Jill Replogle
covers public corruption, debates over our voting system, culture war battles — and more.
Published June 18, 2026 12:33 PM
Huntington Beach has waged a years-long court battle against the state's mandate to plan for some 13,000 new homes.
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After fighting Sacramento for years, Huntington Beach finally approved a plan this week to allow for significantly more housing.
The backstory: State law requires California cities and counties to plan for enough housing to meet the expected demand, with an emphasis on low-income units. For years, Huntington Beach has fought its allocation of some 13,000 new homes. But the city lost its final legal battle earlier this year.
The last stand? The City Council voted 5-2 to approve a draft housing plan at its meeting earlier this week. Councilmembers said they had to comply with the court order but would continue to fight for local control over housing and zoning decisions.
What’s next? The state housing department still has to approve the city’s housing plan, so more back-and-forth is likely. It’s also unclear whether Huntington Beach voters will ultimately have to approve the plan. Voters passed a measure in 2024 requiring public approval of major zoning changes in the city.
After fighting Sacramento for years, Huntington Beach finally approved a plan this week to allow for significantly more housing.
State law requires California cities and counties to plan for enough housing to meet the expected demand, with an emphasis on low-income units. For years, Huntington Beach has fought its allocation of some 13,000 new homes. But the city lost its final legal battle earlier this year.
The last stand?
The City Council voted 5-2 to approve a draft housing plan at its meeting earlier this week. Councilmembers said they had to comply with the court order but would continue to fight for local control over housing and zoning decisions. “There’s still a couple moves on the chessboard on this one,” said Mayor Casey McKeon, without elaborating.
What’s next?
The state housing department still has to approve the city’s housing plan, so more back-and-forth is likely. It’s also unclear whether Huntington Beach voters will ultimately have to approve the plan. Voters passed a measure in 2024 requiring public approval of major zoning changes in the city.
Spain is going back to the World Cup final after defeating France 2-0 in a dominant semifinal performance.
Spain beats out favorite: It was a tough end for France, which had entered this tournament as a favorite after winning the 2018 World Cup and losing to Argentina in the 2022 final. Spain, the reigning European champion and 2010 World Cup winner, enters Sunday's final on a high note and will play the winner of Wednesday's semifinal between Argentina and England.
What's next: Spain will play in the finals against the winner of Wednesday's England vs Argentina match. France will have one more game to play, the third-place match against the losing team of the other semifinal Saturday.
Copyright 2026 NPR
Spain is going back to the World Cup final, after defeating France 2-0 in a dominant semifinal performance.
It was a tough end for France, which had entered this tournament as a favorite, after winning the 2018 World Cup and losing to Argentina in the 2022 final. But France had no match for Spain, which has only allowed one goal this World Cup — and has not been beaten in two years (a 37-game streak: 28W - 9D - 0L).
In fact, neither team had trailed in this World Cup until a Spanish penalty kick in the 21st minute put them up 1-0. Spain got another goal in the 58th minute to seal the victory and managed to stifle the stellar French attacking trio of Kylian Mbappé, Ousmane Dembélé and Michael Olise. Mbappé had entered the game as the tournament leader in the Golden Boot race (eight goals and three assists, just ahead of Argentina's Lionel Messi with eight goals and two assists).
Spain, the reigning European champion and 2010 World Cup winner, enters Sunday's final on a high note and will play the winner of Wednesday's semifinal between Argentina and England.
France will have one more game to play, the third-place match against the losing team of the other semifinal on Saturday.
Copyright 2026 NPR
Makenna Cramer
covers the daily drumbeat of Southern California. She has a special place in her heart for creatures that make this such a fascinating place to live.
Published July 14, 2026 1:34 PM
Nearly three dozen lobsters were seized from alleged poachers on the Santa Monica Pier.
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Nearly three dozen lobsters were seized and six people were arrested for poaching at the Santa Monica Pier, state wildlife officials announced Tuesday.
The details: The poached crustaceans were hidden in duffel bags, backpacks, vehicles and a baby stroller, according to the California Department of Fish and Wildlife. The 34 lobsters were returned to the ocean alive, including several females, which can have 50,000 to 800,000 eggs each year.
“Lobster poaching is high priority for CDFW and Wildlife Officers are diligently working to apprehend those who violate our resource laws,” the department said in a statement to LAist, adding that there were others illegally taking lobsters who officers weren’t able to catch.
Why now: The alleged poachers were arrested last Wednesday, about four months after the recreational spiny lobster season closed. They’re accused of taking lobster out of season, taking undersized lobstersand possessing more than triple the daily bag limits, among others. Each violation can bring up to one year in jail or a $1,000 fine.
How you can help: If you see someone poaching or have information about a wildlife crime, you can make an anonymous tip to department officials by calling (888) 334-2258 at any time. You can also submit it through the “tip411” app from the Apple or Google Play stores. If you don’t want to download, you can submit the anonymous tip by texting 847411.
If the information you provide leads to an arrest, you could be eligible for a cash reward. Previous rewards have reached up to $3,500, according to the department. You can find more information here.
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Park Royale Trailer Park in Van Nuys on June 11, 2026. Van Nuys, which is in the San Fernando Valley, has cool winter nights and hot summer days.
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One Los Angeles contractor found a planet-friendly solution to a problem many California mobile home park residents face: dangerous heat and unaffordable cooling.
No cost equipment: Ben Shamoon's home upgrading business, Bryge, uses state and federal money to help deploy appliances like heat pumps and HVAC systems that cut pollution. He could install the units at no cost to the customer and the roughly $8,885 incentive per job would be enough to pay for the equipment, labor, permits and profit. Residents paid nothing. Low-income customers receive the highest incentive.
Benefits beyond cooling: What Shamoon is doing, swapping gas-powered heating and cooling for electric versions of appliances, lowers carbon pollution by pulling from the state’s mostly green grid. But it also could improve indoor air quality. Residents often reduced monthly utility bills when old, inefficient equipment were replaced.
Maria Franco has lived in the Park Royale Mobile Home Community for 25 years, in the Van Nuys neighborhood in north Los Angeles. The community has just under 150 rectangular homes, lined up neatly on a large field of mostly asphalt, with fruit trees popping up here and there.
Two years ago, Franco faced a string of bad luck. The 65-year-old lost her long-time job packing orders at a distribution company when it abruptly moved to another county, a commute too far for her to make.
Then her hot water heater clonked out, so she hauled warm water from her stovetop to her bathroom, scooping it over her head for a shower.
“I was depressed,” Franco said in Spanish. “I was in shock.”
The Southern California summer bore down harshly where she lived in the San Fernando Valley, its temperatures regularly 10 to 15 degrees higher than those on the coast.
To cool off, Franco relied on a fan and a partially functional window air conditioning unit. When her adult kids and grandchildren came by, they found the heat inside oppressive.
A knock on her door changed all that. A young contractor named Ben Shamoon stood on her step, wanting to know if he could install a new water heater, and an HVAC system that both cooled and heated her home. The cost to Franco? Absolutely nothing.
Heat pump customer, Maria Franco, outside her home in Van Nuys on June 11, 2026.
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“It was an inexplicable experience, a blessing from heaven,” Franco said.
Shamoon won over customers by canvassing trailer parks. By working with families who lived in close proximity, he could buy in bulk and work more efficiently to complete projects faster. The approach maximized incentives from a state program — aimed at supercharging heat pump adoption — to improve homes at no cost to owners.
He found a climate solution with a lot of wins — for customers, tradespeople and the planet. The approach cracked the nut of one way to bring heat pumps, which run on electricity rather than gas, to low-income Californians.
Best of all, Shamoon brought safety and comfort to families.
Cold calls to San Diego
In July of 2024, Shamoon was working to get his home upgrading business Bryge, then called LivSmart Home Services, off the ground. Tons of state and federal money was flowing to homeowners and contractors at the time through an initiative called TECH Clean California, to help deploy appliances like heat pumps that cut pollution. Low-income customers received the highest incentive.
Shamoon is based in Los Angeles, but the government incentives in the current funding cycle were exhausted in most parts of the state. He saw that there was some money left — about a million dollars to install heat pump water heaters for low-income customers in San Diego.
Shamoon often passed by a mobile home community at the end of his street. One day, an idea came: why not pitch mobile homeowners on the upgrades?
He could install the units at no cost to the customer and the roughly $8,885 incentive per job would be enough to pay for the equipment, labor, permits and profit.
Shamoon and a colleague found a list of San Diego mobile home parks and started cold-calling managers’ offices. Most said no, he could not go door to door, hoping to keep predatory schemes away from residents. Shamoon’s offer of free upgrades was hard to believe.
But a few said yes.
Door-knocking his way through each community, Shamoon picked up clients.
He found that — along with a higher concentration of potential customers — the mobile home parks were home to many families who made under 80% of the median income in the area, which meant they qualified for state assistance, and higher incentives.
“We started to see a trend,” Shamoon said. Not only did most customers qualify for incentives, but like Franco, they needed the help.
He met senior citizens who’d been living without working hot water heaters for months. And people with no air conditioning on days when outside temperatures exceeded 100 degrees.
“It was just one door after the next, after the next,” Shamoon said. He started to see his work as not just about comfort, but about dignity.
As installations began, Shamoon stumbled on wins. Sending contractors to one community cut down on commute times and meant he could get three to four jobs done in a day, as opposed to just one or two. He could bulk order supplies and get lower prices.
After he and his colleagues first canvassed mobile home parks, word traveled fast through the tightknit communities.
People who had initially turned his company away visited their neighbors’ homes and were assured that they had indeed paid nothing for their fancy new appliances. They called Shamoon back and wanted in.
For most customers who had older, inefficient air conditioners and live in hot, dry areas, their monthly bills went down noticeably.
While walking through a neighborhood in Van Nuys, Ben Shamoon (right), founder of Bryge and LivSmart Home Services, showed Evan Kamei, a director at Energy Solutions, one of the ways he creates social media and word of mouth awareness for Bryge.
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The process was not without challenges: electrical panels in some homes did not have capacity to power the upgrades. Different mobile home parks had restrictive rules about where appliances could be placed on the outside of homes.
But Shamoon was not deterred. He repeated the process, adding installations of heat pumps to warm and cool homes.
In the beginning, he worked with homeowners of all income levels, as there were incentives for people with high incomes too, but he eventually zeroed in on low-income homeowners.
Wealthier clients proved high-maintenance, despite getting free appliances, he said. Low-income families were incredibly grateful, and experienced a dramatic improvement in their quality of life.
Hundreds of miles north in Oakland
Consultant Evan Kamei started to take notice.
He had never met Shamoon, nor heard of his company before he started seeing its name pop up on spreadsheets. Kamei works in Oakland for Energy Solutions, an environmental consulting company that implements the state’s incentive program.
He keeps track of where heat pumps are being installed and how that impacts customer bills.
Kamei realized more and more mobile homeowners were participating in the program thanks to Shamoon.
His company has installed the majority of the roughly 1,500 TECH-funded heat pump HVAC and water heaters in mobile homes statewide. California’s incentive program has funded about 80,000 heat pump installations on all types of homes.
In Franco’s mobile home park, Shamoon has completed 38 projects.
“That’s the beauty of having a market-based solution of enabling contractors to figure out something that could work,” Kamei said, reflecting on contractor creativity, “It’s not something you typically see with an incentive program like this.”
A lot of wins, and some limits
What Shamoon is doing, swapping gas-powered heating and cooling for electric versions of appliances, lowers carbon pollution by pulling from the state’s mostly green grid. But it also could improve indoor air quality.
Esperanza Sanchez is breathing easier after she upgraded her HVAC system to a heat pump with Shamoon’s help. Sanchez lives in the Blue Star Mobile Home Park in the San Fernando Valley’s Sylmar neighborhood.
Sanchez had previously avoided using her gas heater because it triggered her asthma. “It stung my nose and I couldn’t stand it,” Sanchez said in Spanish. After making the switch, she said her respiratory issues were gone.
Maria Franco’s heat pump takes just 15 minutes to cool down her two-bedroom home on a scorching day.
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“It’s a public health thing. It’s an equity thing,” said Ethan Elkind, a UC Berkeley lawyer and policy researcher who’s studied how low-income Californians can adopt more planet-friendly appliances.
“It’s almost a human rights thing in these really hot climate zones — giving people access to reliable air conditioning,” Elkind said. “It checks a lot of boxes for what we need to do.”
But there are limits to this solution. There’s no way for the state to provide incentives for every low-income Californian to make the switch. California has doled out more than $219 million so far, but bringing electric appliances to all low-income residents would cost in the hundreds of billions of dollars, Elkind said, money the state does not have.
A settlement from a 2016 gas leak in the San Fernando Valley will funnel roughly $30 million in incentives to nearby residents through TECH starting late this summer. It’s unclear when these funds will again be available for Californians who live outside that region, and are not eligible for the settlement money.
One way to stretch the state’s limited funds is to use public dollars to attract private investors, Elkind said. Under this model, the state pays the interest upfront — giving low-income homeowners access to no-interest loans — and covers the loss if a borrower defaults. This safety net eliminates risk for private lenders, allowing them to finance the initial equipment upgrades. Homeowners would then pay back the loan principal over time, using the savings many see from now lower utility bills.
But that could only go so far. National policies incentivizing heat pump adoption like those in the Biden Administration’s Inflation Reduction Act, done away with under the Trump Administration’s tax bill, would need to be reinstated to achieve large-scale adoption.
Reaching renters is another story. Gas appliances are cheaper upfront. So landlords have little financial incentive to make the switch — while there are bill savings, those go to renters.
Elkind said achieving this shift would take policies like those slated to roll out in the Bay Area in 2027, requiring all new water heater installations be electric.
The most glaring limit is California’s high cost of electricity. For many, monthly bills for a gas appliance are lower than electric alternatives. But for Californians like Franco, who replaced old, inefficient window air conditioners, their bills often go down. That’s because new technologies use less energy to do the same – and often a better – job.
Cool air, hot showers
Three months after that knock on her door, Franco watched two men install her new water heater. It had been half a year since she had the ability to step into her shower, turn a knob and have hot water come out.
“That first time using the shower was beautiful,” Franco said.
A month later, she welcomed a new mini-split heating and cooling unit, blowing crisp air in her living room.
The single unit is powerful enough to transform her two-bedroom home from oppressive to refreshing in just 15 minutes.
Before the changes, her gas bill, which covered her furnace, water heater and stove, was $40 to $50 per month. It is now just $10. Her electricity bill went from $150 to around $80. The savings are meaningful given her monthly social security benefits of $1000.
Without Shamoon and his coworkers, Franco would have never learned about the state incentives, and never made the change.
“When I needed help the most, it came,” Franco said. “If it weren’t for them, we’d be suffering from the heat.”
Governor Gavin Newsom signed a new housing affordability law on Monday, aiming to cut red tape and spur housing construction.
Reduced construction costs: The reforms signed into law are expected to reduce the per-unit cost of affordable housing by $60,000 to $70,000, the governor said. One primary change is slashing impact fees, which local governments add onto new housing developments to generate tax revenue. The one-time fees levied on developers are used to support municipal services — including schools, public parks and sewage — for residents in the new affordable housing units.
Read on... for more about the new law.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a new housing affordability law on Monday, aiming to cut red tape and spur housing construction.
At a press conference in Oakland’s Chinatown, the governor didn’t mince words when it came to confronting the state’s cost-of-living crisis, which is top of mind for residents.
“It’s Econ 101,” Newsom said. “We need to build more damn housing, and we need to lower the cost of construction.”
The reforms signed into law are expected to reduce the per-unit cost of affordable housing by $60,000 to $70,000, the governor said. One primary change is slashing impact fees, which local governments add onto new housing developments to generate tax revenue.
The one-time fees levied on developers are used to support municipal services — including schools, public parks and sewage — for residents in the new affordable housing units.
A report by the Terner Center for Housing Innovation, a UC Berkeley think tank focused on housing challenges, recently found that across the state, affordable developments paid an average of roughly $300 million in impact fees annually. In his announcement on Monday, the governor called the fees “comical.”
“They’re outrageous. It makes it quite literally impossible to build an affordable unit,” Newsom said.
State Sen. Jesse Arreguín, D-Berkeley, and other officials at the conference credited the state’s investments in housing with alleviating some of the heavy burden of the housing crisis on residents and municipalities — and resulting in a 9% drop in unsheltered homelessness statewide over the past year, Arreguín said.
This announcement was also an opportunity for Newsom to trade barbs with President Donald Trump after he refused to sign a major housing bill from Congress, which became law over the weekend.
“The President may not be familiar because he did not take the time to sign a bill,” Newsom said when asked about the federal legislation, but “it looks a lot like what we’ve been doing here in the state of California.”