Mariana Dale
covers how schools and students are affected by federal immigration policy.
Published December 9, 2025 5:00 AM
A group of educators and students rally to support the release of a San Fernando Valley teen from immigration detention. A new report shows that immigration crackdowns are affecting school attendance across the country.
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Mariana Dale
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LAist
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Topline:
Since the start of President Donald Trump’s second term, Los Angeles educators have said the increase in immigration enforcement actions contributed to more somber graduation ceremonies, lower attendance and fewer students enrolled in school this year. Now, a nationwide survey of high school principals shows similar scenarios are playing out on campuses across the country.
Why it matters: The Supreme Court ruled in 1982 that undocumented immigrants have a constitutional right to attend public schools — there are an estimated 39,000 such students enrolled in Los Angeles County. The number of students with at least one immigrant family member is much greater. For example, almost half of California children have at least one immigrant parent, according to a Public Policy Institute of California analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data.
The methodology: UCLA researchers based the report on a nationally representative online survey of 606 high school principals and interviewed four dozen respondents this summer.
Overwhelmingly concerned: More than two-thirds of principals reported that students from immigrant families were concerned about the well-being of themselves and their families because of policies and political rhetoric related to immigrants.
Now, a new report from UCLA’s Institute for Democracy, Education and Access finds similar scenarios are playing out on campuses across the country.
“There can sometimes be a sense that, well, we're facing a set of conditions that are unique to Los Angeles,” said UCLA education professor and report co-author John Rogers. “But every state in the nation, almost every community in the nation has high schools where young people are experiencing fear and concern for themselves and for their family members.”
UCLA researchers based the report on a nationally representative online survey of 606 high school principals and follow-up interviews with about four dozen administrators who said students from immigration families experienced:
Heightened concern: 70% said students from immigrant families were concerned about the well-being of themselves and their families because of policies and political rhetoric related to immigrants.
More absences: 64% said students from immigrant families missed school.
Loss of family members: 58% said immigrant parents and guardians left during the school year, sometimes without their children.
Bullying and harassment: 36% said students from immigrant families have been bullied or harassed at their school, in part because of a “political climate that has normalized attacks on immigrant communities.
LAist has reached out to the Trump administration for comment, but has not yet heard back.
Families who need assistance regarding immigration, health, wellness, or housing can call LAUSD's Family Hotline: (213) 443-1300
Students’ right to an education
The Supreme Court ruled in 1982 that undocumented immigrants have a constitutional right to attend public schools — there are an estimated 39,000 such students enrolled in Los Angeles County.
The number of students with at least one immigrant family member is much greater. For example, almost half of California children have at least one immigrant parent, according to a Public Policy Institute of California analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data.
Maria Nichols leads the union that represents Los Angeles Unified School District principals and said that there’s widespread uncertainty among students, families and educators. She is also the daughter of an immigrant from South America who was undocumented for part of her childhood.
“Are we experiencing a crisis now with immigration? Absolutely,” Nichols said. “It's extremely traumatic. It's extremely triggering for people that, you know, lived the immigrant existence. And many of us in education in Los Angeles have lived that.”
“I think a purpose of the federal immigration enforcement policies is to create a level of stress and uncertainty and fear,” Rogers said. “And precisely those dynamics make it hard to sustain student enrollment and student attendance at high levels.”
Rogers said the current climate can disrupt learning for students who do make it to school.
“The extent to which young people are concerned about their wellbeing and the wellbeing of their families while they're at the school means there's less attention, less focus, less learning going on,” Rogers said.
Gillian Morán Pérez
is an associate producer for LAist’s midday All Things Considered show. She also writes about your daily forecast.
Published December 9, 2025 6:00 AM
Highs to reach mid 70s to low 80s.
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Allen J. Schaben
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Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
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Quick Facts
Today’s weather: Sunny
Beaches: mid-70s to around low 80s
Mountains: upper 60s to mid 70s
Inland: 77 to 84 degrees
Warnings and advisories: None
What to expect: Sunny with highs in the mid 70s to low 80s. Breezy Santa Ana winds.
Read on ... for more details.
Quick Facts
Today’s weather: Sunny
Beaches: mid-70s to around low 80s Mountains: upper 60s to mid 70s
Inland: 77 to 84 degrees
Warnings and advisories: None
It might be December, but today and tomorrow will feel like early summer.
Sunny skies and some windy conditions are in store for today. The Santa Ana wind-prone corridors could see gusts up to 40 mph, but otherwise wind speeds will mostly be in the 15 to 30 mph range.
Temperatures in L.A. and Orange County beaches will range from the mid 70s to low 80s.
San Fernando and San Gabriel valleys will hit the mid-80s, while O.C. inland areas will see highs ranging from 80 to 86 degrees.
Over in the Inland Empire, temperatures will range from 77 to 84 degrees.
Meanwhile, the Coachella Valley will see highs from 76 to 81 degrees. And the Antelope Valley will be cooler, with highs only reaching the low 70s.
Teacher Claudia Ralston greets a student at the start of school at Marguerita Elementary School in Alhambra
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Elly Yu
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LAist
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Topline:
There’s a lot riding on the success of California’s transitional kindergarten program— including having enough teachers.
Why it matters: Researchers estimate that California schools will need 11,900 teachers to make good on the expansion of TK into every school district.
The bigger picture: There’s a lot riding on the success of California’s universal TK program. Supporters hope that a year of learning through play will help give a boost to children who may not otherwise have access to preschool. Districts facing declining enrollment hope that a surge of new students will improve their financial outlook.
Another path toward the classroom: Last year, California introduced a new teaching credential to teach TK through third grade. Uptake has been slow so far: Just over 400 educators have earned this credential, according to the Commission on Teacher Credentialing, and about 200 more people are working toward fulfilling this requirement. The credential is currently available at 13 schools.
All 4-year-olds in California can now go to school for free in a grade called transitional kindergarten, or TK.
There’s a lot riding on the success of California’s TK program. Supporters hope that a year of learning through play will give a boost to children who may not otherwise have access to preschool. Districts facing declining enrollment hope that a surge of new students will improve their financial outlook.
Whether TK works at such a large scale depends on whether there are enough teachers qualified to work with children who have unique needs. Researchers estimate that California schools will need nearly 12,000 teachers to make good on the expansion of TK into every school district, as is required beginning this school year.
The state does offers multiple paths toward teaching in a TK classroom, including a new teaching credential introduced in May 2024 that lets educators teach TK through third grade, "designed and intended to help meet the demand for qualified teachers," the state said.
Thus far, uptake has been slow. Just over 400 educators have earned this credential, according to data provided to LAist by the Commission on Teacher Credentialing. About 200 more people are working toward fulfilling this requirement.
Many educators have said the process to get credentialed for TK can be frustrating, especially for preschool teachers without experience in the public school system. The state said it doesn’t have data on how many teachers are coming over from the private preschool sector or from upper grades in public school.
In conversation with LAist, educators who have made their way into TK classrooms say they're glad they did.
In search of more structure
At Price Elementary School in the city of Downey, Samantha Elliott is teaching TK for the first time this year.
However, because she’staught preschool in the past, she runs her classroom with ease — and with the help of a state-mandated aide.
Elliott earned a credential and bachelor’s degree in early childhood development at Cal State Fullerton. This made it possible to move into TK without having to take on more coursework.
“Preschool was great,” she said, “but [at that level, students are] still learning [the] fundamentals of how to be a human, in a sense. [In] TK, we’re focusing a little bit more on academics, and I really was excited to teach the kids and get an early influence on their educational lives.”
Elliot keeps her students engaged throughout the day with music. She uses songs to help them learn their ABCs, colors, shapes — even their sense of time.
Often, Elliot has her students get up and dance. This helps the students get the wiggles out — it’s also part of learning through play.
Samantha Elliott made the switch to TK after teaching preschool for two years.
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Julia Barajas
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LAist
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At Smith Elementary in Lawndale, teacher Lauren Bush lets parents know that while it may look like kids are just having fun, they’re experiencing a lesson that she’s crafted carefully.
“You see kids playing with dinosaurs,” she said. “I see kids sorting by color, doing eye-hand coordination and visual discrimination. I see them using their fine motor skills.”
Bush has over two decades of classroom experience and has been teaching TK for three years, but she still spends a lot of time making sure her lessons are just right. When people see her working nights and weekends, they’re often perplexed. “Why work so much?” they wonder aloud, she said. “You're just babysitting.”
Bush gently corrects them: “I'm, like, ‘Oh my gosh, no! You have to have a special degree to teach TK.’”
In search of something less rigid
Over at Marguerita Elementary School in Alhambra, teacher Lisa Vuong is working toward earning that special credential. On top of working full time, she’s fulfilling her required coursework at Pasadena City College. (Statewide, 13 institutions, including Cal State Long Beach and Cal State Dominguez Hills offer the new credential.)
Vuong is already credentialed to teach kindergarten through eighth grade. She also has 22 years of classroom experience and a master's in education. “But this is a whole different beast,” she said.
She means that in the best way. Even though she comes in with a lesson plan, she said, being a TK teacher often means having to improvise.
“You have kind of a platform that you launch off from, and the kids go in 18 million different directions,” she said.
When Vuong taught upper grades, she spent a lot of time making photocopies and stressing out about her students’ performance on standardized tests. TK — which is not graded or subject to those assessments — gives her a sense of freedom.
“I always say it doesn't even feel like a job,” she said. “ I don't wanna discredit the whole program or anything, but it's just so much fun.”
David Wagner
covers housing in Southern California, a place where the lack of affordable housing contributes to homelessness.
Published December 9, 2025 5:00 AM
Huntington Park Civic Center on February 2, 2023.
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Brian Feinzimer
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LAist
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Topline:
Normally, if a tenant falls short on their monthly rent, even by just a few dollars, they can quickly face eviction. But in the past few years, a handful of cities in Southern California have passed rules barring landlords from evicting tenants if they owe one month’s rent or less. Huntington Park could be the next city to pass such a rule.
The vote: The Southeast L.A. city of Huntington Park could be the next city to pass such a rule. On Tuesday night, the City Council is expected to vote on a proposal that would give tenants protections from eviction if they’ve failed to pay up to one month’s worth of rent. The city of L.A. and the city of Cudahy have already passed similar rules.
Voices on either side of the debate: Tenant advocates say renter protections are urgently needed as households deal with the economic fallout caused by federal immigration raids. Landlord groups say rental housing owners wouldn’t be able to count on timely rent payment as required by lease agreements, which could lead to tighter screening of tenants.
Read on… to learn how much a tenant in L.A. can fall behind on rent and still be protected from eviction.
Normally, if tenants fall short on monthly rent, even by just a few dollars, they can quickly face eviction. But in the past few years, a handful of cities in Southern California have passed rules barring landlords from evicting tenants if they owe one month’s rent or less.
The Southeast L.A. city of Huntington Park could be the next city to pass such a rule. On Tuesday night, the City Council is expected to vote on a proposal that would give tenants protections from eviction if they’ve failed to pay up to one month’s worth of rent.
“There's a lot of renters now who are at risk of not being able to pay their rent because their family members were kidnapped, or are having to fundraise because of the fear around going to work,” Gil said. “This is a protection that would give renters more time if they recently lost income."
Will the rules lead to tighter tenant screening?
But landlord advocates said the proposed rule would mean rental housing owners couldn’t count on timely payment as required by the lease terms signed by tenants.
“This idea will ultimately harm the very people it aims to help,” Fred Sutton, spokesperson for the California Apartment Association, said in an email to LAist. “Out of concern about not being compensated, housing providers may tighten screening criteria, making it harder for people to find a home.”
L.A. was the first local city to pass a threshold for eviction over non-payment of rent in 2023. The city pegs the limit to one month of the area’s “fair market rent” as determined by the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
Under those rules, if an L.A. tenant renting a two-bedroom apartment is behind on rent by less than $2,601, they have local protections from eviction.
A push to expand non-payment protections
The city of Cudahy, which borders Huntington Park, passed a similar non-payment eviction threshold in October.
About 75% of Huntington Park households are renters, and nearly 97% of residents are Latino.
Gil said organizers are now fighting for similar changes in Bell Gardens. He said a one-month threshold could give tenants time to apply for rent relief programs. But he acknowledged that for some, the buffer period won’t be enough to stave off eviction.
“We're advocating at the county level as well for there to be a much larger threshold,” Gil said. “Some of the impacts of the ICE raids are going to be months long.”
State cites Altadena care facility post-Eaton Fire
Aaron Schrank
has been on the ground, reporting on homelessness and other issues in L.A. for more than a decade.
Published December 9, 2025 5:00 AM
The MonteCedro, the large complex in the upper left, was mostly unscathed in the Eaton Fire. This overhead shot shows the aftermath after lots were cleared months later.
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Robyn Beck
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LAist
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Topline:
When the Eaton Fire reached the backyard of the MonteCedro retirement community in the early hours of Jan. 8, many residents woke up to the smell of smoke and the sound of people knocking on doors. Nearly 200 residents were moved to safety, but state investigators said two people were left behind during the evacuations.
The investigation: The California Department of Social Services, which licenses residential care facilities, including assisted living facilities, cited MonteCedro in September for failing to follow its own emergency evacuation procedures and leaving residents behind during evacuations. In a Jan. 29 statement, Episcopal Communities & Services — the nonprofit organization that runs MonteCedro — said fire personnel and MonteCedro staff made two tours through the building, triggering fire alarms and inspecting every residence, but "two independent living residents were not encountered and did not make it to the buses." The two women who were initially left behind were eventually located and moved to safety. MonteCedro authorities are appealing the states' findings. They say first responders, including sheriff's deputies and firefighters, took over the evacuations.
Why it matters: The situation reveals what can happen at long-term care facilities during a disaster when emergency planning and coordination are found to be inadequate. It also raises questions about where a facility's responsibility ends and first responders’ begins.
Go deeper ... for details on how the evacuations unfolded, and what's next for MonteCedro and its residents.
Key findings
LAist reviewed state-mandated emergency plans from more than 70 assisted-living facilities evacuated in January and found that more than 90% were outdated. Over one-third were last approved a decade ago or longer despite a state law that requires yearly updates and approvals.
The emergency plan for MonteCedro, a retirement community in Altadena, did not list specific transportation plans or relocation sites as required by law, according to LAist’s review of the document.
State licensing authorities cited MonteCedro after staff failed to follow procedures for confirming residents’ locations.
MonteCedro’s then-executive director, who was designated to stay on site during evacuations, went home during the fire, according to state investigators.
Sheriff’s deputies found two residents left behind on the property hours after staff and first responders relocated nearly 200 others.
When the Eaton Fire reached the backyard of the MonteCedro retirement community in the early hours of Jan. 8, many residents woke up to the smell of smoke and the sound of people knocking on doors.
Residents waited for directions on what to do. Should they shelter in place? Should they head for the exits?
Some told LAist later that they figured staff at the Altadena facility would take the lead. But something went wrong. The retirement community is among the region’s most upscale — the average entrance fee is around $1 million, according to public finance documents.
“We assumed that there’s some kind of plan, but I never saw it, and didn’t think to investigate it when I moved in,” said Linda Bergthold, an 84-year-old who lives at the care facility.
She was among the residents moved to safety during the fire.
Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies found both women at the property hours later. One was walking her dog outside the building's entrance as nearby houses burned. The other, Jean Bruce Poole, then 100 years old, was wandering the dark hallways of the third floor, according to the Sheriff’s Department.
“I think there could be some protocols put in place that they would know who's where and who's not accounted for,” Poole’s son, John Ward, told LAist.
The California Department of Social Services, which licenses residential care facilities, including assisted living facilities, cited MonteCedro in September for failing to follow its own emergency evacuation procedures and leaving residents behind during evacuations.
Neither MonteCedro, nor the nonprofit Episcopal Communities & Services that runs it, responded to multiple interview requests for this story.
In a Jan. 29 statement, Episcopal Communities & Services said that fire personnel and MonteCedro staff “made two complete tours through the building, triggering fire alarms and inspecting every residence.”
“However, two independent living residents were not encountered and did not make it to the buses," the statement read.
At least one other residential care facility, the Terraces at Park Marino in Pasadena, also was cited for not evacuating all residents.
MonteCedro withstood the Eaton Fire. The Terraces did not. The facility was destroyed shortly after firefighters rescued a woman from the third floor who was initially left behind during the evacuations.
Both facilities have appealed the citations, according to state records. MonteCedro’s appeal has not been made public. Administrators for both facilities avoided fines by submitting required plans to fix the problems.
MonteCedro administrators said at a meeting with residents in February that they were working alongside first responders and weren’t the only responsible party, according to a recording of the gathering reviewed by LAist. Administrators noted that the two women who were left behind ended up being moved to safety.
Sheriff’s deputies and Pasadena public transit bus drivers worked with MonteCedro staff to relocate residents to the evacuation shelter at the city’s convention center. One night earlier, the Pasadena Fire Department helped evacuate the Terraces.
Both evacuations reveal what can happen at long-term care facilities during a disaster when emergency planning and coordination are found to be inadequate. They also raise questions about where a facility's responsibility ends and first responders’ begins.
State investigators determined that MonteCedro’s executive director, David Weidert, was designated to remain on site during emergencies, but he went home before the fire closed in on the facility. He also failed to call in additional staff despite emergency protocols requiring it, according to the state’s investigative report.
Weidert has since left MonteCedro. Shortly after residents returned in March, an interim executive director was named, according to the facility’s final public fire update on March 11. LAist made several attempts to reach Weidert by phone and email but was unsuccessful.
State licensing authorities also found that four of the five people working the early hours of Jan. 8 had never been trained in emergency procedures.
Some residents say they have seen safety changes within the past few months.
The official evacuation order for the area that includes MonteCedro was issued at 5:42 a.m. on Jan. 8, according to archived alerts from the L.A. County Office of Emergency Management.
By then, the fire had been burning for more than 12 hours.
Bergthold, who has lived at the facility for seven years, said her daughter called her from Los Feliz the night of Jan. 7 to warn her about intensifying winds and encourage her to prepare for a possible evacuation.
Bergthold packed a go-bag and slept in her clothes inside her apartment.
She said that when she woke up the next morning, the smoke outside was so thick she couldn't see the trees outside her window.
But I was not told to pack any sort of suitcase by the facility," she said. "I was being proactive. I really wanted to be ready, and I'm glad I was.
— Linda Bergthold, 84, a MonteCedro resident
"But I was not told to pack any sort of suitcase by the facility," she said. "I was being proactive. I really wanted to be ready, and I'm glad I was."
Weidert, MonteCedro’s then executive director, left the facility Jan. 7 around 10 p.m., according to statements he made at a post-fire town hall meeting in February with residents and their family members.
By that time winds in the area were at 70 mph, and both the Palisades and Eaton fires had been burning for hours.
According to the state investigation, five employees stayed on the clock past 10 p.m.: a building and safety manager named Bruno Molina, a security guard, two caregivers, and one licensed vocational nurse who was a temporary worker.
Molina did not respond to LAist’s interview requests.
Only the managers and administrators at MonteCedro had gone through emergency training. All but one of them had gone home for the day.
At 11:30 p.m. on Jan. 7, the executive director called the facility and told Molina that MonteCedro should shelter in place while awaiting official evacuation orders from county authorities, according to the state’s report.
At the town hall, James Rothrock — CEO of Episcopal Communities & Services, the nonprofit that runs the facility — explained the buildings were built to withstand wind and fire, and that evacuating hundreds of residents too soon could have exposed them needlessly to trauma and other health risks.
“The safest place we want to be was inside the building,” he said. At 3 a.m., MonteCedro staff called the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department for help, according to the state investigation.
Around 4 a.m., the Sheriff’s Department and L.A. County Fire Department got involved with the MonteCedro evacuation, according to an Eaton Fire response after-action report commissioned by the county.
At 4:15 a.m., MonteCedro authorities made the decision, along with the L.A. County Fire Department, to evacuate 195 residents who had not previously left on their own, according to a Jan. 29 statement from Episcopal Communities & Services.
Around 5:30 a.m., the evacuation began, according to the state report. By that time, eyewitnesses told LAist they saw fire near the back of the MonteCedro property — and neighboring buildings burning.
Most of the residents, some barefoot and in nightgowns, were rushed outside and onto buses by first responders and facility staff.
Two people were missing.
“That should not have happened,” Rothrock said, in the February town hall recording reviewed by LAist.
He stressed that staff members were working alongside sheriff’s deputies, paramedics and firefighters during the chaos.
Rothrock did not respond to interview requests.
Evacuation plans
During the Eaton and Palisades fires, more than 3,000 residents at more than 100 facilities across L.A. County had to be relocated, according to state authorities.
All residential care facilities are required by law to have written evacuation plans, updated annually and filed with the California Department of Social Services.
LAist reviewed copies of plans for more than 70 assisted living facilities evacuated in January, obtained through a public records request. More than 90% of those plans were outdated. And more than one-third of the facilities’ plans were last updated a decade ago or more, despite state law that requires they be filed each year, updated as needed and approved and checked during annual licensing visits.
Disability policy consultant June Isaacson Kailes reviewed LAist’s findings, as well as dozens of plans independently, and said she was “floored by the inadequacy.”
“Some of them were 10 years old,” she said. “Some of them were not fully filled out.”
MonteCedro’s emergency plan, which was signed and approved by the executive director in 2023, set a framework for what should happen during an evacuation, but state investigators said it lacked details about designated staff roles.
It did not list specific transportation plans or relocation sites as required by state law, according to LAist’s review of the document.
And MonteCedro did not follow some of what it had put in writing, state investigators said in the report. For example, the facility’s plan requires it to maintain an emergency contact list for off-duty staff who are supposed to be called in for help during an evacuation. MonteCedro had no such list, investigators said.
Rachel Tate, who oversees the L.A. ombudsman program for long-term care, said many facilities craft their plans for an emergency that’s just affecting their own location.
“I don't think that facilities in Los Angeles County were braced the way they should be for regional incidents where so many people were impacted at the same time,” she said.
Tate said she encourages families to ask residential care facilities or skilled nursing facilities about their emergency plans.
Isaacson Kailes said local officials should do the same.
“Local governments need to recognize that their plans are weak and inadequate, and therefore they need to be planning with these places," Isaacson Kailes said. “Otherwise, people will die.”
John Ward and his mother, Jean Bruce Poole, celebrating her 100th birthday.
She woke up that morning at the care facility and went about her normal routine, her son told LAist. He said she told him she ate breakfast and took a shower before leaving her room. Then she realized the hallways were dark.
The elevators were down. Emergency lights were out. Sheriff’s deputies found her in a hallway hours later, after first spotting another resident walking a dog near the entrance shortly after 9:30 a.m.
Back at the convention center, MonteCedro staffers were doing a head count around that time, according to the account dated Jan. 29 and posted on their website.
Deputies searched the building looking for anyone left behind, kicking down about 40 doors. They found Poole on the third floor, looking for an exit just before 10:30 a.m., according to timestamps on a deputy’s body-worn camera footage. (The footage obtained by LAist above contains text added by the Sheriff's Department.)
“Don’t lose me,” Poole says in the video.
After Rothrock, CEO of the nonprofit that runs MonteCedro, learned two residents were missing, he went to MonteCedro “immediately,” where he was told that two people had been found and transferred, according to the January statement.
Poole was taken to the convention center and then temporarily relocated to Mt. San Antonio Gardens, a care center in Pomona. Eventually she returned to MonteCedro, where she continues to live, her son said.
Ward said his mother didn’t know how close the Eaton Fire had come until she rounded the corner in a patrol car and saw a nearby church in flames.
Pasadena Transit buses arrived at the MonteCedro retirement community in Altadena before dawn on Jan. 8
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Courtesy of a MonteCedro resident
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Looking back, he told LAist, he has some regrets. He said his mother adores MonteCedro — the gourmet meals and access to field trips and concerts. But when it came to safety in an emergency, staff weren’t adequately prepared, he said.
He remembered that his wife told him the previous evening to drive to the care facility to pick up his mother. At the time, the fire was still 3 miles away, and he thought it would never reach her.
“That was a mistake I made,” Ward said. “And it could have been a very serious ending.”
MonteCedro residents and family members told LAist they’re grateful to facility staff who did stick around to help get most people out. That included Molina, the building manager, who they say evacuated residents as his own family home burned down.
“It's extraordinary courage and dedication to us for them to do that,” said Bergthold, the 84-year old MonteCedro resident.
MonteCedro staff told residents they hired a company called Fire & Life Safety Inc. to review its emergency plans and response effort, according to the recording reviewed by LAist. Staff at the meeting said they have no plans to release those findings publicly.
Residents and family members compiled their own list of changes they are demanding from the facility, according to interviews with LAist. The list includes upgrading alarms, new evacuation protocols, more training for staff and better notification systems for residents and families.
So far, residents said MonteCedro has made some of the changes.
Weidert, the previous executive director, retired in February.
The MonteCedro nursing home survived the Altadena fire but residents were evacuated in the middle of the night.
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Aaron Schrank
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LAist
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The facility hired a new executive director, Adam Peña, in August. Bergthold served on a resident committee that hired the new director.
She said that since he took over, there have been new earthquake drills at the facility, residents were provided emergency go-bags with flashlights and battery packs, and a new resident emergency planning committee was created.
Each floor of MonteCedro’s various buildings now have designated emergency leaders, responsible for coordinating evacuations, Bergthold said.
"I'm very pleased with the actions they've taken," she said.
But she and others say there is still work to be done. They’re hoping for a warning system with flashing lights to help people who are visually impaired.
And they want a stronger transportation plan for evacuating residents from the MonteCedro’s memory care villas so residents don’t have to rely on first responders.
Mostly, they want clearer communication from the people in charge, they said.