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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • Metro and street safety advocates battle over HLA
    A birds-eye digital rendering of Vermont Avenue showing that the dedicated bus lanes that L.A. Metro has proposed run along the side of the street. In the rendering, there are still two lanes for traffic each direction and turning lanes in the center.
    A digital rendering of the proposed Vermont Avenue corridor bus project which would includes dedicated bus lanes on both sides of the street.

    Topline:

    A proposed bus lane on Vermont Avenue has become a flashpoint between Metro and street safety advocates, who say its design ignores additional upgrades city voters overwhelmingly approved last year when they passed Measure HLA.

    What’s the controversy: The design of the project doesn’t include bike lanes that Measure HLA requires along Vermont Avenue. Metro says it doesn’t need to comply with the L.A. city-voter-approved initiative because Metro is a county-level agency.

    Why it matters: The resolution to this matter could set a precedent for how the county transportation agency complies— or doesn’t comply — with the ordinance that L.A. city voters overwhelmingly approved last year.

    Read on ... for reaction from mobility advocates and elected leaders.

    Traveling up and down Vermont Avenue is anything but relaxing. It’s congested and unsafe: The street sees one of the highest rates of pedestrian and cyclist deaths and serious injuries in Los Angeles.

    On Thursday, the L.A. Metro Board is set to move forward on a bus transit project that it hopes will make Vermont Avenue a more efficient and safer passageway.

    But the project has become a flashpoint between the countywide transportation agency and street safety advocates, who say the project ignores additional upgrades that city voters overwhelmingly approved last year when they passed Measure HLA.

    About the project

    The Vermont Transit Corridor project will add dedicated side-running bus lanes and 13 stations along a more than 12-mile-long stretch of the busy corridor. It’s slated to be up and running by the 2028 summer Olympic and Paralympic Games.

    The project will also include infrastructure upgrades that help with pedestrian accessibility and decrease the distance people have to walk to get to bus stops.

    Thursday’s vote is for the Metro Board to approve the route and configuration of the project, which it is expected to do.

    Alfonso Directo Jr., the advocacy director of ACT-LA, which advocated for the bus project, said existing transit service on the corridor is “pretty poor.”

    So why is it controversial? 

    The project’s design is controversial because of what it doesn’t include: bike lanes.

    Transportation safety advocates say adding bike lanes is critical to establishing a more multimodal city as required by Measure HLA and minimizing deadly or serious collisions along the corridor.

    Why it matters

    The project could be consequential for a question that has lingered since city voters approved Measure HLA last year: Does Metro, a countywide agency, have to follow the rules of the city-level initiative?

    Metro says it isn’t required to install the bike lanes as part of Measure HLA because the ordinance only applies to projects that the city — rather than a non-city agency — undertakes.

    Meanwhile, Streets for All, the group that spearheaded Measure HLA, sent a letter Tuesday to Metro Chief Executive Stephanie Wiggins requesting the vote be delayed a month to “provide room for dialogue” about adding the bike lanes to Metro’s project design.

    “ What we don't want is we don't want to establish a precedent where Metro can go do whatever they want on city of L.A. streets and ignore HLA,” Michael Schneider, the chief executive and founder of Streets for All, told LAist.

    A quick refresher on HLA 

    In 2015, the City Council adopted Mobility Plan 2035, which identified networks of streets to improve with protected bike lanes, pedestrian signal improvements, bus lanes and other enhancements.

    Seven years later, frustrated with a lack of progress on the plan, Streets for All began campaigning for Healthy Streets L.A., or Measure HLA.

    The initiative that voters overwhelmingly approved last year requires the city to implement Mobility Plan upgrades when it repaves at least one-eighth of a mile of a street specified in one of the networks.

    The Mobility Plan calls for bike lanes along the same stretch of Vermont Avenue that Metro is working on. It also specifies transit and pedestrian improvements are due for the road, but those are mostly covered by the project’s current design.

    How to get involved

    • The March 27 Metro Board meeting starts at 10 a.m.
    • It will be livestreamed here.
    • You can also attend in person on the third floor of Metro headquarters at One Gateway Plaza in Los Angeles.

    More on the disagreement

    The question of how Metro projects would or wouldn’t be affected by Measure HLA has been simmering for months.

    It was brought up in a letter that Streets for All sent to Metro and city officials in September about the same bus project, and the L.A. city attorney has also said in the past that the ordinance doesn’t apply to Metro projects.

    The issue most recently resurfaced March 19, after the L.A. City Council approved a plan to implement Measure HLA that included a directive requesting city staff to report back on how to require Metro and other third parties to comply with the voter-approved initiative “without any additional cost to the City.”

    That directive prompted a letter that a lawyer representing Metro sent to L.A. City Council President Marqueece Harris-Dawson, saying the transportation agency has authority over the public rights of way, Measure HLA as written applies only to city-run projects and that the city would be responsible for paying for any work “incidental to a Metro project.”

    In the letter, the lawyer wrote that Metro would pursue legal action if it’s forced to comply with Measure HLA.

    Schneider said the argument isn’t as simple as saying Metro doesn’t have to comply with Measure HLA because it isn’t a city entity.

    “The city permits Metro’s work,” Schneider said. “They contribute financially to Metro’s work. City planners sign off on Metro’s work, so it’s sort of a technicality who’s leading the project.”

    Schneider also said public funds would be wasted if the bike and bus lanes don’t go in at the same time.

    The 'Master Cooperative Agreement'

    How Metro and the city work together is outlined in a nearly 200-page document known as the Master Cooperative Agreement.

    Metro’s position, according to the letter its lawyer sent last week, is that it would be a violation of the agreement to make the transportation agency comply with Measure HLA.

    Schneider said he believes the Master Cooperative Agreement is actually on his side — he says the document calls for Metro projects to be done in accordance with applicable law, including initiatives and referendums — initiatives such as Measure HLA, Schneider noted.

    “We don’t see how there’s a world where HLA doesn’t apply to Metro projects that are being done in the city,” he said.

    In a statement to LAist, Metro said it’s “supportive of the goals & objectives of Measure HLA” and will continue to work with the city of L.A. and other jurisdictions within the county to improve transit and make streets safer.

    “However, HLA does not apply to Metro projects,” the statement added.

    What happens next

    For now, the item concerning the Vermont Avenue project is on the consent calendar for the Metro Board meeting on Thursday. That means it’s considered non-controversial and will likely pass in one swift motion with other similar items — unless a board member calls for a larger discussion.

    Schneider said Streets for All is working to broker a deal with the city and Metro to add bike lanes to the project without having the issue escalate to the courts.

    “ Everybody would lose if a lawsuit is filed and then a judge issues an injunction, saying, ‘You can't complete this project until we sort this out,’" Schneider said, adding that he believes the bus lanes are “sorely needed.”

    Have city or county officials chimed in?

    The L.A. city attorney has repeatedly asserted Measure HLA doesn’t apply to Metro projects, both in letters to Streets for All and in committee meetings about the ordinance.

    It’s unclear where other city and county officials stand on HLA’s applicability to Metro projects.

    Councilmember Heather Hutt chairs the council’s transportation committee and put forward the directive that prompted Metro’s letter last week.

    “Our office looks forward to continue working with Metro to ensure Measure HLA is fully implemented,” Devyn Bakewell, the councilmember’s director of communications, said in a statement.

    Councilmember Hugo Soto-Martinez told LAist the Vermont Avenue bus project could be "transformational."

    LAist has reached out to other City Council members who supported Measure HLA, as well as Metro Board members, but did not immediately get a response.

  • Photos from DTLA and Westwood
    People wave flags against the backdrop of a clear blue sky and palm trees.
    A man raises the historical Iranian Lion and Sun flag during a rally in the Westwood neighborhood on Saturday.

    Topline:

    Angelenos took to the streets of downtown Los Angeles and Westwood on Saturday in response to the US-Israeli military strikes in Iran.

    Details: Local demonstrations protesting U.S. intervention took place outside City Hall in downtown Los Angeles, as well as in Ventura and Orange counties. In Westwood, Iranian Americans gathered to celebrate the strikes. More demonstrations are planned on today and tomorrow.

    Read on to see photos from Saturday's demonstrations.

    Angelenos took to the streets of downtown Los Angeles and Westwood on Saturday in response to the US-Israeli military strikes in Iran.

    A coalition of organizations, including the National Iranian American Council, the ANSWER coalition and 50501, held protests nationwide in reaction.

    Local demonstrations took place outside City Hall in downtown Los Angeles, as well as in Ventura and Orange counties.

    In Westwood, Iranian Americans gathered to celebrate the strikes. More demonstrations are planned on today and tomorrow.

    Here are photos from yesterday.

    Westwood

    A group of people holding Iranian flags on a city street.
    Hundreds rally seeking regime change in Iran in the Westwood neighborhood on Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026 in Los Angeles, Calif. The rally was organized after works spread that the US and Israel had bombed Iran over night, local time, killing Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei among others.
    (
    Genaro Molina
    /
    /Los Angeles Times via Getty Image
    )
    A group of people holding Iranian flags and a busy street intersection.
    Los Angeles, Calif., United States - February 28: Hundreds rally waving the historical Iranian Lion and Sun and American flags the in the Westwood neighborhood on Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026 in Los Angeles, Calif. The rally was organized after works spread that the US and Israel had bombed Iran over night, local time.(Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
    (
    Genaro Molina
    /
    Los Angeles Times
    )
    Group of people marching with Iranian flags and large banner reading 'CHANGE' featuring the Iranian flag
    Hundreds rally seeking regime change in Iran in the Westwood neighborhood on Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026 in Los Angeles, Calif. The rally was organized after works spread that the US and Israel had bombed Iran over night, local time, killing Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei among others.
    (
    Genaro Molina
    /
    Los Angeles Times via Getty Image
    )
    Group of people holding large Iranian flag and protest signs on a city street
    A man walks under the colors if Iran while joining hundreds in a rally seeking regime change in Iran in the Westwood neighborhood of Los Angeles, Calif.. on Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026. The rally was organized after works spread that the US and Israel had bombed Iran over night, local time, killing Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei among others.
    (
    Genaro Molina
    /
    Los Angeles Times via Getty Image
    )

    Downtown Los Angeles

    A person holding a protest sign that reads, "Drop the files. Not the bombs."
    A protester holds a poster reading "drop the files not the bombs" during a demonstration against the war in Iran in front of City Hall in Los Angeles, California, on February 28, 2026.
    (
    Etienne Laurent
    /
    AFP via Getty Images
    )
    A crowd gathered in front of a park in a protest. They hold up a sign that reads, "No War, No Iran"
    A crowd gathered at Los Angeles City Hall to protest against United States and Israel bombing Iran on Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026 in Los Angeles, Calif. on Feb. 28, 2026. (Photo by Myung J. Chun/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
    (
    Myung J. Chun
    /
    Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
    )
    A woman with a scarf wrapped around her head holds up a photo of Iran Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
    A protester holds a portrait of Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and a flag of Iran during a demonstration against the war in Iran in front of City Hall in Los Angeles, California, on February 28, 2026.
    (
    Etienne Laurent
    /
    AFP via Getty Images
    )
    Protest signs that read "No New US War in the Middle East."
    Protesters holds placards reading "no new US war in the Middle East" during a demonstration against the war in Iran in front of City Hall in Los Angeles, California, on February 28, 2026.
    (
    Etienne Laurent
    /
    AFP via Getty Images
    )
    A man holds a sign that says "War Pig" with a photo of President Trump with pig snout and ears.
    A man holds a sign at Los Angeles City Hall to protest against United States and Israel bombing Iran on Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026 in Los Angeles, Calif. on Feb. 28, 2026. (Photo by Myung J. Chun/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
    (
    Myung J. Chun
    /
    Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
    )

  • Sponsored message
  • Hidden in...a utility box
    As dusk falls, a white woman in white overalls stands beside a model of an open utility box on a sidewalk, revealing an interior with red velvet walls, gold-framed artwork.
    L.A. street artist S.C. Mero stands next to her latest installation in the Arts District, a utility box theater.

    Topline:

    Utility boxes are a popular canvas for public art, but an Los Angeles street artist has taken the idea further — transforming one into a miniature theater.

    Why now: Since S.C. Mero installed the box theater just a few weeks ago, dozens of performers have already reached out and begun using the space, ranging from poets to musicians and clowns.

    The backstory: Mero often transforms overlooked street fixtures into pieces about urban life. A previous installation at the same corner — an oversized mailbox symbolizing the elusiveness of homeownership — stood for about five years.

    Walk through cities around the world and it's easy to spot the trend: utility boxes painted and transformed into public art to spiff up neighborhoods.

    In downtown Los Angeles, street artist S.C. Mero has taken the idea of the utility box as art in a different direction with one she’s installed in the Arts District.

    “Would you like me to open it up and you can see?” she asked on a recent morning.

    At first glance, it looks like an ordinary electrical cabinet — gray and about the size of a refrigerator. But instead of the usual fire-resistant metal, this one is made of wood with a faux concrete base.

    A gray utility box stands closed on a sidewalk near a palm tree and parked cars.
    The box theater incognito.
    (
    Courtesy of S.C. Mero
    )

    She spins two combination locks and pulls open the door.

    A hidden theater

    Inside, instead of a tangle of cables and cords, crushed red velvet covers the walls from top to bottom.

    A gilded clock and gold-framed pictures of two other electrical boxes (“possibly its mother, and its great-grandfather”) adorn the tiny interior, inspired by one of downtown’s oldest movie palaces, the Los Angeles Theatre.

    “The first time I went into that theater, the feeling that I had, I wanted people to have a similar feeling when they opened this up,” she said.

    Like the theater, the box is meant to bring audiences together. Mero invites performers to step inside and since its installation a few weeks ago, some 30 poets, magicians, puppeteers and clowns have reached out about using the space.

    Many are female artists.

    “Maybe it's because of the scale of it, they feel like they can actually have a chance to get inside,” Mero said.

    A tradition of unexpected art

    The box theater sits across the street from the historic American Hotel, an early hub for artists in the neighborhood.

    Jesse Easter, the hotel’s night manager, has a front-row seat to the box theater performances.

    “It was the seminal message of the Arts District is still alive,” he says.

    Easter first arrived in the neighborhood in the 1980s, a blues and rock musician who also professionally installed art.

    He said the Arts District has long been known for unconventional public art. Famously in 1982, artist Dustin Shuler pinned a Cessna airplane to the side of the American Hotel with a 20-foot-long nail.

    “I was one of the people that was in the hotel that saw the room that the nail came down into, went through the brick wall, into the floor and stopped,” Easter recalls.

    Easter says Mero’s installations boldly continue that tradition of guerilla street art in the neighborhood.

    After graduating from USC in 2011, she started to make sculptural works with overlooked street fixtures, exploring issues such as addiction and homelessness.

    An oversized wooden mailbox sculpture labeled “U.S. Mail” stands on a tall post along a sidewalk.
    Before the box theater, there was a giant mailbox.
    (
    Courtesy of S.C. Mero
    )

    Before the theater box, Mero installed an oversized mailbox at the same corner towering over passersby, symbolizing a housing market that remains out of reach for many Angelenos.

    Elsewhere in the Arts District, she has installed a 13-foot-tall parking meter sculpture, commentary on the overwhelming nature of parking in the city.

    Realizing a dream 

    The box theater is perhaps the piece that has invited the most participation.

    A man in a black jacket sits on an open utility box, tuning a guitar in front of the red velvet-lined interior beneath a lit “Electrical Box Theatre” sign.
    Jesse Easter, a musician and night manager at the American Hotel, prepares to perform at the box theater.
    (
    Courtesy of S.C. Mero
    )

    Last week, Mero asked Easter and other local artists to perform there. He played a blues song he wrote more than 40 years ago when he first moved to the Arts District.

    “It was sunset and I was thinking, this kind of is the bookend,” he said.

    Other participants performed spoken word poetry and played saxophone.

    One performer, Mike Cuevas, discovered the theater by accident.

    An Uber driver, Cuevas was waiting for his next delivery order by the box theater as it was being prepped ahead of the night’s performance.

    Mero recalls him getting out of his car to look at what she was doing.

    “He's like, what's going on here? This looks so cool,” Mero said. “He said as he's driving throughout the city, in between his rides, he writes poetry.”

    Cuevas, who goes by the pen name Octane 543(12), left to make a delivery in East L.A., but he said “something in his heart” told him to return that evening.

    After watching others perform, he stepped up to the box and read his poetry in public for the first time, a piece about Latino pride.

    A man gestures while looking at a phone by an open utility box theater with red velvet walls, as two saxophones rest on stands nearby at night.
    Mike Cuevas, aka Mike Octane 543-12, publicly reads his poetry for the first time.
    (
    Courtesy of S.C. Mero
    )

    “Another generation will pass through,” he recited. “And they'll understand why we honor with proud delight, the continuous fight for the history of our brothers and sisters.”

    Cuevas didn’t know Mero by name or anything about her work, but thanks her for giving him a venue.

    “I just felt something beautiful with her art,” Cuevas said. “It's time for me to start expressing myself. She inspired me to do exactly what she's doing but through poetry.”

    He now plans to read again at an open mic in downtown L.A. next week.

    An overture to look inside

    Mero says the project has spoken to her personally, too. Growing up in Minnesota, she loved art as a child but later focused on playing lacrosse and hockey. At USC, she studied public relations.

    “Once I started getting so into art, everyone was kind of shocked,” Mero said. “That's why I really want to encourage people to go inside themselves and see what's there, because you never know.”

    Mero is hoping for a long run for the box theater. The mailbox installation before it stayed up for five years, only toppled, she heard, after skateboarders accidentally ran into it.

    In the meantime, the small theater sits quietly on the sidewalk waiting for its next performer, its exterior starting to collect graffiti like any other utility box.

  • Here's what to know about the Tuesday event
    The City of Los Angeles is seen from  a distance at night. A "blood moon" can be seen in the night sky. Palm trees are in the foreground of the picture. In the background city lights, most prominently from skyscrapers in Downtown Los Angeles can be seen.
    A Super Blue Blood Moon hovers over Los Angeles in 2018.

    Topline:

    A total lunar eclipse is happening this Tuesday. That's when the earth will move directly between the sun and moon, casting a “blood” red color onto the moon.

    What: It's going to be the first lunar eclipse of the year. The process is slated to start around midnight and last until dawn on Tuesday. It’s called the “Blood Moon” because of the red hue the earth’s atmosphere refracts onto the lunar surface as light from the sun passes through it.

    When: Although the eclipse begins around midnight, it won’t reach totality until 3:04 a.m., at which point it will be visible to the naked eye for about an hour. All of Southern California should be able to see it.

    How else can I watch: The Griffith Observatory will be hosting a live virtual broadcast of the celestial event from midnight to dawn.

    What's next: This isn’t the only lunar eclipse happening this year, but it is the only “total eclipse,” according to NASA. Another one is set to occur in August, but it will only be partially visible in North America. A solar eclipse will occur Aug. 12.

  • Where to spot them near LA
    A large blue-gray colored whale pokes its head out of the water with a bright blue sky above.
    An adult gray whale and its calf approach tourists.

    Topline:

    With warm — relative to Alaska — spring waters, migratory rest-stops and great feeding grounds, Los Angeles County’s coast is considered part of the “Blue Highway,” a crucial whale migration corridor and one of the best places to spot the gentle giants.

    What might you see? Cetacean species you may spot in our waters include humpback whales, orcas, blue whales and dolphins. Your best chance, however, is spotting a gray whale. As school-bus-sized gray whales migrate back and forth between Alaska and Baja, they consistently hug LA’s coastline.

    Read on ... for tips on where and how to spot whales near you.

    It’s whale watching season, which always makes me think of the novel Moby-Dick.

    In the book, Captain Ahab chased a whale for vengeance. I recently chased whales off the coast of Los Angeles, but in my case, it was in pursuit of the beauty and majesty of the natural world.

    With warm — relative to Alaska — spring waters, migratory rest-stops and great feeding grounds, Los Angeles County’s coast is considered part of the “Blue Highway,” a crucial whale migration corridor and one of the best places to spot the gentle giants.

    According to Cabrillo Marine Aquarium program director Jim DiPompei, many whales can be seen right in our backyard.

    “There’s a little over 90 species of cetaceans (marine mammals) in the world, and we see about 30% of the species we could possibly see here in Southern California,” DiPompei told The LA Local.

    Cetacean species you may spot in our waters include humpback whales, orcas, blue whales and dolphins. Your best chance, however, is spotting a gray whale. As school bus-sized gray whales migrate back and forth between Alaska and Baja, they consistently hug LA’s coastline.

    But where should you go to actually get a good look at whales? Don’t worry — I got you. Here’s The LA Local guide to cruising the Blue Highway.

    Top spots to watch whales from shore

    Point Vicente Interpretive Center
    31501 Palos Verdes Drive West, Rancho Palos Verdes
    Free, laid-back, on the mountains!

    At the Point Vicente Interpretive Center in Rancho Palos Verdes, you’ll find an overlook dedicated to whale watching. While this is a great free spot for amateurs to come and look out for whales, this is no playground. Professionals conduct the annual whale census here, tracking the migration of whales.

    This is a great place to bring a picnic basket and some binoculars to relax while scanning the ocean. Even if you don’t spot any whale action, you can visit the free natural history museum inside, which focuses on the region and its most famous inhabitants: whales. Afterward, step outside and chat with a museum docent accompanying the census watch.

    If you want to see whales, stick to the coastal canyons. Canyons aren’t just massive structures above water — they are also mountains beneath the surface, offering depth, cold water and nutrients that attract food for whales. Gray whales tend to follow the canyons to stay away from the dangerous orcas.

    Whale spotting 101

    Whale watching season typically runs from December through May. It peaks from January to March.

    When looking for a whale, try to spot their water mist blowing above the water. Gray whales typically surface for air every five minutes. When they do, they’ll blow out a water mist — that’s your chance to spot and track them until they surface again.

    Get on a boat!

    If you want to get eye-to-eye and really feel a cetacean’s scale, there are plenty of whale-watching cruises. They typically depart from Marina Del Rey, Redondo Beach, Long Beach, San Pedro, Dana Point and almost anywhere with a port.

    Many cruises have a naturalist on board to answer questions and provide expert context to ocean wildlife.

    On my tour departing from Long Beach, we saw five gray whales and a swarm of common dolphins feeding.

    But be warned: If you get seasick easily, this trip might not be for you. On our two-and-half-hour trip, the boat rocked emphatically as we approached feeding sites. It’s fun if you can imagine yourself on a see-saw, but it might not be that enjoyable if that sounds nauseating.

    While boat captains are not allowed to approach the whales too closely due to environmental protections, the whales can approach the boat if they choose. Sometimes the whales seem curious and watch us in return — it’s up to them and how they are feeling.

    Get involved

    Cabrillo Marine Aquarium
    3720 Stephen M. White Drive, San Pedro

    If you really catch the whale-watching bug, you’re in luck.

    At the Cabrillo Marine Aquarium, they offer a whale-watching naturalist program where you can volunteer and train to be a naturalist on board whale-watching cruises.

    DiPompei said they train anyone over the age of 18 “who’s interested in learning about whales and volunteering their time to be on these whale-watching boats to talk to the general public and to talk to students.”

    This program was started in the 1970s by John Olge, one of the founders of Cabrillo Marine Aquarium, with an emphasis on education and showing schoolchildren the beauty of our natural world.

    The aquarium is also a great place to introduce whales to children. With kid-sized exhibits and educational programs throughout the year, it’s an ideal way to show young ones just how big and beautiful our oceans are.