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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • Part 3: Colorado River negotiations stall
    COLORADO-RIVER
    Hamby listens attentively as IID employees explain the various levels and purposes of the plant.

    Topline:

    “Imperfect Paradise: The Gen Z Water Dealmaker” is about JB Hamby, a 28-year old Californian who is in charge of protecting the state’s access to Colorado River water during the worst drought ever on the river.

    In Part 3, negotiations break down along geographic lines. JB Hamby realizes the existential threat that climate change poses to his hometown. And he’s forced to confront opposition from some of his long-time neighbors and allies: farmers in the Imperial Valley.

    Why it matters: Climate change and overuse are drying up the Colorado River, which provides water to 40 million people in seven states and two countries and 30% of Southern California’s drinking water.

    The negotiations: The seven U.S. states that use Colorado River water are trying to come up with a deal to keep the river from dropping so low that states like California and Arizona would lose access to it. But the two factions — the Lower and Upper Basin states — disagree on key issues, including who caused this crisis, who should use less, and by how much. They failed to reach a compromise before their initial deadline in March and remain deadlocked.

    Why you should listen: To understand why Imperial Valley farmers feel so strongly about holding on to their water — and how a 28-year old is trying to persuade them to give some up, on their own terms. Also, learn what happens if the seven states can’t agree on a solution before the current guidelines expire.

    How can I listen? Here's Part 3:

    Listen 45:47
    JB Hamby and the other lead negotiators on the Colorado River have to come up with a long term solution to manage the river in the face of climate change. Will they reach a deal before it’s too late? LAist correspondent Emily Guerin examines how JB's position on water has dramatically evolved since he first won office a few years ago. She brings us back to the current water negotiations as the conflict between the Upper and Lower Basins becomes very public, and JB struggles to convince Imperial Valley farmers that they need to cut back.
    JB Hamby and the other lead negotiators on the Colorado River have to come up with a long term solution to manage the river in the face of climate change. Will they reach a deal before it’s too late? LAist correspondent Emily Guerin examines how JB's position on water has dramatically evolved since he first won office a few years ago. She brings us back to the current water negotiations as the conflict between the Upper and Lower Basins becomes very public, and JB struggles to convince Imperial Valley farmers that they need to cut back.

    New episodes of Imperfect Paradise: The Gen Z Water Dealmaker publish Wednesdays wherever you get your podcasts, on LAist.com, and on broadcast at LAist 89.3 the following Sunday.

  • First home receives certificate of occupancy
    A newly-built home next to a dirt lot. A sign in the foreground reads "TJH: The smarter way to design + build."
    The first rebuilt home in the Pacific Palisades has been given a certificate of occupancy following the Palisades Fire in January 2025.

    Topline:

    The first rebuilt home in the Pacific Palisades received its certificate of occupancy Friday.

    Why it matters: The certificate of occupancy is the final step in the rebuilding process. It means the home has been inspected, is up to code and is ready to be lived in.

    "The Palisades community has been through an unimaginable year, and my heart breaks for every family that won't be able to be home this holiday season. But today is an important moment of hope," Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass said in a statement.

    What's next: Mayor Bass' office says more than 340 projects have started construction in the Palisades, with more rebuilding plans being sent in daily.

    More good news: On Thursday, LAist's David Wagner reported on the first home in L.A. County to receive a certificate of occupancy after the fire — an Altadena home belonging to LAist community engagement producer David Rodriguez.

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  • LA organizations see lingering need after shutdown
    Several cars are lined up behind each other at drive-through event. Large canopies are linked up next to the cars, with at least a dozen people wearing neon high-visibility vests carrying cardboard boxes of food to people waiting in the cars.
    A drive-through food distribution, in response to the federal government shutdown and SNAP/CalFresh food benefits delays, hosted by the Los Angeles Regional Food Bank and L.A. County officials.

    Topline:

    In the weeks before the longest government shutdown in American history came to a close, food banks and meal programs in the Los Angeles area scrambled to serve a rush of people looking for help, including many older adults. So what's next for these organizations and the families they serve?

    Why it matters: Hundreds of households signed up for food pantries as SNAP benefits stalled and government workers went without paychecks. More people aged 65 and older turned to senior meal programs for daily lunches.

    Why now: Even though the government has reopened, some leaders of local food organizations say they don’t expect to see a drop in demand anytime soon, particularly with the holidays approaching.

    Read on ... to learn more about what how the food organizations are adjusting to meet needs.

    In the weeks before the longest government shutdown in American history came to a close, food banks and meal programs in the Los Angeles area scrambled to serve a rush of people looking for help, including many older adults.

    Hundreds of households signed up for food pantries as SNAP benefits stalled and government workers went without paychecks. More people aged 65 and older turned to senior meal programs for daily lunches.

    Even though the government has reopened, some leaders of local food organizations say they don’t expect to see a drop in demand anytime soon, particularly with the holidays approaching.

    The government funding bill signed Nov. 12 is “only a temporary fix,” according to Eli Veitzer, president and CEO of Jewish Family Service L.A. He told LAist the organization is trying to prepare for the possibility of another government shutdown next year.

    “We know the drill, we've done this before,” he said. “We know how to flex and expand hours and delivery, but that's really about all that we can do at this point.”

    Veitzer and others said the outpouring of donations and volunteers to outreach organizations helped get them through the crisis in the short term, but that’s not sustainable in the long term.

    As uncertainty lingers, L.A.-area organizations are keeping food flowing with non-government support, including expanded partnerships with local grocery stores or private donors, thousands of additional volunteers and community contributions.

    How we got here

    During the government shutdown, which started in early October, the Department of Agriculture froze funding for SNAP, or the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, beginning Nov. 1.

    NPR reports it was the first time that’s happened since the program was established.

    California, with more than 20 other states, sued the Trump administration over its “unlawful refusal to fund SNAP/CalFresh benefits … despite possessing funds to support this critical program for the month of November,” according to Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office. CalFresh is California’s version of the SNAP program.

    Court rulings ordered funding for SNAP to continue, at least partially. The Trump administration initially said it would comply and then appealed.

    Then, the government reopened.

    The bill passed by Congress funds the government until Jan. 30, with carveouts for SNAP, which will be funded through September 2026.

    Angelenos in need

    The Los Angeles Regional Food Bank saw an immediate surge in demand in October, as people were notified that their benefits would be delayed in November, according to CEO Michael Flood.

    The organization saw a 24% jump in people coming for food assistance, Flood told LAist, with some of the food bank’s more than 600 partner agencies across L.A. County reporting even higher increases.

    “We have more than 1.5 million people in Los Angeles County who those benefits are critical to them to feed themselves and feed their families,” Flood said. “It's led to a lot of just uncertainty, concern, and just worry about, you know, am I going to be able to get enough help in order to feed myself.”

    Jewish Family Service L.A.’s food pantries serve about 10,000 households a year, according to Veitzer. He said they added more than 1,000 households since the organization started to see “huge increases” in demand during the same time period.

    There was also about a 15% rise in the number of older adults turning to the organization’s senior meal programs for hot lunches every day.

    Older adults trying to make ends meet

    Jane Jefferies, 70, lives out of her car in the West L.A. area and told LAist the $24 a month she receives for CalFresh was not disrupted during the shutdown. But she regularly relies on senior meal programs and local food banks to stretch that money as far as she can.

    “If I run out of money, then I have something extra that I can spend at the market for a meal,” Jefferies said, adding that she typically uses the benefits to buy bananas or a day-old loaf of bread for $1.50.

    An 80-year-old woman from Santa Monica, who asked not to be identified, said she lives in low-income senior housing and receives about $140 a month through CalFresh, which covers a little less than half of her monthly food allowance.

    She said she felt anxious and uncertain about how she was going to put food on the table if benefits lapsed, especially as food banks can be difficult to access with her mobility, transportation and medical dietary-restrictions.

    “This supposedly is one of the richest countries in the world, and yet people are wondering how they're going to eat,” she told LAist. “It's unfortunate that the people like me don't seem to matter.”

    Weathering the storm

    Communities and local officials stepped up to help ease some pressure on food organizations during the six-week government shutdown, Veitzer and Flood said.

    Jewish Family Service L.A. raised money to give grocery cards to nearly 1,700 people they serve who may be hardest hit by a loss of benefits, for example.

    “We couldn't fully offset it, but we were able to provide significant funds to a lot of people to help keep them tied over during the initial part of the freeze,” Veitzer said.

    L.A. County committed $12 million to the L.A. Regional Food Bank in recent weeks, Flood said, which translates into about 6 million pounds of food, or roughly 5.5 million meals. County officials made a similar move during the pandemic in 2020.

    The food bank also brought on thousands more volunteers over the course of the year, including in the aftermath of January’s wildfires, from around 25,000 to “well above” 30,000 volunteers, according to Flood.

    Jewish Family Service L.A. partners with a few local Costco’s, Gelson’s Markets, Target and Super King locations to pick-up proteins, produce, dry goods and other necessities for people in need. Veitzer calls it the “grocery store rescue process,” and he said they were able to add two more pickups during the shutdown.

    “At the end of the day, donations, volunteers aren't going to supplant the core underpinning of the benefits that people rely on,” he said. “But in the breach, it's made a huge difference.”

    How to help

    Los Angeles Regional Food Bank

    To support the organization's work, you can:

    • Volunteer
    • Donate financially
    • Donate food, depending on a food bank’s ability to accept and coordinate

    More information can be found at lafoodbank.org

    Jewish Family Service L.A.

    To support the organization's work, you can:

    • Volunteer
    • Donate financially

    More information can be found at jfsla.org

    CEO Eli Veitzer also encourages people to check-up on neighbors, especially older adults, to see if you can assist them directly.

    Looking ahead

    Veitzer doesn’t expect to see a drop in demand anytime soon because “so many people in Los Angeles are financially struggling.”

    “They're not making it, and there's no extra give in their systems,” he said. “And so it doesn't take much for a person to end up unable to pay rent, or unable to pay car insurance, or unable to buy food or medicine.”

    Veitzer said people have already signed up for future food pantry visits through Jewish Family Service L.A.’s app.

    “So they are anticipating coming back to the pantries even after the SNAP benefits get reinstated,” he said.

    The organization is also preparing to more than double the number of Thanksgiving meals it distributes this year from around 800 to 900 households to more than 2,000.

    Flood said the financial pressures people face with the high cost of living in L.A. County leads to continually high demand for food assistance, and it’s challenging for organizations to try and fill that “hunger gap” — even without a government shutdown.

    “It does feel like we're always kind of chasing, you know, sort of a higher demand that we're doing everything we can to try to fill,” Flood said.

  • SoCal Congressmembers want answers
    A view of the Adelanto U.S. Immigration and Enforcement Processing Center.

    Topline:

    More than 40 members of the U.S. House, including 15 representatives from California, are demanding answers from federal authorities about the record number of people who died in immigration detention this year.

    Recent deaths in ICE custody: The letter, sent today to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, follows two recent deaths of Orange County men detained at the Adelanto immigration detention center. LAist emailed the Department of Homeland Security with a request for comment and will update this story if and when we hear back.

    Record number of detainee deaths: ICE has reported 15 deaths in custody since January. That’s higher than any year since the agency began publicly reporting detainee deaths in 2018.

    Detainee health care under the microscope: LAist has reported on concerns among health care workers that immigration agents are compromising the care of detained patients at L.A. hospitals.

    More than 40 members of the U.S. House, including 15 representatives from California, are demanding answers from federal authorities about the record number of people who died in immigration detention this year.

    The letter, sent today to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, follows two recent deaths of Orange County men detained at the Adelanto immigration detention center. LAist emailed the Department of Homeland Security with a request for comment and will update this story if and when we hear back.

    • In September, Ismael Ayala-Uribe, a former DACA recipient who lived in Westminster, died in custody shortly after being returned there from a nearby hospital where he had been evaluated for an abscess. 
    • In October, Gabriel Garcia Aviles, a Costa Mesa resident, died at a hospital in Victorville after being taken into custody during a raid and then being detained at the Adelanto detention center, according to the letter and reporting from L.A. Taco

    Record number of detainee deaths

    ICE has reported 15 deaths in custody since January. That’s higher than any year since the agency began publicly reporting detainee deaths in 2018.

    Listen 28:16
    LISTEN: Health workers say ICE agents at hospitals are compromising patient care

    “This is now a systemic problem,” Rep. Dave Min, D - Irvine, told LAist. “It's inhumane, I believe it violates U.S. and international law, and ICE needs to get their act together.”

    New data released this week shows immigration officials deported, arrested and detained tens of thousands of people from October through mid-November. The arrests led to a jump in the number of people held in immigration jails, with over 65,000 currently detained nationwide.

    LAist has reported on concerns among health care workers that immigration agents are compromising the care of detained patients at L.A. hospitals.

    On Monday, U.S. Rep. Robert Garcia, L.A. Mayor Karen Bass and other local leaders are holding a field hearing and press event in L.A. to discuss alleged unlawful detention and abuses by immigration agents of both immigrants and U.S. Citizens.

  • Well above a normal amount of rain has fallen
    A person holding a clear umbrella with colorful dots walks along a rainy street with traffic in the background.
    Southern California has gotten a drenching lately, which has put a major damper on the potential for large wildfires.

    Topline:

    Southern California — from the coast to the mountains to the deserts — has gotten so much rain over the past month that large-scale, fast-moving fires are essentially no longer a concern. And they likely won't be until well into 2026.

    Expert assessment: "Basically, we're out of fire season across all of Central and Southern California," said Matt Shameson, meteorologist with the U.S. Forest Service's South Ops Office, which regularly assesses wildfire conditions.

    Fire risk: The assessment is determined by a variety of factors, including dead and live fuel moisture, both of which are well above critical thresholds after recent storms. Vegetation is greening up, soils are getting saturated and dry creeks are starting to run again. As of late November, parts of Santa Barbara and Los Angeles counties have received between 5 to 9 times more rainfall than is normal for this time of year.

    The year ahead: We likely won't see any significant fire activity until April, when grasses dry out. Large scale forest fires in our mountains shouldn't be a concern until the middle of summer at the earliest. Fires along Southern California's coastal mountain ranges usually don't occur until the Santa Ana winds show up in late September or early October.

    The big caveat: We can't predict the weather. If we don't see any rain from here on out and only experience hot, dry and windy conditions, fire risk could return within a month. In that case, we'll be back to update you.

    Speaking of the weather: The most recent rain storm should be out of the area by Saturday, and the Santa Ana winds are going to be showing up, according to the National Weather Service. With the ground saturated, trees are more susceptible to being knocked down by the wind. For the Thanksgiving holiday, expect mild weather and temperatures in the 70s if current forecasts hold.