Community, Diversity, Sustainability and other Overused Words

Articles written by alyssa erdley


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  • PETA Kills 84% of the Animals Brought to their Virginia Center, Within 24 Hours

    Alyssa Erdley, Observer Staff Writer|Updated Nov 30, 2020
    8

    PETA, the acronym for People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, bills itself as an "animal rights" organization. Founded in 1980 by Ingrid Newkirk, a former animal shelter worker and deputy sheriff, PETA is now an international group of purportedly 6.5 million members that has appointed itself the voice of animals who can't speak for themselves. But with a voice like PETA speaking for you, you're better off mute. The fact is PETA kills animals. They have killed tens of thou...

  • Officials are Looking at the Wrong Criteria for Reopening Businesses During Coronavirus Pandemic

    Alyssa Erdley, News with Attitude|Updated May 18, 2020

    On Monday, Governor Gavin Newsom announced that he would conditionally allow the reopening of certain types of businesses in the state. Since March 19, only "essential" businesses have been allowed to remain open. The lockdown order plunged 3.4 million Californians into unemployment as most business outlets closed their doors. Newsom cited the necessity for testing and contact tracing for the coronavirus as a condition for reopening so-called low-risk businesses. On both local...

  • "Mr. Gorbachev, Tear Down This Wall!" Santa Monica Residents Lose Patience With Irrational Continuing Shutdowns

    Alyssa Erdley, News with Attitude|Updated May 10, 2020
    1

    Following the example of the state and county, Santa Monica is allowing certain types of businesses to reopen today in a limited fashion. The city began closing businesses during the third week of March, ending with a complete shutdown of all but "essential" businesses March 19. Ever since, restaurants, retail outlets, and business offices have all been off-limits. But today, our wiser and more knowledgeable overlords are allowing certain, very select businesses to open their...

  • Let's Open Businesses on May 1 Instead of May 15, Governor Newsom

    Alyssa Erdley, News with Attitude|Updated May 2, 2020

    On March 16, the City of Santa Monica, the County of Los Angeles and the State of California almost simultaneously began shutting down businesses, beginning with bars and gyms. Within days, both local and state authorities had shut down all but "essential" businesses. The length this lockdown was supposed to last was extended several times until the current deadline of May 15. Ostensibly, the reason for shutting down nearly all economic activity was to allow hospitals to ramp...

  • California to Give Disaster Relief to Undocumented Residents or "Illegal Aliens"

    Alyssa Erdley, News with Attitude|Updated Apr 18, 2020

    At his press conference today, April 15, California Governor Gavin Newsom announced a plan to give $125 million in direct disaster relief to the undocumented aliens living in the state. $75 million of the fund comes from government coffers, and the other $50 million is being donated by various philanthropic entities. Prefacing his announcement of the aid, Newsom pointed out that half of the children living in the state have at least one immigrant parent, though he did not...

  • California Recommends Releasing Defendants Without Bail During Coronavirus Emergency

    Alyssa Erdley, News with Attitude|Updated Apr 10, 2020

    On Monday the Judicial Council of California adopted new rules to lower jail populations in the name of stemming the spread of COVID-19. Chief among these is no-cash bail for certain non-serious, non-felony crimes. The Los Angeles District Attorney had already moved to eliminate cash bail for similar crimes in an effort to "reduce the number of people both in local jails and courthouses as part of her office's response to help curb the spread of the coronavirus," as stated in...

  • #Covid-19? In 2018, there were 10 million cases of active TB which resulted in 1.5 million deaths.

    Alyssa Erdley, Observer Staff Writer|Updated Apr 10, 2020
    4

    The entire United States, with a population of 350 million, shut down nearly all economic activity on March 16, unwilling to expose its citizens to a disease estimated to kill approximately 2 percent of those who contract it. While data is lacking regarding how many people worldwide have been infected with COVID-19, how many develop symptoms from it, and how many ultimately die (as a percentage), what data exists points to no more than a 5 percent mortality rate - at the very...

  • Covid-19? Meh. Home-Bound College Student Sisters Start Volunteer Food Delivery App

    Alyssa Erdley, Observer Staff Writer|Updated Apr 6, 2020

    Sisters Leat and Kayla, 20 and 19 years old, were sent home from college as most other students were this semester because of COVID-19. These sisters, however, had as father Rabbi Sam Newman, chaplain of the West Bureau Los Angeles Police Department. "Rather than sit around and waste time they decided to do something constructive," Newman says. Enlisting friends, the two sisters created a WhatsApp group, Shopping Helpers L.A., that receives requests for groceries from seniors...

  • Large Jump in Coronavirus Cases Countywide Attributed to Greatly Increased Testing

    Alyssa Erdley, Observer Staff Writer|Updated Mar 31, 2020
    1

    The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health reported 421 new COVID-19 cases today at a press conference. Dr. Barbara Ferrer, director of the Department, attributed the large increase in known cases to a sudden surge in testing ability and the receipt of delayed test results. Of the 9,400 people tested for the virus so far in LA County, 4,000 of them were tested just yesterday. The county now has a total of 1,216 known cases of COVID-19. 9 deaths were reported today...

  • 8 Days That Shook the World: From the LA Marathon to Closing All Gyms in Santa Monica

    Alyssa Erdley, News with Attitude|Updated Mar 27, 2020

    The response of public officials to the increasing cases of COVID-19 accelerated greatly since twenty-three thousand athletes and even more spectators descended on the city to participate in the Los Angeles Marathon on March 8. At that time, officials considered adding hand sanitizer stations and advising people to stay six feet away from each other would be adequate precautions to take in a county that at that time only had 14 confirmed cases of coronavirus. (Newsflash:...

  • Coronavirus Crisis Highlights the Dangers of Urban Density, Especially in LA County

    Alyssa Erdley, News with Attitude|Updated Mar 25, 2020
    1

    On Friday, March 20, local authorities urged the stay-at-home populace to go out hiking for exercise and mental refreshment. The hundreds of miles of trails in the mountain recreation areas surrounding the Los Angeles basin seemed like a safe place to send people, where there might be room to spread out and abide by the guideline to stay 6 feet away from others. It didn't work out. The trails and parks became so crowded that they were closed by Monday, March 23. The relatively...

  • Big Jump in LA County Coronavirus Cases Today. Number of New Coronavirus Cases had been 40-60 per day.

    Alyssa Erdley, Observer Staff Writer|Updated Mar 25, 2020

    3/23- At a live-stream press conference today, LA Department of Public Health Director Dr. Barbara Ferrer reported 128 new cases of known Coronavirus patients in LA County. Since Tuesday, March 17, the number of new cases per day had been holding fairly steady at between 40-60. Today's number shows a marked increase. The total number of known Coronavirus cases in the county is 536. Two recent deaths have brought the total number of fatalities to 7. Dr. Ferrer added that 80 per...

  • Additional Death Reported in LA County Department of Public Health News Briefing

    Alyssa Erdley, Observer Staff Writer|Updated Mar 19, 2020

    At a streaming press conference today, LADPH Director Barbara Ferrer announced the second death to occur in the county from the COVID-19 virus. The individual reportedly lived in a small community near Pasadena. He was between 30-50 years of age and had an underlying health condition. Ferrer had other new information to relate regarding the testing and quarantine protocols recommended to slow the spread of the virus. Ferrer made clear repeatedly throughout the press briefing t...

  • Santa Monica and Coronavirus: No Plan for the Homeless and Covid-19

    Alyssa Erdley, News with Attitude|Updated Mar 13, 2020
    1

    The city's Chief Resilience Officer and its Communication Officer reported on the state of the city's response to the COVID-19 outbreak at the Santa Monica City Council meeting on Tuesday. Other than presenting the same outlines you have already seen of the disease's presentation, contagiousness, and personal measures to help prevent infection, neither public official had much to add. Certainly, there was no plan presented to prevent the spread of the disease to the city and...

  • SMMUSD Hides Behind Federal and Local Agencies in Coronavirus Response

    Alyssa Erdley, News with Attitude|Updated Mar 13, 2020

    An email sent out Tuesday by Dr. Ben Drati, School Superintendent for the Santa Monica-Malibu Unified School District, seeks to explain the response of the district to the outbreak of the Covid-19 virus outbreak and possibly to allay the fears of the community. UPDATE: SMMUSD sent an email out at 9:10 pm Wednesday night announcing the cancellation of the Stairway of the Stars rehearsals and concerts. They are also cancelling field trips, assemblies, performances, fundraising...

  • 261 Parents File Objection to SMMUSD Settlement Affecting 11,000 Students

    Alyssa Erdley, News with Attitude|Updated Mar 10, 2020
    1

    On Monday, 261 parents, led by former Rent Control Chairperson Joel Koury and Joseph Pertel, both attorneys, filed an objection to a class action settlement between the Santa Monica-Malibu School District and the parents of students who attended SMMUSD schools between July 2016 and the present. The lawsuit was brought on behalf of students who were required to pay school expenses, including supplies, field trips, and athletic participation fees, in violation of California's...

  • California's New Voting System Became A Long-Line Mess And Don't Blame the Victim

    Alyssa Erdley, News with Attitude|Updated Mar 9, 2020
    1

    Last month I wrote that California should wait before laughing at the Iowa Caucus debacle. The state decided that the voting method that had worked seamlessly for over a century should be changed for something new and improved. Whenever a government entity uses those two words, perhaps adding “streamlined” and “transparent,” you can be sure they are only looking to cheap out. Or obtain some kickbacks from the “improver.” And one can only assume that’s exactly what happened...

  • California Democratic Presidential Primary, We Recommend Anybody but Bernie Sanders

    Alyssa Erdley, News with Attitude|Updated Mar 3, 2020
    1

    Voting started in California on February 22 but continues through to the official election day, March 3 - Super Tuesday. We were asked by our whip-cracking publisher to provide a guide to voting for Santa Monica voters. We will do so, ensuring we infuriate the bleeding hearts and validate those who want to see the Golden State return to prosperity, opportunity, and some semblance of law and order. Federal - Each party is conducting their primary election at this time. Those...

  • California Should Wait Before They Laugh at Iowa Caucus Debacle

    Alyssa Erdley, News with Attitude|Updated Feb 15, 2020
    1

    On Monday, the much-anticipated results of the Democratic Iowa caucus were not available once the event ended. An app that had been designed to report results automatically from the phones of the precinct chairs either did not download, did not work, or was too complex for the user to figure out. It took two days for the Democrat party's election officials to parse through the precincts' reports to come up with some numbers that they declared definitive. If Iowa's Democratic...

  • Only Someone Who's Crazy Would Vote for Rachel Rossi for LA County DA. Literally

    Alyssa Erdley, News with Attitude|Updated Feb 2, 2020

    Rachel Rossi, currently a criminal defense lawyer at Cohen Williams, a fancy downtown Los Angeles law firm, has announced her candidacy for Los Angeles County District Attorney. You read that right. A boutique defense lawyer wants to be chief law enforcement officer of the county. Her platform reads pretty much exactly as you'd expect from this information. She would like to transform the DA's office into one big powerful defense firm for criminals. Excuse me. Not criminals....

  • Measure R Connects Citizen Oversight of the Sheriff and Inmate Release

    Alyssa Erdley, News with Attitude|Updated Feb 2, 2020

    Ballot Measure R, also known as Reform LA Jails, will be on the ballot this March. Somewhat confusingly, the measure tackles two disparate issues. The first issue is assuring that the Sheriff Civilian Oversight Commission will have the power to subpoena documents from the county Sheriff's office without the Sheriff having the power to demur. The second issue the law tackles is to find "alternative options to arrest and incarceration for nonviolent crimes where mental health,...

  • Thanks to the American Bail Coalition We Still Have Cash Bail in California

    Alyssa Erdley, News with Attitude|Updated Jan 27, 2020

    In the November 2020 election, Californians will have a chance to give an up or down to vote on legislation that ends cash bail. Back in August of 2018, Jerry Brown signed SB 10, "The Money Bail Reform Act," a law that eliminated cash bail. SB 10 was set to take effect in October, 2019, but sufficient signatures were gathered to support putting a measure on the ballot that would overturn the new law, the Referendum to Overturn a 2018 Law That Replaced Money Bail System with a...

  • Trump Administration Acts to Protect Jews at UCLA Using Title VI

    Alyssa Erdley, News with Attitude|Updated Jan 11, 2020
    2

    The Trump administration made it clear this week how they were going to act on the president's executive order that included Jews as a protected group under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act. The U.S. Department of Education opened an investigation into UCLA for two separate complaints regarding anti-Semitism. When President Trump initially signed the executive order, there was outcry from some who deliberately misunderstood the president's updated interpretation of the 1964...

  • AB-5: California's Gig Economy Law Reveals Who Brokers Power in Sacramento

    Alyssa Erdley, News with Attitude|Updated Jan 11, 2020
    3

    The short list of winners under California's gig economy law and the long list of exceptions to it act like a neon sign announcing who controls the power in this state. The winners are the government treasury, organized labor unions, and such a tiny number of workers that they are barely worth mentioning. The losers are everybody else, including employers (mostly of small businesses), consumers, and, most notably, the lion's share of workers currently operating as independent...

  • From Earthquakes to Murders and elections, 2019 was one for the record books.

    Alyssa Erdley, Observer staff writer|Updated Jan 5, 2020

    ​The news stories happening in Santa Monica this year ranged from the highly unusual to the highly typical. Here's our take on the year that was. The Unusual ​The Ridgecrest Earthquake ​A magnitude 6.4 earthquake shook the Southland at 10:33 in the morning on Independence Day. This was followed by a larger, magnitude 7.1 quake the next day. Both quakes were centered in the small community of Ridgecrest, which was hard hit by the largest earthquakes to occur in the regio...

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