Fiona Ng
is LAist's deputy managing editor and leads a team of reporters who explore food, culture, history, events and more.
Updated January 20, 2025 6:36 AM
Published January 19, 2025 4:44 PM
Tall palm trees sway during extreme gusty winds in Van Nuys on Tuesday as high winds create dangerous conditions and drive brush fires.
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Richard Vogel
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AP
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Topline:
The National Weather Service is sounding the alarm for damaging and harmful winds heading toward portions of Los Angeles and Ventura counties, two weeks after the start of the historic fires that have devastated the region.
Details: A "particularly dangerous situation" red flag warning — the sternest of the weather service's fire weather alerts — will be in effect between noon Monday and 10 a.m. Tuesday. In addition, an advisory for windblown dust and ash advisory will be in effect until 10 p.m. Tuesday.
What's next: Excessive rain could mean trouble for burned areas. Currently, the weather service is looking at around a 50% to 70% for rainfall between Saturday and next Monday — with around a 20% to 30% chance for thunderstorms.
The L.A. region is in for some rollercoaster weather this week.
The National Weather Service is sounding the alarm for damaging and harmful winds heading toward portions of Los Angeles and Ventura counties, two weeks after the start of the historic fires that have devastated the region.
A "particularly dangerous situation" red flag warning — the sternest of the weather service's fire weather alerts — will be in effect between noon Monday and 10 a.m. Tuesday. In addition, an advisory for windblown dust and ash advisory will be in effect until 10 p.m. Tuesday.
Authorities have closed Griffith Park as a precaution Monday and Tuesday, according to Autry Museum officials who noted that also means the museum is closed.
Sustained winds of 25 mph to 40 mph are expected across coastal and valley areas — with gusts of 50 mph to 70 mph.
For mountain and foothill areas, the weather service is expecting sustained winds between 30 mph to 50 mph, with gusts of 60 mph to 80 mph.
" There is that potential for isolated gusts up to 100 mph," said Rose Schoenfeld, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service.
Here are the areas the "PDS" warning covers — included are fire ravaged areas like Malibu and Altadena, according to the NWS.
Areas covered under extreme winds warning between Monday and Tuesday this week.
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National Weather Service
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Courtesy NWS
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It's dry out there
Schoenfeld noted that of the handful of "PDS" warnings that have been issued this winter, including the historic windstorm that fanned the Eaton and Palisades fires — this week's alert is unique because of how crispy things are out there.
"This may be one of the driest fire weather events that we've seen so far this year," she said. "We're looking at widespread single digit humidities down to 3% for some areas."
That means combustible fire conditions.
"We still have not gotten rain since the last particularly dangerous event here. So, the fuels and fire weather conditions continue to be extremely favorable for rapid fire growth," she added.
Safety tips
Public health officials advise anyone in areas under the ash advisory to
Stay inside, with window and doors shut. Use air purifiers or your AC on recirculate to keep ash out.
Wear a mask, if you do need to go outside use an N95 or P100 mask.
Secure your outside stuff by tying down anything loose
Protect your eyes, ear goggles if you have to go outside.
Watch for updates, listen to local news outlets for the latest on evacuations and conditions.
Stay ready (we have more tips below from LAist).
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Courtesy L.A. County Public Health
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Courtesy L.A. County Public Health
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Fire weather watch after Tuesday
At the conclusion of the PDS warning on Tuesday evening, a fire weather watch will be in effect until Thursday.
Chance of thunderstorms this weekend
Firefighters have taken advantage of favorable weather conditions last week to bring the Palisades and Eaton fires under control. The former is at over 50% contained; while the latter is at more than 80%.
But excessive rain could mean trouble for burned areas. Currently, the weather service is looking at around a 50% to 70% for rainfall between Saturday and next Monday — with around a 20% to 30% chance for thunderstorms.
No estimates currently on expected rainfall this weekend, but the chance of thunderstorms, Schoenfeld said, "that does bring the potential for isolated areas of excessive rain and flooding, which would be of concern for burn scars."
Copper wire theft damaged business phone lines at the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department’s East L.A. Station in February — two months later, service is still down.
Why it matters: Residents have faced longer wait times to get in touch with the department for non-emergencies. Now, all dispatchers are working from an off-site communication trailer connected via satellite, according to officials.
Copper wire theft damaged business phone lines at the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department’s East L.A. Station in February — two months later, service is still down.
Residents have faced longer wait times to get in touch with the department for non-emergencies. Now, all dispatchers are working from an off-site communication trailer connected via satellite, according to officials.
“We elevated this to the highest level we possibly could,” said Operations Captain Shawnee N. Hinchman at a Maravilla Community Advisory Committee (MCAC) meeting last week. “Our dispatchers aren’t even at the station right now because we had to reroute the lines to a different location, so we’re even down personnel.”
At the meeting, East L.A. resident Guadalupe Arellano said she’s struggled to contact the station to report parking enforcement issues.
“The last few times that I tried to make calls to…the Sheriff’s office, they had answering machines or are no longer answering calls,” she said.
An officer told her that the best line of action is to contact the Sheriff’s Department directly, but noted delays are expected.
According to Sgt. Michael Mileski, several thousand dollars’ worth of copper wiring was stolen from an electrical vault during the early morning hours on Feb. 13. Fiber optic cables were damaged in the process, which affected a significant portion of the Eastern Avenue corridor in Boyle Heights and East L.A., disrupting phone lines for 100,000 residents for 5 days, Mileski said.
Mileski was unsure why service had not been restored at the station and did not provide a timeline for repairs.
“We were told back in February that this would be ongoing. They said it would take about a month and a half to fix the problem,” Mileski said.
The office of Assemblymember Jessica Caloza has also stepped in to try to expedite the resolution. Hector Rodriguez, a field representative for Caloza’s office, told residents at the meeting that they are working with AT&T to restore service, but it has taken longer than expected.
“It’s extremely frustrating even for us as well but our office takes this extremely seriously, just like the community,” Rodriguez said. A spokesperson for AT&T wasn’t immediately available to answer questions from Boyle Heights Beat.
As of Thursday, the business phone lines remain down and calls cannot be transferred within the East L.A. Sheriff’s Station.
Lt. William Morris told Boyle Heights Beat that four to seven dispatchers are currently working at a time from an off-site communications trailer. If a caller is unable to get through, Morris recommends trying again and said a dispatcher will eventually pick up. He added that 911 calls will go through no matter what.
LA Documenter Alex Medina contributed reporting for this story. LA Documenters trains and pays LA residents to take notes at local government meetings around Los Angeles. You can find meeting notes and audio at losangeles.documenters.org
Several candidates (some pictured here at an earlier debate in Sacramento) running for California governor will take part in a public forum Saturday in Koreatown, offering residents a chance to hear directly from them ahead of the primary election on June 2.
Topline:
Several candidates running for California governor will take part in a public forum tomorrow in Koreatown, offering residents a chance to hear directly from them ahead of the primary election on June 2.
Who is expected: Confirmed candidates include Democrats Xavier Becerra, Tom Steyer, Tony Thurmond, Antonio Villaraigosa and Betty Yee. Candidates were invited based on fundraising totals reported earlier this year to the California Secretary of State.
Who was invited but hasn't RSVPed: Democrats Matt Mahan and Katie Porter, along with Republicans Chad Bianco and Steve Hilton, were also invited but have not confirmed their attendance.
Keep reading... for details on how to attend or listen.
Several candidates running for California governor will take part in a public forum Saturday in Koreatown, offering residents a chance to hear directly from them ahead of the primary election on June 2.
Confirmed candidates include Democrats Xavier Becerra, Tom Steyer, Tony Thurmond, Antonio Villaraigosa and Betty Yee. Candidates were invited based on fundraising totals reported earlier this year to the California Secretary of State.
Democrats Matt Mahan and Katie Porter, along with Republicans Chad Bianco and Steve Hilton, were also invited but have not confirmed their attendance, according to the Center for Asian Americans United for Self Empowerment (CAUSE), one of the lead host organizations.
Details on attending and viewing
The forum will run from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. at World Mission University located at 500 Shatto Place. Doors open at 9 a.m. and space is limited. RSVP is required, though entry is not guaranteed.
The forum will not be livestreamed but organizers say recordings will be released by May 4 with translations in Bengali, Chinese, Hindi, Korean, Punjabi, Tagalog, Thai and Vietnamese with the possibility of additional languages.
Parking will be limited. About 80 spaces are available in the building’s first-floor garage, with another 15 to 20 spaces potentially available in a second-floor tenant lot. Free parking is also available in a nearby lot on Westmoreland Avenue, according to the university.
Focus on AAPI communities
Organizers say the forum is designed to connect candidates directly with AANHPI communities. More than 7.3 million Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders live in California, making up over 15% of the population.
“California’s AANHPI communities are a driving force behind the state’s economy, culture, and democracy,” Korean American Democratic Committee (KADC) President Esther Lim said in a statement.
“As the only gubernatorial forum in Los Angeles County hosted by and for AANHPI communities, this is a historic opportunity for candidates to connect with one of California’s fastest growing and most influential communities. Our coalition represents organizations across the political spectrum united by a common goal: ensuring AANHPI Californians are seen, heard, and prioritized.”
Organizers said Koreatown was an intentional choice for the forum.
“Koreatown, like many AANHPI communities, has historically been overlooked and underestimated, making it especially meaningful to bring gubernatorial candidates directly into this space,” KADC and CAUSE said in a joint statement. “It was important to hold this forum in a location that is both accessible by public transportation and grounded in the communities we serve.”
Where polls stand
The forum comes as the race shifts following Democrat Eric Swalwell’s exit. The candidate — who had been invited — suspended his campaign last week after facing allegations of rape and sexual assault, which he has denied.
A new Emerson College Polling survey conducted April 14-15 shows a wide-open race, with Hilton leading at 17% and nearly a quarter of voters still undecided. Bianco and Steyer trail closely behind at 14%.
Among Democrats, the poll found support is now split between Steyer (20%), Becerra (19%) and Porter (15%), with Becerra gaining ground after Swalwell left the race, according to the poll.
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From left, Betty Yee, Antonio Villaraigosa, Tony Thurmond, Tom Steyer, Katie Porter, Matt Mahan and Xavier Becerra participate in a gubernatorial candidate forum hosted by California Immigrant Policy Center, California Latino Legislative Caucus Foundation, and ACLU California Action at the SAFE Credit Union Convention Center in Sacramento on April 14, 2026.
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Fred Greaves
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CalMatters
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Topline:
Even after Rep. Eric Swalwell’s swift and sudden exit, the race for governor is still frustratingly murky on the Democratic side, with seven major candidates splitting the vote. As party faithful hope for divine intervention, heavyweights like the speaker emerita and the current governor refuse to weigh in.
More details: Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom, the face of the party in California, is not interested in elevating a successor. Democratic Party Chair Rusty Hicks, who faces criticism for not using his position to cull the field, has relied on party-commissioned polls and vague pleas for candidates to “honestly assess” their campaign’s viability, refusing to openly pressure anyone to drop out. Even former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi — known for urging then-Rep. Adam Schiff to run for Senate and former President Joe Biden to drop his reelection bid — won’t intervene.
Read on... for how California Democrats are navigating it.
Democrats are searching for a hero to save them in the California governor’s race.
So far, no one in party leadership has come to the rescue.
Despite Rep. Eric Swalwell’s exit from the race this week, the Democratic field remains unwieldy, with seven major candidates still splitting the field less than three weeks before ballots are sent. Each of them refuses to bow out, regardless of their polling numbers, in the hope they can capture some of the voter attention that Swalwell’s demise drew to the race.
Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom, the face of the party in California, is not interested in elevating a successor. Democratic Party Chair Rusty Hicks, who faces criticism for not using his position to cull the field, has relied on party-commissioned polls and vague pleas for candidates to “honestly assess” their campaign’s viability, refusing to openly pressure anyone to drop out.
Even former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi — known for urging then-Rep. Adam Schiff to run for Senate and former President Joe Biden to drop his reelection bid — won’t intervene.
“People have reached out to me saying, ‘Your mom has to do something!’” said Christine Pelosi, daughter of the San Francisco congresswoman and herself a candidate for state Senate.
“I said, ‘You know what? She doesn't, though,’” the younger Pelosi said. “She already did that with Biden and Harris. She's not going to — don't look to her to do that again.”
Gone is the heyday of the San Francisco-based political machine, a network of political talent that dominated state politics for decades and produced titans such as Pelosi and Newsom, both of whom are moving on from California politics.
Now that pipeline has run dry, and this year there is no obvious heir to Newsom for the party to coalesce behind. No current statewide officeholder joined the fray, and both presumptive favorites — former Vice President Kamala Harris and U.S. Sen. Alex Padilla — opted not to run.
That has made top Democrats loath to weigh in on the state’s first truly open Democratic primary in 16 years. In 2018, Newsom, then the lieutenant governor, was widely viewed as the most likely successor to former Gov. Jerry Brown, another product of the San Francisco political machine.
The 2026 race is also only the second time an open field has competed under the top-two primary system, adopted 16 years ago to the chagrin of both parties. That means two Democrats or two Republicans could advance to the general election and lock the other party out.
Newsom reiterated his lack of interest this week when he issued a statement that said in part, “I have full confidence that voters will choose a candidate who reflects the values and direction Californians believe in.”
Too much democracy for Democrats?
While grassroots activists have for decades decried the king-making of insider machine politics, the alternative — an abundance of candidates with no clear frontrunner — has proved unappealing too.
The resulting decision paralysis has resurrected calls for a strong leader to step in.
“This has been incredibly frustrating, not to mention scary, with the idea that we could end up with two Republicans,” said RL Miller, a longtime delegate and chair of the party’s environmental caucus. “I really do believe that there has been a failure of leadership at the top.”
Miller theorized that party leaders were overcorrecting after years of backlash following the 2016 presidential election, in which establishment Democrats disregarded the grassroots support for Sen. Bernie Sanders and instead anointed Hillary Clinton.
As more Democratic gubernatorial candidates entered the fray in the last year, Miller said she thought leadership had the “admirable intent” of letting delegates winnow the field themselves.
But anxieties were already spiking before the Democrats’ endorsing convention in February, where none of the nine candidates vying for the gubernatorial nod amassed more than 25% — far short of the 60% needed. Hicks faced repeated questions then about whether he would step in, but insisted it wasn’t his role.
“By the party convention, the alarm bells had been ringing for months,” said Miller, who has consistently voted against Hicks in internal party elections.
California Democratic Party Chair Rusty Hicks addresses the media in Sacramento on Nov. 17, 2023.
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Miguel Gutierrez Jr.
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CalMatters
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After the convention, Hicks released an open letter urging that “every candidate honestly assess the viability of their candidacy and campaign,” and “if you do not have a viable path to make it to the general election” not to file to run. Only one listened, former Assemblymember Ian Calderon, who was polling around 1% or less.
Hicks’ defenders said he was right to abstain from picking favorites. Christine Pelosi said it would be “inappropriate” for the chair to weigh in on the candidates after delegates at the party convention chose not to endorse anyone.
Hicks’ calls for candidates to “consider their viability” was a “somewhat extraordinary and surprising” move, said Paul Mitchell, the architect of the gerrymandered congressional maps that voters approved via Proposition 50 to boost congressional Democrats in the upcoming election.
“It maybe wasn't surprising for people who think that the Democratic Party chair is like a backroom dealer that's going to knock heads or something like that,” Mitchell said. “But that's not the chair’s role in California right now.”
Top-two primary adds to tension
Both Mitchell and Christine Pelosi blamed the top-two system for much of the drama. The slim possibility that two Republicans could emerge from the primary has spurred many of the calls for leadership to weigh in.
Mitchell argued that since President Donald Trump put a thumb on the scale by endorsing former Fox News host Steve Hilton, there’s less risk that both he and Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco would end up on the November ticket, alleviating some of the pressure on Democrats.
“If it wasn't a top two, people wouldn't care,” said Christine Pelosi. “You wouldn't have the added agita of ‘there's only two Republicans and there's a bunch of Democrats.’”
Notably, the state GOP failed to endorse a candidate at its recent convention, indicating that Trump’s nod might not hold as much sway as Democrats assume.
Still, if Hicks is trying to convince rank-and-file Democrats he’s doing enough, it’s not working.
Amar Shergill, the former leader of the party’s progressive caucus, suggested that its weak, decentralized leadership was by design so monied interests could exert more control over who gets elected.
“Rusty Hicks is furniture that folks with real power use at their discretion,” Shergill said.
“There's no sort of anger or animosity towards him as a person,” he said. “If it wasn’t Rusty, it would be somebody else. This is just the political situation right now.”
In an interview, Hicks told CalMatters that he is “doing what is required” to ensure a Democrat wins the race. But when pressed repeatedly, Hicks would not elaborate on what that work entails, if he believes what he’s done so far is working or if he should have had a stronger hand in culling the field, as his critics have suggested.
“I'm not interested in opening up the playbook as to what we will or will not do in the coming days and weeks,” he said.
CalMatters’ Yue Stella Yu contributed to this report.
More than 20 locations in South LA will get speed cameras under a pilot program that gets rolling this fall.
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Isaiah Murtaugh
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The LA Local
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Topline:
More than 20 locations in South L.A. will get speed cameras under a pilot program that gets rolling this fall.
Why now: The plan was approved by the L.A. City Council last month and will cover a total 125 targeted zones in the city, according to L.A. Department of Transportation documents. LADOT says the cameras are aimed at reducing traffic fatalities while complying with a 2023 state law that requires LA and five other cities to establish automated speed enforcement programs before 2032.
What's next: The cameras could start snapping photos of speedsters as early as July, with a 60-day warning period — where drivers wouldn’t be fined — running into September.
More than 20 locations in South L.A. will get speed cameras under a pilot program that gets rolling this fall.
The plan, which was approved by the L.A. City Council last month, will cover a total 125 targeted zones in the city, according to L.A. Department of Transportation documents. The cameras could start snapping photos of speedsters as early as July, with a 60-day warning period — where drivers wouldn’t be fined — running into September.
L.A. saw 290 traffic fatalities in 2025, according to LA Police Department data, 6% less than 2024. Several of the city’s deadliest intersections are clustered in South L.A. along Western Avenue, Vermont Avenue and Figueroa Street, according to data analyzed by Crosstown.
Where will the speed cameras be installed in South LA?
Some intersections will have multiple camera clusters installed on the streets around them. The intersection of Gage Avenue and Figueroa Street, for example, will have cameras to the north, south and west.
Cameras will be located on:
Figueroa Street between Adams Boulevard and 23rd Street
Figueroa Street between Gage Avenue and 62nd Street
Figueroa Street between 68th Street and Gage Avenue
Figueroa Street between Manchester Avenue and 85th Street
Normandie Avenue between 62nd Street and 64th Street
Western Avenue between 55th Street and 53rd Street
Western Avenue between 24th Street and Adams Boulevard
Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard between Hobart Boulevard and Saint Andrews Place
Florence Avenue between Van Ness Avenue and Haas Avenue
Florence Avenue between Vermont Avenue and Hoover Street
Vermont Avenue between Florence Avenue and 71st Street
Vermont Avenue between 58th Place and 57th Street
Vernon Avenue between Wadsworth Avenue and McKinley Avenue
Gage Avenue between Hoover Street and Figueroa Street
Gage Avenue between Halldale Avenue and Raymond Avenue
Slauson Avenue between Brentwood Street and Inskeep Avenue
Slauson Avenue between Budlong Avenue and Menlo Avenue
Central Avenue between 92nd Avenue and 91st Street
Avalon Boulevard between 77th Street and 74th Street
Manchester Avenue between Wadsworth Avenue and Central Avenue
La Brea Avenue between Veronica Street and Coliseum Street
La Cienega Boulevard between Coliseum Street and Bowesfield Street
Arlington Avenue between Adams Boulevard and 18th Street
Jefferson Boulevard between Crenshaw Boulevard and Bronson Avenue
More than 20 locations in South LA will get speed cameras under a pilot program that gets rolling this fall.
How much will tickets cost?
Cameras will snap a photo of a speeding vehicle’s rear that includes its license plate as well as its make and model.
The system will document the date, time and vehicle speed, then issue a citation to the vehicle’s registered owner, according to LADOT’s policy plan.
Fines will ratchet higher based on how fast a vehicle is moving, starting with a $50 fine for vehicles going 11 to 15 mph above the limit.
Vehicles moving 16 to 25 mph over the limit will get $100 fines, and vehicles going 26 mph or more over the limit will get $200 fines.
The max fine will be $500 for vehicles that go 100 mph or more above the speed limit.
LADOT said camera images will not include rear windshields or faces, and that state law does not allow the cameras to use facial recognition technology.
How were speed camera locations selected?
Some Angelenos submitted comments to LADOT, worrying the speed camera program will disproportionately affect people of color, according to a March 20 department memo.
LADOT said in the memo that it worked to minimize any inequity, in part, by distributing the cameras evenly across the city’s 15 council districts, with every district getting at least eight cameras, and no district getting more than nine.
The transportation department said it based much of its location selection on speed-related collision data and proximity to places like senior centers and schools.
State law requires that the city continue monitoring the program’s effectiveness and impact on civil rights and liberties, according to LADOT.