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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • Where's your favorite spot for an afternoon tea?
    TKTKTK
    Don't be late! Tea at The Huntington is served with breathtaking garden views, and a delicate assortment of finger foods and, of course, tea.

    Topline:

    Spring is in full bloom and giving way to summer. One of the best ways to enjoy this time of the year? With an afternoon tea, and even better if it's one overlooking one of the many gardens we love here so much in SoCal.

    Why it matters: We can all use an excuse to unplug and recharge, and there's just something about a full tea service in the afternoon that makes us feel like turning off our phones and shoving them into the bottom of our bags or briefcases. Tea is that reason!

    Why now: We're heading into a gauntlet of holidays — Mother's Day, graduation season, Father's Day — where we're looking for a way to get together with family and friends, and make it feel a bit more special than the local pizza joint. A tea house does the trick, allowing everyone to graze as little as they like, or add more dishes on (for a bit extra.) Plus: Most tea services offer some kind of adult beverage, always helpful when getting together with family.

    Where you come in: Let us know about your favorite places to go for tea. This list is just our starting point. We know there are some real gems out there, and we don't want to overlook any of them. Pinkies up!

    If Hollywood is any indication, L.A. is a coffee-drinking town — every lead actor, it seems, walks around holding an empty coffee cup for the cameras.

    But there's another side to our caffeinated ways: We love channeling our inner royal and enjoying the British tradition of a full afternoon tea service. That includes, but is not limited too, warm-from-the oven scones served with jam, lemon curd and clotted cream and those cute little finger sandwiches and pretty petit fours.

    How else to explain that I couldn't find any traditional tea room reservations — none! — for Mother's Day this Sunday for a time and place that worked for us. (So, mom, just a head's up, you're getting a handmade IOU coupon for tea with me later this month...) A few places on this list, however, did indeed have reservations available, and we noted them accordingly.

    It seems that we like an excuse to ditch the flip flop for something a little more presentable as we poke out our pinkies and oooh and ahhh over towering tray stands adorned with dainty, crustless sandwiches and pastries served on flowered plates and alongside delicate teacups.

    At some point you might even find yourself wondering about the difference in such terms as high tea, afternoon tea, and cream tea service. Many use these terms interchangeably. But those in the know — such as Lady Baker's Tea — consider high tea to be more akin to supper, with heartier fare, and afternoon tea to be the more traditional tea and scones and finger foods. A cream tea is pared back even more, typically served with tea and scones and clotted cream, like the nicest, poshest 15-minute work break you could ever imagine.

    Here are six places where we can pretend we're just like Duchess Meghan Markle and Prince Harry up in Montecito, and prep for Season 3 of Bridgerton, coming May 16. But, no doubt, this list is missing a few of your favorite spots. Let us know and we might add it to this list, because we can all use an excuse to turn the phones off (so uncouth at the table!), unplug and unwind with a cuppa.

    The Rose Garden Tea Room at The Huntington

    Several delicate fingerfoods are laid out on a marble tabletop: Small fluted pastry bites, crustless sandwiches filled with greens and strawberry slices, and open faced cucumber and radish sandwiches. All the sandwiches have been sliced into thin strips, so they are easy to hold and eat.
    Tea at The Huntington is served with breathtaking garden views and a delicate assortment of finger foods.
    (
    Courtesy The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens
    )

    The Rose Garden Tea Room at the Huntington serves a variety of sweet and savory options, some that might surprise you, such as a poached Maine lobster roll. There are six crustless sandwiches on the menu, including salmon with dill cream cheese and caviar, curried carrot and golden raisin and a sweet onion. There are also seasonal house made scones, an assortment of teas and desserts such as chocolate brown butter almond cake and seasonal fruit tarts, plus vegan and gluten free menus as well. There are wines and cocktails, too, such as the Noble Bee, $14, made with gin, fresh citrus and a local honey.

    The setting, though, is priceless, looking out onto the lush grounds of the Huntington. A few things to know before you go: Visiting the Rose Garden Tea Room requires purchasing admission to The Huntington, so plan your day to give yourself time to enjoy the grounds. Also, give yourself plenty of time to get across those grounds and to the tea room early: These reservations are in high demand, and you only get a 10 minute grace period. After that, and your reservation will be released to the waiting walk-ins (and yes, there are likely to be waiting walk-ins). And parties larger than six must reserve space directly through the Tea Room.

    Cost: $62-$75 per adult, $28 per child.

    Location: 1151 Oxford Road, San Marino
    Hours: Monday through Friday, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.

    The Culver Hotel in Culver City

    A table is set for tea, with a towering glass-and-silver tray for finger foods, a silver tea pot, a silver vase strewn with flowered vines, and an assortment of dainty dishes and tea cups. It all sits on a white tablecloth that is adorned with tiny pink flower.
    The afternoon tea at The Culver Hotel.
    (
    Dylan and Jeni for The Culver Hotel
    )

    Fresh macerated berries, scones and strawberry jam and chantilly cream start off the high tea at Lillie’s at The Culver Hotel. That’s followed by tea sandwiches and savory bites such as crab cakes with peppercorn aioli, chicken salad, cucumber and watercress sandwiches and French baguettes with radishes. There’s also assorted petit fours. As for tea, there’s English breakfast, an Earl Grey, green and berry herbal teas, and many more. Want something with a bit more punch? Kir Royals, Bellinis and Mimosas are $16. Reservations are recommended. Note the caution that “Proper attire and good manners required.”

    Cost: $65 a person

    Location: 9400 Culver Blvd., Culver City
    Hours: Saturdays and Sundays, 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.


    The Tea House On Los Rios In San Juan Capistrano

    You know what would be a lovely way to spend an afternoon? Taking a leisurely drive down to San Juan Capistrano, strolling the historic downtown, and then dropping into the beloved Tea House On Los Rios for tea, freshly-baked buttermilk scones, raspberry preserves and their specialty Early California Cream and much more. Tea experiences also include soups, garden salads, fresh fruit sprinkled with brown sugar and cream, and assorted tea sandwiches. There is also a wide selection of premium loose leaf teas. And if you want heartier fare, there are other entree options, including grilled salmon, roasted chicken, shepherd’s pie and English Pastis (slow braised beef served in a handmade puff pastry crust). Reservations are recommended. At last check, reservations were still available for this Mother's Day.

    Cost: $39 to $72 per adult ($29 to $45 for children 10 and under), depending upon tea experience chosen. 

    Location: 31731 Los Rios St., San Juan Capistrano
    Hours: Monday through Friday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., with last seatings at 4 p.m.

    Chado, with locations in DTLA, Hollywood, Pasadena and Torrance

    If you're trying to score a Mother's Day rezzie, you could be in luck at Chado. As of this typing, there were reservations available at the DTLA and Torrance locations. The weekly afternoon tea menu at Chado leans more toward a meal, including choice of a cream of tomato soup or salad, and four half sandwiches — smoked salmon, souchong chicken, egg salad, cucumbers and cream cheese — along with tea-infused chocolates, a scone with cream and jam, and butter cookies. There are also plenty of add ons — salads, paninis and chicken tikka masala — all in the $15-20 range.

    Cost: $36.95, more for add ons. Note that there is a special Mother's Day tea menu, $65.

    Locations: 369 East 1st St. (inside the Japanese American National Museum) in DTLA, 6801 Hollywood Blvd. Suite #209 in Hollywood, 79 North Raymond Ave., Pasadena, and 1303 El Prado Ave. in Torrance.

    Hours: In DTLA, Hollywood and Torrance, daily, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. (last seating at 5 pm). In Pasadena, daily 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. (last seating at 6 p.m.)

    Ye Olde King’s Head in Santa Monica

    Afternoon tea at Ye Olde King's Head, one of the most recognizable British pubs in SoCal, includes a selection of finger sandwiches, freshly baked scones served with Devonshire cream and preserves, and a selection of pastries. Hard to beat the price. There is a modest selection of teas, including English Breakfast, Earl Grey and Lady Grey. If you plan ahead, you can also make it for the psychic tea, which is exactly what it sounds like. A psychic will be on hand to provide Tarot card readings and the like. Reservations are recommended: (310) 451-1402

    Cost: Starts at $35, and can include add ons like a glass of champagne. If you want to keep it simple and light, there’s a $9.95 freshly baked scone with jam, and Devonshire cream, and fresh strawberries. Bubbly adult beverages are $12.

    Location: 116 Santa Monica Blvd., Santa Monica
    Hours: Monday through Saturday, 11:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.


    The Langham Huntington in Pasadena

    No surprise, this place takes the typical afternoon tea fare, and levels up the luxury. The afternoon tea at the Langham in Pasadena includes finger sandwiches includes pesto, prosciutto and whipped burrata on sourdough with balsamic, and an egg salad made with kimchi aioli and desserts including a guava cream cheese empanada and pineapple upside-down cheesecake and French macarons as well as favorites such as freshly baked scones (vanilla, lemon poppy) served with lemon curd, Devonshire cream and fruit jam. Gluten free and vegan menus are also available. Reservations are recommended.

    Cost: Starting at $79 per adult, $40 for children under 12. There cocktail and bubbly beverege for add on prices. Parking is $15 with validation. A 20% gratuity is included on billing.

    Location: 1401 South Oak Knoll Ave., Pasadena
    Hours: Thursday through Sunday, 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.

  • Only qualified candidates count
    People lean over tables, separated by privacy dividers reading "Vote" and bearing images of the American flag.
    A man casts his ballot during early voting

    Topline:

    Write-in candidates in Southern California are no joke. Election officials require them to qualify. While many are already in, Tuesday is the deadline to be considered. The full list will be released to the public Friday.

    The rules: The city of L.A. requires write-in candidates to file a form and pay $300 or submit 500 valid signatures, while other cities may not require anything except paperwork. Qualified candidate names are sent to county election officials and will post the information Friday for voters.

    Some write-in candidates: As of 3 p.m. Tuesday, the L.A. County Registrar of Voters listed 20 write-in candidates who filed in California for a wide range of races, from state Assembly and state Senate to governor. Of the 20, 11 filed as write-ins for the governor’s race.

    Why it matters: Most write-in campaigns are a long shot but some have won: Lisa Murkowski won an Alaska U.S. Senate seat in 2010; Washington, D.C., Mayor Anthony Williams was reelected in 2002.

    Who gets counted: Only votes for qualified write-in candidates are counted and certified. Sorry, Mickey Mouse and George Washington.

    What's next: Here’s the current list of qualified write-in candidates in L.A. County. Checking the box that says Show only Write In Records will show you write-in candidates. Orange County election officials say they have no write-in candidates.

    Go deeper: Your LAist voter guide for the 2026 June elections.

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  • Here's a roundup of the fires in SoCal
    Several buildings are seen next to a cove on a rugged island.
    A fire on Santa Rosa Island has been burning since May 15, 2015. The island is seen here in 1997.

    Topline:

    Several fires are burning across Southern California, with some destroying structures, threatening homes and charring pristine landscapes.

    Where are the fires? A large fire is burning on Santa Rosa Island in Channel Islands National Park. A fire in Simi Valley has destroyed one home and led to multiple evacuation alerts. Two fires are in Riverside County, and a small fire is in the San Gabriel Mountains.

    The forecast: Warm weather and Santa Ana wind conditions have hampered firefighting efforts and are expected to continue through Wednesday this week.

    Read on ... for details about the Sandy Fire, Santa Rosa Island Fire and others.

    Several fires are burning across Southern California, with some destroying structures, threatening homes and charring pristine landscapes.

    Warm weather and Santa Ana wind conditions have hampered firefighting efforts and are expected to continue through Wednesday this week. The National Weather Service forecasts cooler weather and "May gray" through the weekend.

    Here's a roundup of some of the fires burning now.

    (All dates refer to today, Tuesday, May 19, unless otherwise noted)

    Santa Rosa Island Fire (Santa Barbara County)

    The fire is burning in Channel Island National Park territory. Firefighters traveled by boat with their equipment to get to the island, according to news reports. The island is home to rare and endangered plants and animals.

    Sandy Fire (Ventura County)

    CalFire reported about 2:40 p.m. Tuesday that lessening winds allowed "firefighters to take full advantage of improved weather to strengthen containment lines and continue aggressive suppression efforts. Crews remain actively engaged both on the ground and in the air to gain additional containment and keep the fire within its current perimeter."

    The fire started Monday in the southern part of Simi Valley. It eventually spread eastward toward L.A. County communities in the San Fernando Valley, but overnight conditions were favorable to firefighters, CalFire said. Several communities were under evacuation orders and warnings, and schools in the area were closed.

    Bain Fire (Riverside County)

    The fire was first reported around noon Tuesday, according to CalFire, near Jurupa Valley (east of the 15 Freeway and south of the 60). CBS News Los Angeles reported that four people have been injured.

    Verona Fire (Riverside County)

    Burro Fire (Angeles National Forest)

    The fire started Monday in a mountainous area north of the San Gabriel Reservoir.

    Listen to our Big Burn podcast

    Listen 39:42
    Get ready now. Listen to our The Big Burn podcast
    Jacob Margolis, LAist's science reporter, examines the new normal of big fires in California.

    Fire resources and tips

    Check out LAist's wildfire recovery guide.

    Prepare for the next disaster:

    If you have to evacuate:

    Navigating fire conditions:

    How to help yourself and others:

    How to start the recovery process:

    What to do for your kids:

  • Ethics Commission to serve as corruption watchdog
    A woman with reddish hair, glasses and light-tone skin speaks on screen as her name (Lindsey P. Horvath) and agenda item appears in the lower thirds.
    Supervisor Lindsey Horvath sponsored the motion to create an L.A. County Ethics Commission.

    Topline:

    Citing a desire to prevent corruption within county government, the Board of Supervisors on Tuesday established Los Angeles County’s first ethics commission.

    The backstory: In 2024, voters approved Measure G, which called for the creation of an Ethics Commission and Office of Ethics Compliance. The measure came amid a series of corruption cases at L.A. City Hall but calls for reform spilled over into the county government.

    The details: The motion by Supervisor Lindsey Horvath and approved by the board Tuesday directs county departments to begin establishing the operational, staffing and legal infrastructure necessary to launch the commission in this year. It also directs staff to prepare a charter amendment for voter consideration on the November ballot to enshrine the commission in the charter.

    Composition: Supervisors voted for a plan that calls for a seven-member commission. Initially, the chair of the Board of Supervisors, the county assessor and the Governance Reform Task Force would each appoint a commissioner, filling three spots. Those appointees would then select the remaining four members from a pool of applicants.

    Opposition: Supervisor Janice Hahn supported the overall motion but opposed the composition of the commission, saying too many members were to be appointed by elected officials — the same people the panel would be charged with watchdogging.

    History: The county has had its own campaign, lobbying and ethics laws on the books for years, but they were enforced by ethics officers in various departments. The latest proposal calls for a 54-member ethics office to enforce those laws and for the commission to impose fines if they are violated.

  • CA community colleges crack down on fake students
    Students walk down a cement path passing signage that reads "Financial aid office. Cloud hall, room 324."
    Students walk past a sign for a campus financial aid office Dec. 8, 2017.

    Topline:

    After a spike in fraudulent applications to California’s community colleges, school officials say they are getting better at detecting and preventing fraud, though it still happens.

    Why it matters: Between January and March 2025, scammers stole nearly $5.6 million in federal student aid and over $900,000 in state aid. By comparison, this spring colleges have reported losing just under $1.5 million in federal student aid and about $330,000 in state aid to fraudsters. Last spring was “really the peak,” Hadsell said. He said he anticipates the end-of-year total in 2026 to be “significantly lower” than last year.

    The backstory: Last spring, CalMatters reported that colleges were seeing unprecedented reports of fraud, with scammers stealing millions more dollars of student aid than in any previous period, according to reports submitted by colleges to California’s Community Colleges Chancellor’s Office.

    Read on... for more on how community colleges in the state are cracking down on financial aid fraud.

    This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters.

    California’s community colleges have been battling fraudulent students for years, trying to prevent scammers from stealing financial aid money.

    Recent data shows the colleges’ efforts finally may be working.

    Last spring, CalMatters reported that colleges were seeing unprecedented reports of fraud, with scammers stealing millions more dollars of student aid than in any previous period, according to reports submitted by colleges to California’s Community Colleges Chancellor’s Office.

    Now fewer scammers are bypassing colleges’ vetting systems, according to monthly reports, and school administrators say they’re better, though still not perfect, at detecting and preventing fraud.

    After CalMatters reported on the rise in fraud last year, Republican U.S. Congress members called for a federal investigation, a Democratic state legislator launched a state audit and later, California’s Community Colleges Chancellor’s Office approved a new ID verification policy for students. Colleges now are more vigilant about policing fraud, said Jory Hadsell, an executive in technology initiatives for the chancellor’s office, who pointed to better filtering practices and new software to detect fraud.

    Between January and March 2025, scammers stole nearly $5.6 million in federal student aid and over $900,000 in state aid. By comparison, this spring colleges have reported losing just under $1.5 million in federal student aid and about $330,000 in state aid to fraudsters.

    Last spring was “really the peak,” Hadsell said. He said he anticipates the end-of-year total in 2026 to be “significantly lower” than last year.

    Even in the worst months, such as last spring, the money distributed to scammers is less than 1% of the total financial aid distributed to community college students in California. Students use the money to help pay for tuition, books and the cost of daily living expenses, such as rent, transportation and food.

    But any fraud, however small, is unacceptable, said Chris Ferguson, executive vice chancellor of finance and strategic initiatives. “The ultimate goal for our system is zero.”

    Some anti-fraud policies have been slow to take effect. The California Community Colleges Board of Governors voted nearly a year ago to require ID verification for all students, but only about 50% of college students are doing it as of this month. Hadsell said the delays arose in part because of complications verifying information of students under 18 years old, who represent a growing demographic for the community colleges. He said ID verification, which is currently optional, will become mandatory on July 1.

    The board also voted to “explore” the option of charging students an application fee of no more than $10, but with the rates of fraud declining and other solutions that seem to work, the chancellor’s office is no longer pursuing that option, Ferguson said.

    After blaming California officials, the U.S. Department of Education, which shares responsibility for administering federal aid and detecting fraud, said it would implement a “screening process” for applicants. It was supposed to take effect last fall but didn’t launch until last month, according to press releases from the department and statements from the California Student Aid Commission. CalMatters reached out to the U.S. Education Department five times over the last 12 months, seeking clarification, but the department has refused to respond to questions about delays with the screening process.

    When more than a third of college applicants are fake

    After classes suddenly moved online during the COVID-19 pandemic, the California Community Colleges Chancellor’s Office saw an increase in financial aid fraud on their application portal, CCCApply, which is used by nearly every student as the first step in applying to community college.

    In 2021, the chancellor’s office suspected roughly 20% of applicants were fraudulent.

    The estimate was higher in January 2024, around 25%. Last spring, it was 34%, though some schools saw much higher rates.

    After they apply through CCCApply, students get filtered locally at their college of choice. In the Los Rios Community College District, which represents Sacramento, college officials suspected 64% of local applications from January to March 2025 were fraudulent. And that was after the state already vetted them through its portal, said Gabe Ross, a spokesperson for the district. The San Diego and Los Angeles community college districts also reported spikes in the number of fraudulent applications around the same time.

    CalMatters reached out to the five largest community college districts for an interview. The Rancho Santiago Community College District, which includes parts of Orange County, did not provide sufficient data to draw conclusions about trends in fraud. The State Center Community College District, which represents schools in Fresno and Madera counties, did not respond to CalMatters’ questions.

    Monthly data reports to the chancellor’s office show that once detected, most scammers who applied to community colleges were then caught and kicked out before they could apply for financial aid, but some succeeded.

    This year, both Sacramento and San Diego community colleges say they’re seeing fewer attempts at fraud and are getting better at stopping those who try. The San Diego Community College District is now manually screening for fraudulent applications twice a week and is finalizing a contract with a company to help improve its detection software.

    CCCApply has improved its filtering process, which helped reduce fraud attempts at Sacramento area colleges, said Ross. “When we talked about such a complex dynamic challenge, it's always hard to identify what's the one thing that sort of moved the needle. The truth is that we needed support from the feds, we needed support from the (chancellor’s) office, and we needed to invest in tools locally.”

    This spring, he said the district flagged about 12% of college applications as suspect.

    Using AI to detect AI 

    Measuring fraud is, by definition, imprecise. If a scammer is truly successful, colleges have no way to identify that fraud.

    For a long time, administrators assumed bots enrolling in online classes were responsible for most fraudulent attempts. Yet teachers, students and financial aid administrators say some of the scams are more sophisticated now and are coming from real people impersonating students. Many fraudulent applications to Los Angeles’ community colleges have real names, dates of birth, and addresses that are likely “leaked or stolen,” said Nicole Albo-Lopez, the deputy chancellor of the Los Angeles Community College District.

    In San Diego, Victor DeVore, dean of student services, said the college district only requires ID verification for students flagged as fraudulent. At that point they must prove their identity, either in person or through Zoom. Once, a potentially fraudulent student appeared on Zoom and presented a valid-looking ID that matched their face, but DeVore’s team noticed that the student’s IP address was odd. “One minute they’re logging in from Nairobi, the next minute they'll be logging in from Virginia,” he said, adding that the use of AI, virtual private networks (VPNs) or other technology has made fraud harder to detect.

    Students’ personal data is supposed to be private, but school districts and education technology companies are frequently hacked. Last week, Canvas — one of the go-to learning platforms for California’s community colleges, University of California and California State University campuses — went offline temporarily due to a major hack. Its parent company, Instructure, said last week that it reached an agreement with the hackers to relinquish students’ data.

    The state has turned to AI to fight fraud. Last summer, the state chancellor’s office negotiated a multimillion dollar contract with N2N Services Inc., enabling any college in the state to access the company’s software at a discounted rate. The software uses AI to detect potentially fraudulent applicants. Colleges are not required to use it, and so far, only about two-thirds do. Some districts, such as the Los Angeles Community College District, use a different fraud detection software, known as Socure.

    Colleges and the state chancellor’s office continue to face political pressure and scrutiny of their approach to fraud. Last month, the U.S. Education Department said it had prevented more than $171 million in fraud in California after implementing a new policy regarding ID verification. Hadsell, with the state chancellor’s office, said the federal policy had no impact on California’s colleges. “They issued some interim guidance last year that basically said you should at least have a Zoom call with students and have them show an ID when you're approving their aid. And those were things that were already happening. It was not, you know, some new thing at least for most of our colleges.”

    Kiran Kodithala, the CEO of N2N, which collects its own data on fraud at community colleges, said the education department’s claim makes no sense.

    “I don’t see how $171 million in fraud in California can occur,” he said. “There’s no basis for those numbers. We’re not seeing anything remotely close.” Kodithala estimates that N2N has prevented over $34 million in fraud since last summer, though his platform is not yet in use by all of California's 116 community colleges.

    Collecting more precise data may take months or years. U.S. Representative Young Kim, who represents parts of Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino counties, launched the effort for a federal investigation last spring, but her office could not provide any updates or confirm that an investigation was in fact underway. At the state level, the Legislature last year approved conducting an audit of how California’s community colleges handled fraud but the findings won’t be released until this summer.

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