Kevin Tidmarsh
is a producer for LAist, covering news and culture. He’s been an audio/web journalist for about a decade.
Published December 23, 2023 5:00 AM
A Monarch butterfly lands on a flower at the Rinconada Community Garden on Nov. 3, 2021, in Palo Alto, California.
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Justin Sullivan
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Getty Images North America
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Topline:
The second phase of this year's Western monarch butterfly count is underway. The count tracks how many of the butterflies are making the southward trip to the Pacific coast from other parts of the North American West.
Why it matters: Monarch butterflies are the only butterfly known to make a two-way migration like birds, according to the U.S. Forest Service. But the number of Western monarch butterflies has been dwindling due to human-caused climate change, which is why scientists and volunteers have been monitoring their numbers for decades.
Monarchs' place in the ecosystem: "If we conserve the monarch, we conserve a lot of other insects as well that depend on the larval food source, the milkweed," said Richard Rachman, a plant ecologist and Los Angeles County Coordinator for the Western Monarch Count. "Monarch butterflies make a really good umbrella species to protect a bunch of others."
What impacts the count: Western monarchs are affected by heavy rain, as well as climate change, non-native plant species and human development. Rachman said the count's coordinators are expecting to find a smaller number of butterflies compared to last year, when more than 300,000 monarchs were documented.
The backstory: Volunteers have been counting Western monarch butterflies since the 1980s, and the annual count was established in 1997. The count has allowed scientists to document a 95% decrease in the population of Western monarchs over the last four decades.
Where to see them: According to Rachman, most monarchs congregate close to the coasts, including at the Hermosa Valley Greenbelt and Ocean Avenue in Santa Monica. However, some populations have been found overwintering as far inland as Death Valley. You can see a list of Western monarch sites at westernmonarchcount.org.
How to participate: The Western Monarch Count isn't accepting more volunteers for this year, but most sites are open to the public to observe. Rachman says to look for butterfly wings (they look like clusters of Doritos) hanging from shady trees like willows, sycamores or eucalyptus trees. Here's a link to sign up to volunteer for next year's count.
By Nigel Duara and Natasha Uzcátegui-Liggett | CalMatters
Published June 10, 2026 12:31 PM
Jeanelle Couch holds a photo of her son, David Couch, while standing in Cascade Park in Redding on April 8, 2026. David Couch was killed in a shooting involving a California Highway Patrol officer in front of his home in February 2023.
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Larry Valenzuela
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CalMatters
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Topline:
Investigations into fatal shootings by California police now take so long that officers often can’t be decertified or prosecuted.
The backstory: In 2020, with the death of George Floyd still dominating the national conversation over police accountability, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a law taking away responsibility for investigating fatal police shootings from local authorities and putting it in the hands of the state attorney general. Lawmakers reasoned that an independent outside agency would bring more credibility — as well as speed and investigative firepower — to the process while eliminating potential conflicts of interest that can arise when police or local district attorneys have to investigate agencies they work closely with.
More details: A CalMatters investigation found that Rob Bonta’s office has 13 use-of-force investigations that have exceeded three years or longer – well past the statute of limitations for many of the crimes an officer or a deputy could conceivably be charged with short of murder. The average fatal shooting investigation takes Bonta’s team nearly two years and five months to complete. Just eight of 41 closed cases took less than two years.
Read on... for more on what this means for investigations.
In 2020, with the death of George Floyd still dominating the national conversation over police accountability, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a law taking away responsibility for investigating fatal police shootings from local authorities and putting it in the hands of the state attorney general.
Lawmakers reasoned that an independent outside agency would bring more credibility — as well as speed and investigative firepower — to the process while eliminating potential conflicts of interest that can arise when police or local district attorneys have to investigate agencies they work closely with.
Police accountability advocates enthusiastically endorsed the legislation that authorized the switch. Then-Assemblymember Rob Bonta championed it, too. When Bonta became attorney general the following year, he pledged to complete all investigations within 12 months.
He hasn’t come close. The department has yet to close a single investigation within one year.
In fact, a CalMatters investigation found that Bonta’s office has 13 use-of-force investigations that have exceeded three years or longer – well past the statute of limitations for many of the crimes an officer or a deputy could conceivably be charged with short of murder.
The average fatal shooting investigation takes Bonta’s team nearly two years and five months to complete. Just eight of 41 closed cases took less than two years.
The delays take away another potential enforcement tool as well: Once a case extends beyond three years, an officer cannot be decertified, meaning they cannot be prevented from working for other law enforcement agencies.
The time lag leaves families of potential victims waiting for justice and leaves officers in limbo as they wait to be charged or exonerated.
“In my experience, three years is an awful long period of time, especially if you’re starting to come upon statutes of limitations,” said Anne Marie Schubert, the former Sacramento County District Attorney who unsuccessfully ran for attorney general in 2022.
Schubert said she was surprised to see that the last case closed by the program was on a shooting in 2023.
“Is it resources?” she asked. “Is it experience? That’s a question I’d want to know.”
To date, not a single officer has been prosecuted by Bonta’s office, and no officer has been referred for decertification or even discipline after a police shooting investigation.
Bonta blames the backlog on a lack of funding and other priorities from the Legislature. His predecessor, Xavier Becerra, made the same argument just before the law took effect when he requested twice as much money for the investigations than the Legislature provided. On its first investigation, Justice Department employees complained in internal emails that they were undermanned.
Bonta’s office also says nothing in the law prevents local authorities from conducting their own parallel investigations.
But the CalMatters investigation found that as a practical matter, local authorities take a hands-off approach once Bonta’s office steps in.
“If the case meets the criteria under (the police shooting law) and DOJ confirms they are taking over the investigation, we do not do a parallel criminal investigation of our own or do a criminal investigation of our own after DOJ concludes their investigation,” said Capt. Brian Cole, who oversees the detective division at the Redding Police Department. “They have complete criminal jurisdiction of the matter.”
'I didn't see him again alive'
That happened with a Redding case that began on Christmas Day, 2022, when David Couch was taken to jail. Since then, Jeanelle Couch spent three and a half years trying to find out exactly what happened to her son.
By the time David Couch, 31, was released on Feb. 8, 2023, Jeanelle Couch said her son was experiencing a manic episode.
According to a lawsuit Jeanelle later filed, David was given the wrong medication for his bipolar disorder for his entire jail stay. He told her he had spent the majority of his time in solitary confinement, another allegation in the lawsuit.
“He was happy to see us and he asked if we remembered him,” she said about the day he went home. “When I got up the next morning to go to work, he talked to me for a long time and I said, ‘oh, honey, I'm so sorry, I got to go to work now.’
“And then I didn't see him again alive.”
Jeanelle Couch holds photos of her son, David Couch, while standing in Cascade Park in Redding on April 8, 2026.
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Larry Valenzuela
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CalMatters
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Jeanelle Couch holds photos of her son, David Couch, while standing in Cascade Park in Redding on April 8, 2026.
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Larry Valenzuela
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CalMatters
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That afternoon, David sat in his car in his mother’s driveway in a small residential neighborhood in Redding.
At 5:25 p.m., the California Highway Patrol received a call of a driver southbound on Interstate 5 who was brandishing a gun. The make, model and plates matched David’s car.
Nine minutes later, California Highway Patrol officer Ryan Cates pulled into Couch’s driveway.
According to dashboard camera footage, Couch was sitting in his white Ford sedan with the driver’s side door open.
“Show me your hands!” Cates called out. “Put your hands up!”
Couch emerged in a brown hooded sweatshirt, khaki pants and a gray baseball cap, the dashcam footage shows. He was wearing a backpack and gripping his cell phone with both hands. Couch also had a pair of knives strapped to his jacket, according to a Justice Department investigation, but didn’t touch them. Couch took eight steps toward Cates, who had his gun in his right hand, pointed at Couch.
Their initial conversation is inaudible.
Cates raised his gun, holding it now with both hands. Couch came toward him. The dashboard camera was able to record more of their argument, which involved Couch saying to leave him alone, then calling Cate obscenities and saying "shoot." A struggle ensued that was not visible on camera. At least twice, Couch called Cates a slur.
“Get on the ground,” Cates said. “I will shoot you right now.”
According to a Department of Justice report issued last week, Couch then got ahold of Cates’ Taser.
Still frames from a California Highway Patrol video depicting the altercation between David Couch, at right, and Officer Cates. The progression of action is from left to right.
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Image via the California Department of Justice
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Couch continued to berate Cates, calling him a “dirty cop.” The two slid back into view, with Cates holding Couch against the hood of the car, Couch’s face bathed red in the patrol car’s dashboard lights. Cates attempted to put handcuffs on Couch, but Couch slipped to his right and out of view of the dashboard camera again.
“Give me a .45 (caliber handgun) and I’d f— you up!” Couch yelled at Cates.
Cates would later tell Justice Department investigators that he believed Couch was trying to take his handgun.
Then, there were several audible clicks. Couch taunted Cates, asking “it’s not working?” A second later, Cates fired four shots. The entire encounter lasted exactly one minute.
“I am uninjured,” Cates said into his police radio. “Suspect down, multiple gunshot wounds.”
Couch lived for nine days. He died on Feb. 17, 2023.
According to Couch’s sister, “David was shot so many times he was no longer recognizable.” In an online fundraising appeal for the family, the sister, Lauren Metzger, added that, “We can’t understand why this happened, but we do know he did not have a gun anywhere around his person when he was discovered laying in the street by my parents and his best friend.”
For the nine days David Couch survived, a five-agency team convened to investigate the shooting, led by the Redding Police Department. Then, when Couch died, the Department of Justice shooting investigation team took over, and the local team ended its inquiry.
A view of the city of Redding from Cypress Avenue on April 8, 2026.
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Larry Valenzuela
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CalMatters
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More than three years have passed. Cates returned to work, according to the California Highway Patrol. His lawyer did not respond to messages from CalMatters.
Shasta County and the state of California have denied responsibility in the federal lawsuit filed by Couch’s family in the Eastern District of California. In its response, Shasta County said Cates is entitled to qualified immunity, which limits the civil liability of government officials, usually police officers.
The investigation from the Department of Justice took 1,199 days. It found “there is insufficient evidence to support a criminal prosecution of Officer Cates.”
Shorthanded from the start
Giving the state justice department more power to investigate law enforcement shootings was hailed as a big win for the police accountability movement when Newsom signed the law in 2020.
Former Assemblymember Kevin McCarty of Sacramento had proposed the legislation several times before. The fatal shooting of Stephon Clark by Sacramento police in 2018 lent momentum to McCarty’s effort – Clark’s family was outraged that Schubert, then the district attorney, didn’t press charges against officers in his killing.
George Floyd’s killing by a Minneapolis police officer in May 2020 emboldened a bipartisan push for police reform laws that ultimately carried McCarty’s bill through the Legislature and on to Newsom’s desk.
But within days of receiving their first case, the Justice Department’s shooting investigation teams knew they were undermanned.
“There were dozens of tasks and assignments that the … special agents could not accomplish because of limited staffing,” the department wrote in a budget request submitted to the Legislature in 2022.
Even before the shooting teams deployed, there were early warnings that the Justice Department might have bitten off more than it could chew.
The department asked for $26 million to pay for the new shooting investigation teams. The Legislature allotted half of that, about $13 million.
Former United States Secretary of Health and Human Services Xavier Becerra on stage during a gubernatorial forum hosted by the California Hispanic Chamber of Commerce at the Sheraton Grand Sacramento Hotel in Sacramento on April 14, 2026.
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Miguel Gutierrez Jr.
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CalMatters
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The allocation “is significantly lower than our estimates and not enough resources to stand up professional teams to perform these new investigative and prosecutorial duties,” former Attorney General Xavier Becerra wrote to McCarty in January 2021, six months before the law took effect.
The department originally wanted four investigative teams — one each in Sacramento, Fresno, Los Angeles and Riverside. Instead, it got two, one North and one South.
One year into the program, shooting investigations were already lagging behind Bonta’s self-imposed timeline of one year.
In response, at the time, Bonta said: “We got the funding that we got, and we’re going to make it work. We have no choice. We have to find a way.”
Investigations first stretched past one year, then two years, and in 2025, a case reached beyond three years.
The California Department of Justice did not make anyone available for an interview about its backlog of police shooting investigations. In a written statement, an unnamed spokesperson said Bonta personally reviews every investigation.
“All investigations are unique in their complexity, and some may take longer than others to investigate and reach a conclusion.” the statement read.
“We’re continuously identifying ways to tighten timelines and improve our processes. It’s a balancing act — but it’s one we’re actively managing. Improvements are already taking hold. In the last two and a half years, we closed 9 times as many cases as were closed in the first two and a half years that the law was operational, and we remain committed to improving.”
Police chiefs want faster investigations
Many law enforcement leaders are growing impatient.
“Police chiefs across the state have consistently raised concerns and advocated for a timelier process, yet progress has been minimal,” said Sean Thuilliez, president of the California Police Chiefs Association.“When transparency is not accompanied by timeliness, the system risks falling short for everyone—eroding confidence, deepening mistrust, and prolonging uncertainty.
Law enforcement and conservative prosecutors were, perhaps predictably, opposed to losing local shooting investigations to the state. But even prosecutors who were pursuing police accountability were nervous about removing locals from the process.
With the state in control, local citizens have less power to protest or pressure their local leaders.
“Local concern, local protests, local interest is felt by local prosecutors,” said Cristine Soto DeBerry, who created a unit investigating police officers at the San Francisco District Attorney’s Office, where she was chief of staff. She is now the executive director of the progressive advocacy group Prosecutors Alliance.
“The very real pain of family and community members that experience that absolutely has an impact on a prosecutor and their willingness to take this crime seriously.”
Jeanelle Couch said that even though the DOJ investigation is over, she’s still hopeful about the lawsuits her family filed against the state, the county and the officer who killed her son.
“I want light on it,” Couch said. “That’s what I want. Just, justice.”
The Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum and SoFi Stadium will share the opening ceremony. The Coliseum will be the site of the closing ceremony.
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Myung J. Chun
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Getty Images
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Topline:
LA28 announced Wednesday that the second round of tickets for the L.A. Olympics will run from August 10–20. Organizers say the second drop will offer tickets across all sports at a range of price points.
How can I register? Register here by July 22. Fans must register in order to enter the ticket lottery for a time slot. If you already entered in the first round and haven’t met your ticket limit, you’ll automatically be re-entered for the upcoming round.
When will I know? Fans will be notified if they receive a slot on August 6-7. If selected, you’ll receive an email with details on your time slot for the ticket draw.
Details on tickets: During your slot, you’ll be able to purchase up to 12 tickets, and another 12 soccer tournament tickets. Tickets to the opening and closing ceremonies are limited to four, which count towards the general 12-ticket maximum for Olympic events.
What happened last time: The April ticket launch sold 4 million tickets, and included a presale just for locals. LA28 said 95% of presale tickets were priced under $100, although some fans were disappointed by unexpectedly high prices and hefty service fees.
Will there be other chances? LA28 said that “fans can look forward to additional purchase opportunities” closer to the Games. Next year, they’ll also launch a secure, verified ticket resale site. Ticket sales for the Paralympic Games begin in 2027, according to LA28.
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Water is sprayed on a damaged tank at GKN Aerospace in Garden Grove, on May 24, 2026, after the tank containing a chemical used to make plastic parts overheated.
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Ethan Swope
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AP Photo
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Topline:
Federal agents from the FBI and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency executed a search warrant early Wednesday at GKN Aerospace in Garden Grove, the plant where an overheated tank led to fears of a massive explosion and caused some 50,000 residents to evacuate over Memorial Day weekend.
The details: The warrant calls for seizing all communications and devices that might contain evidence about how the company handled the chemical methyl methacrylate, or MMA, and what might have led a massive tank full of the toxic chemical to overheat and nearly explode. The warrant also calls for seizing records pertaining to risk analyses of safety conditions at the facility, or the condition of equipment.
What's next: The Orange County Health Care Agency is overseeing the removal of solidified MMA and cleanup after the incident. Cleanup was supposed to start last week but has been delayed indefinitely.
Read on ... for more details about the incident that has already spurred dozens of lawsuits.
Federal agents from the FBI and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency executed a search warrant early Wednesday at GKN Aerospace in Garden Grove, the plant where an overheated tank led to fears of a massive explosion and caused some 50,000 residents to evacuate over Memorial Day weekend.
The warrant calls for seizing all communications and devices that might contain evidence about how the company handled the chemical methyl methacrylate, or MMA, and what might have led a massive tank full of the toxic chemical to overheat and nearly explode.
The warrant also calls for seizing records pertaining to risk analyses of safety conditions at the facility, or the condition of equipment. The warrant is dated June 5 and signed by U.S. Magistrate Judge Stephanie S. Christensen.
How we got here
Right before Memorial Day weekend, a tank onsite holding thousands of gallons of MMA began overheating. Safety officials ordered some 50,000 residents in the surrounding area to leave their homes, and evacuation centers were set up at local high schools and community centers.
For several days, authorities said it was almost certain the tank would either explode or crack and spill out toxins into the surrounding area. The emergency subsided when first responders discovered a crack in the tank had been relieving pressure, and the temperature of the chemical stabilized.
GKN exec gets an earful from residents
At a special City Council meeting Tuesday, Steve Carlin, a senior vice president at GKN, apologized for the incident.
“I understand, and I realize sitting here tonight, what a disruptive event it was and how unsettling it is to the greater community,” he said.
He added that the company would do “whatever it takes” to earn back the residents’ trust.
Dozens of residents also spoke at the meeting, demanding the city force GKN to leave the area entirely, or move dangerous chemicals to a location away from residential neighborhoods and schools.
Mayor Stephanie Klopfenstein called Carlin's appearance “a step forward, but to me … this isn’t going to be good enough long term." She asked Carlin to hold a town hall meeting where residents can have the chance to ask him questions directly.
What's next
GKN is working with Orange County United Way to help people who had to evacuate or close their businesses because of the spill pay for expenses. The company has so far dedicated $3 million to the fund, which local officials say is not sufficient.
You can find more information about how to apply for financial assistance here.
The Orange County Health Care Agency is overseeing the removal of solidified MMA and cleanup after the incident. Cleanup was supposed to start last week, but has been delayed indefinitely. The incident has already spurred dozens of lawsuits.
How to attend a Garden Grove City Council meeting
Regular Meetings are held on the second and fourth Tuesdays of each month. Upcoming meetings schedule can be viewed here.
Meetings take place in the Council Chamber, 11300 Stanford Ave., Garden Grove
The schedule for public Garden Grove meetings is on the city's website. You can make a public comment by attending in person or watch online.
The city of Los Angeles plans to install a fence around MacArthur Park in the Westlake neighborhood by fall 2026.
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Steve Saldivar
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The LA Local
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Topline:
Los Angeles is moving ahead with plans to install an 8-foot-tall metal fence around the perimeter of MacArthur Park beginning this fall. The park is expected to remain open throughout construction and the fence will eventually be removed, according to city officials.
Why now: The fence is meant to improve maintenance, support outdoor programming and make the park safer in response to ongoing concerns about public drug use, homelessness and crime in and around the park. Once the fence is installed, officials say the park will close at night and reopen each morning.
More details: The fencing project will be completed in two phases. The first phase, scheduled for this fall and winter, will involve installing an approximately 8-foot-tall green metal fence around the park’s perimeter, similar to those already in place at Lafayette Park and LACMA.
Los Angeles is moving ahead with plans to install an 8-foot-tall metal fence around the perimeter of MacArthur Park beginning this fall. The park is expected to remain open throughout construction and the fence will eventually be removed, according to city officials.
The fence is meant to improve maintenance, support outdoor programming and make the park safer in response to ongoing concerns about public drug use, homelessness and crime in and around the park. Once the fence is installed, officials say the park will close at night and reopen each morning.
Jimmy Kim, general manager of the Los Angeles Department of Recreation and Parks, said, however, that the fence is not meant to be a permanent fixture of MacArthur Park.
“As we stabilize the community and the neighborhood, it’s meant to also come off,” he said at a public meeting in MacArthur Park Elementary School on Monday. “As part of the fencing, not only will we do more programming, but there will also be other elements of security and a more controlled environment for us to do activities, because without a gate it’s not very controlled.”
The fencing project will be completed in two phases. The first phase, scheduled for this fall and winter, will involve installing an approximately 8-foot-tall green metal fence around the park’s perimeter, similar to those already in place at Lafayette Park and LACMA.
The second phase, scheduled for winter through spring 2027, will focus on adding artistic and decorative elements to the fence. Community members will have an opportunity to weigh in on those features, and Kim said the city will also work with local artists on the designs.
The project outlined during the meeting was attended by Kim and representatives of Mayor Karen Bass’ office, Council District 1 and the Los Angeles Police Department. Monday’s meeting comes as another beautification project recently added spherical orange and red bollards, tree-filled planters and removed a temporary chain-link fence along Alvarado Street.
Kim added that the entire park will be fenced and that all of the corners will have opening areas that have pathways for pedestrians.
Some Westlake residents at the meeting said they weren’t convinced the fence alone would solve the park’s problems.
Maria M. Villalobos, a 78-year-old retiree who has lived in the area for about 10 years, said in her opinion, MacArthur Park’s issues stem from homelessness, addiction and a lack of enforcement, problems she believes require other solutions.
“I think there has to be something stronger,” Villalobos said in Spanish. “These problems haven’t been here for days or months. They’ve been here for a long time.”
Villalobos believes the fence could help to some extent, but only if city leaders also address the underlying issues affecting the park. She suggested building more facilities near the park to serve people experiencing homelessness and those struggling with drug addiction.
“Every day it gets worse,” she said.
Plans for the park outside the fence
Jocelyn Dominguez, deputy director of community engagement for Mayor Karen Bass, said the city is continuing efforts to address social issues in and around the park alongside the fencing project.
She highlighted the city’s dedicated Crisis and Incident Response through Community-led Engagement (CIRCLE) team, which operates around the clock in MacArthur Park conducting drug treatment screenings and connecting people with services.
“We specifically brought a team just for MacArthur Park to make sure that we are doing our drug screenings and really doing our outreach to folks who might be unhoused or needing any other kind of services to make sure that they have access to those,” Dominguez said.
As part of the broader effort to improve the park, Kim also highlighted several recent upgrades, including new turf installations, restroom improvements, security cameras, lighting repairs and playground enhancements.
Diana Vicente, senior field deputy for Council District 1, said the fencing project is one part of a broader strategy to invest in MacArthur Park and the surrounding neighborhood.
Vicente pointed to the district’s clean teams, violence prevention initiatives, lighting improvements, youth programming and infrastructure investments around the park.
LAPD Capt. Ben Fernandes said police will be responsible for helping secure the park after closing hours and will continue regular patrols in the area once the fence is installed.
“LAPD will continue its enforcement operations in and around the park,” Fernandes said. “We’ve stepped up operations, working with our federal partners to make sure that the drug dealers are going away.”
Fernandes is referring to two recent large-scale Drug Enforcement Administration and Los Angeles Police Department operations in and around MacArthur Park that targeted alleged drug trafficking and gang activity, but also public drinking and other violations.
For some Westlake residents and workers in the area, the permanent fence around the park represents a chance to make the park accessible again.
Street vendor Rosa Sánchez, who attended the meeting, no longer feels comfortable spending time in the park the way she once did. Sánchez has lived in the area for nearly 30 years, and said she used to walk through the park and exercise regularly. She now avoids it because she doesn’t feel safe.
“Right now there really is no security,” Sánchez said in Spanish. “You can’t walk or exercise like before. It’s scary because there isn’t safety.”
She said the fence could help if it is paired with increased security and enforcement.
Sánchez currently works about a 15-minute walk from the park and said she stopped selling closer to MacArthur Park because she no longer felt safe. She said she would consider returning if conditions improve.
“If there were more security, maybe I would come back,” she said.
To stay up to date on future community meetings regarding the fence, residents can email admin@themorcosgroup.com or call (310) 479-4727.