Students in California are speaking out in a new wave of activism.
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[Essential California Newsletter] PRESENTED BY Being The Ricardos* January 28, 2022
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[Click to view images]( Lee-Chang, a senior at Redondo Union High, has been calling for increased coronavirus safety measures at the school, including KN95 masks for students and staff and socially distanced desks. (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times) Good morning, and welcome to the Essential California [newsletter](. Itâs Friday, Jan. 28, and Iâm your guest host, Sarah Parvini. Iâm writing from Los Angeles. Students in California are joining in a new chapter of activism since their return from winter break: speaking out against what they see as lax campus safety measures amid the coronavirus surge driven by the [highly contagious Omicron variant](. Theyâve made themselves heard during school board meetings, fired up social media accounts, and organized boycotts, petitions and walkouts â but some are also facing criticism. As my colleague Melissa Gomez reports, the student activists have different styles but share a desire to make their schools as safe as they can. In recent weeks, students in [Boston]( Chicago and New York mobilized to demand their schools increase safety measures, including providing medical-grade masks, conducting more testing and offering a remote learning option at least until the surge in coronavirus cases substantially falls. School administrators say classrooms remain safe. The state requires people on campus to [wear a mask indoors]( and promotes layers of protection, including upgraded air filters and more campus cleaning. Yet even as [infection rates have begun to decline]( since school resumed three weeks ago, [educators are struggling to keep campus doors open]( amid high absentee rates among teachers and students, staff shortages and limited supplies of testing and masks. âThese guidelines are fine, but whatâs the point if theyâre not being enforced?â one student said at a school board meeting in Redondo Beach. âIâm seeing eight through 18 students missing from each of my classes right now, and most because theyâre out from COVID, but some because theyâre not comfortable coming back dealing with the current problem.â [Read the story: â[As student activists fight for COVID safety measures at schools, some face criticism]( in the Los Angeles Times] And now, hereâs whatâs happening across California: Note: Some of the sites we link to may limit the number of stories you can access without subscribing. California promised âsocial equityâ after legalizing pot, but did it deliver? Five years after voters legalized recreational cannabis for adults, many cities and counties have yet to adopt programs to boost the chances of success for hopeful Black and Latino cannabis entrepreneurs. [Los Angeles Times]( No more SAT and ACT testing requirements for Cal State schools? California State University sent a strong signal that it will permanently scrap SAT and ACT testing requirements for admission, aligning it with the University of California, which has dumped the standardized exams. [Los Angeles Times]( The battle over vaccine rules for kids reignites in California. Lawmakers want to create stricter vaccine mandates, especially for children. They anticipate an especially fierce fight in the coming months. [CalMatters]( ADVERTISEMENT BY Being The Ricardos
[Being The Ricardos]( Amazon Studios presents BEING THE RICARDOS. Writer/Director Aaron Sorkin examines one production week of I Love Lucyâ from table read through taping â as Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz face personal and professional crises that threaten their show, careers, and marriage. Now nominated for 2 SAG Awards â Best Actress Nicole Kidman and Best Actor Javier Bardem, and 3 Critics Choice Awards â Best Original Screenplay Aaron Sorkin, Best Actress Nicole Kidman, and Best Supporting Actor J.K. Simmons. Deadline raves itâs "One of the best films of the year." BEING THE RICARDOS is streaming now on Prime Video. End of advertisement L.A. STORIES How Inglewood got SoFi Stadium and the Super Bowl. Hereâs the story of how a horse racing track beat out a landfill, a rock quarry and downtown convention center hall in a battle of billionaires to host L.A. Countyâs first Super Bowl in nearly 30 years. [LAist]( [Two men bump elbows as a third watches in an empty NFL stadium.]
Chargers owner Dean Spanos, left, Rams owner Stan Kroenke and Inglewood Mayor James T. Butts gather during the official ribbon-cutting ceremony for SoFi Stadium in September 2020. (Al Seib / Los Angeles Times) Esteban Torres, a longtime L.A. congressman who championed Latino rights, dies at 91. Torres, a son of East Los Angeles, emerged from the Chicano civil rights movement to become a United Auto Workers leader, anti-poverty activist and eight-term member of the House. After retiring from Congress, he was a co-founder of La Plaza de Cultura y Artes, a museum and cultural center near downtown L.A.âs Olvera Street. [Los Angeles Times]( Our daily news podcast If youâre a fan of this newsletter, youâll love our daily podcast âThe Times,â hosted every weekday by columnist Gustavo Arellano, along with reporters from across our newsroom. Go beyond the headlines. Download and listen [on our App]( subscribe [on Apple Podcasts]( and follow [on Spotify](. POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT Higher interest rates are coming. What does it mean for California homes, cars and credit cards? Housing will probably be more expensive. The interest on credit cards, cars and student loans is likely to go up. And interest on savings is not likely to grow all that much. [Sacramento Bee]( CRIME, COURTS AND POLICING San Franciscoâs 2021 crime data just came out. Hereâs what the numbers show. In San Francisco overall, property crimes went up 11% and violent crimes went up by 1% in 2021 compared to 2020, but the numbers as a whole were lower than crime from 2019 and previous years. [SFGATE]( Support our journalism [Subscribe to the Los Angeles Times.]( ADVERTISEMENT
IMMIGRATION California lawsuit settlement limits ICE from re-detaining immigrants freed because of pandemic. The settlement comes as COVID-19 infections in detention centers have surged since December to 3,129 â nearly 15% of the total detained population â as of Wednesday. Eleven people in ICE custody have died of COVID-19, according to the agency. [Los Angeles Times]( HEALTH AND THE ENVIRONMENT San Francisco eases mask, vaccination proof rules as Omicron recedes. The new rules, which take effect Tuesday, will say that gym members and office workers no longer need to wear a mask indoors as long as they are up to date on their vaccinations and booster shot, if eligible. [Los Angeles Times]( Proposed ballot measure to build more California dams, desalination projects likely to be withdrawn due to lack of money and signatures. Despite Californiaâs drought, supporters havenât built a big enough coalition for the water measure. [Mercury News]( CALIFORNIA CULTURE Augustine tribeâs Temalpakh Farm Market opens in Coachella with bird singing, fresh produce. One of the smallest Native American tribes in the United States, the Augustine Band of Cahuilla Indians, opened a new produce market as part of the tribeâs roughly 50-acre Temalpakh Farm in Coachella. [Desert Sun]( Gifts from my two mothers: One Korean, one Black. An adoptee from South Korea grows up in Compton, then learns she had more in common with her birth mother than she ever imagined. [Los Angeles Times]( Column: Racism in O.C. schools is nothing new â but itâs surprisingly diverse. Video shot from the visitors stands at Portola High in Irvine captures a Laguna Hills High student shouting racist insults at a Black Portola basketball player, drawing national attention as yet the latest last gasp of old, nasty Orange County. But in many ways, hate is more insidious in Orange County than ever before, even as white students are no longer the majority in several of its schools, Gustavo Arellano writes. [Los Angeles Times]( 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: partly cloudy, 74 San Diego: partly cloudy, 70 San Francisco: partly cloudy, 62 San Jose: partly cloudy, 69 Fresno: partly cloudy, 66 Sacramento: partly cloudy, 62 AND FINALLY Todayâs California memory is from Shen Pauley: I took off for California on a frigid, grey day in mid-September, in the early â70s, driving nonstop for several thousand miles. I was exhausted but elated when I landed in the splendors of Yosemite Valley. I marveled at El Capitan, and took a plunge in the refreshing Merced River. I climbed the heights of Yosemite Falls at moonlight in the clear air. A hike to Tuolumne Meadows wrapped me in a magical sense of wonder. I unfurled like a flower in the bright warmth and opened to new friends and adventures. Amazingly, I met a traveling childrenâs theater troupe at the historic Ahwahnee Hotel, joined up with them and spent many years traveling the state in creative, rewarding fun with kids. Later, I settled into a cozy cabin in idyllic Skyforest, near Lake Arrowhead in the San Bernardino Mountains. It was a peaceful and happy time for me, surrounded by tall ponderosas with a lovely organic garden and Nubian goats. California was an epiphany, and this happiness stays with me through the years. 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 to essentialcalifornia@latimes.com. ADVERTISEMENT
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