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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • Union ballot measures draws opposing measure
    A man holds a stethoscope to a white woman's chest.
    The California Medical Association, representing the state’s physicians, is fighting a bill that would fine insurers for having inaccurate provider networks that lead to confusing doctor referrals.

    Topline:

    The looming impact of federal Medicaid cuts has reignited a long-simmering, costly battle between California’s medical industry and one of its largest health worker unions.

    Pay caps and patient spending: SEIU-United Healthcare Workers West, with approximately 120,000 members, has put forward two ballot initiatives to cap the pay of medical executives and require community clinics to spend the vast bulk of their revenues on patient care. The union wants to cap compensation at $450,000 a year for senior hospital and medical group executives, as well as other administrative and managerial staff. However, the initiative does not stipulate how dollars diverted from payroll must be spent. The proposed measure garnered more than 1 million petition signatures.

    Unions and political spending: The California Hospital Association has responded with its own ballot proposal that would make it tougher for unions to spend money on political initiatives in the future. It would require approval by a union’s rank-and-file membership for any spending of $1 million or more on statewide measures, or $100,000 or more on local ones. The union’s ongoing political efforts “threaten patient access to quality health care,” according to the hospital association’s ballot initiative, which could limit how much unions spend on future ballot measures.

    The looming impact of federal Medicaid cuts has reignited a long-simmering, costly battle between California’s medical industry and one of its largest health worker unions.

    SEIU-United Healthcare Workers West, with approximately 120,000 members, has put forward two ballot initiatives to cap the pay of medical executives and require community clinics to spend the vast bulk of their revenues on patient care.

    The California Hospital Association has responded with its own ballot proposal that would make it tougher for unions to spend money on political initiatives in the future. It would require approval by a union’s rank-and-file membership for any spending of $1 million or more on statewide measures, or $100,000 or more on local ones.

    The competing measures, which have drawn enough verified signatures to qualify for the November ballot, come at a time when the rising cost of healthcare is emerging as a top voter concern.

    The Service Employees International Union affiliate has seized upon affordability angst to resurrect a proposal for a cap on healthcare executive compensation, which it has failed to achieve multiple times before. The proposed measure garnered more than 1 million petition signatures.

    “This initiative reflects the serious crisis we face and that affordability is a real thing,” said Vikas Saini, president of the Lown Institute, a Massachusetts-based healthcare think tank. “I think it also reflects grassroots anger and a desire to do something.”

    Mikey Vaughn, a certified nursing assistant at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, said that the Los Angeles hospital, despite its reputation as the go-to place for the rich and famous, often lacks supplies and staffing levels that he and his colleagues need to do their jobs effectively and without undue stress.

    “The executive pay initiative would, I hope, be used to hire staff and to actually provide better resources for our patients,” said Vaughn, a member of SEIU-UHW’s executive board and political committee.

    Thomas Priselac, then-president and CEO of Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, made $8.8 million in fiscal year 2024, according to the organization’s most recent available federal tax filing. Kaiser Permanente’s CEO, Gregory Adams, made nearly $13 million in 2024. Warner Thomas, head of Sutter Health, made just under $12 million.

    Cedars-Sinai spokesperson Duke Helfand said if the measure passed, the hospital would be unable to recruit and retain physicians, nurses, and specialists, dramatically impairing its ability to provide health care.

    “Such a scenario would be disastrous not only for Cedars-Sinai but for hospitals across Los Angeles and California,” Helfand said.

    The union wants to cap compensation at $450,000 a year for senior hospital and medical group executives, as well as other administrative and managerial staff. However, the initiative does not stipulate how dollars diverted from payroll must be spent.

    The union has dubbed the latest proposal the “Health Care Executive Compensation Act of 2026.” A coalition of medical industry heavyweights opposing it — hospitals, physicians, and clinics, among others — has rebranded it the “Health Care Endangerment Act.”

    Carmela Coyle, CEO of the hospital association, called the measure a cynical political ploy. “It’s bad policy and it’s going to have bad consequences across California,” she said.

    Glenn Melnick, a healthcare economist at the University of Southern California, said that even if the initiative were fully implemented and pay cuts enacted he doubts it would reduce the cost of healthcare for patients.

    SEIU-UHW does not have an estimate of the total amount the initiative would claw back from pay packages that exceed the limit.

    Opponents of the initiative note that it doesn’t target only executive pay but would affect medical practitioners who are also managers. That could include chief medical officers and chief nursing officers, as well as heads of surgery, emergency rooms, oncology, obstetrics, cardiology, and other specialties, they say.

    It would be up to each hospital, health system, and physician group to report which staff members exceed the cap and by how much.

    Ultimately, who is subject to the pay cap “probably will have to be battled out in court,” said the hospital association’s Coyle. “That’s why we are throwing everything we can at it.”

    The second SEIU-UHW ballot initiative, on community clinics, is already in court. The California Primary Care Association, which represents clinics, filed a federal lawsuit in April seeking to invalidate it before it reaches the November ballot.

    The proposed measure would require federally designated community clinics to spend at least 90% of their revenues on activities directly related to their mission of providing care for low-income populations. If it were to pass, over 90% of those clinic organizations would be on the hook for penalties totaling $1.7 billion in the first year alone and “would face similarly crippling penalties every year," according to a report commissioned by the primary care association and conducted by the Berkeley Research Group, an international consulting company.

    Louise McCarthy, president and CEO of the Community Clinic Association of Los Angeles County, said many pivotal services the clinics provide — translation and transportation, for example — would likely not be counted toward the spending requirement.

    “They are targeting a group of what they see as employers and we see as the safety net,” she said.

    The lawsuit cites the harm to clinics and claims the proposed spending requirement would interfere with federal authority.

    Renée Saldaña, a spokesperson for SEIU-UHW, characterized the lawsuit against the initiative as “a really desperate attempt by the clinic industry to try and avoid accountability.”

    SEIU-UHW, proud of its political activism, is also behind a controversial billionaire tax proposal that would impose a one-time 5% levy on California residents with fortunes over $1 billion to backfill the funding gap created by federal cuts coming down the pike under Republicans’ One Big Beautiful Bill Act. The law, passed last July and signed by President Donald Trump, is projected to squeeze over $900 billion from the Medicaid health coverage program for low-income people by 2034, including as much as $30 billion annually in California.

    The hospital association, the community clinic group, and the California Medical Association, which represents physicians, are neutral on the wealth tax proposal thus far. But Saldaña said all three of the union’s ballot proposals tie into an overarching strategy to counter the widening healthcare disparities caused by the federal law. Referring to the proposed pay cap, she said, “We believe the primary concern of healthcare providers, including executives, should be to serve the community, heal patients, and not be in healthcare just to enrich themselves.”

    Over the years, the union has submitted dozens of local and statewide ballot initiatives, including ones to cap the pay of hospital executives, regulate dialysis clinics, and raise the minimum wage of healthcare workers.

    The hospital association calculates that SEIU-UHW has spent nearly $125 million on local and statewide initiatives since 2012. But healthcare industry groups have spent far more opposing them. The hospital association data shows that the union spent nearly $36 million on three ballot proposals to regulate the dialysis industry, but dialysis companies poured in $302 million to defeat them, according to state campaign finance records.

    The union’s ongoing political efforts “threaten patient access to quality health care,” according to the hospital association’s ballot initiative, which could limit how much unions spend on future ballot measures.

    Saldaña hinted at a possible lawsuit should that measure pass, saying that “we don’t see the legal viability” of it. The proposal, she said, is an attempt “to silence the front-line healthcare workers.”

    Ultimately, a ballot initiative won’t cure the ills that plague healthcare in the United States, said the Lown Institute’s Saini. What’s needed, he said, is “an evaluation and reimagination of healthcare.”

    KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF—an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about KFF.

    This article first appeared on KFF Health News and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

    KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF—an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about KFF.

  • Hazard is in effect at SoCal beaches
    The silhouettes of two surfers on their boards are seen as they paddle past a large, breaking wave. Two seabirds fly overhead.
    A south swell has brought massive waves to Southern California beaches.

    Topline:

    A south swell has brought massive waves to Southern California beaches, drawing in tons of surfers and spectators. The National Weather Service issued a “beach hazard statement” for the region in effect until Thursday afternoon.

    How big are we talking? The surf peaked Wednesday with waves between 4 and 8 feet, with some sets reaching 10 feet. Swell and surf are expected to subside Thursday, but conditions will remain elevated through the end of the week.

    What does this mean for swimming conditions? For some surfers and thrill-seekers, waves like these are a dream, but they can be dangerous, according to the National Weather Service. Forecasters reported that conditions show a high risk for rip currents.

    Why do these swells happen? Winter storms in the South Pacific during this time of year tend to create larger waves here, National Weather Service meteorologist Lauren Vilafane told LAist.

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  • We fact check ballot curing claims
    A person flips through mail-in ballot envelopes.
    Your signature on your ballot must match your signature on record.

    Topline:

    You’ve voted in the primary election, but now your local registrar is asking you to “cure” your mail-in ballot. That’s not an attempt to squash votes — it’s part of an established process that ensures registered voters are the ones casting votes.

    What is ballot curing? If a mail-in ballot needs to be cured, that means the signature on the envelope either doesn’t match what’s on the voter’s record or it’s missing entirely. When you get mailed a notice to cure your ballot, that’s your registrar giving you a chance to fix it so your vote gets counted. About 24,000 ballots need to be cured in L.A. and Orange counties so far.

    Is this common? Ballot curing happens every election in California. It’s one of the many checks local registrars are required to perform to verify that mail-in ballots were cast by the people they were sent to. A small number of ballots get rejected because of signature issues each cycle — but that only happens if voters don’t remedy it.

    Can election workers see my vote? No, ballot envelopes remain sealed while it goes through the curing process. It’s not opened until after the signature is verified.

    Read on … to learn more about why ballot curing matters.

    California is almost done counting ballots — but the key word is almost. Election officials are now moving onto the ballot “curing” phase and are sending notices to voters for verification.

    If you received a letter in the mail, it doesn't automatically mean your ballot has been rejected, contrary to misinformation circulating online. Ballot curing is a normal part of California’s vote-verification process and a safeguard to make sure you actually cast your mail-in vote.

    Here’s what you should know about how it works and steps to take to make sure your ballot gets counted.

    What is ballot curing?

    If your ballot needs to be cured, that means the mail-in envelope has been flagged for a signature issue. That could be because it looks off (that is, it doesn’t match what’s on your state record) or it’s missing entirely.

    Your county registrar will send you a letter that asks for your signature to attest that you returned the ballot and that it’s your name on the envelope. (The mismatched signature and unsigned envelope letters can be separate in some counties — but L.A. County combines it.) You’ll also have to provide your address. These steps are required under state election code.

    You can reply to that notice via phone, email, mail, fax or in person. If you’ve received a letter in Orange County, follow the steps here. For L.A. County, follow the steps in your letter. Here's an example of what the combined letters look like for both counties:

    The privacy of your vote is protected during this process. The state election code requires the ballot return envelope to stay sealed until the registrar can verify the voter’s signature. LAist has also confirmed this with the L.A. County registrar’s communications manager Mike Sanchez and Aimara Freeman, a spokesperson for Orange County's registrar.

    Why do I need to do it?

    Your registrar is giving you an opportunity to fix a discrepancy, which helps ensure only registered voters cast ballots.

    It’s important to cure your ballot by the deadline because your vote won’t count without it. The registrar must receive it no later than 5 p.m. June 24.

    L.A. and Orange counties have about 24,000 ballots to cure as of Wednesday, according to the California Secretary of State.

    A very small portion of ballots gets rejected each election statewide. The Secretary of State reports that 0.93% of ballots — or 122,480 votes — were not counted in the 2024 general election, for example, mostly because signature issues weren’t resolved.

    How are signatures verified and flagged?

    Signatures are compared to the ones in your voter registration record. Because of California’s Motor Voter program, that could come from the DMV. If you’re curious what your local registrar has, you can ask to review the signatures in your file.

    We cover in detail how the verification process works here, but this is the gist:

    • In L.A. County, a device compares your signatures first. If it’s mismatched or missing, a human then reviews it.
    • In Orange County, humans do the comparison and review.

    Three election officials have to agree that a ballot signature is “significantly” different from the one on record for it to be pulled, according to state code. To verify your signature, officials consider spelling, signature slant, letter characteristics and possible explanations for discrepancies — for example, trembling hands or rushed writing.

    The ballot gets pulled for curing when officials challenge it — that is, they determine it needs extra verification. State law requires notices for this to be sent by first-class mail by the next business day after a challenge.

    Second notices may also arrive by phone or email. You can choose a preferred secondary method through the Secretary of State’s “Where’s My Ballot?” tracking service.

    As a reminder, Tuesday was the last day for ballots to arrive by mail, as long as it was postmarked by Election Day. So if you haven’t been notified that your ballot’s been counted yet, you should check on it.

    Here’s where to do that for L.A. County. Orange County has a similar tool that you can find here.

  • How to see classic films showing in June
    exterior of vintage theatre sign in Los Angeles
    The front exterior of the Los Angeles Theatre, which opened in 1931.

    Topline:

    The Los Angeles Conservancy has been filling historic Broadway theaters for special film screenings since 1987 with their series Last Remaining Seats. That continues starting this weekend through the rest of the month with films like Mary Poppins Sing-a-Long, LA Confidential and North by Northwest.

    The history: The district was built between 1894 and 1931 as a flood of new residents arrived in L.A. The theaters represent a number of styles popular in that period.

    Read more: For cool photos of the theaters, some history and where to find tickets for Last Remaining Seats.

    The Los Angeles Conservancy — which works to preserve L.A. County's historic places — isn’t letting up on its longtime mission of celebrating downtown’s rich history and driving people to the area, particularly the historic theatres.

    From the Mary Poppins Sing-a-Long, noir style thrillers like LA Confidential, and all-time classics like North by Northwest, the organization is screening classic films through its Last Remaining Seats program starting this weekend through through June.

    The distinct style of LA’s Broadway Theater District

    The Broadway Theater District, which is officially recognized in the National Register of Historic Places, was developed between 1894 and 1931 as a flood of new residents arrived in the city.

    One of the most notable buildings, the Los Angeles Theatre, has been preserved in its original French Baroque-style structures.

    Sarah Lann, director of education at the Los Angeles Conservancy, joined AirTalk, LAist’s daily news program, and said visitors entering the Los Angeles Theatre are met with a “jaw-dropping” 50-foot ceiling when they first walk in.

    “There are crystal chandeliers, and  there's silk damask on the walls,” Lann said. “ It was literally meant to remind folks of the Hall of Mirrors in Versailles.”

    The Broadway district represents several styles distinct to the period — including California Churrigueresque, Art Deco and Beaux-Arts.

    Theaters today

    While no Broadway District theaters remain in daily use, the Orpheum and the Million Dollar Theater both host screenings, and other theaters have been refurbished into retail spaces.

    A number of movies have been shot in buildings on Broadway, including Blade Runner, The Neon Demon, and The Prestige.

    Man posing in red
    The Orpheum during the 2024 Last Remaining Seats season.
    (
    Courtesy L.A. Conservancy
    )

    Last Remaining Seats

    It all began in the 1980s as an education program to draw attention to the overlooked and underused theaters in the Broadway district, but it soon became the L.A. Conservancy’s mission to bring people back downtown.

    “ Downtown was really something of a no-go zone for many people in the '80s," Lann said. “Folks who were around then talk about it literally being dark…no open businesses once the sun went down.”

    The Los Angeles Conservancy started the Last Remaining Seats program in 1987. Now, almost 40 years later, Lann said the program continues its work to keep downtown theaters alive and well, celebrating the “incredible legacy of movie palaces that is so unique to L.A.”

    You can get tickets to this year’s selection of Last Remaining Seats screenings at https://www.laconservancy.org/.

  • Angelenos approve another sales tax
    Six people standing in a parking lot in front of a sign that says "Measure ER" wins
    Measure ER supporters, including Jim Mangia of St. John's Community Health and L.A. County Supervisors Holly Mitchell and Hilda Solis.

    Topline:

    Members of the campaign behind Measure ER claimed victory Wednesday, saying the half-percent sales tax in Los Angeles County would help keep hospitals and clinics from collapsing under federal cuts to Medi-Cal.

    Supporters celebrate: Although votes are still being counted, by Tuesday evening, Measure ER had won the support of 50.59% of L.A. County voters, the majority it needs to pass. “We saved the healthcare safety net in Los Angeles County,” said Jim Mangia, president and CEO of St. John's Community Health, at a news conference Wednesday. “We won, but it was close.”

    Why it matters: The sales tax increase is expected to raise about $1 billion a year to fund the region's safety net health care system, which faces cuts from the Trump administration's One Big Beautiful Bill. Cuts and changes under the federal law signed last year will cost the county's health departments about $800 million annually, while stripping hundreds of thousands of health coverage, according to Los Angeles County projections. Measure ER will raise L.A. County’s sales tax temporarily from 9.75% to 10.25%. The county would start collecting the 0.5% sales tax Oct. 1. It will will sunset in 2031.

    Read on ... for details about the measure.

    Members of the campaign behind Measure ER claimed victory Wednesday, saying the half-percent sales tax in Los Angeles County would help keep hospitals and clinics from collapsing under federal cuts to Medi-Cal.

    Although votes are still being counted, by Tuesday evening, Measure ER had won the support of 50.59% of L.A. County voters, the majority it needs to pass.

    The sales tax increase is expected to raise about $1 billion a year to fund the region's safety net healthcare system, which faces cuts from the Trump administration's One Big Beautiful Bill.

    “We saved the healthcare safety net in Los Angeles County,” said Jim Mangia, president and CEO of St. John's Community Health, at a news conference Wednesday. “We won, but it was close.”

    Measure ER will raise L.A. County’s sales tax temporarily from 9.75% to 10.25%. The county would start collecting the 0.5% sales tax Oct. 1. It will will sunset in 2031.

    Cuts and changes under the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" signed into law last year will cost the county's health departments about $800 million annually, while stripping hundreds of thousands of health coverage, according to Los Angeles County projections.

    Accountability

    The Board of Supervisors voted in February to put Measure ER before voters. L.A. County Supervisor Holly Mitchell, who introduced it, vowed Wednesday to ensure the revenue it generates is spent as promised.

    “For me, today is not a celebration, but more so a declaration of our commitment to be accountable to the public, whether you voted for or against Measure ER,” Mitchell said at the news conference.

    It’s a general tax, not a special tax. That means the revenue will go into the county’s general fund and is not legally earmarked for healthcare.

    However, county supervisors approved a spending plan for the Measure ER revenue. It allocates 45% to fund care at nonprofit clinics for uninsured low-income residents, 22% to keep county hospitals and clinics running and smaller shares to the Department of Public Health and Planned Parenthood clinics.

    The measure also establishes a nine-member oversight advisory committee to recommend, review and report publicly how the money is used.

    Kathryn Barger was the lone county supervisor to vote against sending Measure ER to voters, citing cost-of-living concerns. In a statement Wednesday, Barger said her responsibility moving forward is ensuring Measure ER follows through on its promises to voters.

    “Taxpayers deserve to know how these funds are being spent, whether promised outcomes are being achieved,” Barger said. “I will be a strong advocate for rigorous oversight and fiscal responsibility every step of the way.”

    Affordability concerns

    On Election Day, Measure ER had been trailing with about 47% of the vote, but the sales tax shifted into the leading position as votes were counted in the coming days.

    “I know how important this victory has been, and it has been a nail-biter,” said county Supervisor Hilda Solis.

    The main backer of the ER campaign was St. John’s Community Health, a nonprofit that operates a large network of health clinics in Southern California. The campaign, Restore Healthcare for Angelenos, raised about $9.7 million and had the backing of community clinics and healthcare workers’ union SEIU 721.

    The No on ER campaign committee, led by the L.A. County Taxpayers Association, raised less than $10,000, according to L.A. County campaign finance filings.

    Aidan Chao, chairman of the taxpayers group, said the close race shows rising tax fatigue among L.A. County voters.

    “This is by no means a resounding endorsement of measure ER from Angelenos,” Chao told LAist Monday. “We are disappointed that special interests spent $9.7 million — vastly outspending us — to pass a tax that will hurt working-class Angelenos the most.”

    Measure ER’s supporters say the tax increase is warranted, to prevent the collapse of the local healthcare system.

    “We found ourselves in a situation where we had to ask an already over-taxed community, in the midst of runaway inflation and affordability crisis, to tax themselves yet again,” Mangia said. “ We would not allow healthcare to be ripped away from the people who need it the most.”

    He said the current threats to L.A.'s healthcare system aren't just the federal cuts. California moved to freeze new Medi-Cal enrollment for undocumented adults starting in 2026 and add premiums in 2027.

    “This was a crisis created by both the feds and the state,” Mangia said. “ Measure ER was a grueling and expensive campaign, but we're not tired yet. This is just the beginning.”