COVID — less deadly but still disruptive — shows up at the theater. City Lights cancelled previous performances in the run because of COVID, and San Jose Stage Company also cancelled the opening weekend of “Sweet Charity” in June for the same reason.

    “This virus is still dealing financial and emotional blows to arts organizations — and to any group that gathers people together in community. Theaters all over the country have had to cancel shows this summer,” Mallette said. “It’s painful to lose performances for any show, but this one is particularly hard, with such a beautiful cast and story, and with such a timely message of love and pride.”

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    Sal Pizarro

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  • High school football 2025 preview: PAL De Anza Division

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    As part of our high school football coverage to get you ready for the 2025 season, we are rolling out previews of all leagues in our coverage area.

    Today’s focus:

    PENINSULA ATHLETIC LEAGUE DE ANZA DIVISION

    (Predicted order of finish)

    No. 1 THE KING’S ACADEMY

    Coach: Dante Perez 

    2024 record: 5-6

    What to expect: The Knights suffered a blow when highly-regarded receiver Kyle Welch transferred to Riordan. But there is sufficient talent on hand to make another run at the De Anza title, one they shared with Capuchino last season. In fact, even without Welch the wide receiver position is one of the team’s strengths. Perez identified three other wideouts, all juniors, among his top players: Jaiden Flores, a 6-3, 210-pounder; Adrian Barnett, a starter on the TKA basketball team that went to the state finals; and Aaron Duncan, whom Perez characterizes as a fast and skillful athlete. The team’s top overall returning player is LB Justin Turner, who was in on a staggering 186 tackles last year, 97 solo. Three-year starter Nathaniel Vargas is the top returning lineman. Sophomore Ricky Gutierrez is slated to start at quarterback. “Our strength is in our team unity,” Perez said. “We have playmakers who can impact the game in different ways, and the players trust each other to get the job done.”

    Season opener: Aug. 29 vs. Aptos, 7 p.m. 

    No. 2 BURLINGAME

    Coach: John Philipopoulos 

    2024 record: 8-5

    What to expect: RB/FS Hayden Haba will be a primary ball carrier in Burlingame’s Wing-T offense and, in the words of Philipopoulos, “as good as any safety in our league.” Qasim Abutair will also get carries at running back and start at cornerback. Nick Armstrong, both a run and pass threat, will take over at quarterback. He will throw to his brother, Will Armstrong, who will pair with Abutair as the starting cornerbacks. ILB Ravi Krishnan, a team captain along with Haba, is the leader of the defense along with DE Quincy Yu. We have a great mix of returning starters or contributors from the previous season (including 3 of 4 starters on our DL) combined with a strong group of players coming up from the JV,” Philipopoulos said  “We expect to be in a lot of very close games against good teams and having enough depth while staying healthy will be critical.”

    Season opener: Aug. 29 vs. Half Moon Bay, 7 p.m. 

    No. 3 CAPUCHINO

    Coach: Jay Oca 

    2024 record: 8-3

    What to expect: The Mustangs tied TKA for the division title a year ago in their first year after moving up to the De Anza from the PAL Ocean. “We lost a lot but have a lot of guys waiting in the wings ready to step up,” Oca said. There is certainly some size on hand in Lealofi Tofaeono (6-1, 320). DE Rome Iosia has an offer from Portland State. Oca says RB/LB Melo Villareal will be an impact player. Returnee Kevin Hernandez is competing with sophomore Logan Arceo for the quarterback job.  

    Season opener: Aug. 29 vs. Sequoia, 7 p.m.

    No. 4 MOUNTAIN VIEW

    Coach: Rick Esparza

    2024 record: 2-8

    What to expect: Ishan Devarapalli returns at quarterback. He threw for 1,403 yards and eight touchdowns last season as a sophomore. Braden Greene, “pound for pound the strongest player on the team,” is the top returning running back. He led the team in receptions a year ago with 35. RB/LB Sam Ford will also be called on in the ground game. TE/LB Brigham Robinson is a three-year varsity performer and team leader. WR/DB Micah Perkins provides speed and athleticism. Three-year starter Erick Brito and Evan Luedke are the team’s top linemen. “We’ve had a strong offseason with regard to our physical preparation and a good group of leaders on this team that look to carry that momentum throughout the season,” Esparza said. 

    Season opener:  Aug. 29 at Palo Alto, 7 p.m.

    No. 5 SAN MATEO

    Coach: Jeff Scheller 

    2024 record: 8-3

    What to expect: The Bearcats moved up after finishing in a tie for first place last season in the PAL Ocean. Yianni Fitzgerald, a standout at linebacker a year ago, will attempt to replace his brother, Emmanuel Fitzgerald, who rushed for more than 2,500 yards the last two seasons, as a primary ball carrier in San Mateo’s triple option offense. He will share carries with Jovani Hernandez. A third Fitzgerald brother, Lukas, takes over at quarterback. Tyce Copus is a returning starter at slotback and all-league defensive back. “One of the smartest DBs in the league, always in the right position,” Scheller said. Roman Toki will also line up in the slot and play linebacker on defense. WR/FS Hamilton Pitney, the strong safety a year ago now at free safety, is another two-way starter. Logan Jandu is the top returning lineman.

    Season opener: Aug. 29 vs. Los Altos, 7 p.m.

    No. 6 CARLMONT

    Coach: Eric Rado

    2024 record: 6-4

    What to expect: The Scots are moving up after tying for third place in the PAL Ocean. Going into preseason practice Brody Zirelli and Adam Hyman were competing for the start at quarterback. Zirelli threw for 35 touchdowns on the JV team. Whichever player gets the nod will have WRs Lucas Robertson and Maximus Senechal as receiving targets. Both will also see time in the secondary on defense. There’s experience and depth on the line with center Hayden Tonga-Ma’ake, the anchor of the offensive line, Paul Taumalolo and guard Dante Navarra among the team’s top returning players.

    Season opener: Aug. 29 vs. Lincoln-San Francisco, 7 p.m.

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    Glenn Reeves

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  • VTA bus driver slashed with knife, suspect arrested

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    SAN JOSE – A 23-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of slashing a VTA bus driver several times with a knife Wednesday morning in San Jose, according to authorities.

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    Jason Green

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  • South Bay venues wind down summer by showcasing local culinary talent

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    It might feel like autumn is approaching at lightning speed, but some local culinary events should help ease into September.

    Taste of Los Gatos, on Saturday, Sept 6, noon-5 p.m., showcases bites from local restaurants, eateries and coffee shops such as Chez Phillipe, First Born, Gardino’s, Parkside, Los Gatos Roasting Company, Manresa Bread, We Olive and Wine Bar 107. Visit nearly 20 wineries tucked into retailers around town and sip on the latest from local wineries like 3P, Cooper Garrod, David Bruce, Gali Vineyards, Mount Eden and more while you shop. Tickets are $80.12  for food only and $101.22 for both food and libations at https://bit.ly/45lQnUm.

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    Laura Ness, Correspondent

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  • Blaze breaks out Monday night near Eggo waffle plant

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    SAN JOSE – Crews on Monday night battled a vegetation fire near the Eggo waffle plant in San Jose.

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    Jason Green

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  • Preseason all-Bay Area News Group high school football 2025: Kickers/punters

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    As part of our high school football coverage to get you ready for the 2025 season, we are rolling out all-Bay Area News Group preseason recognition.

    Today’s position:

    KICKERS/PUNTERS

    Nathan Bearrows, Pioneer, 6-1, 170, senior

    Three-sport athlete also plays soccer and lacrosse. Holds multiple offers from smaller schools. Rated a four-star punter and 3.5-star kicker by ProKicker.com. Averaged 32 yards per punt with a long of 64, landing two inside the 20-yard line. Went 3 for 6 on field goals with a long of 30 yards.

    Zach Brien, Bishop O’Dowd, 6-2, 175, junior

    Five-star prospect finished first at the Chris Sailer Kicking NorCal training camp. Was 5 of 8 on field-goal attempts and 31 of 36 on PAT tries last season for O’Dowd.

    Braden Clark, Branham, 5-9, 135, senior

    Kicks, punts and also took a handoff for Branham last season. Has consistent 40-yard punt range with three-plus-second hangtime and 45-plus-yard field-goal range.

    Brady Emry, Clayton Valley, 5-9, 170, senior

    Four-star punter/kicker hybrid is committed to Minot State, a Division II school in North Dakota. Returning all-Diablo Athletic League honorable mention punter. Punted 27 times last season, averaging 33.8 yards per punt, landing seven punts inside the 20-yard line and hitting a long punt of 52 yards. 

    Nathan Fox, Sacred Heart Prep, 6-0, 155, senior

    Plays soccer and football at SHP. PAL special teams player of the year and all-BANG honorable mention as a sophomore. Made 34 of 36 PAT and 5 of 9 field-goal attempts last season. Also contributes at defensive back.

    Chase Graff, Archbishop Mitty, 5-11, 200, senior

    Versatile player who was named all-WCAL honorable mention at both kicker and offensive line. Also plays defensive end. Has 60-yard range on field goals. 

    Aidan James, Heritage, 5-5, 135, senior

    Returning all-BANG honorable mention. Hit two field goals in a narrow loss to Antioch last season. Converted 37 of 37 PAT and 5 of 5 on field-goal tries last season. Also plays soccer for Heritage.

    Ben Kerrigan, Monte Vista, 5-11, 155, junior

    A 4.5-star kicker and punter has 50-plus-yard field goal range and 40-plus-yard punt range as well as 70-yard kickoff range. Finished top four at The Punt Factory last man standing competition this August. 

    Saul Marks, Serra, 6-0, 160, senior

    Five-star kicker and punter is the No. 1 prospect in California and No. 10 in the United States, according to Kohl’s Kicking. Holds offers from Idaho and Idaho State. Has 70-plus-yard range on kickoffs and 60-yard range on field goals.

    Sebastian Miles, San Ramon Valley, 5-10, 180, senior

    Five-star punter by Chris Sailer Kicking is committed to Northern Arizona. Has 60-plus yard range. Attended Chris Sailer Top 12 camp.

    Ricky Miramontes, Milpitas, 6-3, 220, senior

    Strong-legged specialist averaged 57.4 yards per kickoff last season. Converted a 46-field goal last year and has range up to 60 yards this year. Also punts for Milpitas.

    Anthony Perez, Menlo-Atherton, 6-0, 230, senior

    Returning all-BANG honorable mention. Named first-team all-PAL Bay as a punter last season.

     

    Saxton Sinatra, Silver Creek, 5-9, 166, sophomore

    Three-star kicker and four-star punter is a developing prospect who was named to the 2024 Sports Illustrated all-freshman team. Has 50-plus-yard range on placekicks. 

    Zach Tabibian, Campolindo, 5-10, 180, senior

    A 4.5-star kicker and punter who has 60-plus-yard field-goal range and 70-plus kickoff range. Converted a 61-yard field goal at an MIT camp this summer and also knocked a 74-yard kickoff through the uprights during a practice session. 

    Justin Uribarri, De La Salle, 5-9, 180, senior

    A 4.5-star kicker and punter by Chris Sailer Kicking. Has 50-plus-yard range on placekicks, 40-plus on punts and 70-plus on kickoffs. 

    WHO IS ELIGIBLE

    Those eligible for all-BANG honors come from leagues based predominantly in Alameda, Contra Costa, San Mateo and Santa Clara counties. The news organization’s high school sports staff chooses the players.

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    Christian Babcock

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  • South Bay family sues tutoring company

    South Bay family sues tutoring company

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    A family is suing an afterschool program in San Jose after their 7-year-old apparently got out on his own and was hit by a car.

    It happened in June, and the young boy is still recovering. The parents of 7-year-old Bastian Michel are suing the Kumon Math and Reading Center of Willow Glen, alleging negligent supervision.

    “What happened to Bastian on June 24 should never have happened to him or any child,” said Ashley Mompoint-Michel, Bastian’s mother.

    The family claimed Bastian left the building without their knowledge and was missing for an hour. During that time, he walked down the street by himself and was hit by a car. He suffered a fractured skull, multiple broken bones, and a ruptured bladder.

    His heart and breathing stopped, but an off-duty EMT performed CPR and brought Bastian back to life.

    “We are so fortunate to have our sweet boy alive and at home with us,” Mompoint-Michel said. Bastian’s parents said that his recovery has been a long process Video from this month shows him learning to jump again during his rehabilitation. They say Bastian has multiple appointments every week to see his five doctors.

    “His traumatic experience often leads to sleepless nights for him,” Mompoint-Michel said. “He’s also learning to be accustomed to taking medication he’s required to take for the rest of his life due to the severity of his injuries.”

    Their attorney said the situation could have been avoided… and they’re are seeking to make changes at the company.

    “Had Kumon done something as simple as requiring a guardian to sign a child out prior to them exiting the premises this could have never happened,” said Mark Boskovich, an attorney for family.

    Kumon is an after-school program that has 1500 sites across the U.S. All of them are independently owned and operated.

    The lawsuit names Kumon and Systematic Learnings Inc., which operates the franchise in willow glen.

    NBC Bay Area reached out to both only Kumon sent a statement saying:

    “There is nothing more important to us than the safety, security, and wellbeing of the students enrolled in the kumon program. All of us at kumon continue to wish the student a complete recovery.”

    Adding, at this time, Kumon has neither been served with nor named in any legal filings related to this matter.

    As for Bastian. His parents say he is back at school part-time but will have a long journey ahead to make a full recovery.

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    Ian Cull

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  • Medical equipment sterilizer fined $587,800 for emissions in Vernon, Ontario

    Medical equipment sterilizer fined $587,800 for emissions in Vernon, Ontario

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    Both operations rely on a chemical known as ethylene oxide to sterilize equipment, but the carcinogen can lead to an increased risk of lymphoid and breast cancers.

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    Jason Henry

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  • LA supervisors advance ‘buffer zones,’ would protect worshippers, healthcare seekers from protesters

    LA supervisors advance ‘buffer zones,’ would protect worshippers, healthcare seekers from protesters

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    Establishing a buffer zone between people entering a hospital or medical clinic, going to religious services or a school facility and groups of protesters gathered outside could soon be the law of the land in unincorporated LA County communities.

    By a 5-0 vote, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday, Aug. 6,  ordered the county counsel to write a draft ordinance establishing a “bubble zone” that “protects individuals” entering or leaving hospitals, medical clinics, schools or places of worship from unwanted interactions with protesters who are trying to share their opposing point of view or offer counseling.

    The ordinance would make it a misdemeanor crime for anyone who obstructs or blocks another person from entering or exiting these places. It also would prevent anyone from getting within eight feet of someone handing out leaflets; displaying signs; orally protesting, educating or offering counseling — unless the person consents.

    The eight-foot buffer zone would be put in effect within a radius of 100 feet from the entrance to these kinds of places.

    “We have seen incidents outside of schools throughout the county,” said Third District Supervisor and board chair Lindsey Horvath on Aug. 2. Horvath authored the motion. “We have to make sure that when people are going to schools, or places of worship, for example, they can go in safely.”

    She said her office has heard from the Jewish community, especially men and women going into a synagogue wearing traditional clothing who have felt unsafe. She said there’s also been an increase in Islamophobic incidents.

    The StandWithUs Center for Legal Justice (SCLJ) filed a lawsuit against pro-Hamas groups and individuals from accessing religious services at Adas Torah Synagogue in Los Angeles on June 23, 2024, the group reported. It cited a federal law that prevents people from blocking access to places of worship.

    Horvath said at a place of worship, every worshipper should be free from intimidation and harassment.

    “Even here in Los Angeles County, we have seen how intimidation is used to prevent community members from entering facilities to receive essential services — bubble zones are how we meaningfully protect personal safety,” Horvath said in a prepared statement after Tuesday’s vote.

    Protests have increased after the start of the Israel-Gaza war, which began when Hamas attacked and killed 1,200 Israeli citizens on Oct. 7, 2023, which was followed by relentless bombing of Gaza by Israel that has killed nearly 40,000 Gazans. The Anti-Defamation League reported that antisemitic incidents were up 140% in 2023 over the prior year.

    Although the motion does not mention abortion, most buffer zone ordinances in the United States that determine where protesters can stand have been in relation to demonstrations from protest groups both for and against abortion rights. Anti-abortion demonstrations often occur at clinics that provide abortion and other reproductive care and they’ve intensified after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the constitutional right to an abortion in June 2022 by reversing Roe v Wade.

    “The exercise of a person’s right to protest must be balanced against another person’s right to access and obtain healthcare services, access education, and exercise their freedom to worship in a safe and unobstructed manner,” read the motion.

    The proposed ordinance is based on a state of Colorado law passed in 1993 that has withstood several court challenges, said Horvath.

    But a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision is seen as weakening bubble zone laws, said Ken Paulson, First Amendment lawyer and director of the Free Speech Center based at Middle Tennessee State University.

    “The next buffer zone case to get to the U.S. Supreme Court will face extraordinary scrutiny as to whether it limits free speech,” Paulson said on Friday, Aug. 2. “There is a strong sense that the more conservative majority Supreme Court will be less tolerant of buffer zones than it has in the past.”

    If the county ordinance is adopted, the board directed the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department to train its deputies in its enforcement. Also, informational forums will be conducted with the county’s 88 cities to encourage them to adopt similar ordinances.

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    Steve Scauzillo

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  • Thousands in the South Bay celebrate July Fourth with parades

    Thousands in the South Bay celebrate July Fourth with parades

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    Despite the heat, cities in the South Bay took to the streets to celebrate Independence Day with parades.

    Floats were adorned with red, white and blue with spectators in the side taking it all in.

    “I love that they have expanded it post-pandemic which is great because it was very small. A few years ago, it was just vendors and then slowly but surely, they brought back a lot more of the parade,” said Mary Castaneda.

    Castaneda said for years she’s attended the parade in Alameda with her mother. It has become a tradition for them.

    “We’re just really excited to be able to see so many people come together and so many different places decide they want to be in the parade,” she said.

    With festivals in the South Bay lasting well into the afternoon, members of the Indian-Punjabi community walked around handing out water bottles in an effort to keep people cool.

    “I’m just participating as a good citizen for the 4th of July,” said Kulwant Singh. “We don’t feel hot when we give water to thirsty people. We feel cool.”

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    Ian Cull

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  • Authorities continue search for escaped inmate out of Hollister

    Authorities continue search for escaped inmate out of Hollister

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    Authorities in Hollister, just south of Santa Clara County, continued a manhunt Wednesday for an escaped jail inmate who is a known gang associate and has a violent past.

    Daniel Lopez Zavala escaped the San Benito County Correctional Facility at about 1:55 a.m. Tuesday while doing janitorial work at the jail, the county sheriff’s office said.

    Lopez Zavala, 37, was last seen wearing a brown jail shirt, orange jail pants and black shoes. Jail authorities found some of his clothing in an open field outside the facility Tuesday, and they believe he may have left the area by vehicle.

    Lopez Zavala is described as 6 feet, 1 inch tall, weighing about 190 pounds and has short black hair and brown eyes, the sheriff’s office said.

    Lopez Zavala also has tattoos on his chest of “San Benito County” and “Hollis” as well as tattoos on his right and left arms that show skulls and portraits of females. He has additional tattoos on his upper back of “ESN,” his right abdomen of “Alexia” and his left abdomen of “Amaya,” sheriff’s officials said.

    Lopez Zavala, who associates with Norteno gang members, was an unsentenced inmate, officials said. He has a criminal record that includes felony gun charges and child abuse charges as well as other drug-related counts.

    Anyone who sees him should call 911 or TEXT-A-TIP to 888777 by typing TIP SBCSO followed by the message.

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    Stephen Ellison

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  • LA Metro beefing up police patrols, ‘hardening’ stations to stop fare-evaders

    LA Metro beefing up police patrols, ‘hardening’ stations to stop fare-evaders

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    In response to a recent spate of rider assaults, LA Metro on Thursday authorized “a surge” of law enforcement to physically patrol on board trains and bus lines marked by high rates of crimes, instead of just remaining on train platforms, within bus depots or in squad cars.

    The sea change comes from a motion approved by the Board of Directors, aimed at rejiggering deployment strategies from the trio of law enforcement agencies hired by the transit agency, including officers from the LAPD and the Long Beach Police Department and deputies from the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department. The motion also includes redeployment of Metro Transit Security Officers.

    The 2024-2025 budget of about $9 billion will include an additional $18 million for law enforcement, bringing the total cost for the three agencies to about $195 million, which means LA Metro gets about 260 armed officers patrolling the vast system each day.

    While many board members acknowledged that is not enough, considering that LA Metro every day handles almost a million riders on 2,400 bus runs, 108 rail stations and more than 400 rail cars, they must work within a tight budget.

    “I’ve been told law enforcement can’t be everywhere at once,” said board member and L.A. County Supervisor Lindsey Horvath. “They don’t have the personnel to the extent needed.”

    Nonetheless, CEO Stephanie Wiggins said the agency is reacting to recent violent incidents on buses and trains and on train platforms. The agency already expanded law enforcement presence primarily on the rail systems, while Metro’s security officers are increasing their presence on buses.

    Liu Francisco, 52, from North Hollywood rides the mile from home on his bike to the North Hollywood B (Red) line station on Wednesday, Aug. 30, 2023. He paid to enter as security look on. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

    The agency on May 28 will also launch a 90-day pilot program that involves locking the exit fare gates at the North Hollywood B Line Station. That will require passengers to touch a TAP card on a reader at the exit, showing they’ve paid the fare in order to open the turnstiles, a first in the agency’s history.

    Riders who did not pay will be cited or removed. The idea is to remove riders, often who are homeless, mentally ill or taking illicit drugs, from the system.

    “The majority of violent crimes are from those with untreated mental health conditions and drug addictions,” Wiggins said.

    An LA Sheriff's Department officer rides the C-train at the Vermont Avenue station in Los Angeles on Wednesday, May 15, 2024. (Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)
    An LA Sheriff’s Department officer rides the C-train at the Vermont Avenue station in Los Angeles on Wednesday, May 15, 2024.(Photo by Axel Koester, Contributing Photographer)

    Board member James Butts, mayor of Inglewood and a former police chief, agreed that enforcement of the agency’s fare system, part of its “code of conduct,” is a key aspect of stemming violent assaults. But that enforcement power was taken away from law enforcement a few years ago by Metro.

    “We need to make sure people who get on buses and trains are the people who have paid the fare,” Butts said.

    Two murders of passengers appear to have been committed by assailants who were mentally ill, as both killings were unprovoked, authorities reported.

    Wiggins specifically mentioned the unprovoked killing of Juan Luis Gomez-Ramirez, a teacher visiting from Mexico who was sitting on a Line 108 bus in Commerce when someone on the bus got up, walked toward the rear exit, pointed a gun at the back of his head and fired, killing Gomez-Ramirez instantly.

    Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascón called it a tragic, senseless and heartbreaking killing of a “beloved father” who was simply riding on a bus in the 6200 block of Slauson Avenue in the afternoon of May 17. Winston Apolinario Rivera was charged with one count of murder, Gascon said in a statement.

    The second involved the fatal stabbing of 66-year-old Mirna Soza Arauz on April 22. Arauz was riding the B Line train at the Universal City Station in Studio City, heading home from her job as a night security guard at Tommy’s Restaurant in North Hills.

    Arauz, a mother and grandmother, was murdered in an unprovoked attack. After being stabbed in the neck, she managed to get off the train at the station, where she was found mortally wounded on the platform. A suspect was arrested about a half-hour later and identified as Elliott Tramel Nowden, 45. Nowden has since been charged with murder.

    Mirna Soza Arauz, 66, seen in a photo on the GoFundMe website, was heading home after boarding Metro B (Red) Line in North Hollywood early Monday, April 22, 2024, and was stabbed to death. A suspect identified as Elliott Tramel Nowden, 45, was arrested. LA Metro's board voted on Thursday, May 23, 2024 to beef up patrols and other security measures on its system. (Photo via GoFundMe)
    Mirna Soza Arauz, 66, seen in a photo on the GoFundMe website, was heading home after boarding Metro B (Red) Line in North Hollywood early Monday, April 22, 2024, and was stabbed to death. A suspect identified as Elliott Tramel Nowden, 45, was arrested. LA Metro’s board voted on Thursday, May 23, 2024 to beef up patrols and other security measures on its system. (Photo via GoFundMe)

    “No one should be losing their life or or risking their life just for riding on Metro,” said board chair and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass. “The violence and crimes we’ve seen on Metro is absolutely unacceptable.”

    A second motion also approved unanimously calls for the three chiefs of the law enforcement agencies to report to the Metro board at its June meeting about these “high profile” incidents, deployment of personnel, staffing levels and a cost analysis.

    Also at that meeting, the board will hear a report from staff on the possibility of establishing its own police department. Director Kathryn Barger, L.A. County Fifth District supervisor, said learning that Metro CEO Wiggins does not have the authority to learn where the officers are deployed and when, is a problem.

    “I feel the tail is wagging the dog right now,” she said.

    Below is a list of recent crimes on LA Metro that made headlines:

    A teenage boy was fatally stabbed at the 7th/Metro Center station in downtown L.A. on Jan. 11.A man was fatally stabbed at the Westlake/MacArthur Park Station (651 S. Westlake Avenue, Los Angeles) on Feb. 1.A No. 2 line bus was hijacked by a man with a BB gun that resembled a gun on March 21. The bus crashed into the Ritz-Carlton Hotel at West Olympic Boulevard.Two people were stabbed in separate attacks at Metro B (Red) Line stations in East Hollywood at (Hollywood/Western) and Westlake/MacArthur Park (600 block of South Bonnie Brae Street) on April 7.A bus operator got punched and stabbed while driving in Willowbrook (119th Street and Wilmington Avenue) on April 13.A man stabbed a 66-year-old woman (Mirna Soza Arauz) to death at a Metro Universal City station in Studio City (3900 block of Lankershim Boulevard) on April 22.A security guard was stabbed at a B Line station in Hollywood (1500 block of North Vermont Avenue) before fatally shooting his assailant on May 7, authorities said.A woman was stabbed in the arm at the Metro C Line Vermont/Athens station (South Vermont Avenue and the 105 Freeway) on Monday May 13.Hours later on May 13, four teenagers fought on a bus in Glendale (West Los Feliz Road and South Central Avenue). Two were stabbed and the other two arrested.On Tuesday, May 14, a man was robbed of his cellphone and hit in the chest on a bus in Encino (Ventura and Balboa boulevards).On Thursday, May 16, a man shot another passenger to death on a Metro bus in Commerce (6200 block of Slauson Avenue), authorities reported.A person was stabbed Tuesday, May 21, on a Los Angeles Metro bus in Lynwood (Long Beach Boulevard and Norton Avenue).

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    Steve Scauzillo

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  • LA County supervisors call for reduced wait times for attorneys at Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall

    LA County supervisors call for reduced wait times for attorneys at Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall

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    The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday, May 21, ordered the Probation Department to analyze and improve excessively long wait times for attorneys, doctors and social workers visiting Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall in Downey.

    The motion, approved unanimously, comes after attorneys from the Los Angeles County Public Defender’s Office and the Juvenile Justice Clinic at Loyola Law School told the Southern California News Group that waits as long as three hours were hindering their efforts to provide legal services to clients at the juvenile detention facility.

    “Lawyers, doctors, and social workers need to be able to visit their young clients at Los Padrinos, and they shouldn’t have to wait two or three hours to see them,” said Supervisor Hahn, who represents Downey, in a statement. “This is unacceptable. The Probation Department needs to make immediate changes to allow people to see their clients faster and has to be transparent with our Board moving forward about the wait times at our juvenile facilities.”

    Related: Attorneys, social workers endure long waits to see LA County detainees in juvenile hall

    Hahn co-authored the motion with board Chair Lindsay Horvath. At the meeting, Horvath said ensuring attorneys have timely access to their clients is not only important for honoring constitutional rights, but it helps achieve the county’s goal of “making sure our young people are getting the service and support that they need.”

    “Decreasing wait times and increasing predictability for professional services at Los Padrinos is among the actions the Probation Department must take to better serve the youth entrusted to its care,” Horvath said in a statement.

    The motion directs the Probation Department to return with a report in four weeks that includes three months of data on wait times, analysis about the causes and the strategies “being implemented to reduce wait times and ensure timely access to visits from counsel, social workers and other experts.”

    Defense attorneys told the Southern California News Group in early May that they experienced such long wait times at Los Padrinos that attorneys have to schedule their entire day around such visits.

    “Everybody knows that this is the new normal; if you get there past 8:30 a.m., then you’re waiting,” said Roshell Amezcua, director of the Juvenile Justice Law Center. “If you’re not the very first person, then you’re waiting two to three hours.”

    Complaints about wait times have come up repeatedly at Probation Oversight Commission meetings in the last year.

    The county Probation Department has denied the problem is widespread and indicated only a small percentage of attorneys — about 10% — experienced wait times longer than 20 minutes in April. The department previously installed four private booths in the chapel at Los Padrinos in an effort to improve wait times.

    The Juvenile Justice Law Center filed a formal complaint with the department’s ombudsman May 20 reiterating that visits to Los Padrinos had become “unduly burdensome.” Wait times in excess of 45 minutes have been deemed unconstitutional in the past, according to a letter attached to the complaint.

    “Here, wait times regularly exceed 45 minutes. Indeed, wait times regularly exceed two hours, and sometimes visits are denied outright,” the letter states. “The JJC’s experience does not exist in isolation. Our discussions with other juvenile defense attorneys at the Los Angeles Public Defender’s Office and the Los Angeles County Independent Defense Counsel’s Office indicate that these wait times are pervasive, common, and well-known to probation staff and directors.”

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    Jason Henry

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  • Biden to expand the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument, add forest rangers, funding

    Biden to expand the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument, add forest rangers, funding

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    President Joe Biden will add nearly 106,000 acres to the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument on Thursday, May 2, expanding the monument designated 10 years ago by President Barack Obama by nearly one-third, according to the White House.

    Also, Biden will approve a 13,696-acre expansion of the Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument in northern California’s inner coast range, north of Sacramento. The two designations will be signed as proclamations by Biden later today at the White House through use powers granted to the executive branch. Together, they will add protections from mining and new highways to nearly 120,000 acres of wild lands in the state.

    The San Gabriel Mountains monument expansion will add 105,919 acres of Angeles National Forest land to the existing 346,179-acre SGM monument, protecting closer-in areas in the western Angeles, including historic Chantry Flat, the Arroyo Seco and federal forest lands near Sunland, Tujunga and Santa Clarita.

    Along with the expansion of the SGM monument, Biden promised additional resources for the area known as “L.A’s backyard playground,” located within 90 minutes of 18 million Southern Californians.

    The White House announced funding for an unknown number of additional field rangers, interpretive rangers and positions to help with visitors. Also, $2.3 million in Great American Outdoors Act funding will be invested in the monument to rehabilitate barracks and provide housing for recreation and other Angeles National Forest staff, the White House said.

    The Angeles National Forest received nearly 4.6 million visitors in 2021, more than Yosemite and Yellowstone national parks. Yet many areas remain closed due to fires, subsequent flooding and not enough funding to complete repairs.

    U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack will join President Biden in the signing of the proclamations.

    “The San Gabriel Mountains National Monument is a crown jewel for Los Angeles. It is a backyard to millions of people, and is also home to cultural resources, rare animals and plants, unique geology, and dynamic forests, rivers and high peaks,” said Secretary Vilsack. “President Biden’s actions today ensure this remarkable place is protected for current and future generations.”

    Others were jubilant over the presidential designation, something that was expected to happen on Earth Day in April but was pushed back. This included Rep. Judy Chu, D-Pasadena, who was present when Obama signed the original designation in 2014 and has championed the expansion for the last 10 years.

    “In 2014, President Obama answered our calls by designating the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument for the first time. Since then, we have introduced legislation and fought to complete the vision of an expanded Monument that includes some of the most visited and beautiful lands in the western Angeles Forest. President Biden and the Biden-Harris Administration heard us,” wrote Chu in a prepared statement.

    The monument before the expansion includes 342,177 acres of the Angeles National Forest and 4,002 acres of the neighboring San Bernardino National Forest. The addition also takes in lands owned and managed by the U.S. Forest Service.

    Biden added to what Obama started by using the Antiquities Act of 1906, first used by President Theodore Roosevelt to designate Devils Tower National Monument in Wyoming. Eighteen presidents of both parties have used this power to designate other national monuments, including the Statue of Liberty, Colorado’s Canyon of the Ancients, and New Mexico’s Gila Cliff Dwellings

    The San Gabriel Mountains monument is renowned for scenic mountain peaks, dark canyons, a plethora of flora and fauna species, hiking trails, campsites, streams and reservoirs. The addition takes in more popular portions of the western Angeles National Forest left outside the boundaries by Obama.

    A map of the proposed addition to the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument. (graphic by Jeff Goertzen/SCNG)

    The expansion includes areas north of Sylmar and east of the Newhall Pass, near Placerita Canyon in the Santa Clarita area. It would include the Upper Arroyo Seco, a historic tributary of the Los Angeles River with headwaters in the Angeles that meanders through La Canada Flintridge, Pasadena and South Pasadena. Also, the addition includes the Big Tujunga Reservoir and Big Tujunga Canyon, Switzer’s Camp, Millard Canyon and Eaton Canyon waterfall.

    Another key addition is a closer-in area known as Chantry Flat, a popular hiking, picnicking and camping spot north of Arcadia and Sierra Madre that has attracted thousands of visitors on weekends but has been closed for several years due to damage from fires, rainstorms and a lack of resources from the U.S. Forest Service to make repairs.

    The road leading to Chantry Flat is closed. This area would be added to the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument. (photo SCNG)
    The road leading to Chantry Flat is closed. This area would be added to the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument. (photo SCNG)

    .

    Also included in the expansion is the site of Thaddeus Lowe’s funicular, the Mount Lowe Railway, which from 1893 to 1938 took people on a roller-coaster of a ride high into the mountains above Pasadena. The monument protects giant wheels used to hoist the railway onto the tracks, left on the side of the trail near Echo Mountain for decades.

    Other historic trails that were created as part of the Great Hiking Era include the Gabrielino Trail, which was once a trade route used by Native American tribes and was recently restored. The new areas also contain ancient Native American relics.

     

    “Our local community is overjoyed to see this next step in a 20-year effort to permanently protect the San Gabriel Mountains,” said Belén Bernal, executive director of Nature for All, a group lobbying for more resources and expansion of the monument. “The area included in the expanded San Gabriel Mountains National Monument is the closest section of the National Forest to the San Fernando Valley,” she added.

    Guillermo Rodriguez, vice president of the Pacific Region and California director for Trust for Public Land, said the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains monument will stimulate not just public, but also private funds, too.

    “Having that special designation allows for greater resources to be invested in these areas,” Rodriguez said. “We have seen national monuments, like national parks, act as economic drivers. That increased attention and accessibility adds revenue to the local economy.”

    About $1 million will be invested in the SGM monument from the State Water Resources Control Board, U.S. EPA, and the California Rivers and Mountains Conservancy, according to the White House.

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    Steve Scauzillo

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  • Unions and gig workers win fight as Metro denies Lyft bike share contract

    Unions and gig workers win fight as Metro denies Lyft bike share contract

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    In a victory for local unions, LA Metro has reversed course by canceling the proposed turnover of its bike share contract to Lyft, documents show.

    The contract was slated to go in February to Lyft’s subsidiary, Lyft Bikes and Scooters LLC, but that was abruptly squashed after heated protests from unions and gig drivers said the rideshare company was not friendly to unions.

    A letter dated March 26 sent to current contract holder, Bicycle Transit Systems, Inc., (BTS) said: “The Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (Metro) has decided to cancel the subject solicitation.” It was signed by James Giblin, senior contract administrator for Metro.

    Instead, LA Metro is reexamining the scope of the program and plans to put the contract out for bid once again under a Request For Proposal (RFP). There’s no timetable for the new RFP, said Dave Sotero, Metro spokesperson on Monday, April 1.

    “There will be no interruption in bike share services,” he said.

    Both Lyft and BTS said they would reapply under the new RFP.

    “We are elated the voices of Angelenos were heard. Metro listened,” said Alison Cohen, founder and owner of BTS, which has been operating the system for the last nine years. “It is rare that once a decision is made they (Metro) change course. But it was the right thing to do.”

    The contract was the subject of a rally by drivers for Lyft, Uber, DoorDash and other car and bicycle delivery workers — known as gig workers — in front of Metro headquarters on Jan. 18. About 40 rallied against giving the contract to Lyft’s subsidiary, arguing that Lyft has not treated workers fairly and that the contract would downgrade bike share service in L.A. County.

    FILE- Felipe Caceras, organizer with the California Gig Workers Union, leads a rally on Thursday, Jan. 18, 2024, of gig workers who are against a plan by LA Metro to award a contract to Lyft for managing and operating Metro’s Bike Share program. Metro canceled the request for proposal and did not award the contract to Lyft at the end of March 2024. (photo by Steve Scauzillo/SCNG).

    Workers said they had been trying to join a union and have had labor disputes with Lyft, a ride-sharing company that has other ventures including operating bike share programs in New York City, Chicago and San Francisco.

    A letter sent to LA Metro from David Green, SEIU Local 721 president and executive director, said Lyft’s alleged anti-union practices and failure to uphold equitable standards made it a bad choice.

    This was one of 700 comments, letters and emails brought to the attention of Metro’s Operations, Safety, and Customer Experience Committee that agreed to put off the matter in January. Although Metro staff recommended Lyft over the other vendors, the contract solicitation was canceled a short time later.

    “We are proud of our submission, which earned the highest score from LA Metro, and look forward to reapplying to the new RFP,” wrote Jordan Levine, a Lyft spokesperson in an emailed response received on Monday, April 1.

    On its website, Lyft wrote that a new ruling from the Department of Labor defining an independent contractor does not change Lyft’s business model and will not reclassify Lyft drivers as employees.

    Lyft said that 92% of its drivers support a policy under which drivers would remain independent contractors and would receive “some but not all of the benefits that employees receive.”

    Others that opposed giving Lyft the contract said Metro should not privatize a public transit system. “I applaud Metro reconsidering and ultimately canceling a frivolous contract which would have given taxpayer dollars to a private company making millions off the working poor,” wrote L.A. County Democratic Party Chair Mark Gonzalez in an emailed response.

    Political and union forces could remain steadfast when Metro rejiggers the contract and opens it up to the lowest bidder.

    “I hope LA Metro continues to heed the call for a robust bike share system worthy of Los Angeles that protects union jobs,” Gonzalez said.

    Cohen said her company BTS, which is women- and LGBTQ-owned, has about 65 employees. Of those, 40 are unionized, she said. She is looking for a one-year extension at the very least. The BTS contract ends in August, she said.

    The canceled 11.5-year Lyft contract proposal would have cost Metro $47 million less than the estimated cost of the current BTS contract, according to a Metro staff report.

    BTS argues that under its leadership, LA Metro Bike Share has grown.

    In all of 2023, Metro Bike Share ridership reached 441,199, which is the highest annual ridership thus far, Sotero reported. The 2023 ridership figure shows an increase of 128,787 trips or 41%, compared to the highest pre-COVID ridership of 312,412 trips in calendar year 2018, he wrote in an emailed response.

    Lowered costs and more available bikes increased use of the program, which mainly operates within the city of Los Angeles. The number of on-street bikes increased from 1,224 in April 2022 to 1,726 in November 2023. Pedal assist e-bikes increased from 97 in April 2022 to 370 in November 2023, Metro reported.

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    Steve Scauzillo

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  • Redondo Beach mayor dies at 65 of lung cancer

    Redondo Beach mayor dies at 65 of lung cancer

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    Bill Brand, the mayor of Redondo Beach, died Friday evening of lung cancer, according to city officials. He was 65.

    Brand had been battling cancer for more than four years, but his health took a “sudden turn” for the worse in recent days, according to a city statement. Brand’s wife and other family and friends were by his side in the end.

    Brand was serving his second term as Redondo Beach’s mayor, after previously serving two terms on the City Council. He had remained in office despite undergoing intense treatments and being hospitalized several times.

    Bill Brand

    (City of Redondo Beach)

    Brand was born in Texas, but had lived in the South Bay since moving there as a child in 1966. “Finding the Seaside Lagoon, he thought that he had found heaven,” the city’s statement said.

    Other officials in the region took to X, formerly Twitter, to mourn Brand’s death.

    “Bill Brand was my dear friend and even though we knew this day would be coming, it hurts to say goodbye,” wrote L.A. County Supervisor Janice Hahn.

    “Elected office can be a challenge, but being Mayor of Redondo Beach came naturally to Bill. He embodied the South Bay,” Hahn wrote. “He was passionate about his work as Mayor, fighting corporate developers to preserve the beach community he loved, but he also made time for surf breaks.”

    County Supervisor Lindsey P. Horvath wrote that Brand had made “a lasting impact on the community [and] all who knew him.”

    County Supervisor Holly J. Mitchell wrote that Brand “was a fighter who kept showing up to serve” even while battling cancer. “We have lost a leader who loved the South Bay and fought with all his heart to protect our environment.”

    Mitchell cited in particular Brand’s role in the recent closure of the AES Redondo Beach power plant, which she said was “just one example of Bill’s lasting impact.”

    Brand got involved in politics first “as a concerned resident, then as a champion for open space,” creating the nonprofit South Bay Parkland Conservancy, the city’s statement said. Only then did he run for office.

    Living to see the closure of the AES plant, which he had fought so hard for, “was an accomplishment of which he was extremely proud,” the city statement said.

    In lieu of flowers, Brand’s family asked for donations in his memory to the conservancy, or to Cancer Support Community South Bay.

    Flags at Redondo Beach City Hall were to fly at half-staff in Brand’s honor. Information on services were not provided.

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    Kevin Rector

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