Former domestic worker fights for labor rights



Angela Alvarez - a former domestic worker who now a lead organizer for the domestic workers movement at IDEPSCA

Angela Alvarez  is a former domestic worker who is now a lead organizer for the domestic workers movement at IDEPSCA | Sinduja Rangarajan

As a former live-in housekeeper, Angela Alvarez quietly worked 15- to 18-hour days. She ate her employer’s throwaway food. She stayed up late after parties to clean up the mess.

It was Alvarez’s first job in the United States and she thought the long hours were normal.

Once, Alvarez took a day off for being sick and her employer penalized her by paying 25 percent less for the entire week. Alvarez quit her job.

That was injustice, Alvarez said. “They never gave me money for taking care of their grandson; they never gave me money for cleaning their daughter’s house.” [Read more…]

Crenshaw High defeats Narbonne in city final; A new political dynasty begins



Exposition Park Rose Garden | Photo Courtesy of The National Register

Exposition Park Rose Garden | Photo Courtesy of The National Register

A roundup of news stories about South L.A:

Black leaders speak out on how to fill LaMotte’s seat (LA School Report)

A new political dynasty begins (Inglewood Today)

Crenshaw defeats Narbonne High in City Final (The Wave)

Motorcyclist dies in collision with bus on 110 freeway (KTLA)

 

$50k reward for killer of South LA boy; Pay phones fight gentrification?



academy theater

Inglewood’s Academy Theater in 1972 | Photo Source: Woodhaven-Historic

A roundup of news stories about South L.A:

$50k reward for killer of South LA boy (CBS LA)

Pay phone fights gentrification in Leimert Park? (Streetsblog LA)

Sebastian Ridley Thomas wins 54th district seat (Press-Telegram)

Rapper The Game raises money for family of South LA boy shot (Los Angeles Times)

 

City council considers more murals for South L.A.



A June 2013 photo of a mural outside a home in South L.A. | Intersections

A mural outside a home in South L.A., as seen in June 2013 | Subrina Hudson

The L.A. City Council considered an ordinance Thursday that would allow single-family homes in South L.A. to paint exterior murals. The ordinance would affect Boyle Heights and Highland Park as well.

Bernard Parks was the lone council member who opposed mural ordinance in a 14-1 vote, saying that individual communities should decide whether residents can paint murals on the sides of their homes.

The response from community members was mixed.

Hear their comments in an audio story from Annenberg Radio News:

[Read more…]

Proud Bird restaurant closes Dec. 21 after 47 years



The Proud Bird | Katherine Davis

The Proud Bird prepares to close. | Katherine Davis

[Update: The Proud Bird announced Dec. 13 that it would, in fact, be able to remain open.]

After nearly 50 years of serving filet mignon dinners and champagne brunches, the much loved Proud Bird Restaurant neighboring LAX is preparing to close its doors for good on Dec. 21. What will patrons and employees remember about this richly-decorated, aviation-themed, banquet-ready eatery?

Hear their comments — and the sounds of whizzing planes — in an audio story from Annenberg Radio News

And click here to view a photo slideshow by Katherine Davis. 

Diners enjoy one of The Proud Bird's last meals. | Katherine Davis

Diners enjoy one of The Proud Bird’s last meals. | Katherine Davis

More murals for South LA; Surveillance video could help find killer



SLAMural-LosAngeles

A mural in South L.A. | Intersections

A roundup of news stories about South L.A:

Audubon’s Baldwin Hills program creates opportunity for Dorsey High students (KPCC)

5 hospitalized at Watts school after science experiment goes wrong (KTLA)

Council says homes in South Los Angeles can have murals (KPCC)

Surveillance video released to help find South LA man’s killer (NBC SoCal)

Leimert Park Phone Company debuts reinvented pay phones



Pay phone protoype

Pay phone protoype. | Stephanie Monte

At the forefront of remixed technology, transmedia, and community storytelling, the Leimert Park Phone Company seeks to create new forms of civic engagement simply by re-purposing old pay phones.

Leimert Park glimpsed the future Saturday outside the historic Vision Theatre at the unveiling of the first reinvented phone.

The fire-engine red prototype is equipped with a microphone, loud speaker, tablet device and electrical outlets. The public was invited to pick up the receiver and share as well as hear stories about the history and culture of Leimert Park.

To project participant Ben Caldwell, director of media arts organization KAOS Network, the old objects have potential.

“Discarded pay phones are portals for community storytelling and to preserve our history,” he said. KAOS Network has been a community staple for more than 30 years helping develop local artists develop multi-media and design skills.

Caldwell is one of a group of Leimert Park community members, artists and musicians who have worked with 30 USC students and faculty on the project since 2012. It began with a series of workshops geared for brainstorming and rapid-prototyping – “hacking” the pay phone to find ways the device could be programmed to record sound or create its own WiFi network.

François Bar, a USC Communication professor, helped acquire the phones. He also posed a key question: “How do you change the objects that are on the sidewalk so they can interact with the people that live there?” Leimert Park’s unique street life would offer an ideal opportunity for experimentation, he decided.

“Many people live outside, there’s a lot of interaction — life from the sidewalk that’s very different from other parts of this city,” said Bar.

Art work for the Leimert Park Phone Company

Art work for the Leimert Park Phone Company. | Stephanie Monte

Leimert Park has been a key artistic and cultural hub for L.A.’s African-American community. Residents and business owners have recently begun to worry that that developers will drive them out by buying property and blasting up the rent, now that a Metro Line is slated for a Leimert Park station.

Some say a few old-fashioned pay phones could be just the thing to help stimulate business within the community as well as generate civic engagement.

Pick up the receiver and you’ll hear: “Press ‘one’ to hear a story about Leimert Park. Press ‘two’ to leave a story. Press ‘three’ to hear the history. Press ‘four’ to hear the music of Leimert Park.”

The project, still in its soft-launch, operates with a small computer called “Raspberry Pi,” which uses an ARM processor, runs Linux and costs about $35. Programmers said it’s ideal for embedding in a pay phone because it’s cheap, flexible and can detect and send voltage changes.

Electrical engineer Wesley Groves made the two outlets encased in flexible plastic tubing that let users plug in USB cables such as phone chargers. He said the pay phone was designed to look attractive.

“As you’re walking down the street and you look at this, your eyes begin to communicate with the object… Then you’ll walk over to it, maybe interact with it, and more people will come,” said Groves. “It creates its’ own communication field.”

His wife Collette Foster Groves, who lives in nearby Ladera Heights, said the phone plays with innovation and technology in mystical, magical ways.

“It’s great to see such art and technology fused together, recycled and repurposed especially for a historical function,” she said. “They should call it the smart phone because of all the ways it can be used.”

Historic Visions Theatre in Leimert Park

The historic Visions Theatre in Leimert Park. | Stephanie Monte

Attendee Janice Villarosa also supported the idea of making art “instead of throwing something out,” and said she thinks learning about Leimert Park’s history will “build more community.”

Andrea James, a frequent Leimert Park visitor, said this kind of project is long overdue to help people understand the neighborhood’s history and struggle.

“This is really the last area that people of Black culture can call their own in the city of Los Angeles,” said James.

For now, the prototype phone is too fragile to be left on the sidewalk. But the Leimert Park Phone Company says it’s planning a permanent installation by January, perhaps with the help of local business owners.

For more, visit http://leimertphonecompany.net.


The Vision Theatre in Leimert Park. View larger map.

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54th District Assembly Special Election Dec. 3



Chris Armenta, John Jake, and Mark Waksberg, three of the 54th District Assembly candidates.

Chris Armenta, John Jake, and Mark Waksberg, three of the 54th District Assembly candidates. | Stephanie Monte

The four candidates running for the 54th District Assembly discussed jobs, prisons, guns, traffic and the environment Saturday at the Holman United Methodist Church ahead of tomorrow’s special election.

The 54th District includes Westwood, Century City, Baldwin Hills, the Crenshaw district and Culver City.  The election was called by Governor Jerry Brown to fill Holly Mitchell’s vacancy after she took a position in the California senate.

At the forum, Sebastian Ridley-Thomas, son of Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas, pledged to fight for jobs, education, and healthcare. Chris Armenta, former Mayor of Culver City, named the economy and the environment among his priorities. John Jake said growing up with adversity in South L.A. made him the right assemblyman. And Mark Waksberg, the independent among three democrats, said both democrats and republicans need his vote for legislation.

Read on for highlights from the candidates’ forum… [Read more…]

Putting ‘Thanks’ giving in the community; 54th district assembly election Tuesday



 

Clown mural on Vermont & Western | Photo Credit: Skylar E Myers

Clown mural on Vermont & Western | Photo Credit: Skylar E Myers

A roundup of news stories about South L.A:

Walmart protesters arrested at Black Friday rally (First Coast News)

Inglewood standoff suspect charged with murder (NY Daily News)

Putting ‘Thanks’ giving in the community (LA Sentinel)

54th district assembly election Tuesday (LA Wave)

Miriam Torres: Improving water quality in South LA (Switzer Foundation)