Anti maskers rally in Redondo, during school board meeting
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by Meghan Jacobs
On the day the Center for Disease Control (CDC) issued guidelines recommending masks for all children in public schools this fall, South Bay parents from Let Them Breathe rallied outside of the Redondo Beach Unified School District office, on Inglewood Avenue, during Tuesday’s school board meeting. Let them Breathe members contend masks wearing in schools should be optional.
Let Them Breathe is organizing statewide rallies at school board meetings, in support of“mask choice resolutions.” The group is also filing a lawsuit against the State of California, challenging the state’s facial covering guidance for K-12 schools.
1127 â Two cars had been parked on Meadowcreek Circle since Thursday.
1302 â A man asked to talk to an officer because his Internet accounts might have been hacked.
1330 â A dirty blue Maxima with its trunk door open was blocking the entrance to a parking lot on Pope Street.
1911 â Report of a reckless driver in a tow truck towing two vehicles on Pope Street.
1952 â Report of a noisy neighbor playing bocce on Tainter Street.
2039 â The noisy bocce game was said to be getting louder.
2149 â Medical aid for a woman who fell and broke her tooth on Kearney Street.
Wednesday, July 14
0936 â There was an ongoing dispute between Park Street neighbors about a fence on a property line. Police determined it was a civil matter.
HERMOSA BEACH
While investigating suspicious circumstances near Hermosa Avenue and 33rd Street, officers arrested three subjects for possession of a stolen vehicle and burglary tools. One of the subjects was in possession of a firearm which was secured by officers, then subsequently the subject escaped custody. The subject is a male Hispanic adult wearing maroon pants and a yellow Lakers jersey.
REDONDO BEACH
Robbery attempt
A victim was sitting in parked car on the 100 block of W. Torrance Boulevard, around 6:45 p.m. on May 5, when a suspect approached and asked him for his phone charger. When the request was denied suspect began punching victim, who fell from the car and hit his head on ground. No loss of property was reported.
Re: âAn Open Apology to Ercoles,â advertisement inÂ
The Beach Reporter, 5/13/21
It is presumptuous to presume what businesses would or would not have survived and why; or if the displaced families would have sold their property long before it produced the wealth that todayâs owners have reaped. Simply put, the Bruce family was not allowed to try.
Many of your arguments are solid, based on the historical examples you used with one very basic flaw. Unlike Chavez Ravine, eminent domain was exercised on the owners of Bruceâs Beach to rid Manhattan Beach of people of color. The presumed action was for what was determined to be a much-needed park. That park, upon which the whole âprocessâ was based, was not built until decades later. It was a racist act that LA County, not the city of Manhattan Beach, has deemed worthy of addressing. I applaud them for doing so.
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Los Angeles County sheriff’s detectives are investigating two homicides that occurred Sunday afternoon one in Compton and the other in Lennox.
The killings come less than a day after the Sheriff’s Department reported three separate homicides in Pico Rivera, near Los Angeles International Airport and in East Los Angeles.
In the first incident Sunday, a man was fatally shot around 3:20 p.m. in the 1200 block of Central Avenue in Compton. Just over an hour later, another man was shot to death in the 10100 block of Inglewood Avenue in Lennox.
The Sheriff’s Department had not released additional details about the shootings.