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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • The newest "ride" at the OC Fair isn't even a ride
    A bright orange Garibaldi fish swims above some kind of structure covered in sea life. In the background are steel beams underwater and more fish.
    A glimpse of the ecosystem that thrives underneath an offshore oil rig.

    Topline:

    At this year's OC Fair, one of the most unique rides isn't a ride at all. It's a virtual plunge 100 ft. below the surface of the Pacific Ocean, and under one of California's offshore oil platforms, to view the abundance of life there.

    Why now: The environmental group Orange County Coastkeeper is sponsoring the free virtual reality dives at the fair. Their goal is to educate the public about the prospects of the state's offshore drilling platforms, once they're no longer pumping oil. The VR experience gives fair visitors a front row seat to one of the most productive ecosystems on the planet.

    Why it matters: There are 27 oil and gas platforms off the coast of Southern California, in state and federal waters. Some are as deep as the Eiffel Tower is tall. Most of these platforms are nearing the end of their lifespan. They will soon need to be shut down and either fully or partially removed.

    'Rigs to reefs' proposal: Environmental groups are split on what should be done with the aging platforms, with some supporting full removal from the ocean. On the other side, O.C. Coastkeeper president Garry Brown highlights the thriving community of fish and other sea life that has developed in and around the massive platforms.

    At this year's OC Fair, one of the most unique rides isn't a ride at all. It's a virtual plunge 100 ft. below the surface of the Pacific Ocean.

    Listen 0:48
    The OC Fair's newest 'ride' is a virtual dive under the sea

    The free, virtual reality experience is hosted by the environmental group Orange County Coastkeeper as a way to educate the public about the thriving sea life underneath Southern California's offshore oil platforms.

    The future of the coast's 27 aging oil platforms — all of them off of Southern California — is TBD. Removing them completely, especially the ones that rival, in depth, some of the world's tallest buildings, is a herculean task.

    But some see a potential for preserving them as habitat for fish and other sea life.

    "An unintended consequence that nobody really planned on was that these oil platforms would become reefs and basically be the habitats to literally hundreds of species of fish in different levels of the platform," said Garry Brown, founder and president of Orange County Coastkeeper.

    At left, a guy in a black ballcap and teal shirt kneels in front of a wall covered in photos of sea life. To his right, a girl and a woman sit on chairs with white VR sets over their eyes.
    Orange County Coastkeeper's Matt Sylvester, left, helps visitors at the OC Fair take a virtual dive underneath an offshore oil platform.
    (
    Jill Replogle
    /
    LAist
    )

    Tell me about the virtual dive

    At the fair exhibit, visitors are invited to sit in a row of plastic chairs while a Coastkeeper staffer fits a VR set around your head. The video starts and we're headed toward an oil platform that the narrator says is eight miles off the coast of Long Beach. Soon, we plunge below the dark blue surface next to a massive steel structure that looks like a spaceship, known as the "jacket" of the oil rig.

    How to take a virtual dive at the OC Fair

    Where? Sand and Sea Exhibit, OC Promenade at the OC Fairgrounds, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa

    When? Noon to 6 p.m. every day of the fair, which runs through Aug. 18.

    Cost: Free!

    Now underwater, sea lions dive and dart away. Schools of fish — halfmoon and blacksmith — swirl around the steel legs of the oil rig.

    A box in a corner of the screen records our virtual depth, 15 ft., then 60 ft., then 100 ft. down. Natural light fades but lights held by divers illuminate steel beams covered in pink, orange, and white clusters of sea life — anemone and corynactis, another invertebrate.

    A school of mid-sized silvery fish swim around upright, steel structures underwater.
    Rudderfish swimming near an offshore oil platform.
    (
    Courtesy: Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Bob Wohlers
    )

    On our way back up to the surface, a cormorant propels itself underneath one of the beams, on a deep dive for fish.

    "It was so cool," said 11-year-old Leyla, from Lake Arrowhead, after taking off her VR set, "like I was actually there."

    What is happening with California's offshore platforms?

    The future of these hybrid natural-artificial ecosystems is unclear at this point. Production has slowed to a trickle at many of the oil and gas platforms off the coast of California, and they'll soon need to be decommissioned, in other words, taken out of production.

    The private companies that own the platforms are responsible for capping wells, cleaning up, and completely removing all of the infrastructure used for offshore drilling. But the cost of doing this, especially for the deepest platforms, are "astronomical," Coastkeeper's Brown said. The process of decommissioning has only recently begun on several platforms off the California coast.

    Some of the platforms are taller than the Eiffel Tower and the Empire State Building — stretching more than 1,000 ft. to the ocean floor. Taking them out would require cutting them into pieces and hauling them on barges across the ocean for cleaning and recycling.

    "You would have to have an armada of work boats and ships, and what is the carbon footprint of that?" Brown asked.

    A large oil platform, with towers, cranes and multi-level structures, sits in the middle of the ocean.
    The Platform Eureka, located off the coast of Long Beach.
    (
    Courtesy: Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
    )

    So can these retired rigs work as reefs?

    Marine biologist Amber Sparks studied the fish and other species that accumulate around oil platforms as a graduate student researcher at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography. "What we found is the platforms in California are these incredibly productive ecosystems, some of the most productive ecosystems on the planet," she said. "It just totally blew our minds."

    Sparks later co-founded a company, Blue Latitudes, to help oil firms and other clients assess the potential for "reefing" their platforms. (There's also a nonprofit research and education wing, Blue Latitudes Foundation.)

    Some research has found that leaving at least some portion of oil rigs in the water would be much more cost effective than trying to remove them completely. A 2020 study co-authored by a former U.S. Department of the Interior official found that removing just the top sections of the 23 platforms in federal waters off California (the other four are in state waters), and leaving the bottom sections as artificial reefs, could save up to $2 billion. Under California law, much of that cost saving would be given to the state.

    But Sparks said the idea of letting the remnants of offshore oil pumping remain in the ocean, indefinitely, can be a touchy subject, especially in environmentally minded California. "It's not the typical 'save the whales' situation," she said. "How do I sit down with my grandmother and explain this could really be a good thing for the state?"

    Some environmental groups, like Greenpeace, have taken the position that converting rigs to reefs lets oil companies off the hook for cleaning up.

    Why 'rigs to reefs' is stalled in California

    California has a law in place, AB 2503, passed in 2010, that would authorize the state Department of Fish and Game (now the Department of Fish and Wildlife) to take over offshore platforms once they stop operating and convert them to artificial reefs. But it's never been implemented, in part, Sparks said, because it fails to clearly delineate responsibilities and liabilities between the oil companies and government agencies.

    In the meantime, according to Brown from O.C. Coastkeeper, some of the companies that own or lease the platforms are "slow pumping" oil in order to avoid the cost of decommissioning.

    State Sen. Dave Min has sought to force the issue, at least for the three platforms in state waters, by introducing legislation that would terminate the remaining leases for offshore drilling.

    Min said the smaller oil companies that now drill off the California coast have little incentive to invest in safety or other infrastructure because there's not much left to drill. He said his legislation was inspired by the 2021 oil spill off Huntington Beach.

    "They really are ticking time bombs at this point," he said of California's offshore oil platforms. Min said mandating the decommissioning of oil platforms would give the state leverage in discussions with the operating companies about how to clean up the rigs and, if possible, convert them to reefs.

    "I think they'd be more likely to do rigs to reef if they felt like they would be on the hook for the full cost of cleanup," Min said of oil companies.

    But Min's legislation didn't get far. Now he's running for Congress in November.

    Brown said the VR experience at the OC Fair is an effort to educate the public about the uncertain future of California's offshore oil rigs, and what's at stake for the underwater ecosystems that have grown up around them.

    "Any way we can stimulate the conversation to keep moving forward with this," Brown said. "If we do nothing, then someday we're going to open up the newspaper and there's going to be a big major oil spill and major damage done."

  • Allegations made against former IT employee
    A street sign reading "300 S Beaudry Av" on a light pole in front of a massive office building
    FILE - Though the building's actual name is simply the L.A. Unified School District Administrative Headquarters, most people refer to the office as "Beaudry" after its address on Beaudry Avenue.

    Topline:

    The L.A. County District Attorney alleges a former Los Angeles Unified information technology employee illegally helped a tech company win more than $22 million in district contracts. Prosecutors say the case is “one of the largest money laundering schemes” in the district’s history.

    The charges: According to the complaint, between 2018 and 2022 Hong “Grace” Peng worked in LAUSD’s IT department and participated in the approval and recommendation of over $22 million in payments to Innive Inc. for services primarily related to the district’s student data system. In the same time period, prosecutors allege Innive CEO Gautham Sampath paid Peng over $3 million.

    Why now: According to the complaint, the district first became aware of the alleged scheme in 2022, when an LAUSD IT employee attended a conference and learned from a former colleague of a possible connection between Peng and Sampath. The district employee alerted a supervisor, who alerted the district's inspector general.

    A district spokesperson sent LAist a statement Thursday saying staff will continue to participate in the investigation “as appropriate.”

    What's next: Prosecutors charged Sampath with felony counts related to money laundering, “having a financial interest in a contract or purchase made in an official capacity” and “aiding and abetting a government official to have a financial interest in a contract or purchase” made in an official capacity. Peng faces two felony counts— one related to money laundering and the other with “having a financial interest in a contract or purchase made in an official capacity.” LAist has reached out to both Peng and Sampath. Peng said she had no comment. The court issued warrants for Peng and Sampath’s arrests and bail was set at $500,000 for each.

    The L.A. County District Attorney alleges a former Los Angeles Unified information technology employee illegally helped a tech company win more than $22 million in district contracts. Prosecutors say the case is “one of the largest money laundering schemes” in the district’s history.

    According to the complaint, between 2018 and 2022 Hong “Grace” Peng worked in LAUSD’s IT department and participated in the approval and recommendation of over $22 million in payments to Innive Inc. for services primarily related to the district’s student data system. In the same time period, prosecutors allege Innive CEO Gautham Sampath paid Peng over $3 million.

    “This is the type of evidence that you just shake your head, like you can’t believe it,” said District Attorney Nathan Hochman in a recorded statement about the case.

    Hochman presented multiple text messages where Peng and Sampath discussed Innive’s contracts with the district. In one, Peng said Sampath was “lucky” she was on a selection committee. When he asked why, she responded "Because you have me...lol...I broke all law for you already lol."

    How did this get uncovered?

    According to the complaint, the district first became aware of the alleged scheme in 2022, when an LAUSD IT employee attended a conference and learned from a former colleague of a possible connection between Peng and Sampath. The district employee alerted a supervisor, who alerted the district's inspector general.

    A district spokesperson sent LAist a statement Thursday saying staff will continue to participate in the investigation “as appropriate.”

    “We will not comment further on the specifics of the case while legal proceedings are ongoing,” the statement read.

    What happens now?

    Prosecutors charged Sampath with felony counts related to money laundering, “having a financial interest in a contract or purchase made in an official capacity” and “aiding and abetting a government official to have a financial interest in a contract or purchase” made in an official capacity. Peng faces two felony counts — one related to money laundering and the other with “having a financial interest in a contract or purchase made in an official capacity.”

    LAist has reached out to both Peng and Sampath. Peng said she had no comment.

    The court issued warrants for Peng and Sampath’s arrests and bail was set at $500,000 for each.

  • Sponsored message
  • Metro Board approved route, mostly.
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    The extension would link to cultural hubs, including the Museum District and Hollywood Bowl, major employers such as Cedars Sinai Medical Center and queer nightlife along Santa Monica and Sunset boulevards.

    Topline:

    The Los Angeles Metro Board approved on Thursday the agency staff-recommended route of the K Line Northern extension with an amendment. The amendment calls for additional study of tunneling under Mid-City to inform what that section of the train ends up looking like.

    The extension: The K Line currently runs from Redondo Beach to Crenshaw and stops at the LAX/Metro Transit Center. Earlier in March, Metro officials recommended a nearly 10-mile route for the train to continue north through Mid-City and West Hollywood and terminate at the Hollywood Bowl.

    No delays: Metro staff, L.A. County Supervisor Lindsey Horvath and Mayor Karen Bass assured the public Thursday that the approved amendment won’t delay the project, including the city of West Hollywood and L.A. County’s joint plan to potentially front billions of dollars to kickstart the project without raising taxes.

    Read on … to see how a compromise was reached.

    The Los Angeles Metro Board approved on Thursday the agency staff-recommended route of the K Line Northern extension with an amendment.

    The amendment calls for additional study of tunneling under Mid-City to inform what that section of the train ends up looking like.

    The amendment was billed as a compromise in a political push-and-pull that continued into early Thursday morning between unabashed supporters of the route, including the city of West Hollywood, L.A. County Supervisor Lindsey Horvath and L.A. Mayor Karen Bass, who has tried to appease persistent concerns over the project's impact on residents of the Lafayette Square neighborhood.

    “ I am very optimistic, and I'm very pleased that we got to an agreement so that we can all move together jointly,” West Hollywood Mayor John Heilman said to LAist in an interview before the vote.

    Metro staff, Horvath and Bass assured the public Thursday that the approved amendment won’t delay the project, including the city of West Hollywood and L.A. County’s joint plan to potentially front billions of dollars to kickstart the project without raising taxes.

    “[The amendment] explicitly ensures that continued study, engagement and refinement in the Mid-City segment will proceed without scheduling, cost or job impacts,” Bass said about the amendment during the meeting.

    The amendment was unanimously approved in an 11-0 vote. Metro Board Directors Jacquelyn Dupont-Walker and Holly Mitchell recused themselves since they own property in proximity to the proposed extension.

    A woman with light skin tone and ginger hair wearing black-rimmed glasses stands behind a dais with sign that reads 'Lindsey P. Horvath/ Third District."
    Los Angeles County Supervisor Lindsey Horvath has championed the K Line Northern Extension.
    (
    Samanta Helou Hernandez
    /
    LAist
    )

    The low-down on the extension

    The K Line currently runs from Redondo Beach to Crenshaw and stops at the LAX/Metro Transit Center. Earlier in March, Metro officials recommended a nearly 10-mile route for the train to continue north through Mid City and West Hollywood and terminate at the Hollywood Bowl.

    The route would connect to the D Line in Wilshire and the B Line in Hollywood, closing a north-south gap that currently exists in Metro’s rail network. The extension would link to cultural hubs, including the Museum District and Hollywood Bowl, major employers such as Cedars Sinai Medical Center and queer nightlife along Santa Monica and Sunset boulevards.

    According to Metro staff estimates, the route that was mostly approved today would serve the highest number of riders and reach the most residents and jobs compared to other alternatives studied.

    You can read more about the specifics and the lead up to Thursday’s vote in our earlier coverage.

    Didn’t Metro already study tunneling in Mid-City?

    Lafayette Square residents have for years expressed fears over the effects of tunneling on property values, noise and vibration.

    Based on the concerns, the Metro Board directed agency staff in October 2024 to do further analysis and community outreach. That work, which cost an additional $2.3 million, involved studying 12 different route options through Mid-City and concluded that tunneling will be deep enough to zero out any surface-level disruptions.

    It’s unclear what the study prescribed by the amendment approved Thursday will materialize that hasn’t already been addressed.

    A map showing train routes. There is one route in bold and colored in pink. It shows a train route from Torrance, in the southern part of L.A. County, running through LAX, Crenshaw, Mid-City and into Hollywood.
    Once fully built out, the K Line will run from the South Bay to Hollywood.
    (
    L.A. Metro
    )

    What happens now?

    Thursday’s affirmative vote was necessary before the city of West Hollywood and L.A. County pursue a plan to capture a certain proportion of future property tax growth in a defined area near the project and funnel it towards construction. Critically, this plan wouldn’t involve raising taxes.

    “Every time a property is redeveloped or sold, it adds to that increment, which adds to the amount of money that you can raise,” Eli Lipmen, head of transit advocacy group Move LA and supporter of the Metro-recommended route for the extension, said to LAist last week.

    Now that the board green-lit the route, West Hollywood City Council and the L.A. County Board of Supervisors will pursue creating the district within which property tax growth could be captured.

    The completion of that legislative work will trigger a 12- month clock to conduct the additional Mid-City tunneling study and finalize the route there.

    It’s all about compromise

    A draft version of the amendment that circulated earlier this week did not include the 12-month time cap on the additional analysis, which raised a red flag for the city of West Hollywood.

    “If additional outreach and technical work must be done … it should be capped at a reasonable maximum duration to prevent further delays,” Heilman and City Councilmember Chelsea Byers wrote in a Wednesday letter to the Board.

    Heilman said he worked through Wednesday night and into Thursday morning with Horvath and Metro and Bass’ staff toward the amendment that the Board approved.

    Today’s vote isn’t final project approval, and it will return back to the Metro Board several more times before shovels hit the ground.

    The projected cost of the train is fluid until the Mid-City section is finalized. However, earlier estimates had the staff-recommended route for the train extension coming in at around $15 billion. Measure M, the half-cent sales tax county voters approved a decade ago, includes more than $2 billion for the project.

    Those funds won’t be available until the 2040s, but the financing plan that West Hollywood and the county are pursuing could expedite the release of that money and construction.

    A train breaks through a banner reading "Now arriving... The K!" The banner is held by two Metro staff members.
    The current Metro K Line train opened to the public on October 7, 2022.
    (
    Raquel Natalicchio
    /
    for LAist
    )

    K Line Northern Extension elicited historic feedback from community

    Public officials said the K Line Northern extension was an extraordinary display of community passion and pressure.

    Inglewood Mayor James Butts, who sits on the Metro Board and was listed as a co-author on the draft amendment, said he received “767 emails from West Hollywood.”

    “I applaud you,” Butts said during the meeting. “You guys are the strongest advocacy group I’ve seen in 54 years of municipal service.”

  • Eat out with loved ones for under $100 per person
    Four champagne glasses are lined up on a brown striped runner. One contains a green colored-drink, another is yellow, and two are orange.
    Pastels, pastels everywhere... it must be Easter time!

    Topline:

    Topline: This year, spring for a great brunch under $100 per person. Family-friendly fêtes feature egg hunts and face painting, or you can keep it calm and classy with live harp music and egg-centric cocktails.

    What’s on the menu: Smoked deviled eggs with caviar, seven-hour roasted leg of lamb or Grand Marnier-infused French toast

    Why now: There’s never a better time to celebrate new beginnings with family and friends.

    The days are getting longer and there's way more pastel out there — yes, it's Easter Sunday on April 5. You may be thinking about getting together with friends and family, so here's a list of the best Easter brunches under $100 per person that your whole fluffle will love.

    (In case you didn’t know, a fluffle is an adorable way to say a group of bunnies, so rabbits just got even cuter.)

    The London West Hollywood at Beverly Hills (West Hollywood)

    A delicious looking brunch is set out on a white tablecloth, with different drinks in tall glasses, and plates of food, and a vase full of pink tulips in the middle. A white bunny cookie rounds out the picture.
    Celebrate Spring with a lively Easter brunch.
    (
    Courtesy The London West Hollywood at Beverly Hills
    )

    The London West Hollywood at Beverly Hills is hosting a Rooftop Easter Brunch & Egg Hunt when you visit the hotel on Easter weekend.

    The menu for Easter Sunday is à la carte and includes crab toast green papaya ($24), lemon ricotta hotcakes ($26), and wood charred spring lamb ($48), among others. Guests with brunch reservations can also enjoy a visit from the Easter Bunny, cookie decorating on the rooftop, plus an egg hunt at 9:30 a.m. or 12:30 p.m. for the kids. Meanwhile, adults can take a ride on the London rooftop Bloody Mary trolley ($26).

    Make your reservations on OpenTable

    • Location: 1020 N. San Vicente Blvd., West Hollywood
      Hours: Brunch is from 10:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. 

    LouLou Santa Monica (Santa Monica)

    Four champagne glasses are lined up on a brown striped runner. One contains a green colored-drink, another is yellow, and two are orange.
    The Easter-themed champagne flight at LouLou.
    (
    Courtesy LouLou
    )

    Perched atop the Santa Monica Place mall is Lou Lou, a French-inspired rooftop spot known for live DJs, drag shows, and more.

    For Easter, they're offering an unlimited brunch buffet ($75), including “Le Gigot D’agneau,” a seven-hour roasted leg of lamb, along with dauphine potatoes, flageolet beans, and deviled eggs. Easter-themed cocktails will also be available. Entertainment includes Live DJ Music and a visit from the Lapin himself.

    Make your reservations on OpenTable. Parking is FREE for 90 minutes in the surrounding structures.

    • Location: 395 Santa Monica Place #300, Santa Monica
      Hours: Brunch is available from 11:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. 

    Rooftop of the Wayfarer Hotel (DTLA)

    A roof top has an array of dark pink colored sofas, all around tables laid with blue glasses and tableware. In the background, the sunset is reflected in a series of skyscrapers
    The view from the Wayfarer hotel rooftop.
    (
    Courtesy Wayfarer Hotel
    )

    Get lost in the skyline of downtown Los Angeles as you nibble Nueske’s applewood smoked bacon and plunge into buttermilk pancakes. This unlimited brunch includes glazed honey ham, roasted Pacifico sea bass, and a roasted leg of lamb with pomegranate chimichurri. Dessert includes a seasonal fruit display, mini cheesecakes, and cookies. The cost is $70 for adults and $35 for children ages 3 to 12.

    Make your reservations on OpenTable.

    • Location: 813 Flower St., Los Angeles
      Hours: Brunch is available from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. 

    The Raymond 1886 (Pasadena)

    An exterior showing a canopy of tree branches stretching over a patio with dark wooden tables and furniture is outlined through a window
    The Raymond 1886 Hotel's exterior
    (
    Courtesy The Raymond 1886
    )

    There's nothing quite like stepping back in time while dining in the craftsman-style dining room at The Raymond 1886. Whether you're outside on the patio or tucked inside a dark booth, it's hard not to feel right at home. Easter specials include a pastry and fruit board for the table, featuring everything from apple coffee cake to spinach quiche, plus seasonal fruit and berries ($40). You also can't go wrong with Grand Marnier-infused French toast ($24) or a garden omelette ($24). Brunch cocktails include familiar mimosas ($15) alongside more inventive beverages like a charred sunset cocktail with mezcal strawberry foam ($18).

    Reservations can be made on their website.

    Location: 1250 S. Fair Oaks Ave., Pasadena
    Hours: Brunch is available from 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. 

    The Portofino Hotel & Marina (Redondo Beach)

    On a patio, two tables with white tablecloths are surrounded by golden chairs; they are set for an elegant meal. Outside the open windows is a large body of water
    The view from the Portofino hotel and marina.
    (
    Courtesy The Portofino Hotel and Marina
    )

    For a truly family-friendly experience, visit The Portofino Hotel & Marina in Redondo Beach, where the Bayside Ballroom is home to your brunch. The hotel will offer two seatings for an endless dining experience, complete with pancakes and waffles, a smoked salmon station, a full charcuterie and cheese board, made-to-order omelettes, prime rib and a sweet station.

    Even more important than the food is the fun, which includes an egg hunt and face painting for the kids following the brunch. Adults also have a chance to win prizes, like an overnight stay in a junior suite. The price is $95 for adults and $45 for children under $12.

    Reservations can be made on their website.

    Location: 260 Portofino Way, Redondo Beach
    Hours: Brunch is available at 10 a.m. or 12:30 p.m. 

    Gelson's (Various)

    Focus on family instead of fixing things up, thanks to an Easter brunch at home, catered by Gelson's.

    Try a spiral-glazed ham that feeds eight ($60) or a vegetable lasagna for 12 ($75) Finish the fiesta with touches like fresh flowers ($8.99+) and smoked salmon deviled eggs with caviar ($45 for 24 pieces).

    Online ordering is already open with store pickup from April 3 to April 5. The last day to order is April 3.

    The Culver Hotel (Culver City)

    A cake stand with three tiers contains all manner of sandwiches and small cakes.
    Tea for two, or however many you'd like, at the Culver Hotel.
    (
    Courtesy Culver Hotel
    )

    The Culver Hotel will host their afternoon tea in the Grand Lobby and Crystal Room, where Easter bonnets are encouraged. Take in the sounds of a live harpist while you relish in housemade scones, chicken curry tea sandwiches, petit fours, and loose-leaf teas.

    The cost is $75 per person before adding on garden-fresh cocktails or bubbly. The hotel will also be hosting a full buffet brunch for $95 per person and $45 for children if you'd prefer a little more feasting. Face painting will be offered in the garden for children of all ages.

    Make your reservations on OpenTable for both the tea and the brunch.

    Location: 9400 Culver Blvd., Culver City
    Hours: Tea is served from 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Brunch seatings are at 11 a.m., 1 p.m., and 3 p.m. 

    Bunny Bungalows (The Grove and The Americana at Brand)

    A person in a giant white bunny costume is sitting on a white bench filled with pastel colored cushions. The bench is inside a bright white gazebo.
    Too many brunch cocktails and you'll start thinking this guy is real.

    Although not a brunch, it’s easy to curate an afternoon adventure around this family photo opportunity. The Easter Bunny is currently burrowing at the Bunny Bungalows at The Grove and The Americana at Brand. Make your reservations from now until Sunday, April 5, for VIB (very important bunny) photo packages. Caruso Members can get extra perks like petting zoo access on select days, and keep your eyes open for golden egg days, which come with $15 vouchers to select restaurants. Pricing begins at $55.

    Location:
    The Grove: 189 The Grove Drive, Los Angeles
    The Americana at Brand: 889 Americana Way, Glendale, CA 91210
    Hours: Daily hours can vary, but are generally 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. 

  • Trans athletes banned from women's sports
    A light-skinned woman with blonde hair sits behind a small black mic.
    IOC President Kirsty Coventry speaks during an IOC event ahead of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics on Feb. 1 in Milan, Italy.

    Topline:

    The International Olympic Committee will prohibit transgender athletes from participating in women's sports, starting at the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.

    Why now: The new policy, approved by the IOC's executive committee Thursday, requires all athletes to undergo a genetic test to compete in women's sporting events at the Olympics.

    Why it matters: The move comes as transgender athletes' participation in sports at all levels — from youth athletics to professional competition — faces intense scrutiny and often partisan debate including in communities in California.

    The backstory: The new Olympic policy limits participation in the women's competitions to "biological females" in order "to ensure fairness, safety and integrity in elite competition." The policy change faced immediate criticism from some women's groups and LGBTQ organizations.

    Read on ... for what what advocates are saying about the policy change.

    The International Olympic Committee will prohibit transgender athletes from participating in women's sports, starting at the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.

    The new policy, approved by the IOC's executive committee Thursday, requires all athletes to undergo a genetic test to compete in women's sporting events at the Olympics.

    The move comes as transgender athletes' participation in sports at all levels — from youth athletics to professional competition — faces intense scrutiny and often partisan debate, including in communities in California.

    "At the Olympic Games, even the smallest margins can be the difference between victory and defeat," IOC President Kirsty Coventry said today, announcing the ban. "So, it is absolutely clear that it would not be fair for biological males to compete in the female category."

    The number of transgender women competing in international sporting events like the Olympics is estimated to be tiny, according to the Williams Institute at UCLA Law, a research center focused on sexual orientation and gender identity law and public policy. The push to bar trans athletes from girls' and women's sports has picked up as a raft of new policies in the U.S. target the rights of transgender people.

    The Trump administration has ramped up efforts to keep trans athletes out of women's sports, through an executive order and legal action, including a lawsuit against California for allowing trans girls to compete in girls' school sports.

    " It is basically the IOC bowing down to the pressure on its body by the federal government, and particularly Donald Trump," said Terra Russell-Slavin with the Los Angeles LGBT Center, responding to the new policy on Thursday.

    About the new policy

    The new Olympic policy limits participation in the women's competitions to "biological females" in order "to ensure fairness, safety and integrity in elite competition."

    The IOC had previously allowed individual sports federations to set their own rules for trans athletes — but the topic became a huge focus of controversy in Paris in 2024, when conservative commentators questioned the sex of two female Olympic boxers, including gold medalist Imane Khelif, kicking off an international firestorm.

    The policy change faced immediate criticism from some women's groups and LGBTQ organizations.

    “By mandating sex testing and excluding transgender and intersex women from competition, the International Olympic Committee is embracing a policy that invites confusion, stigma and invasive scrutiny rather than clarity or safety," Brian Dittmeier, director of LGBTQI equality at the National Women’s Law Center, said in a statement.

    Dittmeier also said the decision would "trickle down" to school sports and discourage young athletes. According to a recent survey by the L.A.-based Trevor Project, less than one in three young LGBTQ people reported participating in sports. Many cited fear of discrimination as a barrier.

    The policy will require all female athletes to do an SRY gene test to determine if a "Y" chromosome is present. According to the IOC, with "rare exceptions," no athletes who test positive will be able to compete in women's sports at the Olympics.

    Groups respond to new rule

    InterACT, a group that advocates for intersex youth, said the IOC's new required genetic test discriminates against intersex athletes — athletes whose sex characteristics don't fall into the binary categories of male or female.

    "Sex testing invades all women’s privacy, forcing them to give up their personal medical and genetic information for the IOC to determine if they are 'woman enough' to compete," Erika Lorshbough, interACT’s executive director, said in a statement.

    Some groups in California celebrated the change, including the California Family Council, a conservative and religious advocacy group that is pushing the California Interscholastic Federation, California high school's governing body for sports, to ban trans youth from girls' sports.

    "We're going to see that reflected in the Olympics, which will be coming up in L.A.," Sophia Lorey with California Family Council said in a video on Instagram about the IOC's new policy. "So it's going to be interesting to see how this plays out."

    Russell-Slavin with the L.A. LGBT Center said Olympic organizers and local politicians should respond to the ban by affirming their support for trans people in Los Angeles.

    " The fact that the policy will be implemented for the first time in Los Angeles is also at direct odds with our values as a city," she said. "I feel very clearly that one of the things that makes Los Angeles so great is our diversity and our inclusion, and this is the opposite."