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California Policy and Politics Monday
Safe zones to be expanded around LAUSD schools; agents detain student at gunpoint near campus -- Amid immigration enforcement, city and school officials will set up “safe zones” monitored by LAPD and community volunteers to protect undocumented families when school resumes at LAUSD. Howard Blume in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/11/25
By sending troops to D.C. and eyeing Oakland, Trump continues targeting Black-led cities -- When President Donald Trump announced Monday that he will deploy National Guard troops to the streets of Washington, D.C., to combat crime, he named several other cities where he might take similar action. Sara Libby in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 08/11/25
Newsom says in letter to Trump California will back off redistricting — if red states do -- Gov. Gavin Newsom sent a letter to Donald Trump on Monday morning offering to stop California’s redistricting push if the president calls off similar efforts in red states. Sophia Bollag in the San Francisco Chronicle$ Rachel Uranga in the Los Angeles Times$ Lia Russell in the Sacramento Bee$ Cheyanne M. Daniels Politico -- 08/11/25
Trump Attacked California’s Congressional Maps. Republicans Want to Save Them -- The independent body that redraws the state’s political maps isn’t perfect, many Republicans say. But they prefer that to the gerrymander that Gov. Gavin Newsom seeks to offset one proposed in Texas. Laurel Rosenhall in the New York Times$ -- 08/11/25
5 things to know as Newsom and Trump go back to court over the National Guard in LA -- Gov. Gavin Newsom alleges the Trump administration broke a 19th Century law called the Posse Comitatus Act when it deployed military units to Los Angeles in June. Mikhail Zinshteyn Calmatters -- 08/11/25
‘Uncharted territory’: Newsom and UC go to battle against Trump’s UCLA sanctions -- Conflict has come to a head after the Trump administration suspended $584 million in grants and has demanded a $1-billion settlement. Newsom says the state will sue. UC Board of Regents will hold an emergency meeting Monday. Jaweed Kaleem in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/11/25
This candidate for California governor has a potential conflict of interest in her own home -- If elected governor, Toni Atkins faces potential conflicts of interest with her spouse’s consulting firms. Atkins and her spouse, Jennifer LeSar, earn hundreds of thousands of dollars annually from clients that also lobby state government. Alexei Koseff Calmatters -- 08/11/25
Trump Raids Help Stir a Political Reversal for Karen Bass -- The mayor of Los Angeles has emerged as a leading voice of the city’s resistance to the Trump administration after facing criticism for her handling of the wildfires. Jill Cowan in the New York Times$ -- 08/11/25
Is anyone in charge of Los Angeles? -- Many of Los Angeles’s leaders had hoped to spend 2025 preparing the city to host the next summer Olympics and instead found themselves engulfed by a series of unanticipated crises, from devastating wildfires to a destabilizing immigration crackdown. But rather than working together, the city’s leading pressure groups are at each other’s throats in a spiraling grudge match. Emily Schultheis Politico -- 08/11/25
‘Why did this happen to us?’ Japanese Americans share heartwrenching WWII incarceration memories -- Only when Jeffrey Kawaguchi, 67, stepped into the room at the Palo Alto Buddhist Temple did he understand how sacred the book was that he’d come to see. The monumental tome called the Ireicho, meaning record of names, lists the more than 125,000 people of Japanese ancestry who were forcibly relocated by the U.S. government to concentration camps during World War II. Most were Japanese Americans. Ko Lyn Cheang, Lea Suzuki in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 08/11/25
Oil
Newsom embraces Big Oil — for now — to curb potential gas supply shortages -- As California decarbonizes, refineries are shuttering fast. Gov. Gavin Newsom’s administration wants to slow that down. Grant Stringer in the San Jose Mercury$ Taryn Luna in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/11/25
Water
Should L.A. look to ‘sponge cities’ to solve its flooding problem? -- L.A.’s water management system discards billions of gallons of rainwater that might be reused. Can ‘sponge cities’ help us? Max Kim in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/11/25
Housing
Here’s how much Bay Area homes have gained in value — and what that means for taxes -- Bay Area homeowners could be in for quite a windfall — if they sell. Christian Leonard in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 08/11/25
The Bay Area is lagging on lofty housing goals. Here's how far behind each city is --Walnut Creek is supposed to permit about 5,800 new homes from 2023 to 2031, according to the California housing department. As of the end of last year, it had approved just 85. Christian Leonard in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 08/11/25
Will we ever get enough housing? The future holds promise -- How can we achieve more and better housing? Denser neighborhoods. Smaller homes, some modular or printed in 3-D. Properties co-owned. ADUs sold separately. Jack Flemming in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/11/25
Homeless
To tackle homelessness, Los Angeles moves to centralize its response -- Los Angeles County launched the Emergency Centralized Response Center earlier this year to better coordinate homeless services. By centralizing the response, supporters say the dispatch center makes it easier to get people off the streets. Andrew Khouri in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/11/25
Wildfire
Canyon fire more than 75% contained as firefighters make ‘good progress’ -- The Canyon fire in Ventura County was 78% contained as of Sunday evening, with firefighters making “good progress” extinguishing the blaze, according to fire authorities. Noah Goldberg in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/11/25
Imagine fire-safe communities where residents can live and evacuate in record time -- Can we really fortify our homes and our city against a fire storm? These experts offer some tips and some hope for the future. Jack Flemming in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/11/25
Climate
‘People’s Hearing On Extreme Weather’ targets Trump climate policy -- On Saturday, Los Angeles-area elected officials, advocacy groups and community members convened in Pasadena for what was billed as a “People’s Hearing on Extreme Weather.” Marcos Magaña in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/11/25
Energy secretary says Trump administration may alter past National Climate Assessments -- Earlier this year, the Trump administration fired more than 400 scientists working on the next federal climate report and removed the website that housed the previous ones. Hayley Smith in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/11/25
Salvaging a crumbling California coastline required some radical thinking -- For an eroding coastline reduced to broken concrete, responding to sea level rise has been a delicate exercise in compromise. Rosanna Xia in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/11/25
Fires and floods have plagued L.A. forever; brilliant marketing lured millions of newcomers anyway -- We’ve always had fires and floods, but brilliant marketing and a lot of hubris allowed Los Angeles to be conjured into existence. Michael Hiltzik in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/11/25
Workplace
21 Ways People Are Using A.I. at Work -- Recent surveys have found that almost one in five U.S. workers say they use it at least semi-regularly for work. Twenty-one people told us how. Larry Buchanan and Francesca Paris in the New York Times$ -- 08/11/25
What’s next for historic Riverside prison and the state workers who staff it? -- For years, residents of Norco have tried to convince the state to close a medium-security prison occupying roughly 100 acres of prime real estate in the Southern California city. Last week, the California Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections granted their wish, announcing the Riverside County prison would close its doors in fall of 2026. William Melhado in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 08/11/25
Education
Garofoli: Will UCLA wilt like an Ivy? Trump extortion threat is the ultimate test -- California’s public universities have the chance to do something elite Ivy League schools didn’t have the guts to: stand up to Donald Trump’s latest extortion plot. Joe Garofoli in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 08/11/25
Where do UC alumni land jobs? See the full list of companies for every campus -- Over 70% of UC alumni live and work in California. While the most common employer for graduates is the UC schools themselves, big, California-based companies like Google and Kaiser Permanente hire hundreds of graduates from across the nine schools. Hanna Zakharenko in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 08/11/25
These are the college majors that lead to the best-paying jobs for UC and CSU graduates -- At $150,000, the median annual earnings two years after graduation for Berkeley computer science majors is significantly higher than those of their peers at UCLA ($130,000), Cal Poly San Luis Obispo ($114,000) and UC San Diego ($106,000). Nami Sumida in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 08/11/25
Has California turned the page on its reading crisis? -- Less than half of the state’s third- and fourth-graders were reading at grade level in the 2023-24 school year, according to state testing data. Molly Gibbs in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 08/11/25
Free AI training comes to California colleges — but at what cost? -- Google, Microsoft, Adobe and IBM will offer AI-related tools to California’s schools and universities in an effort to prepare the state’s students for a changing economy. Adam Echelman Calmatters -- 08/11/25
Street
Another gruesome death in jail, and neglect that preceded it, described in sworn testimony -- In sworn declarations filed this week in San Diego federal court, the men said they warned deputies and medical staff in the days before Karim Talib’s July 28 death that he badly needed help. What they describe suggests Talib suffered from mental illness or cognitive decline. Jeff McDonald, Kelly Davis in the San Diego Union Tribune$ -- 08/11/25
Palo Alto
What Happened When Mark Zuckerberg Moved In Next Door -- The billionaire has bought at least 11 properties in Palo Alto, Calif., creating a compound for his family — and headaches for his neighbors. Heather Knight in the New York Times$ -- 08/11/25
Also
Arellano: When the going gets tough for L.A., our city rallies like no other -- Americans should see this resilience and the subsequent spur of creativity and hope as a blueprint on how to fight back and not just survive, but thrive better than ever. Nothing has proved this more than our current year, with two catastrophes that would have buckled, if not outright destroyed, other cities. Gustavo Arellano in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/11/25
Curwen: Fast-forward 25 years: Sharing hopes and dreams for a future Los Angeles -- Los Angeles is a city built upon amnesia and denial. Graded and paved, bought and sold, it bears little likeness to Tovaangar, the home for the first people who, for thousands of years, walked its valleys and chaparral-clad basins and paddled its broad shorelines. Thomas Curwen in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/11/25
POTUS 47
Trump says he’s placing DC police under federal control and deploying National Guard -- President Donald Trump said Monday he’s placing the Washington, D.C., police department under federal control and deploying the National Guard to make the nation’s capital safer. Bridget Brown, Bernard Mcghee, Curtis Yee Associated Press Eric Schmitt, Campbell Robertson, Katie Rogers and Chris Cameron in the New York Times$ Brianna Tucker in the Washington Post$ -- 08/11/25
The U.S. Marches Toward State Capitalism With American Characteristics -- President Trump is imitating Chinese Communist Party by extending political control ever deeper into economy. Greg Ip in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 08/11/25
Nvidia, AMD to Give U.S. 15% Cut on AI Chip Sales to China -- Unusual arrangement follows Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang’s meeting with Trump. Amrith Ramkumar and Robbie Whelan in the Wall Street Journal$ Tripp Mickle in the New York Times$ Eva Dou and Grace Moon in the Washington Post$ -- 08/11/25
The Harvard-Trained Lawyer Behind Trump’s Fight Against Top Universities -- May Mailman is credited as an animating force behind a strategy that has intimidated independent institutions and undercut years of medical and scientific research. Michael C. Bender in the New York Times$ -- 08/11/25
Small Businesses Brace for the Punishing Side Effects of Trump’s Tariffs -- Smaller firms, for instance, not only have fewer resources to weather unexpected costs, they also lack the bargaining power of megastores like Walmart to pressure suppliers to lower prices. They may also lack access to lines of credit available to bigger firms. Patricia Cohen in the New York Times$ -- 08/11/25
Inflation Up or Down? What About Jobs? The Agency That Should Know Is on the Rocks -- Trump’s firing of the Bureau of Labor Statistics leader compounds a yearslong struggle to modernize methods and maintain resources. Matt Grossman, Brian Schwartz and Rachel Louise Ensign in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 08/11/25
Trump Administration Considers Longtime Critic to Lead Bureau of Labor Statistics -- Officials are looking at E.J. Antoni, chief economist at the conservative Heritage Foundation, among others, to head jobs-data agency. Brian Schwartz and Meridith McGraw in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 08/11/25
American Companies Are Buying Their Own Stocks at a Record Pace -- American companies are repurchasing their shares at a record pace, boosting their balance sheets and fueling the U.S. stock rally. Krystal Hur in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 08/11/25
Transcripts of grand jury that indicted Epstein ex-girlfriend Maxwell won’t be unsealed, judge says -- Judge Paul A. Engelmayer said in a written ruling the government had suggested the materials could be released publicly “casually or promiscuously,” which would risk “unraveling the foundations of secrecy upon which the grand jury is premised” and eroding confidence by persons called to testify before future grand juries. Larry Neumeister, Michael R. Sisak, Jennifer Peltz Associated Press -- 08/11/25
Trump’s birthright citizenship order faces more bans than before Supreme Court ruling -- Four lower courts have placed nationwide injunctions on the Trump administration from enforcing plans to deny automatic citizenship to U.S.-born children of undocumented immigrants and foreign visitors. David Nakamura in the Washington Post$ -- 08/11/25
Trump is rushing to build his ballroom. A review process could take years -- The National Capital Planning Commission, which has yet to consider the massive project, has taken years to approve much smaller changes at the White House. Jonathan Edwards in the Washington Post$ -- 08/11/25
California Policy and Politics Sunday
California’s Gifford Fire is now a ‘megafire.’ Here’s what that means -- Igniting on Aug. 1 along Highway 166, the blaze had scorched more than 111,000 acres as of Saturday afternoon, with containment at just 21%, according to a federal fire update. Fire officials attribute the explosive growth to extreme heat, steep and inaccessible terrain, and dry vegetation in areas that have no recorded history of wildfire. Aidin Vaziri in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 08/10/25
As Canyon fire winds down, heat wave lingers in Southern California -- As Southern California continued to experience a heat wave, officials on Saturday lifted the final evacuation orders in areas affected by the Canyon fire, which has burned more than 5,000 acres in northern Los Angeles and Ventura counties. Jasmine Mendez in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/10/25
‘The safest place to be’: When fleeing fire is no longer an option -- The problem is that there are no standards for fire shelters, safety zones or refuge areas, due mostly to a lack of research. As wildfires become more common and more dangerous, however, scientists are testing new ideas that could save lives down the road. Noah Haggerty in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/10/25
California’s wildfire moonshot: How new technology will defeat advancing flames -- How will we fight fires in the future? With smart fire trucks and smart nozzles, uniforms with intelligent fabrics, and pilot-less helicopters — and lots of AI Hayley Smith in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/10/25
ICE
Anxiety attacks, tears, questions: The impact of immigration sweeps on children -- In their silence and their stomachaches, or the sudden burst of tears, the children living through hardline federal immigration enforcement are saying one thing: they are not OK. Anissa Rivera in the Orange County Register$ -- 08/10/25
California took center stage in ICE raids, but other states saw more immigration arrests -- In the first five months of Trump’s second term, California lagged behind the staunchly red states of Texas and Florida in the total arrests. Jenny Jarvie and Gabrielle LaMarr LeMee in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/10/25
UCLA
‘A continual assault.’ How UCLA’s research faculty is grappling with Trump funding freeze -- The Trump administration’s suspension of grants at UCLA totaling $584 million has imperiled research in an array of subjects. Professors at the university said that some researchers rely on the funding to pay their salaries, and the loss of the money could be devastating. Daniel Miller and Jaweed Kaleem in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/10/25
Workplace
L.A. passed a $30 minimum wage for tourism workers. Then came the warring ballot measures -- It’s the summer of the burn-it-down ballot measure in Los Angeles. For the past three months, labor unions and business groups have been locked in a protracted fight over a law, approved by the City Council in May, hiking the minimum wage for hotel employees and workers at Los Angeles International Airport to $30 per hour by 2028. David Zahniser and Suhauna Hussain Calmatters -- 08/10/25
H-1B visas: Federal government mandates in-person interviews for overseas renewals -- Controversy over the H-1B exploded late last year, as anti-immigrant conservatives faced off against advocates from the tech industry who are close to Trump. Ethan Baron in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 08/10/25
AI Gold
A new gold rush? How AI is transforming San Francisco -- For years, Silicon Valley has been at the center of innovation with some of the world’s valuable tech companies such as Meta, Google, Apple and Nvidia locating their massive headquarters south of San Francisco. AI’s rise, though, has shone a bright spotlight on San Francisco, home to multibillion-dollar companies such as OpenAI, Scale AI, Anthropic, Perplexity and Databricks. Queenie Wong, Florence Middleton in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/10/25
After Harris shake-up, here’s where San Diego’s Toni Atkins stands in wide open California governor’s race -- On Saturday, Atkins held her first show of force in the governor's race, with supporters packing into a new campaign headquarters in Mission Hills. Lucas Robinson in the San Diego Union Tribune$ -- 08/10/25
UCSF doctor reinstated at FDA less than 2 weeks after resigning amid MAGA backlash -- Multiple media outlets on Saturday cited Health and Human Services Department officials confirming the reinstatement of Dr. Vinay Prasad, which was first reported by Endpoints News, a biotech-focused news organization. Sophia Bollag in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 08/10/25
Also
Lawrence Livermore National Lab enters a different kind of space race with a telescope deal -- Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory will have 13 months to develop a low-orbit telescope that will be part of a space mission expected to launch in 2027 to help select future moon landing sites, map mineral deposits, and eventually identify deep space threats to Earth. Chase Hunter in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 08/10/25
What if L.A.’s so-called flaws were underappreciated assets rather than liabilities? -- L.A. could become a solar-powered, biodiversity-rich metropolis, redefining urban sustainability — and a blueprint for the 21st century John Rossant and Carlo Ratti in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/10/25
Imagine fire-safe communities where residents can live and evacuate in record time -- Can we really fortify our homes and our city against a fire storm? These experts offer some tips and some hope for the future. Jack Flemming in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/10/25
Lopez: The state sets lofty goals in the name of a brighter future. What’s a vision and what’s a hallucination? -- In April of 2006, I watched a posse of politicians gather at Skid Row’s Midnight Mission to introduce, with great fanfare and unbridled confidence, a 10-year plan to end homelessness in Los Angeles. That didn’t work out so well. Steve Lopez in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/10/25
How Far Will People Go to Get Into the Magic Castle? Ask These Blood Donors -- The Hollywood landmark has hosted blood drives since 2014. Donors do a good deed, but the perk is entry into the private club. Nicole Stock, Maggie Shannon in the New York Times$ -- 08/10/25
Morrison: Prepare to say a frond farewell to Los Angeles’ palm trees -- Climate change changes cities. We can no longer afford freeloader trees, however glamorous. Palms suck down water like camels, but give back barely enough leafiness to shade a Hula-Hoop. Falling fronds can deliver a mean whack, and during fires, palms light up like a flare. Patt Morrison in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 08/10/25
POTUS 47
Appeals court rules Trump clamp-down on spending data defies Congress’ authority -- A federal appeals court panel shot down a Trump administration bid to make secret a public database of federal spending that researchers say is crucial to ensure the administration is not flouting Congress’ power of the purse. In an order issued Saturday evening, the three-judge D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals panel voted unanimously to give the administration until Friday to put the data back online. Kyle Cheney and Josh Gerstein Politico -- 08/10/25
IRS, White House clashed over immigrants’ data before tax chief was ousted -- The Trump administration’s move to push out IRS Commissioner Billy Long came after the agency said it couldn’t release some information on taxpayers suspected of being here illegally. Jacob Bogage and Kadia Goba in the Washington Post$ -- 08/10/25
Who Is the Heir to the MAGA Movement? Trump Keeps His Options Open -- JD Vance is widely seen as Trump’s successor, but the president has also talked up Secretary of State Marco Rubio. Alex Leary, Meridith McGraw and Natalie Andrews in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 08/10/25
America Is Fracturing Into Red and Blue Nations, Redistricting Fight Shows -- Less than 20% of Americans live in a state where the minority party has a meaningful voice in governance. America’s identity as a unified nation is eroding, with Republican- and Democratic-led states dividing into separate spheres, each with its own policies governing the economic, social and political rules of life. Aaron Zitner in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 08/10/25
‘We are at war – bring it on’: Democrats ready to fight dirty to stop Trump -- Republican push for gerrymandered congressional maps triggers down-and-dirty from new generation – will it work? David Smith The Guardian -- 08/10/25