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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • Mock-up to make a move through Downey streets
    A faded photograph of a large space shuttle model in an indoor-outdoor space. The large mock-up is covered by a container, but sunlight can be seen beaming through the back.
    The "Inspiration" space shuttle in Downey.

    Topline:

    The more than 120-foot-long Inspiration space shuttle mock-up will be taking a short tour through Downey on Thursday and Friday.

    Why it matters: The two-day project is part of a major expansion of the Columbia Memorial Space Center, which opened 15 years ago as the official national memorial for the Columbia space shuttle crew who died in the 2003 disaster.

    Why now: People are invited to celebrate its journey across Bellflower Boulevard, and the museum will be hosting a livestream for those who can’t make it in person.

    The backstory: “Inspiration was probably the biggest step to being able to build a space shuttle that could actually go into space and then come back and be reused,” Ben Dickow, president and executive director of the space center, told LAist

    What's next: The Inspiration shuttle will eventually make another move to the museum so it can be installed in the indoor-outdoor expansion.

    Read more ...about Inspiration's move through Downey.

    The more than 120-foot-long Inspiration space shuttle mock-up will be taking a short tour through Downey on Thursday and Friday.

    The full-scale model, which has been sitting in storage for more than a decade, will move down three blocks in sections from a city maintenance yard to its new temporary home. The two-day project is part of a major expansion of the Columbia Memorial Space Center, which opened 15 years ago as the official national memorial for the Columbia space shuttle crew who died in the 2003 disaster.

    People are invited to celebrate its journey across Bellflower Boulevard, and the museum will be hosting a livestream for those who can’t make it in person.

    Ben Dickow, president and executive director of the space center, told LAist the shuttle is a major part of aerospace history that also represents the future of exploration.

    “We really see it as a catalyst for inspiring people, young people and adults, to keep furthering the progress of innovation and science and technology in Southern California,” he said.

    An aerial map of a portion of the city of Downey, California. It's focused on Bellflower Boulevard, from around a city maintenance yard to 12140 Bellflower Blvd. A public viewing area is marked in yellow, and pop-up boxes highlight street closures for both the northbound and southbound lanes.
    A map of the "Inspiration" space shuttle's move through Downey.
    (
    Columbia Memorial Space Center
    )

    What you need to know 

    The move will kick-off at 9 a.m. Thursday, and Dickow recommends arriving at least a half hour before. You’ll also be able to find the livestream here .

    The northbound lanes of Bellflower Boulevard, between Imperial Highway and Washburn Road, will be closed from 7 a.m. to around 5 p.m. on Thursday and Friday.

    The southbound lanes, between Apollo Way and Washburn Road, will be closed from 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Thursday.

    “We're hoping that people line the streets on Bellflower Boulevard in Downey and they cheer it on,” Dickow said.

    City officials will be flagging certain vehicles through the closures as needed. Those traveling east to the Kaiser Permanente offices, for example, will be directed through during any breaks.

    But be prepared to tell officials stationed at each intersection which business you’re trying to get to, and give yourself plenty of time.

    The Columbia Memorial Space Center will also be closing early at 4 p.m. Wednesday, 3 p.m. Friday, and 2:30 p.m. Saturday.

    About the shuttle 

    The Inspiration mock-up, which belongs to the city of Downey, was created in 1972 as part of a former shuttle contractor’s process of building an orbiter for NASA.

    The 35-foot-tall model was the first shuttle ever built and worked as a prototype and fitting tool for all of the orbiters that launched into space, Dickow noted.

    “Inspiration was probably the biggest step to being able to build a space shuttle that could actually go into space and then come back and be reused,” he said.

    Now, all seven of the components, which have been disassembled for years, will be moved with specialized equipment at about 2 mph to a dedicated building in Downey.

    Historical experts will then restore it and prepare for a future, final trip to the Columbia Memorial Space Center’s roughly 20,000-square-foot new complex.

    What’s next

    The Inspiration shuttle will eventually make another move to the museum so it can be installed in the indoor-outdoor expansion.

    The “state-of-the-art” complex will include hands-on exhibits and learning spaces “where science education and events will come to life,” the Columbia Memorial Space Center and city said in a joint statement.

    A digital rendering of a large interior space with a full-scale space shuttle in the center. People can be seen gathered around the shuttle, which is suspended slightly in the air. Sunlight is shining through a large opening on the far right side of the image.
    A rendering of the Columbia Memorial Space Center's new expansion.
    (
    Columbia Memorial Space Center
    )

    People will also be able to explore the shuttle’s internal cargo bay at the museum to get up close and personal with the components.

    Dickow noted that one of the main design features of the expansion is that the exhibits can be moved out of the way, so the space can be turned into a community gathering area for the neighborhood.

    He said museum officials made that a priority through a community listening process that highlighted what people actually want and need.

    “We shouldn't just be building a jewel box,” he said. “This is supposed to be sort of like a living room for Southeast L.A. in some ways.”

    Construction for the complex is expected to start next summer, and the museum is hoping to raise $50 million through its “Project Inspiration” campaign to fund the project.

  • City considers zone for public drinking at events
    A small dog sits in the cockpit of a pink toy car during the 21st Culver City Car Show. The dog wears sunglasses and a pink umbrella provides shade. In the background a blue Mustang and black Ford Model T can be seen. An owner stands to the side watching his dog.
    The Culver City Car Show is one of several "special events" where an entertainment zone will be active.

    Topline:

    Culver City council has passed a motion to consider an “entertainment zone” for their downtown business district.

    Why it matters: Culver City wants to get into the “entertainment zone” business to boost economic activity and compete with surrounding attractions in Santa Monica and Century City.

    The backstory: In May, Santa Monica became the first city in L.A. County to adopt an “entertainment zone” in accordance with California SB 969, which passed in 2024. Long Beach followed suit in August. West Hollywood voted to study the creation of one in September. Now, Culver City is the latest to motion to create an entertainment zone.

    What's next: The Culver City Council needs to pass an ordinance approving a plan for the area. A date consider that plan has not been set yet.

    The Culver City Council has passed a motion to consider creating an "entertainment zone" for its downtown.

    Once implemented, it would be the third city in Southern California with a designated area where people can walk around and consume alcohol outside during designated special events.

    In May, Santa Monica became the first city in L.A. County to adopt an “entertainment zone” in accordance with California SB 969, which passed in 2024. Long Beach followed suit in August. West Hollywood voted to study the creation of something similar in September.

    And now, Culver City wants to be part of a growing trend to boost economic activity and compete with attractions in surrounding cities.

    "Century City, Hollywood, Downtown LA ...we're competing with the whole city," Culver City Mayor Dan O’Brien told LAist. "So giving yet another reason for Angelenos to come to Culver City and have a nice night out and enjoy our special events. I think we need to grab it."

    A statue and water fountain outside the Culver Theater in Downtown Culver City. A bi-pedal Bronze lion in a long coat poses on its legs. A silver sphere is propped up next to it. Little spouts of water surround them.
    A statue in the middle of the proposed entertainment zone.
    (
    Daniel Martinez
    /
    LAist
    )

    What’s the occasion?

    “It’s going to be for our special events only,” O’Brien said. “Certainly during the World Cup and throughout the Olympics.”

    Other city events listed in the motion include the Summer Concert Series, Independence Day Drone Show and the downtown Tree Lighting ceremony scheduled for Dec. 4.

    “ That would be an ideal opportunity to activate for the entertainment zone,” O’Brien said. “But I do not know if we will have everything in place to do so by then.”

    Where would it be?

    The current entertainment zone proposal encompasses the Downtown Culver City Business Improvement District — of about eight to 10 blocks long and three blocks wide, O'Brien said.

    That includes Culver Boulevard between Madison Avenue and Venice Boulevard — and Washington Boulevard between Hughes Avenue and Culver Boulevard. It would also include side streets up to the city boundary.

    The Downtown Business Association, which is behind the proposal, is requesting the area that includes the Town Plaza, the Culver Steps and Main Street to be part of the new zone.

    A map of the proposed boundaries for Culver City entertainment zone. The map outline spans several blocks of Downtown Culver City. Washington Boulevard bisects the proposed boundaries.
    The proposed boundaries for the Culver City entertainment zone would span a quarter of a mile.
    (
    City of Culver City
    /
    Culver City Council
    )

    What’s next?

    The Culver City Council will now need to pass an ordinance approving a plan with information about the exact boundaries of the entertainment zone, its hours of operations and specific events for which they'll be active.

    A date for the next vote hasn’t been set.

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  • Famed sitcom home up for landmark status
    A beige mid-century house sits behind a gold 1970s station wagon parked on the street.
    The 'Brady Bunch' house in Studio City on Aug. 16.

    Topline:

    The Brady Bunch house in Studio City is now being considered for historic-cultural monument status. Preservationists say protecting it now will safeguard a pop-culture landmark that has shaped how generations imagined suburban L.A.

    Here's the story: Used in the show’s establishing shots during its run from 1969 to 1974, the Dilling Street house is instantly recognizable to generations of fans who watched Mike and Carol Brady wrangle their lively brood of six under its gabled roof.

    Why now: Preservationists and fans say the house helped shape how audiences around the world envisioned an idyllic suburban life in Los Angeles.

    What's next: Members of the Cultural Heritage Commission are expected to visit the property in the coming weeks, then vote on whether to recommend monument status to the L.A. City Council.

    One of TV’s most famous sitcom houses has entered L.A.’s landmarking process.

    City officials are considering whether to grant a mid-century modern ranch known as the Brady Bunch house historic-cultural monument status.

    The owner of the Studio City house is seeking the designation with the backing of preservationists like those at the Los Angeles Conservancy.

    “That show would not be the show without that house,” said Adrian Scott Fine, president and CEO of the conservancy.

    A wider shot of the Brady Bunch living room interior, showing the open staircase and colorful geometric wall panels.
    The living room has been recreated to look like the TV show’s iconic set, with the open staircase and mid-century décor.
    (
    Los Angeles Conservancy
    )

    Used in the show’s establishing shots during its run from 1969 to 1974, the house is instantly recognizable to generations of fans who watched Mike and Carol Brady wrangle their lively brood of six under its gabled roof.

    Though interior scenes were shot on a studio lot, the house façade has become as iconic as Peter’s first voice crack and Jan’s immortal wail, “Marcia, Marcia, Marcia!”

    Fans make regular pilgrimages to snap photos out front, and limited charity tours of the house sell out.

    Fine said the house helped shape how audiences around the world envisioned an idyllic suburban life in Los Angeles.

    “It feels like stepping back into your childhood,” said Fine, who watched re-runs of the show growing up in the Midwest. “Comfort, warmth — it's a place that feels good to so many people.”

    A mid-century TV Star

    Built in 1959 and designed by Harry Londelius Jr., the Dilling Street home was chosen by producers for its close proximity to the studio and its look — the kind of distinctive mid-century house viewers could easily imagine an architect like Mike Brady living in.

    As television production consolidated in Los Angeles in the late 1960s, shows like The Brady Bunch relied on actual exteriors used to ground shows in otherwise studio-filmed episodes, according to a report by the city’s Planning Department recommending review of the Brady Bunch house application.

    Other Los Angeles homes that became famous through establishing shots include the residences featured in The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet, The Beverly Hillbillies and The Golden Girls.

    An interior staircase with open wooden steps with cream carpeting, with dark wood railings.
    HGTV recreated the Brady Bunch staircase for its 2019 renovation show.
    (
    Los Angeles Conservancy
    )

    HGTV’s Big Makeover

    After the show’s five-season run, The Brady Bunch lived on in syndication for decades, with the house imprinting on viewers across generations.

    The home-remodel network HGTV helped revive the house's fame with a 2019 show.

    For the series A Very Brady Renovation, the network brought back cast members to help rebuild the inside of the house to mimic the sets fans knew from TV, from the open, split-level staircase to the kitchen with orange Formica countertops.

    After the series, HGTV sold the house for $3.2 million to current owner Tina Trahan, a superfan who told People in 2023 , "It was like, 'I need this house. I have to have the house.’”

    “I just felt like it was just part of America and the culture,” she said.

    A kitchen with bright orange countertops and avocado-green appliances and dark wood cabinets.
    As part of the HGTV remodel show, the 'Brady Bunch' kitchen was recreated with its orange countertops and avocado-green appliances.
    (
    Los Angeles Conservancy
    )

    What’s next

    Lovingly maintained, the Brady Bunch house is not at risk of teardown like other structures that preservationists have tried to save around town by seeking historic-cultural monument status.

    But Fine argues that now is the time to act.

    “Ideally, what we should be doing for all of the architecturally, culturally significant places in L.A. is codifying and ensuring that they have some type of level of recognition and protection, so that there isn't a risk down the road where you are scrambling,” Fine said.

    Members of the Cultural Heritage Commission are expected to visit the property in the coming weeks, then vote on whether to recommend monument status to the City Council.

    With this designation, any major exterior alteration or demolition proposal would trigger review by city staff and the Cultural Heritage Commission.

    “It doesn’t mean it could never be demolished,” Fine said. “But it would be very difficult, and there would be a lot of steps to go through before you ever got to that stage.”

    A vote by the City Council is expected in the coming months. Years later, the Brady Bunch house still knows how to pull focus.

  • There's a social club for it
    Customers sitting inside a diner as food is being prepared
    The counter was full on The Pantry's last day.

    Topline:

    If you’re mourning the — probably — impending closure of Cole’s downtown or one of the other handful of classic Los Angeles eateries we’ve lost in the past few years, you might find camaraderie in a local social club.

    For about a year now, Jake Hook has been holding monthly meetings of what is called the Diner Preservation Society . "Diner" is a loose term for the group.

    The society: It's called Diner Preservation Society, founded by Jake Hook, a philosophy professor by day and lover of old diners by design.

    Diners, diners, diners: Hook has also compiled a massive list of classic joints in our region. And this month, the club launched the Diner Theory podcast .

    Read on ... for details about the next meet-ups.

    If you’re mourning the — probably — impending closure of Cole’s downtown or one of the other handful of classic Los Angeles eateries we’ve lost in the past few years, you might find camaraderie in a local social club.

    For about a year now, Jake Hook has been hosting monthly meetings of the Diner Preservation Society . "Diner" is a loose term for the group.

    At classic joints like Philippe’s and the recently closed Papa Cristo’s , attendees talk about their favorite eateries and what they can do to save the ones we’re at risk of losing.

    “Diners are the classic American third space. They are where communities happen. And you can see that by how worked up people get when diners close,” Hook said.

    Take the recent closure of the Pantry downtown. Now it looks as if it will be reopening , but Hook said people from across the city showed up in droves before it shuttered.

    “So much so that the wait on the last day was about seven hours. And I endured all seven hours,” they told LAist.

    A group of eight people pose for a photo in front of The Pantry in Los Angeles.
    A meeting of the Diner Preservation Society
    (
    Courtesy Jake Hook
    )

    A philosophy professor by day, Hook’s enduring love of diners led them to compile a massive list of classic joints in our region . And this month, they launched the "Diner Theory" podcast , which delves into topics “at the intersection of food and philosophy.”

    Hook, 31, said they think younger generations are looking for spaces that feel more human in an increasingly online world. And diners fill that void.

    “It’s something that unites people who have lived here from generation to generation to have these experiences in roughly the same way. And I think that’s valuable for forming some kind of citywide identity,” they said.

    Plus, there’s really good, cheap food.

    If you’d like to attend the next meeting of the Diner Preservation Society, visit their Substack to learn more.

    Upcoming club meetings:

    Shakers
    601 Fair Oaks Ave.
    South Pasadena
    Saturday at 10 a.m.

    Bun N Burger
    1000 E. Main St.
    Alhambra
    Dec. 13 at 10 a.m.

  • Federal judge rules against ‘unlawful coercion’
    People outside hold up signs that say "Kill the cuts, Save lives."
    Participants of the "Kill the Cuts" rally against the Trump administration’s cuts to research funding gather outside the Wilshire Federal Building after walking from the UCLA campus in Los Angeles on April 8.

    Topline:

    A California federal judge ruled today that President Donald Trump cannot demand that UCLA pay a $1.2 billion settlement that would have imposed severe limits on the campus’ academic freedoms and efforts to enroll an economically and culturally diverse student body or risk continued funding freezes on grants the system relies on for research.

    The context: The decision by Judge Rita Lin is a preliminary injunction and represents a significant victory for University of California scientists, professors, graduate students and other researchers. They and a national professors association sued Trump in September, claiming that his settlement demand — the most sweeping to date in his war on exclusive universities — represents an “unlawful threat” of funding cuts to coerce the university system into “suppressing free speech and academic freedom rights.”

    Trump administration's argument: Lawyers for the federal government had argued that a federal court cannot block a federal agency from making a decision that hasn’t occurred yet, such as whether to approve new funding for a pending grant.

    Read on ... for the implications of the ruling and next steps.

    A California federal judge ruled today that President Donald Trump cannot demand that UCLA pay a $1.2 billion settlement that would have imposed severe limits on the campus’ academic freedoms and efforts to enroll an economically and culturally diverse student body or risk continued funding freezes on grants the system relies on for research

    The decision by Judge Rita Lin is a preliminary injunction and represents a significant victory for University of California scientists, professors, graduate students and other researchers. They and a national professors association sued Trump in September, claiming that his settlement demand — the most sweeping to date in his war on exclusive universities — represents an “unlawful threat” of funding cuts to coerce the university system into “suppressing free speech and academic freedom rights.”

    Lin agreed with that assessment, calling Trump’s actions toward the university “coercive and retaliatory.” Her ruling doesn’t just apply to UCLA. It largely ties the hands of the Trump administration to target the rest of the UC system for current and future research grants.

    “Agency officials, as well as the president and vice president, have repeatedly and publicly announced a playbook of initiating civil rights investigations of preeminent universities to justify cutting off federal funding, with the goal of bringing universities to their knees and forcing them to change their ideological tune,” Lin wrote in her ruling.

    Lin wrote that this same playbook is occurring at the UC.

    “With every day that passes, UCLA continues to be denied the chance to win new grants, ratchetting up Defendants’ pressure campaign,” she wrote. “And numerous UC faculty and staff have submitted declarations describing how [the Trump administration’s] actions have already chilled speech throughout the UC system.”

    Lawyers for the federal government had argued that a federal court cannot block a federal agency from making a decision that hasn’t occurred yet, such as whether to approve new funding for a pending grant.

    “Notably, plaintiffs’ fears about future grant suspensions and their claims about the likelihood of constitutional violations are entirely based on speculation about an opening settlement offer between the federal government and UC,” U.S. Department of Justice attorneys wrote to Lin .

    The legal documents in the case spanned 700 pages and included written testimony from more than 70 UC professors, staff workers and graduate students.

    The settlement demand and lawsuit

    Trump’s settlement demand is a 27-page document sent to UCLA in early August that would have required the top-ranked public university to hire a senior administrator to review diversity, equity and inclusion efforts; limit campus protest; bar the campus medical center from performing gender-affirming surgeries or hormone therapy on minors; deny admissions to foreign students with “anti-Western” sentiment and other restrictions.

    The public was first able to see the document in late October after some scholars filed a separate lawsuit in state court to force UC officials to disclose the settlement demand.

    The settlement demand emerged a few days after the Trump administration froze more than $500 million in health and science research funding to UCLA over allegations that the campus tolerated antisemitism and enrolled students using racial preferences. Had UC agreed to its terms, the Trump administration would have released the frozen funds back to UCLA.

    However, months before Trump sought the settlement, UCLA had already taken steps to address antisemitism on campus after its leaders commissioned a task force to recommend ways to create a more welcoming environment for Jewish students.

    Lin faulted the administration for disregarding UCLA’s efforts. The agencies did not “mention the remedial steps UCLA had already taken to address the issues described,” Lin wrote.

    UCLA is legally barred by state and federal law from admitting students using racial preferences. Trump’s demands would have also blocked UCLA from a practice the U.S. Supreme Court condoned: allowing students to discuss their racial identity in their personal essays.

    But almost all of that funding that Trump froze in July had since been restored after a separate wave of legal filings prompted Lin to temporarily undo Trump’s cuts in August and September .

    Lin has emerged as a key bulwark for UC researchers as she’s ordered the Trump administration several times to undo hundreds of millions of dollars in science funding cuts to the University of California, including roughly $500 million in science and health grant funding suspensions to UCLA alone. Between June and today, she’s sided with UC researchers and staff four times in rebuffing the Trump administration’s efforts to halt funding to scholars. Her initial ruling that has served as a basis for other preliminary injunctions against Trump was upheld by a panel of judges on the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals.

    UC faculty associations, among the plaintiffs in the case, wrote to Lin that some of its members who don’t have tenure and are international scholars now hesitate to teach issues related to Israel and Palestine or lead lessons on the health effects of climate change. Other scholars say they fear taking part in protests or other free speech activity due to fears about the government’s reprisals.

    “I am a mother, and the threat of jail time or federal involvement or oversight in campus policing would give me new fear” about protesting, wrote Hannah Appel, an anthropology professor at UC Santa Cruz, in a court document .

    Faculty groups also argued that a $1.2 billion hit to UCLA would affect the whole system, as UC leaders would likely pull funding from other campuses to help UCLA absorb the loss. UCLA’s budget is around $13 billion , including its medical and hospital programs, while the UC system’s is more than $50 billion — and a third of that comes from federal sources.

    UC President James Milliken called the situation “one of the gravest threats in UC’s 157-year history.”

    The ruling and evidence in detail

    Lin’s written ruling mirrors the comments she made during a 90-minute hearing last week, in which she said that the Trump administration has told universities, including the UC, that “if you want the funding restored, then agree to change what you teach, change how you handle student protests [and] endorse the administration’s preferred views on gender.”

    “Defendants have submitted nothing to refute this,” she said then..

    Twenty-one labor unions and faculty associations sued Trump and 15 agencies, including the top providers of science research funding — the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, the Department of Defense, NASA and the Department of Education that together award the UC more than $4 billion annually . The UC system itself is not part of this suit but has received sustained pressure from students, staff and faculty — including hundreds of Jewish ones — to reject Trump’s settlement.

    “This agreement violates the very foundations of higher education,” the UC undergraduate student association wrote to Gov. Gavin Newsom, UC’s president and campus chancellors in November.

    Faculty and staff wanted a return of all terminated grants and a block on denying funding to any pending grants that were preliminarily approved by science panels but were stalled for seemingly political reasons.

    Other faculty, staff impact

    The UC has cut the hours or laid off more than 250 lecturers and librarians since Trump began his term this year, said Katie Rodger, the president of UC-AFT, the union of lecturers and librarians at the UC. Lecturers are a core part of the instructional staff at UC but generally lack guarantees of continuous employment that other professors enjoy.

    The federal fiscal picture is a reason why at least some lecturers have received pink slips. The “School of Humanities has incurred budget reductions over the last four years, which have been compounded this year by national and state level budgetary impacts and planning projections indicate substantial future budget shortfalls,” said a termination letter at UC Irvine this past spring.

    And while lecturers do not lead labs that receive federal grant funding, they work in them. The loss of grant funding “already has and it will continue to impact us going forward,” Rodger said of lecturers during an interview. The union in August wrote a letter to UC’s director of labor relations leadership demanding that the system cease negotiations with Trump over the settlement.

    Meanwhile, the dean of the largest college at the UC — the College of Letters and Science at UC Davis — wrote to faculty last month that it’s dealing with a $20 million budget shortfall across this year and next, after absorbing a loss of $6.7 million the past five years. “Budgets for faculty and graduate student employment will reflect these reductions,” the dean, Estella Atekwana, wrote. That would affect most lecturers.

    Several scholars and staffers wrote to Lin that the administration was freezing funding on pending grants that UCLA researchers would have likely received if Trump didn’t target the campus. One of those projects was supposed to go to Marcus Roper, a mathematics and computational medicine professor who submitted a grant to research how to better  predict vision loss in adults with diabetes.

    The proposal also included a program to teach K-12 students how to apply algebra to analyze eye health. Roper showed in court filings that two grants he submitted won the recommendations of the agency’s program directors, but those were pulled when the Trump administration suspended all of UCLA’s existing NSF and National Institutes of Health grants. Even after Lin ordered Trump to restore the existing grants the agency suspended at UCLA, NSF personnel told Roper they were ordered to pause approval of funding for new grants .

    Also at UCLA, the NSF preliminarily approved the renewal grant for a math research program that’s been funded for 25 years, but also pulled it in July . If the program isn’t reupped again, Richard Bartlebaugh, a video producer, will lose his job months before he’s eligible for his pension and the program will close in May of 2026, he wrote to Lin . “In this scenario, my time at (the institute) will have represented a four-year and eleven-month career misstep.”

    Trump didn’t follow rules, lawsuit said

    Catherine Lhamon, formerly the top official during the Obama and Biden administrations at the Office for Civil Rights in the U.S. Department of Education, wrote to Lin that the way the Trump administration pulled funds was illegal.

    “What (the office) cannot do under the law — and what we never did — is move to immediate fund termination.”

    But that’s what the administration did. And as Lin noted in her ruling and comments during last week’s hearing, Trump officials bragged about it.

    “We’re going to bankrupt these universities, we’re going to take away every single federal dollar,” said Leo Terrell on a FOX News program in March . Terrell heads the Trump administration’s multi-agency Task Force to Combat Anti-Semitism . His interview was submitted by lawyers for the UC workers as evidence. “The academic system in this country has been hijacked by the left, has been hijacked by the Marxists” he also said.

    Llamon, who’s now a faculty member at UC Berkeley, wrote that federal law requires the agency to go through a lengthy process of warning a campus of any civil rights violations, such as ones dealing with antisemitism, and allow the campus to come to a settlement with an action plan. Sometimes the Office for Civil Rights leads an investigation at the school and encourages campus leaders to undertake policy changes. All of that occurs before the federal government pulls funding from a school.

    While in charge, her office struck deals to combat allegations of antisemitism at numerous universities, including the UC.

    “Termination of funds was, as is required in statute and regulation, a last resort, and in the thousands of complaints my office received, we never needed to take this step,” she wrote.