Another Wellness and Renewal Fair . . .And Free Trees

The event went from noon to 4 p.m. At 1 p.m., the gym at the Lutheran Church was mostly empty.

L.A. Mayor Karen Bass sponsored a wellness, support and renewal resource fair on Saturday, March 28. Most residents have lost track of how many of these community wellness events have been held in the past year.

AECOM, a global infrastructure consulting firm, hired by Bass, researched and put together a nearly thousand-page report on how to help Pacific Palisades recover from the 2025 Palisades Fire. One of the suggestions was more renewal/information events.

Two AECOM representatives were at one of the many empty tables in the Lutheran Church Auditorium and CTN spoke to them and suggested that instead of more events where residents could sign up for mental health help, a town grocery store was needed.

CTN said there were potholes all over the town and they needed to be repaired. AECOM was told that streetlights were essential, and that sidewalks needed to be repaired. This editor suggested that the city stop writing parking tickets for residents and contractors.
It was suggested to AECOM that there is not going to be a massive rebuilding effort because people don’t have the money. Basically, residents have received theoretical help, but now people need actual support, which includes financial.

What nonprofits/city organizations were behind tables? For mental health, there was Calmura Counseling and Wellness, Care Solace, L.A. County Department of Mental Health, the Didi Hirsch Suicide Prevention Center, Operation HOPE and the Mayor’s Office Crisis Response Team, which brought mini therapy horses.

One of the highlights was three workers from Ruby Nails & Spa who offered free 10-minute massages. Absolutely excellent and well-received, and a good reminder that they are the one nail salon in town open and that they need resident’s support. (To text or call – 714-592-9273. They are open Monday through Sunday from 9:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.)

The Small Business Administration (SBA) and Bet Tzedek (legal aid nonprofit) had tables. Also waiting for “customers” were the City of L.A. Department on Disability and the Department of Aging.

Carlos Camperio, executive director of City Plants, had brought numerous free trees.

One of the biggest draws was free trees. The L.A. Department of Water and Power was working with City Plants (FreeTreesL.A. City Plants) to offer free yard trees to Palisades residents.

People were allowed to select up to seven trees and choose from Sweet Bay, Mimosa, lavender Cape Myrtle, Purple Orchid, Gold Medallion, Canary Island Pine, Jacaranda, Coastal Live Oak or an Olive tree click here.

City Plants Executive Director Carlos Campero offered workshops on how to plant trees.
If one didn’t make it to the event, a resident can sign up on line for up to seven, 5-gallon sized shade trees, that come with stakes, ties and fertilizer pellets. All trees are between three and five feet tall and free. Trees will be delivered approximately in eight to 10 weeks by the L.A. Conservation Corps. The stock changes constantly based on nursery availability.

A City Plants employee, who was helping residents select trees, said that DPW was pushing the program because “the trees will cool down the house in the summer and help reduce energy costs.”

Since many residents are just building now, and haven’t started landscaping, this editor asked how long the program would be in effect, and was told that it was ongoing.

Posted in Environmental | 4 Comments

Proposed Undergrounding Plans Presented by DWP

This is an example of what the above group equipment that is used when utilities are put underground and will need to go in the parkway.

Even as the City and AECOM seem to have problems showing concise rebuilding plans, the Pacific Palisades Community Council’s infrastructure committee headed by Reza Akef presented an informative look at what the next steps are for undergrounding utility lines and the sequencing  through a Zoom meeting held March 26.

Dave Hansen was a key figure in presenting information and answering questions to the nearly 350 people on the meeting. Hansen is Mayor Karen Bass’ interim director of the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, replacing Janiesse Quinones. In a March 26 statement the Mayor wrote “Hanson is well-positioned to support Mayor Bass’ priorities in delivering reliable power and water service to millions of Angelenos and accelerating the transition to 100% clean energy.”

DWP’s Zoraya Oliver Griffin assured residents “Our commitment is genuine and ongoing.”

Hansen said that many Paliisadians may have noticed the undergrounding that was already going on under Sunset. He said that operation was temporarily halted when a fatality occurred. “DWP terminated that contract, and hired someone else,” he said. That Sunset construction should resume in the second quarter of 2026 (next month).

The new director said, “We’re hiring 116 new design engineers for the Palisades.”

There is already 27 miles of existing underground electrical service and 45 miles of existing overhead in Pacific Palisades.  DWP plans to underground the overhead lines where feasible.

For undergrounding to occur, a portion of the equipment must go above ground, which would mean an easement would needed about every 10 homes. During the question phase, people wanted to know if their lots would be impacted because it would go with planning the gates/fences/landscaping. “When the design phase comes. It takes time,” was the answer.  A resident wanted to know if there was an easement in the front of DWP would use that, rather then private land.

“Yes, but most of the easements for electrical and communication wires are in the back of properties,” DWP replied.

Additionally, DWP is working with the telecom companies to have them trench wires, too. If they don’t, there will still be poles with wires on lots.

The utility company plans to increase the system capacity by upgrading Distribution Station 29, at the corner of Sunset and Via de la Paz. When that station is upgraded the two pole top distribution stations (at Marquez and Sunset and Temescal and Sunset), which currently carry high voltage will be taken down. That construction will tentatively take place from the second quarter in 2028 through 2031. A second distribution station will not be needed.

The plan is to start with undergrounding in the Alphabet Streets in the first quarter of 2027 and take about a year. DWP’s Teodore Zeiss said that area was selected because of the extensive damage and the proximity to DS 29. That area will be followed by the Huntington Palisades and the Via de las Olas bluffs. The final area to receive undergrounding will be the Castellammare area and Sunset Mesa.

A resident wanted to know the steps needed to get undergrounding to his/her property.

  1. ) Put in a combo panel, 2.) run a conduit to the street, and 3.) put in an online request to meet with DWP about placement of both. Or one can go to the Palisades (PIPSC) and speak to someone there for help.

How much will this cost residents to have the electricity placed underground? Was the question asked by many in the chat.

DWP had put in a request to FEMA to help with the costs, which are estimated at about $1.8 million. The initial request was rejected. DWP appealed last week, and the government has 90 days to respond.  DWP’s Oliver Griffen said they could use help,  by having everyone write their senators and legislators and urging them to make sure this project gets federal funding. On the Community Council website https://pacpalicc.org/ a sample letter will soon be available. . Infrastructure committee member May Sung suggested that perhaps insurance companies might fund it as a code upgrade.

If FEMA funds don’t come in, DWP will try to cover the cost to underground utilities because they can’t charge individual ratepayers, according to PPCC’s Akef.

In the chat, one person wanted to know when electricity was turned off during the Palisades Fire, which was not answered. But residents were assured that remote switching would now be possible. When one resident said the transformers exploded during the fire, Hansen said, “We have no indication that our equipment started the fire.”

DWP plans to return to the PPCC in April to speak about water and the reservoirs.

 

Posted in Environmental, Palisades Fire | 3 Comments

PaliHi Yearbooks Available through a Labor of Love

 

These three Palisades High School yearbooks were purchased on Blurb, thanks to teacher Rick Steil.

After the Palisades Fire destroyed nearly 7,000 structures in the Palisades, people started tallying losses. Some were large like homes, others small, but meaningful like baby books and yearbooks.

Rick Steil, photography teacher at Palisades High School was asked by his two adult sons, and Pali High alums, Tyler and Tucker, “How are we going to get our books back?” Steil and wife Nicole’s home in the Alphabet Streets had burned.

The teacher had produced the Pali yearbooks for many years and started a search to learn how to get reproductions of the destroyed copies. Blurb Publishing, which specializes in large productions, had done a book for the Booster Club.

Steil reached out to them and started working with Blurb’s Dylan Failla, “he was great,” Steil said. “The company is taking no profit from this project and are essentially doing it for the cost of the book.

“They thought it was a good project,” he said, but then was faced with the cost of the setup – and finding original albums. Luckily, Pali High librarian Andrea King had stored a complete set, which was locked up in back storage and unaffected by the fire.

Steil took 61 individual yearbooks, starting with 1963, and took them apart page by page. Then, each page was scanned. “It was a lot of pages,” Steil said, noting that some of the later books were more than 300 pages.

He started working on the yearbooks in April 2025. “It took me nine months to do them,” said Steil, a former professional photographer.

“The whole cost is the set up,” he said and added that it was borne by the Palisades High School Booster Club ($13,000) and from Forever Palisades ($12,000), a nonprofit.

“Forever Palisades was four kids who had graduated from Pali High and felt so connected to the community they wanted to help,” Steil said.

CTN contacted Haley Holbrow (class of 2017), one of the founders of Forever Palisades, which also included her twin brother Will and the Howard brothers, Spencer (class of 2017) and Justin (class of 2019).“As Pali alums, we know the yearbook is more than a collection of photos; it’s a time capsule of friendships and milestones,” Haley said. “We’re proud to support Mr. Steil’s work to digitize and reproduce decades of lost yearbooks so alumni can reclaim those memories, and the school can preserve its history.”

Someone suggested that maybe the albums could be sold for a profit, but Steil, 67, said “No.”

One of the most popular teachers on the campus, Steil has six full classes and had planned to retire this year. But instead, he’s rebuilding and will now need to continue to teach a few more years.

Palisades High School teacher and Palisadian Rick Steil.

“We’re tweeners,” he jokingly said and explained that there’s a group of Palisadians that are too young not to rebuild, but who are “old” because they have already raised their children. Both his boys attended Palisades Elementary, Paul Revere and Pali High and played sports.

He told CTN, “If I knew I’d have 30 years of magic and then it would all burn down,” he said he wouldn’t do anything different, “I’d still take it.”

Between rebuilding and teaching, He’s leaving it to Blurb to handle the orders.“That’s the beauty of Blurb,” he said, “people can order, pay and Blurb sends it out.” He was asked how long the albums were be available and he checked with the company and said “They said they will host this project for years.”

If you or if you know someone who has lost a yearbook:
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. They are truly great to have back on a bookshelf.)

Posted in Open to all | 2 Comments

LETTER: Direct TV Charging for “No Service”



(Editor’s note: this story was updated on March 29, 2026, with a letter from DIRECTV.)

Pacific Palisades residents Tracey and David Price have been paying Direct TV for the last six months, even though they haven’t had service since January 2025. They have tried to have the service stopped and money refunded but without success. They have now filed a complaint with the California Public Utilities Commission and shared it with Circling the News and Councilmember Traci Park’s office.

After evacuating their home on Charm Acres on January 7 during the Palisades Fire, they called to cancel DirectTV services on January 10, 2025. The customer service representative suggested that they suspend service to October 2025, which they did.

They wrote on the Utilities Commission form that when they suspended service, they had no idea the fire would continue to burn for weeks and destroy more than 7,000 structures.

They still have not returned to their home, but in October 2025, DirectTV started charging them. Prior to the fire their usual monthly charges were between $155 and $170 a month, now they are being charged $311.

The Prices have tried to call DirectTV at least six times to resolve the matter.

“They provide zero detail of why the charges doubled and what we are paying for,” the couple said and added that they had requested a record of account charges for the past two years mailed to their temporary address. But DirectTV said it couldn’t do that.

The couple tried to hand deliver a letter of appeal to the customer service department in El Segundo.

There, they were told by a guard that no one actually works at the facility, that all employees work from home and “if you do not leave the premises, I will call the police, have you escorted off the property and arrested.”

DirectTV refused to refund charges to the Price’s credit card. The couple contacted their bank, ordered new credit cards and changed the autopay accounts.

The Prices wrote that there had to be other fire survivors that had been unjustly charged for services they never received. “Any charges to Palisades Fire survivors should be refunded or waived due to this being the LARGEST NATURAL DISASTER in our country’s history,” they wrote.

 

(Editor’s note: The Price’s received the following letter from DIRECTV–which has resolved the matter.)

Attention: Tracey & David Price,

My name is Aaron Patrick, and I am writing to you from DIRECTV’s Office of the President. I sincerely apologize for the experience you’ve had and for the manner in which this issue was previously handled. This situation does not reflect the level of service we strive to provide, and I understand how frustrating this must have been.

I personally reviewed your account and prior interactions with our customer service teams. As a result, I requested a refund of $928.71. This refund will be issued as a prepaid cash card and mailed to the billing address we currently have on file. Please allow up to 14 business days for processing and delivery.

Once you receive the card, you will find instructions included on how to transfer the funds to your bank account online. If you need assistance at any point, you may also contact the card service’s customer support team directly at 877‑200‑8555.

Should you have any additional questions or need further support, please don’t hesitate to reach out to me directly at (602) 824‑4448. I am generally available on weekdays between 8:00 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Mountain Time, and I would be happy to assist you.

Again, I truly apologize for this situation.

Aaron Patrick

Office of the President

Sr. Customer Service Manager

Posted in Letters, Palisades Fire | 3 Comments

Viewpoint – Voting for L.A. Mayor – Choose Facts Not Feelings

 

A common reason that survivors stay in abusive relationships is that it can be difficult for someone to admit that they’ve been or are being abused. They may feel that they’ve done something wrong, that they deserve the abuse.

That’s the only reason I can think of that one Palisades resident told me that although they don’t like L.A. Mayor Karen Bass, they may vote for her.

MAYOR KAREN BASS:

LAHSA CEO Valecia Adams Kellum and LA. Mayor Karen Bass believe in housing first.
(X-formerly Twitter)

One of the L.A. Mayor’s primary jobs is to make sure all the commissions have top-notch appointees. We can all make a mistake in choosing a friend, but Bass chooses one questionable candidate after another: Lecia Adams Kellum (LAHSA), Janisse Quiñones (DWP), Christine Crowley (LAFD) and Michel Moore (retired 2024) replaced with Jim McDonnell and Public Safety Deputy Brian Williams (on leave for calling in a bomb threat to City Hall during the Palisades Fire.)

All of the Mayor’s text messages and emails disappeared after the fire, according to her deputy Mayor of Communications Zach Seidl (who also quit in October 17, 2025).

Maybe you can’t blame the destructive fire on Bass, just because everyone around her failed, but if she were going to be out of town, she should have directed everyone to be on alert, especially the next person in line, Marqueece Harris-Dawson. Crowley called the Mayor’s replacement at 11:27 a.m. January 7. She received a text from him three and half hours later at 3 p.m. “at command post, eager to connect.”

After the fire, Bass first hired Steve Soborff, then it was Haggerty Consulting, who was replaced by AECOM. Pacific Palisades is not much further along then it was when the Army Corp of Engineers scraped the final lots in August 2025.

Bass also helped Nythia Raman in her run for councilmember – and now Raman is running against her.

COUNCILMEMBER NYTHIA RAMAN:

Prior to Raman becoming a councilmember, she co-founded a nonprofit SELAH Neighborhood Homeless Coalition.

A Harvard graduate with a degree in political theory, she also received a master’s degree in urban planning from MIT.  Raman was one of three members to vote against L.A.M.C. Section 41.18 that banned homeless encampments with 500 feet of schools and daycare centers. She has twins with husband and television writer Vali Chandrasekaran, who worked on Modern Family, which often filmed in Pacific Palisades.

Raman is a strong proponent of increasing housing density and the need to accelerate building construction to address the city’s housing and homelessness crisis. She has been described as one of the most pro-housing members of the LA City Council, advocating for policies that increase development capacity, particularly near transit and increasing density in small-scall multi-family developments. It is not known how she feels about density in very high fire severity zones and how that might affect evacuation in those areas, which includes Palisades, Brentwood and the Hollywood Hills.

In Raman’s prior elections the Democratic Socialists of America (L.A. Chapter) endorsed her. DSA, a left-wing organization, which has about 5,000 members, runs strong ground game campaigns that include canvassing, door-knocking and phone banking. She and Rae Huang sought the DSA’s endorsement for Mayor, but the Democratic Socialists of American is not endorsing either, currently.

ADAM MILLER:

Miller on his website Better Angeles (homeless nonprofit, which received $750,000 from Fire Aid) wrote “Better Angels is not simply another homelessness organization. It is not just a nonprofit. Or even a social enterprise. It is a movement. During the pandemic, after my company, Cornerstone, was taken private, I started focusing on homelessness. I spent several months volunteering with executives at LAHSA (Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority), to try to help improve the organization’s efficacy.

Miller advocates for the Better Angels Affordable Housing Fund, a for-profit real estate investment partnership (where the Better Angels 501c3 owns the general partnership) which will provide investors with diversification across developers, project types and project sizes, construction oversight, and market rate returns. The $250M fund will be levered up to invest in over $1 billion worth of development projects, focused on delivering net new affordable housing units with an approach that is better, faster and cheaper.”

Miller, like Raman and Bass, has not figured out that homelessness is generally caused by mental illness or addiction. After years of working with the Pacific Palisades Task Force on Homelessness, this editor has found that most homeless people refuse services when offered.

The three should be aware that development and building is going on at a massive scale, with homeless nonprofits fighting for money to build, such as the low-income apartments planned for 14th and Wilshire in Santa Monica. Property was listed for sale at $4 million and sold for $6 million. City sold the parking lot behind the property for $1.  Eight story apartment building for low income. Cost will be around $77 million, with about $25 million of the costs paid from a state fund for fire victims with priority given to Santa Monica residents.

And still every day, six people die on the streets. Housing is not the problem, as close to 27,000 Palisadians found out when they had to evacuate the town after the Palisades Fire and all found apartments, Airbnbs, and rooms with friends and relatives.

RAE HUANG:

Haung, an ordained Presbyterian minister and community organizer, has been described as a progressive housing advocate. She promises free transit and social housing if elected. Haung says the L.A. Economy should serve the working people over billionaires, but doesn’t say who will pay for it, if billionaires keep leaving the state.

She said she will expand the unarmed crisis response program and promises to appoint a police chief that shares her values. On her website she says she played a critical role in organizing fire recovery efforts but doesn’t say specifically what that was.

SPENCER PRATT:

A life-long Palisadian, he was among the first to file a lawsuit against the City/State over the Palisades Fire. A strong social media presence, he is touch with the ordinary citizens/firefighters who gave him insider information about the fire. That information has been vetted and presents strong evidence that this fire should never have happened.

He was responsible for getting senators and federal representatives to the Palisades to examine the cause of the Fire even as the City and State claimed it was climate change.

Pratt helped this editor get FireAid information to federal officials, who opened an investigation. Most of that money went to nonprofits, many of whom were not affiliated with the Palisades.

About the homeless, he has said treatment is essential to get people off the streets.

He’s said that he’ll replace the city commissions with qualified individuals. His campaign money comes from concerned citizens, not big donors or union officials (who will expect favors down the line).

Pratt wants to clean up the city, literally, making it presentable before the 2028 Olympics come to town.

Although he has no control over individual councilmembers, he promises that their districts will be made aware of their votes.

Of the five candidates, he is the only one promising change.

Posted in City, Viewpoint | 8 Comments

Beachside Living for Homeless

The homeless had moved in under Gladstone’s restaurant next to the beach.

For the past few days, individuals living underground in storm drains have been making the news. One woman said she called 311 repeatedly for years about the encampments near her home. She said she reported fires, trash and, last year, people living in the storm drains, but nothing happened.

Why did the Mayor’s office respond now? According to Juan Naula, who runs a nonprofit dedicated to cleaning up the city, he believed it was the videos he posted on social media that caught the City’s attention.

One day, at the corner of 88th and Grand, Naula saw as many as 10 people go in and out of the storm drains. After posting a video, he received a call from a Fox 11 reporter, who ran the story Tuesday morning.

On the other side of town, Pacific Palisades Task Force on Homelessness volunteers, Sharon Kilbride and Carmen Kallberg, were doing homeless outreach and made an equally disturbing discovery.

Gladstones restaurant at the Sunset Boulevard and Pacific Coast Highway is situated on the beach/rocks next to the ocean. The wood building is on wood foundation and is high enough for people to sit under it. Usually it is enclosed with a fence and a locked gate..
They noticed that the lock had been cut. Underneath the deck area and further back under the restaurant, “we found a huge abandoned trashed-out encampment, so people have been living under there,” Kilbride said.

There was no one there when they visited, but as Kilbride pointed out “it’s a huge fire hazard and a public nuisance.”

All of the material needs to be cleaned out from under the restaurant. Although it is a state beach, it is under the jurisdiction of L.A. County.

CTN reached out to L.A. County Lindsey Horvath’s office and asked, “since the homeless were on county property will the county help the current Gladstone’s leasee clean out the accumulated trash? Will people living there be offered services.” There was no response from the county.

Kilbride asked, “Do you know the current manager, so this could be resolved? It is really a danger for any restaurant patrons eating in the restaurant. Because if the homeless start a fire, the whole place will go up.”

CTN put Kilbride in touch with the Gladstone’s Legacy group. She was told that no one was helping the  with the homeless. He had a long-time squatter’s car towed today off the Gladstone’s lot and hoped to have help tomorrow (Friday) clearing the encampment out and then replacing the fence.

Thanks again to the Palisades Task Force on Homelessness and their efforts to ensure the entire community, including the homeless stay safe. rehttps://palisadeshomeless.org/

Bedding and clothes were found under the restaurant.

Posted in Homelessness | 2 Comments

Temescal Mural Restoration Mirrors Town Rebuilding

The Palisades Fire destroyed houses in the streets around the Temescal Canyon mural, located across from Palisades High School. The mural, painted in 1983 by Kat Kozik, David Strauch, Jennifer Wilsey and Cathy Salser, had just started restoration in late 2024.

It escaped the flames from the January 2025 fire. Now, just as the homes are being rebuilt around painting, steps to restore the mural’s original beauty continue.

March 14, 2026, marked another major step as the final coat of urethane was removed from the original mural.

The next step will be consolidation. Mural Colors Founder Carlos Rogel explained that consolidation is a process to clean and re-adhere the pigment to the base to recover the work of the original artist.

“A consolidant is applied to the surface to saturate the pigment and strengthen the paint film, healing decades of sun damage and recovering the original appearance of the art,” Roger said and added it is a laborious process. “This step is expected to take several more weeks. The procedure can only take place on weekends when the area is free of parked high school students.”

Once consolidation is finished, then the cracks, peeled layers, and fissures in the wall of the painting will be repaired. “The consolidant restores the paint’s flexibility, allowing the conservation team to peel back the paint film, cleaning the wall beneath and adhering the original paint film with a permanent gel adhesive,” Rogel said.

Rogel praised the original painters. He said the method that they initially employed was the reason that the mural had weathered as long and as successfully as it had. It had been painted from 1983 to 1990, with a retouch in 2008.

In late March 2024, Cindy Simon arranged for Salser and Kozik to meet with Rogel. The first step in restoring the 500-ft. mural, which wraps around Bowdoin along Temescal Canyon Road, was raising nearly $105,000. Kozik and Salser, which they  accomplished by October 2024, with help from 195 donors.

That November, the entire wall was given a bubble bath, with help from volunteers. Then the Palisades Fire closed everything. Temescal Canyon Road was used by the Army Corp of Engineers through about August 2025.

The road has been reopened, students returned to Palisades High School in late January 2026, and workers once again are moving forward to bring the mural, which depicts the history of the canyon.

If one needs more information or would like to donate to the restoration and ongoing upkeep of the painting, email Salser & Kozik at [email protected].

Cathy Salser (left) and Kat Kozik and raised money to restore the Temescal Mural.

Posted in Arts, Community | Leave a comment

Governor Debate Shut Down: Independents Speak at Conference in Palisades

Independent candidates, Lewis Hermes, Reza Safarnegjad and Elaine Culotti spoke to media from a private residence in the Palisades March 24 after the governor’s debate was cancelled.

The University of Southern California’s Dornsife Center, which was scheduled to hold a governor’s debate on Tuesday night on KABC and Univision was cancelled late Monday night, March 23, less than 24 hours before it was set to take place.

The governor hopefuls invited on stage were four Democrats: Tom Steyer, Eric Swalwell, Katie Porter and Matt Mahan, and two Republicans: Steve Hilton and Chad Bianco.
Missing were four Democrats (candidates of color), Xavier Bercerra, Antion Villaraigosa, Betty Yee and Tony Thurmond. Also not invited to the debate were the four independent candidates: Elaine Culotti, Lewis Hermes, Daniel Mercuri and Reza Safarnegjad.

Prior to the cancellation of the debate, a nonpartisan press conference was scheduled Tuesday morning at a private residence in Rivas Canyon in Pacific Palisades. All candidates were invited, 10 of the 14 RSVP’d.

After the debate cancellation, only three independent candidates, Culotti, Hermes and Safarnegjad, were in the Canyon to address the invited media.

“They planned not having an independent at the microphone,” Culotti said about the debate.

In California, during the 2024 Presidential primary, about 47 % were registered Democrats, 24 % Republican and Independents (no party preference) was 22 %. In the United States, 45% of voters identify as independent, and 27% as Democrats and 27% as Republicans, according to Gallup News.

Although it appeared that the debate had been cancelled because of the optics of racism, Culotti, a Palisadian, said “this was far more nefarious than the race card.

“I don’t want to discount racism, but there were going to be four Democrats, two Republicans and no independents,” Culotti said.

Candidates for the forum were selected according to “data-driven” benchmarks developed by Christian Grose, a USC political science professor.

“The methodology was based on well-established metrics consistent with formulas widely used to set debate participation nationwide — a combination of polling and fundraising — and developed without regard to any particular candidate,” USC and television stations said in a March 20 statement.

U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Becerra said on X that it was an “arbitrary formula that favors wealthy candidates.”

Bercerra and Antonio Villagoraise both polled higher than Matt Mahan. Mahan, according to a February 12 story in the San Francisco Standard had raised $8.5million since the end of January, which put him behind top money leader Tom Steyer who put in more than $28 million of his own money for the gubernatorial race.

Culotti, Hermes and Safarnegjad said the scheduled debate and selection of candidates was about controlling the narrative.

Safarnegjad, a Pacific Palisades resident who lost his home in the Palisades Fire said, that “nothing is working in the state,” which is why he decided to run. As an independent, he realized that “none of these parties, people are going to back us. It’s a systematic problem and a corrupt system. And it goes back to the people who built the two-party system,” he said.

Culotti, a developer, who had one child graduate from USC and a second who is attending, reached out to everyone at USC to protest the exclusion of independents at the debate.

“At the Democratic convention, the 3,000 delegates could not pick a candidate” she said and added that it was planned that USC would help cull the candidates by having a debate with four Democrats and two Republicans. That cut out the independents, by discounting them.

“They eliminated my voice,” Culotti said, and added that the voice of Californians who are registered as independents was also eliminated.

Hermes said, “we’re dealing with an establishment that is controlling the narrative. Our news media is running the candidates.”

He quoted Plato, and argued the “illusion of choice,” which in this case is a myth told by the state to keep citizens aligned with the social order. “The Founding Fathers understood this,” he said. “I’m a conservative but I’ve been deleted from the polls.

“There’s a system in place,” he said, which eliminates everyone but Republicans and Democrats. “There are false polls and false rhetoric.”

Safarnegjad said, “We’re boxed into a two-party monopoly. We’re in a crisis.”
To change the system, won’t come from “parties and donors,” Safarnegjad said and urged people to look beyond parties and select someone who would work for them and not unions and big-money donors.

He said running for governor, he learned “if you want to be a Democrat or a Republican, you need large donors. You either come in corrupt or become corrupt.”

Culotti concluded, “No one wants to cancel a fair debate, but this wasn’t a fair debate. If you do not poll, you do not get on stage. The other metric was money. You had to raise enough money to be on stage.”

Posted in Elections, News | Leave a comment

YMCA Spring Festival and Egg Hunt Saturday

Children are invited to the egg hunt this weekend at Simon Meadow.

The Palisades Lowe Family YMCA will hold a spring festival and an egg hunt in Simon Meadow on Saturday, March 28. The morning will include crafts, snacks and a photo opportunity with a special guest. It’s rumored the Easter Bunny may make a surprise appearance.

This free event will include egg hunts from ages 3 to 12 years old, starting with a 9:30 registration.

At 10 a.m., three- and four-year-olds will hunt for eggs on the field.

At 10:30 a.m., five- and six-year-olds will have their opportunity on the field, while seven- to 12-year-olds will look for eggs in Winding Way.

This event is open to the entire community. Simon Meadow is located at 15551 Sunset Boulevard, at the corner of Temescal Canyon Road and Sunset.

Questions: Contact Jim Kirtley, Executive Director [email protected] or call (310) 454-5591. To register: click here.

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Palisades Democratic Club Hosts Mayoral Candidates

The Pacific Palisades Democratic Club in an effort to decide which candidate, if any, they want to endorse, will hold a mayoral candidate forum via Zoom at 1 p.m. on Sunday, March 29.

Democratic candidates invited include Karen Bass, Adam Miller and Nithya Raman. Bass is the incumbent and has agreed to participate along with Raman. The club is hopeful that Miller will also participate.

Maryam Zar and Jen Miner will moderate the forum.

To RSVP, go to [email protected] or call 310- 230-2084.
Questions for candidates may be submitted on the RSVP page and will be posed at the discretion of the moderator.

Posted in Elections | 1 Comment