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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • Measure heads to November ballot
    Close up a white t-shirt being worn by a person. On the t-shirt is a blue outline of the state of California with the words "Tax the billionaires" superimposed
    A man's shirt and sticker are displayed at the Billionaire Tax Now booth at the 2026 California Democratic Party State Convention in San Francisco on Feb. 21, 2026.

    Topline:

    California hospitals and the state’s largest health workers union reached an agreement Thursday to pull two competing initiatives from the November ballot hours before a state deadline. But a separate measure to impose a one-time tax on billionaires remains headed toward voters, potentially reshaping how California funds healthcare.

    About the Billionaire Tax measure: That measure would levy a one-time 5% tax on California billionaires if approved by voters. Supporters estimate the tax would bring in $100 billion to replace recent state and federal healthcare cuts. The union accused Gov. Gavin Newsom, who tried to strike a last-minute deal to kill the ballot measure, of having “no plan” to prevent cuts projected to lose jobs and leave millions of Californians uninsured, according to recent projections.

    A history of dealmaking: For decades, Service Employees International Union-United Healthcare Workers West has used ballot initiatives to gain leverage over the healthcare industry, broker deals with lawmakers and push its political agenda forward. In addition to the wealth tax, the union had qualified an initiative to limit how much hospital executives are paid; while the California Hospital Association hit back with a proposal to limit the union’s political spending without member approval. Those two measures will no longer appear on the ballot under a deal brokered by the California Federation of Labor Unions, AFL-CIO.

    California hospitals and the state’s largest health workers union reached an agreement Thursday to pull two competing initiatives from the November ballot hours before a state deadline. But a separate measure to impose a one-time tax on billionaires remains headed toward voters, potentially reshaping how California funds healthcare.

    That measure would levy a one-time 5% tax on California billionaires if approved by voters. Supporters estimate the tax would bring in $100 billion to replace recent state and federal healthcare cuts. The union accused Gov. Gavin Newsom, who tried to strike a last-minute deal to kill the ballot measure, of having “no plan” to prevent cuts projected to lose jobs and leave millions of Californians uninsured, according to recent projections.

    “We thought it was important to do everything we could to try to solve that problem,” said Dave Regan, president of Service Employees International Union-United Healthcare Workers West.

    In addition to the wealth tax, SEIU-United Healthcare Workers West had qualified an initiative to limit how much hospital executives are paid; while the California Hospital Association hit back with a proposal to limit the union’s political spending without member approval. Those two measures will no longer appear on the ballot under a deal brokered by the California Federation of Labor Unions, AFL-CIO.

    Union members argued that money has been siphoned away from patient care through federal and state budget cuts as well as business decisions that support costly executive salaries. In turn, hospitals and some experts contended that capping leadership salaries would drain talent from pricey California and result in worse patient care.

    Initially the two sides were adamant that they weren’t interested in negotiating, but Thursday’s agreement is the latest reminder that few things are fixed in Sacramento politics. Both sides had raised tens-of-millions of dollars to support their proposals.

    Carmela Coyle, hospital association president and CEO, said in a statement that the agreement would “ensure high-quality health care services are accessible throughout California.”

    Lorena Gonzalez, president of the labor federation, said the deal would support “quality healthcare and good union jobs to Californians.”

    SEIU-United Healthcare Workers West declined to comment on the agreement.

    A history of dealmaking

    This marked the sixth time the union has attempted to cap healthcare executive salaries at $450,000 through state or local ballot measures.

    For decades the union led by Regan has used ballot initiatives to gain leverage over the healthcare industry, broker deals with lawmakers and push its political agenda forward.

    Voters may remember dialysis center initiatives appearing on three back-to-back ballots in 2018, 2020 and 2022. All three failed, and the dialysis industry spent hundreds of millions of dollars to defeat them.

    That strategy is what SEIU-United Healthcare Workers West does — and what it’s doing this year.

    Since 2012, the union has sponsored 48 state and local ballot initiatives spending $120 million. Most of the measures have been withdrawn or voted down. Despite those specific failures, the strategy has yielded major wins, including a $25 per hour health worker minimum wage. On that issue, the union asked voters across multiple cities to increase salaries before striking a deal with lawmakers and hospitals that included a 10-year moratorium on local minimum wage ballot measures.

    That strategy is shaping debate over this year’s most contentious measure, which would put a major question before voters: whether California should impose a new tax on its wealthiest residents to help fund healthcare.

    The proposal has drawn opposition from an unusual mix of business interests, Newsom, billionaires and progressive groups like Planned Parenthood and the California Teachers Association.

    “We have to use all of the tools in our toolbox,” union spokesperson Renée Saldaña said prior to the agreement. “We see the ballot initiative as one way to take it directly to California voters.”

    Good policy or ballot blackmail?

    It’s a game of cat-and-mouse dating back to the early 1900s. California special interests spend millions to place a ballot initiative before voters; use it for political leverage; and ultimately strike a deal with lawmakers or political rivals to pull the measures in exchange for some other benefit.

    Dan Schnur, a longtime Republican analyst and political communications professor at USC, said special interests have always taken advantage of ballot initiatives to try and advance their agendas. What makes SEIU-United Healthcare Workers West unusual is how often it repeats initiatives that fail, but the willingness to do so may be what gives the union so much political leverage.

    “A ballot initiative is the ultimate blunt instrument,” Schnur said. “The threat of a ballot measure can help shape negotiations in the Legislature on the same subject.”

    John Matsusaka, a USC law professor and executive director of the Initiative and Referendum Institute, said ballot initiatives are intended to allow voters to decide directly whether a proposal should become law. This helps bypass a Legislature that constituents may feel doesn’t actually reflect their interests.

    California groups have attempted to pass more initiatives than any other state, Matsusaka said, but wielding them for leverage is an unhealthy way to view the law.

    “Laws shouldn’t be used as bargaining chips in your negotiations in my opinion,” he said.

    Supported by the California Health Care Foundation (CHCF), which works to ensure that people have access to the care they need, when they need it, at a price they can afford. Visit www.chcf.org to learn more.

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

  • First ever and star-studded

    Topline:

    For the first time, the World Cup final will include a halftime show – featuring celebrities from six continents to celebrate the "beautiful game."

    Why now: With the artists selected by Coldplay frontman Chris Martin, it's a powerhouse lineup with big mass appeal including Justin Bieber and Madonna.

    Read on ... to learn about the entire musical lineup ...

    For the first time, the World Cup final will include a halftime show – featuring celebrities from six continents to celebrate the "beautiful game." The show, which will begin somewhere around 3:45 PM ET, will air in the U.S. on Fox, Fox One and in Spanish on Telemundo, as well as on the Fox Sports app and streaming in Spanish on Peacock. It's expected to run for about 11 minutes.

    With the artists selected by Coldplay frontman Chris Martin, it's a powerhouse lineup with big mass appeal: Justin Bieber, Madonna (whose new album just debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200), Shakira (the undisputed World Cup queen), Burna Boy (who duetted with Shakira on this year's official World Cup song – and who is one of the most popular African artists of all time), the global sensation BTS, Coldplay (who brought an inspiring backup choir to their Tiny Desk), the eternally lovable Muppets Kermit and Miss Piggy, conductor Gustavo Dudamel with musicians from the New York Philharmonic and the Simon Bolivar Symphony Orchestra of Venezuela, the viral dance troupe Ghetto Kids from Kampala, Uganda, the Iraq-born Australian singer Emmanuel Kelly, and – whew! – the kids from Staten Island's PS22 Chorus. (How will they all be crammed into an 11-minute spectacle? A fair guess would be lots of arm-in-arm singalongs and Grammy Awards-style mashups aspiring to virality.)

    In its press materials, FIFA says that the halftime show will support its charity arm, the FIFA Global Citizen Education Fund, whose goal is to raise $100 million to expand education and soccer access to children worldwide. FIFA says that it's already raised half that money, including $1 from every ticket sold by FIFA for this Cup – not much of a percentage, considering that FIFA originally put final game tickets on sale for nearly $3,000 for the cheapest seat, and prices have only skyrocketed since.

    Soccer is, of course, already the most popular sport in the world; according to the Library of Congress, "estimates suggest that there are over 240 million registered players worldwide with fan participation in the billions." FIFA has already been boasting about record viewership during the 2026 World Cup. Earlier this month – even before the quarter-final matches had taken place – FIFA had already logged an eye-popping 20 billion video views worldwide across all digital platforms. By contrast, the last Super Bowl attracted some 125.6 million viewers. And it's worth noting that soccer is gaining in popularity in the U.S.: per a recent survey published by The Economist, Americans now rank it as their third favorite sport, having edged out the all-American pastime of baseball.

    Still, FIFA may well have taken a (literally) very valuable page out of the NFL playbook, whether or not they specifically have a U.S. audience in mind: Don't like or care about (real) football? Here's an unmissable diversion midway through the match to keep you buzzing about – and your eyeballs focused on – what's happening on the pitch.

    Copyright 2026 NPR

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  • The first ever Los Angeles Indie Book Crawl
    A woman in a blue shirt stands in pages: a bookstore. She is surrounded by books on all sides.
    People walk inside Pages, a bookstore in Manhattan beach.

    Topline:

    The inaugural Los Angeles Indie Book Crawl aims to take readers on a tour of thirteen independent stores across the region.

    Why it matters: Independent bookstores, beloved fixtures across communities in Los Angeles, often struggle to stay afloat. This event, put on by sellers, wants to bring book-loving Angelenos to stores they may not already know about.

    The backstory: The event is modeled after a popular San Diego book crawl.

    What's next: Organizers hope to make this an annual event.

    Go deeper: What Are The Best Books About LA? Indie Booksellers Share Their Recs

    Books can take you to other worlds, times, and next weekend, all over Los Angeles.

    That’s the goal of the inaugural Los Angeles Indie Book Crawl taking place from July 24 to 26. Book lovers can check out 13 brick-and-mortar stores across the L.A. region in celebration of the little bookstores that can.

    A cartoon map of all the locations for the Indie Book Crawl. A label at the top says participating stores, Los Angeles can be seen throughout the map.
    A map of the LA region and all the Indie Book Crawl locations.
    (
    LA Indie Book Crawl
    )

    Independent, but not alone

    The idea originated with Jennifer Caspar, founder and owner of Village Well Books & Coffee in Culver City. She says she was inspired by a similar event in San Diego that has grown in popularity since starting in 2017.

    “They get thousands of people out every year to do it and the stores are mobbed. They say it's like a holiday weekend in their store with the level of activity,” Caspar said.

    Participating bookstores range from Vroman’s in Pasadena to ones with more of a niche, like the Culver City romance bookstore, The Ripped Bodice.

    “We’re all different. When you're working with independent businesses, you're really getting a lot of personality, and that's what I think people will experience on this,” Caspar said.

    A resurgence, a reality

    The crawl comes at a time when the business of bookselling has been completely upended.

    The front entrance of a bookstore is seen. An awning says "pages". The word is also seen on the glass display. There is a parking meter in the foreground of the picture.
    The front of Pages, a bookstore in Manhattan Beach.
    (
    Pages
    /
    Linda McLoughlin Figel
    )

    “We are competing with a really hellacious online competitor who sells books oftentimes at a loss, none of us can afford to do that,” said Linda McLoughlin Figel, co-owner of Pages in Manhattan Beach.

    But Caspar and Figel say there’s also been a resurgence of interest and appreciation for what bookstores have to offer.

    “People have really reverted back to valuing the smell of a book, the touch of a book and that personal connection that you can have by walking into a bookstore,” said Figel.

    Passionate sellers and passionate readers

    Grace Lee of Montrose is one of those people who loves having a personal connection to bookstores.

    A woman stands in front of Once Upon A Time "Your family bookstore". She wears a black t-shirt and holds a gift wrapped present.
    Grace Lee stands in front of Once Upon A Time, a children's bookstore in Montrose.
    (
    Grace Lee
    /
    Grace Lee
    )

    “If I'm in a new neighborhood or an area of town I'm not usually in, I try to find out where the local bookstore is and stop by,” said Lee.

    She frequents Once Upon A Time, a favorite place for her to find gifts and books for her kids and their friends.

    A children's bookstore is seen. There are stuffed animals, a pig and a teddy bear alongside a shelf with picture books and other children's books.
    Once Upon A Time, a children's bookstore in Montrose.
    (
    Chandra Wicke Photography
    /
    LA Indie Book Crawl
    )

    She says she’ll be attempting to do the crawl over the three days in between work and her family’s busy schedule.

    “I am very ambitious, and so I do want to attempt the full crawl, but we'll have to see,” said Lee.

    How does the crawl work?

    A sample passport for the Los Angeles Indie Book Crawl. The passport is orange and has various places for stamps. There are instructions in the middle of the card.
    A sample passport for the Los Angeles Indie Book Crawl.
    (
    LA Indie Book Crawl
    /
    LA Indie Book Crawl
    )

    Los Angeles Indie Book Crawl

    When: Friday, July 24 to Sunday, July 26

    Store entry is free.

    A purchase of $10 or more gets you a passport and a stamp. Accrue additional stamps toward prizes with each $10 purchase.

    Find details and participating bookstores at the event’s official website.

  • For residents near two L.A. farmers markets
    A vendor at the Crenshaw Farmers Market sells a variety of fruits and nuts. He wears a surgical mask, a white t-shirt.
    A vendor at the Crenshaw Farmers Market

    Topline:

    A new program that gives Angelenos on food assistance the option to have fresh produce delivered to their home has launched, serving a roughly 20 mile radius around the Atwater Village and Crenshaw farmers markets.

    How it works: Food Access Los Angeles, a non-profit that operates a chain of farmers markets focusing on customers who rely on food assistance, is behind the new Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) box delivery program.

    Food Access L.A. curates each box of produce from five to seven different vendors from the farmers market and takes on logistics of home delivery.

    A time of uncertainty: The new produce delivery offering comes at a time of substantial change and uncertainty for nutrition assistance programs nationwide, after implementation of new federal requirements.

    Read on ... to find out how to sign up ...

    A new program that gives Angelenos on food assistance the option to have fresh produce delivered to their homes has launched, serving a roughly 20 mile radius around the Atwater Village and Crenshaw farmers markets.

    Food Access LA, a non-profit that operates a chain of farmers markets focusing on customers who rely on food assistance, is behind the new Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) box delivery program.

    Isabel Thottam, with Food Access LA, said she and her colleagues have spent the last three years or so working with the U.S. Department of Agriculture and other groups to get approval for the delivery program to accept Electronic Benefit Transfer (EBT).

    “What I’m excited about is just being able to give people that opportunity to choose,” Thottam told LAist. “If they want to get farmers market produce delivered and use their EBT that way, they should have that autonomy to make that decision,” Thottam, who directs the nonprofit’s EAT! Food Distribution program, said.

    How it works

    Food Access L.A. curates each box of produce from five to seven different vendors from the farmers market and takes on logistics of home delivery.

    How to get produce delivered

    People using CalFresh benefits can log on to Food Access LA’s website to make their box selections and choose a delivery schedule. Shoppers using EBT can also sign up at physical Food Access LA farmers market locations.

    Organizers said they anticipate delivering 20 to 30 boxes from the Atwater Village and Crenshaw farmers markets every week and expect it to be a welcome option for seniors, people with disabilities or other groups who may have difficulties getting out in-person to a farmers market.

    “You know a lot of people do come to the markets with the ... mindset of ‘farmers markets are inaccessible, they’re for rich people, they’re not for me,’” Miguel Ceniceros, senior manager of benefits and incentives at Food Access L.A., told LAist. “Our job is really to dispel those myths.”

    A woman with a mask and orange hair leaning showing children a book under at a tent in a farmers' market.
    A farmers market operated by Food Access LA.
    (
    Courtesy Food Access LA
    )

    ‘A lot of uncertainty’ 

    The new produce delivery offering comes at a time of substantial change and uncertainty for nutrition assistance programs nationwide.

    That’s because the Trump administration’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act that passed last July imposes funding cuts and new requirements for families trying to get help paying for groceries.

    L.A. County could see more than 200,000 people at risk of losing their CalFresh benefits because of new work-requirement rules that went into effect last month targeting recipients like those between the ages of 55 to 64, unhoused people, and veterans.

    “These changes are quite significant. Because our population of just those estimated impacted are way beyond some caseloads of other counties,” said Shawn Amiel, Division Chief with the L.A. County Department of Public Social Services. “And it could really contribute to the food insecurity of so many people.”

    Amiel said she and her colleagues are working now to educate people on possible exemptions and what the new requirements entail.

    Navigating CalFresh changes

    L.A. County DPSS has set up a dedicated page to help people using CalFresh navigate the new changes

    In the meantime, Amiel welcomes opportunities like the new CSA box delivery.

    “There’s a lot of uncertainty as we enter these policy changes having to be implemented,” Amiel said. “So any additional assistance, any additional opportunities to kind of spread out these funds as much as possible should be taken advantage of.”

  • Old-fashioned film screening at a park
    An older man with a gray mustache wearing a tan shirt, white pants and suspenders is handcranking an antique movie projector
    Joe Rinaudo hand-cranks an antique film projector.

    Topline:

    Joe Rinaudo is the man behind Silent Movies in Two Strike Park, a special showcase of films from the era that usually takes place once a year.

    The backstory: Rinaudo, nicknamed “Professor Rinaudo” for his vast silent film knowledge, has spent his life preserving and screening silent classics. His love of old films stretches back to when he was a kid in the 1950s.

    The show tonight: Tonight’s program includes Buster Keaton’s One Week (1920), Charley Chase’s Crazy Like a Fox (1926), and Laurel and Hardy’s Do Detectives Think? (1927).

    Read on ... to find screening details and more about Rinaudo.

    The new Christopher Nolan epic The Odyssey opens this weekend. And purists will probably want to catch it in a theater to experience it in all of its 70mm glory.

    But another film screening (albeit a little more old-fashioned) happens tonight at a park in La Crescenta.

    “Oh yeah, Christopher Nolan ... In fact, he uses the same lab that I do to print my 35 [mm] — FotoKem,” said Joe Rinaudo, silent film historian and founder of the nonprofit SCAAT or Silent Cinema Art and Technology. “One time I was over there and Christopher Nolan was there and man they were hopping to it!”

    Rinaudo is also the man behind Silent Movies in Two Strike Park, a special showcase of films from the era that usually takes place once a year. Tonight’s program includes Buster Keaton’s One Week (1920), Charley Chase’s Crazy Like a Fox (1926), and Laurel and Hardy’s Do Detectives Think? (1927).

    Professor Rinaudo 

    Rinaudo, nicknamed “Professor Rinaudo” for his vast silent film knowledge, has spent his life preserving and screening silent classics. His love of old films stretches back to when he was a kid in the 1950s. He even bought 99-cent reels at Sears and would host screenings for neighborhood kids.

    Tonight, he will follow in the tradition of the itinerant — or traveling — projectionists of the early 1900s, by cranking out this evening’s slate on a 1909 Power’s Motion Picture Machine Model 6, which started its life with an itinerant projectionist.

    “I bought it from the great-grandchildren of the original owner. It was found in a chicken coop and [I] did a total restoration,” Rinaudo said.

    I was lucky enough to see the hand-crank process in action at his home in La Crescenta earlier in the week.

    “You have to crank at the camera man’s speed,” Rinaudo said. “You have to watch the action very closely … If it slows down, and it looks blurry then you need to speed up, because you’ll betray the camera man’s shutter.”

    ‘Educate and inspire’ 

    Rinaudo’s La Crescenta home isn’t just a showcase for his collection of antique film equipment. It also includes a 20-seat, 1910-style theater that he built. The silent movie palace is complete with an alluring red curtain and period-specific, ornate light fixtures that he manufactured himself.

    A man wearing suspenders stands in front of a stage with a red carpet.
    Joe Rinaudo stands in front of the stage.
    (
    Robert Garrova / LAist
    )

    It defies logic that this huge theater, complete with a second story balcony and projection room, fits in this residential space. But there’s more just below the theater, including an 800-pipe organ Rinaudo is working to restore so that music can accompany his film screenings.

    Catch a Professor Rinaudo screening

    Silent Movies in Two Strike Park
    Where: Two Strike Park, 5107 Rosemont Ave., La Crescenta
    When: Saturday, July 18 at 8 p.m.
    Free

    “The pipe organ will of course add a new dimension to the theater. It’s an 11-rank Wurlitzer built in 1920. It was saved from the Covell Theater in Modesto, California,” Rinaudo said.

    The massive pipes of the Wurlitzer came to life thanks to a vintage air blower in the basement, their low tones enough to rattle your ribcage.

    Rinaudo’s theater isn’t open to the public, but through his nonprofit, he’s thinking about how it can be preserved for all to enjoy. But you can catch his itinerant show at Two Strike Park in La Crescenta, usually once a year. And he's hoping to soon start screening films again at the Nethercutt Collection Museum in Sylmar.

    "Eventually, all of this will go into the non-profit after my passing,” Rinaudo said. “I’m hoping to keep this as a private museum ... that will continue to educate and inspire younger people about our history.”