Southern California Powerball player wins $3 million

Saturday’s Powerball drawing produced a new millionaire in California.

A ticket matching five numbers but missing the Powerball number was sold at Q Quick Mart on Magnolia Avenue in Anaheim, the California Lottery announced

The winning ticket is worth $3.18 million. The winner has not yet been identified.

The numbers drawn Saturday were 19, 36, 37, 42, and 59, and the Powerball was 19. 

No tickets in the U.S. matched all six numbers so the Powerball jackpot climbs to an estimated $88 million for Monday’s drawing.

So far, 2024 has not produced a jackpot winner in California. In 2023, however, two billion-dollar winning tickets were sold, one at Las Palmitas Mini Market in downtown Los Angeles and the other at Midway Market in Frazier Park.

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More than 600K Californians haven’t touched their inflation relief money

It’s been a year and a half since California started sending direct payments to millions of residents to help ease the burden of inflation, but more than 600,000 people haven’t even touched the pot of money they’re entitled to. 

The state’s Franchise Tax Board started issuing the Middle Class Tax Refund – commonly referred to as “inflation relief” payments – by direct deposit and debit cards in October 2022. By September of last year, the last round of payments had been sent out. 

All but the wealthiest Californians qualified for some amount of inflation relief. The payments varied in size from $200 to $1,050.

The Franchise Tax Board (FTB) estimates 7.2 million payments were deposited straight into Californians’ bank accounts, totaling around $4 billion in benefits. But even more people, around 9.6 million, received a debit card in the mail – and only 90% of those cards have been activated. 

A small number of the remaining debit cards were converted to paper checks, but that still leaves 624,000 debit cards loaded with at least $125 million in benefits untouched. 

Californians still have about two years to activate and use the remaining funds.

Beneficiaries can activate their cards by calling 1-800-240-0223. If you’ve lost your card or think it’s been stolen, you can call the same number and follow the prompts to order a replacement.

Even among the activated debit cards, many haven’t been fully used. Less than half of the debit cards have a zero balance, according to the FTB’s latest accounting. Any unused benefits will no longer be available after the program expires on April 30, 2026.

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Famed Southern California chapel to be deconstructed as land continues to shift

Months after Wayfarers Chapel was closed indefinitely due to unprecedented shifting of the ground below it, the church’s leadership team has announced plans to disassemble the iconic California landmark.

An update posted to the Wayfarers Chapel websitesaid the decision was made to take the chapel apart in hopes of preserving it for future generations and save it from “irreparable damage.”

The popular wedding chapel, which was designed by famed architect Lloyd Wright in the 1940s, stands among a crowd of trees that overlook Abalone Cove. It has hosted thousands of weddings, including celebrity nuptials, since it opened in 1951.

But its campus in Rancho Palos Verdes has been the site of ongoing landslides and erosion for years, heightening in recent months with homes gobbled up by shifting hillsides and roads buckled by unstable ground.

The chapel and its grounds were closed to the public in February in hopes that the shifting of the land would eventually slow down, but the ground has continued to move by as much as seven inches per week, officials said.

The movement below Wayfarers has caused damage and bent the chapel’s metal framing in both the walls and its ceiling. The majority of the church’s glass panels have fractured, many doors are impossible to open or close, the concrete floor has significant cracks and the underground utilities, including electricity, water and gas, are broken and unusable.

“The chapel will not be able to withstand much more damage before it becomes impossible to preserve,” church officials said.

The church that operates the famed chapel says it will be collaborating with “historic preservation experts” and the National Park Service to carefully deconstruct the chapel to preserve as many materials as possible to hopefully put it back together again in the future.

“Wayfarers is committed to preserving our iconic chapel exactly as it has always been, either on the current site or a similar site close by in Rancho Palos Verdes,” said Wayfarers Executive Director Dan Burchett. “We are taking immediate action to carefully disassemble the chapel’s historic materials as a necessary step in the preservation of the chapel for generations to come.”

Burchett, who is one of the church’s reverends, called the ongoing landslide a “looming tragedy felt by many” and added that the church community was keeping its neighbors, many of whom are facing the threat of losing their homes, in their prayers and thoughts.

Rancho Palos Verdes Mayor John Cruikshank said the city would be working alongside Wayfarers to find a suitable place for the chapel to be reassembled. The hope, Cruikshank said, is that the chapel will be able to stay in the city its called home since its construction.

Disassembly efforts began this week and those tasked with taking apart the National Historic Landmark will document and catalog all salvageable parts before transporting them to a safe location until the chapel can be reassembled.

“So many of the chapel’s original materials that were part of the Lloyd Wright design cannot be replicated today,” said Katie Horak, Principal of Architectural Resources Group, the company leading the disassembly and preservation efforts. “With each passing day, more of this material is lost or irreparably damaged. Our team is working against the clock to document and move these building components to safety so that they can be put back together again.”

A verified GoFundMe page set up to help cover some of the costs of the chapel’s restoration has so far raised more than $70,000. Officials estimate that disassembly alone will cost between $300,00 and $500,000.

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Los Angeles Region Small Business Summit

The City is removing barriers to help hundreds of small business owners and entrepreneurs recover, grow, and thrive.

Through a City-County partnership, we are bringing together Los Angeles’ region’s top free business resources, services and programs all in one place.

Join us TOMORROW at Cal State Los Angeles for a series of panel discussions, a resource expo that convenes all major public and private providers of free business support, on-site free services (including business assessment, legal aid, certification and procurement clinic, credit counseling, compliance support, permitting assistance, etc.), and much more!

We know that navigating resources can be overwhelming, particularly for small businesses that are often unfamiliar with the region’s business-support ecosystem. The City is here to connect you and support your needs.

Hope to see you tomorrow!

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Unity Negro College Fund Celebrates 80 Years

“A mind is a terrible thing waste, but a wonderful thing to invest in.” – United Negro College Fund

The United Negro College Fund is celebrating their 80th year of incorporation. In honor of this milestone, ESSENCE is recognizing the organization’s remarkable legacy and looking ahead to the next 80 years.

It all started with the former president of Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute, Dr. Frederick Douglass Patterson. In 1943, Patterson penned a column for The Pittsburg Courier, proposing that Black colleges ally to raise funds that would mutually benefit the consortium.

In the year following its establishment, UNCF was founded; it had 27 member colleges that served 12,000 students and generated an income of $765,000. This amount would be equivalent to $10 million today, which was three times more than what the member institutions had been able to raise separately the year before.

Today, UNCF is the biggest private scholarship provider in the US for students of color. They are providing funds for 37 HBCUs and offering over $83 million in scholarships to more than 10,000 students annually at universities and colleges. The organization has raised over $5 billion to support over half a million college students.

Happy 80th Anniversary, UNCF! We applaud you for your continued investment in our future.

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USC Scrubs Valedictorian’s Speech Amid Furor Over Antisemitism

Valedictorian Asna Tabassum denounced the decision to cancel the speech over security and safety concerns as an “”anti-Muslim” pretense.

LOS ANGELES, CA — Amid complaints about alleged antisemitic views posted online, USC’s valedictorian will not be permitted to deliver a speech at the university’s commencement ceremony due to concerns about security, the school’s provost announced Monday.

“While this is disappointing, tradition must give way to safety,” Provost Andrew Guzman wrote in a message to the university community. “This decision is not only necessary to maintain the safety of our campus and students, but is consistent with the fundamental legal obligation — including the expectations of federal regulators — that universities act to protect students and keep our campus community safe.

“It applies the same values and criteria that we have used in the past to guide our actions. In no way does it diminish the remarkable academic achievements of any student considered or selected for valedictorian. To be clear: this decision has nothing to do with freedom of speech. There is no free- speech entitlement to speak at a commencement. The issue here is how best to maintain campus security and safety, period.”

Asna Tabassum had been previously announced as this year’s valedictorian. However, critics raised questions about views relating to the conflict in the Middle East she has posted online. In letters sent to USC administrators, critics accused her of posting on a social media account a link to a website that “takes a swinging bat at over 10% of the USC student body and mudslings by calling Zionists ‘racist-settlers.”‘

“Ms. Tabassum unabashedly and openly endorses the link’s calls for ‘the complete abolishment of the state of israel (sic),”‘ according to a letter circulated for critics to submit to administrators. “As if the unqualified command for abolition of the State of Israel was unclear in any way, Ms. Tabassum’s link reinforces racism with another link, urging readers to ‘reject the hegemonic efforts to demand that Palestinians accept that Israel has a right to exist as a . . . Jewish state.”‘

Immediately following Guzman’s announcement, the Council on American- Islamic Relations-Los Angeles issued a statement demanding that the decision be reversed and that Tabassum be permitted to speak. Tabassum released a statement through CAIR-LA, saying “anti-Muslim and anti-Palestinian voices have subjected me to a campaign of racist hatred because of my uncompromising belief in human rights for all.”

“This campaign to prevent me from addressing my peers at commencement has evidently accomplished its goal: today, USC administrators informed me that the university will no longer allow me to speak at commencement due to supposed security concerns,” she said. “I am both shocked by this decision and profoundly disappointed that the university is succumbing to a campaign of hate meant to silence my voice.

“I am not surprised by those who attempt to propagate hatred. I am surprised that my own university — my home for four years — has abandoned me.”

CAIR-LA Executive Director Hussam Ayloush called the USC decision “cowardly” and the reasoning “disingenuous.”

“Asna is an incredibly accomplished student whose academic and extracurricular accomplishments made her the ideal and historic recipient of this year’s valedictorian’s honor,” Ayloush said in a statement. “The university can, should and must ensure a safe environment for graduation rather than taking the unprecedented step of canceling a valedictorian’s speech.

“The dishonest and defamatory attacks on Asna are nothing more than thinly veiled manifestations of Islamophobia and anti-Palestinian racism, which have been weaponized against college students across the country who speak up for human rights — and for Palestinian humanity.”

Guzman, in his campus message, said the uproar over the valedictorian selection has taken on “an alarming tenor.”

“The intensity of feelings, fueled by both social media and the ongoing conflict in the Middle East, has grown to include many voices outside of USC and has escalated to the point of creating substantial risks relating to security and disruption at commencement,” Guzman wrote. “We cannot ignore the fact that similar risks have led to harassment and even violence at other campuses.

“As always, and particularly when tensions are running so high across the world, we must prioritize the safety of our community,” he said. “And as we do every year, we have been monitoring our commencement security needs based on all the information we have and the facts on the ground. Our (Department of Public Safety) and expert campus safety team are uniquely prepared to evaluate potential threats, and we have consulted with them about the current situation, taking into account everything we know about our reality, as well as the unprecedented risks we are seeing at other campuses and across the world. We are resolute in our commitment to maintain and prioritize the existing safety and well-being of our USC community during the coming weeks, and allowing those attending commencement to focus on the celebration our graduates deserve.”

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Celebrating Black History Month: Destination Crenshaw

February is Black History Month, a time we can recognize and celebrate the achievements, leadership, innovation, arts and culture, and contributions made by Black Americans that have influenced all facets of life in the United States. 

It also gives us an opportunity to explore how history is shaping the future. 

“In Focus SoCal,” took a look at Destination Crenshaw, a community initiative to redesign, repair, and revitalize 1.3 miles of Crenshaw Boulevard, into a thriving business and cultural corridor. 

“In Focus SoCal” host Tanya McRae talks with LA City Councilman Marqueece Harris-Dawson, who represents the 8th District, and serves as Chair of the Planning, Land Use and Management Committee, and is spearheading community-led efforts to build Destination Crenshaw

Councilman Harris-Dawson explained his vision for the landmark initiative in the area known as the largest Black community on the west coast. He tells McRae what makes the Crenshaw district’s history and culture so unique.

“Los Angeles has a story to tell — it’s the first major city to elect an African American Mayor, the first city to form multi-racial coalitions, and it’s the heart of Black culture and the creative capital for Black culture in the United States. The Crenshaw district has produced so many giants, either folks who were born and raised there or folks who moved there and understood it was a place to go if you wanted to be creative and you wanted to be in a creative culture,” Councilman Harris-Dawson said.

The Crenshaw LAX light rail line, known as the K Line, has been a decades long community driven project many local leaders pushed forward as an investment in black Los Angeles. Construction began in 2014 and seven of the nine stations opened in Oct. 2022. 

Destination Crenshaw is meant to let people riding on the Kline know they’re moving through an iconic black community. 

According to Destination Crenshaw President and COO, Jason Foster, the focus is on the community and helping local businesses, “This is a cultural monument for our community – where people from all over the world come to experience Black culture that resonates throughout our country and the world,” said Foster.

Tanya McRae also talks with Assemblymember Tina McKinnor, who represents the 61st District and is taking the lead on a plan to improve infrastructure and quality of life for residents in Inglewood and surrounding neighborhoods. 

Assembly McKinnor’s has been a champion for the Inglewood Transit Connector, a multi-billion dollar project that will link Metro’s downtown Inglewood station with SoFi Stadium. Assemblymember McKinnor explains how the project will help residents in the area. 

“It’s really crowded over there. There’s not a lot of parking — it will help people get in and out of Inglewood quickly. It will also help with the environment because we won’t have all those cars sitting there polluting our airspace,” she said.

Assembly member McKinnor is also the Chair of the Los Angeles County Delegation. 

In her long career as a community advocate, the focus of Assembly member McKinnor’s work has always been to help people secure resources to address a variety of issues, including housing and improving public social services for families in need. 

As Chair of the LA County Delegation Assembly, McKinnor discusses how she will advocate to protect resources and funding to help address some of the current issues facing LA County. 

“We are facing budget shortfalls so we must make sure that LA County fights to bring home those funds home to LA County – we have the largest population and we just have to get organized, I think I can bring us together and through the budget process we can vote together and make sure we secure those funds for LA County,” she said.

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Meredith Thomas Selected as Master of Ceremonies for International Women’s Day Gala for 2024

Award Winning Actress Meredith Thomas will be a Co-Master of Ceremonies at the upcoming International Women’s Day Gala for 2024, along with Kim Estes, at the Prestigious Taglyan Complex in Hollywood, CA on Friday, March 8th, 2024, during Oscars’ Biggest Weekend

Meredith Thomas is an award-winning actress and producer. She started her career while still in elementary school as Tessie in “Annie” and in “Pleasantville” as a teenager and hasn’t stopped acting since. She is ranked in second place in the number of Lifetime Television Movies acted in. Included among her awards is a Best Actress win for her 6th Christmas movie “The Best Gift”. As a producer, Meredith has made inclusion her passion and in 2018 she created a charity event called FYC Independents which gives a platform to underrepresented talent including people of color, performers with disabilities, LGBTQ talent, and women. The FYC Independents’ movement helped lead to countless Emmy® nominations and wins. Meredith is also a founding director of the Cre Theater Company and Changing Perceptions where she writes, directs, and produces theater for visually disabled actors.
Attendees at this Gala will be entertained by internationally acclaimed performers from around the world, such as international recording artist Eugene Cole, accomplished recording musician Michael Raye, April Diamond, a Billboard Charting Recording Artist who was #1 on the National New Music Radio Charts in 2021, Mezzo Soprano Hiroko Yoshinaga, and up-and-coming artist Natasha Mar.
Red carpet and Happy hour is from 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm. Come join us for a unique, magical International Women’s Day Gala, a 5 Course Dinner, live music and a fashion show highlighting the designs of international fashion designer Gordana Gehlhausen (GOGA), a Project Runway finalist, Rohini Bedi, Oksana Grigorenko, and international fashion designer and creative director Tommy Le along with Art by VLADI, from 6:30 – 10:00 pm.
The Key-note speaker will be Katherine Sellery, world renown parenting expert and best- selling author. At the heart of the Gala will be the Women’s Inspiration Awards which honors women who have made contributions in their communities as well as in the world at large. Some of the honorees who will receive the Women’s Inspiration Award include Ava Kaufman, Gail Gibson, Gloria Shulman, Lori Boody, Pam Atwal, Sansu Ramsey, Susan Irvine and Starla Lewis.
This year’s event will be benefitting Ava’s Heart Foundation, a 501c3, which helps people who require a heart transplant to meet their six-month residency requirement to be able to live near a Heart Transplant Center in order to be able to get on the heart transplant list.

Purchase Tickets and Sponsorships:   https://bit.ly/iwd2024
Website:    http://www.womensempowerment.org
Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/WomensEmpowermentSummit/
Instagram:  https://www.instagram.com/womens_empowerment_summit/

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Grants of Up to $200 Available to Help SoCalGas Customers in Need

$1 million in Gas Assistance Funds available today to support eligible residential customers

SoCalGas announced there is $1 million available in the Gas Assistance Fund to support eligible customers with grants of up to $200 to help pay their natural gas bill in 2024. Eligibility to receive a grant from the Gas Assistance Fund is based on total household income and household size. Information on how to qualify and apply can be found at socalgas.com/GAF.

“This winter, there is some good news for SoCalGas customers with natural gas prices dramatically down from last year’s historic high prices. However, with cooler winter temperatures, we know that people may use more gas to keep their homes and families warm,” said Gillian Wright, SoCalGas Senior Vice President and Chief Customer Officer. “SoCalGas is committed to supporting customers and we will continue to provide winter conservation tips, resources and programs such as the Gas Assistance Fund.”

SoCalGas provides resources to help customers manage their energy consumption, make energy-efficient improvements to their homes, and ultimately reduce their bills, including the Gas Assistance Fund, a joint effort between SoCalGas and the United Way of Greater Los Angeles. Working with nonprofit organizations throughout SoCalGas’s service territory, United Way of Greater Los Angeles helps income-qualified customers pay their natural gas bill with a one-time grant of up to $100 per household. If the eligible applicant or a household member is age 55 or older, an additional $100 is available for a maximum grant of up to $200.

“At United Way Los Angeles, we believe that we can accomplish more together than alone. SoCalGas’ Gas Assistance Fund, which has helped Californians pay their utility bills since 1983, is an example of how we can come together to support our neighbors and communities,” said Elise Buik, President & CEO of United Way Greater Los Angeles. “This program directly supports vulnerable individuals who face severe economic challenges. SoCalGas’ donation and continued support enables United Way to expand our impact and support even more individuals to afford their natural gas bills.”

As a reminder to customers, SoCalGas offers a suite of programs and services that can help customers manage their natural gas usage to help save energy and money, including:

Energy Savings Tools for All Customers:

  • Natural Gas Price Notice: text alerts that update customers when a 20% or more increase in the natural gas commodity cost is expected, which may impact their bills. To date, nearly 63,000 customers have signed up for optional text alerts. (Text alerts to be sent winter season December through March).
  • Ways to Save: a free tool that helps customers find ways to save on natural gas bills, with a personalized savings plan that offers a household energy analysis, customized energy-efficiency recommendations, bill comparisons and energy usage comparisons.
  • Bill Tracker Alerts: notifications that help customers monitor gas consumption and take steps to reduce usage to avoid surprises on their bills.
  • Level Pay Plan: averages customers natural gas bill across a 12-month period. Each month, the customer pays an average bill instead of actual charges. This is not a discount program.   

Customer Assistance Programs for those who qualify:

  • California Alternate Rates for Energy (CARE): program that saves customers 20% on their monthly gas bills.
  • Energy Savings Assistance (ESA) Program: provides no-cost energy-saving home improvements, with the potential to save customers up to 20% annually on their natural gas bill.
  • Arrearage Management Plan (AMP): allows customers to have their eligible past due bills forgiven. Once enrolled, every time a current bill is paid in full and on time, SoCalGas will forgive 1/12 of the eligible debt. After 12 consecutive monthly natural gas bills are paid in full and on time, the entire past due amount will be forgiven (up to a maximum of $8,000 per enrollment period).
  • Medical Baseline Allowance: provides additional natural gas at the baseline rate.

To see more programs that can help customers save money and energy, visit socalgas.com/Save.

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Advisory for all Los Angeles County Beaches in Effect Until Friday, Feb. 23 @ 5 pm

Due to current rainfall, the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health advises beach users to avoid all water contact, especially near discharging storm drains, creeks, and rivers due to potentially higher bacteria levels in these areas. This includes any runoff that may flow onto or pond on the beach sand.

Ocean and bay recreational waters, especially near discharging storm drains, creeks and rivers can be contaminated with bacteria, chemicals, debris, trash, and other public health hazards from city streets and mountain areas after a rain fall. Individuals who enter the water in these areas could become ill. Rain advisories remain in effect for 72 hours after the rainfall ends.

This advisory will be in effect until at least Friday, February 23, 2024, at 5:00 am.

This advisory may be extended depending on further rainfall.

Please note: Inner Cabrillo Beach in San Pedro remains closed due to a recent sewage discharge.

Recorded information on beach conditions is available 24- hours a day on the County’s beach closure hotline: 1-800-525-5662.  To view map of impacted locations and for more information please visit: PublicHealth.LACounty.gov/Beach/.

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