October 10, 2011
Audrey Saunders of NYC’s Pegu Club and original partner with Mark Peel in The Tar Pit, is guest bartending tonight at The Spare Room in the Roosevelt Hotel. Starting at 8PM, Saunders will help debut the venue’s new fall menu and welcome in new Beverage Director Naomi Schimek who was promoted after Aiden Demarest left to open Neat. [EaterWire] Continued here: Booze & Brews: Audrey Saunders of NYC’s Pegu Club…
Tags: aiden-demarest, audrey, beverage, beverly hills, freeway, los angeles food, naked-runner, news, nyc, starting-at-8pm, venue, westbound
Posted in Local News | Comments Off on Booze & Brews: Audrey Saunders of NYC’s Pegu Club…
October 10, 2011
Early morning commuters on the westbound 10 Freeway endured especially dreadful traffic this morning due to a tragic traffic incident. A pedestrian was hit and killed by a vehicle. The incident occurred near the La Brea Avenue exit. more › Read more here: Pedestrian Struck & Killed by Car on 10 Freeway, May Have Been Naked Runner
Tags: beverly hills, especially-dreadful, exit-more, freeway, killed, missing, morning, naked-runner, news, struck, the-westbound, tragic-traffic, westbound
Posted in Local News | Comments Off on Pedestrian Struck & Killed by Car on 10 Freeway, May Have Been Naked Runner
October 10, 2011
It’s no secret that the cost of certain colleges in America can empty the bank accounts of parents and students — and worse. For the fifth year in a row, our friends at Campus Grotto calculated which colleges boast the highest total price tags in the country — some nearing a whopping $60,000 per year. This year, 19 colleges made their list. See the top 10 most expensive colleges below, and click over to Campus Grotto for the full list and their methodology. Go here to read the rest: The Most Expensive Colleges
Tags: america, california, campus, colleges-boast, expensive-colleges, guide, hills, los angeles county, methodology, most-expensive
Posted in Local News | Comments Off on The Most Expensive Colleges
October 10, 2011
The black bear rummaged through some trash cans before scampering back into the hills. Visit link: Bear Rumbles Through Sierra Madre
Tags: billionaire, california, californians, hills, jpg, los angeles county, news los angeles, street
Posted in Local News | Comments Off on Bear Rumbles Through Sierra Madre
October 10, 2011
With a simple signature, California Governor Jerry Brown has struck a blow for populism in the ballot initiative process by signing a new law to clarify that all ballot initiatives be voted on in November, when twice the number of voters show up, rather than in primary elections. This week Californians celebrate the 100th birthday of our ballot initiative, referendum and recall process, which was given to us by populist Governor Hiram Johnson. Direct democracy was a vital transfer of power to an electorate subjected to the will of railroad barons. Yet there’s no question big corporations and the richest .0001 percent of Americans have often hijacked the process for their own purposes. Jerry Brown’s gift to the other 99.999% of us will help even the score. Brown’s signature on a new law will ensure that ballot initiatives have to withstand the scrutiny of an electorate that is most reflective of Californians. Too often, wealthy corporations try to sneak a very reactionary idea by a conservative primary electorate that the vast majority of Californians would never support. As Governor Brown points out in his signing message, 5.7 million people voted in the 2010 primary vs. 10.3 million in the general election. “The idea of direct democracy is to involve as many people as possible,” Brown wrote. For example, two of the worst corporate rip-off initiatives of all time landed on the June 2010 primary ballot. Pacific Gas & Electric and Mercury Insurance both tried to sneak self-serving ballot initiatives by relatively conservative voters. We fought back and helped beat both initiatives, but by very small margins, despite being outspent on Mercury Insurance’s Prop 17 16 to 1, and in the case of PG&E’s Prop 16, facing odds that were more like 400 to 1. All consumer groups could do on limited budgets is tell the public who was behind the initiatives, and voters were rightly suspicious. But you cannot always rely on an awakened populace. Governor Brown’s signature on Senate Bill 202 assures that Californians will be mostly likely to be awake and aroused when the next special interest ploy comes their way. And that ploy is just around the corner. Mercury Insurance Chairman George Joseph, the 389th richest man in America, has contributed $8 million for a repeat of Proposition 17 this June . Under the new law, the billionaire will now have to face a November electorate that is even more suspicious of the intent of an insurance company who has been seeking to rollback consumer protections since they passed via ballot measure Proposition 103 in 1988. A group of ballot initiative warriors are gathering in Sacramento today to celebrate and debate what the last hundred years means for ballot measures and what the next will hold. Among them are my colleague and mentor Harvey Rosenfield, who delivered $62 billion in savings to California drivers under Proposition 103, which he authored in 1988 . Harvey’s is the classic David v. Goliath story of the ballot initiative being used as a sling shot to fell a greedy giant. Here is an excerpt from his remarks this morning: “Insurance companies spent a record $63.8 million against us. Aside from mailing costs, we spent $400,000. We had no paid advertising, just word of mouth. And remember, this was before the internet. “To the astonishment of the political establishment, Prop 103 passed. It racked up decisive victories in liberal Los Angeles and conservative Orange County — then often described as Reagan Country. An example of how a really good idea transcends ideology. “After 103 passed, insurance companies wrote checks for over $1.2 billion in refunds to Californians, averaging $170. According to a 2008 study by the Consumer Federation of America, Proposition 103 has saved California drivers more than $62 billion since its passage in 1988. Data published in 2007 show that between 1989 and 2004, California auto insurance premiums declined by 7%, while rates nationally increased 47%. During that period, California went from 2nd most expensive state for auto liability premiums in the country to 21st. Californians, who paid 52% more than the national average for auto insurance in 1989, paid less than the national average in 2004. Maybe you can appreciate why I believe that government, when made directly accountable, can be a force for good.” Then there’s the other side of the ballot initiative coin, of course. That’s billionaire George Joseph, who continues each election to try to take back for insurance companies what the public claimed more than two decades ago. His latest scheme, for which an initiative is circulating for signatures, is to charge people more when they buy auto insurance for the years they did not buy it, even if the reason is that they did not own car or lived in a place where they needed mass transit. Harvey is displaying 8,000 $1,000 bills in Sacramento this morning with Joseph’s face on it to make the point about how billionaires continue to buy the initiative process, and the need for constant vigilance. Jerry Brown’s gift to the voters today is that they will have to vote on ballot initiatives only once every two years, when they are most attuned to elections. That’s what the California constitution says — initiatives only on general elections. For 50 years this was the law of the state, and it is again. Let’s hope the change turns back the clock to a time when politics was more about what 99% of the public believed and wanted, than the wishes of Wall Street and the .001%. There’s no better barometer of the 99% formula than a ballot measure that puts the questions directly to the most voters. Governor Brown has given the 99.99% an important advantage. ———————————————————————- Jamie Court is president of Consumer Watchdog and author of T he Progressive’s Guide To Raising Hell. See more here: Jamie Court: Jerry Brown Sends Birthday Present to the 99% on 100th Anniversary of Ballot Initiative Process
Tags: america, auto insurance, billionaire, california, californians, colleague, consumer, internet, jamie-court, proposition, public, street
Posted in Local News | Comments Off on Jamie Court: Jerry Brown Sends Birthday Present to the 99% on 100th Anniversary of Ballot Initiative Process
October 10, 2011
As Governor Jerry Brown has just signed the California Dream Act into law to allow illegal immigrants to receive state-financed aid for college, the United States should wake up to two mutually reinforcing realities about our broken immigration system. First, America’s failed immigration system is the flip side of a failed foreign policy. For example, Mexican officials are allowed to export their revolution to the United States by not providing a decent standard of living for its citizens who then have to come to the U.S. in search of a better future. In short, America has not insisted on good governance in Mexico. In the meantime, our country has grown from 200 million to more than 310 million in fewer than four decades . This means that states like California need to produce more jobs; protect more of the vulnerable; and build more schools, roads, and bridges. The problem is that the welfare system we have created along with a broken immigration system, is unaffordable under the demographic and economic circumstances of the twenty-first century. Supporters of the California Dream Act argue that we would not have become a global superpower without opening our doors to immigrants, that smart, self-motivated immigrants spur the innovations and create the jobs our economy needs to thrive. This may be true, but it does not tell the whole story. It is our system of government, our culture, our way of life that allowed Sonia Sotomayor to become the first Hispanic on the Supreme Court, Sergey Brin to co-found Google, Pierre Omidyar to found eBay, and Fareed Zakaria to rise to fame as a journalist and the host of a prominent TV show. There are hundreds of Sotomayors in Puerto Rico, Brins in Russia, Omidyars in Iran and Zakarias in India. One of the main reasons why they are successful in America is because of our system. Governor Brown and his allies in Sacramento should advocate an American foreign policy that reorients itself to the soft power of exporting American values and know-how so the Sotomayors, Brins, Omidyars and Zakarias in Puerto Rico, Russia, Iran and India can find success at home. A second fact lost on supporters of the California Dream Act is that global prosperity requires a new narrative on immigration and cross border migration. If we allow the poor from countries like Mexico to escape to states like California and then redistribute the Golden State’s stretched resources to take care of the needy new arrivals, we will only impoverish ourselves in the process. Global prosperity must increase if we are to address this issue seriously and therefore it is imperative that wealth be created indigenously. This is especially true for the economies of Mexico, Central and South America. We must immediately launch a Marshall Plan for our neighbors to the south, establish a micro-finance plan for those who want to go back to their home countries but need start-up capital, and create a private-public partnership plan so that jobs are created south of the U.S. border and immigrants (illegal and legal) who are living in the U.S. have the option to return to their homelands and re-build new lives for themselves. In 2009 California imported $89 billion worth of goods from China. Imagine for a moment a scenario where Californians purchased these same goods from our southern neighbors; creating a win-win situation for all involved — except the authoritarian regime in China. It is in this context of a new narrative on the soft power of exporting American values and need to create wealth south of our border that the Dream Act must be debated — and ultimately supported. Allowing illegal immigrants to pay in-state tuition to attend state public universities in states like California is a good idea provided we ask these students that once they complete their studies, they return to their home countries to serve and rebuild. In the 1960s, the government of Iran established the Education Corps and Health Corps, made up of young men and women with college degrees from the U.S. who served their country by teaching reading and writing and by administering health care. This model can be duplicated across America where legions of illegal students armed with U.S. college diplomas in economics, engineering, computer science and health management fan across the globe and embed themselves in their native communities to serve and rebuild. In short, we should support the Dream Act but with one caveat: eligibility should be contingent on a willingness of students to return to their homelands and help in the economic development of their home countries. This way, an educated Salvadoran or Mexican or Ghanaian can contribute to the socio-economic situation of his or her country by taking advantage of a world-class education. Overtime, creating wealth in El Salvador, Mexico and Ghana is to everyone’s advantage, including the taxpayers of California. Rob Sobhani, Ph.D. is CEO of the Caspian Group and a graduate of Georgetown University. Read more: Rob Sobhani: America’s New Soft Power
Tags: collision, conductor-said, education, government, health, jobs, puerto-rico, railroad-tracks, supreme-court, susan-dibene, update
Posted in Local News | Comments Off on Rob Sobhani: America’s New Soft Power
October 10, 2011
A woman pushing a baby in a stroller across railroad tracks in Southern California Saturday night was killed by a train but she shoved the stroller to safety just in time, authorities said. The woman, identified as 33-year-old Susan Dibene, was trying to walk through the Riverside crossing when the stroller became stuck in the tracks, police said. She managed to free the stroller, but she couldn’t escape the oncoming Metrolink commuter train. “She didn’t quite make it,” Riverside police Sgt. Dan Warren said. “The baby’s fine, but she got hit.” Passenger Joseph Avila said he and the several dozen other passengers on the train going from Oceanside to San Bernardino did not feel the collision. He told KCAL-TV that the train stopped and a conductor said there had been a fatality. “Probably about 45 minutes after what happened, he finally told us that a lady and a baby got struck.” Both police and railroad officials were investigating the collision. WATCH the full story below : Visit link: Susan Dibene, California Mother, Killed By Train After She Pushed Baby In Stroller Out Of Way
Tags: california, collision, conductor-said, news, news los angeles, railroad-tracks, stroller, susan-dibene, train, update, watch-the-full
Posted in Local News | Comments Off on Susan Dibene, California Mother, Killed By Train After She Pushed Baby In Stroller Out Of Way
October 10, 2011
California governor candidates for 2014 are already being talked about.
Tags: being-talked, ca news, california, campaign-season, carly-fiorina, democratic, former-attorney, governor, news, politics, state government
Posted in Local News | Comments Off on California Governor 2014
October 10, 2011
Brown had signed part A earlier this year , which grants students who meet the in-state tuition requirements permission to apply for and receive specified financial aid programs administered by California’s public colleges and universities. The second part signed this weekend by Brown will allow students that meet the in-state tuition requirements to apply for and receive Cal Grants by California’s public colleges and universities. more › Read more: California Dream Act Signed Into Law
Tags: dream, images, la news, news, news los angeles, signed, successful-talk, year
Posted in Local News | Comments Off on California Dream Act Signed Into Law
October 10, 2011
There was something heavenly about Sunday, so much so it almost made me a believer. A day after owner Al Davis died, it seemed like his hands were all over the Oakland Raiders’ 25-20 win over the Houston Texans. They were clearly struggling in the first half not getting their first first-down until 1:46 left in the first half. If not for the leg of Sebastian Janikowski and his 54-yard and 55-yard field goals, it would have been a rout. more › More: Sunday, Holy Sunday in Sports
Tags: almost-made, hands, images, news, sports, were-clearly, year
Posted in Local News | Comments Off on Sunday, Holy Sunday in Sports