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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • Officials propose deep cuts to programs, services
    Half a dozen large tents are set up on a city sidewalk. Taller buildings can be seen in the background.
    Tents line up in a row in downtown Los Angeles on June 28, 2024.

    Topline:

    Facing a $303 million deficit next fiscal year, L.A. County officials propose cutting roughly a third of homelessness programs and services next budget year.

    Proposed cuts: The draft spending plan, presented during a virtual town hall on Thursday, would gut prevention, outreach and supportive services beginning in July to pay to maintain temporary shelter beds and absorb rate increases previously covered by other funding sources.

    Why a deficit? County officials say the shortfall stems from a few factors. Measure A, the county's sales tax for homeless services, has generated less revenue than anticipated as consumer spending declines. Additionally, several sources of temporary federal and state funding have expired or are expiring, according to county officials. Lastly, the rates the county has to pay service providers to operate shelter beds has gone up.

    Next steps: The new Department of Homeless Services and Housing is asking for feedback from the public on the plan through the first week of December. Officials will then draft a revised spending plan and present it to the L.A. County Board of Supervisors in January. The proposed funding changes would take effect in the budget year beginning July 1.

    Facing a $303 million deficit next fiscal year, L.A. County officials propose cutting roughly a third of homelessness programs and services.

    The plan, which is not yet finalized, would gut prevention, outreach and supportive services to maintain temporary shelter beds and absorb rate increases previously covered by other funding sources.

    The new county Department of Homeless Services and Housing is asking for feedback from the public on the plan through the first week of December.

    Proposed cuts

    The draft spending plan, presented during a virtual town hall on Thursday, proposes eliminating or significantly reducing funding across multiple areas next budget year, beginning in July.

    " This is to prioritize funding beds and housing,” said Sarah Mahin, the new department’s director. “And these are very difficult decisions about how to prioritize our limited resources."

    The proposal includes:

    • Closing down 20 of 30 existing Pathway Home program sites (more than 700 beds).
    • Slashing county street outreach staff by half. 
    • Eliminating funding for the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority’s housing navigation program.
    • Eliminating all county homelessness prevention funding, which includes case management.
    • Eliminating $12 million for programs that provide legal and employment services. 
    • Eliminating funding for all four of the county’s existing Safe Parking sites. 
    • Reducing funding for DPSS’ benefits advocacy by half — $5 million
    • Eliminating  $10 million in direct funding to Glendale, Long Beach and Pasadena.

    Why the cuts?

    County officials say there's a large projected deficit in funding for homeless services next year.

    The shortfall stems from three main factors.

    Measure A, the county's sales tax for homeless services, has generated less revenue than anticipated as consumer spending declines.

    Additionally, several sources of temporary federal and state funding have expired or are expiring, according to county officials.

    Lastly, the rates the county has to pay service providers to operate shelter beds has gone up. The county is proposing to spend 46% more (an additional $86 million) to operate about 6,000 “interim housing,” or shelter beds, next year.

    Officials said that new spending would not add any beds, but would maintain existing beds, at increased costs.

    Community concerns

    The county has been conducting community engagement sessions since July, working with the consulting firm Changewell to gather input.

    During the virtual town hall Thursday, frontline workers and advocates raised alarm about the human impact of the cuts. Mahin acknowledged the concern, saying it's why the department wants the Board of Supervisors to approve the plan in January to allow adequate time to “ramp down programs.”

    Mahin said the county is trying to be proactive by releasing the draft plan well before the budget deadline and soliciting extensive public comment. She said the plan also attempts to coordinate with the Los Angeles County Affordable Housing Solutions Agency, which administers separate funding for homelessness prevention and affordable housing.

    Next steps 

    The new county department is soliciting public comment on its website until Dec. 5. Officials will then draft a revised spending plan and present it to the L.A. County Board of Supervisors in January.

    The proposed funding changes would take effect in the budget year beginning July 1.

  • Here's how OC cities voted on the measure
    People wait in line outside to vote,
    Voters line up in Santa Ana to cast their ballots on Proposition 50, which has big implications for congressional districts in the county.

    Topline

    California overwhelmingly approved Proposition 50, the measure that dramatically changed congressional district boundaries in the state to favor Democrats. In Southern California, the measure passed with 64% of the votes.

    The backstory: It’s well known that Orange County has a larger concentration of Republican voters than other parts of Southern California, but there were some notable statistics — based on data from the Registrar’s office — that shed more light on how residents there voted.

    Santa Ana: For example, there was overwhelming support for the measure in Santa Ana – 76%. Outrage over raids by Immigration and Customs Enforcement may be one reason.

    Cities opposed to 50: Villa Park, a mostly residential enclave in the heart of Orange County and with a population of 5,800, led the opposition to the proposition with 63% of voters casting “no” ballots.

    California overwhelmingly approved Proposition 50, the measure that dramatically changed congressional district boundaries in the state to favor Democrats.

    In Southern California, the measure passed with 64% of the votes.

    And while it’s true that all six counties in Southern California voted in favor of Prop. 50, the smallest margin was in Orange County, which voted 55%-45% to pass it.

    It’s well known that Orange County has a larger concentration of Republican voters than other parts of Southern California, but there were some notable statistics — based on data from the Registrar’s office — that shed more light on how residents there voted.

    For example, there was overwhelming support for the measure in Santa Ana — 76%. Outrage over raids by Immigration and Customs Enforcement may be one reason. The city is about half Latino and has been subject to several enforcement actions by the federal agency.

    Santa Ana is Orange County’s only “sanctuary city,” signifying that city leadership stands with immigrants and limits cooperation with immigration enforcement.

    The cities of Irvine, Anaheim and Tustin were among the cities that also showed strong backing for Proposition 50, each topping 60% support.

    Villa Park led Prop. 50 opposition

    Proposition 50 redrew congressional district boundaries so that more Democrats could get elected to Congress from California. Backers hope it will help the party take control of the House of Representatives in next year’s midterm election.

    Gov. Gavin Newsom said it was a response to Texas, which redrew its political boundaries to elect more Republicans to Congress. A federal judge on Tuesday blocked Texas from using its newly drawn map, ruling that it is likely an unconstitutional racial gerrymander.

    Republicans in California also are challenging Prop. 50 in court.

    In Southern California, Republican Representatives Ken Calvert and Darrell Issa saw their red-leaning districts of Riverside and Northern San Diego County turn solidly Democratic. Calvert is expected to challenge fellow Republican Representative Young Kim in next year’s primary.

    Villa Park, a mostly residential enclave in the heart of Orange County and with a population of 5,800, led the opposition to the proposition with 63% of voters casting “no” ballots. Newport Beach and Yorba Linda — traditional strongholds of President Donald Trump — each saw 60% of its voters opposing the measure.

    Trump had denounced Prop. 50 as a Newsom power grab.

    Seven OC cities opposed 50

    Under Proposition 50, Newport Beach will likely be represented by Democratic Representative Robert Garcia, whose politics are well to the left of much of the city. The measure split Yorba Linda into two different districts. Yorba Linda is now represented by Kim. Under the new maps, the conservative city will likely be represented by two Democrats.

    Seven of Orange County’s 35 cities plus the unincorporated area opposed Prop. 50.

    Here’s the breakdown of how Orange County cities voted:

    City / area%Yes%No
    Santa Ana76%24%
    Irvine65%35%
    Stanton64%36%
    Anaheim63%37%
    Laguna Beach63%37%
    Tustin63%37%
    Buena Park60%40%
    Fullerton60%40%
    La Habra59%41%
    Garden Grove58%42%
    Laguna Woods58%42%
    Alisa Viejo57%43%
    Costa Mesa57%43%
    La Palma57%43%
    Orange55%45%
    Cypress55%45%
    Lake Forest54%46%
    Los Alamitos53%47%
    Placenta53%47%
    Westminster53%47%
    Brea52%48%
    Laguna Hills51%49%
    Laguna Niguel51%49%
    Mission Viejo51%49%
    Seal Beach51%49%
    Fountain Valley50%50%
    Rancho Santa Margarita50%50%
    Dana Point48%52%
    Unincorporated area48%52%
    Huntington Beach47%53%
    San Juan Capistrano47%53%
    San Clemente43%57%
    Newport Beach40%60%
    Yorba Linda40%60%
    Villa Park37%63%
  • Sponsored message
  • CDC revives debunked 'link'

    Topline:

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has made a dramatic about-face in the agency's position on the relationship between vaccines and autism.

    What's the change: The CDC's website now says a link between vaccines and autism cannot be ruled out. That's a reversal from the CDC's longstanding stance that there is no link.
    Why now: The change comes even though a connection between vaccines and autism has long been debunked by a large body of high-quality research. But Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has long promoted the discredited claim.

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has made a dramatic about-face in the agency's position on the relationship between vaccines and autism.

    The CDC's website now says a link between vaccines and autism cannot be ruled out. That's a reversal from the CDC's longstanding stance that there is no link.

    The change comes even though a connection between vaccines and autism has long been debunked by a large body of high-quality research. But Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has long promoted the discredited claim.

    The CDC's change is alarming public health experts. They are already worried about a drop in childhood vaccination, which has led to a resurgence of dangerous childhood diseases like measles and whooping cough.

    "The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website has been changed to promote false information suggesting vaccines cause autism," said Dr. Susan J. Kressly, president of the American Academy of Pediatrics, in a statement. "Since 1998, independent researchers across seven countries have conducted more than 40 high-quality studies involving over 5.6 million people. The conclusion is clear and unambiguous: There's no link between vaccines and autism."


    She went on to say, "Anyone repeating this harmful myth is misinformed or intentionally trying to mislead parents. We call on the CDC to stop wasting government resources to amplify false claims that sow doubt in one of the best tools we have to keep children healthy and thriving: routine immunizations."

    In a statement to NPR, Department of Health and Human Services spokesperson Andrew Nixon repeated one of the changes to the website: "The claim 'vaccines do not cause autism' is not an evidence-based claim because studies have not ruled out the possibility that infant vaccines cause autism."

    He said the department "has launched a comprehensive assessment of the causes of autism, including investigations on plausible biologic mechanisms and potential causal links."

    "The new statement shows a lack of understanding of the term 'evidence,'" the Autism Science Foundation said in a statement the organization provided to NPR, adding, "No environmental factor has been better studied as a potential cause of autism than vaccines."

    It's a statement that's confusing by design, said Dr. Paul Offitt, a pediatrician and director of the Vaccine Education Center at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. "These are the usual anti-vaccine tropes, misrepresentation of studies, false equivalence," he says. "They might as well say chicken nuggets might cause autism because you can't prove that either."

    The changes on the website "blindsided" career scientists at CDC, says Dr. Demetre Daskalakis, a former top CDC official who resigned from the agency in August. "The scientists did not participate in its creation," he says. "And the data are unvetted."

    Two current CDC staffers, who contacted NPR Thursday, say the updates are a glaring red flag that indicate the vaccine information on the agency website is no longer credible, and is instead "anti-science." They requested anonymity out of concern they could lose their jobs for speaking to the press.

    The moves are the latest in a series of steps Kennedy has taken on the safety and effectiveness of vaccines that run counter to mainstream medical and scientific organizations like the pediatrics academy, the Infectious Disease Society of American and the American College of Physicians.

    Vaccine proponents say the moves are recklessly undermining public confidence in vaccines and fueling vaccine hesitancy, putting the nation's children at risk. The U.S. appears to be poised to lose its status as having eliminated measles.

    Kennedy sacked all the members of the CDC's influential Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, or ACIP, earlier this year and replaced the members with his own slate. In one of its first actions, the new advisory committee called for the removal of the preservative thimerosal used in a small fraction of flu vaccines, even though safety concerns about it have also been debunked.

    Under Kennedy, federal health agencies have also made it harder for people to get vaccinated against COVID-19, and canceled grants funding new vaccines that rely on mRNA technology at the heart of the most used COVID vaccines.

    The Trump administration has also claimed there is a link between acetaminophen, the active ingredient in Tylenol, and autism, and promoted the use of leucovorin, a prescription form of vitamin B9, to treat autism even though the evidence supporting that is scant.

    An ACIP working group is now studying more major changes in childhood vaccinations, including removing compounds that include aluminum used to increase vaccine effectiveness. These adjuvants have been used safely for nearly a century. The committee is also exploring separating a single shot now given to protect against measles, mumps and rubella in a single shot into individual shots.

    Public health experts say both moves are scientifically unsound and would essentially upend the nation's childhood vaccination regimen, leaving children vulnerable to diseases that had long been brought under control.

    The committee is also considering recommending delaying vaccinating children against hepatitis B. For years, all babies have been vaccinated against hepatitis at birth. Hepatitis B can cause liver failure and liver cancer.

    The CDC acknowledges in a footnote on its main webpage on autism and vaccines that it still carries a header reading "Vaccines do not cause autism*" and says it hasn't "been removed due to an agreement with the chair of the U.S. Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee that it would remain on the CDC website."

    NPR emailed Louisiana Republican Sen. Bill Cassidy's office for comment but didn't receive an immediate response. Cassidy chairs the Senate HELP Committee, which vetted Kennedy's nomination to lead HHS and voted along party lines to support it.

    Cassidy posted on X Thursday afternoon: "I'm a doctor who has seen people die from vaccine-preventable diseases. What parents need to hear right now is vaccines for measles, polio, hepatitis B and other childhood diseases are safe and effective and will not cause autism. Any statement to the contrary is wrong, irresponsible, and actively makes Americans sicker."
    Copyright 2025 NPR

  • How a retired construction worker got it built
    A family of three — including a father, mother and an adult son, all with medium skin tone — stand next to power tools and lumber outside their recently completed accessory dwelling unit on the lot of their home in Altadena.
    From left to right, Jose, Sandra and David Rodriguez stand outside their recently completed accessory dwelling unit in Altadena.

    Topline:

    Jose Rodriguez wasn’t trying to be the first person in Altadena to finish a new home after suffering a loss in the Eaton Fire. But thanks to his decades of construction experience — and fast work by his crew — Rodriguez earned that distinction earlier this week.

    The reaction: A county inspector congratulated Rodriguez on receiving Los Angeles County’s first certificate of occupancy on a property impacted by the January fire.

    Comment from the county: The office of Supervisor Kathryn Barger, who represents Altadena, celebrated the completion of the Rodriguez family’s new ADU in a written statement to LAist.

    “Knowing a fully permitted ADU has transformed what was once a garage into a safe, permanent place to call home feels good and is an important milestone,” the statement said.

    Read on … to learn how many building permits have been issued so far in the county’s Eaton Fire burn zone.

    Jose Rodriguez wasn’t trying to be the first person in Altadena to finish a new home after suffering a loss in the Eaton Fire.

    But thanks to his decades of construction experience — and fast work by his crew — Rodriguez has earned that distinction. Earlier this week, a county inspector congratulated him on receiving Los Angeles County’s first certificate of occupancy on a property impacted by the January fire.

    Speaking with a reporter in Spanish, Rodriguez said he wasn’t expecting this kind of attention.

    “It feels strange because I’m not used to this,” he said. “I feel good. I feel happy because everything is finished."

    ‘An important milestone’

    The completed home is a backyard accessory dwelling unit for his adult son, David Rodriguez. (Disclosure: David works on LAist’s community engagement team). The younger Rodriguez previously lived in a unit attached to the family’s garage.

    The property’s main home survived the fire, but the garage and the attached studio apartment burned down.

    The office of L.A. County Supervisor Kathryn Barger, who represents Altadena, celebrated the completion of the Rodriguez family’s new ADU in a written statement to LAist.

    “This is another tangible reminder that Altadena’s recovery is moving forward,” the statement read. “Knowing a fully permitted ADU has transformed what was once a garage into a safe, permanent place to call home feels good and is an important milestone. This is what steady, determined progress looks like."

    A team effort

    David Rodriguez said the two-bedroom ADU, with its brand new bathroom and kitchen (complete with dishwasher), is an upgrade from his previous space.

    “Both of my parents have worked very hard to just move it along,” he said. “It also wouldn't be possible without the people who were working here as well … the plumber and the electricians and the workers who were putting up everything.”

    Rodriguez said he has strong childhood memories of watching his father, a retired carpenter, getting ready for work before the sun came up.

    “He would leave super early in the morning, like at 4 or 5 a.m.,” he said, adding that the experience was hard-earned but came in handy during the family’s fire recovery process.

    “He has that knowledge,” the son said.

    A burned-down garage and studio apartment is seen immediately after the Eaton Fire tore through Altadena.
    The scene immediately after David Rodriguez’s home was destroyed in the Eaton Fire.
    (
    David Rodriguez
    /
    LAist
    )

    Getting ready to rebuild

    Jose Rodriguez said the process moved quickly because he knew the building process inside and out. He knew how to get plans drawn up, how to apply for building permits, how to assemble a construction crew and how to pass county inspections.

    Switching to English, he recalled the moment he got his building permits.

    “I have everything ready. I have other people coming to help me,” he said. “I have my list. I have everything.”

    Construction took a little over three months. His wife, Sandra, pitched in too. She cooked hot meals for the construction workers on site.

    After living in a string of hotels and short-term rentals, the family moved back into their main house about a month ago. Sandra Rodriguez said she looks forward to seeing their son finally return to his own space.

    She observed his reactions throughout the construction process.

    “Every time when we came here to the back, I saw his face, smiling,” she said. “As a mom, I can feel he's very happy with this new place.”

    A kitchen inside a new accessory dwelling unit that features a dishwasher and new cabinetry.
    The kitchen in David Rodriguez’s new accessory dwelling unit comes with a dishwasher and new cabinetry.
    (
    David Wagner
    /
    LAist
    )

    Recovery is slow but visible

    David Rodriguez said this feels like a hopeful moment, not just for his family but for an entire community slowly recovering from profound loss. He’s encouraged when he sees framing for other ADUs starting to go up on nearby lots.

    “We all lost a lot,” he said. “I think we're all still very much grieving as a community. And I really hope that we can all just continue to rebuild.”

    So far, L.A. County’s Department of Public Works has issued 829 building permits in unincorporated areas affected by the Eaton Fire. Nearly 6,750 housing units were destroyed in the fire.

  • How to handle the roads in snowy weather
    A snow covered road is down to a single lane with several feet of snow build up on either side from snowplows. A yellow caution sign indicates a curve in the road ahead.
    A snow-covered section of Highway 38 near Big Bear.

    Topline:

    Highway 38, one of the main roads leading to Big Bear, is closed to traffic due to damage caused by Tropical Storm Mario. Caltrans is clearing the debris, but the agency estimates the effort will take until June 2026.

    Where is the closure? Highway 38 is closed from Mill Creek Road to Hill Ranch Road.

    What are some alternate routes? Visitors can still get to Big Bear through Highway 330/Highway 18 or Highway 18. Due to increased congestion on these routes, be sure to plan for extra travel time.

    Where can I check for updates? To scope out current highway conditions, you can visit the Caltrans website or call (800) 427-7623.

    Good to know: Snow is forecasted in the coming days, so visitors may be required to use tire chains, which provide extra traction to help prevent accidents on icy roads. Visitors can buy these ahead of time at a local auto parts store (shops in Big Bear might run out), and it’s a good idea to practice putting them on your tires before heading to the mountains.