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Updating. . .
California Policy and Politics Thursday
This hip L.A. neighborhood is installing emergency sirens to warn of ICE raids -- Communities have used loud sirens to warn people about approaching storms, tsunamis and tornadoes, but now some activists in Los Angeles are using sirens to warn about immigration agents. Salvador Hernandez in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 3/5/26
Key Friday deadline could help determine whether California elects a Republican governor -- Friday’s deadline for candidates to place their names on the ballot for California’s June primary has particular weight this year amid concerns that so many Democrats are running they could shut their party out of the general election. Sophia Bollag in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 3/5/26
Walters: Democratic angst and gerrymandering threaten California’s political reforms -- Turmoil within the California Democratic Party over this year’s election for governor and fallout from the party’s naked grab of congressional seats could have long-term effects, undoing two important political reforms — the top-two primary system and redistricting by an independent commission. Dan Walters Calmatters -- 3/5/26
Newsom says Trump pardons have cost taxpayers $2B as war over ‘fraud’ escalates -- President Donald Trump’s pardons of Capitol rioters and other offenders have brought predictable condemnations from critics and shrugs from the president, but Gov. Gavin Newsom has a new line of attack: Grants of clemency for wealthy fraudsters during Trump’s five years in office, Newsom says, are costing the United States and its residents nearly $2 billion in court-ordered repayments. Bob Egelko in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 3/5/26
‘It can only come back to haunt you’: Adam Schiff on why Congress ceded to Trump on Iran -- As President Donald Trump’s war with Iran spirals into violence across the Middle East, California Sen. Adam Schiff has emerged as a leading Democratic voice to halt the conflict and rein in Trump’s military authority. Alexei Koseff in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 3/5/26
Army Reserve soldier from Sacramento is believed to have died in Kuwait drone strike -- Chief Warrant Officer 3 Robert M. Marzan, 54, was at the scene of the drone strike in Port Shuaiba, Kuwait, and is believed to be one of the individuals who perished at the scene, according to a Pentagon news release. Rosalio Ahumada in the Sacramento Bee$ Clara Harter in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 3/5/26
Workplace
Why California cops and firefighters are pushing for a new perk on top of their pensions -- They’re backing legislation that would create a supplementary savings program to allow state law enforcement officers and firefighters to leave public service with a payout. It’s called a deferred retirement option plan, which several local law enforcement agencies already offer to their officers. Adam Ashton Calmatters -- 3/5/26
Irvine startup lays off close to 300 employees -- Supernal, an air taxi company backed by Hyundai Motor Group, laid off most of its staff last week as it struggles to prove its technology. Caroline Petrow-Cohen in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 3/5/26
‘How is that fair?’ San Diego Unified OKs more than 200 cuts to non-teaching jobs, expects dozens of layoffs -- Around 70 classified employees — among them paraeducators, assistants, clerks, custodians and more — are expected to get notices of layoffs, barring major changes before May. Jemma Stephenson in the San Diego Union Tribune -- 3/5/26
AI
How our AI bots are ignoring their programming and giving hackers superpowers -- Despite safeguards built into systems such as Claude and ChatGPT, hackers use creative prompting techniques to “jailbreak” AI into assisting illegal activities. As AI capabilities expand, experts warn that novices can now cause damage previously requiring advanced skills, raising urgent security concerns. Nilesh Christopher in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 3/5/26
Who pays for AI’s power? California watchdog urges new data center rules -- The Little Hoover Commission warns AI data centers could spike electricity bills, urging lawmakers to make tech companies — not households — pay for grid upgrades. Alejandro Lazo Calmatters -- 3/5/26
Tax
Contra Costa voters will weigh tax increase to counter Trump cuts -- Contra Costa voters will decide in June whether they’re willing to pay a new sales tax to help offset the Trump administration’s cuts to Medicaid, which will siphon millions of dollars from the public health care system. Sara DiNatale in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 3/5/26
Fate of hefty tax on empty second homes now up to San Diego voters -- If approved by voters, owners of empty second homes could be taxed as much as $15,000 a year. Lori Weisberg and Phillip Molnar in the San Diego Union Tribune -- 3/5/26
Water
California, Arizona and Nevada press Trump administration to rethink Colorado River water cuts -- The three downstream states said in letters to the Interior Department this week that the agency’s preliminary outline of five options for cuts ignores the foundational “Law of the River” that has underpinned how seven western states operate for more than a century. Ian James in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 3/5/26
Wildfire
California’s next insurance commissioner will have ‘brutal’ balancing act -- Ricardo Lara’s successor will have a full plate. Insurance premiums are rising; fire survivors are struggling; the FAIR Plan is still growing. Levi Sumagaysay Calmatters -- 3/5/26
Legislators eye new prevention efforts in fire-scarred California: ‘A tipping point’ -- Two months after the anniversary of the devastating Southern California firestorms, several legislators at the state Capitol unveiled a package of legislation aimed at preventing wildfires and lessening their harms. Katie King in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 3/5/26
Develop
Buyers selected for downtown S.F.’s shuttered shopping mall -- San Francisco’s vacant downtown mall has new stewards: A pair of experienced, San Francisco-based developers, who are teaming up to reimagine the languishing 1.5 million-square-foot complex. Laura Waxmann in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 3/5/26
A developer wants to build 110 homes just outside Yosemite. Locals are shocked -- A plan to build 110 modular homes at the edge of Yosemite National Park is shaping up as one of the most unusual battles in California’s long-running effort to force construction of new and affordable housing up and down the state. Kurtis Alexander in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 3/5/26
Homeless
Trump’s Medicaid work mandate could kick thousands of homeless Californians off coverage -- A majority of California’s roughly 180,000 people experiencing homelessness have health insurance through Medi-Cal. Providers predict that many will lose insurance under President Donald Trump’s upcoming work mandates even if they qualify for exemptions. Kristen Hwang Calmatters -- 3/5/26
Also
California school says sex offender candidate’s event near campus was ‘not welcomed’ -- An elementary school in California’s Central Valley filed a police report after a registered sex offender running for city council held a news conference across the street from campus while students were present, according to school officials. Aidin Vaziri in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 3/5/26
POTUS 47
Trump fires Homeland Security Secretary Noem after mounting criticism -- President Donald Trump on Thursday fired his embattled Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, after mounting criticism over her leadership of the department, including the handling of the administration’s immigration crackdown and disaster response. Curtis Yee, Pamela Sampson, Katie Vogel Associated Press -- 3/5/26
Judge rules companies are entitled to refunds for Trump tariffs overturned by the Supreme Court -- In a defeat for the Trump administration, a federal judge in New York ruled Wednesday that companies that paid tariffs struck down last month by Supreme Court are due refunds. Paul Wiseman, Mae Anderson Associated Press Lydia Wheeler, James Fanelli and Louise Radnofsky in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 3/5/26
Senate rejects bid to scale back Iran war -- The Senate rejected an attempt to rein in the war in Iran, handing President Donald Trump what amounts to an endorsement of his five-day military campaign. Connor O'Brien Politico Lindsay Wise and Anvee Bhutani in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 3/5/26
Trump Wants a Quick Victory in Iran. But the War May Be Costly -- As President Trump uses U.S. military force overseas, his calculation has been that he can launch military operations with the loss of few American lives and minimal disruption to the economy. The opening days of the war in Iran are challenging that assumption. Luke Broadwater in the New York Times$ -- 3/5/26
Trump calls on Kurds to aid U.S. effort in Iran, offers support -- In outreach to Kurdish minority leaders in Iran and neighboring Iraq, the president offered U.S. support to insurgent efforts against Tehran. Karen DeYoung, Mustafa Salim, Ellen Nakashima and Warren P. Strobel in the Washington Post$ -- 3/5/26
Trump Follows His Gut. His National Security Advisers Try to Keep Up -- Decisions come fast, even if contradictions and inconsistencies abound. But without much of a process, there is little preparation for how things can go wrong. David E. Sanger in the New York Times$ -- 3/5/26
Inside the Trump administration’s scramble to support its own war -- The State Department is adding resources to evacuate stranded Americans in the Middle East, and the Pentagon is scrambling to increase the number of U.S. troops gathering intelligence for operations — the latest indications that the Trump administration was not fully prepared for the broader war it is now facing. Nahal Toosi, Jack Detsch and Paul McLeary Politico -- 3/5/26
Trump Keeps Gambling With the Economy — And Getting Away With It -- President Donald Trump has taken one risk after another that could have destabilized the American economy. Iran is the latest crisis to test U.S. economic resilience. Victoria Guida Politico -- 3/5/26
California Policy and Politics Wednesday
Bay Area gas approaches $5 a gallon after Iran strikes. Why economists aren’t panicking -- “The interesting story since the war began is how little oil markets have reacted,” said UC Berkeley professor Severin Borenstein, director of the Energy Institute at Haas School of Business. Rachel Swan in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 3/4/26
Newsom likens Israel to ‘apartheid state,’ questions future military support -- Gavin Newsom likened Israel on Tuesday to an “apartheid state” and said its leadership has left the United States no choice but to reconsider military support for its ally in the Middle East. Blake Jones Politico -- 3/4/26
Sen. Padilla preps for Trump trying to seize control of elections via emergency order -- Sen. Alex Padilla (D-Calif.) is preparing for President Trump to declare a national emergency in order to seize control of this year’s midterm elections from the states, including by bracing his Senate colleagues for a vote in which they would be forced to either co-sign on the power grab or resist it. Kevin Rector in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 3/4/26
Kamala Harris advocates lowering the voting age to 16 at Oakland event -- Harris said she is worried about voters’ rights and access to the ballot. She fears the Supreme Court will soon gut the Voting Rights Act and its protections against racial discrimination, and that a Trump-backed bill in Congress to sharply curtail access to voting will disenfranchise millions. Sara DiNatale in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 3/4/26
For California Democrats, single-payer health care is back. Voters have heard it before -- The idea of a government-run universal health care program that would replace private insurance as the sole payer of health care costs faces as many headwinds as ever. It had fallen onto the backburner after Gov. Gavin Newsom and Democratic lawmakers failed to get it done, with some balking at the $392 billion estimated annual cost. Jeanne Kuang Calmatters -- 3/4/26
Newsom names Schwarzenegger to California Hall of Fame -- In the end, Gavin Newsom named Arnold Schwarzenegger to the California Hall of Fame — though it took longer than the Arnold-verse expected. Newsom announced Schwarzenegger’s induction, along with eight others who “represent the best of the California spirit,” on Tuesday, about six months after Schwarzenegger’s name was conspicuously absent from an early list of inductees the governor previewed at a reception. Brock Hrehor and Jeremy B. White Politico Don Sweeney in the Sacramento Bee$ Andrew J. Campa in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 3/4/26
Defying party pressure, low-polling Democrats refuse to exit CA governor’s race -- Low-polling Democratic candidates for governor on Tuesday swiftly rejected a top party official’s call for them to quit the race ahead of Friday’s filing deadline, even as Gov. Gavin Newsom said he was sympathetic to the idea that some should step aside. Ben Paviour in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 3/4/26
Republicans blame Carl DeMaio for party division as his group rakes in millions -- Carl DeMaio, a divisive state lawmaker, continues to upset his colleagues as he works to amass influence through his political organization Reform California — one of the state’s biggest conservative fundraising machines. Nadia Lathan Calmatters -- 3/4/26
To attend prom or a football game, California students first had to surrender their data -- The state’s privacy protection agency is fining PlayOn $1.1 million for violating state law. The company, which operates the ticketing service GoFan, required students and parents to share their data to access tickets for high school events. Adam Echelman Calmatters -- 3/4/26
Walters: California businesses and left-leaning groups clash on the ballot and in court -- The state Capitol’s longest running political conflict — going at least a half-century and still counting — pits business interests against a quartet of left-leaning groups. Dan Walters Calmatters -- 3/4/26
Workplace
County pauses major layoffs at cash-strapped Alameda Health System -- Alameda Health System, the county’s safety net health care system that runs Highland Hospital in Oakland, will defer major layoffs that had been slated to take effect March 9, after county officials voted Tuesday to delay the cuts and form a working group to consider alternative solutions. Catherine Ho in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 3/4/26
Marketplace
California’s heralded wine industry is running dry — here’s why -- California wine producers announce major layoffs and facility closures amid an oversupply crisis, declining consumer demand and trade tensions threatening the state’s wine industry. Iris Kwok in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 3/4/26
Open-air ‘mall parks’ are on the rise in SoCal — and exhausted parents are loving it -- Shopping centers across Southern California are adding green spaces, some with play structures, to adapt to changing retail landscapes and attract families. Rachel Kraus in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 3/4/26
Cannabis
L.A. cannabis businesses owe $400 million. The city may get only $30 million -- Los Angeles cannabis businesses owe about $400 million in back taxes and fees, but only $30 million may end up in city coffers. Under an “amnesty” proposed by the City Council, cannabis businesses that pay their back taxes within three years would be forgiven late fees and interest. Sandra McDonald in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 3/4/26
Water
How a California desalination plant could ease water shortages on the Colorado River -- With desert cities like Phoenix and Tucson bracing for their allotments of Colorado River water to be slashed dramatically, San Diego County’s water agency could for the first time sell some of its water to other states by drawing on its ample supplies from the nation’s largest desalination plant. Ian James in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 3/4/26
Wildfire
Can fire-resistant homes be sexy? ‘You be the judge,’ says this Palisades architect -- At first glance, it looks like nothing more than a charming Spanish-revival, quintessentially Californian home — but this Pacific Palisades rebuild is constructed like a tank. Noah Haggerty, Caroline Brehman in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 3/4/26
ICE
How a last-minute deal doomed California’s ban on masked ICE agents -- The judge was perplexed. “Why were state law enforcement officers excluded?” U.S. District Judge Christina A. Snyder wanted to know. Sonja Sharp in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 3/4/26
Education
Survey reveals almost 50% of California teachers may quit teaching soon -- California teachers have slightly better morale on average than their peers in other states, but more are planning to leave the profession in the next decade, according to Education Week’s annual The State of Teaching report. Diana Lambert EdSource -- 3/4/26
HSR
What is CA High-Speed Rail’s plan to shave extra $2B off Central Valley price tag? -- Smaller stations, and building in the correct order. That’s what the California High-Speed Rail Authority says is key to shaving another $2 billion off the cost of its initial Central Valley route, which it hopes to complete by 2032. Erik Galicia in the Fresno Bee -- 3/4/26
Street
More than a ton of methamphetamine uncovered in Northern California drug busts --“Operation Trash Panda” was executed last Friday by the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office’s Intelligence Narcotics Team and the Calaveras County Sheriff’s Office’s Narcotics Enforcement Unit. More than 100 law enforcement agents conducted high-risk search warrants across three locations. Andrea Flores in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 3/4/26
LAPD’s relationship with Flock Safety under scrutiny from oversight body -- The Los Angeles Police Commission on Tuesday said it wants to know more about how data captured by the controversial license plate reader company Flock Safety is stored and shared. Libor Jany in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 3/4/26
POTUS
Trump is running out of time to sell his rationale for Iran war -- The Trump administration hasn’t figured out how to sell Iran — and it’s running out of time. Four days into the war, senior administration officials are only able to say what this conflict is not: It is not Iraq. It is not a forever war. It is not a war of choice. Myah Ward, Felicia Schwartz, Alex Gangitano and Connor O'Brien Politico -- 3/4/26
Israel Is Blowing Up Iran’s Police State to Clear the Way for a Revolt -- Airstrikes have targeted organizations responsible for suppressing protests and cracking down on separatists; analysts are skeptical the strategy will work. Benoit Faucon, Margherita Stancati and Dov Lieber in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 3/4/26
U.S. Submarine Torpedoed Iranian Warship Off Sri Lanka as Conflict Widens -- Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said it was the first such strike since World War II. The Sri Lankan authorities said they had rescued 32 sailors from the crew of 180. Pamodi Waravita, Anupreeta Das and Lynsey Chutel in the New York Times$ -- 3/4/26
Hegseth says U.S. is ‘accelerating’ war on Iran, but strike at Turkey won’t trigger NATO -- The U.S. war effort against Iran was “accelerating” as American and Israeli forces fought for control of Iranian airspace and pressed farther inland to seek and destroy Iranian missile capabilities, top U.S. officials said Wednesday. Kevin Rector and Ana Ceballos in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 3/4/26
State Dept. scrambles to aid stranded Americans amid attacks, airport closures -- The Trump administration said it is looking to use a mix of military and chartered flights to help U.S. citizens leave the Middle East as Iran steps up retaliatory strikes. Adam Taylor, Dan Lamothe and Sammy Westfall Politico -- 3/4/26
Lawmakers anticipate Trump will seek emergency funding for ‘open-ended’ Iran war -- Top Trump administration officials briefed Congress on the U.S. military onslaught Tuesday but did not say whether they will ask for supplemental defense funding. Jennifer Scholtes and Katherine Tully-McManus Politico -- 3/4/26
Justice Dept. reverses course and seeks to defend orders targeting law firms -- The administration had moved to drop its defense of President Donald Trump’s executive orders sanctioning law firms. A day later, it abruptly backpedaled. Mark Berman in the Washington Post$ -- 3/4/26
Inspector General Says Kristi Noem’s DHS Has ‘Systematically Obstructed’ Its Work -- The inspector general for the Department of Homeland Security said the agency’s leaders had “systematically obstructed” its work, including in a federal criminal investigation, according to a copy of a letter viewed by The Wall Street Journal. Tarini Parti and Josh Dawsey in the Wall Street Journal$ Eric Bazail-Eimil Politico -- 3/4/26

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