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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • Fewer unhoused residents died in 2024 than 2023
    A man with light skin tone, wearing a black t-shirt, uses a stethoscope on a man with medium skin tone, wearing a graphic t-shirt and hat, as he sits on the bed of a white pick up truck in a city street. Tall buildings are seen in the background.
    Physician’s assistant Brett Feldman checks his patient Gary Dela Cruz on the side of the road near his homeless encampment in downtown Los Angeles in November.

    Topline:

    For the first time since Los Angeles County began tracking the data, fewer unhoused residents died on the streets in 2024, according to a report released Tuesday.

    Deaths down, but high: About 2,208 people experiencing homelessness died in the county that year, 300 fewer than the previous year, according to the report from the county Department of Public Health. The report also showed the mortality rate — which is the number of deaths per 100,000 unhoused residents — decreased by 10%. Health officials credit drug overdose prevention efforts for some of that decline, including greater distribution of naloxone, a medication that can reverse the effects of an opioid overdose.

    Overdoses: There was a 21% decrease in the drug overdose death rate among unhoused residents, according to the report. In 2024, 884 unhoused people died of drug overdoses in L.A. County. That was down from 1,140 deaths in 2023, according to the report. Unhoused residents were 46 times more likely to die of drug overdose than the general population. The report notes the overdose death rate is still about twice as high as it was in 2019.

    Bottom line: The numbers improved in 2024, but an average of six people experiencing homelessness died each day in L.A. County that year. People without stable housing face mortality rates over four times higher than the general population. Public health officials say many of those deaths are preventable. They recommend providing more access to shelter and housing, mental health and substance use treatment services.

    For the first time since Los Angeles County began tracking the data, fewer unhoused residents died on the streets in 2024, according to a report released Tuesday.

    About 2,208 people experiencing homelessness died in the county that year, 300 fewer than the previous year, according to the report from the county Department of Public Health.

    The report also showed the mortality rate — which is the number of deaths per 100,000 unhoused residents — decreased by 10%.

    “This is our seventh year putting this report out. It’s the first time we’ve seen this reduction,” said Will Nicholas, director of the department's Center for Health Impact Evaluation at a Tuesday news conference.

    “I’m hoping that we can use that energy to keep the rates heading in the right direction, heading down,” he said.

    Health officials credit the decline in large part to a drop in drug overdose deaths.

    Gary Tsai, director of the county's Substance Abuse Prevention and Control division, said a range of county services have contributed, including expanded field-based treatment, recovery-oriented housing, and distribution of naloxone, a medication that can reverse the effects of an opioid overdose.

    There was a 21% decrease in the drug overdose death rate among unhoused residents, according to the report.

    Still, an average of six people experiencing homelessness died each day in L.A. County throughout 2024. People without stable housing face mortality rates over four times higher than the general population.

    Authorities note that number is still too high.

    "These disparities reflect systemic barriers — lack of safe housing, limited access to culturally responsive healthcare, unsafe environments, and the ongoing effects of trauma, discrimination, and social inequities," Barbara Ferrer, director of the L.A. County Department of Public Health, wrote in the report.

    She said she expects the work to get harder, with major state and regional funding reductions to some homeless services this year.

    “Just as we are beginning to see positive momentum on homeless mortality reduction, we are at risk of losing precious ground,” Ferrer continued.

    County health officials made several recommendations in the report, including providing more access to shelter and housing, mental health and substance use treatment services.

    Drug overdose deaths 

    The annual report relies on state death records, county medical examiner data and population estimates from the region’s annual point-in-time homeless count.

    More than 75,000 people were estimated to be experiencing homelessness in L.A. County in 2024, according to the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority’s official count that year.

    Despite some decreases, drug overdose remained the leading cause of death among people experiencing homelessness in Los Angeles County and accounted for 40% of all deaths among that population.

    In 2024, 884 unhoused people died of drug overdoses in L.A. County. That was down from 1,140 deaths in 2023, according to the report.

    Unhoused residents were 46 times more likely to die of drug overdose than the general population. The report notes the overdose death rate is still about twice as high as it was in 2019.

    Many of the deaths involved fentanyl, a synthetic opioid, but for the first time they accounted for a lower percentage than in the previous year — 59% in 2024 and 70% in 2023, according to the data.

    Most overdose deaths involve multiple drugs, according to the county. The percentage of deaths in which methamphetamine was a factor remained relatively steady — 80% in 2024 and 79% in 2023.

    Overdose deaths involving only methamphetamine rose from 19% in 2023 to 27% in 2024.

    Tsai warned Tuesday that federal changes to Medicaid, known in California as Medi-Cal, could put the reduction in deaths, as reflected in the report, at risk.

    L.A. County’s substance use treatment system expanded significantly after the county implemented a Medi-Cal waiver nearly a decade ago, he said, and the 2025 federal budget law known as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act could cause some to lose eligibility.

    Tsai noted, however, that people with substance use disorders are exempt from the work requirements under the new law, and said the county is working to make sure that population is aware of the exemption ahead of January 2027.

    Other causes of death

    The Public Health Department is tracking other leading causes of death for unhoused residents. In 2024, the rates for coronary heart disease and homicide among unhoused Angelenos went down, while transportation-related deaths and suicides went up.

    • Coronary heart disease: The second leading cause of death among L.A. County’s unhoused population continued to be coronary heart disease, which accounted for 14% of unhoused deaths in 2024. The previous year, it was 15%.
    • Transportation-related deaths: Traffic-related injury remained the third leading cause of death among all unhoused L.A. County residents, accounting for 11% of those fatalities. That’s up from 8% the previous year. After a two-year plateau, the traffic injury mortality rate increased by 25% to 315 deaths per 100,000 unhoused people. About 230 unhoused pedestrians or cyclists were killed in traffic collisions in 2024. They were 24 times more likely to die from traffic-related injuries than the overall L.A. County population.
    • Homicide: Homicide was the fourth leading cause of death among unhoused people in L.A. County in 2024. That year, 105 unhoused people were victims of homicide, according to county data. That’s compared to 124 the previous year. Unhoused Angelenos were 14 times more likely to die by homicide than the general population.
    • Suicide: The suicide rate among L.A.’s homeless population increased by 21% in 2024. County data show 80 unhoused L.A. County residents died by suicide in 2024. That was 4% of all recorded deaths among unhoused residents, up from 3% the previous year. Unhoused residents were 13 times more likely to die by suicide than Angelenos in general.

    Public Health recommendations

    The Department of Public Health made several recommendations to prevent premature deaths and continue slowing the mortality rate among unhoused people in the region.

    They included:

    • Ensuring access to affordable housing and health insurance.
    • Ensuring that housing options support harm reduction, overdose prevention and substance use treatment.
    • Expanding comprehensive primary and preventive care services for unhoused people.
    • Conducting a detailed analysis of 2024 traffic injury deaths among unhoused residents to inform policy interventions. 

    Officials said the expansion of shelter beds in L.A. County over the past several years has contributed to declining deaths.

    “The more we can get people inside, the better we’re gonna do on mortality,” Nicholas said, noting that it's usually easier to connect people with services when they have a place to live.

    In a statement released Tuesday, Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass credited her administration's Inside Safe program with driving the decline. That program moves unhoused people from tent and RV encampments into temporary shelter.

    "There is no doubt that Inside Safe, by bringing thousands of people inside and reducing street homelessness by 17.5 percent, has saved lives and helped drive this decline," Bass said.

    Read the full report here

  • Infected plane passenger traveled through Burbank
    A tower marked BUR is visible in a photo taken from an airport tarmac.
    A traveler who had measles flew on Southwest Airlines through Burbank Airport on the morning of June 17. L.A. County health officials are warning people at the location of possible exposure to the highly contagious virus.

    Topline:

    L.A. County health officials today confirmed the seventh case of the measles this year in a passenger who was traveling through Hollywood Burbank Airport on the morning of June 17.

    Why it matters: They're warning people who may have come in contact with the person of possible exposure to the highly contagious virus.

    What you should know: Public health officials say the infected traveler arrived on Southwest Airlines Flight 4245 Gate A4 on June 17 at the Hollywood Burbank Airport. Anyone who was at that gate between 8:45 a.m. to 9:45 a.m. may have been exposed. In addition, people who were at the Thrifty Rental Car Service on June 17 from 9:20 to 10:20 a.m. and on June 18 from 10:25 to 11:25 a.m. may have been exposed. That's located at 2627 N. Hollywood Way in Burbank.

    L.A. County health officials Wednesday confirmed the county's seventh measles case this year — a traveler who passed through Hollywood Burbank Airport on the morning of June 17.

    They're warning people who may have come in contact with the person of possible exposure to the highly contagious virus.

    What you should know: Public health officials say the infected traveler arrived on Southwest Airlines Flight 4245 Gate A4 on June 17 at the Hollywood Burbank Airport. Anyone who was at that gate between 8:45 to 9:45 a.m. may have been exposed.

    Officials also noted that people who were at the Thrifty Rental Car Service on June 17 from 9:20 to 10:20 a.m. and on June 18 from 10:25 to 11:25 a.m. may have been exposed. That's located at 2627 N. Hollywood Way in Burbank.

    What if I was on the flight? Public health officials say passengers sitting next to the traveler will be notified by local health departments and should monitor for symptoms. Keep in mind those symptoms could appear up to three weeks after you were exposed.

    Symptoms to look out for: Common symptoms include runny nose, fever cough, or a rash. It's also important if you develop these symptoms, don't just walk into a health care center without calling ahead first.

    For people exposed on June 17, the last day to monitor for symptoms is July 8. For those exposed on June 18, the last day to monitor for symptoms is July 19.

    How can I protect myself?: It's important to check if you are vaccinated against the measles. As health officials noted in the news release reporting the latest case: "The most effective way to protect yourself and your family is with the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine."

    Why measles is so dangerous

    Some context on the measles via our partner newsroom CalMatters:

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  • Longtime administrator takes the top job
    A man with medium light skin tone and a goatee wears a dark gray suit and a blue and green striped tie. He smiles and looks to the side.
    Andres Chait, acting superintendent, at a March 2026 LAUSD board meeting.

    Topline

    The Los Angeles Unified Board voted unanimously to appoint Andres Chait, a longtime district administrator, as superintendent days after his predecessor resigned.

    Why now: The board met privately to discuss the district’s top job three days after Alberto Carvalho resigned. Carvalho wrote in a letter that he was leaving “because I believe our schools must remain focused on students and learning without distraction.”

    Who is Andres Chait? Chait rose through the ranks from teacher to administrator at LAUSD over nearly three decades. The responsibilities of his most recent role, chief of school operations, included overseeing school safety, athletics and the district’s office of emergency management.

    Why it matters: LAUSD is the country’s second largest school district, employs 83,000 people and enrolls more than 400,000 students across more than 1,000 schools.

    Read on ... for more on what the new administrator will face.

    The Los Angeles Unified Board voted unanimously to appoint Andres Chait, a longtime district administrator, as superintendent days after his predecessor resigned.

     “This board's decision reflects the confidence in Mr. Chait's leadership, his decades of service to Los Angeles Unified, and his demonstrated ability to guide the district during this period of transition,” said board President Scott Schmerelson.

    The board met privately to discuss the district’s top job three days after Alberto Carvalho resigned. Carvalho wrote in a letter that he was leaving “because I believe our schools must remain focused on students and learning without distraction.”

    The board placed Carvalho on paid administrative leave following FBI searches of his home and district office in February and appointed Chait acting superintendent. Carvalho has not been charged with a crime and has maintained his innocence.

    Who is Andres Chait?

    Chait rose through the ranks from teacher to administrator at LAUSD over nearly three decades. The responsibilities of his most recent role, chief of school operations, included overseeing school safety, athletics and the district’s office of emergency management.

    Chait thanked the board, the community and his family after the announcement Wednesday and reflected on his first day as a kindergarten teacher 30 years ago. “ I was probably more nervous than the kids were, but I knew then that this was a place where I could make a positive difference in the lives of students and families,” Chait said. “I've always known that there is no greater accelerator of change and opportunity than the schoolhouse, and that is still true today.”

    What is the superintendent responsible for?

    LAUSD is the country’s second-largest school district, employs 83,000 people and enrolls more than 400,000 students across more than 1,000 schools. Despite recent gains in student test scores, the majority of students are not proficient in reading and math skills for their grade level. The district also faces looming financial challenges from declining enrollment — which is tied to state funding — and federal investigations into programs designed to help underserved students succeed.

    This is a developing story and will be updated.

    LAUSD Superintendents (1990-present)

    • Bill Antón (July 1990-Sept. 1992)
    • Sidney Thompson (Oct. 1992-June 1997)
    • Ruben Zacarias (July 1997-Jan. 2000)
    • Ramón Cortines* (Jan. 2000-June 2000)
    • Roy Romer (July 2000-Oct. 2006)
    • David Brewer (Nov. 2006-Dec. 2008)
    • Ramon Cortines* (Jan. 2009-Apr. 2011)
    • John Deasy (Apr. 2011-Oct. 2014)
    • Ramon Cortines* (Oct. 2014-Dec. 2015)
    • Michelle King (Jan. 2016-Sept. 2017)
    • Vivian Ekchian* (Sept. 2017-May 2018)
    • Austin Beutner (May 2018-June 2021)
    • Megan Reilly* (July 2021-February 2022)
    • Alberto Carvalho (February 2022-June 2026)
    • Andres Chait (February 2026-present)

    * Denotes interim

  • Ex-parks chief allegedly targeted male lifeguards
    The sun rises in the distance while in the foreground, there's a concrete wall that says Bolsa Chica State Beach with paintings of gulls.
    Bolsa Chica State Beach at sunset.

    Topline:

    A former Orange County state parks superintendent has been charged with secretly filming naked male lifeguards in the locker room at Bolsa Chica State Beach.

    What allegedly happened? Kevin Pearsall retired last year shortly after officials executed search warrants in the case against him. He was charged Wednesday with taking secret footage and is also accused of sending the images to two other men. Efforts to reach Pearsall were unsuccessful Wednesday.

    Read on ... for more about the allegations and the pending case.

    A former state parks superintendent who oversaw Orange County beaches was charged Wednesday with secretly filming naked male lifeguards and other workers inside the locker room at Bolsa Chica State Beach. The former superintendent, Kevin Pearsall, is also accused of sending some of the images to two other men.

    What charges does he face?

    Pearsall, 59, of Long Beach, faces five felony counts of eavesdropping, 23 misdemeanor counts of secretly filming another and three misdemeanor counts of unlawful dissemination of private recordings. If convicted on all charges, he faces a maximum sentence of 18 years and eight months behind bars.

    Scott C. Thomas, a defense attorney representing Pearsall, declined to comment in the wake of the charges being announced by the Orange County District Attorney's office. Pearsall is scheduled to be arraigned Aug. 6 and could enter a plea at that time.

    Details of the investigation

    In July 2025, a California State Parks officer discovered a USB stick with a hidden camera in the men's locker room at Bolsa Chica State Beach Lifeguard Headquarters. The officer contacted California Highway Patrol, which launched an investigation.

    The investigation found Pearsall allegedly had recorded numerous secret videos in the locker room over an 11-month period beginning in August 2024, according to the DA's announcement. Pearsall retired from his job shortly after CHP served search warrants in the case. He turned himself in earlier this week.

    State Parks reaction

    Marty Greenstein, a spokesperson for California State Parks, told LAist the agency “takes these charges very seriously and has fully cooperated with law enforcement through every step of the investigation.” Greenstein declined to comment further, citing the active criminal investigation.

  • Sang Yoon opens Tiny's at South Coast Plaza
    The interior of Tiny's showing shelves of imported snacks including Japanese Kit-Kats and Korean chips, with the order counter and illuminated Tiny's sign visible in the background.
    The konbini-style snack shop at Tiny's, stocked with imported chips, Japanese Kit-Kats and a refrigerated wall of drinks.

    Topline:

    Sang Yoon — the chef behind Father's Office, the Los Angeles gastropub institution known for its high-quality food and an uncompromising no-substitutions policy — has opened Tiny's, a new fast-casual burger stand and konbini-style snack shop inside Costa Mesa's South Coast Plaza.

    Why it matters: For Yoon, the son of Korean immigrants who grew up between two worlds, Tiny's is the restaurant he always imagined but never had: an American burger stand meets an Asian convenience store, all under one roof.

    Why now: Tiny's opened last week at South Coast Plaza, marking Yoon's first new concept in years and his first venture into Orange County — a deliberately accessible entry point for a chef who has spent decades at the top of L.A.'s gastropub scene.

    Read on ... for more on what makes the new venture special.

    Making your way through South Coast Plaza — the sleek consumer cathedral in Costa Mesa, a sort of mall of malls — past Uniqlo window displays and Pop Mart blind boxes, there's a good chance you'll eventually land at Tiny's, the new casual restaurant from Chef Sang Yoon.

    The burger shack-meets-Asian convenience store is the latest from Yoon, best known for Father's Office, the Los Angeles institution where he's spent two decades running one of the city's most uncompromising kitchens — no substitutions, no exceptions.

    Tiny’s marks Yoon’s first venture into Orange County — a deliberately accessible entry point for a chef who has spent decades at the top of L.A.'s gastropub scene.

    The concept

    Tiny's is the place Yoon wanted to exist as a kid.

    Inside, you're greeted by shelves stocked in the style of a konbini, the beloved Japanese convenience corner store, with cilantro-flavored Doritos from China, elote-flavored Turtle Chips from Korea and, for the purists, the requisite Japanese Kit-Kats and Pocky too.

    At the counter, a friendly employee greets you beneath a letterboard menu anchored by Yoon’s signature 30-day dry-aged beef burger. Starting at $9 for a plain burger, up to $12 for the Tokyo Dog dressed in bonito flakes and furikake, there's also salt and vinegar tots, french fries, miso mac 'n' cheese and soft serve that runs from Straus vanilla to Pineapple Dole Whip, available as a swirl, cup, cone or float. That's the menu, streamlined by design.

    A cheeseburger and a Tokyo Dog topped with bonito flakes and furikake sit on a yellow Tiny's branded tray alongside a serving of french fries.
    Chef Sang Yoon's cheeseburger and Tokyo Dog at Tiny's, his new fast-casual concept inside South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa
    (
    Grid Vongpiansuksa
    /
    Courtesy Tiny's Burger
    )

    For Yoon, the son of Korean immigrants who grew up between two worlds, the idea of opening a burger stand with a konbini was about tapping into the happy place of his memories: after school with friends, trying out the latest snacks to hit the market to Friday nights with the entire family celebrating after a long week of grinding it out with burgers and chili fries.

    "The corner burger stand is where life happened. ... What if those two of my favorite things were under one roof?" said Yoon.

    Tiny the dog

    Inspiration for the name Tiny’s came from a somewhat unlikely place: Yoon’s beloved Cavalier King Charles Spaniel. Yoon describes her as appearing extremely cute and friendly, but in reality, she was actually sassy and judgmental. Illustrations bearing Tiny’s "don't mess with me" vibe can be seen throughout the restaurant.

    “People would rather hear this from a sassy, cute dog than me. So I decided that we should channel Tiny. And let this belong to her," Yoon said.

    The food

    The cheeseburger itself is simple: a thin patty topped with melted American cheese and Tiny's signature sauce — a blend of Kewpie mayo, caramelized gochujang, ssamjang and tomato — finished with pickle chips and a bed of lettuce.

    What sets it apart is what you can’t see, the same 30-day dry-aged chuck Yoon has used at Father’s Office for over 25 years.

    “I still don’t think there’s any product superior to that for the purpose of a hamburger,” he said.

    An overhead shot of a yellow Tiny's tray covered in branded paper, holding a cheeseburger wrapped in Tiny's paper, mac and cheese made with fresh elbow, chicken nuggets, crinkle fries, tater tots, and a jammy egg sandwich visible in the background.
    The spread at Tiny's includes the cheeseburger, miso mac 'n' cheese, chicken nuggets, tater tots, fries and a jammy egg sando — a konbini staple in Japan.
    (
    Grid Vongpiansuksa
    /
    Courtesy Tiny's Burger
    )

    The nuggets ($10) had a crispy, craggy exterior finished with visible seasoning crystals, a small but deliberate touch, and came with a fresh herbaceous dipping sauce. As for the chili fries ($8), the chili itself was sufficient as an L.A.-style chili (think Tommy's), but since Lao Gan Ma chili crisp was promised in the name, I was expecting that distinctive, crunchy, fermented kick — but left wanting more of it. It felt more like a whisper than a statement.

    The miso mac 'n' cheese ($6) was a highlight of the meal, especially for someone who doesn't usually order mac 'n' cheese. Fresh ridged elbow pasta with a proper chew in each bite, and salty morsels of miso folded into a tight cheese sauce had me picking up forkfuls until it was mostly gone. Consider my position reconsidered.

    Encouraged, I went back and ordered a Dole Whip ($7). The electric, tangy flavor, paired with the soft creaminess, served as a suitable exclamation point for my lunch that day.

    With Tiny's, Yoon has built his most personal restaurant — accessible in price, but uncompromising in intention.

    Could mall food now be on a new trajectory? Perhaps we've finally transcended corn dogs at Hot Dog on a Stick and cinnamon rolls at Cinnabon.

    After dining at Tiny’s, all signs point to yes.