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LA County approves six-month rent moratorium for tenants, workers affected by fires

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Eviction protections for those impacted by the recent Los Angeles County fires were given first approval by the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday night, Feb. 18, after much debate surrounding the measure.

The supervisors voted 4-0 to approve the motion, with Fifth District Supervisor and Board Chair Kathryn Barger abstaining from the vote.

A resolution incorporating countywide eviction protections will return for a second and final vote on Feb. 25.

Low-income renters who have lost their jobs as a result of the devastating Eaton and Palisades fires will be shielded from evictions after being unable to pay rent, as long as they show evidence of income loss due to the fires.

Under the approved motion authored by Third District Supervisor Lindsey Horvath, tenants who qualify could stay in their apartment, motel, hotel room or house for up to six months without making rent payments.

Horvath said the eviction protections and the possibility of money awarded as rental assistance and for paying back rent to make the landlord whole, is needed right away, until renters can get other resources in hand.

“This is intended to provide some breathing room to help those under stress and trauma,” Horvath said. “Workers just need time to get back on their feet, to look for a new job and access government relief programs.”

Members of the Los Angeles Tenants Union, a nonprofit with members of tenants’ rights groups from Pasadena, Glendale, Chinatown, Lennox, Inglewood and other county and city of L.A. regions, noted the immediate crisis stemming from the loss of 16,000 structures by the fires that created a scramble for those who lost homes to find places to live, has created another crisis.

Vulnerable renters have seen rate hikes and illegal price-gouging from some landlords in an effort to replace occupants with higher-paying tenants displaced from the Pacific Palisades, Malibu, Pasadena and Altadena — the areas hardest hit by the January fires.

As of Feb. 12, the county’s Department of Consumer and Business Affairs has received more than 1,000 price-gouging complaints, mostly connected to housing and rentals. The Board approved a maximum penalty for price-gouging of $50,000 last week.

“Tenants in neighborhoods such as Pico Union and Lincoln Heights worked in the Palisades and now have lost the income needed to stay housed,” the LA Tenants Union reported.

The fires sent thousands of additional households into what is one of the tightest, most expensive rental markets in the nation.

Altadena Hardware destroyed in the Eaton fire on Wednesday, January 22, 2025. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Altadena Hardware destroyed in the Eaton fire on Wednesday, January 22, 2025. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

Also, 20,000 businesses and 125,000 employees have been displaced or otherwise impacted by the fires. In addition, the fires left landscapers, day laborers, housecleaners, restaurant workers, retail clerks and child caregivers without work who live throughout L.A. County, the motion reported. This placed even more pressure on existing low-income households within the county, said Tony Carfello, LATU organizer in an interview on Tuesday.

“A giant fire took their jobs away — their employment is gone. These are people trying to keep up with rents in L.A. while working blue collar jobs. They are financially impacted by this,” Carfello said.

Those who opposed the motion included landlords, property managers and business groups who felt the landlords shouldn’t have to carry this burden or that the action would lessen the number of rental units available.

“As a lifelong Angeleno I wanted to do my part for those impacted by the fires and I rented out properties at a discount to those affected as a show of solidarity with my fellow community members. And in return, I feel like I am punished,” wrote Jensen Jen in a written comment to the board.

“This proposal is too broad and created a long-term risk for the housing market,” said Victor Reyes, representing the Valley Industry & Commerce Association (VICA). He suggested the county should instead distribute state funds to help renters.

While workers can apply for unemployment insurance and emergency funds from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), it can take time to receive these benefits, the county reported.

“But more must be done quickly to protect people from falling into homelessness,” read the motion entitled: “Keeping Wildfire Impacted Workers Housed.”

Qualified tenants would be protected from eviction between Feb. 1, 2025 and July 31 2025. The tenant must have been financially impacted by the wildfires and must have a 2024 household income equal to or less than 150% of the Area Median Income; be enrolled in or have applied to a wildfire relief program and applied for unemployment benefits or other qualifying income assistance programs.

The tenant’s loss of monthly income must be at least 10%. If a tenant’s income was lost due to their workplace being destroyed by the fires, the lost income qualifies as a resulting economic impact. Rental debt incurred as a result is a defense to an unlawful detainer action, the motion states.

After the emergency is over, tenants would be required to repay any rental debt incurred or still owed the landlord during the time of the protection. They would have 12 months to do so.

The motion also asked the county to find at least $10 million in unspent funds that could be used to provide flexible spending that supports impacted tenants and landlords.

“I appreciate that people have lost their income because their business was working in these communities and now they cannot pay their rent,” said Supervisor and Board Chair Kathryn Barger.

Barger suggested any dollars to help pay rents or make landlords whole come from Measure H, which was passed by voters in 2017 for homeless services, or the more recently passed Measure A, a new homeless initiative that will take its place.

Horvath added a provision that asks the county’s chief executive officer to seek philanthropic dollars to help fund payback to landlords and rental assistance.

“There is an overall need for rental assistance,” said Rafael Carbajal, director of the county’s Department of Consumer and Business Affairs (DCBA). He intends to pursue a standing rental assistance fund using Measure A dollars in the near future.

 

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Rickea Jackson leads hot-shooting Sparks past Aces

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LAS VEGAS — Rickea Jackson had the hot hand for the Sparks on Wednesday night.

Jackson scored a career-high 30 points and grabbed seven rebounds, Azura Stevens had 19 points and 10 rebounds and the Sparks scorched the nets early before holding on to beat the Las Vegas Aces, 97-89, on Wednesday at Michelob ULTRA Arena.

The Aces were without three-time WNBA MVP A’ja Wilson for the final 11 minutes of the game after she left with 1:17 left in the third quarter with a head injury. She was accidentally hit in the face on a drive to the basket by Sparks forward Dearica Hamby.

Jackson shot 11 for 17 from the field, including 4 for 8 from 3-point range, and went 4 for 5 at the free-throw line to top her previous best of 25 points against Dallas last season.

Hamby scored 19 points to go with eight rebounds and seven assists for the Sparks (4-7). Kelsey Plum had 13 points and nine assists in her second game in Las Vegas since being traded to the Sparks in the offseason.

The Sparks shot 56.9% from the field, including a 9-for-20 showing from 3-point range and outrebounded the Aces 38-28.

Jackie Young tied her career high with 34 points and Chelsea Gray made six 3-pointers and added 28 points for Las Vegas (4-4), which has lost two straight games. Wilson was 2 for 12 from the field and 9 for 10 at the free-throw line to finish with 13 points, eight rebounds, five assists and four blocked shots in 28 minutes.

Young, who added eight rebounds, four assists and three steals, scored 14 straight Las Vegas points in the second quarter.

A 3-pointer by Gray pulled Las Vegas within 60-56 with 3:11 left in the third quarter, but the Sparks scored seven of the next 10 points with Jackson’s three-point play giving the Sparks a 67-59 lead with 1:12 remaining.

The Sparks led 71-65 entering the fourth quarter but opened a 14-point lead before the midway point of the period. Hamby made back-to-back shots to start a 10-2 run and Jackson’s basket finished it to give the Sparks an 86-72 lead with 5:22 left.

The Aces made a charge and used a 3-pointer from Gray and a basket by Young to move within 93-87 with 1:44 left.

Plum put the game away with two free throws with 20.1 seconds left. Plum made all nine of her free throws.

The Sparks were especially hot over the first 14 minutes, making 15 of their first 18 field goal attempts (83.3%), including 7 of 8 from 3-point range, on their way to a 39-19 lead in the second quarter. Las Vegas responded with an 11-0 run to get back in the game.

The Sparks finished with 24 assists on their 33 field goals while going 22 for 27 from the free-throw line.

The Aces shot just 37.5% from field, including 9 for 35 from behind the arc. They went 26 for 29 from the free-throw line.

The Sparks improved to 2-2 in Commissioner’s Cup play, while the Aces dropped to 1-2.

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‘ICE Out of OC’: In Santa Ana, roughly 300 people protest immigration raids as National Guard watches on

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Roughly 300 people gathered Wednesday evening outside the Ronald Reagan Federal Building and Courthouse in Santa Ana to protest the ongoing mass immigration raids in Orange County.

The peaceful protest began shortly after 6 p.m. and soon tripled in size as people from all walks of life congregated in front of a road closure, occupied by at least six members of the California National Guard on North Birch and 4th Street. Chants such as “ICE Out of OC” and “Trump Out of OC” could be heard throughout the group as people held up various creative signs and carried Mexican and American flags.

Donned in a cowboy hat, Navy veteran Jason Martinez, 28, stood in front of the National Guard with an American flag that read “I’m More American.”  His parents were both deported in 2011, a few years before his military enlistment in 2015. “I still think this country can be great,” said Martinez. “There’s no borders up in heaven, there shouldn’t be (borders) here either,” he added.

Several people holding megaphones urged the crowd to “keep things peaceful” as at least 15 officers from the Irvine Police Department, dressed in riot gear, stood back around the perimeter of the protest. One person carried a Salvadorian flag while another waved a joint American-Pride flag.

For 28-year-old former Santa Ana resident David Vasquez, the protest was an opportunity to show support for the broader immigrant community.

The Corona resident carried a large cardboard poster with historic images depicting the displacement and mistreatment of Hispanic immigrants in America. “These people never got justice,” he said. Vasquez added that his mother was undocumented and had picked fruits and vegetables as an agricultural worker in the 90s, often for little to no pay. At times, he said his mother’s employers would call ICE to “chase out” the workers to avoid paying them.

“It feels like the federal government is trying to be as dramatic as possible to elicit a response from people,” said 30-year-old Kelsey Leach from Orange. “It’s important to come out and nonviolently exercise our First Amendment rights.”

The sound of engines revving and cars honking in support echoed in the background.

 

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NBA Finals: Pacers outlast Thunder in Game 3, regain series lead

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By TIM REYNOLDS AP Basketball Writer

INDIANAPOLIS — Every time the Indiana Pacers have lost a game in the last three months, they have come back to win the next one.

Even in the NBA Finals – against a huge favorite who the Pacers now have in some trouble.

Bennedict Mathurin scored 27 points off the bench, Tyrese Haliburton finished with 22 points, 11 assists and nine rebounds, and the Pacers retook the lead in the NBA Finals by beating the Oklahoma City Thunder, 116-107, in Game 3 on Wednesday night.

“This is the kind of team that we are,” Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said. “We need everybody to be ready. It’s not always going to be exactly the same guys that are stepping up with scoring and stuff like that. But this is how we’ve got to do it.”

Pascal Siakam scored 21 for Indiana, which enjoyed a whopping 49-18 edge in bench points. The Pacers, who lost Game 2 in Oklahoma City, improved to 10-0 since mid-March in the game immediately following a loss.

“So many different guys chipped in,” Haliburton said.

Jalen Williams scored 26 points, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander added 24 and Chet Holmgren had 20 for the Thunder, who led by five going into the fourth.

Game 4 is back in Indiana on Friday night.

“We had a lot of good stretches of the game,” Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said. “But they had more good stretches than we did – and outplayed us over the course of 48 minutes.”

History says the Pacers are in control now; in the 41 previous NBA Finals that were tied at a game apiece, the Game 3 winner went on to hoist the trophy 33 times – an 80.5% clip.

Advantage, Pacers.

It was back-and-forth much of the way. There were 15 ties; to put that in perspective, there were 13 ties in the five-game entirety of last year’s Finals between Boston and Dallas. The last time there was a Finals game with more ties: Game 1 between Cleveland and Golden State in 2018, which was knotted 17 times and included a 51-point effort from LeBron James before the Warriors held on in overtime.

TJ McConnell finished with 10 points, five assists and five steals for Indiana; since all those stats started being charted, nobody had ever come off the bench and done all that in an NBA Finals game.

“We just had guys make plays after plays,” Haliburton said. “Our bench was amazing.”

The Thunder were 61-2 when leading going into the fourth quarter in the regular season. They’re 1-2 when leading going into the fourth quarter in this series. Indiana – at home in an NBA Finals game for the first time in 25 years, with Caitlin Clark, Reggie Miller, Oscar Robertson and many other stars in the crowd – simply owned the final 12 minutes.

Oklahoma City, often playing against full-court pressure after allowing the Pacers to score, missed nine of its final 10 shots from the floor. That ugly stretch started after a Williams floater pulled the Thunder within a point of the Pacers with 5:58 remaining.

The Thunder’s only basket down the stretch was a midrange pull-up by Gilgeous-Alexander, but that was the league MVP’s only field goal in the fourth quarter. He was held to three points on 1-of-3 shooting with no assists in the final frame.

“They were aggressive,” Gilgeous-Alexander said of the Pacers’ defense. “I’m not sure how many points they had, but it felt like when they scored, we’re going against a set defense, and it’s always harder against a set defense.”

Indiana outscored OKC 32-18 in the fourth, holding the Thunder to 35% shooting with the game and control of the series on the line.

“There’s a lot of areas we can clean up,” Holmgren said. “Everybody who stepped out there can be better.”

FAMILIAR TERRITORY

Game 1, a loss on the opposition’s final shot. Game 2, an easy win. Game 3, another loss to fall behind in the series again.

This formula is not the one that would be considered optimal by the Thunder, especially in the NBA Finals. But if there is some consolation for the overall No. 1 seed in these playoffs, it’s this: the Thunder have been in this exact spot before and found a way to prevail.

That resiliency will be tested yet again.

“I thought it was an uncharacteristic night in a lot of ways for us,” Daigneault said. “We got to learn from it and then tap back into being who we are in Game 4. If we do that, I think we’ll have a much better chance to win.”

It was not very Thunder-like in Game 3. They blew a fourth quarter lead for the second time in the series and gave up 21 points off turnovers.

“We’ll watch it. It wasn’t all bad,” Daigneault said. “But we definitely have to play our style and impose our will for more of the 48 minutes if we want to come on the road and get a win.”

There are uncanny similarities between the first three games of this series and the first three games of the Western Conference semifinal matchup between Oklahoma City and Denver.

• In Game 1 of the West semifinals, Aaron Gordon hit a 3-pointer with about 3 seconds left to give the Nuggets a win in Oklahoma City. In Game 1 of the NBA Finals, Haliburton hit a jumper with 0.3 seconds left to give the Pacers a win in OKC.

• In Game 2 of the West semifinals, the Thunder evened things up with an easy win. In Game 2 of the NBA Finals, the Thunder evened the series with an easy win.

• In Game 3 of the West semifinals, Denver – at home for the first time in that series – played from behind most of the night before fighting into overtime and eventually getting a win for a 2-1 series lead. In Game 3 of the NBA Finals, Indiana – at home for the first time in the series – trailed for much of the first half before eventually getting a win for a 2-1 series lead.

The Thunder dug their way out of that hole against the Nuggets. And now, the same task awaits – with an NBA title at stake.

“I wouldn’t say that now is the time for emotions, to be thinking about how you’re feeling, emotional this, emotional that,” Holmgren said. “You kind of have to cut that out and look at the substance of what it is. We have a great opportunity here and the great thing is we have another game coming up, Game 4.”

GUEST LIST

Clark – wearing a yellow T-shirt emblazoned with the famed “In 49 other states it’s just basketball. But this is Indiana” saying along with a finals logo – was seated with Indiana Fever teammates Aliyah Boston and Natasha Howard for the game, in the same end of the court as the Pacers’ bench.

In addition to Hall of Famers Robertson and Miller, both seated near the court as well, former Pacers Mark Jackson, Dale Davis were also on hand. Former Indianapolis Colts running back Edgerrin James and Alex Palou, the winner of this year’s Indianapolis 500, were also in the arena. Palou arrived for the game in a pace car from Indianapolis Motor Speedway, which was lit up in gold for the evening as a Pacers tribute.

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