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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • Pop-up vote centers available for special election
    A voter prepares their ballot at a voting booth during early voting
    A voter prepares their ballot at a voting booth during early voting in Los Angeles, California.

    Topline:

    Boyle Heights residents who want to vote in person will be able to do so at four pop-up vote centers in the upcoming election, Los Angeles County officials confirmed on Monday.

    The backstory: The announcement comes after Boyle Heights Beat reported
    no polling places would be available in the neighborhood for the Nov. 4 statewide special election.

    Why it matters: Without the pop-up vote centers, Boyle Heights residents would have had to travel to East L.A., downtown L.A. or another Eastside neighborhood for their nearest vote center.

    This story was originally published by Boyle Heights Beat on Oct. 28, 2025.

    Boyle Heights residents who want to vote in person will be able to do so at four pop-up vote centers in the upcoming election, Los Angeles County officials confirmed on Monday.

    The announcement comes after Boyle Heights Beat reported no polling places would be available in the neighborhood for the Nov. 4 statewide special election. This would have required that Boyle Heights residents travel to East L.A., downtown L.A. or another Eastside neighborhood for their nearest vote center.

    “Boyle Heights has long been a priority for Vote Center placement in Los Angeles County, and we will continue that tradition for this election and all upcoming elections,” Dean Logan, registrar-recorder/county clerk for L.A. County, said in a statement.

    Logan said the pop-up vote centers in Boyle Heights were made possible through a partnership with county, city and community partners. He said “scheduling conflicts” made it difficult to secure city facilities to serve as formal vote centers “under the short lead time” for the special election.

    Here are the times and locations for the pop-up vote centers:

    • Saturday, Nov. 1: Día de Muertos Community Block Party, 6-10 p.m., at 1831 1st St., Los Angeles, CA 90033
    • Sunday, Nov. 2, and Monday, Nov. 3: Boyle Heights City Hall parking area, 10 a.m.-7 p.m., at 2130 1st St., Los Angeles, CA 90033
    • Tuesday, Nov. 4: Boyle Heights Senior Center, 7 a.m.-8 p.m., at 2839 E 3rd St., Los Angeles, CA 90033

    In a statement on Friday, L.A. County Board Supervisor Hilda Solis said she requested that the L.A. County Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk “take immediate steps to ensure residents would have access to in-person voting.”

    “Every community deserves the opportunity to make its voice heard, and no neighborhood should be left without accessible options to participate in our democracy,” Solis said.

    In another statement, L.A. City Councilmember Ysabel Jurado said she was working with Solis to “ensure that communities like Boyle Heights are fully represented in the democratic process.”

    Local organizers with InnerCity Struggle, a Boyle Heights-based group that conducts voter outreach in the Eastside, discovered the community’s lack of vote centers on Oct. 17 while reviewing the LA County Vote Centers map.

    Henry Perez, executive director of the group, feared that voters would decide it was too difficult to get to a polling location outside their neighborhood, especially at a time when immigration raids are contributing to the stress and anxiety around traveling through L.A. County.

    “We’re happy that the county registrar’s office took our concerns seriously and have moved to create a better opportunity for the community of Boyle Heights to be able to vote for this upcoming special election,” Perez said.

    However, Perez added, “we still believe that it is not enough to have a couple of pop-up voter centers for a limited amount of time around the community.”

    Perez said InnerCity Struggle has been fielding calls from voters asking where they can vote in person. The group had to direct them to other nearby polling sites outside Boyle Heights, as well as drop box locations.

    “I hope that this provides an important lesson to the county voter registrar’s office that they cannot leave an entire community without a polling center, and we hope that this does not happen again in any future election,” he added.

    “When we see an injustice happening in our community, it is important for us to speak up loudly to make sure that these injustices are addressed,” Perez continued. “Because we spoke up loudly, they did what they knew they had to do and what they could have done from the very beginning.”

    A spokesperson for the registrar-recorder/county clerk’s office previously said that November’s special election will see just 250 vote centers, compared with 640 during last year’s general election. He pointed to the time necessary to recruit vote centers, and noted a community space that previously served as a polling place in Boyle Heights was unavailable for Nov. 4.

    On the ballot is Proposition 50, a measure that, if passed, would temporarily redraw California’s congressional maps to help Democrats win more seats in the U.S. House of Representatives.

    Gov. Gavin Newsom launched the effort behind Proposition 50 after the Texas state legislature approved new maps that would give Republicans an advantage in the 2026 midterm elections, LAist reported.

  • Scientists look for ways to reduce nausea
    Zepbound is one of several new drugs that people are using successfully to lose weight. But shortages have people strategizing how to maintain their weight loss when they can't get the drug.
    Zepbound is one of several new drugs that people are using successfully to lose weight.

    Topline:

    Millions of Americans have shed pounds with help from drugs like Wegovy and Zepbound. But people who take these drugs often experience unpleasant side effects.

    Why now: At this year's Society for Neuroscience meeting in San Diego, Warren Yacawych of the University of Michigan and other researchers held a session to describe their efforts to understand and solve the side-effect problem.

    Read on ... for more on how scientists are approaching the issue of side effects with weight-loss medication.

    Millions of Americans have shed pounds with help from drugs like Wegovy and Zepbound.

    But people who take these drugs often experience unpleasant side effects.

    "They lose weight, which is a positive thing," says Warren Yacawych of the University of Michigan, "but they experience such severe nausea and vomiting that patients stop treatment."

    So at this year's Society for Neuroscience meeting in San Diego, Yacawych and other researchers held a session to describe their efforts to understand and solve the side-effect problem.

    The weight-loss products are called GLP-1 agonists. They work by mimicking a hormone that reduces appetite and slows digestion.

    Yacawych and his colleagues wanted to know if they could tweak these drugs to suppress appetite without making people queasy.

    The team focused on two areas in the brain stem where GLP-1 drugs have a big effect.

    "The first is affectionately known as the brain stem's vomit center," Yacawych says. "It's naturally designed to detect any accidentally ingested toxin and coordinate the feeling of nausea and the vomit response."

    The second area monitors food intake and tells people when they're full.

    The team found a way to direct GLP-1 to the area involved in feeling full, while keeping the drug out of the vomit center.

    When the researchers did this, the mice no longer felt sick. But they also didn't get thin — probably because there are specific cells in the vomit center that do not induce vomiting but are critical to weight loss.

    "So it's very challenging," Yacawych says, "to be able to separate these side effects, like nausea, from GLP-1's intended effects, like weight loss."

    A possible workaround came from a team led by Ernie Blevins of the University of Washington. They gave obese rats a low dose of a GLP-1 drug along with the hormone oxytocin, which is itself an appetite suppressant. That allowed the rats to lose weight without feeling sick.

    Not just nausea

    Another side effect of GLP-1 drugs is a decrease in thirst, which could be dangerous for people who are already losing lots of fluids from side effects like vomiting and diarrhea.

    "If you're in that state of dehydration and you're not feeling thirsty to replace those fluids, that would be a problem," says Derek Daniels of the University at Buffalo.

    To understand how GLP-1 drugs reduce thirst, Daniels and a team began studying the brains of rats. And they got lucky.

    "We had a happy accident in the lab," Daniels says. "And the happy accident involved a rat called the Brattleboro rat."

    Brattleboro rats are laboratory rodents with a genetic mutation that makes them thirsty nearly all the time. But the scientists discovered that these rats are also very sensitive to GLP-1 drugs, which drastically reduced their water consumption.

    The team studied the rats' brains to see where GLP-1 was influencing thirst. That led them to several areas of the brain that appear to affect thirst but not appetite.

    The discovery could help scientists preserve thirst by designing drugs that "target good places but not bad places," Daniels says.

    Appetite and addiction

    A team from the University of Virginia found that GLP-1 drugs are already targeting a brain area that plays a role in addiction as well as eating. It's a region involved in emotion and the reward system.

    When the researchers delivered GLP-1 to this brain area in mice, it reduced their desire for "rewarding food, like a burger," says Ali D. Güler of the University of Virginia.

    But the animals continued to eat healthy, nonrewarding foods, he says — a bit like people choosing a salad bar over dessert.

    Identifying this brain area should help scientists find GLP-1 drugs that target the reward system while avoiding areas involved in appetite, Güler says. And that could lead to new treatments for alcoholism and other substance use disorders.

    The finding also could explain the observation that people who take GLP-1 agonists tend to reduce their consumption of alcohol.

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  • Supreme Court weighs in on new Texas map
    A view of a white domed building with an American flag and Texas state flag with a gray sky in the background and two gold stars on top of a fence in the foreground.
    The State Capitol is seen in Austin, Texas, on June 1, 2021.

    Topline:

    The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday temporarily blocked a lower court ruling that found Texas' 2026 congressional redistricting plan pushed by President Donald Trump likely discriminates on the basis of race.

    What's next: The order signed by Justice Samuel Alito will remain in place at least for the next few days while the court considers whether to allow the new map favorable to Republicans to be used in the midterm elections.

    Read on ... for more on how this decision may affect other Congressional map battles across the nation, including in California.

    WASHINGTON — The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday temporarily blocked a lower court ruling that found Texas' 2026 congressional redistricting plan pushed by President Donald Trump likely discriminates on the basis of race.

    The order signed by Justice Samuel Alito will remain in place at least for the next few days while the court considers whether to allow the new map favorable to Republicans to be used in the midterm elections.

    The court's conservative majority has blocked similar lower court rulings because they have come too close to elections.

    The order came about an hour after the state called on the high court to intervene to avoid confusion as congressional primary elections approach in March. The justices have blocked past lower-court rulings in congressional redistricting cases, most recently in Alabama and Louisiana, that came several months before elections.

    The order was signed by Alito because he is the justice who handles emergency appeals from Texas.

    Texas redrew its congressional map in the summer as part of Trump's efforts to preserve a slim Republican majority in the House in next year's elections, touching off a nationwide redistricting battle. The new redistricting map was engineered to give Republicans five additional House seats, but a panel of federal judges in El Paso ruled 2-1 Tuesday that the civil rights groups that challenged the map on behalf of Black and Hispanic voters were likely to win their case.

    If that ruling eventually holds, Texas could be forced to hold elections next year using the map drawn by the GOP-controlled Legislature in 2021 based on the 2020 census.

    Texas was the first state to meet Trump's demands in what has become an expanding national battle over redistricting. Republicans drew the state's new map to give the GOP five additional seats, and Missouri and North Carolina followed with new maps adding an additional Republican seat each. To counter those moves, California voters approved a ballot initiative to give Democrats an additional five seats there.

    The redrawn maps are facing court challenges in California, Missouri and North Carolina.

    The Supreme Court is separately considering a case from Louisiana that could further limit race-based districts under Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. It's not entirely clear how the current round of redistricting would be affected by the outcome in the Louisiana case.

  • 'Substantially' contained, shelter-in-place lifted
    a photo of a cargo port on fire. A boat is spraying water at the direction of stacked cargos.
    The fire started on a cargo ship at the Port of L.A. started Friday evening.

    Topline:

    A fire broke out Friday evening on a cargo ship docked at the Port of Los Angeles. At one point, more than 180 firefighters were battling the fire.

    Why it matters: Hazardous materials were in some of the cargo bays, according to LAFD captain Adam VanGerpen.

    Injuries: Authorities say all crew members on the ship are accounted for with no injuries reported.

    Read on ... for the latest updates.

    The fire that started on a cargo ship docked at the Port of Los Angeles is now "substantially contained," according to the Port of Los Angeles.

    Authorities say fire crews and ship crew members are continuing to put out the fire.

    LAFD captain Adam VanGerpen told LAist the cargo ship — "ONE Henry Hudson" — was moved to open waters, less than a mile from the port, to ensure the safety of those living in San Pedro and Wilmington, as well as port operations.

    A shelter-in-place order for residents in San Pedro and Wilmington has been lifted, according to VanGerpen.

    Authorities say all crew members on the ship are accounted for with no injuries reported.

    At one point, more than 180 firefighters were fighting the fire, which was reported at 6:38 p.m. by crew onboard as an "electrical fire" that started below deck. An explosion was reported by authorities about an hour later.

    A number of cargo bays contained some hazardous materials, VanGerpen said.

    He said a number of containers are believed to be damaged, but the extent won't be known until the fire is fully contained.

    "Many of these cargo containers are stacked one on top of another, and they were not able to get cranes in there to start removing these," he said.

    The cause of the fire is under investigation.

  • The derelict shopping center has a remarkable past
    A black and white archive view of a store front that say "Valley Plaza Surplus" in big lettering. The windows have words on them that advertise the merchandise such as blankets for two dollars. Three white men in button up shirts are standing in front of the doors and posing for the camera.
    Valley Plaza Surplus when it opened in 1957. The store used to be located at 6330 Laurel Canyon Blvd.

    Topline:

    Valley Plaza in North Hollywood has been neglected for years. As some buildings are getting demolished, we look into its legendary past and why it fell from grace.

    How it began: When Valley Plaza opened in 1951, it was right when the shopping experience was changing. The developer behind the center, Bob Symonds, created a new masterplan of specially picked stores in an area that prioritized freeway access and lots of parking.

    Why it was unique: Back in those days, his ideas were novel. Instead of going to individual places, customers could visit a huge range of stores at one center, including the largest Sears at the time. It became one of the most important shopping centers on the West Coast because of its design, which fueled the local economy.

    Read on…. to learn more about Angelenos’ personal memories with the space.

    Demolition is underway in parts of Valley Plaza, a shopping center in North Hollywood. The razing comes after years of vacancy and a vote to declare six of its dilapidated buildings a public nuisance. But did you know that this was once one of the most important shopping centers on the West Coast?

    Valley Plaza may look like an ordinary strip mall that kicked the can due to the rise of online retail, but it’s actually a shell of what it once was. We’ll explore its past and wax nostalgic about its heyday with tales from Angelenos.

    The novelty of Valley Plaza

    The plaza first opened in 1951 at the corner of Laurel Canyon and Victory boulevards, and with it, the San Fernando Valley began a new era. Post-war, the suburbs were rapidly growing, and this center was right in the middle of all the action.

    The shopping experience we know today — where you can go to one large location and find every store you need — was just starting to take shape. When developer Bob Symonds designed Valley Plaza as an open-air shopping center, it was believed to be one of the first of its kind in the United States, especially one to do so at such a scale.

    His “ultra-modern” plaza got national attention for a few reasons. For one, Symonds is credited as a pioneer in Southern California for recognizing the potential of putting retail hubs next to freeways. Most developers still focused on boulevards. He also put hundreds of parking spots in front of the mall, rather than in the back, which was the normal practice. The “mammoth” shopping area, as it was hailed, was ultimately special because it brought together a huge range of stores.

    I put out a call on social media for people to send me their memories.

    “I remember how excited we were to have real stores near us,” wrote Pat DeCurtins, who lived in North Hollywood between the ‘40s and ‘60s. “We no longer had to order all our clothes from Spiegels Catalogue. We could buy clothes in a REAL store.”

    A black and white archival view of the Sears storefront as half a dozen cars drive through a flooded area on the main street. A Valley Plaza sign and palm strees can be seen in front of the store.
    A flooded intersection next to Valley Plaza in 1962.
    (
    Gordon Dean
    /
    Valley Times Collection/Los Angeles Public Library
    )

    One of those was Sears, which opened its largest location at the time in the U.S. at Valley Plaza (it apparently smelled like popcorn, too). Sears joining was the key to getting other companies onboard. Thrifty also opened a store, signing the longest lease in its history at the time for 25 years.

    Symonds was known for courting big companies and curating the plaza’s stores to blend the essential, mundane and desirable. It had mom-and-pop shops, innovative self-service grocery stores, a theater, an ice skating rink and restaurants like the Hawaiian spot Kel Luau.

    “My little son and I would go to this tropical style restaurant in Valley Plaza mall across from the ice skating arena,” wrote Cassandra Adams. “We would have blue drinks from a glass shell with two long straws. They would put a sugar cube floating on top and light it on fire. It was really fun!”

    Valley Plaza’s downward spiral

    Valley Plaza was a roaring success for a while. It brought in $100 million in annual sales in its first five years and was a big employment boost for the community. The plaza would later expand to cover more than 1 million square feet, ranking it as one of the largest in the nation.

    A black and white archive view of a group of white men in suits surrounding a white woman in a long dark skirt holding a newspaper. They are all smiling and looking at the paper, except for the man on the far right who is looking at the camera and pointing back to a tall Valley Plaza sign behind them.
    A group of store managers pose in front of new Valley Plaza signage with developer Bob Symonds and honorary Valley Plaza mayor Anita Gordon in April 1957.
    (
    Valley Times Collection/Los Angeles Public Library
    )

    It even had the tallest building in the San Fernando Valley with the Los Angeles Federal Savings and Loan Tower, now known as Valley Plaza Tower. Built in 1960, the 165-foot-tall building was one of the first skyscrapers constructed after the repeal of the city of L.A.’s building height limit a few years prior.

    In the decades after, Valley Plaza slowly declined. The area’s demographics shifted, meaning shopping habits changed, and vacant spots in the center weren’t replaced with similar quality stores. The plaza’s future was also hard to plan because it had dozens of owners at one point, ranging from corporations to a 90-year-old widow, according to UCLA research.

    But one event may have sealed its fate: the Northridge Earthquake of 1994. According to an L.A. City Council motion, many of the buildings were red-tagged, and tenants who didn’t have the capital for repairs got evicted.

    Since then, Valley Plaza has been a thorn in L.A.’s side. While some of it has been redeveloped, numerous plans for the center have failed. Owners haven’t fixed the broken-down lots. L.A. leaders even explored the possibility of using eminent domain to take it over.

    It’s not known yet what will happen to Valley Plaza once demolition is completed, but some say it will be sorely missed.

    “So many memories,” wrote Rhonda Theodoulou, who had her ninth birthday there. “It’s been a shame what that area has looked like for many years. I hope it’s developed into a newer thriving area again.”