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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • A new breeding program is saving the species
    A small round frog, only a few inches long grips a rock with its three-toed feet. It’s a light, earthy green with brown spots and a lightly colored underbelly.
    A southern mountain yellow legged frog.

    Topline:

    The southern mountain yellow-legged frog — which one researcher lovingly called "L.A.'s frog" — is being rehabitated by the L.A. Zoo and other organizations. About 170 froglets, raised by zoo staff, were released last week to their natural habitat in the San Gabriel Mountains.

    Why it matters: Protected under the California Endangered Species Act, the frog is close to being extinct, with just a couple hundreds in existence before the U.S. Geological Survey enlisted the L.A. Zoo to spearhead the breed-and-release program.

    What do they look like: The frogs are small, but not the tiniest — ranging from one-and-a-half to three-and-a-quarter inches long. They come mainly in brown and yellow, but can sometimes be gray, red or greenish, with mossy-looking spots that help them stay camouflaged. Notably, its belly and bottom half of its back legs are yellow, giving the frog its moniker.

    In the remote waterways of the San Gabriel Mountains, some 170 froglets are swimming and hopping in their native habitat.

    They are southern mountain yellow-legged frogs — and they are so rare and threatened that these teenage frogs were raised from tadpoles by staff at the Los Angeles Zoo, Santa Ana Zoo, and the Aquarium of the Pacific.

    It's all part of an ongoing conservation effort to restore the endangered native species. Last week, these froglets were released back to their homes in an undisclosed area in the San Gabriels.

    Watch the release:

    “It's L.A.'s frog,” said Ian Recchio, curator of herpetology at the L.A. Zoo. “It's one of the most endangered small vertebrate animals on the planet, and it lives right in our backyard.”

    The frogs are small, but not the tiniest — ranging from one-and-a-half to three-and-a-quarter inches long. They come mainly in brown and yellow, but can sometimes be gray, red or greenish with mossy-looking spots that help them stay camouflaged. Notably, its belly and bottom half of its back legs are yellow, giving the frog its moniker.

    
A zoo-keeper wearing rubber gloves and an LA City employee shirt holds a clear tupperware container with frogs inside. He is also equipped for the hike with a hat, backpack and radio, and stands in front of thick brush of trees and a mini waterfall leading into a stream.
    LA Zoo animal keeper Sam Abundis releases the southern mountain yellow-legged frogs
    (
    Photo Courtesy of LA Zoo
    )

    Coming back from near extinction

    Currently protected under the California Endangered Species Act, the southern mountain yellow-legged frog is close to being extinct, with just a couple hundreds in existence before the U.S. Geological Survey enlisted the L.A. Zoo to spearhead a breeding program to help restore their population in the San Gabriels.

    Recchio said myriad of factors contributed to their decline: habitat loss, chemical pollutants, climate change — including more severe drought and wildfire — invasive species, and a fungus that’s killing amphibians around the world.

    How you can help your frog neighbor

    • If you fish in the San Gabriels, do not move rainbow trout from one pond to another— it may be a location reserved for frog recovery. 
    • Don't leave trash in the mountains.
    • Don’t disturb mountain habitat.

    The frog is native to narrow ponds and streams above 5,000 feet where heavy snowfall is common in the winter. They are endemic to the San Gabriel, San Jacinto, and San Bernardino mountains, as well as the southern Sierra Nevadas.

      Four southern mountain yellow-legged frogs sit on a rock in a stream. They are varying shades of yellowish brown with dark spots on the top side of their bodies.
      Southern mountain yellow-legged frogs, chilling in their native habitat
      (
      Courtesy of Adam Backlin/U.S. Geological Survey
      )

      Recchio said if you want to spot a southern mountain yellow-legged frog for yourself, “best of luck to you in the wild right now, because [they are in a] very remote and hard to get to places and [they’re] extraordinarily rare.”

      But he added while conservationists work to restore their populations, you can see them on exhibit at the L.A. Zoo until November, when the frogs will be moved to their breeding center to create more offspring for future release.

    • Law targets agents' mask use in immigration sweeps
      Gregory Bovino, chief of the Border Patrol’s El Centro sector, marches with federal agents after they made a show of force outside the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles, where Gov. Gavin Newsom was holding a redistricting news conference Thursday. The agents carry weapons and wear tactical gear and face masks.
      Gregory Bovino, chief of the Border Patrol’s El Centro sector, marches with masked federal agents after they made a show of force outside the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles, where Gov. Gavin Newsom was holding a redistricting news conference last year.

      Topline:

      A federal judge today temporarily blocked California from enforcing a new law that would have banned federal immigration agents from wearing masks during immigration sweeps.

      About the decision: U.S. District Judge Christina Snyder ruled that the state could not enforce the facial-covering provision of SB 627, the No Secret Police Act, while a legal challenge brought by the federal government moved forward. That lawsuit argued that SB 627 conflicted with federal authority and would improperly limit how federal agents could do their jobs.

      What's next: The ruling still required enforcement of SB 627 and SB 805’s remaining provisions, including that officers identify themselves. It also protected the pathway for civilians to directly sue agents for misconduct. This temporary order will remain in effect until the federal case is resolved.

      A federal judge on Monday temporarily blocked California from enforcing a new law that would have banned federal immigration agents from wearing masks during immigration sweeps.

      U.S. District Judge Christina Snyder ruled that the state could not enforce the facial-covering provision of SB 627, the No Secret Police Act, while a legal challenge brought by the federal government moved forward. That lawsuit argued that SB 627 conflicted with federal authority and would improperly limit how federal agents could do their jobs.

      The backstory

      The law banning facial coverings took effect Jan. 1 and had already sparked confusion and backlash in Los Angeles after Los Angeles Police Department Chief Jim McDonnell said officers would not enforce the ban. McDonnell called the law bad policy and said enforcing it could put officers and the public at risk.

      McDonnell’s statements drew sharp criticism from local elected officials, the authors of the laws, and immigration law attorneys and advocates.

      The federal government sued California last year, arguing that SB 627 and a second law, SB 805, known as the No Vigilantes Act, unlawfully interfered with federal immigration enforcement. SB 627 sought, in part, to make it illegal for most officers, including federal agents, to conduct law enforcement operations while wearing masks. SB 805, in part, required agents to identify themselves.

      About the ruling

      Snyder ruled that the mask ban inconsistently applied to some law enforcement officers and not others, which is one of the reasons why the judge temporarily blocked it.

      Federal attorneys had argued that agents should be allowed to wear masks for their safety against harassment and assault, such as doxxing. Snyder disagreed, writing that while federal agents and other public figures face security risks, masks were not essential for performing their duties.

      “Security concerns exist for federal law enforcement officers with and without masks,” Snyder wrote. “If anything, the Court finds that the presence of masked and unidentifiable individuals, including law enforcement, is more likely to heighten the sense of insecurity for all.”

      Reaction to the ruling

      One of the law’s authors, Sen. Scott Wiener, D-San Francisco, announced Monday afternoon that he would be introducing new legislation aimed at revising the original law to apply to state officers it previously exempted. He characterized the ruling as a win and vowed to continue efforts to unmask federal agents.

      “Now that the Court has made clear that state officers must be included, I am immediately introducing new legislation to include state officers,” Wiener said in a prepared statement, adding: “We will unmask these thugs and hold them accountable. Full stop.”

      What's next

      Monday’s ruling still required enforcement of SB 627 and SB 805’s remaining provisions, including that officers identify themselves. It also protected the pathway for civilians to directly sue agents for misconduct.

      This temporary order will remain in effect until the federal case is resolved. The Department of Homeland Security did not immediately respond to requests for comment. This story will update if it does.

    • LA County ID's ZIP codes hit hardest in new report
      A city skyline shows a row of tall buildings with clouds in the distant.
      A new report from L.A. County offers a closer look at the economic damage to the region caused by federal immigration enforcement.

      Topline:

      A new report from L.A. County offers a closer look at the economic damage to the region caused by federal immigration enforcement — and at the neighborhoods most affected.

      Where is the report from? The analysis was compiled by the Los Angeles County Department of Economic Opportunity and Los Angeles County Economic Development Corporation. The report lays out the ripple effect of that campaign on communities, local businesses, and workers, and its uneven influence on the region as a whole.

      What were some of the findings? Researchers determined that the most targeted ZIP code in the county is 91402, which spans Mission Hills, Panorama City and North Hills in the San Fernando Valley.

      Background: The Department of Homeland Security has detained more than 10,000 people in the L.A.-area since June, according to numbers released in December. Its aggressive deportation campaign has altered daily life in Los Angeles, where nearly one in five people is undocumented or lives with someone who is undocumented.

      Read on… for how small businesses have experienced in the wake of the ongoing ICE raids.

      A new report from L.A. County offers a closer look at the economic damage to the region caused by federal immigration enforcement — and at the neighborhoods most affected.

      The analysis, compiled by the Los Angeles County Department of Economic Opportunity and Los Angeles County Economic Development Corporation, identified the neighborhoods hardest hit by ICE, and found that they were more economically precarious.

      Researchers determined that the most targeted ZIP code in the county is 91402, which spans Mission Hills, Panorama City and North Hills in the San Fernando Valley.

      The report, which was commissioned by the county Board of Supervisors, also found that many small businesses county-wide have lost revenue and customers since ICE ramped up its presence in Los Angeles last year.

      The Department of Homeland Security has detained more than 10,000 people in the L.A.-area since June, according to numbers released in December. Its aggressive deportation campaign has altered daily life in Los Angeles, where nearly one in five people is undocumented or lives with someone who is undocumented.

      The report lays out the ripple effect of that campaign on communities, local businesses, and workers, and its uneven influence on the region as a whole.

      Vulnerable neighborhoods

      The report lays out the economic consequences for communities repeatedly hit by ICE sweeps.

      The Los Angeles County Economic Development Corporation, a nonprofit research group, used census data and reports on detentions from the Los Angeles Rapid Response Network to assess how vulnerable each L.A. County ZIP code was to immigration enforcement.

      Researchers looked at four other factors for each ZIP code: shares of foreign-born population from Latin America, renter households, Spanish-speaking households and non-citizen workforce.

      The 10 most vulnerable ZIP codes, they determined, are primarily in working class, immigrant neighborhoods including Bell, Pico Rivera and Southeast L.A.

      Researchers used employment data for the county and found that those ZIP codes were over-represented in industries, including manufacturing and retail, which have a significant number of undocumented workers. Businesses in these neighborhoods also tended to have fewer employees on average compared to the rest of the county, and employees were paid less.

      "Taken together, these exhibits show that areas facing heightened immigration enforcement differ from the rest of Los Angeles County and appear more economically vulnerable," the report states.

      Declined revenue, less foot traffic

      Researchers also distributed a survey to small businesses county-wide to assess how federal immigration enforcement has affected the communities they operate in and their bottom lines since summer.

      More than 200 small businesses responded. Most reported having fewer than 10 employees, and the majority were in industries like restaurants, retail, professional or personal services and manufacturing.

      The majority of respondents — 82% — reported being negatively affected by federal immigration enforcement. Around half reported lost regular customers, less foot traffic or reduced daily sales. Around a quarter reported temporary closures due to concerns from community members.

      Many surveyed business owners reported a climate of fear that has led people to stay home and avoid certain places altogether.

      "Businesses reported that customers expressed fear about their location, that customers asked about safety in the neighborhood, and that customers avoided shopping or dining in their neighborhood," the report states.

      Undocumented workers generate 17% of county's economic activity

      No corner of Los Angeles is exempt to the ongoing immigration sweeps that have become a new reality for the region. Nearly 950,000 undocumented immigrants live in L.A. County, according to recent estimates. That's more than 9% of people in the county who lack legal status.

      Undocumented workers also play a huge role in many of L.A.'s key industries. Recent research from the USC Equity Research Institute estimates that 37% of cleaning and maintenance workers and 25% of food preparation and service workers in L.A. County are undocumented.

      The industry with the highest percentage of undocumented workers is construction, at 40%.

      The county's undocumented population together generates just under $240 billion in economic output, according to the county's report. That's around 17% of the county's total economic activity.

    • Teachers, parents urged board to delay cuts
      A man with medium-light skin tone stands at the front of a classroom. In the foreground there are two young girls with long hair facing toward the front of the room.
      Los Angeles Unified is the second-largest employer in L.A. County with more than 83,000 employees in the 2025-26 school year.

      Topline:

      The Los Angeles Unified School District rescheduled a Tuesday meeting where the board was expected to vote on layoffs as part of a larger plan to cut spending. Educators and parents have urged district leaders to delay the vote.

      Why delay? “The district has adjusted the date of the upcoming board meeting to ensure adequate time for preparation, public engagement, and responsible deliberation on items of significant impact and interest to our workforce and community,” an LAUSD spokesperson wrote in a statement to LAist. The statement said the proposed reduction in force would be presented at a “future meeting.” Tuesday’s meeting is currently re-scheduled for Feb. 17.

      The backstory: For the last two years, the district has relied on reserves to backfill a multi-billion-dollar deficit. There are more than 40% fewer students compared to the early 2000s and the district has not closed schools or significantly reduced staff as costs have increased. LAUSD hired more staff to support students during the pandemic, but the federal relief dollars that initially funded those positions are gone.

      What are the cuts? The district’s fiscal stabilization plan proposes layoffs in those “un-funded” positions, central office staff and at schools that support higher needs students.

      Unions push back: In a Friday letter, the unions representing LAUSD teachers, support staff and principals asked the board to delay the RIF vote until there is more information available about state funding and the public has more time to understand the proposed cuts. “The notion that these are dark times for education requiring harmful cuts when there are record high state revenues is fearmongering,” the letter states.

      The Los Angeles Unified School District rescheduled a Tuesday meeting where the board was expected to vote on layoffs as part of a larger plan to cut spending.

      “The district has adjusted the date of the upcoming board meeting to ensure adequate time for preparation, public engagement, and responsible deliberation on items of significant impact and interest to our workforce and community,” an LAUSD spokesperson wrote in a statement to LAist.

      They wrote the proposed reduction in force would be presented at a “future meeting.” Tuesday’s meeting is currently re-scheduled for Tuesday, Feb. 17.

      In a Friday letter, the unions representing LAUSD teachers, support staff and principals asked the board to delay the RIF vote until there is more information available about state funding and the public has more time to understand the proposed cuts.

      “The notion that these are dark times for education requiring harmful cuts when there are record high state revenues is fearmongering,” the letter reads.

      LAUSD's financial challenges

      For the last two years, the district has relied on reserves to backfill a multi-billion-dollar deficit. There are more than 40% fewer students compared to the early 2000s and the district has not closed schools or significantly reduced staff as costs have increased. LAUSD hired more staff to support students during the pandemic, but the federal relief dollars that initially funded those positions are gone.

      The layoff vote is part of a $1.4 billion “fiscal stabilization plan.” Reductions in force are proposed for several categories including “un-funded” positions, central office staff, and at schools that support higher needs students.

      LAUSD must vote on the reduction in force before March 15, the deadline for California school districts to notify staff they may be laid off.

       “It is not a foregone conclusion that people will lose jobs,” said Superintendent Alberto Carvalho at a Jan. 20 board meeting. For example, he said staff may be reassigned to vacant positions or given the opportunity to transfer to another school.

      Where are the plan details?

      Several board members pressed LAUSD staff for more details at the same meeting.

      “When are we going to know the central office reductions? When are we going to know how many of those [there] are?” Board Member Karla Griego asked. “In a couple of weeks, I hope.”

      “No, sooner,” responded Chief Financial Officer Saman Bravo-Karimi. Bravo-Karimi said the board would be provided with the number of positions impacted and their job classifications.

      LAist requested information about the proposed layoffs last week and was told by a district spokesperson that the information would not be available until the board materials were publicly posted.

      California’s Brown Act requires public agencies, including school districts, to post information about their regular meetings, including a description of each matter to be discussed, at least 72 hours in advance. Some agencies opt to publish the information even earlier.

      No materials related to the Feb. 10 meeting were posted by that 72-hour deadline, and the meeting was rescheduled Sunday.

      LAist reached out to Board President Scott Schmerelson to discuss the delayed meeting but has not received a response as of Monday evening.

      Weigh in on LAUSD’s planned layoffs

      The next meeting where the board could vote on the layoff proposal is Tuesday, Feb. 17. The agenda for the meeting must be publicly posted by Saturday, Feb. 14 at 10 a.m.— 72 hours before the start of the meeting. Sign up to get the agendas emailed here.

      Find Your LAUSD Board Member

      LAUSD board members can amplify concerns from parents, students and educators. Find your representative below.

      District 1 includes Mid City, parts of South L.A. (map)
      Board member: Sherlett Hendy Newbill
      Email: BoardDistrict1@lausd.net
      Call: (213) 241-6382 (central office); (323) 298-3411 (field office)

      District 2 includes Downtown, East L.A. (map)
      Board member: Rocío Rivas
      Email: rocio.rivas@lausd.net
      Call: (213) 241-6020

      District 3 includes West San Fernando Valley, North Hollywood (map)
      Board member: Scott Schmerelson
      Email: scott.schmerelson@lausd.net
      Call: (213) 241-8333

      District 4 includes West Hollywood, some beach cities (map)
      Board member: Nick Melvoin 
      Email: nick.melvoin@lausd.net
      Call: (213) 241-6387

      District 5 includes parts of Northeast and Southwest L.A. (map)
      Board Member: Karla Griego
      Email: district5@lausd.net
      Call: (213) 241-1000

      District 6 includes East San Fernando Valley (map)
      Board Member: Kelly Gonez
      Email: kelly.gonez@lausd.net
      Call: (213) 241-6388

      District 7 includes South L.A. and parts of the South Bay (map)
      Board Member: Tanya Ortiz Franklin
      Email: tanya.franklin@lausd.net
      Call: (213) 241-6385

    • LA County is considering half cent bump
      A woman with medium-dark skin tone with dreadlocked hair in a bun wearing a green shirt as she speaks from a dais sitting in a cream colored chair.
      A proposal from Los Angeles County Supervisor Holly Mitchell is meant to make up for some federal funding cuts, most of which were to the county's healthcare system.

      Topline:

      The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday will consider a proposal to place a plan on the ballot that, if passed, would raise the sales tax by half a cent to address federal funding cuts. The increase would bump the county’s sales tax to 10.25% — the highest allowed by state law.

      The backstory: L.A. County faces projected losses of $2.4 billion over the next three years as a result of President Donald Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill,” most of it to the county’s healthcare system. In just four months following the bill’s signing, the county lost an average of 1,000 people per day from Medi-Cal enrollment — over 120,000 people between July and November 2025, according to Supervisor Holly Mitchell.

      Children hit hard: During the same four-month period, more than 27,000 children under age 18 lost their Medi-Cal coverage, equating to nearly 200 children per day, according to Mitchell. The county also lost more than 70,000 CalFresh enrollees receiving food assistance, including approximately 27,000 who were children under age 18.

      Temporary tax: Under Mitchell’s proposal, which must be approved by voters, the sales tax would raise $1 billion a year and expire in five years. Mitchell is proposing to place the measure on the June ballot.