Good morning. It’s Friday, Dec. 13.
Today’s edition: 13 items,
• | Planned Parenthood sets up at Los Angeles schools. |
• | UC grad students launch strike for higher pay. |
• | And famous Californians before they made it big. |
Statewide
1
“Normal life has changed, and it’s never going to be the same again.”
Christchurch, New Zealand, offers a powerful example of what Los Angeles or San Francisco can expect when the next big earthquake hits. On Feb. 22, 2011, Christchurch shook violently, killing 185 people and toppling the skyline. Eight years later, the recovery is incomplete. Plausible quakes in California would be much worse. L.A. Times
2
Fresh snow blanketed the San Gabriel Mountains on Nov. 28.
David McNew/Getty Images
Just a week ago, 85 percent of the state was deemed abnormally dry by the U.S. Drought Monitor. After another round of soaking rain and snow, that figure is now just 4 percent. “All of a sudden we went from people wondering when it would rain to people wondering when it will stop raining,” a meteorologist said. SFGate.com | KTLA
3
Bob Wick/Bureau of Land Management
The Trump administration signed off on an order to open up more than 1,800 square miles of Central California to fracking and conventional oil drilling. Most of the new development is expected in the Bakersfield and Santa Barbara areas, where significant extraction already occurs. But the plan also allows for drilling at the edge of Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks and the Carrizo Plain National Monument, pictured above. S.F. Chronicle | Sacramento Bee
Northern California
4
A group of graduate student instructors at UC Santa Cruz launched an unauthorized strike demanding higher wages — and they plan to withhold student grades if the administration doesn’t capitulate. The workers say they can’t afford food and housing on their monthly stipend of $2,000. “We’re not playing defense anymore with these administrations,” a striker said. Santa Cruz Sentinel | KPIX
5
Among American bridges, San Francisco’s Golden Gate is the most prolific departure point for suicides.
Construction of a suicide net on the Golden Gate Bridge is two years behind schedule. Delays blamed on the lead contractor mean the project won’t be done until 2023. With the bridge averaging 30 suicide deaths a year, that means two more years of a mounting and unnecessary loss of human life, champions of the project said. S.F. Examiner | S.F. Chronicle
6
Thousands of fat innkeeper worms washed up on Drakes Beach.
David Ford
Countless plump, pink worms were found strewn across two miles of beach in Point Reyes after a recent storm. Known as fat innkeeper worms, their distinctive shape is perfectly suited to a life spent underground. It’s also the reason for the worm’s other name, penis fish. Bay Nature | Vice
7
Mayor Sam Liccardo in San Jose in 2016.
Yichuan Cao/NurPhoto via Getty Images
On this week’s California Sun Podcast, host Jeff Schechtman chats again with Sam Liccardo. The mayor of San Jose has been spearheading an effort to turn PG&E into a customer-owned utility. For a city wedded to the tech economy, power outages are more than an inconvenience, he said. “For us it’s a pretty existential challenge.” California Sun Podcast
Southern California
8
Planned Parenthood is opening 50 reproductive health clinics at Los Angeles-area high schools in what is believed to be the most ambitious effort of its kind in the country. The program will offer a full range of birth control options, testing and treatment for sexually transmitted infections, and pregnancy counseling, but not abortion, for an estimated 75,000 teens. Washington Post | LAist
9
Rep. Rashida Tlaib on Capitol Hill on Oct. 23.
Alex Wroblewski/Getty Images
Rep. Rashida Tlaib, a Michigan congresswoman who has been critical of Israel, was scheduled to give a talk at a high school in Poway. Then protesters called the event an insult to the local Jewish community. Now the school district has withdrawn permission to hold the event. The reason? They need to clean the theater that day. S.D. Union-Tribune | Times of San Diego
10
Los Angeles County adopted a boycott of automakers that fail to meet California’s clean air laws, retaliating against companies like General Motors and Toyota that sided with the Trump administration in a skirmish over emissions standards. The state announced a similar move last month. “We don’t want to go back to Smogville,” a supervisor said. Courthouse News Service | L.A. Daily News
11
Nipsey Hussle’s influence pulses throughout South Los Angeles.
A group of residents has been meeting every month in South Los Angeles to talk about buying property in their neighborhoods. It’s called Buy Back The Block L.A. and it was inspired by Nipsey Hussle, the rapper and entrepreneur killed last March. “We’re anti-gentrification, and we’re unapologetic about it,” the founder said. He added, “This is our neighborhood. This is our culture. These are our streets.” Curbed Los Angeles
Old school California
12
A couple looks back at famous Californians before they made it big:
Marc Canter/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images
This is Saul Hudson, better known as Slash, jamming with his band at Fairfax High School in Los Angeles in 1982. In his autobiography, the Guns N’ Roses guitarist recalled how, at age 14, he heard his first music teacher play “Brown Sugar” by the Rolling Stones. “That’s what I want to do,” Hudson told him. “That.” He practiced 12 hours a day.
That’s Quentin Tarantino behind the counter at a video rental shop in Manhattan Beach in the 1980s. It was during this job at Video Archives that he worked on screenplays for “True Romance,” “Natural Born Killers,” and “Reservoir Dogs.”
One of the store owners later recalled Tarantino’s encyclopedic answers when asked about obscure films: “Quentin would go on to tell you who the supporting cast was, who the DP was, who wrote the screenplay, and probably do a couple of scenes from the film with the dialogue verbatim.” Here’s that interview.
In case you missed it
13
Hells Angels got violent with fans at Altamont on Dec. 6, 1969.
Bill Owens
Five items that got big views over the past week:
• | Images of the violence at the 1969 Altamont Speedway concert were published in Rolling Stone without captions. The photographer feared retribution from the biker gang. Fifty years later, he’s finally published a collection of his photos. S.F. Chronicle | Juxtapoz |
• | An elderly couple’s simple dispute with Allstate Insurance Company over $200,000 has been overshadowed by an unconventional tactic of their lawyer: ridiculously over-the-top profanity. Law & Crime | Above the Law |
• | Sacramento is one of the great mural towns. Hundreds of outdoor walls have been transformed into works of art in an ongoing effort to enliven California’s heart of bureaucratic dreariness. Here are a couple photographic tours. Wideopenwalls.com | Sacramento Journalism Review |
• | Los Angeles’s mountains are glorious year-round — but especially in the fall and winter. Here are nine choice cabin rentals in mountain towns nearby yet a world away. Curbed Los Angeles |
• | It’s uncertain what drew the photographer George Fardon to San Francisco at the onset of the Gold Rush, but he amassed a bounty far more precious than mere metal. His “San Francisco Album,” published in 1856, is credited as the earliest published photographic record of an American city. Flickr |
Wake up to must-read news from around the Golden State delivered to your inbox each morning.