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On homelessness, California and the Supreme Court largely agree

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What does a small, solidly Republican city in Oregon have in common with California’s largest liberal enclaves? All breathed a sigh of relief this year thanks to the far-right U.S. Supreme Court.

The court’s conservative bloc ruled in favor of the city of Grants Pass, Ore., in June, overturning a key lower court ruling on homelessness and clearing the way for local governments to crack down on sleeping in public spaces regardless of the availability of housing or shelter. California’s response to the ruling has become a vivid reminder of not just the intractability of the homelessness epidemic but also the tension between national liberal politics and local policy in Democratic-dominated states and cities.

Some 186,000 people across California lack consistent shelter. Roughly 84% of the state’s voters believe homelessness is a “very serious” problem, a Quinnipiac University poll found, and Democrats and Republicans were in similarly broad agreement on that assessment, at 81% and 85%, respectively. In that light, it’s not surprising that California officials have wasted no time since Grants Pass in implementing their preferred “solution” to the homelessness problem.

From San Diego to San Francisco, state and local workers began disassembling makeshift shelters and camps and displacing the homeless people living in them. Within days, entire blocks were remade across the state. Residents rallied to social media platforms such as Reddit and Nextdoor to exchange strategies for getting homeless encampments removed from their own neighborhoods.

Other California residents have taken the Supreme Court’s ruling and Democratic officials’ exuberant co-sign as further evidence of the nation’s growing disdain for society’s most marginalized. Reports spread of homeless people being ejected from campsites with little or no warning, their pets taken away and medications lost, among other indignities.

The American Civil Liberties Union and other advocacy groups have condemned the Grants Pass ruling. The chief executive of the National Alliance to End Homelessness said it set a “dangerous precedent.” But the precedent set by California Democrats has arguably been far more dangerous.

During the initial waves of the Golden State’s housing crisis, in the late 1970s, Democratic politicians were reluctant to be seen as overtly antagonistic to the state’s homeless people, many of them veterans of the nation’s wars in Vietnam and Korea. But as the homeless population has grown and diversified, officials have faced deepening NIMBY sentiment not just in California’s well-heeled liberal cities but also in Democratic-leaning working-class communities that increasingly experience the highest rates of homelessness and related problems such as loitering and blight. As a result, anti-homeless policies have become more politically appealing despite being painfully at odds with inclusivity and other virtues Democrats signal on the national stage.

Addressing the housing crisis has been a quintessential and enduring social justice cause for Democrats, encompassing themes that tend to unify the party, including health, economic and racial equity. According to one survey, 82% of homeless adults in California reported having experienced a serious mental health condition, and 65% had used illicit drugs at some point. The state’s Black people are disproportionately affected by homelessness: Despite making up only about 5% of California’s total population, they represent roughly 25% of its homeless people. Such statistics helped liberals frame homelessness as a product of Republican policies weakening social services and promoting unchecked capitalism.

But that view has lost support as homelessness has become more dramatic and visible over the last decade. In some of California’s liberal enclaves, homeless encampments have become full-blown tent cities. Scenes of squalor, drug use and petty crime have spawned a subculture of gonzo-style documentary videos racking up hundreds of thousands of views on YouTube. San Francisco and Los Angeles have the most prominent crises, inviting scrutiny of the latter city’s readiness to host the 2028 Olympics.

Democrats’ conundrum is whether authorities should roust, fine and imprison people residing in public spaces in the interest of answering the broader community’s quality-of-life concerns. Critics have argued that such criminalization is a cruel distraction and that more affordable housing is the only way to meaningfully address the crisis.

Gov. Gavin Newsom and his predecessor, Jerry Brown, devoted billions of dollars to homelessness prevention and affordable housing even as the homeless population generally continued to grow. Newsom was quick to seize on the conservative Supreme Court’s permission to put punishment ahead of housing, warning cities that if they don’t remove encampments, they risk losing state funding. San Francisco Mayor London Breed, who just lost a reelection bid partly because of concerns about homelessness, likewise promised to be “very aggressive” in removing encampments. Never mind that those displaced by the state’s homeless sweeps often end up occupying another nearby space and returning at a later date.

So how did we get here? California’s ruling Democrats have tried to have it all ways, largely cultivating and tolerating deeply bureaucratic housing development standards while amplifying a booming tech industry populated by employees willing to pay top dollar for homes, dramatically boosting prices. And although Newsom and others have heralded emergency housing and other measures to answer the crisis, the total capacity is far short of the unhoused population. That’s partly because new facilities are often rebuffed by cities such as the L.A. suburb of Norwalk, which recently enacted a moratorium on homeless shelters.

Reducing and preventing homelessness, whatever the underlying motivations, is one of the few civic concerns that bind the political parties together in an age of stark polarization. Beyond the obvious moral merits of the cause, it could provide a road map to arrive at bipartisan solutions for other challenges facing the state and country. Unfortunately, the consensus on homelessness is coalescing around a prescription with little chance of long-term success.

Jerel Ezell is an assistant professor of community health sciences at UC Berkeley.



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Walmart worker goes in for an extra shift and walks out a millionaire

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Rebeca Gonzalez got the call no retail worker wants on a weekend they’re scheduled off — the store was short-staffed and her manager needed her to come in for a few hours.

It would be a shift that would change Gonzalez’s life.

Overwhelmed with customers during the Labor Day weekend, Gonzalez was unable to keep to her plan to buy a lottery scratcher on her lunch break, she told The Times in an interview. Instead, she bought it at the end of her shift after almost forgetting to purchase one in the first place.

When she scratched it — it revealed she’d won $1 million.

“I’ve only told one person at work, and it was the manager who wanted me to stay late on a holiday,” she said. “He couldn’t believe it.”

Gonzalez had been purchasing Scratchers twice a month, and the most she’s ever won was $50.

It’s a gamble that her dad had always taken and Gonzales started doing the same just for the thrill of the “what if.” She never dreamed she would win $1 million.

And to think she almost didn’t buy a scratcher that day.

“I wanted to, obviously, be home with my family because we planned to barbecue,” Gonzalez told the California Lottery.

In fact, the only reason Gonzalez was motivated to buy a scratcher that particular day was because she found a $10 bill in her pocket, leftover change from a raspado, or shaved ice, that her daughter had purchased. After her find, she resolved to put it toward buying a scratcher during her lunch break.

But with the store busy, she’d nearly forgotten her plan until she felt the $10 burning a hole in her pocket on the walk back to her car at the end of the night.

She walked back into the store, purchased the Scratcher and started revealing the game spots, uncovering the $1 million prize.

Before her win, Gonzalez’s life as a working mother was a grind that required getting up early to take her two children — who share a room — to school before going to work in the day and attending night classes at Mt. San Antonio College to become a radiologist.

Now, the family has an offer in on a five-bedroom home, much of their debt is paid off and Gonzalez has put in her two weeks’ notice at work so she can focus on her schooling. It’s a far cry from her low-income upbringing, where the family struggled to make ends meet, she said.

When she shared the news of her win with her family, Gonzalez said they cried.

There’s a verification process a winner undergoes, and Gonzalez said she was told by California Lottery staff there’s a video recording of her jumping up and down in celebration outside the local liquor store where she verified her scratcher card.

“I was doing that and looking up at the sky and thanking God, because this is a blessing,” she said.

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Column: Volunteering where the views are heavenly, the cause is critical, and the sea lions are barking

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• Volunteers at Pt. Lobos State Natural Reserve are cultivating ‘the next generation of conservationists.’

• ‘The first thing you want [visitors] to do is have fun… and if they can be impressed with the natural beauty, that encourages them to want to protect it.’

• For docents, like Doug Cambier, ‘it’s enough for us to be here in nature, with all of this beauty, and to give back a little bit.’ It never gets old.

Of the roughly 78 million people who volunteer in the United States, about 7.5 million of whom are in California, no one has a better view than Doug Cambier.

On a sun-drenched fall morning, Cambier strapped on his binoculars and began a 90-minute walking tour of the Cypress Grove Trail at Pt. Lobos State Natural Reserve, a heavenly stretch of seashore between Carmel-by-the-Sea and Big Sur. Massive winter waves exploded against rocks, sea lions barked and squawking gulls joined the symphony.

This is not a place that can be described, painted or photographed in any way that does it justice, though many have tried. Ansel Adams visited again and again with his camera. Australian landscape artist Francis McComas called this simply “the greatest meeting of land and water in the world.”

For Cambier, who wore a green vest with a Point Lobos Docent insignia, it never gets old.

GOLDEN STATE with a rising/setting sun in the middle

California is about to be hit by an aging population wave, and Steve Lopez is riding it. His column focuses on the blessings and burdens of advancing age — and how some folks are challenging the stigma associated with older adults.

“So we have six habitats here,” the retired family physician said, giving a dozen of us a quick warning about poison oak before breaking down the marine, plant and wildlife glories that surrounded us.

Cambier mingles habitat and history, touching on the Ohlone, the European conquest, the destruction wrought by over-fishing and the resilience of Monterey pine and cypress trees. All of it in the service of greater appreciation that might lead to better stewardship of a planet in peril as climate change accelerates and biodiversity declines.

I was at the reserve not just to breathe in the salt air at one of my favorite places in the world, but to mark the season by acknowledging those who give back in one way or another. On some days, it seems like our culture is defined by isolation and self-interest, but the good will of nearly 80 million people, many of them serving their communities in retirement, tells another story.

Doug Cambier, 70, is a volunteer docent at Pt. Lobos State Natural Reserve. Cambier be

Doug Cambier is a volunteer docent at Pt. Lobos State Natural Reserve.

(Steve Lopez / Los Angeles Times)

For those who want to contribute, but don’t know which cause to support, Rick Stoff and a friend started a Los Angeles nonprofit five years ago called the Volunteer Collective, which lists opportunities ranging from working to support survivors of domestic violence to wellness programs to pet care support.

He doesn’t know of a volunteer who spends time, say, mentoring or reading to a child, and doesn’t feel enriched by the experience. “You’re getting out of your house and you’re doing something for someone else,” said Stoff, for whom running the nonprofit is his own form of volunteering.

“I have a purpose,” said the 76-year-old, who was profiled in 2021 by my colleague Robin Abcarian. “I feel like a young man.”

I was surprised to find that more than 27,000 Californians are committed to helping out at state parks. According to a state website, those volunteers devoted 780,000 hours of time in 2023. Point Lobos alone has more than 200 docents, all of whom go through a months-long training course and commit to a minimum of six hours of service per month.

John Hiles, Monterey sector manager for the state parks department, told me Point Lobos has one of the best organized volunteer groups in the region and offers “fantastic educational programming.” Besides conducting tours, the docents staff information kiosks and a museum, help with trail maintenance and log sea otter sightings to aid in habitat restoration efforts.

When Cambier raised his hand to volunteer, he knew exactly what he was in for because his wife, Jan, a retired school teacher, had just begun her eighth year as a Point Lobos docent. She’s helped lead training efforts, among other administrative duties, and said she’s putting in 20 to 30 hours a month.

“If I didn’t enjoy it, I wouldn’t be doing it,” Jan said. “There’s a built-in camaraderie because we have something in common with all these people who have a desire to protect the reserve.”

Pebble Beach- Doug Cambier, 70, is a volunteer docent at Pt. Lobos State Natural Reserve. Ca

For docents, Doug Cambier said, “it’s enough for us to be here in nature, with all of this beauty, and to give back a little bit.”

(Steve Lopez / Los Angeles Times)

The docent program is funded by the nonprofit Point Lobos Foundation, which also sponsors park visits from fourth-graders who attend schools in the region’s poorest communities, including farming regions in and around Salinas.

“That’s our next generation of conservationists,” Jan said.

As many as 60 kids at a time arrive in buses, she said, and many of them have never seen the ocean.

“We do one docent for every six kids. That’s 10 docents on that walk,” with more volunteers setting up spotting scopes so the kids can get a closer look at the sea lions barking on nearby rocks.

“The first thing you want them to do is have fun… and if they can be impressed with the natural beauty, that encourages them to want to protect it,” said Jan, 70, who thinks the magic of Point Lobos can be a revelation for kids who’ve grown up in a trance, glued to their screens.

“A kid will spend five minutes looking at a rolly polly and recently we’ve been finding a lot of turret spiders and their webs. We talk to them about wood rats and how their nests are so similar to human homes,” Jan said. “It’s just an appreciation for what is in this world, and we spend a lot of time talking about native plants and invasive plants… Pods of Risso’s dolphins will go by, and they get excited seeing deer or rabbits, or they’ll say ‘oh, there goes a bird.’”

Pebble Beach- Doug Cambier, 70, is a volunteer docent at Pt. Lobos State Natural Rese

Besides conducting tours, the docents, including Doug Cambier, staff information kiosks and a museum, help with trail maintenance, and log sea otter sightings to aid in habitat restoration efforts.

(Steve Lopez / Los Angeles Times)

On my tour with Doug Cambier, 70, he was no less dazzled than those kids.

He pointed out warblers, lace lichen and tree limbs coated in an orange algae called trentepohlia. He saluted cypress trees that “originated biologically at Point Lobos” and speculated that maybe they developed their horizontal, wing-like limb structure here to withstand coastal gusts. He offered up a crash course on the 80-million-year history of geologic forces that sculpted this masterpiece at the edge of the continent.

People are inclined to tip docents after the guided tours, Cambier said, but he says no thanks. If they insist, he suggests a donation to the Point Lobos Foundation to further the cause of education and conservation.

For docents, he said, “it’s enough for us to be here in nature, with all of this beauty, and to give back a little bit.”

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Why Donald Trump still could not conquer Orange County

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Donald Trump posted notable gains in Orange County during the November election, but it was not enough to win the increasingly purple county that has become a suburban battleground between Republicans and Democrats — and a reflection of the demographic political realignment unfolding across the nation.

Kamala Harris won Orange County, but by a much tighter margin than either Hillary Clinton in 2016 or Joe Biden in 2020. When it comes to presidential politics, Orange County has backed Democrats since 2016, with increasingly blue areas such as Santa Ana, Anaheim and Irvine besting more red areas such as Huntington Beach and south Orange County.

But experts say the 2024 results offer some warning signs for Democrats.

“What the early numbers indicate is that Donald Trump made inroads with minority voters including probably substantial gains with Latino and Asian voters,” said Jeff Corless, a former strategist for Orange County Dist. Atty. Todd Spitzer. “What we’re hearing is that he made those same kinds of gains in other communities similar to Orange County across the country. He also made gains with traditional suburban voters, which he struggled with in 2020.”

Paul Mitchell, a Democratic data specialist, said Trump probably did better in the county because of lower Democratic turnout this year compared with 2020, as well as voters being familiar — and potentially comfortable — with Trump because of their experience during his prior tenure.

“It may also be Trump has been normalized, in an odd way,” Mitchell said. “He’s been in our political eyesight for the last decade now. Maybe voters like the economy better under Trump.”

In 2016, Clinton received roughly 100,000 more votes in Orange County than Trump, making her the first Democrat county voters selected for the presidency in 80 years. In 2020, Biden fared even better, besting Trump by more than 137,500 votes. Now, Harris has edged out Trump, but the margin of victory is on trend to be much tighter than seen in past elections.

Votes in Orange County are still being counted and final numbers aren’t required to be certified by the county until Dec. 5 and by the state until Dec. 13. But it’s clear, experts say, that Trump harnessed the disillusionment felt by voters who are unhappy with the direction of the country and the economic pains that have beset many living in the suburbs.

“People in the press and people like me still so often take Trump literally, whereas voters lived through this once and the apocalypse didn’t happen and they liked the economy better,” said Rob Stutzman, a veteran GOP strategist and Trump critic who previously advised former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger.

He noted that Trump’s improved performance in Orange County was not an outlier.

“He did better — look at how he did in New York, on the Eastern Seaboard, in Massachusetts,” Stutzman said. “There are red dots that never existed the last few decades.”

Still, there were some bright spots for Democrats, notably being able to hold on to a congressional seat that became open because Rep. Katie Porter of Irvine pursued an unsuccessful Senate bid, and flipping the 45th Congressional District. In that race, first-time candidate Derek Tran defeated Republican Rep. Michelle Steel of Seal Beach in a hotly contested race that became one of the most expensive in the country.

A UC Irvine poll released last year conveyed discord among Orange County voters, particularly Republicans and those who choose not to identify with a political party, who said despite their optimism about Orange County and somewhat about California, they did not have a good feeling about the future of America.

“The [election] results are much more a statement about people’s dissatisfaction with the current national administration than some grand statement about Trump or Republicans,” said Jon Gould, dean of the university’s School of Social Ecology.

“This is not a sign that Orange County is suddenly a red county,” Gould said. “This is exactly what it means to be a purple county.”

Michele Monda, a Republican who lives in the deep-blue city of Laguna Beach, voted for Trump in 2016, 2020 and 2024 with her son and grandchildren in mind. The high housing costs and general lack of affordability have made it a challenge for middle-class couples, like her son and daughter-in-law, to build a life in many parts of California, including Orange County.

“Who is looking out for them?” Monda said. “They’re barely getting by, and quite honestly, the Democrats don’t seem to care. While I know Trump is a billionaire, I think he understands the needs of a middle-class person.”

Economics and Trump’s stance on immigration were the two main drivers that motivated her to vote for him. While she’s not always a fan of Trump’s behavior, she loves his policies. It’s not surprising, she said, that others in Orange County were swayed to his side as well.

“I think people have had enough of the Democrat party line, enough of the economy, enough of the whole platform. The things they espouse they just don’t work,” Monda said. “I think people in California are waking up.”

Trump’s improvement in the county has generated excitement among California Republicans who for years have tried to strengthen its hold on Orange County as Democratic voter registration grew and elections became more competitive.

For decades, Orange County was a conservative stronghold — the birthplace of former President Nixon, the cradle of Ronald Reagan’s ascent to the governor’s mansion and then the White House, and, for decades, a virtual synonym for the Republican Party of California.

The county’s shift over the last decade from deeply red to a more politically and demographically diverse region has fascinated the public for years.

“Orange County is a battleground,” said Jon Fleischman, a Republican campaign strategist and former executive director of the California GOP.

Trump’s popularity boost among Latinos and Asian Americans seen nationally could very well also be at play in swing counties such as Orange County. Republicans in the county for years have sought to attract Latinos and Asian Americans to their party with mixed success, and Trump’s performance could signal gains among these voter blocs, as well as Black Americans. He also won back some suburban women who turned against the Republican Party during his 2016 campaign and in the aftermath of the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn federal protection for abortion access in 2022.

Democrats leaned heavily into messaging about the loss of reproductive rights during this year’s campaign, in television ads and during their convention when they nominated Harris. However, Stutzman contended that the argument failed to resonate with suburban women in affluent areas such as Orange County as much as Democrats expected it to.

“Most women in America still have access — an overwhelming majority have access to abortion,” he said. “I just don’t know if there’s a connection, any real existential threat that their rights are being further eroded than they have been.”

Though Harris won the majority of votes across deep-blue California, Trump was on track to win Butte, Stanislaus, Fresno, Inyo, San Bernardino and Riverside counties, all areas that Biden carried in 2020. Trump also gained ground in Silicon Valley and Los Angeles County compared with 2016 and 2020.

“In order for Trump to win Orange County, he had to make inroads with minority voters, and he did that through issues that mattered to them and the struggles they’re facing,” Corless said.

Democrats’ ability to register voters in Orange County has also slowed.

Between October 2022 and October 2024, the Democratic Party in Orange County grew by just over 3,100 voters. At the same time, the Republican Party’s numbers swelled by 31,000 people, according to data from the California secretary of state.

In the years that the GOP voter registration waned, the number of nonparty-preference voters grew. Many longtime Republicans in Orange County, irritated by Trump’s outlandish speaking style and policy positions, branded themselves as “Never Trumpers.” But Republicans in Orange County have made a concerted effort this cycle to reregister former GOP voters and push early voting and mail ballots, a recognition of how much Trump’s opposition to such efforts harmed the party in 2020.

“When Trump was first elected, he was not everybody’s favorite flavor of ice cream, and I think you saw a lot of Republicans who decided to become independent,” Fleischman said. “I think as people have decided that they’re OK with Trump, they’ve been coming back to the party.”

The Republican Party of Orange County went as far as hosting a ballot collection day on Oct. 11 in which Republican Party offices served as designated ballot-drop locations. The move, it said at the time, makes voting more accessible while “maintaining the highest level election integrity.”

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California recalls more raw milk after bird flu test results

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California health officials announced Wednesday that another batch of raw milk from Fresno-based Raw Farm has tested positive for bird flu virus, as dairy farms throughout the state continue to struggle with a widening number of outbreaks.

For the second time in roughly the span of a week, Santa Clara County Department of Public Health officials tested store-bought raw milk and found evidence of the virus. The sample was collected and tested on Tuesday.

Raw Farm is voluntarily recalling a batch of “cream top” whole milk half-gallon-size products, lot No. 20231119, expiration date Dec. 7.

According to Mark McAfee, the owner of Raw Farm, the state’s Department of Food and Agriculture has requested that he “hold delivery of further products” until Friday.

On Wednesday, state agriculture officials visited his farms in Fresno and Hanford, as well as his creamery in Fowler, and tested finished and unfinished products, as well as his trucks, bulk tanks and bottling facility.

He said the investigation was carried out with a thoroughness “like never before.”

There have been no reported illnesses associated with either this second recall or the first. The first recall also involved Raw Farm and was limited to a batch that was bottled on Nov. 9.

State and federal health officials say the H5N1 bird flu virus poses a low risk to the public. However, they have urged people not to drink raw, unpasteurized milk.

In addition, every waste site tested in California by WastewaterScan — an infectious disease monitoring network led by researchers at Stanford and Emory University, with lab testing partner Verily, Alphabet Inc.’s life sciences organization — has tested positive for bird flu in the past two weeks.

The County of Los Angeles Health Department issued a statement late Wednesday expanding the list of stores that may have sold bird-flu contaminated raw milk.

They include:

  • Back Door Bakery, 8349 Foothill Blvd., Sunland, CA, 91040
  • Bristol Farms, 7880 Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90046
  • Eataly, 10250 Santa Monica Blvd., Los Angeles, California 90067
  • Erewhon Market, 475 S. Lake Ave., Pasadena, CA 91101
  • Erewhon Market, 26767 Agoura Rd., Calabasas, CA 91302
  • Erewhon Market, 4121 Santa Monica Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90029
  • Erewhon Market, 7660 Beverly Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90036
  • Lassen’s Natural Foods, 1631 W. Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90026
  • Lassen’s Natural Foods, 2080 Hillhurst Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90027
  • Lassen’s Natural Foods, 710 S. La Brea AVE., Los Angeles, CA 90036
  • Lazy Acres, 1841 N. Western Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90027
  • Lazy Acres, 2510 Pacific Coast Highway, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254
  • Mothers Market & Kitchen, 6677 W. Santa Monica Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90038
  • Mothers Market & Kitchen, 2475 Cherry Ave., Signal Hill, CA 90755
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 1302 S. La Brea Ave., Los Angeles CA 90019
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 1751 Westwood Blvd., Los Angeles CA 90024
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 8985 Venice Blvd., Los Angeles CA 90034
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 915 N. La Brea Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90038
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 2245 Yosemite Dr., Eagle Rock, 90041
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 7925 Atlantic Ave., Cudahy CA, 90201
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 5660 Sepulveda Blvd., Culver City CA, 90230
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 12060 Lakewood Blvd., Downey, CA 90242
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 14411 Hawthorne Blvd., Lawndale, CA 90260
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 1515 Hawthorne Blvd., Redondo Beach, CA 90278
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 4230 Pacific Coast Hwy., Torrance CA, 90505
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 15801 Whittier Blvd., Whittier, CA 90603
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 11522 Alondra Blvd., Norwalk, CA 90650
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 11900 South St., Cerritos, CA 90703
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 4253 Woodruff Ave., Lakewood, CA 90713
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 820 N. Western Ave., San Pedro, CA 90732
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 4600 E. Pacific Coast Hwy., Long Beach, CA 90804
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 920 Foothill Blvd., La Canada Flintridge, CA 91011
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 400 W. Huntington Dr., Monrovia, CA 91016
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 39 N. Rosemead Blvd., Pasadena, CA 91107
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 6607 Fallbrook Ave., West Hills, CA 91307
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 10821 N. Zelzah Ave., Granada Hills, CA 91344
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 24285 Magic Mountain Pkwy., Valencia, CA 91355
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 21821 Ventura Blvd., Woodland Hills, CA 91364
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 1011 N. San Fernando Blvd., Burbank, CA 91504
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 11315 Ventura Blvd., Studio City, CA 91604
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 835 W. Foothill Blvd., Claremont, CA 91711
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 655 S Grand Ave., Glendora, CA 91740
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 1375 Foothill Blvd., La Verne, CA 91750
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 239 S. Diamond Bar Blvd., Diamond Bar, CA 91765
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 2630 E. Workman Ave., West Covina, CA 91791
  • Sprouts Farmers Market, 150 E Main St., Alhambra, CA 91801
  • Vitamin City LB, 6247 E. Spring St., Long Beach, CA 90808
  • Vitamin City, 642 W. Arrow Hwy., San Dimas, CA 91773
  • The Whole Wheatery, 44264 10th W, Lancaster, CA 93534

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L.A. County native, reported dead after football injury, is alive

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Tributes rolled in Wednesday morning shortly after Alabama A&M’s athletic department announced the death of a Southern California native who suffered severe injuries in a football game last month.

The historically Black college’s athletic director praised the student-athlete as “a remarkable young man whose positive energy, leadership, and compassion left an indelible mark on everyone who knew him.”

That announcement led to an outpouring of grief.

Rival Grambling State, where the young man had transferred from, sent condolences and prayers via X.

Even the student’s former Southern California high school coach spoke of his “grief and disbelief” over the 20-year-old’s passing.

Back in Alabama, however, Medrick Burnett Jr., a Lakewood resident and former star at Mayfair High School, remained alive.

Why he was erroneously reported as dead and why the news was disseminated and picked up by outlets such as ESPN and the Associated Press remains a mystery.

Burnett is listed as stable but on life support, Alabama A&M confirmed Wednesday. The university retracted its earlier news release, apologized and issued a new statement.

“We express our immediate regret for disseminating false information; however, we hold complete joy in knowing that Medrick remains in stable condition,” the statement said.

Alabama A&M officials said they were advised by an immediate family member Tuesday evening of Burnett’s passing. The school informed the community of his death as requested by that family member, according to Alabama A&M.

The university did not confirm whom they spoke with.

They did acknowledge, however, that staff from the University of Alabama at Birmingham Hospital, where Burnett is hospitalized, informed them Wednesday that he was alive.

Burnett, a redshirt freshman linebacker, was injured on a kickoff on Oct. 26 in a rivalry game against Alabama State, which Alabama A&M lost 27-19.

His sister Dominece James said on a GoFundMe post that Burnett was “severely injured after a head-on-head collision.”

She said he had several brain bleeds and swelling of the brain that eventually led to a craniotomy, a procedure that removes part of the skull to relieve pressure on the brain.

The family was hoping to raise $100,000 for medical bills, housing of visiting family members and other expenses.

“Please pray, [Burnett] is having a tough time but we are holding on till the very end,” James wrote in an update Wednesday. “God give us strength so we can keep the faith.”

An email to James was not immediately returned.

His Mayfair High School football coach, Derek Bedell, said he spoke with Burnett’s father “at great length” Tuesday night. Both men believed that Burnett was dead at the time.

“Everybody was hopeful until last night, and the report of his death was a tremendous shock to all,” Bedell said. “I think his father consoled me more than I consoled him.”

Bedell said he fielded calls all day Wednesday from former teammates and coaches who knew and played with Burnett.

The onetime St. John Bosco transfer played two years at linebacker and running back at Mayfair, graduating in 2023.

“Medrick is an incredible spirit, and I know it’s a cliche but he had a zest for life,” Bedell said. “He is a fantastic person in the locker room and a leader.”

His senior year, Burnett led the Monsoons with 525 yards and seven rushing touchdowns in the backfield, while racking 104 tackles, including five tackles for a loss.

He moved on to Grambling State in Louisiana before transferring this year to Alabama A&M.

“I’m not really sure what happened with the information around his death,” Bedell said. “I just hope that he’ll continue to recover.”

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Judge denies Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’ request to be released to apartment

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Sean “Diddy” Combs won’t be released on bail before Thanksgiving, a federal judge ruled Wednesday while accusing the hip-hop mogul of violating and looking for ways to skirt prison rules since he was arrested.

In a five-page ruling, U.S. District Judge Arun Subramanian ruled Combs should not be released on the $50-million bail proposed by his legal team, stating that Combs posed a “serious risk of witness tampering” and had been found to be breaking prison rules, such as paying other inmates for their phone access codes to call people outside of his own approved contact list.

“His willingness to skirt [Board of Prison] rules in a way that would make it more difficult for his communications to be monitored is strong evidence that the Court cannot be reasonably assure[d] as to the sufficiency of any condition of release,” Subramanian ruled.

The ruling shut down the third attempt by Combs’ attorneys to have him released during his criminal trial.

In the latest motion, his attorneys asked that instead of prison he be confined to his three-bedroom apartment in New York City’s Upper West Side with 24-hour surveillance.

In their motion, Combs’ legal team argued that the apartment would be “far more restrictive” than what Combs faces in jail, and that the arrangement would include limiting phone calls to attorneys only, allowing only specific family members and lawyers to visit him there, and being monitored by an independent firm.

But Subramanian shot down the request.

“Given the nature of the allegations in this case, and the information provided by the government, the Court doubts the sufficiency of any conditions that place trust in Combs and individuals in his employ—like a private security detail—to follow conditions,” he wrote.

Combs faces charges of sex trafficking, racketeering and transportation to engage in prostitution. In court records, federal prosecutors allege the 55-year-old founder of Bad Boy Entertainment used his network of employees and influence to lure female victims and used force, threats, coercion and drugs to get them to engage in sex acts with male prostitutes.

The sometimes days-long sexual binges were referred to by Combs as “freak-offs,” prosecutors said.

Prosecutors have opposed Combs’ attempts to be released on bail, alleging that Combs has continued to try to tamper with witnesses and has broken prison rules.

In his decision, the judge found that federal prosecutors had “shown by clear and convincing evidence that no condition or combination of conditions will reasonably assure the safety of the community” and that Combs still posed “serious risk of witness tampering.”

Subramanian also pointed to the infamous security video of Combs assaulting then-girlfriend Cassandra “Cassie” Ventura at the InterContinental Hotel in Los Angeles, stating that the video showed “compelling evidence of Combs’ propensity for violence.”

The judge in his decision also pointed to what he called “misrepresentations” by Combs’ attorneys during an emergency hearing Nov. 19.

During the hearing, Combs’ legal team argued that notes on legal pads that were seized from Combs’ cell during a sweep in Metropolitan Detention Center should be considered privileged because the pads were labeled, “legal.”

Photos from the sweep, however, showed that the notebooks had no such labels on them.

“The circumstances of this incident, and the misrepresentations made at the November 19, 2024 hearing where Combs was present, bear on whether the Court can be reasonably assured that any conditions it imposes will be followed,” he wrote.

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Katie Porter gets temporary restraining order against ex-boyfriend

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U.S. Rep. Katie Porter (D-Irvine) secured a temporary restraining order Tuesday against a former boyfriend, saying in dozens of pages of court filings that he had bombarded her, as well as her family and colleagues, with hundreds of messages that she described as “persistent abuse and harassment.”

Porter, 50, alleged in a filing with Orange County Superior Court that her ex-boyfriend Julian Willis, 55, was contacting her and her family with such frequency that she had a “significant fear” for her “personal safety and emotional well-being.”

Judge Stephen T. Hicklin signed a restraining order Tuesday barring Willis from communicating with Porter and her children until a mid-December court hearing. He also barred Willis from communicating about Porter with her current and former colleagues.

In the court filing, Porter said that Willis had been hospitalized twice since late 2022 on involuntary psychiatric holds and had a history of abusing prescription painkillers and other drugs.

She said in a statement to The Times that Willis’ mental health and struggles with addiction seemed to have gotten worse since she asked him in August to move out of her Irvine home. She said she sought the court order after his threats to her family and colleagues “escalated in both their frequency and intensity.”

“I sincerely hope he gets the help he needs,” Porter said.

Willis declined to comment. He will have an opportunity to file a legal response to the temporary restraining order and challenge Porter’s allegations.

Porter is leaving the House of Representatives in January after losing in California’s U.S. Senate primary in March. She has been discussed as a front-runner in the 2026 governor’s race in California after Gov. Gavin Newsom is termed out, but has not said whether she will launch a campaign.

The 53-page court filing, first reported by Politico, included 22 pages of emails, text messages and other communications among Porter, family members and colleagues who had received messages from Willis, as well as messages that Willis sent to Porter’s attorney and to her political mentor Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.).

The filing also included messages between herself and Willis’ siblings as they discussed trying to help him during his psychiatric holds and while he was staying in a sober-living facility.

Porter said that since she ordered Willis to move out, he had sent her more than 1,000 text messages and emails, including texting her 82 times in one 24-hour period in September, and 55 times on Nov. 12 before she blocked his number.

Porter said in the filing that her ex-boyfriend had “already contacted at least three reporters to disseminate false and damaging information” about her and her children, which she said “poses a serious risk to [her] career and personal reputation.”

The filing includes an email that Porter said Willis sent to her attorney late Monday, in which Willis said he had visited Porter’s son at college in Iowa and told him that he would “bring the hammer down on Katie and smash her and her life into a million pieces.”

Another screenshot shows Willis telling Porter’s attorney that he would file a complaint about Porter, who has children ages 12 and 16, with child protective services.

One of Porter’s congressional staff members received a text message from Willis saying he would “punish the f—” out of him if he did not agree to “cooperate” with a New York Times reporter and Willis’ attorneys, according to a screenshot included in the court document.

Willis previously made the news in 2021, when he was arrested after a fight that broke out at a Porter town hall at a park in Irvine.

Times staff writer Christopher Goffard contributed to this report.

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Monterey Park restaurant patrons may have been exposed to hepatitis A

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L.A. County health officials are warning that some diners at a Monterey Park restaurant may have been exposed to hepatitis A.

An employee at a Buffalo Wild Wings in the city was found to be infected with the highly contagious liver infection, the county public health department said in a release Wednesday.

Customers who ate at the restaurant at 4000 Market Place Drive in Monterey Park between Nov. 13 and 22 might have been exposed and should receive a hepatitis A vaccine if they are not already immunized, health officials said.

Hepatitis A is spread through food or drink contaminated with tiny particles of fecal matter, according to the World Health Organization. It can also be spread through close physical contact with an infectious person; casual contact does not spread the virus.

There is no specific antiviral treatment for hepatitis A. Cases can range from mild to severe, occasionally but rarely causing death. Symptoms include fever, weakness, fatigue, nausea, loss of appetite, yellowing of the skin or eyes, stomach pain, vomiting, dark urine, pale stools and diarrhea.

Most people feel sick for several weeks but usually recover with no lasting liver damage, according to the CDC.

Receiving a vaccination within 14 days of exposure could help reduce the risk of infection, health officials said.

Children should receive two doses of a hepatitis A vaccine between 1 and 3 years old, according to CDC guidelines. Adults who have not been inoculated can also receive the vaccine.

If you were exposed and develop symptoms, health officials advise calling your health provider and asking for a hepatitis A test.

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Thieves steal 1,200 pairs of Air Jordans from a train in California

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Three men accused of stealing more than 1,200 pairs of Air Jordans from a train in the Mojave Desert were foiled by a GPS tracker hidden inside the shipment, authorities said.

Authorities were notified by BNSF Railway police Friday that a shipping container had been moved from a train near Amboy in San Bernardino County, the Orange County district attorney’s office said in a release.

Nike had placed a GPS tracker in the shipment of 11 Retro shoes, which was worth about $311,000. Authorities did not say whether the shoes were a new color, which would retail for around $230 a pair, or a different model.

Police tracked the GPS signal to a U-Haul truck at an Anaheim parking lot and found 1,278 pairs of shoes inside, prosecutors said. The suspects are believed to be part of an organized theft ring, according to a district attorney’s spokesperson.

Bryan QuinteroEcharravia, 18, of Mesa, Ariz.; Bernardo Romeroquintero, 34, of Phoenix; and Olegario Flores, 26, were charged with felony counts of grand theft and receiving stolen property. The two older men also were charged with possession of burglary tools. They face a maximum sentence of three years if convicted on all counts.

“Organized theft rings are no match for the sophistication and determination of law enforcement to track down these thieves, arrest them and prosecute them to the fullest extent of the law,” Orange County Dist. Atty. Todd Spitzer said in a statement.

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