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Boyle Heights Beat
Boyle Heights Beat / Pulso de Boyle Heights is a local nonprofit news organization serving the communities of Boyle Heights and the Eastside.
Boyle Heights Beat reporters provide “noticias por y para la comunidad,” or “news by and for the community” in Spanish and English.
The newsroom is a longstanding partner of LAist.
Stories by Boyle Heights Beat
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On Dec. 13 and 14, about 1.6 miles of streets in City Terrace will go car-free for pedestrians, cyclists, joggers and runners.
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From handmade jewelry to one-of-a-kind treasures, local pop-ups and community arts spaces are hosting markets all December.
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The district says immigration raids are intensifying enrollment losses already tied to falling birth rates and rising housing costs.
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The news comes just days after the organization informed parents and students that programming at YOLA’s Torres site would be reduced.
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After reports that ICE interfered in patient care, hospital representatives issued a news release reinforcing privacy rules and staff protections — but doubts remain.
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We’ve rounded up a list of local organizations seeking extra support during the holidays.
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Event organizers aim to bring business back to the callejones, where vendors have noticed a decrease in foot traffic since immigration sweeps began in the summer.
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An Adventist Health White Memorial memo insists law enforcement isn’t interfering with medical care, but immigrant rights advocates say there’s still work to be done.
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Working group members will represent their neighborhoods, with meetings compensated up to $150 each, and help inform local priorities along the I-710 corridor.
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FeedLA will distribute $7.5 million worth of food across all 29 YMCA locations in L.A. County, offering meals, groceries or home deliveries with no membership required.
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For the Morales family, sharing the World Series with their neighbors is about more than baseball — it’s about community and resilience.
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The announcement came after Boyle Heights Beat reported that no in-person polling places would be available in the neighborhood for the Nov. 4 special election.