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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • California lawmakers push Fair Elections Act
    These stickers were at a polling station in Grand Rapids, Mich.
    A new bill would lift the ban on public financing for elections in California

    Topline

    A group of legislators is seeking to lift the ban on public financing for elections in California, a move to counter the ever-increasing amount of money spent on campaigns in the Golden State.

    The details: Right now, only cities governed by their own charter may enact public financing. And five of the state's 121 charter cities, including Los Angeles, Long Beach, San Francisco, Oakland and Berkeley, have done that. Under the proposed ballot measure, the state’s other 361 cities and 58 counties would be able to set up public financing in their jurisdictions. In addition, the state Legislature could establish public financing for statewide offices, the senate and the assembly.

    Supporters: Supporters say the California Fair Elections Act could be a game changer for underfunded candidates facing well-financed opponents and make races more competitive.

    Opponents: Opponents of the bill,  including the California Taxpayers Association, say public money should not be given to people running for office — that the money is better spent on services for the public.

    A group of legislators is seeking to lift the ban on public financing for elections in California, a move to counter the ever-increasing amount of money spent on campaigns in the Golden State.

    Supporters say the California Fair Elections Act could be a game changer for underfunded candidates facing well-financed opponents and make races more competitive.

    “The California Fair Elections Act is all about trying to improve our Democracy and elections,” said Sen. Ben Allen (D-Santa Monica), who co-authored the bill,  in a statement to LAist. “Public financing programs serve as a tool to lessen the power of big money, expand opportunities for more people to run for office, and allow candidates to focus more on voter appeal instead of donor appeal.”

    If passed, SB42, would place the measure on the November 2026 ballot. Sen. Tom Umberg (D-Anaheim) and Sen. Sabrina Cervantes (D-Riverside) are sponsors.

    Common Cause, a group that fights to strengthen democracy, is among the bill’s backers.

    “It’s essentially leveling the playing field,” said Sean McMorris, the group’s transparency, ethics and accountability program manager. “It’s also an attempt to diversify the candidate field, which gives voters more choice.”

    Opponents of the bill,  including the California Taxpayers Association, say public money should not be given to people running for office — that the money is better spent on services for the public.

    Right now, only cities governed by their own charter may enact public financing. And five of the state's 121 charter cities, including Los Angeles, Long Beach, San Francisco, Oakland and Berkeley, have done that. 

    Under the proposed ballot measure, the state’s other 361 cities and 58 counties would be able to set up public financing in their jurisdictions. In addition, the state Legislature could establish public financing for statewide offices, the senate and the assembly.

    The measure would allow a candidate to accept public funds unless the funds are earmarked by a state or local entity for education, transportation, or public safety. 

    The bill would also require candidates to abide by expenditure limits and prohibit public funds from being used to pay legal defense fees, fines or to repay personal loans to their campaign.

    Ways to publicly finance campaigns

    There are a variety of public campaign financing schemes where governments use taxpayer money to fund candidates who agree to limit their spending.

    In Los Angeles, candidates for City Council who agree to spending limits must first raise $5 each from 100 residents in their respective districts and about $77,000 from residents anywhere in the city before they qualify for matching funds. 

    In the last election cycle, the maximum matching funds for the primary and general elections combined was $425,000. The city doled out $3.8 million in matching funds.

    Trent Lange of the California Clean Money Campaign, which backs the bill, said public financing has helped diversify the L.A. City Council, which has gone from one woman member a decade ago to eight now.

    “All of them were elected using public funds that helped them get their message out and run and compete,” Lange told LAist.

    In the 2022 L.A. mayor’s race, billionaire Rick Caruso spent more than $100 million compared to Mayor Karen Bass’ roughly $10 million. But Bass benefitted from $2.3 million in matching funds. 

    Caruso rejected spending limits, which prohibited him from receiving matching funds.

    In Oakland, voters have approved a voucher program. Under the program, the city will disperse $100 in so-called Democracy Dollar vouchers to eligible residents who can then give the money to the candidate of their choice. Eligible residents must be 18-years-old, an Oakland resident and a U.S. resident or green card holder.

    The program, which puts free cash in the hands of voters to spend on campaigns, launches in 2026.

    A group called Los Angeles for Democracy Vouchers is lobbying L.A. to institute democracy vouchers.

    Previous efforts have failed

    Lange said two other efforts to overturn the statewide ban on public financing failed in 2006 and 2010.

    That was before the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2010 landmark Citizens United decision, which prohibited restrictions on expenditures in politics.

    “That decision really, really exploded the amount of money spent in politics and really raised the understanding that voters have about the problems of big money in politics,” Lange said. 

    Opponents of public financing of elections argue it diverts public money from more pressing needs. Republicans have generally opposed using taxpayer dollars to finance political campaigns. 

    “People when they pay taxes want to pay for schools, fire departments, libraries, roads, that sort of thing,” David Kline of the California Taxpayers Association said. “The last thing they want to pay for is a negative political ad that is going to hit them on the radio or T.V. during election season.” 

    He noted someone you disagree with is going to end up getting your tax dollars under public financing of campaigns.

    UCLA Law Professor Rick Hasen, director of the school’s Safeguarding Democracy Project, called public financing of elections “potentially democratizing.”

    “Some of the systems have allowed for more non-traditional candidates to run - more women and racial minorities for example,” he said. 

    But some worry that empowering small dollar donors with matching funds can fuel more extreme candidates, Hasen said, noting those candidates can attract large numbers of small donors.

    “If you give matching funds, you might be fueling that tendency to reward flashier or more extreme candidates,” he said.

    Hasen noted public financing does nothing to prevent exorbitant spending by outside groups like labor unions, corporations and wealthy individuals on campaigns.

    Nonetheless, Dora Rose, of the League of Women Voters, said public financing has been a top priority of the organization.

    “Public financing really helps engage unrepresented communities in the political process and it makes our democracy ultimately much stronger,” she said.

    Incumbents may balk

    It's far from clear that the Democrat dominated state Legislature will place the measure on the ballot. 

    Politicians elected under one system tend to like that system, said Fredric Woocher, an attorney and recognized expert on campaign finance law.

    “Obviously, under the current system it's easier to raise funds as an incumbent than it is as a challenger,” he told LAist.

    Woocher said, progressive candidates in Los Angeles who otherwise may have been underfunded have benefitted from public financing.

    “We’ve seen a number of these progressive candidates compete in elections and win in races where they probably wouldn’t have been able to without public financing,” he said.

    Woocher pointed to the victory of progressive candidate Zohran Mamdani in New York’s Democratic primary for mayor as another example of matching funds helping a progressive candidate.

    Umberg, one of the sponsors of the bill, said if the Legislature places the measure on the ballot and voters approve it, voters in individual cities would still need to approve public financing. “Its not mandatory,” he said.

    “The playing field is never going to be completely level but it is a step toward leveling the playing field where the average Joe or Jane has a more profound voice than they do today,” Umberg said.

    The bill is currently being held in the Assembly Appropriations Committee. A vote is expected on Aug. 29.

    If approved, it would move to the full Assembly.

  • Activists are using whistles during ICE raids
    A box of hundreds of blue, green and grey whistles are depicted. They have a phone number on one side and the words "Report ICE" on the other. They are a few hundred in a box stacked up against each other.
    A box of the whistles that will be handed out and assembled in the whistle kits.

    Topline:

    Community volunteers say one of the first lesson they learned during ICE raids is to make as much noise as possible.

    Why now: A workshop is being organized today in Downtown L.A. by the Los Angeles chapter of Democratic Socialists of America to show people why the humble whistle is such a powerful tool. Some 300 whistle kits will be assembled at the inaugural workshop, which is at capacity.

    Read on ... to learn more about the event.

    Community volunteers say one of the first lesson they learned during ICE raids is to make as much noise as possible.

    When they see people being detained by ICE, they use their voices, megaphones and, most effectively, whistles to signal danger.

    One workshop being held in Downtown L.A. today will teach people how to use this tool.

    Make some noise

    Rain Skau is an organizer with the L.A. chapter of Democratic Socialists of America, he said the idea to hand out whistles came from community organizers in Chicago where they’ve been using them to alert neighborhoods of ICE presence.

    Skau said his group had already been doing outreach to businesses across the city on how to better protect their workers from immigration raids, but they wanted to do more.

    They plan to give out these kits in their future outreach.

    “This wasn't something that we were doing previously. We want to make sure that people have whistles and they have the hotline information,” said Skau.

    The whistles are 3D printed and come with a phone number to advocacy group Unión del Barrio’s community hotline to report ICE sightings and those who might have been detained.

    Amplify

    Skau says there are two specific whistle patterns — one to alert people if ICE is nearby. The other to signify when someone is being detained.

    In that event whistle-blowers are also instructed to “form a crowd, stay loud, and stay nonviolent.” 

    But Skau said they’ve mostly been telling people to whistle as loud as possible, no matter the pattern, to raise awareness.

    Jack Bohlka organizes Home Depot Patrols for DSA-LA, he said the whistles are tiny but mighty.

    A man in a camouflage sweatshirt and blue jeans stands next to a man in a cargo vest with a stroller. He stands next to a man in black sunglasses and a black shirt who holds a sign that says "Stop Employees Only". He stands next to a man in sunglasses, wearing a green jacket, plaid shirt and red undershirt. A woman stands next to him in a black sweatshirt and holds a white tote bag. They pose for a picture together.
    Jack Bohlka (center) poses with other members of DSA-LA during a recent "Know Your Rights" business walk.
    (
    Jack Bohlka
    /
    Jack Bohlka
    )

    “It's a whole lot better than trying to yell. It's instantly recognizable, they're very effective,” Bohlka said.

    An orange whistle sits on a pepper colored table it has an orange lanyard attached to it.
    Jack Bohlka's personal whistle he uses for Home Depot patrols.
    (
    Jack Bohlka
    /
    Jack Bohlka
    )

    Spreading the sound

    Some 300 people signed up for today's workshop, more than Skau and Bohlka anticipated. They had to end RSVPs early to keep attendance manageable. But Skau says more workshops are in the works (check their Instagram for new events).

    Participants today will assemble and take home whistle kits with instructions on how to use them, what to note if someone is being detained, and who to call during a raid.

    DSA-LA said lately immigration enforcement agents have changed their tactics, targeting specific areas, striking quickly and leaving. It’s part of why Skau thinks getting whistle kits to as many people as possible is critical.

    “So that if you just happen to be walking down the street," Skau said. "And you see something happening right in front of you, you're not just standing there shocked and aghast, and unsure of how to respond."

  • Sponsored message
  • Volunteer group is building public seating
    A shot of the exterior to the West Los Angeles Municipal Building with a stone sign in the foreground and a wooden bench in the background.
    Jonathan Hale of People's Vision Zero built benches that he placed around Sawtelle.

    Topline:

    An L.A. group that has been painting DIY crosswalks is now planning to build and place benches across the city to make public spaces more user-friendly.

    The backstory: People's Vision Zero led by Sawtelle resident Jonathan Hale is holding a bench building event next weekend that's attracted woodworkers and artists.

    National conversation: Unpermitted benches are showing up in cities across the country as residents take street improvements into their own hands.

    What's next: The L.A. bench build event is already at capacity but Hale said he anticipates planning more events.

    In Los Angeles, volunteers have been painting their own crosswalks, reasoning that safer streets shouldn’t be held up by red tape.

    Now, a group of them is channeling that same DIY energy to another everyday need: public seating.

    “We just want to build a bunch of benches and hopefully people have some cool places to sit,” said Jonathan Hale, founder of People’s Vision Zero.

    Hale, a Sawtelle resident and UCLA law school student, is leading a session next weekend to build public benches. The plan is to bypass the permitting process , set out the seats and create more third spaces.

    “There’s not that many places where you can go that aren’t work or home,” Hale said. “Benches, parks [and] open, inviting public spaces are a way that we can rebuild that in L.A.”

    For Hale, the gathering is just as important as the finished product.

    “The point of the labor is that we form stronger bonds with our neighbors and we have a healthy discussion about the use of public space," he said.

    A growing bench movement

    That conversation is part of a larger one across the country, where residents are making small but impactful changes to improve public space — from pop-up bike lanes to guerrilla gardens in what's described as "tactical urbanism."

    Unpermitted public benches have been popping up in cities from Chattanooga, Tenn. to Kansas City, Mo. and San Francisco.

    Over the last couple years, the San Francisco Bay Area Bench Collective has installed more than 100 benches at bus stops that draw the most riders.

    “Bus riders deserve to be treated with respect and to have a place to rest as they wait for the bus,” said Mingwei Samuel, an Oakland-based programmer who founded the group.

    Samuel, who learned woodworking from his father, built and installed his first public bench in San Francisco in 2023.

    “It’s sort of a revolt against the trend of hostile architecture,” he said. “Cities trying to remove benches just because they don’t want people to gather in public spaces.”

    The Bay Area collective is seeing real change. More than 100 benches now dot the region, from Berkeley to Petaluma.

    Last year, the city of Richmond approved a permit program allowing residents to add their own benches.  

    A person is lying in a blue hammock that’s tied to a chain-link fence. They are giving a thumbs-up gesture. In the background, two people are playing tennis on a court
    Sawtelle resident Johnathan Hale is expanding the work of People's Vision Zero to include bench building.
    (
    Dañiel Martinez
    /
    LAist
    )

    From crosswalks to benches 

    Meanwhile in Los Angeles, Hale’s group had already been gaining traction with its crosswalk projects.

    Volunteers with People’s Vision Zero last year painted more than a dozen DIY crosswalks, taking a page from another volunteer group The Crosswalk Collective.

    Most of the crosswalks have been left intact by the city. But in December, while volunteers were striping a street in Westwood, Hale was arrested and cited in an incident that went viral on social media.

    Afterward, Hale met with the office of Mayor Karen Bass. In a statement to LAist, the mayor’s office said Bass was once a former community activist like Hale and wants to “explore solutions that are innovative and will expedite crosswalk installations across Los Angeles.”

    The office did not respond to follow-up questions about what those solutions may look like or when they would be rolled out.

    For now, Hale said he’s taking a hiatus from painting crosswalks “in the interest of working with them in good faith.”

    That’s opened the door for more bench projects. Hale did a test run of sorts last summer in Sawtelle.

    Drawing from skills learned as an Eagle Scout, he built four benches that he placed at the West Los Angeles Civic Center and Stoner Park, using the same design as those made by the Bay Area collective. All but one of the benches at the civic center are still there.

    “When I’m just walking along and there’s people sitting on my bench, and they don’t even know that I built it, I get to feel like Batman or something,” Hale said. “It’s my little secret.”

    Now he’s ready to scale up – and artists and woodworkers are answering the call. So many people have RSVP’d to the upcoming bench build next weekend that capacity has already been reached. Hale anticipates hosting more events.

    He says Los Angeles should become a national leader in grassroots urban problem-solving or — as he puts it — “getting stuff done.”

  • Here's all the details
    A crowd watches drummers and dancers perform at the Sunday African Marketplace & Drum Circle in Leimert Park.
    A crowd watches drummers and dancers perform at the Sunday African Marketplace & Drum Circle in Leimert Park.
    Topline:
    The Los Angeles Official Martin Luther King Day Parade will take Monday in South L.A. So, whether you’re attending the parade or watching it on TV, here’s everything you need to know about Monday’s parade.

    The details: The procession will begin at 10 a.m., with ABC7 set to begin a broadcast at 11 a.m. Organizers say the best place to catch the parade in person is the intersection of Crenshaw Boulevard and Martin Luther King Jr. King Boulevard, or “camera corner,” where the parade will culminate and organizers are planning a live preshow. Bleacher seats, though, will be limited.

    Getting there: The Metro K Line runs directly to the intersection, dropping people off at the Martin Luther King Jr. Metro station. Only residents will be allowed to drive into the band of neighborhoods directly along the length of the parade route. That includes the blocks from 39th Street to 42nd Street along King Boulevard and the blocks between McClung Drive and Victoria Avenue along the Crenshaw closure.

    Read on . . . for more information about street closures and the annual MLK Freedom Festival.

    In just four days, the Los Angeles Official Martin Luther King Day Parade will take over South L.A.

    The LA Local recently spoke with Sabra Wady, the parade’s lead organizer, who said this year’s parade will look much the same as recent years.

    So, whether you’re attending the parade or watching it on TV, here’s everything you need to know about Monday’s parade:

    The procession will begin at 10 a.m., with ABC7 set to begin a broadcast at 11 a.m.

    What time does the parade start? How can I watch? Is anything happening after?

    Wady said the best place to catch the parade in person is the intersection of Crenshaw Boulevard and Martin Luther King Jr. King Boulevard, or “camera corner,” where the parade will culminate and organizers are planning a live preshow. Bleacher seats, though, will be limited.

    The Metro K Line runs directly to the intersection, dropping people off at the Martin Luther King Jr. Metro station.

    Onlookers can also post up along the parade route with folding chairs and other self-arranged seating, Wady said.

    The parade broadcast will run until 1 p.m., but Wady said the procession is expected to keep going until mid-afternoon.

    “After the cameras stop rolling, it’s the people’s parade,” Wady said.

    LA City Council President Marqueece Harris-Dawson and Councilmembers Curren Price and Heather Hutt – who represent council districts 8, 9 and 10, respectively — will organize the annual MLK Freedom Festival in the Leimert Park Plaza from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

    What route will the parade take?

    The route will remain the same, running down King Boulevard from Western Avenue to Crenshaw Boulevard before turning south down Crenshaw and heading to Leimert Park. Much of the route will be closed to traffic overnight before the parade.

    More than 150 groups, including bands, floats, horseback riders and marchers, will trek down the boulevard. Wady said organizers cut off new sign-ups weeks ago in order to keep the parade manageable.

    What will road closures look like?

    Colin Sweeney, a spokesperson for the LA Department of Transportation, said in an email that the department will close off traffic down the main parade route overnight.

    Here are the roads that will be closed to all vehicles for the duration of the parade and festival.

    • King Boulevard from Vermont Avenue to Crenshaw Boulevard 
    • Crenshaw Boulevard from King Boulevard to 48th Street
    • Leimert Boulevard from 8th Avenue to Leimert Park 
    • Degnan Avenue between 43rd Street and Leimert Park

    Sweeney said only residents will be allowed to drive into the band of neighborhoods directly along the length of the parade route. That includes the blocks from 39th Street to 42nd Street along King Boulevard and the blocks between McClung Drive and Victoria Avenue along the Crenshaw closure.

    The transportation department will allow traffic to cross the parade route at major intersections — including Western Avenue, Arlington Avenue and Stocker Street — but those crossings will be shut down at 10 a.m. All closed roads will stay blocked off until the parade and festival wrap up and transportation officials determine crowds have sufficiently dispersed, Sweeney said.

    Wady said the parade is expected to peter out around mid-afternoon. The festival at Leimert Park Plaza is scheduled to end at 5 p.m.

    Vehicles parked in the parade assembly area, parade route and disbanding area will be subject to impound or tickets, Sweeney wrote.

  • Shoot days up at end of 2025 but down from 2024
    A man with a professional camera for film and TV production sits on a cart that is situated on top of a metal track and films a scene. Other crew members holding microphones, cameras and other production equipment look on in the background.
    A film crew works on the set of author Michael Connelly's "Bosch," shooting in the San Fernando Valley. On-location film shoots in the last three months of 2025 rose 5.6% but were 16.1% lower overall during the year than in 2024.

    Topline:

    On-location filming in L-A increased over the last three months of 2025 but still lagged behind where it was at the end of 2024, according to an end-of-year report from Film L.A., the official filming office for the city and county.

    By the numbers: Film and television shoot days total 4,625 in the final three months of 2025, up 5.1 percent in that timeframe. But overall last year there were 19,694 shoot days, which is down 16.1 percent from 2024's total of 23.480.

    Why it matters: Production in Los Angeles has been slow to rebound since the COVID-19 pandemic and the Hollywood writers and actors strikes in 2023. There is also increased competition from other states that offer appealing film tax credits and other incentives for productions that decide to take their shoot outside of California. This summer, Governor Gavin Newsom expanded California's Film and TV Tax Credit Program in an effort to lure productions back to the Golden State.

    What's next: Film L.A.'s Phil Sokoloski says that many of the productions approved under the expanded tax credit program are just now getting underway, and he hopes the industry will start to see the effects of not only the tax incentive expansion in 2026, but also L.A. Mayor Karen Bass' directives to streamline the permitting and shooting process in the city.

    Topline:

    On-location filming in L.A. increased over the last three months of 2025 but still lagged behind where it was at the end of 2024, according to an end-of-year report from Film L.A., the official filming office for the city and county.

    By the numbers: Film and television shoot days totaled 4,625 in the final three months of 2025, up 5.1% in that timeframe. But overall last year, there were 19,694 shoot days, which is down 16.1% from 2024's total of 23.480.

    Why it matters: Production in Los Angeles has been slow to rebound since the COVID-19 pandemic and the Hollywood writers and actors strikes in 2023. There is also increased competition from other states that offer appealing film tax credits and other incentives for productions that decide to take their shoot outside of California. This summer, Gov. Gavin Newsom expanded California's Film and TV Tax Credit Program in an effort to lure productions back to the Golden State.

    What's next: Film L.A.'s Phil Sokoloski says that many of the productions approved under the expanded tax credit program are just now getting underway, and he hopes the industry will start to see the effects of not only the tax incentive expansion in 2026, but also L.A. Mayor Karen Bass' directives to streamline the permitting and shooting process in the city.