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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • These records continue to inspire
    An 'environments' vinyl record sits nestled in some tall grass. The album artwork depicts a serene beach.
    Disc one of "environments."

    Topline:

    In the late 1960s, pioneering field recordist Irv Teibel billed his nature soundscapes of seashores and thunderstorms as “the most sensuous recordings ever made.”

    Now, more than 50 years later, his work continues to inspire some Angelenos to tune out the stress of the world with sound therapy.

    The backstory: Under his label, Syntonic Research, Teibel — who attended Pasadena's ArtCenter College of Design — wanted people to use his recordings as sonic therapy and to alter people’s psychological states for the better.

    Healing sound: Brittany Bueno, an LA-based psychotherapist clinically trained in trauma-informed care, said she often uses soundscapes similar to Teibel’s in her practice.

    An 'environments' listening session: Bueno and partner Collin Davis will be leading an “environments” listening session 5 p.m. Saturday, May 24, at the Philosophical Research Society, at 3910 Los Feliz Blvd., Los Angeles.

    You can get more info and buy tickets here.

    In the late 1960s, pioneering field recordist Irv Teibel billed his nature soundscapes of seashores and thunderstorms as “the most sensuous recordings ever made.”

    Now, more than 50 years later, his work continues to inspire some Angelenos to tune out the stress of the world with sound therapy.

    A vanguard in sound

    If you’ve spent any time crate digging, there’s a very good chance you’ve come across some intriguing looking records with album art depicting serene beaches or tranquil forests. Instead of an artist’s name, they just have the word “environments” across the top and strange track titles like “The Psychologically Ultimate Seashore.”

    The photo depicts a person seated on a rock beside a natural body of water, such as a pond or stream. They are engaged in audio recording, equipped with a microphone and wearing headphones. An open reel tape recorder is placed next to them on the rock. The setting is outdoors, surrounded by foliage and rocks, giving it a serene, nature-focused atmosphere. The person's face is obscured for privacy.
    Irv Teibel recording the sound of a stream.
    (
    Courtesy Irv Teibel archive
    )

    These are the meticulously-engineered field recordings and soundscapes of the late Irv Teibel, a sonic traveler and ArtCenter College of Design attendee who went around recording everything from the sound of the waves at Brighton Beach, to insects and animal life in Georgia’s Okefenokee Swamp.

    “I don’t think he’s ever going to be recognized as like a Brian Eno. But I think some of his ideas and his work are probably just as important these days for the way we’ve ended up with the way people use music,” said Jonathan Een Newton, an East Coast-based musician who worked with Teibel’s daughter, Jennifer Ballow, to get the catalog out of the dollar bin and back into the public consciousness.

    Newton said he estimates the “environments” series sold tens of thousands of records every year when they were first released in the late 60s through the 70s.

    “I think people are hungry for this kind of thing, always. Immersive sound kind of things are probably appealing to people. Probably now more than ever, just given how stressful the modern world is,” Newton told LAist.

    Sound as art and healing

    Listen 4:33
    These old, trippy recordings of nature are inspiring Angelenos to use sound for art and healing

    Teibel’s recordings, like “Dawn at New Hope, Pennsylvania” foreshadowed our world, now saturated with 10-hour YouTube videos of rain storms and apps offering dulcet tones on repeat.

    The “environments” series has found new life in the work of experimental music producers and local DJs too.

    In an interview uploaded eight years ago to the Irv Teibel Archive YouTube channel, Angeleno and Dublab founder Mark “Frosty” McNeill called the “environments” series “sonic seasoning” that continues to be used by music producers and DJs like himself to this day.

    “These records used in kind of longform ambient DJ sets or experimental DJ sets are essential to have in the bag. And so many people have utilized these records because they’re just building blocks,” McNeill said.

    Under his label, Syntonic Research, Teibel wanted people to use his recordings as sonic therapy, to alter people’s psychological states for the better.

    “As human beings we are designed to have that in the background. And it’s only in the last couple of hundred years that that’s been totally absent,” said Collin Davis, an audio engineer who works for Stones Throw Records in Los Angeles who has gone down the “environments” rabbit hole.

    “So I think on a therapeutic level, too, found sounds and field recordings are very beneficial to our mental state,” Davis said.

    A man with glasses holding a pair of headphones next to his ear. Behind him are sound editing equipment.
    Irv Teibel in his studio.
    (
    Courtesy Irv Teibel Archive
    )

    More real than reality

    Teibel didn’t just focus on pure sound documentary work, Davis said. These recordings were “hyper-engineered,” which set them apart from other field recordings.

    “Irv would go out and record with a microphone and then bring it back and EQ and compress and sometimes [use] pitch shifting... in making ambient music and working in recording studios so much, I just became fascinated with the way Irv really hyper-engineered all of these to really feel realer than real and make them as pleasing as possible,” Davis said.

    Since coming across an “environments” title on vinyl at a local record store with his partner, Brittany Bueno, the two say they’ve collected all of them.

    Teibel’s impact on mental health work

    Collin Davis and Brittany Bueno lead a music listening session at the Philosophical Research Society in Los Feliz. They sit at a table with headphones on, adjusting knobs on a synthesizer. A dozen or more people lay on the floor listening.
    Collin Davis and Brittany Bueno leading a therapeutic listening session at the Philosophical Research Society in Los Feliz
    (
    Jackie Radinsky
    )

    Bueno, a psychotherapist clinically trained in trauma-informed care, said she often uses soundscapes similar to Teibel’s in her practice.

    “I’ve noticed that using field recordings in sessions really helps clients ground and feel present with themselves. It doesn’t impose any kind of narrative since it’s a natural sound,” she said.

    Bueno and Davis said Teibel’s work is part of the inspiration behind their just-launched label “Evidence Based Music.” With this new venture, they want to make their own compositions, leaning on scientific studies about how soundscapes and certain tones can be effective in a therapeutic setting.

    “With Collin’s expertise and my background, it’s really easy for us to collaborate on what is effective. And we’re also working with other artists who are really attuned to these types of states and sounds and what feels really peaceful and grounding,” Bueno told LAist.

    Bueno and Davis said “environments” records are often the first ones they reach for in the morning to tune out the sounds of urban Los Angeles.

    These days, “environments” soundscapes can be found on pretty much every format, from YouTube to Spotify to a stand alone app.

    So next time you need to chill, try changing your environment.

    As a listener testimonial written on the back of the first record says: “Haven’t felt this good since my vacation.”

    Details for listening session

    Bueno and Davis will be leading an “environments” listening session 5 p.m. Saturday, May 24, at the Philosophical Research Society, at 3910 Los Feliz Blvd., Los Angeles.

    You can get more info and buy tickets here.

  • New report shows sharp rise in LA County
    Empty playground swings

    Topline:

    Nearly 30% more students in Los Angeles County experienced homelessness from 2022-23 to 2023-24, making it the county’s highest rate in the past five years and far outpacing the rate of homelessness across the state in the same timeframe, as the resources to identify and support this student population have decreased.

    Norwalk-La Mirada Unified: Researchers found that Norwalk-La Mirada Elementary Unified School District had the highest rate of student homelessness in the county — 1 in 3 students, meaning that over 4,700 students were identified as experiencing homelessness during the 2023-24 school year out of a total cumulative enrollment of about 15,600.

    Underidentifed students: Researchers also found that the Transformation of Schools focuses on the lack of dedicated funding for school staff to identify and support homeless students. Students and families facing homelessness do not always self-identify, whether due to fear, shame or being unaware that their housing situation is considered homelessness

    Nearly 30% more students in Los Angeles County experienced homelessness from 2022-23 to 2023-24, making it the county’s highest rate in the past five years and far outpacing the rate of homelessness across the state in the same timeframe, as the resources to identify and support this student population have decreased.

    The UCLA Center for the Transformation of Schools published two reports on Wednesday on the state of student homelessness in the county: “Rising Numbers, Fading Resources: Students Experiencing Homelessness in Los Angeles County” and “Hidden in Plain Sight: Fear, Underidentification, and Funding Gaps for Housing-Insecure Students in Los Angeles County.”

    Researchers found that Norwalk-La Mirada Elementary Unified School District had the highest rate of student homelessness in the county — 1 in 3 students, meaning that over 4,700 students were identified as experiencing homelessness during the 2023-24 school year out of a total cumulative enrollment of about 15,600.

    The city of Norwalk, where the district is located in the eastern region of the county, was sued by the state in 2024 for banning emergency shelters and other support services for people experiencing homelessness. Last year, the state reached a settlement with the city, which was forced to overturn the ban and put $250,000 toward building affordable housing.

    Student homelessness is defined differently under the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act, a federal law that requires every public school to count the number of students who are living on the street, in shelters, in motels, in cars, doubled up with other families, or moving between friends’ and relatives’ homes.

    As a result of this expanded definition, McKinney-Vento includes doubled-up students in the count of homelessness. Doubled-up is a term used to describe children and youth ages 21 and under living in shared housing, such as with another family or friends, due to various crises.

    There were a few other patterns seen in the L.A. County data analyzed by the UCLA researchers:

    • Latino students were disproportionately more likely to experience homelessness: they represent 65% of the county’s student population, but 75.5% of student homelessness
    • A third of homeless students were in high school
    • Many districts with the highest rates of homelessness had higher school instability but lower dropout rates

    While McKinney-Vento has an expanded definition that includes more types of homelessness than several other definitions, identifying students remains difficult.

    The second report from the UCLA Center for the Transformation of Schools focuses on the lack of dedicated funding for school staff to identify and support homeless students. Students and families facing homelessness do not always self-identify, whether due to fear, shame or being unaware that their housing situation is considered homelessness under McKinney-Vento.

    “A lot of these young people are dealing with a lot of trauma, so they don’t want to be identified. They don’t want to be pointed out; sometimes it’s scary for them, because they think we’re going to report them to the Department of Children and Family Services,” said L.A. County Office of Education staff interviewed for this report.

    School staff, known as homeless liaisons, who work with homeless students received a historic influx of federal funds during the Covid-19 pandemic — $98.76 million for California, out of $800 million nationwide, from the American Rescue Plan-Homeless Children and Youth.

    That funding has since ended, and there is no other dedicated, ongoing state funding set aside solely for the rising number of homeless students. This has led districts in California to “heavily depend on highly competitive and unstable federal streams,” the UCLA researchers wrote. Those federal streams have become increasingly precarious as the federal administration last year sought policy changes that would shift how they are structured.

  • Sponsored message
  • Fire reaches 1,500 acres, forces evacuations
    Dark smoke rises in the distance in a wide view of homes and neighborhoods.
    The Spring Fire around 11 a.m. in east Moreno Valley.

    Topline:

    Multiple evacuation orders are in place for residents near the Spring Fire burning east of Moreno Valley in Riverside County. The fire was first reported around 11 a.m.

    What we know:

    • Acreage: 1,500 acres as of Friday afternoon
    • Containment: 0%

    Evacuation orders and warnings are issued for nearby neighborhoods. Here's the latest evacuation map.

    Keep reading... for more on evacuations and weather conditions.

    This is a developing story and will be updated. For the most up-to-date information about the fire you can check:

    Multiple evacuation orders are in place for residents near the Spring Fire burning in east of Moreno Valley in Riverside County. The fire was first reported around 11 a.m.

    As of this afternoon, the fire has reached about 1,500 acres.

    West of the Spring, a separate bush fire near Acton also began Friday afternoon. The Crown Fire has burned 280 acres and is 0% contained.

    The basics

    • Acreage: 1,500 acres as of Friday afternoon
    • Containment: 0%
    • Structures destroyed: None reported
    • Deaths: None
    • Injuries: 0
    • Personnel working on fire: 105
      • 2 helicopters
      • 23 engines
      • 2 dozers
      • 2 crews

    Evacuation map and orders

    Evacuation orders have been issued by the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department for the following areas:

    • MOE-0507
    • MOE-0747
    • MOE-0745
    • MOE-0641
    • MOE-0746
    • MOE-0744
    • RVC-0748
    • RVC-0826
    • RVC-0825

    Evacuation warnings

    Authorities say those who require additional time to evacuate and those with pets and livestock should leave immediately.

    • MOE-0504
    • MOE-0505
    • MOE-0506
    • MOE-0633
    • MOE-0636
    • MOE-0637
    • MOE-0638
    • MOE-0639
    • MOE-0640
    • MOE-0743
    • MOE-0822
    • MOE-0823

    Evacuation shelters

    Valley View High School
    13135 Nason St.
    Moreno Valley, 92555

    Animal Shelter

    San Jacinto Animal Shelter
    581 S. Grand Ave. San Jacinto 92582

    Road closures

    Gilman Springs Road is closed from Alessandro Road to Bridge Street, according to Cal Fire.

    What we know so far

    The Spring Fire was first reported around 11 a.m. Friday near Gilman Springs Road as a 5-acre fire that grew to 1,000 acres by 1:45 p.m.

    Conditions are fairly windy and dry in that area, according to the National Weather Service. Wind gusts reached 20 to 30 mph from the east. The Santa Ana wind event is expected to last into tomorrow.

    Listen to our Big Burn podcast

    Listen 39:42
    Get ready now. Listen to our The Big Burn podcast
    Jacob Margolis, LAist's science reporter, examines the new normal of big fires in California.

    Fire resources and tips

    Check out LAist's wildfire recovery guide

    If you have to evacuate:

    Navigating fire conditions:

    How to help yourself and others:

    How to start the recovery process:

    What to do for your kids:

    Prepare for the next disaster:

  • Trump budget excludes transit funding
    An orange bus with advertisements and a white sign that reads "Metro Local" passes by a large gray building.
    The president’s budget request released Friday didn’t provide a dime of the $2 billion the countywide transportation agency seeks.

    Topline:

    The Trump administration did not include funding in its federal budget proposal for Los Angeles Metro’s key plan to use thousands of buses to transport fans to scattered venues hosting the 2028 Games.

    The plan: Metro plans to essentially double its bus fleet for the 2028 Games by temporarily acquiring, operating and storing nearly 1,750 additional buses for spectators. The agency says that will cost about $1 billion. The remainder of the $2 billion appropriations request would be for pedestrian improvements and designing a network of roads for Games vehicles, among other uses.

    Final opportunity? California Democratic congressional representatives have repeatedly appealed to the Trump administration to provide funding for Metro. In their latest letter from February, they said this budget process is the “final opportunity” to secure Metro’s funding request.

    Read on … for more details on Metro’s plan, how buses were used in the 1984 Olympics.

    The Trump administration did not include funding in its federal budget proposal for Los Angeles Metro’s key plan to use thousands of buses to transport fans to scattered venues hosting the 2028 Games.

    L.A. Metro’s Board and California Democrats have repeatedly appealed to the administration to provide federal dollars for the region’s "transit-first" Games. The president’s budget request released Friday didn’t provide a dime of the $2 billion the countywide transportation agency is seeking.

    The 92-page document is a signal of the administration’s priorities for the budget for the next fiscal year, which begins Oct. 1. Ultimately, the U.S. Congress decides how federal dollars are spent.

    Rep. Sydney Kamlager-Dove, who represents Culver City and parts of Los Angeles, wrote a letter with her California Democratic colleagues to the administration in February calling this budget process the “final opportunity” to secure Metro’s funding request.

    A woman in a pink shirt stands in front of a podium. She is speaking into a mic. She is wearing a pink shirt that has the text "RESIST" printed on it in white. Behind her, a crowd of people stand holding a banner that says "Women's Rights are Human Rights."
    U.S. Representative Sydney Kamlager-Dove is one of the California Democrats leading advocacy in Washington, D.C., to secure L.A. Metro's $2 billion federal funding request.
    (
    Assembleymember Sydney Kamlager Facebook Page
    )

    In a statement to LAist, Kamlager-Dove said she was “incredibly disappointed” that Metro was excluded in the president’s budget request.

    “At the end of the day, Congress has the power to appropriate money,” she said. “Despite the president’s lack of foresight, I will continue to advocate to ensure this funding is included so L.A. Metro has what they need to succeed.”

    Rep. Pete Aguilar, who has a seat on the Congressional subcommittee overseeing federal transportation appropriations, said President Donald Trump has talked about the Olympics “time and time again,” pointing to the most recent State of the Union as an example.

    “Our charge is to ensure that they adequately fund this and that they put the resources behind it so they aren't just using it as a talking point, but they're actually leaning in,” Aguilar told LAist in an interview before the president’s proposed budget request was released.

    What would the money be used for?

    Metro plans to essentially double its bus fleet for the 2028 Games by temporarily acquiring, operating and storing nearly 1,750 additional buses for spectators. The agency says that will cost about $1 billion. The remainder of the appropriations request would be for pedestrian improvements and designing a network of roads for Games vehicles, among other uses.

    Seleta Reynolds, Metro’s chief of innovation and Games mobility planning, said at a January Metro Board meeting that finding and preparing the real estate where the buses will be staged involves a lead time of two years, meaning the agency would need a “chunk of funding available by this summer.”

    Initially, Metro had asked for $3.2 billion to support a plan to temporarily use 2,700 buses. Metro reduced the estimate for the number of buses needed after LA28, the Games organizing committee, refined the venues and schedule for events.

    That reduction, plus other federal funding that Metro has received to partially support station and light rail improvements, brought the total amount of money in the federal appropriations request down to $2 billion, the countywide transportation agency said.

    “Without the full level of funding requested, the complete scope of the [Games Enhanced Transit System] would not be feasible, as the cost of operating this temporary system exceeds Metro’s available operating resources,” the agency said in its statement.

    Jacie Prieto Lopez, a spokesperson for LA28, told LAist in a statement before the president released his budget request that the organizing committee was supporting partners in Congress and the administration, who are leading the budget and appropriations process.

    "With the full support of federal transit money for the games, we can collectively create a positive commuting experience," Prieto Lopez said.

    Success with buses during LA84

    A bus system similar to the one Metro is planning for 2028 was critical to the success of the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles.

    Metro's predecessor, Southern California Rapid Transit District, deployed 550 additional buses, hundreds of new drivers and 24 routes to move people around the city for the Olympics.

    A stadium is full with audience members and two large scoreboard screen. The message on one of them reads: 'Good luck to the athletes of the world'. Purple smoke rises in the distance.
    A view of the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum during the closing ceremony of the 1984 Summer Olympics, Los Angeles, 12th August 1984.
    (
    Steve Powell
    /
    Getty Images Europe
    )

    In the run-up to those Games, one California Highway Patrol official warned the L.A. Times that congestion around the L.A. Memorial Coliseum would be so extreme that drivers would abandon their cars on the freeway. Headlines warned of "traffic woes."

    Instead, the Olympics offered a surprising reprieve from L.A.'s typical traffic. More than 1 million passengers took buses to the Games.

    Rich Perelman, who led press operations for the 1984 Olympics and edited the official report on the Games, told LAist that in 1984, no public funds were used for the additional bus fleet. Bus tickets and some donations and corporate sponsorships covered the cost.

    Perelman said organizers pulled off the bus system by staying focused on the areas where parking was sparse, such as the Coliseum. According to the official report, nearly 80% of rides on the bus system were to Exposition Park.

    " It was a transit-smart approach," Perelman said. " If there was plenty of parking, we didn't say you have to take the bus. We didn't make any nonsensical claims of 'no-car Games' or 'transit only Games.’"

    Security funding from the federal government 

    Transportation funding is just one bucket that the federal government is expected to contribute for the Olympics.

    The budget released by the Trump administration Friday contained major increases for the Department of Homeland Security, including some linked to Olympics preparations. It asks for additional funding for the FBI and Secret Service, which leads security planning for the Games.

    Last year, Trump's "One Big Beautiful Bill" allocated $1 billion for Olympics security costs.

    But exactly how that money will be distributed has yet to be determined — and L.A. politicians have expressed concern that the funds may come with strings attached that the city of L.A. will find hard to swallow.

    It's also possible that money could face delays that could disrupt Olympics planning. The federal government was late in awarding hundreds of millions of dollars that it promised for security for the World Cup this year — a delay the Trump administration attributed to the Homeland Security shutdown.

  • Sidewalk feature has turned into dumping grounds
    A sidewalk feature meant to capture rain water runoff
    Across from an auto shop on Venice Boulevard and Albany Street sits a narrow, sunken strip of land lined with overgrown shrubs and cacti. It’s mostly filled with trash — from plastic bags and cups to containers, straws, chip bags and aluminum foil.


    Topline:

    Bioswales — narrow, sunken strip of land along some L.A. streets — are meant to capture and filter storm water runoff, helping reduce flooding and keep pollutants from flowing into the ocean. But citywide, there are about 23 bioswales that appear abandoned.

    Why it matters: The sidewalk features were installed during former Mayor Eric Garcetti’s Complete Streets program around 2018. The initiative aimed to improve streets, add greenery and better manage stormwater along key corridors across the city. But residents, like some in Pico Union, say that bioswales have become dumping grounds. In some cases, the concrete structures were installed but left without vegetation for years, presenting safety concerns.

    What's being done about them? Steve Kang, president of the city’s Board of Public Works, said his office is now working to create a program similar to “Adopt-a-Median” that would allow community members and organizations to formally maintain bioswales. Under the proposal, participants would enter into agreements with the city, with support from the Office of Community Beautification, which can provide tools like gloves, trash bags and gardening supplies.

    This story first appeared on The LA Local.

    Across from an auto shop on Venice Boulevard and Albany Street sits a narrow, sunken strip of land lined with overgrown shrubs and cacti. It’s mostly filled with trash — from plastic bags and cups to containers, straws, chip bags and aluminum foil.

    It’s original purpose was to capture and filter storm water runoff, helping reduce flooding and keep pollutants from flowing into the ocean. But neighbors in Pico Union say that this bioswale and many others across the city have become dumping grounds.

    The sidewalk features were installed during former Mayor Eric Garcetti’s Complete Streets program around 2018. The initiative aimed to improve streets, add greenery and better manage stormwater along key corridors across the city.

    Local resident Aurora Corona — a longtime Pico Union community organizer involved in local environmental and cleanup efforts — said in some instances it looks like the bioswales were not fully installed.

    Citywide, there are about 23 bioswales that appear abandoned, Corona said. Many are located in central and South Los Angeles and spread across at least eight council districts.

    In some cases, the concrete structures were installed but left without vegetation for years, Corona said, raising concerns that they were never able to function as intended.

    Heberto Portobanco, owner of the Nicaraguan restaurant Portobanco in Pico Union, first noticed the bioswale outside his business about eight years ago, but it became hard to ignore about two years ago when it became a hazard.

    “We had an accident, one of the people who does maintenance for us came and fell into it,” he said.

    The bioswale was deeper and not fully finished, Portobanco said. After multiple people reported what happened to the city, Portobanco said the city added more soil to level it out.

    “The idea might be nice, but if it’s not maintained, it’s a problem,” Portobanco said.

    The biggest concern for Portobanco remains safety, especially as he said that people continue to use the space improperly or fail to notice it altogether.

    He would be willing to help maintain the bioswale outside his restaurant if the city created a formal program to do so.

    For him, keeping the space clean is also about pride and perception.

    “I don’t want people to think that Latinos are careless and that we don’t take care of our surroundings,” he said, adding that a well-kept space could encourage others to take better care of the neighborhood.

    Corona, the local organizer, has experienced similar issues to the ones Portobanco described. 

    She lives near two bioswales, including the one near Portobanco’s restaurant.

    She first encountered them while organizing a cleanup around 2024 and said she didn’t initially know what they were. What she did know was that they were not being taken care of.

    “I was tired of seeing this being a dumping ground, they would just throw trash here all the time,” she said.

    That frustration pushed her to take action. She thought of what she had already done with other public spaces in her community.

    In 2024, she helped transform a neglected dirt space on Venice Boulevard and Union Avenue into a small community green area — also known as a median — using local grant funding. With the help of volunteers, they removed contaminated soil and planted drought-tolerant greenery.

    “It’s only been here since November and it’s grown a lot,” she said about the green belt, pointing to plants that started as small pots and are now taking root.

    Corona continues to organize cleanups and, through the city’s “Adopt-a-Median” program, works with neighbors to maintain the space. She said she’d like to see a similar model applied to bioswales — essentially an “Adopt-a-Bioswale” program that would allow residents to take ownership of the ones near them.

    “I think people would step up if they were given the chance and the support,” she said.

    A green garden is seen in a center median.
    Across from an auto shop on Venice Boulevard and Albany Street sits a narrow, sunken strip of land lined with overgrown shrubs and cacti. It’s mostly filled with trash — from plastic bags and cups to containers, straws, chip bags and aluminum foil.
    (
    Marina Peña
    /
    The LA Local
    )

    The program for the bioswales, as she envisions it, would involve planting California natives such as dudleya edulis, dudleya pulverulenta and other species that can withstand the weather. It would also call for improving their visibility by painting the bioswale borders in colors that reflect the neighborhood.

    That idea has already been discussed at the city level.

    Steve Kang, president of the city’s Board of Public Works, agrees that many bioswales now sit “barren” and are treated as “more of a trash repository.” 

    He said his office is now working to create a program similar to “Adopt-a-Median” that would allow community members and organizations to formally maintain bioswales.

    “My intention is to make the process as seamless and easy as possible,” Kang said, adding that the goal is to launch the program sometime in 2026.

    Under the proposal, participants would enter into agreements with the city, with support from the Office of Community Beautification, which can provide tools like gloves, trash bags and gardening supplies.

    For residents like Corona and business owners like Portobanco, that kind of partnership could turn what are now neglected strips of land into something more useful. 

    “If we take care of these spaces, they can become something people are proud of,” Corona said. “It changes how people see the neighborhood and how they treat it.”