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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • Tycho, new Salt & Straw flavors and more
    Picture of  Tycho sitting on grass

    This week:

    'Memnon' opens at Getty Villa, Tycho plays the reopened Roxy, Salt & Straw debuts fall flavors and more.

    Our picks:

    • Tycho; West Hollywood - Electronic music pioneers Tycho are playing a three-night residency at the Roxy to mark the release of their new album, Infinite Health.
    • Salt & Straw's Apple Series; multiple locations - Salt & Straw ice cream is ready with those fall flavors. Apple is the name of the game, with Apple Pie vs. Pumpkin Pie, an Apple Cider Donuts collab and more!

    Aah, there’s nothing like a short week.

    Fill it up with a special show at the Getty Villa amphitheater, a turntable jam at the Stowaway, or a night with Tycho at the Roxy. If that’s all just too much, treat yourself to one of the new intense apple ice cream or sorbet flavors at Salt & Straw or a tequila tasting in Montclair.

    For more to explore, visit LAist.com where you can learn about the history of drive-ins in Southern California, get your fill of Decoy/Ohtani news, and revisit the Tournament of Cheeseburgers in a chat with the Hangaburs owners.

    Events

    • Sat, Sep 28

      'Memnon'

      • The Getty Villa
        17985 Pacific Coast Hwy., Pacific Palisades

      Experiencing classical theater in the outdoor, almost mystical setting of the Getty Villa’s amphitheater will transport you to ancient Greece in an instant.

    • Wed, Sep 4

      Screening of new PBS Series: 'Hope in the Water'

      • Ocean Institute
        24200 Dana Point Harbor Dr., Dana Point

      Be among the first to learn more about the blue food revolution by getting a peek at the new PBS docuseries Hope in the Water at Dana Point’s Ocean Institute.

    • Wed, Sep 4

      'Let Us Descend': Jesmyn Ward and Traci Thomas in conversation

      • Mark Taper Auditorium - L.A. Central Library
        630 W. 5th St., Downtown L.A.

      Central Library to talk about her latest bestseller, Let Us Descend, which follows an enslaved teenage girl’s harrowing journey in the South just before the Civil War.

    • Wed, Sep 4

      Tycho

      • The Roxy Theatre
        9009 Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood

      Electronic music pioneers Tycho are playing a three-night residency at the Roxy to mark the release of their new album, Infinite Health (just released on August 30).

    • Wed, Sep 4

      Open Turntables

      • The Stowaway
        416 S. Spring St., Downtown L.A.

      Break out your favorite records and nerd out with fellow vinylheads at the weekly Open Turntables event at Downtown’s Stowaway.

    Viewing Pick

    • Tue, Sep 3

      'Mo’ Better Blues'

      • Vidiots
        4884 Eagle Rock Blvd., Eagle Rock

      1990 Denzel playing jazz trumpet in Brooklyn. Need we say more? Spike Lee’s take on jazz and relationships and questionable decisions was scored by none other than Brandon Marsalis

    Dine & Drink Deals

    • Thu, Sep 5

      Tequila tasting

      • Terraza by Los Portales
        10244 Central Ave., Montclair

      Terraza by Los Portales hosts a tequila tasting featuring six unique tequilas and one smoky mezcal at this event in Montclair.

    • Mon, Sep 30

      Salt & Straw's Apple Series

      • Salt and Straw
        Various Locations

      Apple is the name of the game, with Apple Pie vs. Pumpkin Pie, an Apple Cider Donuts collab with longtime partner Sidecar Doughnuts, Finnriver’s Black Currant Apple Cider, Apple Wasabi Sorbet, and Caramel Apple Sherbet.

    • Thu, Sep 5

      Now Serving: 'Big Vegan Flavor,' Zoë Bakes Cookies

      • Now Serving
        727 N. Broadway, Chinatown

      Two big cookbook events come to Now Serving this week and they are both virtuous and indulgent. First, Nisha Vora and Joanne Lee Molinaro talk about the benefits and delicious ways to eat vegan in their new book Big Vegan Flavor.

  • Highs in the upper 60s, low 70s
    Sunset at a marina with water in the foreground and small personal boats in the background.
    Another cool day with mostly sunny skies.

    Quick Facts

    • Today’s weather: Sunny
    • Beaches: 63 to 69 degrees
    • Mountains: low to mid 60s
    • Inland: 65 to 71 degrees
    • Warnings and advisories: Beach hazards, No burn alert

    What to expect: Sunny and cool today with highs in the mid 60s to low 70s across SoCal.

    Read on...for more details and who is affected by a No Burn Alert, as well as why you should be careful near ocean waters.

    Quick Facts

    • Today’s weather: Sunny
    • Beaches: 63 to 69 degrees
    • Mountains: low to mid 60s
    • Inland: 65 to 71 degrees
    • Warnings and advisories: Beach hazards, No burn alert

    The crisp, cool weather continues Tuesday as the region prepares for another Santa Ana wind event on Wednesday.

    Highs along the coast on Tuesday will be from 63 to 69 degrees, and up to 72 degrees for the valleys.

    The Inland Empire will see daytime highs of up to 71 degrees.

    In the Antelope Valley, there will be some areas of frost in the early morning, with temperatures ranging from 56 to 62 degrees.

    Beach hazards

    You'll want to avoid swimming in the ocean because of strong rip currents and breaking waves from high surf. Minor flooding of beach parking lots is possible. These conditions will last until Friday morning for the Orange County coast, and until Saturday morning for L.A. County beaches.

    No burn alert in effect

    The South Coast Air Quality Management District has issued a no burn alert for most of SoCal until 11:59 p.m. because of high air pollution. That means you should avoid any burning of wood, including fireplaces or manufactured logs made from wax or paper. The alert applies to O.C. and L.A. County's non-desert areas, as well as Riverside and San Bernardino counties.

  • Sponsor
  • Should mom-and-pops be allowed an extra 1% hike?
    A view of Los Angeles City Hall from below, with a tall palm tree in the forefront and the light blue sky in the background.
    L.A. City Hall on Monday, April 21, 2025.

    Topline:

    After Los Angeles moved to significantly lower yearly increases in most of the city’s apartments, some City Council members now want to change the rules again. This time, they’re hoping to give small landlords the ability to raise rents more than their corporate counterparts.

    The details: On Tuesday, the council is scheduled to vote on a proposal that would let small landlords — those who own 10 units or fewer— raise rents by an additional 1% each year. The idea was put forward by Councilmembers John Lee and Monica Rodriguez.

    Why now: In a culmination of years of debate, the City Council voted last month to lower the maximum allowable rent increase in the city’s rent-controlled housing to 4% per year. That’s down from the previous maximum of 10%. Lee voted against the changes after expressing concern about how the lower increases would affect the bottom line of small rental property owners. Rodriguez supported the changes, but said more needs to be done to keep “mom and pop” landlords afloat.

    Read on… to learn what landlord and tenant advocates have to say about the proposal.

    After Los Angeles moved to significantly lower yearly increases in most of the city’s apartments, some City Council members now want to change the rules again. This time, they’re hoping to give small landlords the ability to raise rents more than their corporate counterparts.

    On Tuesday, the council is scheduled to vote on a proposal that would let small landlords — those who own 10 units or fewer — raise rents by an additional 1% each year. The idea was put forward by Councilmembers John Lee and Monica Rodriguez.

    “This modest adjustment recognizes the difference between a family that owns a few units and a large corporate operator,” Lee said in a statement to LAist. “Our goal is to keep small landlords in the system and prevent the loss of rent-controlled homes.”

    While the idea is gaining support from landlord groups, tenant advocates say the proposal would create a cumbersome and unfair, two-tier system in which some renters have to pay more than others.

    The changes coming for LA rent control 

    In a culmination of years of debate, the City Council voted last month to lower the maximum allowable rent increase in the city’s rent-controlled housing to 4% per year. That’s down from the previous maximum of 10%.

    Lee, whose district includes the northwest San Fernando Valley, voted against the changes after expressing concern about how the lower increases would affect the bottom line of small rental property owners. Rodriguez, whose district includes the northeast San Fernando Valley, supported the changes, but said more should be done to keep “mom-and-pop” landlords afloat.

    “The motion proposes a modest adjustment to help ensure these small landlords remain viable, rather than being pushed out and accelerating the further corporatization of housing in Los Angeles,” Rodriguez said in a statement to LAist.

    Landlord groups said the proposed 1% increase could help at the margins, but small landlords would still have to contend with insurance premiums and maintenance costs that have been rising faster than overall economic inflation.

    “Throwing a bone in the form of an additional 1% to smaller owners is necessary but will be insufficient to keep many owners in the housing business,” Daniel Yukelson, executive director of the Apartment Association of Greater Los Angeles, said in an email. “More and more, owners are being forced to look for the exit ramp in the city of Los Angeles.”

    Do small landlords really have it harder?

    But researchers paid to investigate the issue have not found evidence that small landlords face stronger headwinds than corporate owners. A city-commissioned report by the Economic Roundtable, an independent research nonprofit, found no significant differences between the financial health of small and large landlord operations in L.A.

    “The study found that, in general, small landlords are not suffering greater distress,” Anna Ortega, who is with the city’s Housing Department, said during a recent City Council meeting.

    Tenant advocates with the group Keep L.A. Housed opposed the 1% bump for small landlords, saying it would be unfair to charge some tenants more every year simply because they’re renting from a non-corporate owner. The coalition also said enforcing the rules would be difficult.

    “Allowing small landlords to self-certify creates the opportunity for abuse, as some will fraudulently claim the status and charge incorrect (and potentially illegal) rent increases to already rent-burdened tenants,” said Pablo Estupiñan, a Keep L.A. Housed member and an organizer with the nonprofit Strategic Actions for a Just Economy.

    The rules in LA and beyond

    The city’s rent control rules generally apply to rental units built before October 1978, though some newly built apartments are covered as well. About 70% of the city’s apartments are subject to the rent hike caps.

    Some other Southern California jurisdictions with rent control allow small landlords to increase rents more than larger owners.

    L.A. County allows small landlords in unincorporated areas to increase rents an extra 1%. The city of Inglewood allows owners of buildings with four apartments or fewer to increase rents by an extra 5% compared with owners of buildings with five or more units.

  • City Council to consider expanding support dollars
    A welcome sign for Santa Ana, with palm trees in the background
    The Santa Ana City Council could more than double its contribution to the city’s immigrant support fund.

    Topline:

    The Santa Ana City Council will consider tonight whether to more than double its contribution to the city’s immigrant support fund to help families who have been hurt by ICE enforcement. The vote would add an additional $150,000 to its Ayuda Sin Fronteras fund, which launched in July.

    Why it matters: Santa Ana is Orange County’s only sanctuary city. When federal agents began mass sweeps across Southern California, Santa Ana residents were hit hard. Many have chosen to stay indoors out of fear of ICE sweeps, avoiding workplaces, grocery stores and other public spaces.

    What is Ayuda Sin Fronteras? The money from this fund goes toward helping residents pay for rent and utilities. In July, when the fund was first launched, the city allocated $100,000 for housing assistance.

    Read on … for how Santa Ana residents affected by ICE sweeps can get help.

    Santa Ana’s Ayuda Sin Fronteras — a fund to support immigrant families affected by ICE sweeps — could more than double with an additional $150,000 influx of city dollars if approved by the City Council Tuesday night.

    The federal immigration sweeps have increased fear among immigrant families, prompting some to avoid workplaces and other public areas. The fund goes toward helping those families pay for up to one month’s worth of housing expenses, including past due rent and utility bills.

    The program was created in July following heavy immigration enforcement that rattled many communities in Southern California, including Orange County’s only sanctuary city — Santa Ana.

    When it launched, the city approved an initial $100,000 for housing assistance. In October, the City Council directed the city manager to seek additional funding for approval. Those funds were pulled from several city department employee vacancies, including the city attorney’s office, the Santa Ana Police Department and others.

    Ayuda Sin Fronteras has supported 232 residents as of Oct. 21, according to city officials.

    Mayor Valerie Amezcua said she will revisit the fund as much as possible to make sure the city is doing all it can to support community members affected by immigration enforcement.

    “We need to make sure that we take good care of our community because there is a need,” Amezcua told LAist. “There's a need for rental assistance, for food, for utilities. As the mayor and council, we're committed to helping out our community.”

    Who qualifies? 

    The funds are reserved for Santa Ana families with members who have been detained, deported or financially hurt by immigration enforcement. Families will need to provide proof of immigration enforcement activity or a signed third-party verification form.

    The program requires identification of all household members, but the city says it does not require proof of citizenship.

    Applicants need to be renters at or below moderate income. A family of five, for example, needs to make no more than $177,000 a year. The city’s income chart can be found here.

    How to apply

    If you are interested in getting financial assistance from the city, you need to get a referral from one of the city’s partners.

    You can get more information by reaching out to the Ayuda Sin Fronteras team by filling out a contact form.

    You can also send them an email or call at (714) 565-2655.

    Other help is available 

    In Orange County, Supervisor Vicente Sarmiento created the Orange County Liberty Fund in partnership with community organizations, bringing together $1.5 million to support immigrant families in navigating the legal system.

    In September, the Costa Mesa City Council launched a $200,000 immigrant legal defense fund to help those detained by ICE within the city.

    Outside Orange County, the cities of Los Angeles and Long Beach, along with L.A. County, have asked for support from local philanthropists to donate to immigrant support funds.

  • LAHSA to reallocate money away from housing first
    A 2019 photo of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development building in Washington, D.C.

    Topline:

    The governing board for the L.A. Homeless Services Authority voted Monday to start the process of reallocating about $130 million in federal funding currently being spent on permanent housing to other projects meant to serve unhoused Angelenos.

    New HUD policy: The Los Angeles region is eligible for more than $260 million in federal funding under that program in the coming fiscal year, including $217 million for existing projects. But no more than 30% of those funds can go toward permanent housing projects, according to a notice issued last month by the U.S. Office of Housing and Urban Development.

    Why it matters: It's a challenge for L.A. County because 90% of regional HUD funds currently cover people’s rent, according to LASHA officials. Under the new HUD policy, about 5,000 households in the county will lose their rental subsidies.

    Pushback: Last week, 21 states, including California sued HUD, claiming the new federal policies “essentially guarantee that tens of thousands of formerly homeless individuals and families will be evicted back into homelessness.”

    Los Angeles’ regional homelessness agency is working to find ways to keep thousands of people in their homes, while complying with new federal funding restrictions on permanent housing.

    The governing board for the L.A. Homeless Services Authority voted Monday to start the process of reallocating about $130 million in federal funding currently being spent on permanent housing to other projects meant to serve unhoused Angelenos.

    Because of new funding restrictions from the U.S. Office of Housing and Urban Development, known as HUD, about 5,000 households in the county will lose their rental subsidies, according to several LAHSA officials who spoke at a commission meeting Monday.

    Those changes, along with state and county funding shortfalls for homeless services, threaten to drastically worsen the region’s homelessness crisis, they said.

    "The fact of the matter is there’s going to be a tremendous and terrible impact on people, on agencies, on landlords,” said Nathaniel VerGow, LAHSA’s chief program officer.

    Officials said they’re scrambling to maximize federal funding under the new guidelines while also advocating against the new HUD policy.

    “It is a cliff and it feels catastrophic, but I think it forces us as a region to figure out how to save ourselves,” LAHSA Commission Chair Amber Sheikh said.

    The funding challenge

    Most federal homelessness dollars flow into the L.A. region through the Continuum of Care program, managed by HUD.

    The Los Angeles region is eligible for more than $260 million in federal funding under that program in the coming fiscal year, including $217 million for existing projects.

    But no more than 30% of those funds can go toward permanent housing projects, according to a “notice of funding opportunity” HUD issued last month.

    That’s a challenge for L.A. County, because 90% of regional HUD funds currently cover people’s rent, according to LASHA officials.

    Instead, L.A. and other cities and counties must spend the bulk of their federal funds on other interventions, including transitional housing and street outreach.

    HUD officials have said the policy is meant to encourage self-sufficiency.

    At Monday’s meeting, Commissioner Justin Szlasa urged his colleagues to consider larger funding trends.

    “ There's actually a 23% increase in available funding from HUD, the federal government,” he said. “It just doesn't work with the way that we normally have done things here.”

    “We need to find, in this crisis, a way to be constructive about this,” Szlasa added.

    HUD policy changes

    HUD released its new notice of funding opportunity last month and rescinded a previous two-year funding agreement.

    Opponents have concerns with the federal housing department’s move away from “housing first” approaches. They also said HUD rolled out the changes without providing enough time to prepare service providers and clients for disruptions.

    Last week, 21 states, including California, sued HUD, claiming the new federal policies “essentially guarantee that tens of thousands of formerly homeless individuals and families will be evicted back into homelessness.”

    This week, a group of cities and homelessness organizations also sued over the changes. Plaintiffs include the city and county of San Francisco. The Continuum of Care for San Francisco was awarded $56 million in federal funding for Fiscal Year 2024.

    Approximately 91% of that funding supports permanent housing projects, according to the complaint.

    What’s next?

    The LAHSA Commission voted Monday to approve its request for applications for existing and new projects.

    Providers must submit applications to LAHSA over the next two weeks, and LAHSA has until Jan. 14 to craft and submit a new application to HUD.

    The agency is now talking with 130 contractors about the transition.

    LAHSA is also working with some permanent supportive housing providers to convert their programs to transitional housing instead, officials said.

    People who were in permanent housing projects aren’t eligible for transitional housing under HUD’s guidelines because they're not considered unhoused, VerGow said.

    The commission also reviewed a policy for ranking project applications and prioritizing them for federal funding. Officials said that policy has to be approved at a LAHSA Commission subcommittee on Dec. 10.

    Funds are expected to be awarded in May 2026.