Essential California – A big resignation on L.A.’s City Council

A protester at the Los Angeles City Council meeting on Tuesday. (Gary Coronado / Los Angeles Times)
By Ada Tseng

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Good morning, and welcome to the Essential California newsletter. It’s Thursday, Oct. 13. I’m Ada Tseng, an assistant editor on the Utility Journalism Team. We write explainers and guides to help Southern Californians make decisions and solve problems.
The fallout from this weekend’s leaked audio of L.A. City Council President Nury Martinez, Councilmembers Gil Cedillo and Kevin de León, and Los Angeles County Federation of Labor President Ron Herrera continues. On Wednesday, Martinez announced her resignation.

 

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The subject of the recorded conversation was the three council members’ dissatisfaction with the redistricting maps drawn by a commission that included their own appointees.
Mike Feuer, city attorney and former council member, renewed his call for the city to switch to a truly independent commission to draw district lines that council members could not amend to their own benefit.
“If you leave in the hands of elected officials the power to determine their own political districts, this is a recipe for conflicts of interest and an invitation for backroom deals,” Feuer told reporters at a news conference.
In an interview with my colleague Jon Healey, Feuer said his proposal would create “a very specific antidote” to the negativity and division sparked by the controversy.
Going the independent-commission route would require voters to amend the city’s charter, Feuer said, so he urged the council to put two measures on the ballot: one next spring to use the county’s independent redistricting process to draw new lines temporarily, and then one in the 2024 general election to create the city’s own independent commission and double the number of council districts, among other major changes.

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The scandal started when secretly recorded audio was posted on Reddit. The post was removed and the user suspended — but not before The Times got the audio.
But there are better ways to get evidence of government malfeasance or other newsworthy information out into the world than by using a Reddit burner account.
The Times has a secure tip line that allows you to share what you know with reporters and editors. Some of our biggest stories, including the Geroge Tyndall scandal, come from readers.
In 2019, The Times’ data reporter Phi Do led a revamp of our tips page with our readers’ digital security in mind. Her team built a tips page that included new, secure lines for people to contact us via encrypted instant message and email.

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Here are some pointers for sending us information:
• Text us using Signal, a free secure messaging app that encrypts messages so only the sender and recipient can see them. Records are not stored, and messages can be configured to disappear after a set amount of time.
• For greater security, avoid using a personal or work phone.
• If you want to email confidential messages to [email protected], you can use a tool called PGP (from the Electronic Frontier Foundation) that encrypts the contents of the email — though email addresses, timestamps and subject lines are not concealed.
• Or you can send information the old-fashioned way — through postal mail.

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Mail without a return address can be a confidential way to communicate. It’d be best to mail it from a sidewalk mailbox far from where you live or work.
So if there’s something important you think The Times should look into, consider using our tips line.

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And now, here’s what’s happening across California:
Note: Some of the sites we link to may limit the number of stories you can access without subscribing.

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L.A. STORIES

Podcast: The leaked tape that upended L.A. politics. In case you missed it, “The Times” podcast host Gustavo Arellano spoke with reporter Benjamin Oreskes about how the fallout has roiled L.A. politics just before a crucial mayoral election and what could come next. Los Angeles Times
Does L.A. need a new generation of Latino leaders? Columnist Jean Guerrero argues younger progressive Latino leaders are the ones ready to do the difficult work ahead. Los Angeles Times
A setback for diversity in Hollywood? Warner Bros. Television received criticism for its decision earlier this week to shut down its television workshop for emerging writers and directors of color. Los Angeles Times
Check out “The Times” podcast for essential news and more
These days, waking up to current events can be, well, daunting. If you’re seeking a more balanced news diet, “The Times” podcast is for you. Gustavo Arellano, along with a diverse set of reporters from the award-winning L.A. Times newsroom, delivers the most interesting stories from the Los Angeles Times every Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Listen and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts.

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POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT

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Relief for Californians struggling to pay utility bills. Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office announced that the state would disperse $1.4 billion in utility relief funds by year’s end. Bay City News Foundation
Tackling opioid and fentanyl addiction in California. The rise in fentanyl deaths has prompted the creation of a special bipartisan state committee. Bay City News Foundation

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CRIME, COURTS AND POLICING


$4.2 million in donations for the L.A. County sheriff’s race. Where’s it coming from? Katie Licari and Aida Ylanan from The Times’ data and graphics desk track the money flowing into the Los Angeles County sheriff’s race.

HEALTH AND THE ENVIRONMENT


Updated COVID-19 boosters approved for kids 5 and older. The tweaked boosters have been modified to target today’s most common and contagious Omicron strain. Federal health officials encourage people to get the extra protection ahead of holiday gatherings. Los Angeles Times
Today is International Day for Disaster Risk Reduction. Prepare for an earthquake by signing up for the Unshaken newsletter, The Times’ free six-week guide toearthquake resilience.

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CALIFORNIA CULTURE


The pickleball vs. tennis battle. Pickleball has increased in popularity during the pandemic, and some cities have rushed to convert underused tennis courts to pickleball courts. But not San Francisco, some pickleballers say. San Francisco Chronicle
A daughter’s final goodbye to her father in “Last Flight Home.” Writer-director Ondi Timoner’s film documents the final 15 days of her 92-year-old father’s life after he chose to utilize California’s End of Life Option Act. Los Angeles Times
SoCal’s Burmese community rallies in O.C. Protesters gathered at the Myanmar Democracy Solidarity Rally in Stanton over the weekend. Voice of O.C.

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CALIFORNIA ALMANAC

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Los Angeles: 78, partly cloudy. San Diego: 71, partly cloudy. San Francisco: 61, partly cloudy. San Jose: 72, partly cloudy. Fresno: 90, sunny. Sacramento: 85, partly cloudy.

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AND FINALLY

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Today’s California memory is from Rita Steiner:
Growing up in Southern California during the ’60s was the place to be. It was the time of the Beach Boys, Jan & Dean and more. Surfing was king. My best friend inherited an old yellow Dodge. We would tie our surfboards to the roof and head to Huntington Beach. We were unaccomplished surfers, yet we thought we were cool in our bikinis and our tans. Every time we stopped and turned the car off, we had to jumpstart it again. It never seemed to bother us. There were always cute boys around to help us with the jumper cables.

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