Twenty days into the fight against the Caldor fire, crews on Friday were feeling âcautiously optimisticâ as they turned a corner.
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[Essential California Newsletter] September 4, 2021
[View in browser]( Good morning, and welcome to the [Essential California newsletter](. It is Saturday, Sept. 4. Quick programming note: This newsletter will be off Monday for Labor Day. Weâll be back in your inbox on Tuesday morning. ADVERTISEMENT
Hereâs a look at the top stories of the last week Caldor progress. All of Californiaâs national forests closed beginning late Tuesday [as crews fought back flames](. Twenty days into the fight against the Caldor fire, crews on Friday were feeling âcautiously optimisticâ as they turned a corner, [saying it was it was 29% contained](. Widespread damage near Lake Tahoe. So far, the Caldor fire has triggered mass evacuations in two states, torched hundreds of homes, made the air hazardous to breathe and spurred President Biden to issue an emergency declaration. And the erratic wildfire is also causing [another problem for Lake Tahoe]( Smoke and ash particles are clouding its world-famous crystal blue waters. The recall effort is struggling. A new poll finds most likely California voters are [opposed to the Republican-led effort]( against Gov. Gavin Newsom and a growing number fear the consequences of removing him from office. And what about those who have already voted? [Lots of Democrats, few young people](. - In his fight to keep his political life afloat, Gov. Gavin Newsom has staked his future on [how well he can emulate a tea party darling]( former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker. - Republican front-runner Larry Elderâs support base draws from a mix of Californians who include some evangelicals, new converts, Trump backers and longtime listeners of his radio talk show who [call themselves âElderados.â]( - Former San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer is the most experienced politician heading into the Sept. 14 election. But the âvanillaâ Republican is still [struggling to break out of the pack](. Afghanistan war ends. The last U.S. troops departed the country at almost the stroke of midnight Monday, [ending Americaâs longest war](. But it wasnât an easy exit: The Times profiled four California Marines who were killed [as they assisted with evacuations](. Roe vs. Wade poised to fall. The Supreme Courtâs conservative majority has sent its strongest signal to date that Roe vs. Wade will fall, allowing [Texas to outlaw abortions after six weeks]( of pregnancy. The decision comes as a belated wake-up call to liberals and has [intensified one of the most fraught issues]( in American politics. Vaccination milestone. More than 80% of eligible Californians have now received [at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine]( a milestone Newsom characterized as a âmomentous occasion.â Meanwhile, state lawmakers have [dropped a controversial proposal]( to mandate vaccinations in the state. Community college fraud. The California Community Colleges system is investigating potentially widespread fraud involving [fake âbot studentsâ enrolled in active courses]( in what officials suspect is [a scam to obtain financial aid]( or COVID-19 relief grants. Santa Monica vs. Malibu. The two cities that make up the Santa Monica-Malibu Unified School District want a divorce amid disagreement over money, power, fairness and the most volatile issue of all: [what is in the best interests of the children](. On the run. A Tarzana couple are on the run from federal authorities after they sliced off their monitoring bracelets and fled while awaiting sentencing for the[theft of millions of dollars in]( pandemic relief funds]( according to the FBI. Enjoying this newsletter? Your support helps us deliver the news that matters most. [Become a Times subscriber.]( ADVERTISEMENT
ICYMI, here are this weekâs great reads Long live street couches! To the outside world, street furniture may not seem like one of the things that is, or should be, representative of L.A. But love it or hate it â and some people really, really hate it â these pieces are part of the cultural and visual fabric here. From climate-conscious collectors to photographers, plenty of Angelenos [canât get enough of free sidewalk finds](. A little labor history for your Labor Day. Columnist Patt Morrison takes you deep into the bricks, bombs and socialist utopias of Southern Californiaâs labor movement, including the one time Los Angeles [came close to having a socialist mayor](. Our television critic Lorraine Ali reflects on life as an American Muslim two decades after the 9/11 attacks: âMourning loss is critical, and the ongoing need to make sense of a senseless act like the one perpetrated by Osama bin Ladenâs henchmen is understandable. Still, itâs hard to get behind the mediaâs ongoing canonization of the attacks after two failed wars, thousands of lives lost and millions of people displaced, [including my extended Iraqi family](. Iâm not sure whether there is a âright wayâ to process a devastation so deep, with such lasting ramifications, but last weekâs withdrawal from Afghanistan is a stark reminder that [remembering it as a Pearl Harbor-like prelude to war is not the answer]( Free online games Get our free daily crossword puzzle, sudoku, word search and arcade games in our game center at [latimes.com/games](. Todayâs week-in-review newsletter was curated by Laura Blasey. Please let us know what we can do to make this newsletter more useful to you. Send comments, complaints and ideas to essentialcalifornia@latimes.com. ADVERTISEMENT
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