The most important stories for you to know today
The Los Angeles Unified School District Board voted unanimously Tuesday to rename two campuses named after César Chávez by fall 2026 and to fund the removal of murals and any other commemorations of the disgraced labor leader at other schools.
: Board Member Kelly Gonez introduced the resolution through tears. “These heartwrenching stories represent a betrayal for so many of us and yet they resonate with many survivors and many women who have experienced this as girls and in our adulthood including myself,” Gonez said. Board Vice President Rocío Rivas co-authored the resolution. “This is not an easy moment, but it’s a necessary one,” Rivas said.: The board committed to working with the communities surrounding César Chávez Learning Academies in San Fernando and César Chávez Elementary School in El Sereno to identify new names that “reflect the District’s values of equity, justice, and community leadership.” The district will also recognize March 31 as Farm Workers Day this year and in future calendars.: Board Member Kelly Gonez introduced the resolution. “These heart-wrenching stories represent a betrayal for so many of us and yet they resonate with many survivors and many women who have experienced this as girls and in our adulthood including myself,” Gonez said through tears.: The board committed to working with the communities surrounding César Chávez Learning Academies in San Fernando and César Chávez Elementary School in El Sereno to identify new names that “reflect the District’s values of equity, justice, and community leadership.”At the Supreme Court Monday, the conservative majority seemed ready to overturn laws in 29 states that allow mail-in votes to be counted after Election Day if they were postmarked by Election Day.The split was illustrated in Monday's case from Mississippi. In 2020, the state legislature, by a bipartisan and nearly unanimous vote, approved a five-day grace period for counting election ballots if they were postmarked by Election Day but arrived late. But in the Supreme Court Monday, the conservative justices seemed suspicious of extending a short grace period to count late-arriving ballots. Justices Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett, for instance, fixated on what they deemed the possibility of voters"recalling ballots," which they said could be theoretically done by the U.S. Postal Service or other common carriers like FedEx.A decision overturning Mississippi's law would have particularly profound implications for large rural areas, and members of the military abroad. The state most likely to suffer serious ramifications is Alaska, the nation's largest state by area, where 80% of the population lives off the road system, the weather is unpredictable, and some communities do not offer in-person voting. Indeed, in 2022, ballots from six rural villages were not counted because the U.S. Postal Service failed to deliver them in time.At the Supreme Court Monday, the conservative majority seemed ready to overturn laws in 29 states that allow mail-in votes to be counted after Election Day if they were postmarked by Election Day. President Donald Trump has long railed against mail-in voting, believing — incorrectly — that those late votes improperly cost him the 2020 election. But citizens and politicians alike have enthusiastically embraced voting by mail. The split was illustrated in Monday's case from Mississippi. In 2020, the state Legislature, by a bipartisan and nearly unanimous vote, approved a five-day grace period for counting election ballots if they were postmarked by Election Day but arrived late. But in the Supreme Court Monday, the conservative justices, like Trump, seemed suspicious of extending a short grace period to count late-arriving ballots. Justices Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett, for instance, fixated on what they deemed the possibility of voters"recalling ballots," which they said could be theoretically done by the U.S. Postal Service or other common carriers like FedEx. Mississippi Solicitor General Scott Stewart tried repeatedly to assure the court that the state does not permit ballot recalls. But Gorsuch in particular seemed to view those assurances as unreliable.Similarly, Justice Brett Kavanaugh questioned whether a grace period to count legally cast ballots might undermine public confidence in the election process. And Justice Clarence Thomas wondered how early voting is legal. On that, however, even the Trump administration's solicitor general, D. John Sauer, conceded the validity of early voting. The larger question that seemed to divide the court's six conservatives from the three liberals was where the court should be in terms of assessing new election procedures. Why, asked Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, should we look only at old procedures and not new ones that Congress has left undisturbed. And finally, Justice Sonia Sotomayor took aim at what she viewed as dishonesty in the Trump administration's brief. "I am a little upset — not a little, a lot upset — by many of the statements in your brief quoting historical sources out of context," she said. A decision overturning Mississippi's law would have particularly profound implications for large rural areas, and members of the military abroad. The state most likely to suffer serious ramifications is Alaska, the nation's largest state by area, where 80% of the population lives off the road system, the weather is unpredictable, and some communities do not offer in-person voting. Indeed, in 2022,Immigration and Customs Enforcement deployments to American cities are a central part of President Trump's immigration crackdown. Yet, according to data analyzed by NPR — and interviews with law enforcement and city officials — these actions stretched local police departments thin, disrupted businesses and left city budgets struggling to absorb the fallout.What unifies these ICE actions is they were all sustained over several weeks, in communities where local law enforcement isn't authorized towith federal immigration efforts. Still, these deployments resulted in knock-on effects that required the use of local police to bring about or preserve order. Police overtime surged as departments were forced to deploy officers for demonstrations, extra patrols, security around federal facilities and emergency responses tied to the raids — often at overtime pay rates.in Southern California."The first three weeks of it, we were really balancing and teetering on martial law," LA councilwoman Eunisses Hernandez told NPR. She said the city didn't expect"such a heavy-handed and militarized and war-like response from the federal government to people expressing their First Amendment rights." The LAPD spent around $17 million between June 8 and 16 responding to the anti-ICE protests that broke out that month. Close to $12 million of that went to overtime costs,Immigration and Customs Enforcement deployments to American cities are a central part of President Donald Trump's immigration crackdown. Yet, according to data analyzed by NPR — and interviews with law enforcement and city officials — these actions stretched local police departments thin, disrupted businesses and left city budgets struggling to absorb the fallout.What unifies these ICE actions is they were all sustained over several weeks in communities where local law enforcement isn't authorized towith federal immigration efforts. Still, these deployments resulted in knock-on effects that required the use of local police to bring about or preserve order. Police overtime surged as departments were forced to deploy officers for demonstrations, extra patrols, security around federal facilities and emergency responses tied to the raids — often at overtime pay rates.spending climbed to $41 million in June 2025, when immigration raids sparked weeks of protests — well above the department's typical monthly range of $18 to $30 million,In Minneapolis, the Police Department reported more than $6 million in overtime and standby pay in less than a month, from Jan. 7 to Feb. 8, according to the city's police chief. That's The full financial picture is still not fully known. City leaders are reviewing their budgets and expect costs to continue to go up. In response to NPR's questions about how the immigration crackdown has affected city budgets, Abigail Jackson, a White House spokeswoman, provided a statement and included source links:"Illegal aliens cost American taxpayers"The first three weeks of it, we were really balancing and teetering on martial law," LA Councilwoman Eunisses Hernandez told NPR. She said the city didn't expect"such a heavy-handed and militarized and war-like response from the federal government to people expressing their First Amendment rights." The LAPD spent around $17 million between June 8 and June 16 responding to the anti-ICE protests that broke out that month. Close to $12 million of that went to overtime costs, These figures do not include the costs of potential lawsuits or liability claims from residents and protesters injured during the demonstrations, and from aggressive policing by the LAPD that the city expects to face, Hernandez said.In response to questions from NPR, the LAPD did not provide any information about what types of activities officers were engaged in when they incurred the overtime hours. The City Controller's Office pointed NPR to the public database of city funding for more information. But the data lacked specifics. Overtime costs for the LAPD for the entire month of June 2025 ballooned to more than $40 million. Overtime hovered between $22 million to a little over $33 million from January 2025 through May 2025. The LAPD, the country's third-largest police department, has struggled with short staffing — contributing to the need to spend millions on overtime in prior years,L.A. Mayor Karen Bass did not answer questions about the financial repercussions on the city from the police response to the raids or on local businesses. U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents stand off against demonstrators as tear gas fills the air outside the federal ICE building during a protest in Portland, Ore., last June.Not long after the unrest in Los Angeles, Portland Police Bureau Chief Robert Day said protesters and federal agents began to converge on the city's ICE facility in June. "The bulk of our overtime investment, and demands on our time have been at the facility," Day told NPR. From June until November 2025, Portland police officers were staffed at the ICE facility nearly every day, according to the city data provided to NPR. There were other times when officers were actively monitoring but weren't at the facility. In 2025, the Portland Police Bureau recorded 38,213 overtime hours categorized as"event response," according to data provided to NPR. For context, Portland police racked up 19,166 overtime hours for event response for all of 2024. The overtime hours accrued in 2025 are nearly half of what was accrued when police responded to major protests in 2020 and 2021 following the death of George Floyd. Police worked between 70,000 to more than 80,000 hours of overtime to respond to those events, according to the data. Local law enforcement's role at the ICE facility this summer and fall was to maintain order. Protests got out of hand at times."The facility was badly damaged. It was heavily attacked. Windows broken and graffiti," Day said. During now-outgoing DHS Secretary Kristi Noem's October visit, Portland police were tasked with providing even more security to the center — 456 officers, resulting in close to 3,000 hours of overtime hours worked, according to data provided to NPR, and equating to"a few hundred thousand bucks," according to Day. "Cops were working long days, long weeks, over an extended period of time," Day said."We are understaffed, under-resourced, and the rest of the city suffers because of that." In the summer and fall, that meant calls for service took much longer, according to Day."Our average response time to priority calls has grown to 17,18 minutes … and it should be more like six to eight," he confirmed.At the peak of the immigration enforcement surge, there were around 3,000 ICE and Customs and Border Protection agents in the Minneapolis area. There are only around 600 cops in the Minneapolis Police Department, and statewide, there are around 10,000 law enforcement officers. "I cannot imagine any other city going through the intensity and the sheer amount of chaos that happened here. It was terrible," Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O'Hara told NPR."Minneapolis is a small city. This is not Chicago. It's not LA, I don't think it would be possible for them to overwhelm those cities in the way that this city was really overwhelmed by that surge." Early on, O'Hara made big changes to respond to the deployments of federal agents to Minneapolis. He changed operational procedures and created a full-time position for a lieutenant to be available to monitor ICE-related calls. He also staffed the department's operation center with civilian community service officers to help monitor social media and the city's camera feed to see action in the streets in real time, he explained. By early January, O'Hara was instructing all sworn officers to be in uniform at all times while on duty. "I was afraid there was going to be a need for an emergency situation that would require a massive deployment. And the next day is when Renee Good was killed," he told NPR."From that moment, until about a day or two after the third shooting that we had when Mr. Pretti died, I would say it just continued to escalate." When the police were responding to and protecting active crime scenes in the aftermath of the shootings, ICE agents continued with immigration stops and arrests. In response, demonstrations of thousands in opposition to the raids continued.O'Hara compared that chaos to the unrest after the 2020 killing of Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer, which led to major protests and riots.As a result, overtime costs skyrocketed. O'Hara said the department spent about $6.4 million on overtime costs from Jan. 7 through Feb. 8. "It was, honestly, an overwhelming situation that for most of it, it felt like there was just no end in sight," he said.By the third week of January, O'Hara said he received reports that officers were experiencing symptoms of PTSD,"which scared me," he said. The 2020 Floyd protests had a huge impact on the department — so much so it led to a mass exodus of officers reporting symptoms of PTSD. "As emotionally charged as things were on the street, it was difficult for them," O'Hara said."It took them back to the feelings and things that they had experienced in 2020. That was really tough for a lot of the cops." O'Hara continued, talking about staffing concerns:"It was my fear that we were going to wind up having this cycle again and just wind up losing more people. Unlike in 2020…there's absolutely no buffer. We're at bare bones here." With police pulled to respond to keep public order, officers were being pulled off of active investigations. Crimes weren't being solved or investigated as quickly as they could have, he added.on Feb. 13 that estimated the total economic fallout in one month during these operations was more than $203 million. The report lists a host of consequences from the raids, including residents detained, job losses and business closures. "The impact was both extraordinary and it was devastating for those months, while this invasion was taking place," Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey told NPR."People were afraid to go out. Afraid to go to the grocery store. Terrified that their families were going to get ripped apart."Jackson, the White House spokeswoman, said in her statement:"When will NPR ask sanctuary cities if they will reimburse the American people for expenses incurred by illegal aliens? Or if they will apologize to the victims of violent criminal illegal aliens?" O'Hara said the problem was not that immigration enforcement was happening. The problem is the"unsafe and questionable methods" of the federal agents and"questionable leadership."St. Paul, the capital of Minnesota and close neighbor to Minneapolis, loaned some officers to Minneapolis to deal with the crush of Operation Metro Surge, according to Rebecca Noecker, the president of St. Paul's City Council. "This was a problem that we did not make and it's a problem we don't have the resources to solve," said Noecker. Following the shooting of Renee Macklin Good in Minneapolis, St. Paul police spent $46,000 in overtime in just one day to assist the neighboring police department, Noecker said. From Jan. 7 to Feb. 5 St. Paul police shared with NPR that 4,679.75 employee overtime hours were worked in response to Operation Metro Surge. That cost $372,341.38. They didn't tell NPR how many officers worked the additional hours or provide additional data beyond early 2026. "The line between physically intervening with ICE to keep protesters safe and physically intervening with ICE in a way that prevents a lawful enforcement action is a really fine one," Noecker said."What I heard mostly from our police was: 'We're really in an impossible situation.'" Community members and neighbors of people detained by ICE gather in protest at a Target store on Jan. 19 in St. Paul.Noecker says the numbers her city is seeing now are not the end of the story. She expects these bills to go up. In nearby Bloomington, Minn., 10 minutes south of Minneapolis, the city's police Chief Booker Hodges told NPR protests against ICE spilled into his community. He said, for example, demonstrations broke out in front of hotels where it was rumored that ICE agents were staying. In January, when the White House deployed federal law enforcement to Minneapolis"all hell broke loose," Hodges said. Border Patrol and other federal agents were seen following residents to nearby schools, which triggered emergency calls to the department. There were also racial profiling incidents targeting the city's large Latino and Somali population, Hodges told NPR.Hodges said his officers were exhausted, but that his department is fully staffed so didn't require as much overtime as other agencies. His department spent more than $32,000 in overtime costs in response to immigration protests and activities, he told NPR. That covered 60 police officers and totaled 415.5 hours. The work for these officers involved extra patrols in retail and at the city's more than four dozen hotels. It also required the deployment of the department's Public Order Group . It was deployed once all of last year. This year, as of mid February, the group was deployed four times. He would like to see reimbursement from the federal government, but said,"it's pointless to even ask them for it." He says time would be better spent pushing for comprehensive immigration reform:"Because even though the surge has ended here, the laws that allowed it to take place are still in place."If you're enjoying this article, you'll love our daily newsletter, The LA Report. Each weekday, catch up on the 5 most pressing stories to start your morning in 3 minutes or less.It won't be as hot as last week, but we're in for another warm week here in SoCal where temperatures are going to be more than 10 degrees above normal.It won't be as hot as last week, but we're in for another warm week here in SoCal where temperatures are going to be more than 10 degrees above normal. Low clouds and even patchy fog are in store this morning for the coasts, downtown L.A. into the San Gabriel Valley. Otherwise, expect a mostly sunny afternoon. High temperatures along the beaches will be in the mid to upper 70s. For the valleys, we're looking at highs between 83 to 91, and up to 93 degrees in the Inland Empire.Red sand verbena, a native dune plant, blossoms with small purple flowers in the spring and is a key plant for the formation of dunes.Some 30 acres of sand dunes will be restored on an iconic stretch of beach in Santa Monica to help combat rising sea levels and worsening erosion.Thousands of acres of sand dunes once stretched from south of Santa Monica to the Palos Verdes Peninsula, providing habitat for local wildlife and buffering the coast against storms. Development and worsening climate change is threatening the beaches as we know them today, but research is finding bringing back dunes could help.in Santa Monica where San Vicente and Ocean boulevards meet. A few hundred yards away, the waves crashed on the shore.lived in this once-rural spot of coast, standing this close to the house would put you knee deep in water at high tide. “That low white concrete wall was the sea wall to protect the pool, to protect the backyard of that home,” said Tom Ford, CEO of the Santa Monica Bay Foundation, gesturing toward the house. A century ago this wide flat beach was far narrower. Many beaches in the Santa Monica Bay were artificially widened from the 1930s through the 1960s. The sand came from an ancient system of coastal dunes that extended from LAX all the way to the Palos Verdes Peninsula. Thehas been figuring out how to bring back pieces of those ancient dunes. So far, the nonprofit has restored small patches of dunes on beaches from Point Dume to Manhattan Beach. Their latest, and largest dune restoration effort so far, will extend about 30 acres south of Santa Monica pier to the border with Venice.The nonprofit first installed dunes in Santa Monica in 2016 — “installed” meaning they put in a simple rope and little wood fence around about 3 acres, then scattered a bunch of native dune plant seeds. Nature did the rest.Now across about 8 acres of this beach, dunes up to 5 feet tall are crowned with low-lying plants: blossoming yellow beach evening primrose flowers, light green beach bur, saltbush — a foundational plant for growing dunes, Ford said. “These are super tough characters. They can handle the salt water, they can handle the salt air," Ford said. “Their big roots are extending down into the beach.”Birds migrating thousands of miles along the Pacific Flyway will be able to rest and forage here too. Not only that, the dunes can lessen the amount of sand that blows onto the bike path, parking lots and roads, a regular nuisance for city maintenance crews.The Bay Foundation relies on volunteers to help with dune restoration, and a lot more help will be needed as the nonprofit expands their efforts. Find volunteer opportunities“Between the sea level rising and getting taller, more frequent, more violent storms hitting our coastline, we're likely to lose the beach,” Ford said.But dunes “start to build a beach that grows in height, and that helps us keep up with sea level rise,” Ford said.but the Santa Monica dunes have been shown to reduce erosion and flooding. Native dune plants hold onto sand, while allowing the dunes to remain dynamic, reducing erosion. That’s opposed to introduced species like iceplant, which have squeezed out many native dune plants and are akin to concrete to wildlife. When not carpeted by iceplant, the dunes themselves can absorb waves’ energy, displacing less sand and redistributing it in a way that allows the beach to recover. In contrast, sea walls trigger a scouring effect when the waves reverberate off of them, said UC Santa Barbara coastal ecologist Kyle Emery, who is part of a team that has surveyed more than 120 dune restoration sites across the state, including the Santa Monica dunes. His research found that those dunes also reduced flooding on the beach during significant storms in the winter of 2023. “That restored dune site was able to prevent about 14 meters or 50 feet of water runup on the beach,” Emery said..There’s hard infrastructure like sea walls, but that’s costly and worsens erosion. You can build sand berms like the ones that go up in the winter in Orange County — those can protect infrastructure, but don’t have much benefit for wildlife .“We've demonstrated that this nature-based solution can protect against sea level rise and storm-driven wave erosion,” Emery said. Still, Emery emphasized, dunes are no silver bullet. Dunes won’t work everywhere, and some places are likely to simply be too inundated with water. More long-term research is needed, Emery said, but so far the research on dunes shows promise.requires all coastal areas to plan for sea level rise — dunes are mentioned as a nature-based strategy. And Proposition 4, passed by voters in 2024, provides dedicated funding for such coastal resilience efforts.Bolsa Chica State Beach, for example, is likely to seek such funding for its own burgeoning dune restoration effort , as are parts of south Orange County, where beach erosion has been a major problem for infrastructure,“ I think the writing is on the wall, and we're now looking at it differently, that we really need to get ahead of this,” Pratt said. In Santa Monica, the dunes are something of a test. We’ve become used to volleyball and sunbathing on wide, groomed stretches of sand, but maybe it’s time to make room for dunes, too. They may be cluttered with some trash, but there’s also a patchwork of plants and small birds foraging. There’s also driftwood and kelp — once the foundations of developing dunes before we came accustomed to scraping the beach clean.
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Dallas Weighs Options for Cesar Chavez Boulevard Amid ControversyFollowing accusations, Dallas considers renaming Cesar Chavez Boulevard and seeks suggestions for alternative honorees, sparking discussion about public figures and their legacies. The city is responding to a callout for replacement names.
Read more »
What we learned from The New York Times' investigation into Cesar ChavezKevin Lind is a staff writer for the Deseret News on the Ideas and Culture team, covering the Intermountain West.
Read more »
A San Diego community garden honors Dolores Huerta following Cesar Chavez allegationsYasmeen Ludy joined the ABC 10News team in Oct. 2024.
Read more »
Bay Area artists move to erase and rethink Cesar Chavez's legacyWork is underway to remove the likeness of farm labor leader Cesar Chavez from schools and other buildings in the Bay Area and California.
Read more »
Allegations of Sexual Abuse Against César Chavez Highlight Challenges for Women FarmworkersReports reveal allegations of sexual abuse against César Chavez, a prominent farmworker leader, highlighting the ongoing challenges of sexual violence and exploitation faced by women farmworkers. The article discusses the historical context, the impact of these revelations, and the progress made by women-led organizations in combating sexual harassment in the agricultural industry.
Read more »
Lesson plans go 'out the window' as educators pivot on César Chávez amid abuse allegationsEducators at college and K-12 schools are rethinking how to teach about César Chávez following allegations that the United Farm Workers co-founder and labor leader sexually abused girls and women.
Read more »
