Posts Tagged ‘ federal ’

Richard Reeves: A New American Rebellion – Truthdig

March 29, 2013

Richard Reeves: A New American Rebellion – Truthdig : LOS ANGELES—As the Supreme Court debated this week over the federal Defense of Marriage Act, the 17-year-old law barring same-sex marriage, Justice Antonin Scalia noted the number of states that are permitting gays and lesbians to marry. “There has been a sea change,” he said, “between now and 1996.”

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,
Posted in Press | Comments Off on Richard Reeves: A New American Rebellion – Truthdig

"Civic Center Slapper Strikes Again," Says LAPD

February 3, 2012
"Civic Center Slapper Strikes Again," Says LAPD

A suspect the Los Angeles Police Department have dubbed the “Civic Center Slapper” has “struck again,” say authorities. The LAPD describes an incident from the evening of January 27, when a 51-year-old victim who works as a US attorney was walking near Aliso and Alameda streets in the vicinity of the Federal Building. more › Read more here: “Civic Center Slapper Strikes Again,” Says LAPD

Tags: , , , , , ,
Posted in Local News | Comments Off on "Civic Center Slapper Strikes Again," Says LAPD

Gay Army Veteran Sues Federal Government for Denying Military Benefits to Her Wife

February 2, 2012
Gay Army Veteran Sues Federal Government for Denying Military Benefits to Her Wife

A gay U.S. Army veteran in Pasadena has filed a suit against the federal government for denying military benefits to her wife. In her suit, Cooper-Harris says that the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs is still denying benefits to same-sex couples that it offers to heterosexual couples in violation of her constitutional rights, according to City News Service. more › Read the original post: Gay Army Veteran Sues Federal Government for Denying Military Benefits to Her Wife

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
Posted in Local News | Comments Off on Gay Army Veteran Sues Federal Government for Denying Military Benefits to Her Wife

‘Somehow Those Promises Don’t Get Kept’

January 28, 2012

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — The court-appointed receiver overseeing California’s prison health care system said Friday the state must keep its promise to spend more than $2 billion for new medical facilities before the federal courts can end an oversight role that has lasted six years. California committed to spending $750 million to upgrade existing medical facilities, building a new $906 million medical center and converting juvenile lockups at a cost of $817 million. So far, only the new medical center in Stockton is being built. Receiver J. Clark Kelso told The Associated Press that the state must begin all the upgrades before it should be allowed to retake control of a prison medical system once deemed so poor that it was found to have violated inmates’ constitutional rights. They are his first public comments since a federal judge last week told officials to begin preparing for an end to the receivership. “That leaves a court order that the state is now out of compliance with,” Kelso said during the 75-minute interview. “The courts have been promised construction for the last half-decade. Somehow those promises don’t get kept.” California officials are analyzing the need for new medical facilities in light of a state law that took effect last year that is sending lower-level criminals to county jails instead of state prisons. Federal judges have ordered the state to reduce its prison population by 33,000 inmates over two years to improve the treatment of mentally and physically ill inmates, a decision that has been upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court. At its height in 2006, California’s inmate population was more than 162,000. Kelso said the medical center that is under construction in Stockton and the $750 million in upgrades are needed even if the state has fewer inmates. Conversion of the juvenile lockups was to have included new housing and treatment facilities for sick and mentally ill inmates. Kelso has been negotiating with officials from the state Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation and attorneys representing inmates after a federal judge issued a notice saying it was time to begin ending the federal receivership. Court oversight of medical care in the nation’s largest state prison system has led to improvements in inmate health care that have cost California taxpayers billions of dollars. “We’ll just see if the parties can’t find a middle ground for agreement,” Kelso said. The pace of those negotiations will determine how quickly the state can retake control of its prison health care operations, he said. Corrections Secretary Matthew Cate said he wanted to see the receivership end as early as this summer, although he also said it would be appropriate for the courts to maintain some type of oversight role to ensure that inmate care does not deteriorate. “I think the sooner we return day-to-day operations to the state, the better,” Cate told the AP in an interview earlier this week. “We need to work out the construction issues, obviously, and I know that Clark is also concerned about making sure there’s a strong structure in place to maintain the strides we’ve made. But if we can work those issues out, I’d love to see it be this summer.” Kelso said the state also should create a quasi-independent medical bureaucracy within the corrections department to make sure the state doesn’t backslide because of budget cuts or a lack of interest. “A lot of that has to do with budget independence and the independence of the head of prison health care really to control his or her budget,” Kelso said. “They can’t just get lost in the big haze that is the corrections budget.” He said the corrections department traditionally has focused on keeping inmates safely locked up, with a lesser emphasis on the well-being of those prisoners, and it is unclear if that culture has changed. Citing inmate overcrowding as the leading cause, the federal courts previously found that medical care for California prisoners was so poor that an average of one inmate a week was dying of neglect or malpractice. It ordered the prison population reduced, prompting the department to send layoff notices this week to 545 employees because fewer workers are needed as the number of inmates declines. In the notice he filed last week, U.S. District Court Judge Thelton Henderson said conditions had improved enough to consider ending the receivership. He said most of the goals of the federal oversight had been met. The San Francisco-based judge ordered Kelso, state officials and inmates’ attorneys to report by April 30 on when the receivership should end and whether it should continue some role in ensuring that conditions remained constitutional. “I think this all depends much more on the state’s progress than on mine,” Kelso said. “Frankly, if the construction had been done as promised, I’d be a hell of a lot closer.” See the original post here: ‘Somehow Those Promises Don’t Get Kept’

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,
Posted in Local News, Press | Comments Off on ‘Somehow Those Promises Don’t Get Kept’

60 Arson Fires Terrorize L.A.

January 2, 2012
60 Arson Fires Terrorize L.A.

Southern California firefighters battled 12 more arson fires at carports this morning in the cities of Los Angeles and West Hollywood as police detectives question a person of interest. Authorities suspect that today’s fires could be connected to 48 other terrorizing blazes in L.A. County communities, including: Downtown Hollywood Hollywood Hills West Hollywood Fairfax Los Feliz North Hollywood Sherman Oaks Valley Glen Sun Valley Los Angeles The rash of L.A. area car fire incidents now totals 60 fires, including the blaze that torched the former home of rock star Jim Morrison of The Doors. It is the worst arson fire outbreak since the 1992 Los Angeles Riots. The LAPD, the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department, the LAFD, the L.A. County Fire Department and the Federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives are all working together on the Los Angeles Metro arson fires cases. A reward of $60,000 has been offered for information that leads to the arrest and conviction of arsonists involved in what many are suggesting could be a conspiratorial case of domestic terrorism. One Angeleno’s Message to L.A. Arsonists: “STOP BURNING THINGS!” View original post here: 60 Arson Fires Terrorize L.A.

Tags: , , , , , , , ,
Posted in Local News | Comments Off on 60 Arson Fires Terrorize L.A.

Docs for Pot: State’s Largest Doctors’ Group Calls For Legalization

October 16, 2011
Docs for Pot: State’s Largest Doctors’ Group Calls For Legalization

A group that represents 35,000 doctors in the state is calling for the legalization of marijuana at the federal level. The California Medical Association, a lobbying group for doctors in the state, fights tooth and nail to protect doctors’ rights to treat their patients the best way they know how. The doctors’ group is complaining that right now federal policy is getting in the way of their work. more › See the original post here: Docs for Pot: State’s Largest Doctors’ Group Calls For Legalization

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,
Posted in Local News | Comments Off on Docs for Pot: State’s Largest Doctors’ Group Calls For Legalization

LAst Night’s Action: Kings Dig Deep in Philly

October 16, 2011
LAst Night’s Action: Kings Dig Deep in Philly

LA Kings defeat Philadelphia Flyers 3-2 (OT) . It is hard to blame the Kings for not playing their best hockey. They opened the season playing two games in Europe and are finishing two games on the East Coast. In fact they haven’t been in Southern California since Sept. 30. But the Kings dug in and snuck out of the Wells Fargo Center with the win with the aid of the returning son Mike Richards. more › See more here: LAst Night’s Action: Kings Dig Deep in Philly

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,
Posted in Local News | Comments Off on LAst Night’s Action: Kings Dig Deep in Philly

CA Medical Assoc. Urges Pot Legalization

October 16, 2011
CA Medical Assoc. Urges Pot Legalization

The California Medical Association , the state’s largest doctor group, has shocked the nation by officially calling for legalization of marijuana. The CMA, which represents 35,000 physicians statewide, has adopted their pro-legalization position as the first major medical association in America to urge marijuana legalization. The statewide doctors’ association proposes that cannabis be regulated in the same manner as alcohol and tobacco currently are. The California Medical Association’s announcement is predictably receiving opposition from law enforcement bureaucrats in the state. “I wonder what they’re smoking,” said John Lovell of the California Police Chiefs Association. “It’s just an unbelievably irresponsible position.” Law enforcement has a political and economic interest in keeping California jails at maximum capacity, say critics. The U.S. government considers cannabis as having “no medical use”, however, the California Medical Association now wants the Obama administration to reclassify marijuana to promote further research on the potential of cannabis as medicine. The feds recently rejected a request to reclassify marijuana, but the decision is currently being appealed in federal court by advocates for marijuana legalization. Today, the federal government is cracking down on California’s medical marijuana industry with threats to prosecute property owners who rent buildings to medical marijuana dispensaries. U.S. federal law continues to prohibit the sale or possession of marijuana, while California upholds its state law that classifies possession of less than one ounce of weed as an infraction, not a misdemeanor. Doctors across America have called for further marijuana research, and the American Medical Association has called for the federal government to ease restrictions on cannabis research. Of all the AMA state affiliate organizations, though, it is the California Medical Association now calling for the full legalization of marijuana. California Marijuana Legalization Read the rest here: CA Medical Assoc. Urges Pot Legalization

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
Posted in Local News | Comments Off on CA Medical Assoc. Urges Pot Legalization

How Much $ Do We Need To Survive In CA?

October 4, 2011

Story courtesy of California Watch By Joanna Lin A family of four in California would need an average of more than $63,000 a year – nearly triple the federal poverty level – to cover its basic needs, according to an analysis of the state’s cost of living to be released today. The 2011 Self-Sufficiency Standard, released by the Insight Center for Community Economic Development , a national research organization, shows that in every county in California, the federal poverty level falls short of meeting basic needs: housing, food, child care, health care, transportation and other essential household expenses. Taking all these costs into consideration, the standard calculates the minimum annual income required for 156 family compositions in each county. The pre-tax income needed to make ends meet for a family of two working, married adults; a preschooler; and a primary school-aged child ranged from $53,775 in Tulare County to $86,629 in Marin County. For a family of four, the 2011 federal poverty level , which is based on the cost of food alone and does not take into account regional cost-of-living differences in the contiguous United States, is $22,350. “The federal poverty guidelines miss this whole population of individuals and families who are struggling to make ends meet,” said Jenny Chung Mejia, an attorney and program manager for the center. “Essentially, what happens is they earn too much to qualify but yet don’t have enough to make ends meet; they fall in this sort of policy-benefits gap.” Many people and entities, including policymakers, public agencies, philanthropic organizations, advocates and service providers, use the Self-Sufficiency Standard as a benchmarking tool to gauge the needs of their communities. In affluent counties, needs often go unrecognized, Chung Mejia said. “The public has this perception that if you live in Marin County, for example, you’re not going to be poor,” she said. While figures from the U.S. Census Bureau show 9.1 percent of the population in Marin County lives below the poverty level, the county’s median household income – $83,867 – is lower than its Self-Sufficiency Standard. Even in counties where median income exceeds the Self-Sufficiency Standard, advocates say the cost of basic needs can be striking. In Santa Clara County, for example, the median household income, $85,002, is just slightly higher than the Self-Sufficiency Standard for a family of two adults, a preschooler and a school-aged child. According to the standard, the cost of food for such a family – $852 a month, based on the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s low-cost food plan – eats up more than 12 percent of household income. More than 91,500 students in the county are eligible for free or reduced-price meals at school. But to qualify for the programs, a student’s household income must be at or less than 185 percent of the federal poverty level – or $41,347.50 for a family of four. “There’s this huge gap,” said Dana Bunnett, director of Kids in Common, a program of Planned Parenthood Mar Monte that advocates for children in Santa Clara County. “We really have needs for families that go beyond those federal guidelines.” Although the Self-Sufficiency Standard accounts for more basic costs than the federal poverty level does, it misses others that many Californians would consider essential – including cell phone and Internet service. “That just makes it all the more crazy,” Chung Mejia said. “We’re just putting forth a very, very modest budget.” Joanna Lin is an investigative reporter for California Watch, a project of the non-profit Center for Investigative reporting. Find more California Watch stories here. See the article here: How Much $ Do We Need To Survive In CA?

Tags: , , , , , , , ,
Posted in Local News | Comments Off on How Much $ Do We Need To Survive In CA?

Raw Police Video