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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • Glendale is a pilot city for the program
    A camera on a pole with palm trees and a street light behind.
    A view of a flash camera system, seen at a local street light intersection in Los Angeles.

    Topline:

    Glendale is one of six California cities that could be designated to be a pilot location for a speed camera program intended to reduce traffic deaths if a bill currently making its way through the state legislature were signed into law.

    Why it matters: The bill would authorize the six pilot cities to install traffic cameras in school zones and areas with a history of traffic violence and street racing to measure vehicle speeds, snap photos of cars driving through traffic stops and issue speeding tickets that would be mailed to their home.

    Why now: Over 100 pedestrians are killed by drivers in L.A. each year. The Federal Highway Administration estimates that speed cameras can reduce injury crashes by 50%.

    What's next: AB 645 still needs to be considered by the state Senate. If passed, the six California cities — Glendale, Los Angeles, Long Beach, Oakland, San Jose, and San Francisco — will be authorized to begin a five-year pilot program.

    Go deeper:

    Keep an eye on that speedometer. Glendale is one of six California cities that could be designated to be a pilot location for a speed camera program intended to reduce traffic deaths if a bill currently making its way through the state legislature were signed into law.

    If passed, the bill will allow pilot cities to install speed cameras to measure vehicle speed and snap photos of cars as they drive through traffic stops. Cameras will be stationed near schools and places with a history of traffic violence or street racing.

    About the proposed bill

    Assembly Bill 645, which has passed the Assembly but awaits Senate approval, also authorizes San Jose, Los Angeles, Oakland, Long Beach, and the City and County of San Francisco to participate in the pilot program. Assemblymember Laura Friedman, a Glendale Democrat who also heads the Assembly Transportation Committee, is one of the bill's authors.

    More than 100 pedestrians are killed by drivers in L.A. each year. The Federal Highway Administration estimates that speed cameras can reduce injury crashes by up to 54%.

    “At the current rate of funding, it's going to take 125 years just to re-engineer the 6% of the most dangerous roads in the city of Los Angeles,” says Damian Kevitt with nonprofit Streets Are For Everybody, which co-sponsored AB 645.

    “Armed police officers are not the solution to addressing traffic safety issues all over the place. We need another tool.”

    Cities like Chicago, Denver, and Portland have cited success with speed camera programs; New York reduced speeding by up to 73% in school areas. But in California, speed cameras are currently illegal.

    Concerns about security and burdensome fines

    Some civil liberties organizations like the ACLU oppose the bill, citing privacy and government surveillance concerns. Other critics say the program is simply a revenue generator for city governments.

    Bill language states revenue must be spent on traffic calming measures, and cities must reduce fines by 80% for those under the poverty line, or “50% for individuals making 250% above the poverty level or less.”

    Tickets will not affect insurance rates or take photos of drivers, only the license plate.

    They'll work like parking citations — tied to the car, not the person driving it. That means if a camera catches you speeding, you’ll have to pay a fine, but it won’t go on your record.

    Citations would start at $50 for 11 to 15 mph over the speed limit, all the way up to $500 for 100 mph or more.

    Listen to the conversation

    Listen 19:11
    LA Intersections May Soon Have Speeding-Cameras

  • Meet the people overseeing the LA 2028 Olympics
    Two graphics side by side, both reading "LA 28". Left graphic shows the "A" in old english font in rainbow colors. The five Olympic rings are pictured below the letters and numbers. Right graphic shows the "A" in rainbow and black and white stripes with three swishes of colors beneath in red, blue and green.

    Topline:

    LA28, the committee behind the upcoming Summer Games and Paralympics in Los Angeles, made recent headlines after supporting and defending their chair, Casey Wasserman, whose name appeared in the ongoing Epstein files released last month. Who sits on the LA28 planning committee?

    Exponential influence: The official LA28 website only lists the names of the 35-member committee, failing to provide any additional information on their external position, affiliation, or background. Despite the limited information that the board provides about its members, the influence they hold is exponential. Overall, they are in charge of the successful execution of the 2028 games through things like ensuring the games remain on budget, managing environmental sustainability and venues and securing corporate partnerships with companies such as Starbucks, Delta, Google, and Comcast.

    Who sits on the committee: Among the committee members who continue to defend Wasserman are local business, sports, and political leaders. They include Pete Rodriguez, a labor union leader, Jessica Alba, actress and founder of the Honest Company, Reince Priebus President Donald Trump's Trump’s former chief of staff, and Jeffrey Katzenberg former chairman of Walt Disney Studio and DreamWorks Animation.

    LA28, the committee behind the upcoming Summer Games and Paralympics in Los Angeles, made recent headlines after supporting and defending their chair, Casey Wasserman, whose name appeared in the ongoing Epstein files released last month.

    The 35-member committee, which seems to be the only entity that could remove and unseat Wasserman, said that after they reviewed his documented interactions with Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, they did not go “beyond what has already been publicly documented.”

    "The Executive Committee of the Board has determined that, based on these facts, as well as the strong leadership he has exhibited over the past ten years, Mr. Wasserman should continue to lead LA28 and deliver a safe and successful games,” the committee said in a statement.

    Despite local leaders and organizations, including members of the L.A. City Council, L.A. Mayor Karen Bass, representatives on the L.A. County Board of Supervisors and the Los Angeles County Legislative Delegation, demanding his removal from the games' leadership, the board has remained steady in its defense of Wasserman.

    For starters, the official LA28 website only lists the names of the 35-member committee, failing to provide any additional information on their external position, affiliation, or background.

    Despite the limited information that the board provides about its members, the influence they hold is exponential. Overall, they are in charge of the successful execution of the 2028 games through things like ensuring the games remain on budget, managing environmental sustainability and venues and securing corporate partnerships with companies such as Starbucks, Delta, Google, and Comcast.

    Among the committee members who continue to defend Wasserman are local business, sports, and political leaders, including the following:

    Latinos

    • Beatriz Acevedo

    Beatriz Acevedo is a Latina entrepreneur, co-founder and president of Mitú, or we are Mitú, a digital news and culture source for Latinos. Acevedo, who was born in Tijuana and raised in Mexico City, also co-founded SUMA Wealth, a financial wellness company and app that is said to help Latinos with tips about financial literacy and wealth-building tools.

    The app uses AI “financial coaches” that help subscribers with budgeting, investing and receive personalized financial coaching.

    “Your financial future can shine brighter than your abuela's saints' candles with our unlimited money-making tips, deals, and financial tools,” the official website states.

    Acevedo is also the president of her family’s foundation, the Acevedo Foundation, which, according to its website, is committed to creating more equitable access to capital and mentorship for Latino entrepreneurs to elevate the community's needs and build generational wealth. She is also a member of the Latino Community Foundation.

    • Jessica Alba

    Jessica Alba is known for acting roles in movies like “Fantastic Four” and “Good Luck Chuck,” among others. She is also the founder of the Honest Company, an L.A.-based consumer goods company specializing in baby, beauty and personal care items, including diapers and wipes, utilizing non-toxic, plant-based ingredients.

    In 2015, numerous lawsuits claimed the company had deceptive labeling of ingredients, specifically sodium lauryl sulfate in laundry detergent.

    The actress, who last month made a surprise dancing appearance during Bad Bunny's Super Bowl halftime show, has also openly spoken about experiencing sexual harassment “all the time along the way” throughout her career in the Hollywood industry.

    • José E. Feliciano

    José E. Feliciano is a Puerto Rican-born American businessman, investor and multi-billionaire.

    He is the co-founder of investment firm Clearlake Capital, a private investment firm in the technology, industrial and consumer sectors, managing over $90 billion of assets. The company is the majority owner of Chelsea Football Club, having acquired the team in May 2022.

    Through the Kwanza Jones and José E. Feliciano Initiative, Feliciano and his wife have also donated to causes at Princeton University and Stanford University. He also serves on the boards of the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Latino and today is one of the wealthiest Americans.

    • Pete Rodriguez 

    Pete Rodriguez is a labor union leader and member of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, one of North America's largest building-trades unions, representing over 500,000 members in the construction and wood-products industries.

    Besides joining the union in 1996, when he was doing highway and bridge work, there is not much public information about him. His father was an immigrant who arrived in the U.S. undocumented and worked as a union laborer as well.

    Members Tied to President Donald Trump 

    • Kevin McCarthy

    Kevin McCarthy served as the Speaker of the House of Representatives from January to October 2023. The Republican from Bakersfield, California, concluded his 16-year career after he was the first Speaker of the House in U.S. history to be formally removed from the position. McCarthy was initially a supporter of Trump until he stated Trump “bears responsibility” for the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, a statement that he later retracted and once again became a vocal supporter of Trump's return to power.

    • Reince Priebus

    Reince Priebus served as Trump’s chief of staff for the first six months of his first term. He was removed as White House chief of staff in July 2017 after being blamed for poor performance and leaking of documents. He also serves as a political analyst for Fox News, appearing across their platforms and news segments.

    • Diane Hendricks

    Billionaire Diane Hendricks, considered to be the wealthiest person in Wisconsin, has been a Trump mega-donor for years. Hendricks, who has openly said to be anti-union, faced controversy in the past for paying zero state income taxes in 2010, 2012, 2013, and 2014, although it was classified as legal due to business tax classifications. She has previously said to have built the majority of her multi-billion-dollar fortune through ABC Supply, one of the largest roofing supply companies in the U.S. Before that, she worked as a Playboy Bunny for about a year as a teenager, a job she said she took to support her child and pay her bills.

    • Patrick Dumont

    Billionaire Patrick Dumont is the owner of the National Basketball Association team, the Dallas Mavericks. He was also recently appointed chairman and chief executive officer of Las Vegas Sands, a casino and resort company. He is also the son-in-law of Miriam Adelson, an Israeli-American physician who has been ranked as one of the wealthiest people in the world and has been a major Trump benefactor, as well as one of the largest donors to Republican causes. In 2018, Trump awarded her the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest U.S. civilian honor, for her work in support of Jewish causes and advocating for strong U.S.-Israel ties.

    Others

    Jeffrey Katzenberg served as chairman of Walt Disney Studios from 1984 to 1994 and later as the chief executive officer and founder of DreamWorks Animation. For decades, he has been a top Democratic Party fundraiser, involved with campaigns for Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton and was a co-chair for Joe Biden’s 2024 campaign.


    Contrary to popular belief, the majority of the board is not made up of former Paralympic athletes; instead, the majority of its members are billionaires and prominent political and business figures.

    CNN reported last week that, according to their sources, the U.S. and International Olympic committees, which oversee and approve major LA28 decisions, have been engaged in backchannel conversations about Wasserman’s role, with a potential replacement floating around.

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  • Workers now providing kits on the Eastside
    People sit inside a tent on Boyle Avenue.
    Homeless outreach workers are now roaming daily across the Eastside, including Boyle Heights, to provide hygiene kits and tents and connect unhoused residents to temporary housing.


    Topline:

    Homeless outreach workers are now roaming daily across the Eastside to provide hygiene kits and tents and connect unhoused residents to temporary housing. The effort is part of a new year-long program launched last Thursday by Councilmember Ysabel Jurado, which works in partnership with Urban Alchemy, a San Francisco-based nonprofit that provides services to unhoused people.

    Program details: The team is made up of three people, which includes two on-the-ground outreach practitioners and a third person directing their operations. Workers will exclusively offer daily outreach to CD 14 neighborhoods, which include El Sereno, Lincoln Heights, Boyle Heights, Eagle Rock, Highland Park and downtown Los Angeles. The program — Leading Outreach with Valued Engagement, or LOVE — will be in effect through March 2027.

    Services offered: Outreach workers are tasked with providing crisis intervention and de-escalation, assessing individual needs and connecting people to interim housing referrals. They will also distribute food and Narcan, as well as offer “post-placement follow-up to help people remain housed.”

    This story first appeared on The LA Local.


    Homeless outreach workers are now roaming daily across the Eastside, including Boyle Heights, to provide hygiene kits and tents and connect unhoused residents to temporary housing.

    The effort is part of a new year-long program launched last Thursday by Councilmember Ysabel Jurado, which works in partnership with Urban Alchemy, a San Francisco-based nonprofit that provides services to unhoused people.

    The program — Leading Outreach with Valued Engagement, or LOVE — will be in effect through March 2027. The program costs $300,000 and is funded through Jurado’s discretionary funds. The team is made up of three people, which includes two on-the-ground outreach practitioners and a third person directing their operations.

    Boyle Heights has seen a recent rise in homeless encampment reports. In the first quarter of 2025, 635 encampments were reported in Boyle Heights, compared with 379 during the same period in 2024, according to an analysis by The Eastsider.

    Homeless encampments were also a source of discussion at January’s Community Police Advisory Board hosted by the Hollenbeck Community Police Station. 

    Attendees expressed frustration about unhoused people living in an alley behind the Benjamin Franklin Library and a growing encampment near Hollenbeck Drive and South Boyle Avenue, according to a summary of the meeting. 

    Encampments move from one place to another, said Susana Betancourt, a member of the Community Police Advisory Board. Betancourt talked about pressuring property owners to clean up. “They not only have tents, the encampments there, but they put their vehicles,” she said.

    Jurado, in a statement to Boyle Heights Beat, said her office works with service providers “to respond to encampments thoughtfully.”

    “We coordinate every two weeks to prioritize areas of greatest need, making sure neighbors get consistent support and that unhoused residents are connected to housing, health care, and other services,” she said. 

    Jurado touts the new program as giving unhoused residents better access to “life-saving health care, stable housing, [and] pathways to recovery.” The LOVE program, Jurado said, will help “reach neighbors before situations become emergencies.”

    “Addressing homelessness isn’t one-size-fits-all. I invested in the LOVE Team because every person’s needs are different,” Jurado said. “The team is out in the community every day, visiting every neighborhood in the district each week, building trust, and connecting neighbors to housing, health care, and support services that help them regain stability.”

    Outreach workers are tasked with providing crisis intervention and de-escalation, assessing individual needs and connecting people to interim housing referrals. They will also distribute food and Narcan, as well as offer “post-placement follow-up to help people remain housed.”

    Jurado said workers will exclusively offer daily outreach to CD 14 neighborhoods, which include El Sereno, Lincoln Heights, Boyle Heights, Eagle Rock, Highland Park and downtown Los Angeles. 

    Mason Santa Maria, a spokesperson for Jurado, said outreach workers have already identified unhoused residents who are not yet logged into the Homeless Management Information System, an online database tracking services accessed by people who are unhoused or at risk of homelessness. 

    “It’s hard to keep track of people when they don’t have a stable address,” Santa Maria said. “This is a way to keep track of them.”

    The post Outreach team hits Eastside streets with health kits and housing referrals for unhoused residents appeared first on LA Local.

  • LA County breaks ground on Norwalk campus
    A beige building with a ceramic tile roof
    One of the buildings on the site of the Metropolitan State Hospital that will be renovated into a 16-bed psychiatric facility.

    Topline:

    Los Angeles County broke ground Friday on a project that will bring dozens of new mental health beds and supportive housing to the sprawling, 110-year-old Metropolitan State Hospital campus in Norwalk.

    The details: Led by Supervisor Janice Hahn, the project includes a renovation of some of the decaying buildings on the site into 32 locked treatment beds. The $65 million in funding comes from Proposition 1,the state’s mental health funding bond passed in 2024. In all, county leaders plan to have 162 beds at the so-called Mental Health Care Campus, ranging from locked psychiatric beds to permanent supportive housing.

    The historic site: Run by the state, the psychiatric hospital opened in 1916 and at its peak housed thousands of patients. These days, with its 162 acres, overgrown grass and boarded up buildings, the place feels mostly abandoned.

    Read on... for what else is planned for the project.

    Los Angeles County broke ground Friday on a project that will bring dozens of new mental health beds and supportive housing to the sprawling, 110-year-old Metropolitan State Hospital campus in Norwalk.

    Led by Supervisor Janice Hahn, the project includes a renovation of some of the decaying buildings on the site into 32 treatment beds within locked facilities. The $65 million in funding comes from Proposition 1, the state’s mental health funding bond passed in 2024.

    “One of the biggest challenges we face in Los Angeles County right now is that we simply do not have enough places where people can get the compassionate, professional mental health care that they need,” Hahn said before the groundbreaking.

    In all, county leaders plan to have 162 beds at the so-called Mental Health Care Campus, ranging from locked psychiatric beds to permanent supportive housing.

    A man in a blue suit stands beside a woman wearing a bright blue jacket. They stand in an empty room and before a poster of furnished room.
    California State Senator Bob Archuleta (L) and LA County Supervisor Janice Hahn stand in front of a rendering of a remodeled bedroom at the Metropolitan State Hospital Campus in Norwalk.
    (
    Robert Garrova
    /
    LAist
    )

    Hahn said part of the idea is to get help for people who have been cycling out of emergency rooms and incarceration.

    “This Care Village really is a big step forward showing people that there’s a different way that we can get help to the people who need it most,” she told LAist.

    At a meeting last year, county supervisors voted to sign off on a lease with the state for a 13-acre portion of the campus. Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill from Sen. Bob Archuleta in 2024 that cleared the way for the lease.

    A building is seen by overgrown grass
    One of the buildings that will be renovated into supportive housing at the Metropolitan State Hospital campus in Norwalk.
    (
    Robert Garrova
    /
    LAist
    )

    The historic site 

    Run by the state, the psychiatric hospital opened in 1916 and at its peak housed thousands of patients. These days, with its 162 acres, overgrown grass and boarded up buildings, the place feels mostly abandoned.

    Some of the buildings feature large windows that architectural mock ups provided by the county show will remain intact, allowing light to flow into large indoor communal spaces. Officials have also said the plan is to preserve the architectural features of the buildings, which have historical landmark status.

    The interior of a room with large windows.
    The interior in one of the future 16-bed facilities at the Metropolitan State Hospital.
    (
    Robert Garrova
    /
    Laist
    )

    What’s next

    The plan is to bring several levels of care together on one campus. In all, the project calls for renovating six of the buildings on the site.

    That includes:

    • 32 locked psychiatric care beds, which will serve young adults between 18-25 who have acute mental health needs.
    • 70 interim housing beds and short-term housing with on-site mental health services.
    • 60 permanent supportive Housing apartments. These will be reserved for adults with serious mental illness who were previously unhoused.

    The county’s plan also includes a shared community building with a kitchen and communal dining space.

    The county estimates the interim housing will be completed late next year, with the locked beds coming in early 2028. The county did not yet have a timeline for the permanent supportive housing beds.

  • Iconic Mexican churreria expands in SoCal
    A large stack of plates with a pile of churros on the very top one. They sit atop a white counter. To the right of the churros is a smaller stack of plates that read "Churreria El Moro."
    The beloved Mexican churreria El Moro is opening a second location in Los Angeles.

    Topline:

    A beloved churreria from Mexico City is expanding its footprint in Southern California with a second location in Los Angeles. El Moro debuted in Echo Park in January, drawing lines out the door — and it’s getting ready to open a new shop in Culver City by the end of 2026.

    The backstory: El Moro was founded in 1933 when Francisco Iriarte, an immigrant from northern Spain, started selling churros out of a food cart in the Zocalo, the historic main square in Mexico City. Its first brick-and-mortar location opened just a couple years later in 1935 — and it remains in business to this day, using its original recipes. The business has grown to nearly two dozen shops, and its first U.S. location opened in Costa Mesa in 2023.

    Family business: The churreria is now being run by Iriarte’s great nephew, Santiago, who told LAist he was about 8 years old when he decided to get into the family business. He was moved after spotting El Moro in a 1950s guidebook for tourists while rummaging through a public library in the city. “ That's when I realized that I wanted to join my dad at some point,” he said, adding that he started working at El Moro full-time in college. ”I fell in love with it.”

    Menu: The menu includes ice cream sandwiches, Mexican hot chocolate and iced lattes, and a variety of churros and dipping sauces — flavors like cajeta and chocolate. Here’s a full list.

    SoCal locations: There's one in Echo Park at 1524 Sunset Blvd., and another in Costa Mesa located inside Mercado Gonzalez Northgate Market at 2300 Harbor Blvd.

    This story was produced with help from Gillian Moran Pérez.