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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • L.A. artist ‘adopts’ Topanga landslide
    TOPANGA DIRT ART
    Metabolic Studio project manager Kelly Majewski atop "Topanga Mountain," the largest portion of landslide soil that resides at Metabolic Studio's Undevelopment One, known as "The Moon," on the east bank of the L.A. River.

    Topline: 

    Earlier this month, crews cleared mudslide debris from Topanga Canyon’s main coastal route. A chunk of that soil made an unlikely journey to downtown Los Angeles, where it will help restore a historic park and join a living art and environmental experiment.

    The backstory: The hillside crashed across Topanga Canyon Boulevard on March 9 amid heavy rain. The road closure created a lengthy detour for San Fernando Valley commuters, hampered local businesses, and blocked a critical evacuation route as fire season approached.

    How to move a mountain: In April, the California Department of Transportation estimated it would take until fall to clear soil and boulders from the road. “What if disturbances in ecology create abundance, and what if we were to retrieve this material instead of discard it?” wondered artist and Topanga Canyon resident and environmental artist Lauren Bon. The question catalyzed three weeks of phone calls between various local and state agencies, plus soil testing and engineering consultations. Over the past month, trucks carried 1,500 cubic yards of soil and boulders to Bon’s studio and Los Angeles State Historic Park.

    What's next: Los Angeles State Historic Park plans to use the soil to enhance 4 acres of undeveloped land. Meanwhile, Bon and the team at Metabolic Studio will study how the soil can be used to regenerate the L.A. River’s wetlands.

    In early June, Topanga Canyon’s main coastal route reopened three months ahead of schedule after a massive spring landslide.

    While the California Department of Transportation trucked the debris to sites in Malibu and Port Hueneme, a chunk of the hillside made an unlikely journey to downtown Los Angeles, where it will revitalize a historic park and join a living art and environmental experiment.

    The project is the latest endeavor of environmental artist Lauren Bon’s effort to create a “new normal” where creatives and government agencies collaborate to solve big problems around how we manage natural resources.

    “What if disturbances in ecology create abundance?” Bon said. “What if we were to retrieve this material instead of discard it?”

    Time makes you boulder

    The hillside above Topanga Canyon Boulevard crashed onto the roadway on March 9 amid heavy rain.

    The landslide created a lengthy detour for San Fernando Valley commuters, hampered local businesses, and blocked a critical evacuation route as fire season approached.

    In April, Caltrans quantified the scale of the landslide as enough to fill 5,500 dump trucks.

    Though that estimate was later revised downward, “A window in my thinking of being annoyed and frightened about the imposition of the landslide kind of opened up,” said Bon, a longtime Topanga Canyon resident. Bon is the daughter of philanthropist Wallis Annenberg and Metabolic Studio is an extension of the family’s foundation.

    Bon and the team at Metabolic Studio collaborated with government agencies, engineers, and others to test the soil and secure the necessary permissions to transport and store the materials.

    “Seeing multiple different agencies be able to very quickly come together and make something happen was very impressive and really heartening,” said Metabolic Studio project manager Kelly Majewski.

    Clean soil is a valuable construction resource, but the team needed to secure space for the material in mere weeks.

    “It seemed really exciting,” said California State Parks Los Angeles District Superintendent Richard Fink II. “Kind of like a full circle opportunity because we could take the soils from the Santa Monica Mountains and the Topanga State Park area and potentially reuse them here in Los Angeles.”

    Climb a mountain and turn around

    The park’s 50 truckloads of soil is destined for four acres of the sprawling Los Angeles State Historic Park that remain undeveloped.

    Engage With Metabolic Studio

    “It's been basically cleared, remediated, and it's been left as an open palette for our next phase,” Fink said.

    The parks system is exploring a collaboration with Metabolic Studios as the land is developed. Bon’s 2005 project “Not A Cornfield” cultivated millions of ears of the eponymous vegetable on the land that’s now the park.

    A black-and-white image of a woman standing on a hillside overlooking a valley.
    Environmental artist Lauren Bon has lived in Topanga Canyon for 20 years and relies on Route 27 to reach Metabolic Studio in downtown Los Angeles.
    (
    Richard Nielsen
    /
    Courtesy Metabolic Studio
    )

    The remaining 100 truckloads of slip went to Bon’s Metabolic Studio. She described the acquisition of the landslide as an adoption.

    “It's not like we're just placing a…dispossessed landscape from a slid mountain to someplace else,” Bon said. “We're now taking care of it.”

    Listen 3:56
    Corn Flower: A Profile Of Environmental Artist Lauren Bon

    Bring it down

    Part of the landslide resides at “The Moon,” a truck-yard-turned-environmental-experimentation lab on Pasadena Avenue along the L.A. River.

    A combination of shady cloth covers and mist machines will help one mound feel like it’s in its coastal birthplace. Another pile is mixed with matter from the L.A. River’s floodplain, and the largest mass has been compressed into a boulder-strewn mini-mountain.

    The project seeks to answer many questions, including, “Can we keep that soil healthy and well long enough for the next generation to do the greatest good for the greatest number of living systems in the shortest amount of time?”

    One idea is to layer the landslide soil atop unpaved land along the L.A. River to create new ecosystems where the ground was once smothered in concrete.

    Visit LA State Historic Park

    “Moving Mountains” builds on Bon’s effort to reconnect the L.A. River to the floodplain.

    Bon obtained more than 75 permits from varying agencies to gain permission to draw water from the river. The ongoing project seeks to funnel the water in L.A. State Historic Park for irrigation.

    Bon acknowledged it would be easier to create art that fits within the walls of a gallery.

    “If you just work within a social organization that's very similar to you where you feel accepted, you may not allow the work to reach the largest capacity it has to do work in the world,” Bon said. “I want to be doing work that has applications on a larger scale than I can realize on my own. I want to see systemic changes happen.”

  • LA explores tax cut for Palisades rebuilds
    Fencing lines a sidewalk next to a home under construction. Signs on the fence bear the Horusicky name.
    Fencing lines a sidewalk next to a home under construction.

    Topline:

    As Los Angeles homeowners grapple with the expense of rebuilding after last year’s devastating fires, an L.A. City Council member is putting forward an idea that could lower some costs.

    Who’s behind it: Councilmember Traci Park, who represents the Pacific Palisades, has introduced a motion to explore waiving part of the city’s portion of the local sales tax for fire victims who purchase rebuilding materials in the city.

    The details: The plan calls for returning the 1% of the local 9.75% sales tax that goes into the city’s general fund. The waiver could apply to lumber, appliances and other rebuilding goods purchased within the city.

    Read on … to learn whether economists think the proposed tax relief could make a difference.

    As Los Angeles homeowners grapple with the expense of rebuilding after last year’s devastating fires, an L.A. City Councilmember is putting forward an idea that could lower some costs.

    Councilmember Traci Park, who represents the Pacific Palisades, has introduced a motion to explore waiving part of the city’s portion of the local sales tax for fire victims who purchase rebuilding materials in the city.

    The 1% of the local 9.75% sales tax that goes into the city’s general fund would be given back to consumers under the proposal. The waiver could apply to lumber, appliances and other rebuilding goods purchased within the city.

    The motion, introduced Friday by Park and seconded by Councilmember John Lee, says: “The City should do everything within its power to alleviate the financial burden for these residents and businesses in order to facilitate their return and stabilize the Pacific Palisades community.”

    Would it make much of a difference? 

    Economists told LAist the proposal could help many homeowners mitigate the high cost of rebuilding, but likely wouldn’t tip the scales for under-insured, under-resourced property owners.

    “It wouldn't hurt if it's very well designed and easy to use,” said Alexander Meeks, a director at the Santa Monica-based Milken Institute. “But I'm not sure if it's really going to tackle the scale of the financial challenge that survivors are facing.”

    Meeks noted that the tax waiver wouldn’t lower up-front costs such as environmental testing, architectural design and permitting. And it may not help homeowners sourcing raw materials from outside the city.

    Zhiyun Li, a UCLA Anderson School of Management economist, said the waiver could help some homeowners justify the additional cost of rebuilding more fire-safe structures.

    “Homeowners must typically pay out of pocket to upgrade to IBHS+ standards, which are more stringent,” Li said. “The tax waiver could encourage upgrading to IBHS+ standards or investing more in mitigation, thereby reducing future risk and improving the likelihood of maintaining insurance coverage.”

    What’s next for the proposal? 

    The proposed tax relief would not be available to properties that have been sold since the fires started in January 2025.

    The motion has been sent to the City Council’s budget and fire recovery committees. If approved by the full council, it would require the city administrative officer, the Office of Finance and the city attorney to report back to the council within 60 days on options for crafting a tax relief plan.

    The motion calls for the report to consider factors such as how to minimize the burden of administering the tax relief, what documentation homeowners would have to submit and what it would cost the city to oversee the program.

  • Sponsored message
  • Republicans in Congress say they have a deal

    Topline:

    House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., said in a joint statement on Wednesday that the House will take up a measure passed by the Senate last week to fund most of DHS except Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Border Patrol through the end of September. Republicans would then attempt to fund ICE and Border Patrol for three years using a party-line budget reconciliation bill that would not require support from Democrats.


    About the deal: The agreement comes nearly a week after House Republicans dismissed an identical plan, refusing to take up the Senate-passed measure and instead passing a 60-day short term funding bill for all of DHS that had little chance of overcoming Democratic opposition in the Senate. Democrats welcomed the agreement as in line with their pledge not to give ICE any more money without reforms after immigration enforcement agents killed two U.S. citizens in Minneapolis. But the deal does not include any of the policy demands Democrats are pressing for, such as a ban on masks for immigration enforcement officers and requiring warrants issued by a judge, not just the agency, to enter homes.

    What's next: Congress is on a two-week recess, but the Senate and House could move to fund all of DHS except ICE and CBP as early as Thursday using a procedure known as unanimous consent that allows the chambers to circumvent formal voting as long as no member objects. Even during a recess when most members are not in Washington, this could be unpredictable, especially in the House, where many hard-line conservatives oppose a deal that does not fully fund DHS. If a member does object, that could require waiting for another vote when all members are back from recess.

    Senate and House Republican leadership have resurrected a stalled plan to fund the Department of Homeland Security after a record 47-day funding lapse.

    House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., said in a joint statement on Wednesday that the House will take up a measure passed by the Senate last week to fund most of DHS except Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Border Patrol through the end of September.

    Republicans would then attempt to fund ICE and Border Patrol for three years using a party-line budget reconciliation bill that would not require support from Democrats.

    "In following this two-track approach, the Republican Congress will fully reopen the Department, make sure all federal workers are paid, and specifically fund immigration enforcement and border security for the next three years so that those law-enforcement activities can continue uninhibited," Thune and Johnson wrote.

    The agreement comes nearly a week after House Republicans dismissed an identical plan, refusing to take up the Senate-passed measure and instead passing a 60-day short term funding bill for all of DHS that had little chance of overcoming Democratic opposition in the Senate.

    Johnson called the agreement a "joke" and President Donald Trump declined to publicly endorse the deal. Trump had previously resisted any package that did not include his push to overhaul federal elections known as the Save America Act.

    "I think any deal they make, I'm pretty much not happy with it," Trump told reporters last week.

    Democrats welcomed the agreement as in line with their pledge not to give ICE any more money without reforms after immigration enforcement agents killed two U.S. citizens in Minneapolis. But the deal does not include any of the policy demands Democrats are pressing for, such as a ban on masks for immigration enforcement officers and requiring warrants issued by a judge, not just the agency, to enter homes.

    "For days, Republican divisions derailed a bipartisan agreement, making American families pay the price for their dysfunction," Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., wrote in a statement Wednesday. "Throughout this fight, Senate Democrats never wavered."

    Trump seemed to bless the revived plan earlier Wednesday, writing on social media that he wants a party-line bill to fund immigration enforcement on his desk by June 1.

    "We are going to work as fast, and as focused, as possible to replenish funding for our Border and ICE Agents, and the Radical Left Democrats won't be able to stop us," Trump wrote.

    Despite the shutdown, ICE has been minimally impacted because Republican lawmakers approved $75 billion for ICE through another party-line budget reconciliation bill last year.

    Congress is on a two-week recess, but the Senate and House could move to fund all of DHS except ICE and CBP as early as Thursday using a procedure known as unanimous consent that allows the chambers to circumvent formal voting as long as no member objects.

    Even during a recess when most members are not in Washington, this could be unpredictable, especially in the House, where many hard-line conservatives oppose a deal that does not fully fund DHS.

    "Let's make this simple: caving to Democrats and not paying CBP and ICE is agreeing to defund Law Enforcement and leaving our borders wide open again," Rep. Scott Perry, R-Pa., a member of the ultra-conservative House Freedom Caucus, wrote on X. "If that's the vote, I'm a NO."

    If a member does object, that could require waiting for another vote when all members are back from recess.

    Claudia Grisales contributed reporting.
    Copyright 2026 NPR

  • Youth baseball program expanding
    A child with black hair and light skin poses for a photo with a mascot wearing a Dodgers uniform.
    Logan Cattaneo, 6, poses for a photo with the Dodgers mascot during Dodgers Dreamteam PlayerFest at Dodgers Stadium in 2024.

    Topline:

    The Dodgers Foundation says it's expanding Dodgers Dreamteam, its program for underserved youth. The foundation says the program will be able to serve 17,000 kids this year, 2,000 more than last year.

    Why it matters: Now in its 13th season, the program connects underserved youth with opportunities to play baseball and softball and provides participants with free uniforms and access to baseball equipment. It also offers training for coaches in positive youth development practices, as well as wraparound services for participant families like college workshops, career panels, literacy resources and scholarship opportunities.

    How to sign up: For more information and to sign up, click here.

  • Low snowpack could signal early fire season
    Aerial view of a forest of trees covered in snow
    An aerial view of snow-capped trees after a winter snowstorm near Soda Springs on Feb. 20, 2026.

    Topline:

    California clocked its second-worst snowpack on record Wednesday, a potentially troubling signal ahead for fire season. It’s an alarming end to a winter that saw abnormally dry conditions briefly wiped from California’s drought map in January, for the first time in a quarter-century.

    What happened? Though precipitation to date has been near average, much of it fell as rain rather than snow. Then March’s record-breaking heat melted most of the snow that remains. The state’s major reservoirs are nevertheless brimming above historic averages and are flirting with capacity, and a smattering of snow, rain and thunderstorms are dousing last month’s heat wave.

    Why it matters: Experts now warn that California’s case of the missing snowpack could herald an early fire season in the mountains. State data reports that California’s snowpack is closing out the season at an alarming 18% of average statewide, and an even more abysmal 6% of average in the northern mountains that feed California’s major reservoirs. “I think everyone's anticipating that it will be a long, busy fire season,” said Lenya Quinn-Davidson, director of the UC Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources Fire Network.

    California clocked its second-worst snowpack on record Wednesday, a potentially troubling signal ahead for fire season.

    It’s an alarming end to a winter that saw abnormally dry conditions briefly wiped from California’s drought map in January, for the first time in a quarter-century.

    Though precipitation to date has been near average, much of it fell as rain rather than snow. Then March’s record-breaking heat melted most of the snow that remains. The state’s major reservoirs are nevertheless brimming above historic averages and are flirting with capacity, and a smattering of snow, rain and thunderstorms are dousing last month’s heat wave.

    But experts now warn that California’s case of the missing snowpack could herald an early fire season in the mountains.

    On Wednesday, state engineers conducting the symbolic April 1 snowpack measurement at Phillips Station south of Lake Tahoe found no measurable snow in patches of white dotting the grassy field.

    “I want to welcome you call to probably one of the quickest snow surveys we’ve had — maybe one where people could actually use an umbrella,” joked Karla Nemeth, director of the California Department of Water Resources. “We’re getting a lot of questions about are we heading into a hydrologic drought? The answer is, I don’t know.”

    State data reports that California’s snowpack is closing out the season at an alarming 18% of average statewide, and an even more abysmal 6% of average in the northern mountains that feed California’s major reservoirs.

    Only the extreme drought year of 2015 beat this year’s snowpack for the worst on record, measuring in at just 5% of average on April 1st, when the snow historically is at its deepest.

    “I think everyone's anticipating that it will be a long, busy fire season,” said Lenya Quinn-Davidson, director of the UC Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources Fire Network.

    “Without a snowpack, and with an early spring, it just means that there’s much more time for something like that to happen.”

    ‘It’s pretty bizarre up here’ 

    In the city of South Lake Tahoe, which survived the massive Caldor Fire in the fall of 2021 without losing any structures, fire chief Jim Drennan said his department is already ramping up prevention efforts.

    “It's pretty bizarre up here right now. It really seems like June conditions more than March,” Drennan said. “People are already turning the sprinklers on for their lawns.”

    Without more precipitation, an early spring may complicate prescribed burning efforts. But Drennan said fire agencies in the Tahoe basin can start mechanically clearing fuels from forest areas earlier than usual.

    “That means we can get more work done,” he said.

    It also means homeowners need to start hardening their homes now, said Martin Goldberg, battalion chief and fuels management officer for the Lake Valley Fire Protection District, which protects unincorporated communities in the Lake Tahoe Basin’s south shore.

    Goldberg urges residents to scour their yards for burnable materials, create defensible space and reach out to local fire departments with questions. The risks are widespread — from firewood, wooden fences, gas cans, plants, pine needles — even lawn furniture stacked against a house.

    “In years past, I wouldn't even think of raking and clearing until May,” Goldberg said. “But my yard's completely cleared of snowpack, and it has been for a couple weeks now.”

    ‘A haystack fire’

    Battalion chief David Acuña, a spokesperson for Cal Fire, said fire season is shaped by more than just one year’s snowpack.

    Climate change has been remaking California’s fire seasons into fire years. And California’s recent average to abundant water years have fueled what Acuña called “bumper crops of vegetation and brush.”

    “Most of California is like a haystack. And if you’ve ever seen a haystack fire, they burn very intensely because there's layers of fuel,” Acuña said.

    Like Quinn-Davidson, Acuña wasn’t ready to make specific predictions about fires to come.

    But John Abatzoglou, a professor of climatology at UC Merced, said the temperatures and snowpack conditions this year offer a glimpse of California in the latter decades of this century, as fossil fuel use continues to drive global temperatures higher.

    How this year’s fires will play out will depend on when, where and how wind, heat, fuel and ignitions combine. But it foreshadows the consequences of a warmer California for water and fire under climate change.

    “This,” Abatzoglou said, “is yet another stress test for the future in the state.”

    This article was originally published on CalMatters and was republished under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives license.