Also in the news: L.A. County to reopen indoor restaurants, gyms, movie theaters as early as Monday.
â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â [Los Angeles Times] Essential California March 12, 2021
[View in browser]( Good morning, and welcome to the Essential California [newsletter](. Itâs Friday, March 12, and Iâm writing from Los Angeles. Los Angeles was still under a nightly curfew when members of the L.A. City Council [first called for]( an investigation into the tactics employed by the Los Angeles Police Department during the unrest that erupted after the death of George Floyd. By the end of June, the council [had voted unanimously]( to commission a report examining the LAPDâs crowd control tactics during the protests that dominated the city in late May and early June. Eight months later, that City Council-commissioned report is here â and it outlines many of the same failings [that have been loudly voiced by]( activists and protesters since the summer. The LAPD seriously mishandled its response to the summer protests, according to the independent report. The departmentâs failures were attributed to poor planning, inadequate training and a disregard for rules on mass arrests and crowd control that were established after past failures to manage protests. [Read the full story: [âHighly critical report faults LAPD for mishandling summer George Floyd unrestâ]( in the Los Angeles Times] As my colleagues [Kevin Rector and Emily Alpert Reyes report,]( the analysis was conducted by a panel of former Police Department commanders led by Gerald Chaleff, an attorney and former member of the LAPD and the L.A. Police Commission who has helped review the departmentâs handling of past unrest. [Previously: [âUnder lax protocol, LAPD responded to protests with aggressive forceâ]( in the Los Angeles Times on June 11] The [independent report]( found a âchaos of commandâ during the unrest where even the LAPDâs own command staff didnât always know who was in charge. Secret âshadow teamsâ of undercover officers were sent into crowds without sufficient means of relaying their intelligence to commanders, according to the report. The report also found that officers were sent into the streets with hard-foam projectile weapons that they werenât adequately trained to use, and police commanders without up-to-date training in crowd control tactics were put in charge of volatile scenes. [Kevin Rector]( who covers the LAPD for The Times, has reported on [multiple]( were badly wounded after being shot with 40-millimeter hard-foam projectiles at close range despite apparently representing little or no threat to officers. [Read a summary of [some of the key points]( in the report] The LAPD said it would not comment on specific criticisms in the report before completing its own review of the summer events, which is pending, but that it has already made some changes based on lessons learned. Melina Abdullah, co-founder of BLM-L.A., [told my colleagues]( that the report addressed some of the wrongs that were perpetrated against protesters, but âwhat it doesnât do is really critique the notion that LAPD should be putting down righteous protests in the first place.â And now, hereâs whatâs happening across California: President Biden said restrictions on who can make a COVID-19 vaccine appointment will be lifted nationwide by May 1. The current limitations no longer will be needed because vaccine supply will be adequate to meet demand. All American adults should be able to get at least a first shot by the end of May, he added. [Los Angeles Times]( California releases details on how millions can get COVID-19 vaccinations beginning Monday: Four days before an estimated 4.4 million Californians with disabilities or underlying health conditions become eligible for the vaccine, the California Public Health Department released guidance on the verification process. Notably, the state is not requiring that eligible disabled or sick individuals present documentation of their condition. [Los Angeles Times]( L.A. County to reopen indoor restaurants, gyms, museums and movie theaters as early as Monday: The reopenings will be triggered as soon as California reaches its goal of administering 2 million COVID-19 vaccine doses to residents in its most disadvantaged areas â which appears likely to happen Friday. If the vaccination threshold is met Friday, the new L.A. County public health officer order could go into effect as early as Monday morning. [Los Angeles Times]( The San Francisco school board unanimously approved a reopening plan on Thursday. Under the plan, San Francisco public schools are expected to begin in-person learning for preschoolers through fifth-graders, special education students and vulnerable older groups starting April 12. Older students will probably not return before the end of the school year on June 2, according to the Chronicle report. [San Francisco Chronicle]( Note: Some of the sites we link to may limit the number of stories you can access without subscribing. ADVERTISEMENT
L.A. STORIES Meet the L.A. Phil musicians who started a music series on their Pasadena porch. They gave 25 weekly concerts from May through November. [Los Angeles Times]( [See also: [âLizzoâs musician. A âTenetâ artist. 11 classical musiciansâ stories of pandemic loss and hopeâ]( in the Los Angeles Times] The Grammys will be held in Los Angeles on Sunday. Hereâs a preview from our music writers. Angeles Times]( Plus, Oscar nominations arrive Monday. Awards columnist Glenn Whipp has complete predictions for all 23 categories, if youâre the betting sort. [Los Angeles Times]( Former Harvard-Westlake English teacher Caitlin Flanagan on the indefensibility of elite private schools: âElite schools breed entitlement, entrench inequality â and then pretend to be engines of social change.â [The Atlantic]( Support our journalism [Subscribe to the Los Angeles Times.]( POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT Supporters of Gov. Gavin Newsom tacitly acknowledged this week that the Democratic governor is likely to face a special election seeking his removal from office, as Newsomâs critics said they have collected more than 2 million signatures on petitions to force a vote this year. Registrars of voters in Californiaâs 58 counties have until late April to finish reviewing the petitions. [Los Angeles Times]( Rural Northern California finds its moment during the Newsom recall campaign: Californiaâs northern counties have often felt overlooked in the famously liberal Golden State. [Los Angeles Times]( CRIME AND COURTS A 75-year-old Asian man who was assaulted and robbed in Oakland died Thursday from his injuries. The assault comes amid a broader rash of violence against the Bay Areaâs Asian American community. Murder charges have been filed against a suspect in the assault. [San Francisco Chronicle]( L.A. is home to heavy industry â and more federal deals not to prosecute polluters than anywhere else. Critics of these deals â known as deferred prosecution or nonprosecution agreements â say they give corporations a pass. [Los Angeles Times]( [A building wrapped in scaffolding, as seen through a fence]
The Exide battery recycling plant in Vernon closed in 2015 as part of a deal with federal prosecutors not to file criminal charges against the company or its executives. The company later went bankrupt and so did not pay the full cost of cleaning up the pollution that blanketed predominantly working-class Latino neighborhoods. (Al Seib / Los Angeles Times)
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HEALTH AND THE ENVIRONMENT âWhich blessing should we say when we get the COVID vaccine?â An East Bay rabbi muses on the correct prayer to mark an undeniably âspiritual moment.â (I had planned to recite the shehecheyanu when I finally get the jab, but Rabbi Stein has me reconsidering.) [The Jewish News of Northern California]( CALIFORNIA CULTURE Lost year: How high school athletes coped during the COVID-19 pandemic. [Los Angeles Times]( With the return of high school sports in Southern California, The Times is launching Prep Rally, a newsletter written by the dean of Southland prep coverage, Eric Sondheimer. [Sign up for it here](. For creators, everything is for sale: âA rash of new start-ups are making it easier for digital creators to monetize every aspect of their life â down to what they eat, who they hang out with and who they respond to on TikTok.â [New York Times]( [See also: [âMarketers are underpaying Black influencers while pushing Black Lives Matterâ]( Bloomberg] Berkeley institution Moeâs Books has voted to unionize, citing âmany incidentsâ of unsafe COVID-19 protocols in the store. [SFGATE]( A poem to start your Friday: âOff the Blossom Trailâ by Andre Yang. [Poets.org]( Free online games Get our free daily crossword puzzle, sudoku, word search and arcade games in our new game center at [latimes.com/games](. CALIFORNIA ALMANAC Los Angeles: briefly sunny before the bleak clouds settle in, 57. San Diego: morning rain, 57. San Francisco: sunny, 61. San Jose: sunny, 64. Fresno: partly sunny, 61. Sacramento: sunny, 68. AND FINALLY Todayâs California memory comes from Anita Nardulli Seeley: As a child in the 1940s, I had the privilege of being a student at Dorris Place Elementary School in Los Angeles. In 1946, when I was 9, my father passed away after a brief illness, leaving my mother with three children to raise. I was very gifted musically as identified by the schoolâs music teacher, Mrs. Hendricks. Knowing how difficult it would have been for my mother to pay for lessons of any kind, Miss Adams, the schoolâs principal, gave permission for my fourth-grade teacher to pay for flute lessons for the following two years! That teacherâs name was Mrs. Robinson. I will never forget her! If you have a memory or story about the Golden State,[share it with us](. (Please keep your story to 100 words.) Please let us know what we can do to make this newsletter more useful to you. Send comments, complaints, ideas and unrelated book recommendations to [Julia Wick](mailto:julia.wick@latimes.com). Follow her on Twitter [@Sherlyholmes](. ADVERTISEMENT
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