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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • Unsuitable staffing levels (again)
    A sign reads on a dirty building reads: Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall. Street lights and wires are visible over the roof.
    Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall in Downey

    Topline:

    A state board has warned Los Angeles County probation authorities once again that Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall in Downey is at risk of being shut down after inspectors found insufficient staffing at the facility.

    The context: Earlier this year, the Board of State and Community Corrections deemed Los Padrinos unsuitable to house hundreds of youths because of low staffing, failure to conduct safety checks at the proper times, as well as being out of compliance with use-of-force training requirements.

    The issues: According to the board’s letter, Los Padrinos facility reports from July show that 17% of shifts did not meet the minimum staffing required by the state.

    The letter said the lack of staffing leads to several issues at Los Padrinos, including:

    • Some medical appointments being canceled
    • Youths being late to their education programs
    • Outdoor recreation time canceled

    What's next: According to the board, the Probation Department has until Dec. 12 to comply with the staffing requirements or move some 300 youths out of the facility.

    A state board has warned Los Angeles County probation authorities once again that Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall in Downey is at risk of being shut down after inspectors found insufficient staffing at the facility.

    How we got here

    Earlier this year, the Board of State and Community Corrections deemed Los Padrinos unsuitable to house hundreds of youths because of low staffing, failure to conduct safety checks at the proper times, as well as being out of compliance with use-of-force training requirements.

    The county Probation Department avoided having to shut down Los Padrinos in April after the board determined minimum requirements on staffing levels and safety checks had been met.

    In an Oct. 14 letter to Chief Probation Officer Guillermo Viera Rosa, the board said inspections revealed Los Padrinos was out of compliance with staffing requirements yet again.

    The move comes about a year after L.A. County was forced to transfer hundreds of incarcerated youths out of two other facilities the board deemed unsuitable and into Los Padrinos.

    The issue

    According to the board’s letter, Los Padrinos facility reports from July show that 17% of shifts did not meet the minimum staffing required by the state.

    The letter said the lack of staffing leads to several issues at Los Padrinos, including:

    • Some medical appointments being canceled
    • Youths being late to their education programs
    • Outdoor recreation time canceled

    Probation response

    The Probation Department said in a statement Wednesday that it was disappointed by the board’s finding. The department said that the unsuitability finding would have “no immediate impact to families” and that the department will continue to provide services.

    “The Probation Department has, in fact, increased staffing levels at the facility by actively recruiting new personnel, conducting training academies, reallocating officers from field assignments, and utilizing overtime,” the department said in an email.

    What's next

    According to the board, the Probation Department has until Dec. 12 to comply with the staffing requirements or move some 300 youths out of the facility.

  • The IE city aims to become an entertainment hub
    The front gate of a modern, small baseball stadium.
    The Ontario Tower Buzzers' inaugural season starts April 2. It's the new team in the Dodgers' minor league system.

    Topline:

    The city of Ontario is expanding its entertainment reach with a major sports complex.

    ONT Field: Ontario just opened its new 6,500-seat field, where the Dodgers' Single-A affiliate, the Tower Buzzers, play.

    Aggressive Expansion: The city has plans to expand outside ONT field to attract sports tournaments and offer other entertainment in the region with what they are calling the "Ontario Sports Empire."

    Keep reading... for what residents and visitors can expect to see with the Ontario project and when.

    In the ever-evolving Inland Empire, the city of Ontario is experiencing significant changes, largely due to a growing “sports empire.”

    Often dubbed the Gateway to Southern California, the city stretches across San Bernardino and Riverside counties and has shifted from an agricultural colony to a bustling residential hot spot.

    Ontario Sports Empire

    Last week, Ontario opened its brand new ONT Field, home of the Dodgers’ Single-A affiliate, the Tower Buzzers, which holds up to 6,500 fans.

    Ontario City Manager Scott Ochoa joined AirTalk, LAist 89.3’s daily news show, to talk about how it’s shaping the city.

    “The idea of putting together a sports complex that allows both community play and attracts the burgeoning market for travel teams really manifested itself into the potential of that 200-acre parcel,” Ochoa said.

    The city plans to use this field and its surrounding area, calling it the Ontario Sports Empire, for a variety of tournament sports.

    Here are some of the key features:

    • Eight full-size baseball diamonds, 14 youth diamonds 
    • 20 multipurpose fields for soccer or lacrosse that can be converted into four football or rugby fields
    • Three large playground areas
    • 227-room hotel  
    • 51-foot jumbotron
    • Six-level parking garage

    Ontario Sports Empire will open in October. You can read more about the project’s development here.

    ‘A chip on our shoulder’

    “The Sports Empire is really born from a chip on our shoulder,” Ochoa said, adding that they may be in the Inland Empire, but the goal is to remain as part of Greater Los Angeles.

    That’s part of the Ontario City Council’s long-term strategy to expand offered amenities consistent with the boom in single-family home development over the last few decades. Ochoa said that, given Ontario’s proximity to L.A., he believes the city has a unique opportunity to evolve into an entertainment hub.

    “Compared to the coastal communities, we are affordable,” he said.

    Kome Ajise, executive director of the Southern California Association of Governments (SCAG), pointed to sports entertainment hubs like those in Inglewood that have grown around SoFi Stadium and Intuit Dome.

    “Ontario has stepped forward to create a center that will dominate,” he said.

    More growth

    The City Council is working to expand the city’s 130-acre Grand Park to 340 acres, making it longer than Central Park in Manhattan, as well as a new Capital City Project that will be an entertainment mixed-use space.

    Listen here

    Listen 19:15
    Is Ontario becoming a new entertainment hub?

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  • War with Iran is driving high energy prices

    Topline:

    The U.S. war with Iran and the resulting spike in energy prices have pushed inflation to its highest level in nearly two years.

    Latest numbers: A report from the Labor Department today showed consumer prices in March were up 3.3% from a year ago. That's the biggest annual increase since May of 2024. Prices jumped 0.9% between February and March, with higher gasoline prices accounting for nearly three-quarters of that increase.

    Why now: Gas prices have jumped by more than a dollar a gallon, on average, since the U.S. and Israel launched their attack on Iran. Pump prices have remained high this week, despite a tentative ceasefire.

    The U.S. war with Iran and the resulting spike in energy prices have pushed inflation to its highest level in nearly two years.

    A report from the Labor Department Friday showed consumer prices in March were up 3.3% from a year ago. That's the biggest annual increase since May of 2024. Prices jumped 0.9% between February and March, with higher gasoline prices accounting for nearly three-quarters of that increase.

    Gas prices have jumped by more than a dollar a gallon, on average, since the U.S. and Israel launched their attack on Iran. Pump prices have remained high this week, despite a tentative ceasefire.

    Higher jet fuel prices also contributed to a jump in the cost of airline tickets last month, although food prices were flat, as rising costs for restaurant meals offset a decline in grocery prices.

    Excluding volatile food and energy prices, so-called "core" inflation was 2.6% in March.

    Loading...

    Inflation spike reverses stabilizing trend

    Although inflation is nowhere near the four-decade high it reached in 2022, following Russia's invasion of Ukraine, progress on stabilizing prices fizzled out last year, partly as a result of President Trump's tariffs. The wartime jump in energy prices has pushed inflation even higher.

    "We were making progress, making progress. Then we kind of stalled out and now it's been inching itself up the other way," Chicago Federal Reserve Bank President Austan Goolsbee told the Detroit Economic Club this week.

    Goolsbee worries that the longer inflation stays above the Federal Reserve's 2% target, the greater the risk that high inflation becomes baked into the economy. But a survey from the New York Fed this week showed that even though people expect higher inflation in the short run, they still believe it will come down in the long run.

    Fed policymakers try not to overreact to a spike in gasoline prices, which are notorious for bouncing up and down. But core inflation has also been climbing, which is likely to make the central bank cautious about any quick cuts in interest rates.

    The Fed is also keeping a close eye on the job market, which showed some signs of life in March when employers added 178,000 jobs, after cutting workers the previous month. While employers have not been adding a lot of jobs, they've been reluctant to lay people off as well.

    "I think it's from uncertainty," Goolsbee said. "I think that's what happens when businesses are uncertain and they say we're just going to sit on our hands until we figure out, is the war going to be a temporary shock?"

    Copyright 2026 NPR

  • How a community college is trying to help add more
    Students wearing safety vests and helmets participate in hands-on work with wooden material leaning against a metal frame.
    Students participate in hands-on classwork at Los Angeles Trade Technical College on March 24, 2026.

    Topline:

    Los Angeles has an acute shortage of qualified construction workers as the region tries to rebuild from the Eaton and Palisades Ffres. One community college is trying to help.

    Learning to rebuild own home: Hudson Idov wasn’t excited about any of his college options — that is, until his Los Angeles house burned down in the Palisades Fire his senior year of high school. Less than a week after graduation, he and one of his classmates enrolled in the carpentry program at Los Angeles Trade-Technical College, a community college just south of downtown.

    Why it matters: Before the Palisades and Eaton fires last year, Los Angeles was already short roughly 70,000 qualified construction workers. The destruction of thousands of homes and businesses during the fires made that problem even worse.

    Read on... for more on the program at LATTC.

    Hudson Idov wasn’t excited about any of his college options — that is, until his Los Angeles house burned down in the Palisades Fire his senior year of high school.

    Less than a week after graduation, he and one of his classmates enrolled in the carpentry program at Los Angeles Trade-Technical College, a community college just south of downtown. Their goal is to start a construction company one day and help rebuild the Palisades. “We have big, big 10-year plans,” he said during a break in his morning class.

    His personal tragedy drove the decision, but he also considers it wise to pursue a high-demand job, especially now. Before the Palisades and Eaton fires last year, Los Angeles was already short roughly 70,000 qualified construction workers. The destruction of thousands of homes and businesses during the fires made that problem even worse. The city now needs over 100,000 new workers in construction and construction-related careers, according to one state analysis, which estimates median pay at just under $30 an hour, though it varies depending on the position and the level of experience.

    A man with light skin tone, wearing a safety vest, glasses, and helmet, stands in a room near stacks of wooden boards on one side and a few people wearing similar items on the other side behind a metal rebar frame.
    Student Hudson Idov during class in the carpentry department at Los Angeles Trade Technical College on March 24, 2026.
    (
    Jules Hotz
    /
    CalMatters
    )

    Last year, the state awarded five Los Angeles community colleges a total of $5 million to train more workers who can help rebuild from the Palisades and Eaton fires. The money only recently arrived at Los Angeles Trade-Technical College, where it will fund supplies and new curricula for students who are entering the construction industry. Pasadena City College, a few miles northeast of Los Angeles Trade-Tech, is using part of the money to build a 55,000-square-foot center for construction training.

    Historically, it takes years to recover after devastating fires, and some California cities hit hard by fires in 2017 and 2018 still have just a fraction of their homes rebuilt.

    “We can’t put out enough people,” said Jaime Alvarez, one of Idov’s carpentry instructors, as students hammered, sawed and drilled all around him. This semester, Alvarez has about 30 students. The four-semester carpentry program at the technical college is likely the largest such program in the state, enrolling over 1,800 people per year.

    Rebuilding the foundation of the Palisades

    Idov still lives in an AirBnB with the few belongings he grabbed on the night he evacuated his home. He has some of his clothes and a couple of personal items he could fit in his car, such as a bowling pin from a birthday party he went to as a kid. The rest is gone, he said.

    Most days, he starts school at 7 a.m and finishes around noon. He normally spends the afternoons working part time for a general contractor. The carpentry program is designed to take about two years to complete, roughly 25 hours a week. This semester, he’s learning how to build concrete foundations, how to drill rebar into those foundations and to construct the frame of a building — work that’s particularly needed in fire-damaged parts of Los Angeles.

    A woman stands in front of a classroom next to a white board and points at it as students listen. Pieces of paper are taped on a window in the foreground blocking out most of the classroom view.
    Nicole Jordan, a carpentry instructor, teaches a class at Los Angeles Trade Technical College on March 24, 2026.
    (
    Jules Hotz
    /
    CalMatters
    )

    The extreme heat from fires doesn’t just burn down wood; it also makes concrete foundations brittle and unstable, Alvarez said. His course has to be sparing with its use of concrete, though, since it’s expensive.

    Although the college’s construction, maintenance and utilities programs have a total annual budget of over $10 million, most of the money goes to staff salaries, leaving just over $575,000 for many of the supplies students use, said Abigail Patton, the vice president of academic affairs. She said the state grant for fire recovery will help supplement supply costs, including the concrete in Alvarez’s class.

    While the state funding is helping, other money recently fell through. In 2024, Los Angeles Trade-Tech was one of the recipients of a $20 million federal grant from the Environmental Protection Agency. The college was set to receive $2 million through that grant, part of which went to the Coalition for Responsible Community Development, an economic development organization based in south Los Angeles.

    The money was supposed to support the college’s construction programs, where students would learn about home weatherization, lead abatement, and residential energy audits. The federal agency disbursed just over $88,000 of the grant to the Coalition for Responsible Community Development before suddenly cancelling it last May after President Trump took office. Environmental justice groups filed a lawsuit appealing the Trump administration’s decision.

    The Coalition for Responsible Community Development refused to comment about the grant, but the Environmental Protection Agency was unsparing in its remarks. “Maybe the Biden-Harris Administration shouldn’t have forced its radical agenda of wasteful DEI programs and ‘environmental justice’ priorities on the EPA’s core mission,” said Brigit Hirsch, press secretary for the department, in an email to CalMatters. “Thankfully, those days are over.”

    ‘It’s not all fun and games’

    Some short-term community college certificates in construction can lead to high-paying jobs, including some that pay over $40 an hour. Many of Los Angeles Trade-Tech’s programs, including carpentry, electrical maintenance and welding, are popular and often at capacity.

    But students who enroll rarely graduate. Ultimately, about 33% of students who started at Los Angeles Trade-Tech’s construction, maintenance and utilities programs got a certificate, degree or transferred to a university within four years, according to the college’s data from students who started in 2021. Low graduation rates are typical for most community colleges. Many students, especially low-income students, struggle to manage the demands of school along with caring for children or aging parents and working full- or part-time jobs.

    “We get floods of students that want to do this, and I say it’s not all fun and games in terms of swinging a hammer,” said Nicole Jordan, who teaches the first semester in the carpentry program. “We do a lot of math and a lot of book work.” Before Jordan’s students start building anything, they have to study blueprints and Los Angeles building codes so they know what is possible and legally required.

    Still, there’s a sense of community among the students, who vary in age and ethnic background. To help them get through it, Jordan’s first semester students have a cheer. “We the best,” one student yells as they sit in a classroom. “Carpentry,” responds everyone in unison.

    After the cheer, Jordan walks up to the white board and the class settles down. She sketches out the blueprint of a home. If they stick around, the students will build that home in just four semesters.

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

  • What warrants behind seizures reveal
    Chad Bianco, a man with medium skin tone, short gray hair, and a gray mustache, wearing a dark gray suit, speaks on a stage and gestures with his hands.
    Republican gubernatorial candidate Chad Bianco speaks on stage during the Western Growers California Gubernatorial Candidate Forum at Fresno State on April 1, 2026.

    Topline:

    Riverside County Sheriff and California governor candidate Chad Bianco launched an investigation into alleged voter fraud after hearing allegations from an activist group. Newly unsealed warrants justifying the investigation do not show direct evidence of voter fraud.

    Why now: Until this week, the warrants were secret with Bianco, a Republican, contending they reflected “normal law enforcement” and Judge Jay Kiel keeping them under seal. That changed Wednesday when a different Riverside County judge and the California Supreme Court ordered them opened after CalMatters and other news organizations petitioned for their disclosure.

    About the warrants: After reviewing the documents, experts had mixed opinions on whether Bianco’s investigators had enough evidence of probable cause to justify the raid. Some said the lack of evidence in the investigators’ affidavits raises troubling questions about how easy it was for Bianco to seize the ballots with the appearance of judicial oversight.

    Read on... for more about the newly unsealed warrants.

    Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco’s investigators had no insider tipsters, no witnesses and no independent analyses from forensic experts when they approached a local judge and asked to take the unprecedented step of seizing hundreds of thousands of ballots.

    Instead, the evidence they showed Judge Jay Kiel were claims from a group that one independent elections expert described as the equivalent of “flat earthers” alleging possible voter fraud. The county’s top elections official says their claims of miscounted ballots are based on flawed and incomplete data.

    Kiel, whom Bianco endorsed when he was running for the bench, signed the search warrants anyway, allowing the sheriff to take the highly unusual step of seizing 650,000 ballots from California’s 2025 election amid his own campaign for governor.

    Until this week, the warrants were secret with Bianco, a Republican, contending they reflected “normal law enforcement” and Kiel keeping them under seal.

    That changed Wednesday when a different Riverside County judge and the California Supreme Court ordered them opened after CalMatters and other news organizations petitioned for their disclosure.

    After reviewing the documents, experts had mixed opinions on whether Bianco’s investigators had enough evidence of probable cause to justify the raid. Some said the lack of evidence in the investigators’ affidavits raises troubling questions about how easy it was for Bianco to seize the ballots with the appearance of judicial oversight.

    Bianco said he didn’t care what independent experts had to say about his investigators’ warrants, and he blamed the media and California Attorney General Rob Bonta for trying to politicize the sheriff’s investigation.

    “We took the information to a judge, and the judge agreed; it's really as simple as that,” he said. “Why not just get to the bottom of it and see what the difference in the numbers were?”

    Cristine Soto DeBerry, a former prosecutor who heads the nonprofit Prosecutors Alliance Action, said she was troubled by how much the sheriff relied on an activist group’s claims without trying to first verify them before obtaining the warrants.

    “This entire course of conduct concerns me,” said Soto DeBerry, whose group advocates for criminal justice reform. “Elections are a sacred institution in this country. We have not seen sheriffs seizing ballots in this country until 2026 and it is being done in a very casual, procedural manner instead of with the kind of care that I’d expect we would use around something so important. And I think that applies to everybody who was involved here.”

    Carl Luna, director of the Institute for Civil Civic Engagement at the University of San Diego, criticized the citizens’ group that deputies cited in the warrants and questioned Bianco’s integrity.

    “They are the political equivalent of flat earthers who refuse to look at any facts that do not support their unsupportable views,” said Luna in an email to CalMatters. “The fact that Sheriff Bianco, an elected representative of the people of Riverside County, is using this group’s baseless allegations of fraud as what amounts to a campaign stunt is … evidence to question his fitness to lead the state.”

    But Paul Pfingst, a former San Diego County district attorney and the former president of the California District Attorneys Association, said he thought the information presented in the affidavits was enough to meet probable cause.

    “I think it exceeds it by a lot,” he said, pointing to the court paperwork, which says the county registrar of voters had not answered questions from an activist.

    “In the absence of an explanation by the registrar of voters,” said Pfingst, “and unless someone can explain how … such a large discrepancy could occur, it is reasonable for law enforcement to determine whether the discrepancy is the result of electoral fraud or ballot fraud.”

    Pfingst said it wasn't necessary for investigators from the sheriff’s department to get an explanation from county election officials before seeking the warrants.

    Art Tinoco, the county’s registrar of voters, publicly rejected the activist group’s claims. He told county supervisors on Feb. 10 – before Kiel signed the last two of the warrants – that the activist group making the allegations didn’t understand the data they were looking through.

    “Did the Nov. 4, 2025, statewide special election have a 45,896-ballot discrepancy between ballots cast and ballots counted?” Tinoco told the supervisors, according to the Riverside Press Enterprise. “The answer to that is no.”

    CalMatters requested an interview with Tinoco on Thursday. County Chief Executive Officer Jeff Van Wagenen responded with a statement saying that no county officials would comment due to the pending litigation.

    A spokesperson for Riverside County Superior Court said Kiel couldn’t comment due to rules prohibiting judges from discussing pending cases.

    Court halted Bianco's investigation

    The search warrants were unsealed on Wednesday, the same day that the California Supreme Court halted Bianco’s ballot investigation, which he previously characterized as a “fact-finding mission” intended “just as much to prove the election is accurate as it is to show otherwise.”

    That ruling was in response to legal challenges from Bonta and UCLA Voting Rights Project contesting the seizure and recount.

    In lawsuits, Bonta argued that Bianco failed to show that probable cause or evidence of a crime existed — a step that’s required to obtain a search warrant. He called it an attempt to undermine public confidence in elections.

    Bonta’s office responded to an interview request Thursday with an emailed statement saying the office is working to “prevent the misuse of criminal investigative tools for partisan fishing expeditions.”

    “Our focus is on the sheriff’s responsibilities under the law — to provide sufficient evidence of probable cause in obtaining criminal search warrants, to allow (the) Riverside (registrar of voters) to retain physical custody of the ballots as required by the elections code, and to follow the Attorney General’s lawful directives, all of which he failed to do,” the email read.

    Claims from outside group

    The newly released records show that the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department was in contact with a citizens’ group that believed they found possible voter fraud after surfacing a roughly 46,000-vote discrepancy between the number of ballots cast versus the number ballots certified, according to Riverside County Sheriff Department investigator Robert Castellanos in a sworn affidavit.

    The last of the three warrants Kiel signed was filed on March 19, roughly three weeks after the state Justice Department ordered the Riverside County Sheriff Department to pause its work and share any information that could substantiate its concerns. By that point, the sheriff’s department had already recounted 12,561 ballots, according to Castellanos’s affidavit.

    Castellanos’s affidavits do not have a signature from a prosecutor at the Riverside County District Attorney’s Office, suggesting prosecutors may not have reviewed the sheriff’s office warrant requests. It’s a common practice in California for a deputy district attorney to review local law enforcement search warrants to ensure investigators are on sound legal footing before presenting their evidence to a judge. The DA’s office didn’t return a message from CalMatters Thursday.

    In an interview, Greg Langworthy said he wasn’t a conspiracy theorist and insisted his group, which calls itself the Riverside County Election Integrity Team, found enough evidence of vote-count discrepancies to warrant further investigation based on the registrar of voters’ own records.

    “There’s no doubt that there is a discrepancy, and that's supported by his own records,” he said. “That’s why we say the sheriff is duty bound to investigate. I think all of them are duty bound to investigate.”

    Allegations of voter fraud in Trump era

    Groups like Langworthy’s are increasingly common, as President Donald Trump and his Make America Great Again movement spread unfounded allegations of rampant voter fraud.

    Across the country, there’s been “an increasing appetite for seizing materials for the sake of simply seizing materials,” said Stephen Richer, the Republican former elected recorder of Maricopa County, Arizona. Richer was running his county’s elections office in 2020, when Trump falsely accused him of overseeing a “rigged election,” leading to death threats.

    “I have a lot of experience with independent election fraud hunters and they almost universally have no experience in election administration,” he said. “I think it’s also important when ethically and responsibly submitting an affidavit for probable cause that you assess the credibility of the witnesses.”

    Leonard Moty, a former Redding police chief and Republican supervisor in Shasta County where similar allegations of election impropriety have become common, described the warrants as “pretty light” after reviewing them at CalMatters’ request.

    He said he would have liked to have seen a more specific allegation with supporting evidence in the warrant before taking the matter to a judge.

    Instead, the warrants focused on allegations from activists.

    “Statements don’t really mean much, particularly with this issue where on both sides people are saying what they want to say,” Moty said. “I would have wanted to see some actual evidence of votes not being counted.”

    State Sen. Tom Umberg, a Democrat from Santa Ana who used to be a federal prosecutor, also reviewed the warrants at CalMatters request.

    He said he’d never seen warrants before that didn’t identify a specific law investigators suspected may have been broken, nor did they present evidence that investigators had verified the reliability of the group making the allegations.

    After reading the warrants, Umberg said he was considering writing legislation “to make sure that elections are not interfered with, that ballots are not seized based on some conspiracy theory.”

    “This election is going to be a test of our democracy,” Umberg said. “And if it doesn't go the way the president thinks it should go, I am gravely concerned that he will use whatever levers of power he has, federally as well as locally, to undermine that election.”

    Cayla Mihalovich is a California Local News fellow.

    CalMatters Deputy Editor Adam Ashton contributed to this story.

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