California Policy and Politics Wednesday

Alcatraz boat disaster leaves 1 dead, 2 missing after capsizing -- One person died and two women remained missing Tuesday evening after a pontoon boat carrying 19 people capsized and sank in San Francisco Bay between Alcatraz Island and the Golden Gate Bridge, authorities said. Sixteen people survived. Divers, helicopters and 11 vessels from public agencies and private operators continued searching the Bay for the missing passengers. Aidin Vaziri, St. John Barned-Smith, Aldo Toledo, Anna Bauman in the San Francisco Chronicle$ Clara Harter in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/15/26

ICE

After lawsuit, ICE pauses construction of Bay Area detention facility -- The voluntary pause until Sept. 9 comes after the California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta and Santa Clara County officials sued the Trump administration last month to block the facility from being developed near Gilroy. The lawsuit remains ongoing. Andrea Castillo in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/15/26

Faith groups form ‘sacred corridor’ outside San Francisco immigration court -- As individuals waited Tuesday morning for hearings at San Francisco’s federal immigration court, they were joined by a group of clergy members and parishioners offering prayers, words of encouragement, food, water and informational pamphlets. Davis Cuffe in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 7/15/26

ICE will suspend most vehicle stops in the wake of two deadly shootings -- The tactical shift comes a day after an ICE officer shot and killed a Colombian man in Biddeford, Maine, and a week after an ICE officer fatally shot another man in Houston. Andrea Castillo in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/15/26

Workplace

WGA sues Paramount, claiming Warner Bros. acquisition would take away jobs -- The Writers Guild of America sued Paramount on Tuesday, alleging that the company’s planned $111-billion acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery violates federal antitrust law. The union said that with fewer competitors, the merged Paramount-Warner Bros. Discovery business would be able to lower costs by reducing writers’ wages and work. Wendy Lee and Meg James in the Los Angeles Times$ Wyatte Grantham-Philips Associated Press Molly Reinmann in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 7/15/26

Christopher Nolan spent $250 million on ‘The Odyssey.’ This AI version cost almost nothing -- Just days before Christopher Nolan’s star-studded $250 million film “The Odyssey” invades theaters, an artificial intelligence startup with ties to the Bay Area announced it has made an AI version of Homer’s ancient Greek epic poem on a budget of just a few thousand dollars. G. Allen Johnson in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 7/15/26

26 Meta employees sue, alleging AI-driven layoff picks hit workers on medical and parental leave -- A group of 26 Meta employees has sued the company, claiming it used artificial intelligence systems to select people for layoffs, disproportionately targeting those on medical, parental or family leave. Barbara Ortutay, Alexandra Olson Associated Press -- 7/15/26

 

Anger grows in Boyle Heights as warehouse fire leaves stench, flies and vermin in its wake -- Nearly one month after a fire destroyed a massive cold-storage facility in Boyle Heights, the neighborhood has been overcome by the stomach-churning stench of rotting food. Tony Briscoe in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/15/26

This invasive insect threatens California’s wine industry. It’s been linked to another Costco-sold plant -- Costco is warning California customers who recently bought desert willow plants that an invasive insect may be living on them, which can threaten grapevines and the state’s $73-billion wine industry. Grace Toohey in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/15/26

SAT

A new review of the SAT at University of California is coming by June 2027 -- A growing number of professors are pushing the UC to reinstate the SAT for undergraduate admissions, which the Board of Regents removed from the admissions process in 2020. Mikhail Zinshteyn Calmatters Jaweed Kaleem in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/15/26

Landslides

Scientists crack the code on predicting California’s deadly cliff collapses -- Scientists at UC San Diego’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography found that it is possible to predict a coastal landslide hours, sometimes days, before it happens. Rosanna Xia in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/15/26

Also

House passes bill to 'ditch the switch' and make daylight saving time permanent -- The Senate passed a bill four years ago to make daylight saving time permanent, but it stalled in the House. Kevin Freking Associated Press -- 7/15/26

‘The Ring’ star Daveigh Chase, who died at 35 while homeless, leaves behind six-figure estate -- Legal documents filed July 8 in Los Angeles reveal Daveigh Chase left behind about $400,000 in personal property. Chase died June 16 in a hospital at age 35 of AIDS. Alexandra Del Rosario in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/15/26

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Trump’s Flip-Flop on Strait of Hormuz Fees Raises New Risks -- One day after proposing a fee for ships transiting the Strait of Hormuz, President Trump on Tuesday said the United States would instead guarantee safe passage to vessels from Persian Gulf states that agree to invest in the United States. It’s not clear how Mr. Trump’s plans would play out, and the president’s latest comments left questions unanswered. Jenny Gross in the New York Times$ -- 7/15/26

South Korean company paid Trump $2 million amid trade investigation -- A South Korean investor paid Trump's company $2 million while its aluminum firm fought a Commerce Department trade case, raising new conflict-of-interest questions. Cat Zakrzewski in the Washington Post$ -- 7/15/26

E Jean Carroll receives $5.6m owed by Trump after court releases damages -- A Manhattan federal court has released more than $5.6m that Donald Trump owes E Jean Carroll in her successful 2023 sexual abuse and defamation trial against him, records reveal. Victoria Bekiempis in The Guardian -- 7/15/26

 

California Policy and Politics Tuesday

After lawsuit, ICE pauses construction of Bay Area detention facility -- Federal officials have agreed to temporarily halt construction of a controversial Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility near Gilroy. California and Santa Clara County sued the Trump administration to halt the project. Andrea Castillo in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/14/26

PG&E power shutoffs planned for this week as fire weather rolls up -- Residents in Alameda, Contra Costa and Marin counties could lose power for up to 20 hours this week due to elevated fire weather, Pacific Gas & Electric Co. warned Tuesday. Chrissa Olson in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 7/14/26

Dangerous heat and fire risk are spreading across California. Here’s when temperatures will peak -- Temperatures will surge across California on Tuesday, nearing 100 degrees in parts of the Bay Area and climbing as high as 118 degrees in the Southern California deserts. Greg Porter in the San Francisco Chronicle$ Grace Toohey and Seamus Bozeman in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/14/26

Earthquakes north of L.A. appear to be on or close to San Andreas, Garlock faults -- Back-to-back earthquakes rocked the area north of Los Angeles near two of California’s most significant faults — including the mighty San Andreas — sending shock waves across the region. Rong-Gong Lin II in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/14/26

 

CalPERS just had one of its best years in a decade. Why it matters to taxpayers -- CalPERS’ investment returns are important markers because they determine whether government agencies — and taxpayers — have to kick in extra money to cover losses at the pension fund. It eclipsed its target in 2025-26. Adam Ashton Calmatters -- 7/14/26

California, 11 other states sue to block Paramount’s Warner Bros. deal -- A coalition of 12 state attorneys general is filing a lawsuit in federal court on Monday to block Paramount Skydance’s purchase of Warner Bros. Discovery on antitrust grounds, imperiling one of the biggest mergers in entertainment and media history. Daniel Miller Politico Meg James in the Los Angeles Times$ Dave Michaels and Joe Flint in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 7/14/26

Permanent daylight saving time is on the table. Would California scrap being on standard time? -- Congress is again weighing legislation to put the nation on permanent daylight saving time and end the twice-yearly clock change. In 2018, California voters approved Proposition 7, which gave the Legislature the authority to impose year-round daylight saving time — but only if the federal government allowed states to do so. Iris Kwok in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/14/26

Climate

California to offer $3,500 EV rebates to first-time buyers -- Gov. Gavin Newsom signed legislation on Monday that offers $3,500 for first-time buyers of EVs that cost $50,000 or less. There’s also a rebate of $1,750 for first-time buyers who purchase a used electric vehicle with an MSRP of up to $25,000. Rob Nikolewski in the San Diego Union Tribune -- 7/14/26

Oil

This California Oil Pipeline Was Dormant for 11 Years. Trump Reopened It -- For decades, state and federal officials had halted new offshore drilling here on California’s coast to protect its shoreline. But in March, amid an oil shortage during the war in Iran, the Trump administration ordered the reopening of a Santa Barbara pipeline that had been dormant since 2015 after a major spill. Soumya Karlamangla in the New York Times$ -- 7/14/26

Workplace

Hundreds of economists say ‘we must act now’ on AI’s economic impact and job displacement risks -- Hundreds of economists say in an open letter that institutions “must act now” to address how artificial intelligence could transform the economy and could put many people out of work. The statement released Monday was signed by top economists, along with computer scientists and some executives at tech companies including Anthropic, Google and OpenAI. Associated Press -- 7/14/26

Uncertainty in Tijuana after Toyota announces Tacoma production moving to U.S. ‘A wake-up call.’ -- The Japanese automaker employs more than 2,000 people and produces 166,000 units annually at its Tijuana plant, which will move to Texas. Alexandra Mendoza in the San Diego Union Tribune -- 7/14/26

 

Historic transfer of wealth coming to Bay Area. It won’t look like you expect -- The “Great Wealth Transfer” is coming — and the Bay Area will be its epicenter. But what that really means for the region and for your family may defy expectations. Jessica Roy and Hanna Zakharenko in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 7/14/26

Guns

Parents sue Bay Area gun store after suicide of son, 19 -- Jeffrey Marshall, 19, contacted a Pacifica gun shop two years ago to buy a hunting shotgun, the only type of gun that can be legally sold in California to a buyer aged 18 to 21. But the City Arms store instead sold him a short-barreled shotgun with lead slugs, a weapon and ammunition that are both banned for hunting in the state, according to a lawsuit filed by his parents. Bob Egelko in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 7/14/26

Education

UC abruptly suspends plan to reconsider SAT in admissions -- The University of California admissions board has voted to rescind — for now — its plan to study whether to resume SAT or ACT requirements in admissions, a move that leaves the direction of one of the university’s most closely watched debates unclear a day before the Board of Regents meets in San Francisco. Jaweed Kaleem in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 7/14/26

Street

Grocery Outlet Bay Area stores are using facial recognition technology to catch shoplifters -- Grocery Outlet, the popular Emeryville-based chain of “bargain markets,” has quietly begun rolling out facial recognition software across its Bay Area stores, in what the company’s signage says is an effort to thwart shoplifting. Megan Cassidy in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 7/14/26

‘Psychological war’: Inside California’s expanding use of jailhouse stings -- Undercover police operations are proliferating in California jails — even after suspects invoke their rights. Cayla Mihalovich Calmatters -- 7/14/26

Also

Feds charge San Jose State grad student with hateful campus threat -- Ziheng ‘Tony’ Fang is formally charged with single instance of a slur-filled violent threat, but criminal complaint implicates him in a string of similar scrawlings that repeatedly prompted unease across campus. Robert Salonga in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 7/14/26

Why flags across California and the Bay Area are flying at half-staff this week -- President Donald Trump on Monday ordered American flags to be flown at half-staff until 6 p.m. Saturday at the White House and all public buildings, military posts and naval stations around the nation to honor Graham. Anna Bauman in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 7/14/26

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Oil Surges Most Since 2020, Reflecting Bet That Strait Won’t Go Back to Normal -- Oil markets and Middle East producers appear to be aligning around a new reality: The Strait of Hormuz is no longer expected to return to a prewar norm. Ryan Dezember, Georgi Kantchev and Rebecca Feng in the Wall Street Journal$ Stan Choe Associated Press -- 7/14/26

Trump’s Cease-Fire Effectively Collapses as He Vows to Restart Blockade and Tolls -- After several days of strikes, the president notified Congress that fighting had begun again and announced shipping fees that his administration previously deemed illegal. Peter Baker in the New York Times$ -- 7/14/26

What to Know About Trump’s Plan to Charge a Toll in the Strait of Hormuz -- President Trump announced a 20 percent fee on cargo through the waterway, despite his own administration’s position that such fees violate international law. Yan Zhuang in the New York Times$ -- 7/14/26

Trump’s attorneys, Justice Dept. leaders misused courts in IRS case, judge says -- The president's lawsuit against the IRS — which resulted in a now-scuttled proposal for a $1.8 billion payout fund — was filed for an “improper purpose," the judge said. Jeremy Roebuck and Mark Berman in the Washington Post$ Andrew Duehren and Alan Feuer in the New York Times$ Richard Rubin and C. Ryan Barber in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 7/14/26