Rough & Tumble ®
A Realtime Snapshot of California Public Policy and Politics
 
 
 
   
 
 
 

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California Policy and Politics Friday

Three unions unite in massive LAUSD strike threat: What’s at stake for workers, families -- Three unions representing nearly 85% of LAUSD’s 83,300 workers — teachers, support staff and administrators — threaten April 14 strike, an unprecedented alliance. All three groups demand significantly higher pay, citing a multi-billion dollar reserve. Howard Blume in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/10/26

Colossal hospice scheme cost California millions, officials say amid intensifying Trump feud -- Five principal conspirators were arrested on suspicion of a host of felonies, including insurance fraud, money laundering, conspiracy and identity theft for their alleged role in a sophisticated hospice scam operating across Southern California. Richard Winton and Hannah Fry in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/10/26

California Democrats urge election officials to prep for Trump ballot seizures during midterms -- California House Democrats on Thursday said election officials across the country need to prepare for the possibility President Donald Trump and the federal government will intervene — or even seize ballots — during the midterm elections. Sara DiNatale in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/10/26

Trump’s divisive role in California politics is on display as GOP prepares election endorsements -- California Republicans meet in San Diego for their annual convention where they’ll consider who to back in the governor’s race and work on plans to maintain and expand their legislative presence. Nadia Lathan and Maya C. Miller Calmatters Mathew Miranda in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 4/10/26

How thousands of sensitive LAPD files got leaked online — and what happens next -- The hackers gained access to a file-sharing system that stored documents involved in police-related litigation. The records include officer personnel and disciplinary files normally kept secret under state law. Richard Winton and Libor Jany in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/10/26

Walters: California voters will face dueling ballot propositions this fall. Confusion is likely -- When California voters approved Proposition 13 in 1978, they forced a massive change in how government services are financed that continues to reverberate nearly a half-century later. Dan Walters Calmatters -- 4/10/26

Oil

Trump energy chief attacks California oil and gas policies in Long Beach -- U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright visited a Long Beach oil site to pressure Gov. Newsom over state regulations he says are driving up energy costs for Californians. Wright visited Synergy Oil & Gas, where a deal to convert a retired oil field into wetlands — in exchange for new drilling rights — has been blocked by a state law. Alejandra Reyes-Velarde and Alejandro Lazo Calmatters -- 4/10/26

ICE

Man shot by ICE agents in Northern California disputes agency’s account -- The man shot by immigration agents Tuesday during a targeted stop in Northern California said he tried to flee in his vehicle only after shots were fired, contradicting U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s statement about the encounter, according to his lawyer. Anna Bauman in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/10/26

Housing

Why the slow down in S.F. housing construction is leading to a new tax battle -- Affordable housing advocates are pushing a new ballot measure in November that would earmark San Francisco’s real estate transfer tax revenue for subsidized housing, setting up a likely fight with Mayor Daniel Lurie amid a difficult budget climate. Laura Waxmann in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/10/26

Almost no housing is getting built in S.F. Could this proposal change that? -- Three years ago the San Francisco Board of Supervisors slashed the percentage of affordable units that developers must include within their market-rate housing projects, arguing that it would help revive a residential construction industry that has been moribund since the pandemic. It didn’t work. J.K. Dineen, Laura Waxmann in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/10/26

After years of delays, major affordable housing project finally breaks ground in the Mission -- As commuters stream through the 16th Street BART station, a familiar corner has given way to change: A decades-old building that stood behind the station is gone, its absence marked by a construction fence. Laura Waxmann in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/10/26

Karen Bass seeks council approval of $360-million allocation for affordable housing -- Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass and City Councilmember Ysabel Jurado called Thursday for allotting more than $360 million to developers and nonprofits building and preserving affordable housing projects. Noah Goldberg in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/10/26

LA28

L.A. officials raise alarms over crippling Olympic costs: ‘Bankruptcy cannot be the legacy’ -- Los Angeles officials are expressing growing fears that taxpayers and the city treasury could be hit with a round of crippling costs to support the 2028 Olympic Games if the city doesn’t ink a rigorous deal to assure a “zero-cost” Games. James Rainey in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/10/26

Bianco

We went to court to unseal the warrants behind Sheriff Chad Bianco’s ballot seizures. What they reveal -- Riverside County Sheriff and California governor candidate Chad Bianco launched an investigation into alleged voter fraud after hearing allegations from an activist group. Newly unsealed warrants justifying the investigation do not show direct evidence of voter fraud. Ryan Sabalow, Cayla Mihalovich and Wendy Fry Calmatters -- 4/10/26

Workplace

JPMorganChase lays off 53 S.F. workers -- The layoffs at One Front St. are only a small part of the bank’s nearly 6,000 Bay Area workers and it is still hiring, with over 230 open positions locally, JPMorgan spokesperson Angela Reighard-Rand said. Roland Li in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/10/26

Qualcomm lays off dozens of senior positions in San Diego -- The layoffs affect employees at 11 San Diego facilities, including its headquarters, but no plants will be closed, according to the WARN notice. Noelle Harff in the San Diego Union Tribune -- 4/10/26

After losing his home in the Palisades fire, he’s learning to rebuild it — literally -- Los Angeles has an acute shortage of qualified construction workers as the region tries to rebuild from the Eaton and Palisades Fires. One community college is trying to help. Adam Echelman Calmatters -- 4/10/26

FEMA

Landslides Destroyed Their Homes. Two Years Later, FEMA Money Still Hasn’t Come -- Homeowners on the Palos Verdes Peninsula in California remain in limbo as the federal agency has yet to deliver $42 million in voluntary buyouts. ‘It is the difference between financial recovery and ruin.’ Nancy Keates in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 4/10/26

Street

7 arrests in Esparto fireworks blast: At least 4 charged with 7 counts of murder -- A sweeping criminal investigation into last summer’s deadly Esparto fireworks explosion culminated Thursday in multiple arrests, including a sheriff’s lieutenant, his wife and the Bay Area owner of the fireworks company long suspected of being at the center of the blast. Daniel Lempres and Joe Rubin in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 4/10/26

‘This is senseless’: Detective killed in Porterville barricade, shootout -- A Tulare County sheriff’s deputy was killed Thursday morning while assisting officers serving an eviction notice in Porterville. The incident turned into a barricade situation and shootout. Ruben Vives in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/10/26

Student Hit by Projectile During ‘No Kings’ Protest Lost an Eye, Lawyer Says -- The student, Tucker Collins, 18, was observing demonstrators in Los Angeles when he was struck, the lawyer said. Chris Hippensteel in the New York Times$ -- 4/10/26

Also

A California bill seeks to make robotaxis safer. AV companies say it could ‘ban’ the industry -- A Silicon Valley lawmaker is pushing a bill that would require robotaxis to hire local human operators for emergency situations like the blackouts that paralyzed Waymo vehicles in San Francisco last winter. Rachel Swan in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/10/26

High-speed rail could run from S.F. to L.A. by 2040. All it needs is $126 billion -- The figure, buried in a table in the plan’s technical supporting document, is nearly triple the original sticker price of $45 billion that was put to voters in 2008, when California passed a bond measure to fund the 800-mile rail network. Rachel Swan in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/10/26

Rodolfo Acuña, 93, Forthright Scholar at Forefront of Chicano Studies, Dies -- An activist in the academy, he wrote a foundational text in the field, “Occupied America: A History of Chicanos.” It is still in print and still assigned to students. Trip Gabriel in the New York Times$ -- 4/10/26

POTUS 47

‘This is very real’: Surging gas prices drive inflation to highest level in two years -- As the effects of President Donald Trump’s war with Iran ripple across the economy, the combination of surging prices and grim attitudes is a warning sign to Republicans seeking to maintain control of Congress in the midterm elections. Sam Sutton Politico Konrad Putzier in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 4/10/26

Democrats grow bolder on talk about removing Trump from office after his Iran threats -- President Donald Trump’s threats to wipe out Iran, “a whole civilization,” ended the restraint that Democrats have mostly practiced when it comes to questions of removing him from office in his second term. Stephen Groves, Lisa Mascaro, Kevin Freking Associated Press -- 4/10/26

Melania Trump delivers statement at the White House denying knowledge of Jeffrey Epstein’s crimes -- First lady Melania Trump is denying ties to Jeffrey Epstein and knowledge of his sex crimes, saying Thursday that the “stories are completely false” and calling accusations that she was somehow involved “smears about me.” Collin Binkley, Will Weissert Associated Press -- 4/10/26

The Middle East war depleted US weapons. Rebuilding will require China's cooperation -- Beijing has a stranglehold on the critical minerals the U.S. needs to rebuild its weapons cache following five weeks of war. Daniel Desrochers Politico -- 4/10/26

 

California Policy and Politics Thursday

‘It’s killing everything.’ California’s truckers are buckling under country’s priciest diesel -- California’s diesel prices hit record highs near $7.75 per gallon — up 50% in one month and 35% above the national average — crushing trucking operations statewide. Nilesh Christopher in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/9/26

 

‘Revolution’ or ‘chaos’: The massive stakes if a Republican becomes California governor -- If conservative commentator Steve Hilton is elected California’s next governor, as President Trump wants, it would mark a “political revolution” for the liberal state, the candidate said. Kevin Rector in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/9/26

Conservative election group drove Republican sheriff’s ballot seizure, documents show -- Documents unsealed by the Riverside County Superior Court show that Sheriff Chad Bianco’s office credited a conservative election denial group’s disputed claims about the November 2025 statewide election as its justification for seizing 650,000 ballots, injecting the Republican gubernatorial candidate into the middle of California’s fight with the Trump administration over free and fair elections. Raheem Hosseini, Bob Egelko in the San Francisco Chronicle$ Jeremy B. White Politico Grace Toohey and Hailey Branson-Potts in the Los Angeles Times$

California investigated a right-wing influencer’s hospice fraud claims. Here’s what it found -- California officials conducted a sweep of a Los Angeles office building as part of its continued efforts to push back against claims by right-wing influencers and President Trump. California agents said most of the businesses housed at the site can’t access state Medicaid funds, and argued that most potential fraud is happening at the federal level, which is under Trump’s purview. Sara DiNatale in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/9/26

SEIU pulls its endorsement of Scott Wiener, backs only Connie Chan in House race -- The California Service Employees International Union, with 750,000 members statewide, has pulled its endorsement of state Sen. Scott Wiener over his opposition to Proposition D, San Francisco’s “Overpaid CEO Act,” set to appear on the June 2 ballot. Joe Garofoli in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/9/26

Tom Steyer once managed $90M stake in firm now running CA ICE facility. ‘It was a mistake’ -- Under the management of Tom Steyer, a hedge fund called Farallon Capital Management invested almost $90 million in the company that today operates California’s largest immigration detention center located in Kern County. Erik Galicia in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 4/9/26

California billionaire tax is a no-brainer for progressive Democrats, right? Wrong -- The health care union behind the tax measure argues its plan is the only viable fix for federal funding cuts to Medi-Cal. But even some of the most liberal lawmakers and labor unions aren’t convinced yet. Maya C. Miller Calmatters -- 4/9/26

 

Bruce Springsteen’s comeback at Kia Forum is no victory lap. It’s a battle against Trump -- As the time approached 10:30 Tuesday night — nearly three hours after Bruce Springsteen had marched onstage at Inglewood’s Kia Forum alongside 18 of his musical comrades — the 76-year-old rock legend told the crowd he hadn’t intended to be there. Mikael Wood in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/9/26

Anti-war demonstrators march on Market Street in S.F. -- About 100 people gathered in downtown San Francisco Wednesday evening to demonstrate against the U.S. and Israel-led war in Iran. Lucy Hodgman, Aldo Toledo in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/9/26

ICE

Inside ICE detention centers, medical misdiagnoses and delays prove deadly -- Ismael Ayala-Uribe was in agony. The pain started soon after immigration agents seized the bespectacled 39-year-old man, who had lived in the United States since he was 5, at the Orange County car wash where he worked last August. St. John Barned-Smith and Ko Lyn Cheang in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/9/26

LA28

Excitement over ‘affordable’ L.A. Olympics turns to angry sticker shock over high-priced tickets -- LA28 promised affordable Olympics tickets for locals, but presale saw sticker shock with prices up to $5,519 and widespread website access errors. High 24% service fees and limited cheaper ticket availability have frustrated Southern California residents seeking to attend the 2028 Games. Suhauna Hussain and Thuc Nhi Nguyen in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/9/26

 

L.A. population is falling fast: Is it a Rust Belt ‘death spiral’ in the making? -- Los Angeles County lost 54,000 residents from 2024 to 2025, driven by immigration restrictions and continued out-migration to other states. Jenny Jarvie in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/9/26

Workplace

Silicon Valley is booming. So why does the system feel like it’s breaking? -- Slowing population growth, strained public systems and rising costs are testing whether Silicon Valley can sustain its success. George Avalos, Julia Prodis Sulek in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 4/9/26

GoPro to cut 23% of workforce in Bay Area layoffs -- GoPro will cut nearly a quarter of its workforce this year, the San Mateo action camera maker said Tuesday, as it looks to rein in costs while betting on a new generation of products to revive growth. Aidin Vaziri in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/9/26

Disney plans extensive round of layoffs in the coming weeks -- The layoffs add to Hollywood’s ongoing workforce reductions, with Sony Pictures also announcing significant cuts as media companies restructure amid industrywide pressures. Samantha Masunaga and Meg James in the Los Angeles Times$ Joe Flint and Ben Fritz in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 4/9/26

California Assembly committee gives initial OK to state employee telework bill -- Over 100 California state employees crowded outside a hearing room of the Capitol Wednesday morning, waiting their turn to testify in support of a bill to protect their ability to telework. William Melhado in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 4/9/26

Insurance

California insurance commissioner defends bill in face of strong opposition -- Senate Bill 876 aims to speed up and ease that recovery process by requiring insurance companies to provide more coverage in certain instances, make payouts within 30 days after a home is destroyed and assign employees to be primarily responsible for claims, among an array of other changes. Stephen Hobbs in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 4/9/26

Does a new report offer a way out of California’s home insurance crisis? -- As insurers hike rates and cancel policies for thousands of homeowners across California, a new state report has proposed a series of reforms to prevent the property insurance market from cratering amid increasingly catastrophic wildfires — but some consumer advocates say it doesn’t go far enough. Ethan Varian in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 4/9/26

Housing

S.F. cut affordable housing requirements to spur development. Now it may slash them even further -- Three years ago the San Francisco Board of Supervisors slashed the percentage of affordable units that developers must include within their market-rate housing projects, arguing that it would help revive a residential construction industry that has been moribund since the pandemic. It didn’t work. J.K. Dineen, Laura Waxmann in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/9/26

Environment

Inside California’s audacious bid to build the world’s deepest floating wind farm -- California plans to transform Humboldt Bay into a hub for floating offshore wind power to help reach its 100% clean energy goal by 2045. Hayley Smith, Beau Saunders in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/9/26

Palo Alto group buys Coyote Valley farmland in San Jose for $5.3 million -- In the latest step to preserve agriculture and open space in Coyote Valley, the largely undeveloped area on San Jose’s southern edges that was once planned for large technology campuses, a non-profit environmental group has purchased a 71-acre farm to keep it rural for generations to come. Paul Rogers in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 4/9/26

Education

An anonymous donor is giving every SFUSD educator $250 — no strings attached -- An anonymous donor has given $1.6 million to split among the nearly 6,000 teachers, teachers aides and other educators in the district to show appreciation for the jobs they do, which pencils out to $250 each, after some administrative expenses. Jill Tucker in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/9/26

LACMA

The new LACMA is divisive. It’s also ambitious, disorienting — and radically alive -- Los Angeles County Museum of Art’s new David Geffen Galleries represents the riskiest leap taken by any L.A. institution this century. Sam Lubell in the Los Angeles Times$ Robin Pogrebin, Damien Maloney in the New York Times$ -- 4/9/26

Also

Walters: As tax deadlines loom, Californians should note how little they get for paying high taxes -- We Californians pay the nation’s highest taxes, including various fees, on fuel for our vehicles, about 90 cents a gallon, and a hefty chunk of that is parceled out to local governments for roadway maintenance. Dan Walters Calmatters -- 4/9/26

‘A false front’: The California agency failing to stop conservatorship abuses -- A CalMatters investigation finds the Professional Fiduciaries Bureau hasn’t fulfilled its promise to protect Californians as the state’s population ages. Byrhonda Lyons Calmatters -- 4/9/26

S.F. can move forward with dismantling Embarcadero Plaza fountain, judge rules -- A San Francisco judge on Wednesday denied a motion to stop the removal of the embattled Vaillancourt Fountain from Embarcadero Plaza as an emergency safety precaution. Sam Whiting in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/9/26

 

For more than 30 years — day in, day out — he’s chronicled California. One paragraph at a time -- The Sacramento-based Rough & Tumble may be California’s longest-running aggregator of politics and policy. Mark Z. Barabak in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/6/26

POTUS 47

Trump Allies, U.S. Officials Fear Iran Victory Lap Is Premature -- Among the top concerns is Iran’s refusal to fully open the Strait of Hormuz. Lara Seligman, Alexander Ward and Michael R. Gordon in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 4/9/26

Why Iran Thinks It Won the War Despite Huge Military Losses -- Tehran emerged from 38 days of war against the U.S. and Israel having won not only its primary goal—its own survival—but also two potential strategic gains: control of the Strait of Hormuz and a newly established deterrence against large-scale attacks by its longtime adversaries.David S. Cloud in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 4/9/26

Disagreement Over Lebanon’s Inclusion in Cease-Fire Threatens to Unravel It -- The U.S. says the deal didn’t include the country, but Iran says it did. Israel is bombarding Lebanon, and Iran wants to show it supports its allies. Farnaz Fassihi in the New York Times$ -- 4/9/26

With the Cease-Fire in Iran, Here’s Where Trump’s Five War Goals Stand -- On the first day of the pause, Iran fired missiles and launched drones in the region. It said an oil refinery on Lavan Island had been attacked. Israel continued its strikes in Lebanon. Edward Wong in the New York Times$ -- 4/9/26