Death Valley Reopens

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Death Valley Reopens
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LAist is part of Southern California Public Radio, a member-supported public media network. For the latest national news from NPR and our live radio broadcast, visitThe Do Not Enter sign is located at the end of Mustard Canyon Road, a scenic loop in Death Valley National Park. The road was erased by flash floods on August 20, 2023. The road has been repaired and will be open on Oct. 15, 2023.

In some locations flash floods washed mud, rocks and other debris over roads. The 25 MPH speed limit sign is buried in a debris flow in the Wildrose area.State Route 190, which provides access to the park’s eastern and western entrances, has undergone enough repairs to reopen at 6 a.m. on Sunday, but Caltrans is warning of significant delays. There will be multiple places allowing for just one lane of traffic as construction to restore the road continues.

Andler said the spots are remnants of the mini lakes that formed between the sand dunes after the rains this year. “You may get started someplace and be like, ‘I don't know why they have this closed. There's nothing wrong with this.’ And then a couple miles later, you can be coming up against a road cut through a dirt road that has a six-foot drop off. And if you get yourself in there, we're not going to be able to get you out,” Andler said. “We always say that help may be hours to a few days away.

The victory for health workers was long in the making. It unfolded in the final days of the legislative year when the hospital lobby and health care providers announced a rare deal with labor unions. The new law is expected to benefit about 469,000 employees statewide, including some who earn slightly more but who would get a corresponding boost, according to an analysis by

Hospitals with a high mix of Medi-Cal and Medicare patients, as well as rural independent hospitals would have to pay workers $18 an hour in 2024. That rate would increase 3.5% annually until it reaches $25 in 2033. State agencies did not weigh in on the bill. A wide range of business groups, medical clinics and county offices opposed the industry minimum wage hike.people have access to the care they need, when they need it, at a price they can afford. Visit Through a partnership between the Los Angeles Metro and public bathroom start-up Throne, a pilot program has launched self-contained bathrooms at three different metro stations for a six-month period to find solutions to L.A.

The self-contained bathrooms can be set up in a matter of hours, cutting out the installation costs of building bathrooms and connecting them to sewage, water and power systems.All users need to do is send a text, scan a QR code or check-in via an app. Instructions are available on the app, outside stalls and inside stalls in English and Spanish.of its ridership has phones, but TAP cards would be another option for accessing the bathrooms should the project roll out after six months.

That's because it comes attached with a piece of cinematic history — a nondescript hedgerow that just so happened to be in the 1978 slasher flickIn the scene, the film's protagonist Laurie Strode and a friend are walking home from school as she catches a glimpse of the escaped masked murderer lurking behind a hedge.

"People are really good. They're not very disruptive. They just take their pictures, and then they're on their way," she said.in South Pasadena the horror classic has made famous. Working on a shoestring budget, director John Carpenter had to shoot in L.A. to keep costs low. And South Pasadena with its small-town, all-American feel was deemed a credible stand-in for, it went on to become one of the highest grossing indie films of all time, spawning sequels and remakes.

The jail was infamous for the large number of inmates arrested over suspicions about their sexual orientation. It even had a separate wing for LGBTQ+ inmates, according to the Los Angeles Conservancy.Security Pacific National Bank Collection/Los Angeles Public Library)The Lincoln Heights Jail ended up being decommissioned in 1965 because of overcrowding and cost. The L.A. City Council and the L.A.

“This parcel of land is sitting vacant and almost entirely unused in the middle of a neighborhood with an unprecedented need for deeply affordable housing, community resources and economic development,” Hernandez said in a statement. “My office will be leading the charge to finally demolish this jail and rehabilitate the land for use that will serve Lincoln Heights and the broader Northeast LA community.

Baker is a rendering company located about five miles southeast of Downtown L.A. The company recycles animal parts and sometimes entire carcasses.Baker has been in a legal fight with AQMD since last year, and operating in a limited capacity, following aBaker’s attorneys are seeking to keep the inspector’s photos from public view, saying the images contain trade secrets and that they were obtained without permission.

The Beverly Hills Police Department did not immediately respond to a written request for comment. In the past, it has said it polices without regard to race."It tells us it doesn't matter who you are in Beverly Hills," said Gage."If you are a police officer getting pulled over for driving while Black, the ordinary citizen should be terrified going to the city of Beverly Hills if you're Black.

“I’m still traumatized," he said."I’m uncomfortable being in Beverly Hills. I no longer work in Beverly Hills." LAist analyzed arrest data provide by the city of Beverly Hills in October 2021 and found that nearly all of the people arrested by a special unit of the Beverly Hills Police Department assigned to Rodeo Drive during a two-month period in 2020 year were Black.The data shows 80 of the 90 people who were arrested were Black. Three were white. Almost all of those arrested were males between the ages of 18 and 30.

“This money will be given to the port of LA to transition more trucks and cargo handling equipment to zero emissions and to LADWP as they convert one of their natural gas plants to a clean hydrogen plant,” Bass said.The process involves renewable energy sources like wind and solar that are used to split water into hydrogen and oxygen. Hydrogen is then burned to create energy instead of the fossil fuel methane, which releases carbon dioxide when burned.

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