Destiny Torres
is LAist's general assignment reporter and brings you the top news you need for the day.
Published November 24, 2025 3:32 PM
A student takes notes during history class.
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Allison Shelley
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via EDUimages
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Topline:
Fast, affordable internet service in parts of L.A. County is expected to become available soon and organizers say now is a good time to sign up for alerts when the program goes live.
How much will the service cost? There will be different plans available — low income, market rate and small business — at different internet speeds and fixed price rates. The low-cost service plan will start at $25 per month for qualifying families. Those who don’t qualify could also purchase plans starting at $65 a month.
How will it work? The internet provider, WeLink, will install a Wi-Fi router inside a home and a 4-inch radio on the roof that will then connect to the internet network.
Why it matters: About 23% of households in East L.A. and Boyle Heights, and more than 40,000 households in South L.A., don’t have home internet.
Read on … for how to stay in the loop when the service rolls out.
Low-cost internet service will soon roll out in parts of L.A. County at the end of this year, and organizers say eligible households can sign up for alerts when the service becomes available.
The service — a partnership between L.A. County and internet provider WeLink — is the latest project from the county’s “Delete the Divide,” an initiative meant to bridge the digital divide in underserved neighborhoods.
Major funding for the project comes from the American Rescue Plan Act, as well as a grant from the California Public Utilities Commission.
It’s badly needed
About 23%, or more than 20,000, households in the East L.A. and Boyle Heights area don’t have home internet, according to Delete the Divide.
The service will also soon be coming to South L.A., where more than 40,000 households were identified as lacking home internet.
What you need to know
There will be different plans available — including low-income, market-rate and small business options — at fixed prices. The low-cost plan will start at $25 per month for qualifying families. Those who don’t qualify could also purchase plans starting at $65 a month. Monthly rates are fixed until at least September 2027.
Every plan includes unlimited data, a router and parental controls.
Low-cost internet service will soon roll out in South L.A. at the end of this year.
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Courtesy of L.A. County
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Low-cost internet service will soon roll out in parts of East L.A. and Boyle Heights at the end of this year.
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Courtesy of L.A. County
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How it works
WeLink will install a Wi-Fi router inside a home and a 4-inch radio on the roof to connect the household to the internet.
Interested households can sign up for updates and be notified by WeLink when service is available here.
Mayor Rex Richardson speaks at a press conference outside City Hall as Long Beach announces a new housing assistance program on Thursday, April 23, 2026.
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Thomas R. Cordova
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Long Beach Post
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Topline:
Long Beach residents at risk of losing their housing can now apply for short-term rental assistance to help them stabilize their finances and, hopefully, stay in their homes.
Who qualifies: To qualify, renters must be making 50% or less of the area’s annual median income. That amounts to $53,000 or lower for a household of one and increases for each household member — for instance, $75,750 for four, $100,000 for eight.
The backstory: It’s among the first programs being funded by Los Angeles County Measure A, a half-cent sales tax increase approved by voters in 2024 and specifically earmarked for programs to prevent homelessness in the region.
Read on... for more on how to apply.
Long Beach residents at risk of losing their housing can now apply for short-term rental assistance to help them stabilize their finances and, hopefully, stay in their homes.
The city says it’s rolling the program out quickly. Qualified renters could start receiving funds as early as the second week of May.
It’s among the first programs being funded by Los Angeles County Measure A, a half-cent sales tax increase approved by voters in 2024 and specifically earmarked for programs to prevent homelessness in the region.
Long Beach’s program, called Long Beach Renter Aid, got $2.7 million in Measure A dollars. Officials estimated that’s enough to help between 175 and 250 households with up to 6 months of rental assistance or up to $9,000 per household, whichever is less.
The funds can also be used to pay for overdue rent, past-due utilities, moving expenses and/or security deposits.
To qualify, renters must be making 50% or less of the area’s annual median income. That amounts to $53,000 or lower for a household of one and increases for each household member — for instance, $75,750 for four, $100,000 for eight.
Long Beach residents can see if they qualify and apply online here or in person Monday through Thursday at the Multi-Service Center or on Friday at the city’s Housing Authority.
The application window closes on May 8. The financial assistance should start going out that same day, said Deputy City Manager Teresa Chandler.
There will be a new application window each month starting in June. The city plans to accept new applicants between the 5th and 12th of each month until funds are exhausted.
The program will prioritize applicants who are 55 and older, at imminent risk of eviction or are impacted by the loss of federal benefits, policy changes or immigration enforcement actions.
Long Beach is the first city to roll out such a program using county Measure A funds.
Another program funded by Measure A is also paying for legal aid to help renters stave off wrongful evictions. Two more planned to launch soon are aimed at preventing homelessness for Long Beach residents aged 55 and older and residents aged 18-25. Details will be announced in the coming months.
“These resources are a lifeline,” Mayor Rex Richardson said at a news conference on Wednesday.
Mayor Rex Richardson speaks at a press conference outside City Hall as Long Beach announces a new housing assistance program on Thursday, April 23, 2026.
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Thomas R. Cordova
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Long Beach Post
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It will also be a huge help for families who have suffered financial hardship as a result of aggressive immigration enforcement tactics that began last May, said Susannah Sngiem, executive director of the nonprofit United Cambodian Community.
In many cases, “those that are detained are the breadwinners of these families,” Sngiem said.
Monica Bushman
produces arts and culture coverage for LAist's on-demand team. She’s also part of the Imperfect Paradise podcast team.
Published April 24, 2026 5:00 AM
Pianist Yi-Ju Lai, faculty member at the Pasadena Conservatory of Music, at The Huntington on April 20, 2026.
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Monica Bushman / LAist
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Topline:
LACMA, The Huntington, the Getty Center and the Norton Simon Museum all offer opportunities to catch live music performances for free this spring/summer.
Dates to know:
Music in the Rose Garden at The Huntington: Mondays from 1 to 3 p.m., April 20 through June 8
Jazz at LACMA: Fridays from 6 to 8 p.m., May 1 through October
Off the 405 at Getty Center: Select Saturdays, May 30 through August 22
Golden Hour: Music in the Garden at the Norton Simon Museum: Select Fridays, May 29 through August
Read on ... for more about the free live music performances.
The jacaranda trees are blooming (a little early); the three-acre rose garden at The Huntington is in full bloom too; and Jazz at LACMA is about to start …
It's springtime in Southern California!
That also means it’s time to do a little planning for your next Southern California museum visit — so you can not only see some art, but also enjoy a free live music performance.
Music in the Rose Garden at The Huntington
The Huntington Rose Garden
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The Huntington
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Flickr
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The Huntington’s Music in the Rose Garden live music performance series is already underway. The series is in partnership with the Pasadena Conservatory of Music, and now is a great time to go and see the more than 1,300 varieties of roses in full bloom in the San Marino garden that dates back to 1908.
On Monday afternoons from 1 to 3 p.m. (through June 8) a different Pasadena Conservatory performer or duo plays instruments including piano, violin, accordion, cello and guitar.
Music in the Rose Garden performances are free, with paid admission to The Huntington or an annual membership. The series also returns in the fall.
An insider tip, especially for those visiting with kids (who get free admission if they’re under 4-years-old): keep an eye out for the rose garden’s fairy door.
Jazz at LACMA
Jazz at LACMA
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Photo courtesy of LACMA
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via Facebook
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The 35th season of Jazz at LACMA kicks off on Friday, May 1 and runs through October. The first performance this year is by vocalist and composer Michelle Coltrane, the daughter of jazz legends John and Alice Coltrane, as part of a celebration of the 100th anniversary of her father’s birth.
The live performances take place from 6 to 8 p.m. in the Smidt Welcome Plaza, next to the Instagram-famous “Urban Light” installation of 200+ antique street lamps.
The free jazz nights at LACMA don’t require admission to the museum, but if you do also want to visit the museum, admission is free for L.A. County residents from 3 to 6 p.m. on weekdays (including Friday).
If you’re looking to check out LACMA’s newly unveiled David Geffen museum galleries, you’ll need to be a member to enter on May 1. The next Friday opportunity for non-members is May 8.
The Getty Center’s nighttime Off the 405 summer concert series kicks off on Saturday, May 30 with a performance by blues poet, vocalist and composer aja monet. Other artists in the series include South Korean pop band and electronic musician Laurel Halo.
The “Off the 405” performance series is free, but does require an online reservation. Reservations for the aja monet performance will be available beginning May 7 and about three weeks ahead of each of the following performances (which run through August 22).
Also, admission to the Getty Center is free, but there is a fee ($15-25) for parking before 6 p.m. on Saturdays.
Golden Hour: Music in the Garden at the Norton Simon Museum
Norton Simon Museum’s annual Garden Party
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Norton Simon Museum
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The Norton Simon Museum in Pasadena offers free live music in its newly renovated sculpture garden on select Fridays from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m., beginning this year May 26 and running through August.
The performances are programmed by bassist and composer Masatoshi Sato and feature a range of musical styles. They’re free with admission to the Norton Simon Museum, which is $20 for adults and free for students and people 18 and under. Admission is free for all on the first Friday of every month from 4 to 7 p.m.
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By Jill Replogle, Alejandra Molina for The LA Local
Published April 24, 2026 5:00 AM
Members of People's Care Collective prepare to rally outside Los Angeles General Medical Centerto denounce the treatment of immigrants brought into hospitals by ICE on March 15, 2026.
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J.W. Hendricks
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The LA Local
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Topline:
After widespread reports last year of immigration agents interfering with patient care and privacy at local hospitals, Los Angeles County now has a policy that asserts the rights of detained patients and instructs county public hospital staff on how to handle the ICE agents that accompany them.
About the new policy: The policy, which went into effect in March, clarifies that patients brought in by civil law enforcement officers, including immigration agents, have the right to communicate with family members, legal counsel and advocates. Implemented by the LA County Department of Health Services, the policy has been described as a “new gold standard of care” meant to safeguard patient rights as hospitals navigate an influx of federal immigration raids. These new guidelines only apply to public health care facilities.
Advocates say policy is not well known: To physicians and advocates with the People’s Care Collective, a network of health care workers and organizers, this policy marks a major shift in how hospitals handle patients in immigration custody. But they said awareness of it has been lacking within the health care system, even though the Department of Health Services said the policy has been shared with staff. A statement provided by the Department of Health Services said the policy is accessible to staff through a workforce portal, adding that a “guidance tool” has been distributed.
Read on ... for full details of the new L.A. County policy.
After widespread reports last year of immigration agents interfering with patient care and privacy at local hospitals, Los Angeles County now has a policy that asserts the rights of detained patients and instructs county public hospital staff on how to handle the ICE agents that accompany them.
The policy, which went into effect in March, clarifies that patients brought in by civil law enforcement officers, including immigration agents, have the right to communicate with family members, legal counsel and advocates. Implemented by the LA County Department of Health Services, the policy has been described as a “new gold standard of care” meant to safeguard patient rights as hospitals navigate an influx of federal immigration raids.
There’s one problem, though: Hardly anyone knows about it.
To physicians and advocates with the People’s Care Collective, a network of health care workers and organizers, this policy marks a major shift in how hospitals handle patients in immigration custody. But they said awareness of it has been lacking within the health care system, even though the Department of Health Services said the policy has been shared with staff.
“The vast majority of the [LA County Department of Health Services] workforce, which is the second largest health care system in the country — second only to NYC — is unaware of this policy, unaware of all of the rights of their patients under this policy, and how the policy empowers health care workers to protect these rights,” said a Department of Health Services physician who is a member of the People’s Care Collective. The doctor asked to speak anonymously due to fear of retaliation.
The policy follows a Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors directive requiring the Department of Health Services to develop guidelines allowing patients detained by immigration authorities to authorize the release of information to family, counsel and government representatives.
The policy also:
Instructs staff to ask agents to remain outside of a patient’s room at all times, absent safety concerns
Forbids unnecessary restraints, or shackling, of patients
Requires agents to remain in public areas of the hospital unless they have a judicial warrant
Requires agents to “remain identifiable at all times”
Prohibits agents from acting as interpreters or surrogate decision-makers for detained patients
Instructs staff not to physically interfere with ICE agents or assist a patient in hiding or fleeing
Prohibits discharging the patient back into immigration custody “until custody is confirmed as lawful and documented.”
These new guidelines only apply to public health care facilities and not private hospitals such as Adventist White Memorial in Boyle Heights, where doctors last year reported ICE agents violating the privacy rights of detained patients and prohibiting contact with patients’ family members.
This article was published in collaboration with LAist.
People’s Care Collective members say they hope private health care facilities adopt similar measures — and they may have to if the state legislature passes several bills making their way through the legislature. But first, the members say, an education campaign is crucial to inform hospital workers and the public at large about the new guidelines.
“Being upfront about this really can set the precedent for places across the country to follow suit,” the LA County Department of Health Services physician said. “It’s our patients’ rights to know these rights. If we really care as a county that wants to live by our values [of caring] about all of its residents, including immigrant residents and folks who are being targeted by ICE, we need to walk the walk.”
The physician said members of the collective, who were aware of the Board of Supervisors’ directive, learned about the policy’s implementation last month only after searching through the Department of Health Services’ internal website. The department officially announced the policy a few days later by summarizing key points through email, according to the physician.
“The majority of health care workers are only going to know about the policy to the extent that is shared with them … and are not going to have the time and capacity to be digging deep into this internal website, finding the policy, reading it through [and] understanding it,” the physician said.
While health care facilities may fear retaliation by the Trump administration for being vocal about the rights of patients and immigrants, the physician said the Department of Health Services should “model the bravery and integrity” that its workforce has embodied since the beginning of the raids.
“These rights are not up for negotiation. They’re not flexible pending political circumstances,” the physician said.
A statement provided by the Department of Health Services said the policy is accessible to staff through a workforce portal, adding that a “guidance tool” has been distributed.
“We have also taken proactive steps to communicate this specific policy to all staff, supervisors, and managers through multiple internal channels, including all staff emails, hospital newsletters,” the statement said.
None of the hospitals or medical centers operated by LA Health Services have received a patient under civil custody, including ICE detention, since January 2026, according to the department.
This article was published in collaboration with LAist.
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J.W. Hendricks
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The LA Local
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Rebecca Trotzky-Sirr, a physician at LA General who has worked closely with patients in criminal custody, said hospitals across the country were caught off guard when the Trump administration’s aggressive immigration tactics led to an influx of patients brought in by ICE for emergency care. Many hospitals, including LA General, have clear protocols for handling patients in criminal detention, for example, after being arrested by a police officer.
But most patients accompanied by ICE are civil, not criminal detainees.
“It took a long time for people to understand that,” she said. Trotzky-Sirr spoke with LAist as an individual physician, not on behalf of the Department of Health Services or LA General.
Initially, she said, many health care workers assumed ICE had the same authority as criminal law enforcement agencies in medical settings to take precautions like restricting a patient’s communications.
“But that’s not what we should do," she said. "That’s not what we’re legally obligated to do.”
Plus, Trotzky-Sirr said, hospital staff, like anyone, might feel intimidated by a masked, armed agent.
“It’s hard to stand up confidently to someone with a gun,” she said.
But staff members’ deference to the demands of federal immigration agents over patients’ rights has been slowly changing, the doctor said, as more staff become educated on policies for handling detained patients, and especially, the difference between patients in civil custody versus criminal custody. Most patients who have been apprehended by ICE are civil, not criminal detainees.
“It took a long time for people to understand that,” the doctor said.
To Henry Perez, executive director of InnerCity Struggle, the county can strengthen awareness by working with organizations “with deep roots in the community.”
Perez, who has been involved in community efforts to protect patient rights at White Memorial, thinks of the county’s outreach work around housing and renters’ rights, partnering with organizations like Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles, Public Counsel and InnerCity Struggle.
“There is a roadmap … and the county needs to reproduce that template that they already know how to do,” Perez said. “Just as housing is a critical issue in the community, so are immigrant rights and protections.
“A policy is only as good and as strong as its implementation and enforcement.”
Some Southern California legislators are trying to safeguard the rights of detained patients at the state level. State Sen. Caroline Menjivar, who represents Burbank and the San Fernando Valley, authored a bill, SB 915, that would, among other measures, prohibit immigration officers from remaining at a patient’s bedside unless there’s a credible risk of harm, or the officer has a valid judicial warrant.
A second bill, SB 1323, authored by state Sen. Susan Rubio, whose district stretches from El Monte to Ontario, would require hospital staff to immediately notify management when immigration agents show up. It would also require hospital management to instruct staff on how to respond to a detained patient’s request to notify family of their whereabouts.
Both bills would apply to all health care entities in California, both public and private.
The Department of Homeland Security did not respond to a request for comment by publication time. This story will be updated if a response is received.
Fiona Ng
is LAist's deputy managing editor and leads a team of reporters who explore food, culture, history, events and more.
Published April 24, 2026 5:00 AM
Dishes such as the shrimp Pad Thai dish at Miya Thai in Altadena.
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Cathy Chaplin
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LAist
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Topline:
What screams Thai food more than pad Thai? Nothing. And on Sunday, the utilitarian stir-fried noodles will be the main character of an attempt to break a Guinness World Record.
What exactly is this? The challenge? To serve andsell 1,200 plates of the stuff in 60 minutes.
Why now: The headline grabbing gambit is part of17th Thai New Year Festival happening on Sunday in Hollywood Thai Town.
Read on ... to learn more about the event and how it came together.
What screams Thai more than pad Thai? Nothing. And on Sunday, the utilitarian stir-fried noodles will be the main character in an attempt to break a Guinness World Record.
The challenge? To serve andsell 1,200 plates of the stuff in 60 minutes. The headline-grabbing gambit is part of17th Thai New Year Festival happening Sunday in Hollywood Thai Town.
Pad Thai Guinness World Record Sunday, April 26 Gates open: 9 a.m. Challenge: 10 a.m. - 11 a.m. Ticket: $38, including a plate of Pad Thai as part of the record-breaking attempt
Chinnakrit Soonthornwan (he said you can just call him Oak) came up with the idea to break the old Guinness record of around 1,000 plates. As of Thursday, the team already has received about 700 orders from participants.
"I think it [is] very possible," Oak said of their chances to make history. "It is going to be epic."
Also epic is the setting of this record-breaking attempt.
"It's all outside," Oak said. " There will be 35 restaurants working at the same time with big woks — like, gigantic woks."
Not to mention the 1,200 (or more) people chowing down on said noodles.
Pad Thai wasn't the first dish of choice. The team first landed on mango sticky rice.
"It seemed like everyone can eat it. It's vegan," he said.
But the popular dessert is difficult to make, and Oak added, "It's Thai, but the name is not Thai."
Again, what screams Thai cuisine more than pad Thai?
"This is Thai. This is how we do it together," he said. "This is how we do world history."
Oak is also a co-founder ofDS Night Market, a weekly Thai gathering proffering music and food taking place in Chinatown for the past couple years. He said his team has been regular attendees of the New Year festival and those born-and-raised in Thai Town have always wanted to help out.
"And we were like, 'We not gonna do something like they had done for 16 years,'" Oak said. "So we pitched them the pad Thai world record thing."
The bigger goal is to shed a spotlight on the community and to support the mom-and-pops. The pad Thai challenge is just one of the highlights. The all-day Sunday New Year celebration includes five stages focusing on food, music, a beer garden and even boxing.
"We want to drive the business sales and bring more good vibes to Thai business owners," he said.