Sponsored message
Audience-funded nonprofit news
radio tower icon laist logo
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Subscribe
  • Listen Now Playing Listen

The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • Reframing an 'epidemic'
    A drawing of a man facing outward, and to the side, and seeming very small against a large blank backdrop
    Los Angeles is a vast place. It can be hard to connect with others, allowing feelings of loneliness to creep in.

    Topline:

    Los Angeles is a vast place. Attempting to stay connected to others in a city like L.A. can be daunting, and might even feel impossible. But we have some suggestions.

    Why it matters: Last year the Office of the Surgeon General declared loneliness an epidemic, and it can feel particularly acute in L.A. Among a host of lingering mental and physical health effects related to isolation — like depression, dementia, insomnia, and stroke — new research shows that loneliness physically hurts.

    Why now: How to LA is exploring these feelings of loneliness in a new series, examining how we can reframe the discussion around loneliness and identify ways people are connecting in Los Angeles.

    Go Deeper:

    Dating In LA Can Suck. Try Speed Dating? Here Are Some Tips

    People often talk about how isolated one can feel in Los Angeles.

    In your car, stuck in traffic. In your neighborhood, perhaps feeling nations away from friends or colleagues across town. In your apartment … by yourself (almost one-third of Americans live alone).

    Attempting to stay connected to others in a city like L.A. can be daunting, and might even feel impossible.

    “There's a revolving door feeling about lots of spaces in L.A.,” says Cat Moore, human connection specialist and director of belonging at the University of Southern California. “It's so sprawling, it's so fast paced. There's a sense of scale that can become overwhelming, and people often come in and spin out.”

    Lonely in L.A.

    These days, large metropolises like L.A. seem to breed the perfect conditions for chronic loneliness: The cost of living is high, and people are constantly working at the expense of personal relationships. Many flock to the city to chase a dream, only to leave if it isn’t fulfilled. And of course, the ever-growing presence of technology, winding its way into all facets of our lives, keeps us tethered to screens and starved of human interaction more and more each year.

    Listen 31:27
    LA Can Be Lonely AF: Reframing An 'Epidemic'

    “Everyone here in L.A. is doing their own thing,” says Tori Leppert, an independent musician originally from Chicago whom we spoke to for this story. “If you aren't intentional about finding those people, and making sure that your values and interests are aligned, they're not paying attention to you.”

    “There were just so many times where I just questioned what I was doing in this city where I was like, ‘I'm never gonna achieve what I wanna achieve here,’” says Kat Hamilton, curator at the music collective Writers 'Round, a group that brings musicians, like Leppert, together in L.A. together.

    A lot of Angelenos — and many other Americans — are in fact lonely. Among a host of lingering mental and physical health effects related to isolation — like depression, dementia, insomnia, and stroke — new research shows that loneliness physically hurts.

    It shows up in the brain in the same area as hunger and as pain. It's literally physical and, at a soul level, painful. In the same way you need a sandwich, say every day at noon, you need people.
    — Cat Moore, director of belonging at USC

    Research from the surgeon general’s advisory says the “mortality impact of being socially disconnected” is comparable to smoking 15 cigarettes a day.

    “It's f****** scary,” says Eddie Navarro, another independent musician who we met through Writers ‘Round. “It's like a dragon. You have to find it and you have to tame it.”

    Reframing an 'epidemic'

    So how can one fight the beast of loneliness in our giant, sprawling, transient city?

    First, Moore says, we must reframe how we fundamentally understand it. She suggests that rather than “pathologizing” loneliness as a mental health problem — which often exacerbates the painful feelings, Moore says — we should look at it as a natural, very human condition.

    “Because, really, it's an inescapable part of being human,” she says.

    To emphasize her point, Moore describes the first experience of connection, and of loss, that all humans have: in their mother’s womb, being tied to one another by an umbilical cord.

    “But then, the moment you emerge, the first experience you have is of that cord being cut,” she says.

    From those first moments on Earth, loss continues to occur through one’s life. It’s inevitable, Moore notes, and the feelings of loneliness that accompany it are complex and ever-changing. She believes that understanding this can slash the stigma and ease the pain.

    “Loneliness is maybe the oldest part of the human condition,” she adds. “It comes in waves and all kinds of different flavors and degrees across the lifespan.”

    Finding your people

    The next step for working through feelings of loneliness, says Moore, is to be proactive about it. There are some simple ways one can do this, and create community in the process — even in a city as complex as L.A. As Moore notes, most people naturally want to connect, even if they don’t always present that way. Here are some of her suggestions:

    Go to a coffee shop and talk to someone (anyone!)

    Due to a phenomenon called a “liking gap,” Moore says, many falsely assume other people don’t want to be bothered or spoken to in public. But striking up conversation in public with strangers — or even the simple act of making eye contact — has proven to decrease both people’s experience of loneliness. Better yet, it may cause a ripple effect and encourage others to break social barriers in a public setting (it doesn’t have to be a coffee shop, by the way.)

    I've never had someone respond poorly to simply looking at them and asking them how they're doing. We can spark those kinds of experiences that can totally make someone's day.
    — Cat Moore, director of belonging at USC

    Make a belonging map

    Moore says she developed this exercise to help her clients determine where to invest energy in their social landscape. 

    Sit down in a quiet place, find a blank piece of paper and make circles on the page that represent different spheres of relationships that you could pursue in your life. Circles may include one’s neighborhood, work, hobbies, social or political causes, charity or even online communities.

    Make the circles larger or smaller, relative to how interested you are in that community.

    “It helps you know that there's multiple pathways available to you to pursue, and you get some agency in determining how interested you are in any number of those,” Moore says.

    Then, identify the top two to three circles and make an action plan to do one thing to get involved and move yourself closer to someone in that sphere.

    “You're gonna make just small goals for yourself each week and then reflect on how that went and what you wanna do next,” she says.

    Find a 'third space'

    For those struggling with severe social anxiety, or who otherwise aren’t ready to take steps like joining a class, league or club, Moore suggests finding what she calls a safe “third space.” For her, it was a coffee shop. She says that simply placing yourself around other people in a public space can ease feelings of isolation and loneliness.

    “You don't have to commit to talking to anyone, just make yourself part of the flow of human life,” Moore says.

    Creating community

    While we’ve established that a city as sprawling as L.A. can sometimes feel disjointed, lacking a central thread that ties everyone together, the vastness also means there’s something for everyone.

    “L.A. has enormous potential, if you look into the fine grain of different communities,” Moore says. “People have made incredible strides in building cool spaces.”

    There’s groups out there for folks who like to get physical, who want to make stuff, get engaged in social justice and, yes, even for quieter types.

    “Most of my friends are from this league at this point,” said Micah Mumper, who joined a pickleball league in Long Beach last year. “It’s a true, tight-knit community.”

    For some additional ideas on how to find your people, tune in to How To LA’s series on how not to be lonely in this city. From speed dating to salsa classes, music collectives to sports leagues, we’ll be profiling a variety of scenes and communities all around the city that have helped Angelenos feel a sense of belonging, and a lot less lonely.

    “There's so many different things happening here that whatever you're into, your people are here,” says Greg Gilman, founder of Writers ‘Round. “Whether that's 'Dungeons & Dragons', or being a singer-songwriter, or a book club, your people are here.”

  • Fire department honored with 'Award of Excellence'
    A close-up of a star plaque in the style of the Hollywood Walk of Fame on top of a red carpet. The star reads "Los Angeles Fire Dept." in gold text towards the top.
    The "Award of Excellence Star" honoring the Los Angeles Fire Department on Friday.

    Topline:

    The Hollywood Walk of Fame has a new neighbor — a star dedicated to the Los Angeles Fire Department.

    Why it matters: The Fire Department has been honored with an “Award of Excellence Star” for its public service during the Palisades and Sunset fires, which burned in the Pacific Palisades and Hollywood Hills neighborhoods of L.A. in January.

    Why now: The star was unveiled on Hollywood Boulevard on Friday at a ceremony hosted by the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce and Hollywood Community Foundation.

    Awards of Excellence celebrate organizations for their positive impacts on Hollywood and the entertainment industry, according to organizers. Fewer than 10 have been handed out so far, including to the LA Times, Dodgers and Disneyland.

    The backstory: The idea of awarding a star to the Fire Department was prompted by an eighth-grade class essay from Eniola Taiwo, 14, from Connecticut. In an essay on personal heroes, Taiwo called for L.A. firefighters to be recognized. She sent the letter to the Chamber of Commerce.

    “This star for first responders will reach the hearts of many first responders and let them know that what they do is recognized and appreciated,” Taiwo’s letter read. “It will also encourage young people like me to be a change in the world.”

    A group of people are gathered around a red carpet with a Hollywood star in the center. A man wearing a black uniform is hugging a Black teenage girl on top of the star.
    LAFD Chief Jaime E. Moore, Eniola Taiwo and LAFD firefighters with the "Award of Excellence Star" Friday.
    (
    Matt Winkelmeyer
    /
    Getty Images North America
    )

    The Award of Excellence Star is in front of the Ovation Entertainment Complex next to the Walk of Fame; however, it is separate from the official program.

    What officials say: Steve Nissen, president and CEO of the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce, said in a statement Taiwo’s letter was the inspiration for a monument that will “forever shine in Hollywood.”

    “This recognition is not only about honoring the bravery of the Los Angeles Fire Department but also about celebrating the vision of a young student whose words reminded us all of the importance of gratitude and civic pride,” said Nissen, who’s also president and CEO of the Hollywood Community Foundation.

    Go deeper: LA's wildfires: Your recovery guide

  • Sponsored message
  • Councilmember wants to learn more
    A woman with brown hair past her shoulders is speaking into a microphone affixed to a podium. She's wearing a light blue turtleneck under a navy blue checkered jacket and small earrings. Two other women can be seen standing behind her on the left.
    L.A. City Attorney Hydee Feldstein Soto was accused of an ethics breach in a case the city settled for $18 million.

    Topline:

    Fallout from allegations of an ethics breach by Los Angeles’ elected city attorney has reached the City Council. Councilmember Ysabel Jurado introduced a motion Friday requesting a closed-session meeting about an allegation that City Attorney Hydee Feldstein Soto improperly contacted a witness days before her office entered into one of the city’s biggest settlements in recent years. The motion came a day after LAist reported about the allegation.

    The case: In September, the city settled a lawsuit brought forward by two brothers in their 70s who said they suffered serious injuries after an LAPD officer crashed into their car. Days before the $18 million settlement was reached, lawyers for the brothers said Feldstein Soto called an expert witness testifying for the plaintiffs and “attempted to ingratiate herself with him and asked him to make a contribution to her political campaign,” according to a sworn declaration to the court by the plaintiffs’ attorney, Robert Glassman.

    The response: Feldstein Soto did not respond to an interview request. Her spokesperson said the settlement “had nothing to do” with the expert witness. Her campaign manager told LAist the city attorney had been making a routine fundraising call and did not know the person had a role in the case, nor that there were pending requests for her office to pay him fees.

    What Jurado says: In a statement to LAist, Jurado said she wants to “make sure that the city’s legal leadership is guided by integrity and accountability, especially when their choices affect public trust, civic rights and the city’s limited resources."

    What’s next: The motion needs to go through a few committees before reaching the full City Council. If it passes, the motion calls for the city attorney to “report to council in closed session within 45 days regarding the ethics breach violation and give updates to the City Council."

    Topline:

    Fallout from allegations of an ethics breach by Los Angeles’ elected city attorney has reached the City Council. Councilmember Ysabel Jurado introduced a motion Friday requesting a closed-session meeting about an allegation that City Attorney Hydee Feldstein Soto improperly contacted a witness days before her office entered into one of the city’s biggest settlements in recent years. The motion came a day after LAist reported about the allegation.

    The case: In September, the city settled a lawsuit brought forward by two brothers in their 70s who said they suffered serious injuries after an LAPD officer crashed into their car. Days before the $18 million settlement was reached, lawyers for the brothers said Feldstein Soto called an expert witness testifying for the plaintiffs and “attempted to ingratiate herself with him and asked him to make a contribution to her political campaign,” according to a sworn declaration to the court by the plaintiffs’ attorney, Robert Glassman.

    The response: Feldstein Soto did not respond to an interview request. Her spokesperson said the settlement “had nothing to do” with the expert witness. Her campaign manager told LAist the city attorney had been making a routine fundraising call and did not know the person had a role in the case, nor that there were pending requests for her office to pay him fees.

    What Jurado says: In a statement to LAist, Jurado said she wants to “make sure that the city’s legal leadership is guided by integrity and accountability, especially when their choices affect public trust, civic rights and the city’s limited resources."

    What’s next: The motion needs to go through a few committees before reaching the full City Council. If it passes, the motion calls for the city attorney to “report to council in closed session within 45 days regarding the ethics breach violation and give updates to the City Council."

  • How one Santa Ana home honors the holiday
    At the center of the altar is a statue of the Lady of Guadalupe -- a brown-skinned woman wearing a green veil with her hands clasped in prayer and an angel at her feet. Behind the statue is a tapestry with a glass-stained window design. The statue is surrounded by flowers of all kinds of colors.
    Luis Cantabrana turns the front of his Santa Ana home into an elaborate altar in honor of La Virgen de Guadalupe.

    Topline:

    Today marks el Día de La Virgen de Guadalupe, or the day of the Virgen of Guadalupe, an important holiday for Catholics and those of Mexican descent. In Santa Ana, Luis Cantabrana builds an elaborate altar in her honor that draws hundreds of visitors.

    What is the holiday celebrating? In 1513, the Virgin Mary appeared before St. Juan Diego, asking him to build a church in her honor. Her image — a brown-skinned woman, wearing a green veil with her hands clasped in prayer and an angel at her feet — miraculously appeared on his cloak. Every year on Dec. 12, worshippers of the saint celebrate the Guadalupita with prayer and song.

    Read on … for how worshippers in Santa Ana celebrate.

    Every year in Santa Ana, Luis Cantabrana turns the front of his home into an elaborate altar in honor of La Virgen de Guadalupe that draws hundreds of visitors.

    Along the front of the house, the multi-colored altar is filled with lights, flowers and a stained-glass tapestry behind a sculpture of the Lady of Guadalupe. Cantabrana’s roof also is lit up with the green, white and red lights that spell out “Virgen de Guadalupe” and a cross.

    Visitors are welcomed with music and the smell of roses as they celebrate the saint, but this year’s gathering comes after a dark year for immigrant communities.

    A dark-skinned man wearing a navy blue long sleeve shirt stands in front of the altar he built for the Lady of Guadalupe. At the center of the altar is a statue of the Lady of Guadalupe -- a brown-skinned woman wearing a green veil with her hands clasped in prayer and an angel at her feet. Behind the statue is a tapestry with a glass-stained window design. The statue is surrounded by flowers of all kinds of colors.
    Luis Cantabrana stands in front of the stunning altar he built in front of his home in honor of La Virgen de Guadalupe. Every year, his display draws hundreds of visitors.
    (
    Destiny Torres
    /
    LAist
    )

    Why do they celebrate? 

    In 1513, the Virgin Mary appeared before St. Juan Diego between Dec. 9 and Dec. 12, asking him to build a church in her honor. Her image — a brown-skinned woman wearing a green veil with her hands together in prayer and an angel at her feet — miraculously appeared on his cloak.

    To celebrate in Santa Ana, worshippers gathered late-night Wednesday and in the very early hours Dec. 12 to pray the rosary, sing hymns and celebrate the saint.

    Cantabrana has hosted worshippers at his home for 27 years — 17 in Santa Ana.

    The altar started out small, he said, and over the years, he added a fabric background, more lights and flowers (lots and lots of flowers).

    “It started with me making a promise to la Virgen de Guadalupe that while I had life and a home to build an altar, that I would do it,” Cantabrana said. “Everything you see in photos and videos is pretty, but when you come and see it live, it's more than pretty. It's beautiful.”

    The roof of a home is decked out in green, white and red lights. At the center peak of the roof is a small picture of the Virgin Mary. Lights spell out the words, "Virgen de Guadalupe." on the slope of the roof, the lights are laid out in the display of a cross.
    The Santa Ana home's elaborate altar in honor of La Virgen de Guadalupe draws hundreds of visitors each year.
    (
    Destiny Torres
    /
    LAist
    )

    Gathering in a time of turmoil 

    Many also look to the Lady of Guadalupe for protection, especially at a time when federal enforcement has rattled immigrant communities.

    “People don’t want to go to work, they don’t want to take their kids to school, but the love we have for our Virgen de Guadalupe,” Cantabrana said. “We see that la Virgen de Guadalupe has a lot of power, and so we know immigration [enforcement] won’t come here.”

    Margarita Lopez of Garden Grove has been visiting the altar for three years with her husband. She’s been celebrating the Virgencita since she was a young girl. Honoring the saint is as important now as ever, she said.

    “We ask, and she performs miracles,” Lopez said.

    Claudia Tapia, a lifelong Santa Ana resident, said the Virgin Mary represents strength.

    “Right now, with everything going on, a lot of our families [have] turned and prayed to the Virgen for strength during these times,” Tapia said. “She's a very strong symbol of Mexican culture, of unity, of faith and of resilience.”

    See it for yourself

    The shrine will stay up into the new year on the corner of Broadway and Camile Street.

  • Audit says state agency spent millions
    A woman wearing a blue long sleeved top and black pants walks past a large, dark green building with signage that reads, "Employment Development Department"
    The offices of the Employment Development Department in Sacramento on Jan. 10, 2022.

    Topline:

    California’s unemployment agency kept paying cellphone bills for 4 1/2 years without checking whether its workers actually were using the devices. That’s how it racked up $4.6 million in fees for mobile devices its workers were not using, according to a new state audit detailing wasteful spending at several government agencies.

    The investigation: The Employment Development Department acquired 7,224 cellphones and wireless hotspots by December 2020. State auditors analyzed 54 months of invoices since then and found half the devices were unused for at least two years, 25% were unused for three years and 99 of them were never used at all. The investigation, which auditors opened after receiving a tip, identified 6,285 devices that were unused for at least four consecutive months and said the department spent $4.6 million on monthly service fees for them.

    Department response: Officials told auditors they were unaware of the spending, but auditors pointed to regular invoices from Verizon that showed which phones were not being used. The unemployment department began acting on the auditors’ findings in April, when it canceled service plans for 2,825 devices. It has since implemented a policy to terminate service plans for devices that go unused for 90 days.

    California’s unemployment agency kept paying cellphone bills for 4 1/2 years without checking whether its workers actually were using the devices.

    That’s how it racked up $4.6 million in fees for mobile devices its workers were not using, according to a new state audit detailing wasteful spending at several government agencies.

    The Employment Development Department’s excessive cellphone bills date to the COVID-19 pandemic, when it shifted call center employees to remote work and faced pressure to release benefits to millions of suddenly unemployed Californians.

    It acquired 7,224 cellphones and wireless hotspots by December 2020. State auditors analyzed 54 months of invoices since then and found half the devices were unused for at least two years, 25% were unused for three years and 99 of them were never used at all.

    The investigation, which auditors opened after receiving a tip, identified 6,285 devices that were unused for at least four consecutive months, and said the department spent $4.6 million on monthly service fees for them.

    From the beginning, the department had about 2,000 more cellphones than call center employees, according to the audit. The gap widened over time after the pandemic ended and the department’s staffing returned to its normal headcount.

    As of April, the audit said the department had 1,787 unemployment call center employees, but was paying monthly service fees for 5,097 mobile devices.

    “Although obtaining the mobile devices during COVID-19 may have been a good idea to serve the public, continuing to pay the monthly service fees for so many unused devices, especially post-COVID-19, was wasteful,” the audit said.

    Department officials told auditors they were unaware of the spending, but auditors pointed to regular invoices from Verizon that showed which phones were not being used.

    “We would have expected EDD management to have reconsidered the need to pay the monthly service fees for so many devices that had no voice, message, or data usage,” the audit said.

    The unemployment department began acting on the auditors’ findings in April, when it canceled service plans for 2,825 devices. It has since implemented a policy to terminate service plans for devices that go unused for 90 days.

    The California state auditor highlighted the mobile devices in its regular report on “improper activities by state agencies and employees.” The audit also showed that the California Air Resources Board overpaid an employee who was on extended leave as he prepared to retire by $171,000.

    This article was originally published on CalMatters and was republished under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives license.