A shooting at a Seal Beach, California hair salon has claimed the lives of six victims, reports KTLA . A total of nine people have been shot, according to the Associated Press , and Orange County Fire Authority Capt. Marc Stone says that their conditions are “undetermined.” The suspect is already in police custody, according to a tweet from NBCNews . KTLA notes several weapons were found in his car. The shooting took place at Salon Meritage, and Los Alamitos-Seal Beach Patch notes that while most of the victims were found inside the salon, one was inside a car. The entire Seal Beach police department is responding to the scene, according to the Los Angeles Times . Story developing… Read more: Shooting At Seal Beach: 6 Believed Dead
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LAPD Arrests Man at Occupy L.A.
Police made one arrest last night at Occupy L.A. , but the detainment was not due to unlawful protest. A man was arrested and charged with battery against an occupier. Occupy L.A. tweeted about the incident, stating that “LAPD response was swift w/out injury.” more › Original post: LAPD Arrests Man at Occupy L.A.
WATCH: Protesters Claim USC Hospital Is Dangerously Short-Staffed
Hospital workers at the Keck Medical Center of USC began their day-long strike at 6am this morning, protesting what they say is a serious short-staffing problem, a one-year wage freeze, and exclusion from the university’s tuition and retirement benefits plan. Noemi Aguirre, a respiratory therapist, told ABC 7 Los Angeles that one of the protesters biggest concerns are the short-staffing problems at the hospital. “We have a lot of units where we are just plain short-staffed,” said Aguirre, “and they haven’t addressed those issues for us.” She also noted that NUHW has been trying to address this problem for the past 14 months. Watch Aguirre’s interview on ABC 7: According to a press release from the National Union of Healthcare Workers (NUHW), the hospital has received $250 million in donations over the last three years, as well as pledges that amount to an additional $150 million. The statement also notes that the federal government has scheduled a hearing for Keck Medical Center managers later in October to address unfair labor practices. Hospital spokesman Mitch Treem told CBS Los Angeles , “While we are unable to discuss the specifics of our proposal publicly, we can say that our NUHW employees are among the highest-paid in the region.” The NUHW union is made up of hospital workers like radiology and surgery technicians, housekeepers, and respiratory therapists. See the original post: WATCH: Protesters Claim USC Hospital Is Dangerously Short-Staffed
FBI Makes Arrest in Celebrity Hacking Case, Scarlett Johansson Exhales
The FBI has made an arrest in Operation Hackerazzi, the investigation of celebrity phone hacking in Hollywood. Officials have scheduled a news conference later Wednesday morning to release additional information. The break in the case comes several weeks after reports that the cellphone accounts of stars, including the outraged Scarlett Johansson , were hacked more › Read the original here: FBI Makes Arrest in Celebrity Hacking Case, Scarlett Johansson Exhales
Mónica GarcÃa: Hey Alabama, Take A Hint From California
While Alabama and other states are putting barriers to the education of immigrant children, California celebrates Latino Heritage Month by passing the California Dream Act, which will ensure that all deserving students get the opportunity to pursue higher education and be productive members of society. Alabama’s recent court ruling to uphold significant portions of Alabama’s immigration law seems shamelessly un-American. In light of reports that Latino students are vanishing from public schools in the wake of the ruling, we think it is timely to remind people why we celebrate Latino Heritage Month. Also, as Board members of the Los Angeles Unified School District, we care deeply about the education of all children and feel compelled to remind people why, as Americans, it is our responsibility to educate all children, regardless of immigration status, and why anti-immigrant state laws are un-American. We must educate all children, regardless of immigration status, because it is the law of the land. In the Plyer case nearly 30 years ago, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled that every undocumented child must be provided a public education. The Supreme Court said that the state law in question, which denied funding for K-12 education to undocumented children, was “directed against children, and impose[d] its discriminatory burden on the basis of a legal characteristic over which children can have little control.” While proponents of current anti-immigrant state laws claim the measures do not prohibit undocumented children from attending school, the effect is that it does keep them at home. It does, in effect, deny them their right to a public education. Education officials in Alabama say that scores of immigrant families have withdrawn their children or kept them home after the court ruling. And several districts with large immigrant enrollments reported a sudden exodus of children of Latino parents. Anti-immigrant state laws cannot do indirectly what they are forbidden to do directly: deny undocumented children, many of whom are Latino, a public education. Moreover, any suggestion by state officials in Alabama that their state is only trying to compile immigrant status statistics for benign purposes is naïve at best, disingenuous at worst. Such informational gathering cannot be benign when the law’s findings start by stating that “The State of Alabama finds that illegal immigration is causing economic hardship and lawlessness in this state…” The findings go onto say that “because the costs incurred by school districts for the public… education” of undocumented children “adversely affect the availability of public education resources” to non-undocumented students, “the State of Alabama determines that there is a compelling need for the State Board of Education to accurately measure and assess the population of students who are aliens not lawfully present in the United States….” Immigration status statistics are not simply being collected for the sake of being collected. The students’ information is being taken because, as the legislation’s findings indicate, there is a presumption that these children are guilty of draining state resources. Thus, the Alabama law is un-American on several levels. It is based on a premise that illegal immigrant students are guilty, until proven innocent, of being a drag on state resources. In America, you are innocent until proven otherwise. In America, all children have a right to public education. The Latino students in Alabama are therefore guilty with little chance of proving their innocence because, while their “costs” are immediate (and their guilt immediately apparent), their benefits do not materialize until long into the future. With the law that just took effect, the chance of these children’s benefits materializing and becoming apparent – and the chance of these students proving their innocence – has just diminished substantially. In fact, the benefits may have turned to costs because, as the Plyer decision stated, denying the undocumented children a proper education would likely contribute to “the creation and perpetuation of a subclass of illiterates within our boundaries, surely adding to the problems and costs of unemployment, welfare, and crime.” The Alabama law is also un-American because it is contrary to what then-Senator Obama said in his July 2004 speech at the Democratic National Convention: America is the “Beacon of freedom and opportunity for those that have come here.” For thousands of undocumented Latino immigrant students, the Alabama law does away with the America that made President Obama’s story possible – an America where no children’s dream is impossible and where every child has an opportunity. State anti-immigrant laws make impossible human stories of self-determination, dignity and respect. They make impossible the stories that are only possible in America, such as that of leading U.S. neurosurgeon Dr. Alfredo Quinones-Hinojosa, who made it from being an undocumented California farm worker child to Harvard Medical School and who now directs and leads preeminent brain surgery and research programs at the Johns Hopkins Hospital, a leading hospital in the world. Just as President Obama said that “in no other country on Earth is my story even possible,” so, too, only in America would Dr. Quinones-Hinojosa’s story, and those of other Latino immigrant students, be possible. We celebrate Latino Heritage Month to acknowledge opportunity in this country and remind ourselves of our American traits: self-determination, dignity and respect. Celebrate with us Latino Heritage Month by expressing your support for an America where all children have a right to education. We must oppose any attempt to limit or deny children a chance to be productive members of this society. We call on Congress and President Obama to address issues related to the Federal Dream Act immediately. In the spirit of hope. Daughters of Immigrants, Mónica GarcÃa Board President Los Angeles Unified School District Nury Martinez Board Member Los Angeles Unified School District The Los Angeles Unified School District is the second largest school district in the country, with about 665,000 students, 73% of whom are Latino. See the article here: Mónica GarcÃa: Hey Alabama, Take A Hint From California
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Grand jury adds new charges on Newport schools chief
Newport-Mesa schools chief Jeffrey Hubbard has been indicted by a Los Angeles grand jury on a third charge of misappropriating public funds during his last job in Beverly Hills. More: Grand jury adds new charges on Newport schools chief







