In Brief
The Los Angeles City Council voted to get rid of so-called “no-vending” zones in February. But a lawsuit filed in 2022 by Hollywood street vendors against the city continues on as vendors seek to repeal tickets and remaining restrictions.
Today on AirTalk, everything you need to know about LA City Council’s approval of a package of ethics reforms designed to fight corruption. Also on the show, we examine California Highway Patrol’s reaction to the UCLA student protests; we continue our week-long series on neurodiversity, today looking at neurodiversity in the workplace; and more.
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Larry Mantle and LAist film critics Claudia Puig and Andy Klein review the latest releases on FilmWeek.
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Earlier in the day, the encampment had expanded as protestors observed the Nakba, an annual commemoration of when Palestinians were displaced in the creation of the state of Israel.
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Today on AirTalk, everything you need to know about LA City Council’s approval of a package of ethics reforms designed to fight corruption. Also on the show, we examine California Highway Patrol’s reaction to the UCLA student protests; we continue our week-long series on neurodiversity, today looking at neurodiversity in the workplace; and more.
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California’s deficit has increased, but K-12 schools are largely spared cuts in the governor's May revision.
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Among other demands, student workers and researchers want amnesty for students arrested over the past month.
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The dining and cocktail destination has started rolling out its reopening already, with Pacific Seas and a revamped cafeteria concept slated to start serving customers again this summer.
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Find out where to get online and brush up your digital skills and get online in the L.A. area without having to buy a coffee.
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Belle and Sebastian, National BBQ Month at Grand Central Market, a massive drum circle, and a talk on The Swans of Harlem.
Entertainment Thursday
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The platform’s reach, and the creators’ ability to keep ownership of their intellectual property and retain full creative control, are big factors.
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The hangover from the streaming splurge of the past decade is still pervading the industry, which is suffering as a result.
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The traditional pilot season has shrunk to a nub of what it used to be as networks focus on year-round programming.
California Budget Crunch
With tax revenues down, billions in cuts are needed.
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Gavin Newsom proposes a mix of spending cuts and using reserves to balance the state budget. He says that core services will be largely untouched, but some existing programs would be affected.
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The governor's revised proposal makes cuts to funding for transitional kindergarten facilities, state preschool slots, and home visiting programs.
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The governor’s revised budget plan includes $2 billion in broadband cuts. It’s one of many trims to help balance the state budget — learn where to submit public comment on the spending plans.
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Featured Events
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A live event series in partnership with The James Beard Foundation that will go behind the scenes of some of L.A.’s favorite restaurants.
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Looking to kick off your Saturday with something that will grow your kiddos’ brains and get the creative juices flowing? Join us at LAist for a morning of multilingual reading and kid fun.
LAist Promise Tracker
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Mayor Bass made an ambitious campaign pledge to address homelessness by housing 17,000 Angelenos. We’ve been trying to keep tabs, but it’s complicated.
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Here's how Mayor Bass did on her campaign promises on homelessness during her first year in office.
Best Of LAist
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Supervisor Andrew Do directed millions to the group, which was supposed to go toward feeding needy residents. “If they can’t prove then they should pay the money back,” Supervisor Katrina Foley told LAist.
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One year after California became the first state to require that its public universities provide the abortion pill to students, LAist found that basic information on where or how students can obtain the medication is lacking and, often, nonexistent.
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Images from across the Golden State show how the storm systems have transformed our mountains into winter wonderlands.
Education
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It currently costs $555 to renew the permit online and $605 to renew it by mail.
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Minimum wage for many California fast workers is now $20. Those who work in child care say they feel left behind.
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USC students reflect on a full circle moment, recalling cancelled high school graduations and now a cancelled main ceremony.
LA History
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We talk to historian Elsa Devienne about how beaches developed and her new book Sand Rush: The Revival of the Beach in Twentieth-Century Los Angeles.
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Erskine had two career no-hitters and won a World Series with the Dodgers in 1955. But many remember his friendship with Jackie Robinson at a time when segregation was legal.
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Los Angeles has the most diversity in street light design of any American city.
More Stories
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More May Gray conditions in store for this week.
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The state covers basic services for vulnerable residents, including things like air purifiers for kids with asthma. But nonprofits offering the services struggle to work within the health care system.
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L.A. County Supervisor Holly Mitchell wants residents of two neighborhoods to decide how to spend $1 million.
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California is in a massive housing crisis, and while longstanding environmental law is not solely to blame, a new report finds it isn't helping matters.
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Suzanne Levy, a senior editor at LAist, reflects on 10 years in a land she never imagined embracing.
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Phew. Eleven state propositions have already qualified for the November 2024 ballot in California, including one to repeal a law that limits the type of housing subject to rent control and one to repeal a law that defines marriage as being between a man and a woman.
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Mizuhara pleaded not guilty as part of a formality, but will change his plea to guilty as part of a deal reached with the U.S. District Attorney’s Office last week.
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The L.A. County Probation Department says all of the sworn officers were placed on leave this year pending internal affairs investigations into allegations of misconduct or arrests.
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A CalMatters review documented at least 25 instances in which officers appeared to aim their weapons at the eye-level of pro-Palestinian protesters or fired them into crowds.
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“There's still lowrider car clubs that have laws and bylaws that don't allow women to even sit in on their car club meetings,” artist Jacqueline Valenzuela says.
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The city settled a lawsuit with the annual airshow operator — and residents want to know details about what taxpayers are on the hook for.
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As of Sunday, Vroman’s Bookstore on Foothill Boulevard is no more.
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