Fallen Tree Closes Chautauqua, a Major Artery, for Hours

A large eucalyptus tree fell across Chautauqua Road near Vance Street early in the a.m. on January 18, closing both lanes.

Neighbors reported that the tree was on the homeowner’s property and that the resident immediately called a tree service to remove the tree.

At 11 a.m., the street was still closed as workers cut the tree into smaller, transportable pieces. By noon, the tree had been cut into pieces and workers were waiting for a truck to take it away.

Chautauqua is one of the three egress/ingress streets into Pacific Palisades – the other two are Temescal Canyon Road and Sunset.

The lack of alternate evacuation sites during the Palisades Fire results in traffic jams and eventually people having to jump out of their cars and run to escape flames. Bulldozers then came and plowed the cars to the sides of the road so that emergency vehicles could access streets.

No evacuation route has ever been put in place in Pacific Palisades, and residents are worried if density is added, it could result in more people with no way out of the community that is closed off on one side by the Santa Monica Mountains.

Today was Pro-Am at the Genesis Golf Tourney as the storied tourney returns to the Riviera  after the Palisades Fire made it impossible to play at the course last year. Traffic is always bad, but a closed artery compounds problems.

Chautauqua was open by rush hour.

There are those who say they could bike out of the Palisades. Nice thought. But after the winds yesterday, the cement bike path was covered with sand.  L.A. County was alerted, so they could clean the sand.

Only a small part of the bike trail can be seen. The rest has been covered by sand.
Photo: SHARON KILBRIDE

Over the past 24 hours, Pacific Palisades received .72 inches of rain, according to RainDrop. More rain, about half of inch is predicted for Thursday, starting in the early a.m.

Posted in News, Palisades Fire | 1 Comment

Great News! PaliHi Yearbooks from 1963 to 2025 Available

Palisades High School Photography teacher Rick Steil announced that reprints of every Pali High yearbook from 1963–2025 are now available to purchase.

So many Palisades residents who lost homes also lost personal keepsakes or their children’s keepsakes, such as class albums.

“Grab your copy of Surf and relive the moments that made your Pali years special,” Steil said. “This is a special opportunity to revisit decades of Pali High history — friendships, milestones, spirit days, championships, performances, and the everyday moments that defined Pali.”

Steil added, “These editions were created from scanned originals. They are slightly smaller than the original books but include all original content.”

To browse and order:

  1. Visit: https://www.blurb.com/search/site_search
  2. Click on the Bookstore tab
  3. Search for “Palisades Surf”

Steil said, “We are proud to make this archive of Pali High memories accessible once again.”

(Editor’s note: This editor’s three children graduated from PaliHi. I went to the website and easily ordered the three yearbooks. I hope to have a story next week of how this was all made possible.)

Posted in Palisades Fire, Schools | 5 Comments

Is it Los Leones or Los Liones?

When writer Laurel Busby researched and wrote Palisades Hiking Trails, she found that it seemed both Leones and Liones were used interchangeably. She reached out to Jason Finlay, the Angeles District trails coordinator for California State Parks (CSP) for an explanation of the  difference.

Finlay explained: The name “Los Leones” is used to refer to the area of the Park formerly called “Los Liones.” This change reflects both the correct spelling and the historical name of this area. The canyon was originally called “Cañada del León” but was renamed around 1924 when the area was plotted as the Miramar Estates subdivision.

Los Liones Drive, the street that accesses this area of the Park, and Los Liones Canyon and Creek, geographical landscape features, are outside of CSP’s purview and their names have not been changed.

“Any new trail signage going in post-fire will follow the convention ‘Los Leones,’ Finlay said.

Posted in Parks | Leave a comment

Some Palisades Hiking Trails Repaired/Others Still Under Reconstruction

Some reconstruction was done on the Los Leones trail by workers  in March 2025.                            Photo: California State Parks

By LAUREL BUSBY

Special to Circling the News

Repairs to Pacific Palisades hiking trails damaged by both fire and rain have been complicated by destroyed bridges and mudslides, according to park officials.

While several popular trails have gone back in service, including the Los Leones Canyon Trail and the path to Will Rogers State Historic Park’s Inspiration Point, other trails require more extensive repairs, including a segment of the Backbone Trail and portions of the trail that traverses Temescal Gateway Park into Topanga State Park.

Both trails have bridges that were destroyed in the fire. In addition, both pre-and post-fire rain caused significant damage to a mile-long section of the Temescal Canyon trail, which will require extensive repairs outside the scope of the in-house trail-building team, according to Jason Finlay, the Angeles District trails coordinator for California State Parks.

This was the Chicken Ridge Bridge in January 2025 before any postfire rains.                                           Photo: California State Parks

The 140 acres of Temescal Gateway Park with its 1.5-mile trail that connects to Topanga State Park’s Temescal Canyon trail has been partially repaired by both volunteers and a contracted trail builder, according to Dash Stolarz, the director of public affairs at the Mountains Recreation & Conservation Authority. However, park facilities, including the public restrooms, still lack electricity, hot water, and gas, and much of the park’s piping and cabling was damaged by the fire.

A reopening date for the park has not yet been set, but Stolarz said it will happen soon.

“All that I can tell you is that the park will be open soon,” said Stolarz, who also noted that about 12 cabins were destroyed, while most of the park’s other structures, including the post office, dining hall, and auditorium, were saved. “We want to open the park as much as the public wants it open. This is just a tragedy, and we’re having to deal with it just like everyone else.”

Safety issues, such as exposed tree roots and unstable trees that are in danger of falling, are one problem area, Stolarz said. In addition, most of the well-used trail is on State Parks land, so it is being addressed by that agency.

Finlay, who oversees trail-building in Topanga State Park, said that the Temescal trail has “serious issues” on the State Parks side.

“Even the small amount of rain last year did incredible damage to our property,” Finlay said. “Most of the trails are on old ranch and fire roads preexisting State Park management of the land…..During post-fire rains, there were large flows of water coming down the devegetated hillsides causing significant washouts.”

The damaged area, which is about a mile of the trail with some “massive slides and massive boulders,” requires repairs beyond the scope of the normal handwork trail repairs that his department manages, Finlay said. Instead, heavy equipment will be required, so a team from Sacramento that includes engineering hydrologists, will conduct an assessment of the trail in early April after the rainy season has ended to advise the district on how to proceed.

“I know it’s the most popular hike in that park,” Finlay said. “It’s a priority for us to get that trail open.”

In addition to the Los Leones and Inspiration Point trails, Finlay said the following trails had been repaired and reopened since the Palisades Fire: Bone Canyon Road, Betty Rogers Trail (Including Lower Betty Rogers Trail and Betty Rogers Connector Trail), Bone Canyon Trail, Bridal Path, Mitt Pasture Trail, Pasture Trail, and Sunset Trail.

Over the coming months, the Inspiration Point Loop Trail at Will Rogers State Historic Park will undergo partial closures for work that was planned prior to the fire. Currently, it is closed west of the Bone Canyon access road, although both Inspiration Point and Bone Canyon are still accessible.

“The western end will be closed through approximately the end of March [or] early April provided the weather cooperates and we don’t lose too much time to wet weather work shutdowns,” Finlay said. “This is an ongoing road restoration project that began with phase I in Fall of 2024 and ended just before the January fires. We are addressing long running erosion issues and slope failures along the road for long term sustainability.”

According to Finlay, other trails that still need substantial repairs are the following:

Backbone (Rogers Road) Trail: The 6.8-mile segment between Will Rogers and Temescal Ridge Fire Road lost the Chicken Ridge Bridge in the Palisades Fire. The old bridge was not up to modern standards and replacing its 110-foot trail span is outside the capacity of the in-house trail team. A geotechnical firm did preliminary assessments at the beginning of January, and they are working on their report.

Bent Arrow Trail: Closed due to 2024 atmospheric river storms, the ½-mile trail will require retaining walls and hillside stabilization, but the priority is low compared to the Backbone Trail and Temescal Canyon trail system.

Josepho Spur Trail: The trail, which connects to the Chicken Ridge Bridge, is currently in good condition, but inaccessible until the closed Backbone Trail segment reopens. (The rest of the Backbone Trail is open.)

Rustic Canyon Trail: This ½-mile trail needs structural repairs that are a low priority for the department due to low usage compared to other trails.

Bienvenida Trail: The Sierra Club Task Force and other volunteer partners have been helping the in-house team repair the trail. Once a final, small section of a retaining wall is built, which should happen by the end of February, the trail will reopen, assuming that it suffers no further damage from rain this month.

Finlay also noted that the Rivas Canyon and Temescal Ridge trails within Topanga State Park have been rehabilitated, but they are not yet accessible since Temescal Gateway Park remains closed.

According to Stolarz of the MRCA, the Rivas Canyon and Temescal Ridge trails within Temescal Gateway Park “are not in good condition and are not safe to open to the public. MRCA is actively rehabilitating the trails so that when the park does open the trails will be safe and enjoyable for the public.”

Updates on closures at Topanga State Park can be found: click here.

Updates on closures at Will Rogers State Historic Park can be found: click here.

This was the postfire condition of a portion of the Los Leones Trail.
Photo: California State Parks

Posted in Parks | 1 Comment

PaliHi Sports Roundup: Basketball, Soccer, Water Polo, Wrestling

OJ Popoola soars for a layup in Palisades’ 75-42 victory over El Camino Real in the Open Division quarterfinals.
Photo: STEVE GALLUZZO

Pali High Boys Hoops Is Right at Home

By STEVE GALLUZZO

CTN Contributor

The Palisades High boys basketball team showed why it is the favorite to win the City Section Open Division championship last Wednesday night.

Looking like a No. 1 seed should, the Dolphins (18-11) raced to a 25-5 first-quarter lead on the way to a 72-45 quarterfinal rout of eighth-seeded El Camino Real—their first playoff win in their own gym in two seasons under coach Jeff Bryant.

“It felt good to be playing at home,” said Bryant, whose team hosted its postseason games at Birmingham High last year in the aftermath of the Palisades Fire.

EJ Popoola led the way with 23 points and twin brother OJ had 12 for the Dolphins, who face

No. 5 San Pedro Saturday at 6 p.m. in the semifinals at LA Southwest College. The Pirates (23-6) upset No. 4 Washington in the quarterfinals and are riding a six-game winning streak. Palisades has won 10 in a row.

AJ Neale, Jack Levey and Phillip Reed each scored 11 points for the Western League champions, who are two wins away from their first section crown since 2020. They took their foot off the gas with sloppy play in the fourth  quarter but by then the issue was long decided.

“I liked our start and that we had a sense of urgency,” Bryant said. “We just have to play all four quarters.”

GIRLS BASKETBALL

Palisades’ Riley Oku (right) in the opening tip-off against Birmingham’s Jaydin-Lynn Walker.
Photo: STEVE GALLUZZO

Thursday night was the girls’ turn to book their spot in the semifinals and they stayed close for eight minutes before second-seeded Birmingham shifted to a higher gear, outscoring

the seventh-seeded Dolphins 24-6 in the second quarter and beginning the second half with a 13-0 run on its way to a 75-39 win.

Riley Oku scored 10 of her team-high 11 points in the first half, Sumaya Levy added nine and Angela Locke had six for Palisades, which dropped to 12-13.

BOYS SOCCER

The Dolphins’ boys soccer team scored twice in the second half to beat Bell in the quarterfinals.
Photo: STEVE GALLUZZO

Crew Norris tallied the equalizing goal on a header off of a corner kick early in the second half and Diego Diaz scored the game-winner on a rebound from 15 yards away in the 60th minute as the fourth-seeded Dolphins survived a scare to beat fifth-seeded Bell 2-1 in the City Open Division quarterfinals Thursday at Birmingham.

“The ball came right to me and I had to think quick,” Diaz said of the go-ahead goal, whichsomehow went in through a maze of players. “I was there in front, it bounced once and I shot it as hard as I could.”

The Dolphins found themselves trailing 1-0 at halftime after an unlucky bounce led to the Eagles’ goal in the 34th minute. Bell players thought they had tied it on a free kick with less than four minutes left but the referee ruled the play offside and Palisades held on to win.

“When Crew scored it gave us energy to start attacking more and I scored not long after that,” Diaz added. “I’m a senior, this is my last season and I really want to win, especially after losing in the first round last year.”

The fourth-seeded Dolphins (17-4-2) advanced to the semifinals to face defending City champion El Camino Real, the No. 1 seed, Thursday in Woodland Hills.

The teams last met in the Division I quarterfinals two years ago when the Royals prevailed 2-1 in overtime. The year before El Camino Real edge Palisades 4-1 in a shootout in the semifinals after neither side was able to score in regulation or overtime.

The Palisades-ECR winner plays either No. 6 Marquez or No. 2 South East in the finals Feb. 27 or 28 at a site to be determined.

“What it’ll take to win is pure confidence, strength and aggressiveness,” Diaz said.

GIRLS SOCCER

Stella Robinson and the girls soccer squad kicked into the semifinal round with a win at San Pedro.
Photo: STEVE GALLUZZO

Having learned their lesson in a 2-2 draw with Venice that ultimately cost them the outright league crown one week earlier, the Dolphins traveled to San Pedro last Wednesday in the City Open Division quarterfinals and stayed aggressive the entire 80 minutes.

The result was a 5-3 victory in a rematch of the teams’ 3-3 stalemate in a nonleague matchup February 2 on the same field. This time, leading scorer Mechal Green had two goals and two assists, Harper Given had two goals and one assist, Danaya Williams had a goal and an assist and goalie Maria Knierim made three saves.

The fifth-seeded Dolphins (14-3-4) advanced to the semifinals versus No. 1-seeded Cleveland (15-2-3) at 5 p.m. Wednesday at Taft High in Woodland Hills. This is the third straight season the teams have faced each other in the semifinals, the Cavaliers prevailing 5-4 in a shootout in 2024 and winning 3-1 last winter.

The Palisades-Cleveland victor will meet either sixth-seeded New West Charter or No. 7 Granada Hills for the championship Feb. 27 or 28.

GIRLS WATER POLO

PaliHi water polo Captain Yasmine Santini and the team will play for the City Division I title.
Photo: STEVE GALLUZZO

The Dolphins will attempt to duplicate what the boys program did in the fall by winning the Division I title on Wednesday at the Valley College pool.

Palisades got humbled by Birmingham 22-3 in the City Open Division semifinals but in the new playoff format the Dolphins dropped to the Division I bracket and beat Banning and

Cleveland to earn a berth in the finals at 5 p.m. against league San Pedro. The teams split their two league meetings.

The Dolphins (12-15) are vying for their fourth section title, having defeated Birmingham in the finals in 2019 and 2022 when there was only one playoff division and again in 2024 in the inaugural Open Division final.

BOYS AND GIRLS WRESTLING


Matthew Suh won the 175-pound division at the City Championships in downtown Los Angeles.
Photo: STEVE GALLUZZO

On the mat, Palisades’ boys placed second in the team standings—matching their best finish ever—last Saturday in the City Section Championships at Roybal Learning Center.

Senior captain Matthew Suh won the 175-pound title with a 7-5 decision in the finals against Birmingham’s Akosha Okenov. Suh built a 12-2 lead before pinning El Camino Real’s Aron Moeller 53 seconds into the third period in the quarterfinal round, then scored a major decision (9-1) over Cleveland’s Domenik Fuentes in the semifinals.

After taking third in the 190-pound division last season, Suh became Palisades’ first individual City champion since James Van Wagenen won at 126 in 2024.

Birmingham continued its City supremacy, racking up 333 points. The Dolphins, who tied San Fernando with 171.5 points, previously came in second in 2015 (six weeks after the program’s first coach Randy Aguirre died of brain cancer) and in 2022 under present coachMike Lawlor.

Other Dolphins placing in their weight classes were Jude Perez (third at 113); Vincent Meiseles (third at 165); Bladimir Hernandez (fourth at 106); Connor Kang (fourth at 138); Panyarat Litmen (fourth at 215); Caleb Kim (fifth at 126); Rocco Falcione (fifth at 132); and Zane Lazar (sixth at 144).

Three Palisades girls also medaled. Jaden Mehrdad was sixth at 115, Sofia Townsley took fifth at 135 and Emma Bolch reached the finals at 140.

Posted in Sports | Leave a comment

Residents on “Concrete” Alert in Santa Monica Canyon

The heavy rains that fell February 15-16, totaled 1.91” according to RainDrop click here. Prior to the rain storm, the City and County sent flash flood alerts and warning of possible debris and mud, but no one could have predicted a concrete slab “flow” alert.

Santa Monica Canyon resident Sharon Kilbride reported that “folk in the lower Canyon were alarmed to hear a loud rumbling in the creek near Channel Lane” on February 16.

As residents gathered on the narrow one lane street to peer over the bridge, they were treated to a roar of water that appeared close to breaching the side walls of neighboring homes.

As the rain subsided, so did the water and people could see huge slabs of concrete piled in the canal. With more rain predicted for tonight, February 17, and a danger that additional water could breach the sides of the flood control banks, Kilbride, a member of the Canyon Alliance and a representative on the Pacific Palisades Community Council contacted L.A. City councilmember Traci Park and L.A. County Public Works.

Parks office responded immediately. “Preliminary reports from LA County Public Works  field engineers for the Santa Monica Channel say the concrete overlay that was installed in the 1970s has peeled off  and this is the material in the channel.

After the water subsided in the channel, concrete slabs were seen.
Photo: SHARON KILBRIDE

According to those engineers, “the channel capacity has been reduced by about 15% near the confluence of Rustic Canyon and Santa Monica Channel and should handle expected flows.”

Residents were told that crews will not be able to remove the concrete until after the storms but that officials are continuing to monitor the channel.

The channel is County responsibility, but if water flows out of the channel into the streets, it is a City issue. Arus Grigoryan, field deputy for Traci Park’s  office added, “We will continue to work with City departments to keep them aware of the issue if we have more water that spills over during the next few rain events.”

The National Weather Service is predicting a half and three quarters of an inch tonight and on Wednesday another tenth of an inch is predicted.

There were historic floods in Santa Monica Canyon between February 27 and March 3, 1938, when two storms swept across Los Angeles. As local historian Betty Lou Young (now deceased) wrote “A crisis developed in Santa Monica Canyon when the storm drain under West Channel Road became blocked by debris, sending a crest of water four feet high rushing down the canyon. Huge chunks of Pacific Coast Highway were washed out to sea.”

And the local town paper The Palisadian reported, “two days of heavy rains forced the water from Rustic, Sullivan and Mandeville Canyon to overflow and converge to form a mighty, roaring torrent 100 feet wide. . . homes were flooded along Channel Road, Rustic Road and Entrada Drive, and all the stores and service stations in the canyon were flooded to a depth of several feet.”

After the 1938 flood, Rustic Canyon and Santa Monica Channel were lined with concrete, to ensure the water stayed in the channel. By the early 1960s most of the channels in L.A. were lined. They are credited with saving property in 1969, when record rainfall of 13 ½ inches fell in L.A. in nine days (more than what fell in 1938). And again in 1980, the channels held back water when there was another major L.A. rain event.

In the 1990s, visions of restoring and improving the L.A. River back to a more natural form has slowly gained favor.

But, now, once the concrete is removed, an assessment will need to be done to see if concrete will be replaced or if other work needs to be done.

The corner of PCH and Chautauqua after the 1938 flood.

The 1938 Flood also covered Hollywood.

Posted in Environmental, History | 4 Comments

Continuing to Heal Through “Music Meadow” February 22

 

“Music Meadow” featuring live music and student bands from Palisades High School, Crossroad, Windward and New Roads will be featured in Simon Meadow from 3 to 5 p.m. on Sunday, February 22. This free event, sponsored by Seven Arrows Elementary School will offer a fun afternoon of music, nature and socializing.

The event is part of TREEAMS, the student-led movement which brings young people across Los Angeles together to plant trees, restore community and rebuild hope. Those participating will also honor the global Jewish Holiday Tu BiShvat, an ecological awareness day celebrating tree planting and renewal.

Seven Arrow’s Elementary students are leading a movement to rebuild Pacific Palisades, greener and healthier through TREEAMS (Trees + Dreams). The idea came to the students as they brainstormed ideas to combine, healing, hope and action.

Inspired by Dr. Jane Goodall, TREEAMS has grown into a network of students, schools and community partners committed to environmental stewardship and resilience.

High school leaders are training to teach workshops to younger students on the interconnectivity of ecosystems and the importance of trees, as well as capturing the stories of families who lost their homes in the fire.

TREEAMS is providing young people with a tangible way to connect across generations and contribute to renewal in our city, with tree planting events planned for the spring for Pacific Palisades and Altadena.

Music Meadow is designed to bring students and community together through music while building enthusiasm for the work ahead, combining joy and purpose in a place that holds a shared history.  The event will take place in Simon Meadow at the corner of Temescal Canyon Road and Sunset Boulevard.

Visit: TREEAMS click here.

Posted in Music, Palisades Fire, Schools | Leave a comment

Genesis Invitational Tees Off at Riviera


Patrick Cantlay hits his tee shot at the 10th hole in the first round of the 2024 Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club.
Photo: STEVE GALLUZZO

After One-Year Hiatus, Pro Golf Returns to Pacific Palisades

By STEVE GALLUZZO

CTN Contributor

The Genesis Invitational returns to Riviera Country Club this week and as usual a loaded field will challenge the historic course off Capri Drive.

Rain could delay the four-day, 72-hole event, but if it remains on schedule the first round will begin early Thursday morning and the final round will conclude late Sunday afternoon at Riviera’s iconic 18th green, where the trophy presentation will take place.

Due to the January 2025 Palisades Fire, the event was moved south to Torrey Pines last February and Sweden’s Ludvig Aberg was the winner at 12 under par. He returns to defend his title against, among others, World No. 1 and reigning British Open champion Scottie

Scheffler, World No. 2 and reigning Master champion Rory McIlroy and World No. 3 Justin Rose.

A 29-year-old from Dallas, Scheffler is considered the best golfer on the planet. He has won four majors and 20 Tour events since turning pro in 2018 and is seeking his second victory in 2026, having won his season debut, The American Express on January 25 in La Quinta. He is making his sixth start at the Genesis, having tied for third last year. His best result at Riviera was 12th in 2023.

McIlory, a 36-year-old from Northern Ireland, led Europe to a decisive triumph over the United States in the 45th Ryder Cup competition in September. He debuted at Riviera in 2016 (under its former name, the Northern Trust Open) and tied for fourth in 2019.

Last year marked the third time since 1973 that Riviera did not host the PGA Tour’s Los Angeles stop, the previous two being 1983 (when what was then known as the Glen Campbell Los Angeles Open was held at Rancho Park while Riviera was getting prepared for that year’s PGA Championship) and 1998 (when what was then the Nissan Open was moved to Valencia Country Club in Santa Clarita while Riviera was being groomed for that summer’s U.S. Senior Open).

Originally called the LA Open, the tournament debuted 100 years ago at Los Angeles Country Club and was first held at Riviera in 1929.

This is the 61st time Riviera is hosting and the purse is $20 million, with the winner pocketing $4 million and the runner-up $2.2 million.

The 72-player field was finalized last Friday (Tony Finau received the final sponsor exemption) and features 16 past major champions, 41 of the top 50 players in the Official World Golf rankings, including the top 11, and 28 of the top 30 golfers from the PGA TOUR’s 2025 FedExCup standings.

The TGR Foundation, established some 30 years ago by 15-time major champion Tiger Woods, became the chief beneficiary of the Genesis Open in 2017 and it was elevated to invitational status three years later.

Tournament host Tiger Woods withdrew with an illness during the second round two years ago and will not play this week.
Photo: STEVE GALLUZZO

Riviera holds a special place in Woods’ heart, even though it is one of the few venues he has never conquered in his storied career (he is winless in 14 starts). Raised in Southern California but now living in Florida, Woods was only 16 years old when he made his PGA Tour debut as an amateur at the Nissan Open in 1992, missing the cut by six strokes.

His best result at Riviera came in 1999 when he tied for second, two shots behind winnerErnie Els. Woods carded his lowest score (64) at Riviera in the final round in 2004 when he tied for seventh place.

Woods, who turned 50 in December and has not played a competitive round since the 2024 British Open at Royal Troon, is still recovering from lumbar disc replacement surgery in October and the 50-year-old will not tee it up this week. His last appearance at Riviera was two years ago when influenza forced him to withdraw in the middle of the second round.

Japan’s Hideki Matsuyama fired a nine-under-par 62—the lowest final- round score ever in a PGA event at “Hogan’s Alley”—to overcome a six-shot deficit and win by three stores at 17 under. Matsuyama is one of several past Genesis champions in this year’s field along with Aberg, 2005 and 2020 winner Adam Scott and 2021 winner Max Homa.

Sahith Theegala, a former three-time NCAA All-American at Pepperdine, is this year’s Charlie Sifford Memorial Exemption recipient.

Other well-known names this year include Jason Day, Xander Schauflee, Jordan Spieth, Keegan Bradley, Patrick Cantlay, Collin Morikawa, Rickie Fowler, Viktor Hovland, Wyndham Clark, Brian Harman, Cameron Young, Shane Lowry and Tommy Fleetwood.

The exciting week of golf begins Monday with the 13th annual Collegiate Showcase (closed to the public) followed by practice rounds Tuesday and an 18-hole Pro-Am on Wednesday.

Tickets can purchased online click here.

The Riviera Golf Course was constructed in 1926.

2026 Genesis Invitational

Where: Riviera Country Club (1250 Capri Dr, Pacific Palisades)

When: Thursday, Feb. 19-Sunday, Feb. 22, 2026

Tournament Host: Tiger Woods

Format: 72 Holes, Stroke Play

Purse: $20 million ($4 million to the winner)

FedEx Cup Points: 700

2025 Champion: Ludvig Aberg (Sweden), -12

TV Coverage: Thursday — 1-5 p.m. (Golf Channel)

Friday — 1-5 p.m. (Golf Channel)

Saturday — 12-4 p.m. CBS

Sunday — 12-3:30 p.m. CBS

Posted in Sports | Leave a comment

PaliHi Reconstruction Project Presented to Community

 

This is an overview of where the new building will be placed on Palisades High School campus.

This is an architects’ rendering of the proposed PaliHi new classroom building.

A final design meeting for the proposed replacement of Palisades High School Buildings that were destroyed or damaged by the January 2025 Palisades Fire was presented on February 12 to community members.

LAUSD Director of Community Relations Lorena Madilla served as a moderator. About $266 million will be needed to replace, upgrade and expand the facilities. The money will come from bond funds, and reimbursement will be pursued through insurance and FEMA.

Although Palisades Charter High School is an independent fiscal charter, it is based on Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) facilities.  PaliHi has greater flexibility in budgeting and resource allocation and operates independently within LAUSD, but LAUSD owns the property, buildings and is the “landlord.”

During the Palisades Fire, general/specialty classrooms and athletic support buildings burned. Infrastructure, landscape, track and field were impacted and needed to be replaced at the campus located at Temescal Canyon Road and Bowdoin Street.

Actual buildings, rather than portables will be put next to the track.

In order to bring the students back to campus the end of January 2026 (they were in a temporary facility, the Sears Building in Santa Monica), extensive cleaning and testing took place on the remaining campus. Portable classrooms were put on the baseball field to house students, but that meant the field was no longer available to athletes.

At the February meeting,  LAUSD’s Director of Facilities Planning and Development spoke and then a final design presentation was given by Jeffrey Zolan (DLR Group Project Manager) and Alenoush Aghajanians (DLR Group Principal Design Leader).

The new classroom building will have 21 general classrooms and six additional classrooms for a variety of purposes, such a special ed and media and filmmaking. The building will have administrative spaces that will include 13 faculty/staff offices.

Palisades Academy, which was located below the Stadium by the Sea, was destroyed in the fire and three general classrooms for the academy will now be built and located on the campus.

The Academy Buildings which burned, will now be put on campus.

After building construction is completed, the baseball field will be rebuilt. Along the current track, two modular buildings, which stored weight/athletic gear and served as rooms for teams, melted and will be replaced with new buildings.

Design for a reconstructed campus started in the second quarter of 2025 and was completed in February 2026. Once there is DSA (Division of the State Architect) approval, which is required for public school construction projects in California, the project will go out for bids.

Construction is projected to start in the first quarter of 2027 and take about 21 months. Students could move to the new buildings and facilities as early as the fourth quarter of 2028.

The new building, with 21+ classrooms will be situated between the old building (left) and the baseball field (right) which will be rebuilt.

Posted in Palisades Fire, Schools | 2 Comments

Republican Club Meeting: Joel Pollack to Speak

The annual Pacific Palisades Republican Annual membership meeting will be held from 2:45 to 5 p.m. on Sunday, February 22. Joel Pollack will speak on “The California Post: A New Voice for California.”

Pollack, a Palisades resident, is the opinion editor of the California Post and the former senior editor of Breitbart. He is also one of three men featured in the podcast “Three Homeless Guys,” along with Oren Ezra and Ron Goldlschmidt who have discussed the fallout and tragedy of the Palisades Fire.

The meeting will be held at the Elks Club at 1040 Pico Boulevard and people must RSVP by February 20 to [email protected].

Posted in Community | 1 Comment