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The most important stories for you to know today
  • How to host your own children's reading party
    A light-skinned woman on a stage reads to a group of children and adults in a brightly colored but dark room.
    Author Suzanne Lang talks to children about a certain Grumpy monkey.

    Topline:

    For our second annual Super-Fun Saturday, we partnered with more than two dozen community partners, along with several local Los Angeles authors and performers, for an event that drew hundreds to our Pasadena headquarters. Missed it? Here's how to bring the fun to your own home.

    Start with reading time: There are countless benefits to reading aloud with kids— from helping babies bond with their caregivers to building a toddler’s vocabulary. We have four read-aloud options.

    Add in some arts and crafts: There were a ton of super-fun happenings throughout the event — a lot of which you can recreate on your own. We had a little music corner with a ton of tiny instruments where kids rocked out on the drums or jammed on the key-tar. There were plenty of other offerings too: This coffee filter butterfly that Options for Learning had. You can host your own toddler dance party like Encore Music & Performing Arts. Or listen to tunes by LoveBug & Me.

    Keep reading: To see all our partners and watch some readings from L.A. authors.

    The communities around Southern California have been vital in how they’ve informed our early childhood coverage over the years.

    Last year, though, we decided to offer something new that families could enjoy together. And that’s how we created Super-Fun Saturday — a morning of infectious fun, with bilingual readings, performances, singing, dancing, and art for children 5 and under and their families.

    For our second annual Super-Fun Saturday, we partnered with more than two dozen community partners, along with several local Los Angeles authors and performers, for an event that drew more than 700 people to our Pasadena headquarters.

    If you couldn’t make it this year — or if you did and just want to relive the memories — then we’ve compiled a recap here for you. Use it as inspiration to make your own Saturdays … super fun!

    Have storytime in English, Spanish, and Mandarin

    There are countless benefits to reading aloud with kids— from helping babies bond with their caregivers to building a toddler’s vocabulary.

    The Super-Fun Saturday readers brought us stories with lessons in colors, shapes and identifying — and embracing — emotions.

    We also made a point to feature multilingual readers because more than half of California kids live in a home that speaks a language other than English and there are many benefits to being bilingual.

    Lulu Cheng is one of the parents who have led the charge here in L.A. to bring new perspectives to children’s books that better reflect today’s multicultural kids.

    Cheng is the co-founder of local bilingual children’s book publisher Bitty Bao along with fellow mom Lacey Benard.

    Grow your home library

    Throughout the story we include links to purchase these titles through MiJA Books, a local independent bookseller that partnered with LAist for Super-Fun Saturday. You can find many of these books at your local library— for free!

    Since 2020 Bitty Bao has published more than a dozen board books in English, simplified and traditional Chinese.

    Cheng read Dragon Boat Festival, which uses the celebration’s trappings to teach the basics of shapes.

    Create your own fearsome — and colorful! — vessel at home with this printable activity.


    Juan Moreno originally created El Pato y Sus Zapatos for his family— and to celebrate his own love of sneakers.

    “It was something I never thought would be published,” Moreno said.

    But local bilingual children’s book publisher Lil’ Libros took notice and brought the book to a larger audience in 2023.

    With this craft, your little one can practice decorating and tying their own paper shoe.


    We heard not one, but two stories about everyone’s favorite pouty primate — Grumpy Monkey Yuck! and the forthcoming Too Many Bugs.

    Jim Panzee helps kids and adults alike make peace with life’s grumpier moments in a series that includes board books for the littlest readers and Spanish translations.

    Author Suzanne Lang writes the series and husband Max creates Jim’s signature scowl— which you can turn into a wearable mask.


    The Colors of Us highlights the many different shades of brown skin from peanut butter to peachy tan.

    Actress Zuri Miles read this book through LAist’s partnership with Multiracial Americans of Southern California.

    FOMO? No need! Try out these activities at home

    There were a ton of super-fun happenings throughout the event — a lot of which you can recreate on your own!

    We had a little music corner with a ton of tiny instruments where kids rocked out on the drums or jammed on the key-tar.

    A young boy sits on a small chair and plays a bright green and pink keytar.
    It's never too early to learn how to rock a keytar.
    (
    Stefanie Ritoper
    /
    LAist
    )

    “We want the kids to feel free to like experiment with the sounds and, the way the instruments feel and you never know, I think maybe someone is going to discover that they love music here and I think we're gonna, you know, they're gonna say, you know, I really want an axe and I really want to rock,” said music station creator Caitlin Biljan. “I just hope it captures the spirit of what a joy it is to listen to music, but also to perform for an audience.”

    There were tons of arts and crafts with items you can find in your home, like:

    Two children with East Asian features stand at a table playing with art supplies. Across the table from them, a woman with light brown skin stands and smiles at them.
    The Office of the Young Child Pasadena created an art station at Super-Fun Saturday 2024.
    (
    Stefanie Ritoper
    /
    LAist
    )

    Plug in! Find partners in learning

    If you want to catch up with any of the vendors and community organizations who were at Super-Fun Saturday, here’s who was there:

    • Autry Museum of the American West is a museum in Griffith Park that features stories of all peoples of the American West. The Autry is also home to one of the largest collections of Native American materials in the United States. (Good timing: It hosts the American Indian Arts Festival this weekend, June 8-9).
    • Bewilder is an outdoor education company that blends art, games, storytelling, and gear to inspire busy families to spend time outside. Kids climbed into the camping tent they set up onsite to make wildflower seed bombs.
    • Bread Lounge graced Super-Fun Saturday with the very necessary coffee and pastries. Based in downtown L.A., they sell a wide range of fresh bread and pastries daily, including croissants, danishes, and Jerusalem bagels.
    • CurlyKids, a product line for children with curly hair, was at Super-Fun Saturday braiding kids’ hair.
    • The Discovery Cube is a SoCal museum with a mission to instill a passion for sciences in kids. 
    • Encore Music & Performing Arts, based in San Marino and Pasadena, provides music lessons, theater classes, and summer camps.
    • LoveBug & Me provides music classes to SoCal toddlers, often accompanied by LoveBug, the puppet.
    • Mutiracial Americans of Southern California builds community and advocates on behalf of multiracial families. 
    • Metro co-sponsored Super-Fun Saturday, offering free fruit cups from Rosita’s fruits to anyone who took public transit to the event.
    • MiJa Books showcases multicultural and diverse children’s books and helps indie and self-publishers to reach a greater audience. MiJa invited all the authors who were featured at this year’s event.
    • Options for Learning assists families regardless of income in locating licensed child care free of charge. If you want to keep the party going, they will also be holding a Summer Kick-off resource fair next Saturday, on June 8, with games, activities, and resources.
    • Pasadena Office of the Young Child, run by the City of Pasadena, shapes Pasadena’s vision for early childhood policies and services. One resource they shared was Pasadena Public Library’s 1000 Books Before Kindergarten campaign, which shares gifts to families as they log the books they read with their children.
    • Pasadena Playhouse, a theater that has been in Pasadena since 1917, taught kids how to juggle with scarves.
    • Quality Start Los Angeles shared resources to support families in developing their child’s abilities to speak multiple languages as part of their initiative to support dual language learning.
    • Self-Help Graphics was onsite screen printing Super-Fun Saturday bags for families. Founded in 1973, Self-Help Graphics supports Chicana/o and Latinx artists through workshops, cultural events, and youth outreach.
    • Southern California Children's Museum, based in Pasadena, hosts interactive exhibits, creative experiences, and dramatic play at their facilities and collaborates with local schools and organizations.
    • Vivi’s food truck was right outside, serving up Colombian eats.

    Make a photo album to capture memories

    It's always good to take some photos. Here are some of our favorites from Super-Fun Saturday.

    Sign up for a super-special newsletter

    Our Early Childhood newsletter features all our recent stories, plus links to things we’ve read elsewhere that we think will speak to parents. And it has event listings! The people who subscribed to the newsletter, along with our LAist members, were among the first to know about Super-Fun Saturday.

    Education editor Ross Brenneman contributed to this article.

  • LA made one part easy, there's more to do
    An arial view of blocks of empty lots, charred trees, and some homes under construction spread out. There are mountains in the background.
    Home construction on Hartzell Street in the Alphabet Streets neighborhood of Pacific Palisades, on Aug. 30, 2025.

    Topline:

    While few victims of last year’s fires are back in their homes, that’s not unusual following natural disasters; permitting changes appear to be helping.

    The backstory: As of this week, more than 2,600 residential permits have been issued between the Palisades and Altadena — roughly one for every five of the nearly 13,000 homes lost. Another 3,340 are under review. For many displaced and traumatized homeowners, that represents an intolerably slow return to what was. But by historic standards, the Los Angeles recovery has been on the speedy side so far.

    A slow process: Rebuilding after disaster is almost always a grueling, slow process. Of the more than 22,500 homes destroyed in five of California’s most destructive fires between 2017 and 2020, fewer than four-in-ten had been rebuilt by 2025, a Los Angeles Times analysis from late last summer found.

    Read on... for more on the progress of rebuilding after the fires.

    In the days immediately after last January’s Los Angeles firestorm, state lawmakers and civic leaders promised to turbocharge the rebuilding effort. For California, where the permitting and construction of homes is infamously slow and costly, the scale of destruction stood as a singular challenge.

    A year later, the charred homes, the melted appliances and the toxic ash have mostly been removed, the dirt beneath scraped and then carted away. Many of the residents whose houses were spared have returned. Permits for reconstruction have been filed, architects and contractors hired. Battles with insurance companies, utilities and banks persist, vacant lots and blackened trees abound, but look around and — here and there — you’ll find new construction.

    As of this week, more than 2,600 residential permits have been issued between the Palisades and Altadena — roughly one for every five of the nearly 13,000 homes lost. Another 3,340 are under review.

    For many displaced and traumatized homeowners, that represents an intolerably slow return to what was. But by historic standards, the Los Angeles recovery has been on the speedy side so far.

    In a press release commemorating the first anniversary of the disaster, Gov. Gavin Newsom lauded the permitting figures as “historic.”

    Last year local governments — the City and County of Los Angeles, as well as Malibu and Pasadena — issued permits for single-family homes and accessory dwelling units “three times faster” than they were in the five years leading up to the fire, the administration noted.

    Rebuilding after disaster is almost always a grueling, slow process. Of the more than 22,500 homes destroyed in five of California’s most destructive fires between 2017 and 2020, fewer than four-in-ten had been rebuilt by 2025, a Los Angeles Times analysis from late last summer found.

    A year after major fires ripped through Maui, Paradise, Redding and the outskirts of Boulder, Colo., 2%, 3%, 15% and 30% of the destroyed homes, respectively, had been permitted for reconstruction, according to a separate Urban Institute analysis.

    Based on the pace of permitting, Los Angeles’ reconstruction is on a relatively fast track. But freshly-pulled permits aren’t completed homes.

    “People can pull permits, but you know, if they don't have their costs sorted out — we've had folks abandon their plans,” said Devang Shah with Genesis Builders, which is selling pre-approved, fixed-priced rebuilds in Altadena. Using permits as a metric of progress may be premature, he said.

    Some of the speedy progress that Los Angeles has seen may be due to regulatory changes imposed by fiat in the aftermath of the fire. In early 2025, both Newsom and Mayor Karen Bass mandated speedier permitting of like-for-like rebuilds — construction that stuck to the rough dimensions and design specification of the home that was there before. Los Angeles county rolled out a self-certification building plan approval pilot program for certain simple projects. Newsom waived building code requirements intended to ease the cost of reconstruction.

    “We’ve got planning approvals in three days that would have normally taken three months,” said Tim Vordtriede, an architect who also lost his home in Altadena. The county has “done a remarkable job at making things as efficient and streamlined as a bureaucratic entity can.”

    In the weeks after the fire, Vordtriede co-founded the Altadena Collective, a network of designers and architects that provides discounted design services, permitting advice and contractor recommendations to local survivors. He and his co-founders Chris Driscoll and Chris Corbett have also launched a nonprofit called Collective OR that is meant to represent inexperienced and anxious homeowners in negotiations with builders and architects.

    It's impossible to say, ‘they were here by this date so we should also be there.’ The data set is just too variable.
    — Colette Curtis, recovery and economic development director, Paradise

    The pace of reconstruction may simply benefit from the fact that it’s taking place in Los Angeles County: A mammoth economic hub flush with financial resources and political connections.

    “We have access to a really good supply chain, there’s a lot of capital, there’s a lot of infrastructure,“ said Ben Stapleton, director of U.S. Green Building Council California.

    That’s in contrast to a town like Paradise.

    Since the majority of homes were destroyed in the 2018 Camp Fire, fewer than one-in-five have since been rebuilt, said Colette Curtis, the Butte County town’s recovery and economic development director.

    She cautioned against comparing the pace of rebuilding efforts across communities struck by disaster.

    “It's impossible to say, ‘they were here by this date so we should also be there,’” she said. “The data set is just too variable.”

    Paradise, a remote town with relatively low income, lacked the local services and philanthropic draw of places like Lahaina and the Palisades, she said. But lower land values and the fact that displaced homeowners haven’t had to compete with investors setting aside new units for tourist rentals was a net positive.

    Another thing that may give Los Angeles a leg up: It’s a region that’s also heavy on expertise.

    At around the same time that Vordtriede was setting up the Altadena Collective, nearby architect couple Cynthia Sigler and Alex Athenson launched the Foothill Catalog, a packet of ready-made architectural and structural plans that have been pre-approved by L.A. County.

    With roughly 15 projects either under construction or gearing up to break ground, Athenson said the pre-approval process can shave at least 10% off the total development cost of a custom single-family home.

    That’s in part by trimming the approval process. But that's also because prior to the fire, a "custom single-family home" in ALtadena was a luxury product.

    The local industry is “set up to serve that client who is building their dream home from scratch, with a very large if not unlimited budget,” said Athenson. Long-time homeowners displaced by fire, many of them on fixed incomes, represent a very different kind of buyer.

    As builders, designers and policymakers scramble to rebuild in faster, cheaper and more fire-resilient ways, they may stumble upon a solution that could be of use long after the last home is rebuilt in Altadena, he added.

    “Ultimately, we're providing a system for more efficient, affordable housing development,” said Athenson. “I'm excited about proving it in Altadena, and then seeing where it goes beyond.”

    So far the county has approved more than two dozen of the catalog’s plans. Athenson said they are now discussing rolling out a similar batch for the Palisades with the City of Los Angeles.

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

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  • Arraignment for Nick Reiner pushed to next month
    Director Rob Reiner, a man with light skin tone, bald head and white beard, smiles as he stands in between and hugs his wife, Michele Singer, a woman with light skin tone, wearing a black dress and sunglasses, and son, Nick Reiner, a man with light skin tone, short goatee, wearing a dark-colored flannel. They pose for a photograph with Rob Reiner and Michele Singer look at the camera, while Nick Reiner looks away.
    Actor/Producer/Director Rob Reiner (center) and wife Michele Singer (L) and son Nick Reiner (R) attend Teen Vogue's Back-to-School Saturday kick-off event at The Grove in 2013.

    Topline:

    A high-profile defense attorney for Nick Reiner, who is accused of killing his famous parents in their Brentwood home, has stepped down from the case and arraignment has been pushed to next month.

    Why now: Reiner, 32, was expected to be arraigned Wednesday morning in Los Angeles County Superior Court in connection with the deaths of his parents, Hollywood legend Rob Reiner and Michele Singer Reiner, last month. Instead, Nick Reiner’s lawyer, Alan Jackson, revealed in court that he was withdrawing from the case.

    What's next: The L.A. County Public Defender’s Office is expected to take over Reiner’s defense. Arraignment is now set for Feb. 23.

    A high-profile defense attorney for Nick Reiner, who is accused of killing his famous parents in their Brentwood home, has stepped down from the case and arraignment has been pushed to next month.

    Reiner, 32, was expected to be arraigned Wednesday morning in Los Angeles County Superior Court in connection with the deaths of his parents, Hollywood legend Rob Reiner and Michele Singer Reiner, last month.

    Instead, Nick Reiner’s lawyer, Alan Jackson, revealed in court that he was withdrawing from the case.

    The L.A. County Public Defender’s Office is expected to take over Reiner’s defense.

    Reiner, the youngest of the famous couple’s four children, two counts of murder and special-circumstance allegations — multiple murders and use of a deadly weapon — that would make him eligible for the death penalty if convicted.

    District Attorney Nathan Hochman has said his office has not yet determined whether it would seek death or life without the possibility of parole. Such decisions are usually made after a preliminary hearing where a judge hears evidence from prosecutors.

    Hochman has said he would consider the family’s wishes when making his decision.

    Rob Reiner, 78, and Michele Singer Reiner, 68, were found dead Dec. 14 after police were called to their home on South Chadbourne Avenue.

    Detectives with the Police Department’s elite Robbery Homicide Division, Homicide Special Section began an investigation and identified Reiner as the suspect, according to police.

    The younger Reiner was located and arrested in Exposition Park near USC at approximately 9:15 p.m., according to police. He remains in jail on a no-bail status.

    His arraignment in now set for Feb. 23.

  • Crews will repair road through landslide area
    An uneven roadway shows traffic traveling along the oath with cones in the lanes.
    Palos Verdes Drive South has undergone multiple repairs in the Palos Verdes landslide complex area.

    Topline:

    Commuters should avoid Palos Verdes Drive South in Rancho Palos Verdes’ landslide area as crews repair rain-related damage Wednesday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

    About the road: The thoroughfare is the main road through the landslide area carrying around 15,000 cars daily. The recent storms resulted in flooding on the road by Wayfarers Chapel. In the last three years, city officials have grappled with unprecedented land movement that has left around 20 homes uninhabitable and damaged drainage infrastructure.

    Did the recent rains result in land movement: It’s too early to tell. Land movement in Rancho Palos Verdes is triggered when water seeps into the ground, activating the bentonite clay layer, which then slips and slides when wet. A city spokesperson told LAist that land movement will be “felt weeks and months later, so we should know more with future survey data collection.”

  • Many LA fire survivors face delays
    A man with light skin tone, wearing a jacket and pants, shovels mud out of a driveway in front of a home. A woman with light skin tone, wearing a jacket and pants, watches him as she stands closer to the home.
    Ray Farhang clears out mud from his driveway after heavy rainfall triggered multiple mudslides in the Eaton Fire burn scar area in Altadena on Feb. 14, 2025.

    Topline:

    Despite billions in dollars of claims paid out, fires exposed problems in California’s beleaguered insurance market. All policyholders are likely to see premiums rise.

    Why it matters: Seven in 10 L.A. fire survivors have yet to return home, some in part because of insurance claim delays, according to a new survey released this week by Department of Angels, a nonprofit group that was formed after the fires.

    What's next: Newsom said Tuesday that he is working with state lawmakers, the banking industry and others on new loans for rebuilding, and that the state will expand eligibility for the CalAssist Mortgage Fund. The governor’s office did not respond to CalMatters’ questions about whether he plans to propose any aid for renters who survived the fires, and about what else he is doing to continue to press the federal government for long-term disaster funding.

    Read on... for more on the delays many fire survivors are facing.

    A year after the deadly Los Angeles County fires, California’s property insurance market remains problematic; survivors are suing insurers over delayed or denied claims; and most of the state’s policyholders are likely to see their premiums rise.

    Seven in 10 L.A. fire survivors have yet to return home, some in part because of insurance claim delays, according to a new survey released this week by Department of Angels, a nonprofit group that was formed after the fires.

    The survey also found that 4 in 10 insurance policyholders have experienced insurability issues, such as huge premium increases and dropped coverage, although state law mandates a one-year moratorium on insurers canceling or not renewing customers’ policies after the governor declares a state of emergency. Those with homes that did not burn down but are still standing are especially likely to have seen big increases in their premiums, according to the survey of 2,443 adults from Nov. 18 to Dec. 2, 2025.

    Insurance premiums for everyone, not just fire survivors, were already expected to rise under new rules by Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara. The commissioner, under pressure to improve availability of insurance in the state, last January implemented a plan that aims for quicker rate reviews and allows insurers to use catastrophe modeling and reinsurance costs in setting their rates. The plan took effect just days before the L.A. fires.

    Now the response to the fires could also lead to even higher insurance premiums across the board, said Amy Bach, executive director of consumer advocacy group United Policyholders.

    “I advocate for disaster survivors, but also for the entire community of policyholders,” Bach said. “For every ‘Eliminate the List’ bill, for every improvement we make to prevent post-disaster trauma around under-insurance, there’s a cost.” She said such actions will have ramifications for both insurance affordability and availability.

    Eliminate the List,” which Gov. Gavin Newsom signed into law last year, requires insurance companies to pay 60% of personal property coverage limits, up to $350,000, to policyholders who experience a total loss without requiring them to submit a detailed inventory for at least 100 days.

    Still, Bach knows that such mandates are necessary to improve survivors’ experiences after a fire, and lawmakers are introducing new bills to address their concerns. Her own group released a survey in November, reporting policyholder complaints that included insurer communication delays, claims payment delays and being assigned multiple claims adjusters.

    The Department of Angels survey found that customers of State Farm and the last-resort FAIR Plan — the two largest insurers in California — were the most dissatisfied with their insurers’ response. California’s insurance department is investigating State Farm’s response to the fires, and has taken legal action against the FAIR Plan over its response as well, especially to smoke-damage claims. Those insurers, along with other companies, are also facing policyholder lawsuits.

    “Our customer feedback reflects a different experience than what is being reported,” said Tom Hartmann, a State Farm spokesperson, in an email. “We’re supporting more than 13,500 customers affected by the wildfires, more than any other carrier, and have already paid over $5 billion to help them recover.”

    A woman stands in a living room looking out a window with blinds. A man looks out another window a few feet away in the background.
    Sam Strgacich, left, and his wife Rossana Valverde, right, examine soot damage at their home in Pasadena on April 26, 2025.
    (
    Joel Angel Juarez
    /
    CalMatters
    )

    “We’ve paid almost $200,000 out of pocket to repair our home because of the FAIR Plan’s blanket denials of our remediation,” said Angela Giacchetti, a spokesperson for the Department of Angels who worked on the survey. She’s also a fire survivor whose Altadena home did not burn down but was badly damaged.

    “While we are unable to comment on individual policyholders' claims, the California FAIR Plan does not direct where policyholders reside,” said Hilary McLean, a spokesperson for the plan. “The FAIR Plan evaluates every claim on its own merits and pays all covered claims up to the individual policy limits.”

    The FAIR Plan said in a press release this week that it has handled about 5,400 claims and paid almost $3.5 billion to policyholders. It also said it “has taken steps to enhance its ability to serve policyholders” by securing a line of credit and reinsurance, helped by a $750 million catastrophe bond made possible by a new law allowing the FAIR Plan to get bond financing through the California Infrastructure and Economic Development Bank.

    The American Property Casualty Insurance Association says insurance companies have paid $22.4 billion of the expected $40 billion in total claims from the L.A. fires.

    The Department of Angels survey also found 79% of survivors are facing financial hardships, with more Black, Asian and Latino survivors falling behind on their rent or mortgage payments. In addition, 40% of those surveyed said they were very dissatisfied with the local, state and federal response to their needs.

    Newsom said Tuesday that he is working with state lawmakers, the banking industry and others on new loans for rebuilding, and that the state will expand eligibility for the CalAssist Mortgage Fund. The governor’s office did not respond to CalMatters’ questions about whether he plans to propose any aid for renters who survived the fires, and about what else he is doing to continue to press the federal government for long-term disaster funding.

    “This report says exactly what we’ve been hearing,” said Michael Soller, spokesperson for the insurance department. “Wildfire survivors want action and they want results.” He said the issues in the survey are top priorities for the department, and among other things pointed to a task force on smoke damage that the department has convened.

    A bill sponsored by Lara and introduced by newly appointed Senate Insurance Committee Chair Steve Padilla, the Democrat from San Diego, late Tuesday would require insurance companies to submit to the state their disaster-recovery plans related to handling claims; double penalties for violations of fair claims practices during an emergency; expand upfront claims payments; give policyholders status updates within five days whenever their adjuster is replaced; and more.

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