Fast food workers strike, serial killer convicted + 2 wounded in South LA shooting



Image by _skynet on Flickr.com

Image by _skynet on Flickr.com

LA Times: Fast food workers strike around the country, including in South L.A., to demand living wages.

LA Times: A 74-year-old man who killed 3 women in South L.A. in the 1980s was finally convicted using DNA testing as evidence.

LA Times: The number of street vendors grows in L.A. as more Angelenos lack another reliable source of income.

LA Times: South L.A. could be more “socially vulnerable” to an earthquake or natural disaster in California.

KPCC: A 17-year-old girl and 24-year-old man were wounded in a car-to-car shooting near 84th Street and Vermont Avenue.

Chicago Tribune: Residents in areas such as South L.A. are paying higher housing prices than their counterparts in San Francisco, New York and Miami.

 

Despite odds, a boost in heart health for South LA



By Belinda Cai, Diana Crandall, Bentley Curtis, Taylor Haney, Daniel Jimenez, Kevin Mallory, Ken Mashinchi, Jonathan Tolliver and Yingzhi Yang

Zumba class at the Baldwin Hills Mall. | Daniel Jimenez

Zumba class at the Baldwin Hills Mall. | Daniel Jimenez

The Baldwin Hills Crenshaw community is changing shape.

The South L.A. neighborhood has received various grants within the past several years to start programs aimed at reducing its relatively high rates of diabetes, heart disease and obesity while improving access to nutrition and basic health services.

For many people, these efforts have worked. Take Debra Finley, who signed up for free Zumba classes through the BFit program at the Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza.

“I was 195 pounds,” said Finley. “Now I’m 145.”

It is still unclear whether overall health outcomes are improving in the area. Many of these programs are less than a decade old, and are being pushed into neighborhoods that remain swamped with fast food restaurants and liquor stores. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, only 8 percent of area food retailers in the area are considered healthy.

Yet, many positive trends are emerging. [Read more…]