Santa Ana Recall

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Santa Ana Recall
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The Orange County Registrar of Voters made a late discovery in the recall of Councilmember Jessie Lopez — the whole election was based on bad data. But it's still going forward, for now.The city used current information about Lopez's district when it should have used information from when voters first elected Lopez in 2020. The source of the confusion? Redistricting.

Using the correct district boundaries, Page also calculated that the initial recall petition actually fell short of the number required to hold an election by 230 signatures. Last week, Page rescinded his initial verification that recall petitioners had met the signature threshold. Santa Ana is the only city in Orange County where elected officials have passed a rent control ordinance. Its policy restricts rent increases to 2.54% through the end of August 2024.cap rent increases under 3%. For example, West Hollywood’s cap is 2.5% through the end of August 2024 and rent controlled housing in the city of L.A.

"The fact that the answer is clear doesn't mean that the question comes up often enough for it to be on the top of everybody's mind," said Fredric Woocher, a Los Angeles-based election lawyer. Downey city clerk Maria Alicia Duarte told LAist there was no question that the recall would be up to voters in the district that originally elected Duarte in 2020. The city hasthat the new boundaries for the district formerly represented by Alvarez, won't go into effect until the November 2024 general election.

So who's fault is the Santa Ana mistake? Woocher said"everybody has the responsibility to provide correct information." "The integrity of our elections is way too important and sacred for politicians to be the ones who decide whether an election currently taking place gets canceled or not, especially after many Santa Ana residents have already cast their votes," he wrote.

There are 88 cities in the county, but not every patch of land under the L.A. County umbrella is a city. Some places have their own police forces. Some don’t. Some have their own fire departments. Some don’t. So to get that water to L.A. in an easier way, two years later city leaders annexed most of the San Fernando Valley. This annexation put the aqueduct in incorporated L.A. city boundaries.This meant if you lived in the city of L.A, you had access to this water. If you didn’t — well, that was unfortunate. No Owens water for you! And because of a legal provision, officials were not allowed to sell the newly available resource to places outside the city.

And that was problematic as many people didn’t want Big Brother to tell them what to do, according to Tom Sitton, retired curator at the L.A. County Museum of Natural History. The Historic Venue Restoration and Resiliency Act was introduced by State Sen. Anthony Portantino, who represents the Rose Bowl Stadium. It allows designated venues to reinvest a portion of sales and use taxes into their own infrastructure improvements.

Portantino expects much of the new money to go towards modernization projects that have been put on the back burner. The new law will only apply to venues that meet specific criteria. The property must contain a structure built before 1940, it must be officially designated a National Historic Landmark by the National Park Service or the United States Department of the Interior, and it must be used for live, ticketed events for more than 50 years.

Animal control has removed multiple nets strung up between trees in Temple City, though it’s unclear who’s putting them up and why.If you’re in Temple City and you see someone putting up or taking down a net, call the Sheriff Department's non-emergency number at 626-285-7171.Jacob Margolis helps Southern Californians understand the science shaping our imperfect paradise and gets us prepared for what’s next.Sunset Beach in Huntington Beach will be closed until 4:30 p.m.

Sharks mostly coexist peacefully with surfers and swimmers, Carey said. However, in some instances, they display aggressive behaviors such thrashing and splashing in the water, making contact with or bumping a surfer, or swimming at a fast pace towards a swimmer. When that happens, it warrants a closure.The whale, a pygmy sperm whale, was humanely euthanized by a team from the Pacific Marine Mammal Center.

This species of whale, Deming said, typically dive very deep “so we suspect this animal was very ill and that's why it was trying to beach itself and the shark bite was probably just an incidental thing with a shark taking an opportunity when it came across an injured marine mammal.” On Monday, the Ministry of Health in Gaza reported more than 10,000 people killed — most of them women and children — in the besieged territory. In the West Bank, 155 people have been killed since Oct. 7, the health ministry says.have been killed since Oct. 7,"the highest number of United Nations fatalities ever recorded in a single conflict."

The United Nations estimates more than 1.4 million people — more than half of the territory's population — are displaced from their homes.Humanitarian groups like the UNRWA continue to plead for the release of hostages and for each party to agree to a cease-fire. Israeli bombs hit refugee camps. One attack on the Maghazi refugee camp early Sunday killed at least 33 people and wounded dozens, health officials in the region said.The Rafah border crossing was reopened Monday

The ones that have managed to flee have mostly traveled by foot for miles — adults carrying babies or pushing wheelchairs with the elderly, and holding the hands of children lugging bags full of whatever belongings they could grab. Some waved white pieces of cloth to show they were civilians.NPR spoke with a group traveling in Gaza who said they had to walk past dead bodies rotting in the street as bombs dropped in the distance. They declined to provide their names over security concerns.U.S.

Despite this whirlwind visit, Blinken's efforts yielded little obvious progress on cease-fire talks or increasing humanitarian aid to Gaza. It's one of the most difficult choices a community can make. Local governments typically want more housing, not less, because budgets are generally funded by the property taxes from those homes. At the same time, a nationwide housing shortage is creating even more pressure to build.

With some of the most expensive housing in the U.S., California's cities face requirements to build more housing to boost supply. But where to put it is tricky. About one-quarter of California is at, according to state wildfire authorities. And as the climate gets hotter, ten of thousands of homes have been lost in destructive wildfires in the last five years alone.

Collinsworth directs Preserve Wild Santee, an environmental group that joined several others to file a lawsuit to stop the development after the city approved it in 2020. A, finding that the developer didn't adequately analyze how long it would take residents to evacuate during a fire or whether they could do so safely.

"We tried to take everything we can learn from the fires plus even more, making it, in my opinion, the best example of what can be done to make a defensible community," Aden says. In Casa Grande, about an hour south of Phoenix, Mayor Craig McFarland knows his city's future is linked to water. Housing is already in high demand. Industry is moving into the area, with both a battery and an electric car manufacturer offering thousands of jobs near town.

"Arizona is the only state in the country that requires 100 years' worth of water," McFarland says."It's a consumer protection." Not far from the center of town, construction workers are putting the finishing touches on new single-story homes in a 331-unit development. Water supply hasn't been a barrier to building because these units will be part of one large rental project.

Ferris helped write Arizona's 100-year water law four decades ago. She says its strength is that it tethers building decisions to water decisions. Back then, build-to-rent wasn't common. Now, she says, the state is reaching a pivotal moment when all water use needs to be accounted for. Arizona's groundwater law is a rarity among Western states, requiring cities to think about how building decisions will affect the water supply over the next century."I used to say, 'Maybe we're at our limit. Maybe we can't build any more houses,'" says Pinal County Supervisor Stephen Miller, who works on water issues."So now I say, 'If we're going to maintain any type of growth, we have to bring water in.

As a result, New Jersey appears to be doing significantly better than the national average when it comes to the number of homes in flood zones, according to preliminary findings by a group of climate scientists including Siders and Mach. Stephanie and Nicholas Cepparulo's home in Lambertville, N.J., was destroyed in a flash flood in 2021. The property had been in Stephanie's family for over 100 years, but with climate change causing more severe storms, it was no longer a safe place to live. They chose to accept a home buyout, with the support of their local mayor and a case manager from the state government.Because home buyouts are voluntary, the town could move forward only if people agreed to move.

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