Home Blog Page 48

Keep Health in mind this year

By Rhonda L. Randall

With the New Year come and gone, many are still considering what will be on their list of resolutions, and mental health should be top of mind.

A recent study shows that in 2023, one of the highest reported New Year’s resolutions was to improve mental health (36%), reflecting a growing recognition of mental well-being as pivotal to our overall quality of life and highlighting a collective commitment to prioritize self-care and emotional resilience in the coming year.

The state of mental health in America continues to decline, with a mere 31% of Americans describing their mental health as “excellent” – a record low. While the collective recognition of prioritizing mental health is a step in the right direction, many people setting resolutions may not stick to them, with the majority losing their resolve as early as February.

So, as we plan our resolutions for the year ahead, here are some easy ways to implement and execute your mental health resolutions in 2024:

Find and establish a solid support system. A robust support system is a cornerstone of mental well-being, providing a crucial safety net during inevitable challenges. When surrounded by understanding friends, family, or mentors, individuals are better equipped to navigate stressors, share burdens, and find solace in times of need. The interconnectedness of a strong support system not only validates emotions but fosters a sense of belonging and resilience, ultimately contributing to maintaining positive mental health.

Reset your mind and body. Adequate sleep is a cornerstone of mental health, pivotal in cognitive function, emotional regulation, and stress resilience. According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, a third of us sleep less than seven hours a night. Insufficient sleep has been shown to negatively impact mental health, leading to impaired cognitive function, emotional regulation, and an increased vulnerability to mental health challenges. It is recommended for adults to sleep 7 or more hours a night to keep the mind healthy.

Don’t be afraid to talk to a professional. Engaging with your primary care physician or a mental health professional offers a unique and confidential space to express thoughts and emotions without judgment, fostering self-awareness and understanding. A primary care physician or trained therapist both provide valuable insights, coping strategies, and evidence-based interventions tailored to individual needs, helping to navigate challenges and promote emotional well-being. Seeking professional help is a proactive step towards mental health, offering a guided journey of self-discovery and equipping individuals with the tools necessary to manage and overcome various mental health issues.

Check your health insurance coverage. You may be surprised to learn that your health insurance plan offers mental health benefits which may include digital self-help tools, in-person and virtual visits, coaching, and employee assistance programs, allowing you to access support in a variety of ways. People with mild behavioral health needs may find digital self-help tools and virtual coaching as good places to start. If you have any questions, call the number on your insurance card for more information.

Editor’s Note: Rhonda L. Randall, is D.O., Chief Medical Officer at UnitedHealthcare located in Cypress

Griffins girls basketball sweeps first round of Surf League play

0

With a resounding 54-22 victory over Corona del Mar, the Los Alamitos girls basketball team completed a dominating first-round sweep of their three Surf League rivals, winning the games by an average of 41 points each.

Both the Griffins (19-5) and the Sea Kings (11-11) came into the January 16 game with 2-0 league records, and the first half was competitive. The Griffins raced out to a 9-0 lead, but the home team Sea Kings battled back, and with 5:20 left in the second quarter the Griffins’ lead was down to 15-14.

Griffin Kassidy Beach protects the ball from swarming Segerstrom player.
Photo by Troy Yoshida.

The score stayed the same until, with about 4 minutes left in the half, the Griffins went on a 10-0 run prompted by a spinning bank shot in the paint by Griffin senior center Kassidy Beach and a three-pointer from the top of the circle by sophomore guard Tam Yoshida. The first half ended with the Griffins up 25-14.

Los Alamitos dominated the second half 29-8 behind an aggressive full-court press that overall led to 27 Sea Kings’ turnovers compared to only 12 for the Griffins.

Coming into the game, the Griffins had already soundly defeated league rivals Fountain Valley, 74-32 on January 9, and Edison, 90-41 on January 11. With a 3-0 league record, the Griffins hold the advantage and will play each of those three teams once more to finalize league standings.

Last season, the Griffins and Corona del Mar were co-champions of the Surf League with identical 5-1 league records, but having lost the first game to the Sea Kings, the Griffins had to win a dramatic final game matchup to grab a share of the championship.
“This is a really big win for us,” said coach Maya De Anda, “It’s good to win the first one, and it puts us in a good position to reach our goal of winning another Surf League championship.”

In the victory over Corona del Mar, seven Griffin players scored, led by Beach with 16 points, and Yoshida with 10 points.

The Griffins outrebounded the Sea Kings 32-29, led by junior forward Bryn Pagett with 9 rebounds, Beach with 6 rebounds, and freshman Denvur Ramirez with 5 rebounds.
In the first three league games combined, the leading Griffin scorers were Beach with an average of 14.7 points per game, senior point guard Kayli Liew with 13.7 points per game, and Yoshida with 12 points per game.

The Griffins have now won 7 games in a row and resume Surf League play on Friday, January 26, with a road game against Fountain Valley (13-11).

Cypress switches to by-district elections; after acrimony, some citizens call on mayor to step down

The City of Cypress voted 4-1 in a special meeting Wednesday to sign a Settlement Agreement with plaintiffs who alleged the city’s at-large election system violated the state’s Voting Rights Act.

On a motion by Mayor Pro-tem Bonnie Peat, seconded by Anne Hertz-Mallari, the Council voted to authorize a transition to district elections in the city.

Council members David Burke and Frances Marquez also voted in favor of districting, while Mayor Scott Minikus voted no and exploded into a tirade of accusations with no evidence against the two Democrats on the Council before abruptly ending the meeting.

With the vote, the city has signed on to a 16-page settlement agreement which puts the city under some time pressure to create districts approved by the plaintiffs once the districts are drawn and accepted and decide which two of the five districts will elect their council members in this year’s cycle.

The remaining three districts would be filled with single-member representatives with a phased-in election plan, which could run until 2030. According to city attorney Fred Galante, if the city is not able to draw and accept five-single member districts before March 11, 2024, “the lawsuit will proceed to trial.”

Wednesday’s special meeting had been arranged to accommodate new Council member David Burke, whose wife Courtney had given birth to their second child, a daughter, on Monday. The meeting on Wednesday was tense throughout, yet ended with so much acrimony after Minikus’ allegations that police had to sort residents out after a scream fest erupted after the cameras were turned off in the meeting room.

The meeting began calmly enough, with citizens finally being given their chance to speak on the issue, expressing passionate views on both sides of the by-district election issue for more than 90 minutes.

“I personally feel like an at-large system is far better than dividing our very small city into five districts,” a meeting attendee said. “I believe the lawsuit is misleading, unreasonable, and unjustifiable.”

“The truth will set you free,” said Beth Culver, “but first, it will piss you off.” Culver held up a copy of the CVRA and said it was full of “racist phrases.” She said the CVRA was developed from the Communist Manifesto.

Jaime Crisafi, who said she’s lived in Cypress for 51 years, a single mother who raised three children. “I find this important enough to voice my opinion,” she said, noting that “Asian American Cypress voters are not being disenfranchised by not having an Asian council member. This is identity politics and has no place in Cypress.”

“Many of our residents basically believe in this city and we believe that we want to vote for all of you,” said Pearl Bolter. “This city is amazing,” she said.

Robin Itsler said the districts would create five “mini-mayors.” “That’s what we’re going to have if we have districting, just because someone thinks its racist.”

Glen Button described the CVRA as “un-American” and “poorly written legislation.” He said there has been “accusations, but no evidence” presented by “the attacking attorney” and suggested since districting seemed “inevitable,” the city should, at least, remain in control of the transition to by-district elections.

“I’m opposed to switching to districts,” said resident Barry McGeorge, noting that “district maps are not an easy process. Districts are intended to divide cities,” McGeorge told the Council.

Others were equally passionate in favor of districts, even if their reasons differed.
“I think that it’s a good idea to go to districts,” said Marilyn Reames. “I think it’s a really good idea to have one council member that we can turn to that represents us and each person and it’s so ludicrous to think that they’re going to become individual cities. That’s absurd. They are not all going to be mayors. There’s going to be one mayor,” she said.
“And no, this is not a racist city,” she said, “nor is Los Alamitos or any of our surrounding cities. I said this Monday night. They’re not racist cities and I find that so darn offensive,” she said.

Resident Bob Youngsma suggested the previous council’s determination to appoint Scott Minikus rather than call a special election or appoint Carrie Hayashida when Stacy Berry resigned was the genesis for redistricting. Had the Council not appointed Minikus, Youngsma suggested, “maybe we wouldn’t be having this conversation.”

“I don’t believe in districting either, but maybe it’s a good thing because these good ole boys been running this [city] for too long and they got a lot of backing with money to get themselves elected,” he said. “I do think it’s time to correct some of the mistakes and quit letting big money dictate how our city is operated,” he added.

Many of those supporting districting hoped it would help to get the “dark money” out of Cypress elections.

“I’ve lived a majority of my 62 years in this city. This is the first Council meeting I’ve ever been to. I wasn’t going to speak tonight but this is an important matter,” said Paul Kokkinos. “I’m a registered Republican, and I consider myself pretty conservative.”

Nevertheless, he said “I don’t see this (districting) as a progressive idea,” he said. “A move away from at-large is I believe a good move for the city. For too long, the City Council in this city has been run by a small, organized group of Council members.”

“And, in my mind, they have not looked out for the best interest of the citizens of Cypress. They haven’t done it in a transparent way,” said Kokkinos. “We need to break up what has previously been like a cabal running this city,” he added. “We need to know who is supporting the campaigns,” he said.

“I’m a resident of Cypress, I love it here and I hear the opinions on both sides of the debate,” said Quentin Dentley. “I want to be clear that I think it is important for people to have representation in their local elections. Cypress has some incredibly wealthy community and some with more working class families,” he said.

“I think the districting will provide greater representation for the working-class people of our city,” said Dentley “and I support any and all changes that lead to greater representation.”

Kraemer said recent Council action, both on 3-2 votes, to spend nearly $50 million of taxpayer funds on two city parks that Kraemer termed “gifts to special interest.” “I think districting is an imperfect solution,” said Edwin Kraemer, “but it is a solution.” “Normally I wouldn’t be concerned with it, but I don’t feel represented by those votes,” he said.

When the Council debate began, Council member Anne Hertz-Mallari requested a voice vote on each of the three resolutions and motions that would be required to authorize the process to transition to by-district elections.

David Burke, who Cypress voters ranked as their top candidate in the 2022 election, finishing nearly 10 percent ahead of both Mayor Scott Minikus and Mayor Pro-tem Bonnie Peat, said he supported districting even before he ran for city council.

“I’ve been open since before I was running for council, that I thought the right response was for the city to voluntarily transition to district elections. And that’s not based on my personal views on district or at large elections. That’s because I studied the law, and I realized that it was extremely difficult for a city to win one of these lawsuits at trial,”
Burke, an attorney, said his reasoning was based on potential legal outcomes.

“I believe our own local school board voluntarily transitioned to districts because they understood that every single city that’s fought has lost,” he said, noting some cities have spent as much as $5 million and some as much as $20 million.

“And after reading the case law and the history of elections here in Cypress, I don’t see any reason to believe the outcome would be different. If in my opinion, the city takes this case to trial, we will lose. I don’t think any attorney who works in this area of law feels otherwise.

“I’d rather see $5 million spent on our parks or community programs than on a lawsuit we’re almost certain to lose” said Burke, “so I’m relieved we’ve gotten to this point. I wish it had happened sooner because it is the fiscally responsible thing to do.”

“It’s been a long two years,” said City Council member Frances Marquez, who is a former Congressional staffer with a Ph. D. in political studies, with an emphasis on districting.
After receiving the demand letter in September of 2021, “I recommended that we follow the law and transition to district elections,” said Marquez. “I’ve seen other cities waste millions of dollars challenging a law in a lawsuit they were never going to win,” she said.
Had the city done so, the total expense to the city would have been only $30,000 in legal fees which she said now is likely in the six or seven-figure realm. “I knew it was a no-win situation,” she said, “and I made it clear that it was critical for Cypress to abide by the law.”

“I live right off of Valley View and Katella during the 1980s,” she said. “When I was away at UCLA, we welcomed companies from Asia, Mitsubishi Excuse me, Miss Mitsubishi, Yamaha, Panasonic, Sony, so it should not be a surprise that the Asian population in Cypress is nearing 40 percent, she suggested.

“We need to embrace diversity, especially, you know, we are in this huge economy, and we need to bring people together in this city. I’m tired of the division,” she said.

“For those that know me, this is a very difficult day,” said Mayor Pro-tem Bonnie Peat.
“The California Voting Rights Act is intended to make it easier for minority groups in the state to prove their votes are being diluted,” said Peat, but saying it “doesn’t have to prove a candidate vote because of racially polarized voting.”

She said districting will “deprive our residents for all candidates, and I’ll say qualified candidates and it also draws lines within our city. They’re going to be invisible, but there’s going to be lines,” said Peat. “And what happens is that council members become very focused on their districts and what’s best for them and lose sight sometimes of what’s best for the city.”

While she loves the “diversity” of the city, Peat said the new system is “going to change the lives of everyone in our city, it’s going to change how we run within districts and it’s also going to change the perception of people and how they think they can vote.”

She thanked people for expressing their views, on both sides of issue and asked the public to “please understand that how we vote tonight is based on what’s best for our city and information from experts that we have that you may not be privy to in terms of this particular lawsuit.”

Hertz-Mallari said she would somehow wage a war against the CVRA at the state level, but she too would be voting to transition to by-district elections.

“It’s a tough night tonight,” she said, saying that the CVRA is a “very poorly conceived law that makes it very easy to force at-large jurisdictions like ours into district elections.”

Hertz-Mallari said she believes “the CVRA assumes minority voters always vote for minority candidates. So you look up and see there are no Asian electeds but I know many Asians who voted for me or one of my colleagues” she said.

“My skin color is not same as the voter, that doesn’t mean they don’t like me, right,” she asked? “Doesn’t mean I don’t represent them. So that is a concern for me. The law assumes that voters vote for people that look like them, that is built in to the way the law is enforced,” Hertz-Mallari suggested.

“Because when a minority candidate doesn’t win, then there was a claim of vote dilution or racial polarization. So when the minority candidate doesn’t win, there’s this assumption note within the law, that something went wrong and minorities weren’t heard,” she said. “I dispute that.”

There’s a remedy built into the law. The law assumes that the miniorities will get a better result if there’s a majority of the minorities” in a single district. So the law and these assumptions are troubling to me,” she said. “This law takes away four of my five votes,” Hertz-Mallari said, “and people died to give me the right to vote; to give you the right to vote.”

However, “I participated in mediation, and I’ve become completely convinced that a court would not find in our favor. Hertz-Mallari said she would get involved in “pushing the issue up to the state.” “For now,” she said “voters’ should indulge us and help us along the path of making the best of the situation.”

Minikus, despite the city’s civility, conduct and governance code, went after two Cypress citizens and two council colleagues, calling them out by name and making charges and accusations for which he presented no evidence.

The mayor cast the only vote against agreeing to a settlement, and seemed intent on creating a narrative to cast blame on others for a change in the city’s voting system that many believe was largely spurred by his own appointment to the Council in 2021.

Minikus acknowledged some believe telling citizens that “I’m going to take you through the timeline, beginning with the appointment process, which seems to have started all this.”

At that point, an angry Minikus read a statement that attempted to ensure voters blamed two local women who he mistakenly said were involved from the beginning. They were not.

In short, he accused Burke and Marquez, both Democrats, of being good friends with CRVA plaintiffs Dr. Malini Nagpal and “questionable” Katie Shapiro.

“Because of the people that I’ve just mentioned recently, with Councilwoman Marquez and Councilmember Burke complicit in this lawsuit, they’ve remained close with the plaintiffs,” said Minikus , despite a Conduct, Civility, and Governance Code that bars such accusations in open session.

Minikus then went after both Council members, slinging accusations that fit a narrative but for which he gave no proof, only his vision.

For Marquez, he brought out the greatest hits of accusations that other Council members have used to keep her out of the mainstream since this process began. Even if his timing of events were incorrect, Minikus inferred that Councilwoman Marquez was so committed to districting that she leaked the city’s legal strategy.

“Tell me that you don’t believe that Councilman Marquez was the one who leaked our legal strategy. From day one, she’s had motive and intent to cram this lawsuit down our throats and force you into districts, whether you like it or not. And apparently, she succeeded in doing just that,” Minikus said.

About Burke, the mayor charged, with no evidence that Shapiro has been to Burke’s home several times, and that somehow, Burke had been talking with plaintiff attorney Kevin Shenkman. He also suggested the top vote recipient in the most recent election was some sort of plant.

“If you believe that David Burke just happened to move into our city approximately a year before the election and started showing up at council meetings as a concerned resident. I think you’re sadly mistaken as this was a calculated move to run for office,” he said.

In addition, the mayor suggested, without evidence, that Burke colluded with the plaintiffs.
Burke, said Minikus, “told me he had spoken to Attorney Shenkman over the phone to discuss the lawsuit but then they did not go into specifics with me. Why not? Honestly I was shocked. I asked him if he told this to the city attorney and the city manager and he said that he had not. But it begs the question, why would someone, with a legal background who knows or should have known better not notify and divulge a critical piece of information to the city attorney and the city manager in an immediate and timely fashion?”

“Councilmember Burke confessed he is good friends with Katie Shapiro, who has been to his home multiple times,” said Minikus, though Shapiro said after the meeting that she had never visited Burke’s home.

“Quite honestly, this entire lawsuit and the circumstances that led us here is incredibly disheartening because we’ve had this if you will leftist ideology forced down our throats,” the mayor charged.

Following Minikus, the Council formally voted on three resolutions to jumpstart the districting process, voting 4-1 in favor and Minikus being the only vote against settling the lawsuit.

Angered, both Burke and Marquez demanded equal time to answer Minikus’ allegations, none of which they said was true.

“I don’t think a councilmember should get to spread hateful, vicious lies about each other and then adjourn without giving the other councilmember a chance to respond,” Burke told Minikus.

“I was elected by the people of Cypress, so we need to respond to accusations that you made that are not true and put the city in a very, very precarious legal position,” said Marquez.

Minikus announced the next meeting, Peat made the motion to adjourn, Hertz-Mallari seconded it and it passed 3-2.

Though the meeting was over, citizens and Council members reportedly exchanged emotional outbursts, and since the meeting, Two residents, Marilyn Reames and Edwin Kraemer have penned letters to the city asking Minikus to step down as Mayor. We have reached out to the Mayor for a comment but at press time, had not heard back.

Editor’s Note: Watch for more coverage and the aftermath of the meeting in next week’s ENE.

One dead, one rescued in Cypress condo blaze

First responders rushed to a burning home in Cypress Thursday morning where a condo somehow caught fire and began blazing quickly, eyewitnesses say.

Firefighters responded to the 5700 block of Playa Way at 9:18 this morning for a fire in an apartment complex with reports of people trapped, a spokesperson for the Orange County Fire Authority said. Crews found one unit that was involved with fire and threatening adjacent units and an injured woman on their arrival, they said.

The injured woman was rescued by two women prior to firefighters arriving. The two seeing the front door area well-involved in fire quickly broke out a window, freeing the woman yelling for help. Unfortunately, a second person inside the home was found deceased.
Neighbors say a cleaning crew used the back end of brooms to break windows to save the woman they heard screaming in the burning condo.

Firefighter paramedics provided treatment for the woman and transported her to a hospital in unknown condition. It took firefighters about 30 minutes to get a knockdown on the blaze. Crews were able to prevent the fire from spreading to the adjacent units.

According to the OCFA public information officer Capt. Sean Doran, the fire was already well underway by the time crews arrived, with one unit in the complex fully engulfed.
Further, the OCFA has stated that fire investigators are working closely with the Cypress Police Department to peel back the layers of this devastating incident and uncover the root cause, which remains a mystery at present. The community was a bit rattled, grappling with the hard reality of the loss of life in their complex.

Authorities have thesituation under investigation and neither the name of the woman rescued or the man who died in the fire have been released to the public. OCFA says the investigation continues in an effort to understand how the fire started and to prevent future tragedies.

OCFA fire investigators were on scene and are still working with the Cypress Police Department as the investigation continues. An investigation determined the fire was accidental. Damage to the structure is estimated at $350,000 and $150,000 to contents

Nefulda Mayor, Hasselbrink Mayor Pro-tem as Los Al reorgs for 2024

The city of Los Alamitos honored outgoing mayor Tanya Doby at their December meeting as they voted in new leadership for 2024.

Mayor Jordon Nefulda
Courtesy photo

Jordan Nefulda, the Mayor Pro-tem was elected Mayor while former Mayor Shelley Hasselbrink was elected Mayor Pro-tem.

Before moving out of the Mayor’s seat, however, Doby conducted the city’s last bit of business in 2023, honoring Mark Hoover of the local business Audophile. The city, to promote its local businesses, has been recognizing one each month giving them attention and promoting them on the city’s social media.

“I basically grew up in Seal Beach,” said Hoover, “went to Los Al High School then moved away. I came back and found Los Alamitos as a great place to continue our business,” he told the mayor.

Mayor Pro-tem Shelley Hasselbrink
Courtesy photo

So he moved the 25-year-old company, Audiophile, a vinyl records business, to the city and recently opened the front of the store where customers can purchase vinyl records, which are back in style.

“Basically, we carry all sorts of music, from classical to jazz, to contemporary so we pretty much have everything in our inventory. Basically, we’re just trying to keep the music business alive,” he said.

In addition, key officials such as State Sen. Janet Nguyen, Assemblymember Tri Ta, a representative of U.S. Rep. Michelle Steel, the Los Alamitos Chamber and members from the city administration all paid tribute to Doby, presenting her with framed certificates in recognition of her leadership of the city for the past year.

“Your love for this city is unmatchable. And we all can see it and you definitely won’t stand there and accept a no, which is what we need in our cities. And so again, thank you for your dedication and support for our city through the year,” Nguyen told Doby.

“This has been an honor for my staff and myself to work with you and everyone on the city council for almost a year,” said Ta. “I really, really am thankful and appreciate your leadership, your dedication and support for your community,” he said.

“I still remember that you came to my office and had a meeting with us to raise all the challenges or concerns that your city has faced and I really appreciate that,” Ta added.
Lt. Col. Dan Fox, the commander of the Joint Forces Training Base, attended the event to thank Doby on behalf of several generals and officers of the base who have worked with Mayor Doby throughout the year.

“I wanted to extend this certificate of appreciation to you,” said Col. Fox. “It is being presented in recognition of your selfless service and sacrifice and is a symbol of our appreciation for the monumental support you have shown to the service members and civilians of the Joint Forces Training Base,” said Fox.
Doby also received thanks and praise from incoming Mayor Nefulda and city manager Chet Simmons.

“I would just like to say thank you,” said Doby, “first to my husband, who made this decision with me to go on this journey with me and has supported me when even I didn’t necessarily understand what I was supposed to be doing.”

“And I want to thank my staff who have been just the most amazing I cannot say enough, like I will go to war for my staff. And I say that in other rooms with other people that don’t have staff as exemplary as mine. Because I hear the stories I hear about, you know, the people sitting managers and their admin and their clerks and their, you know, their finance people, whatever the case may be, and I am significantly and tremendously blessed,” she said.

“So, I’m thankful for my colleagues that came along with me, stood with me worked with me, and would encourage me when it got to be a bit overwhelming when sometimes I couldn’t see you, know, sometimes we lose sight of the bottom line. I’m grateful for my colleagues that would come and link arms with me and stand with me and telling me ‘Tonya keep going because our turn is coming.’

Nefulda then proceeded to assign Council members to their respective outside board and commissions throughout Orange County. Simmons said the city has added an “intergovernmental” post and also another position for a member of the Council to work closely with the military base.

Los Al Chamber installs two Co-Chairs for 2024

With a near capacity crowd looking on inside the new high-tech Epson Campus on Katella, the Los Alamitos Chamber of Commerce thanked outgoing Chairwoman Nesi Stewart for a four-year run at the top as a completely new slate of officers and board were installed Friday.

Photo by David N. Young
Lina Lumme, left, Executive Director of the Youth Center, swears in the two Co-Chairs of the Chamber, Meryl Cohn, far right and Kristin DiMiceli, next to her, as other incoming board members and directors look on.

“This should have been a one-year term,” said Stewart, “but it ended up being four years and I’m grateful to each every one of you who helped make a difference,” said Stewart.
Stewart, who was elected Chamber President shortly before COVID, stayed at the helm as the pandemic made membership and meetings a problem and after three years, the board gave Stewart a full-year term once things had returned to normal.

Also honored were outgoing board members Judy Klabouch, owner of Green Street Interiors and Dan Schwartz of Pacific Premiere Bank.

Klabouch, a Los Alamitos businesswoman for more than 40 years, said she has enjoyed her service on the Chamber board. “I really enjoyed bringing people together,” she said.
In addition, Klabouch is credited with the idea of the annual “Hero’s Appreciation Luncheon,” the popular annual event to honor local first responders and frontline workers.
The Chamber also honored Schwartz, a banker who has kept the Chamber’s account and books intact. “Thank you for always answering the phone,” Stewart told Schwartz.

Photo by David N. Young
Nesi Stewart thanks banker Dan Schwartz for his service to the Los Al Chamber

Both outgoing board members were awarded lifetime Chamber memberships for their dedication to the Los Al Business Community.

In addition to the Chamber, Congresswoman Michelle Streel, Assemblymember Tri Ta and the City of Los Alamitos honored Stewart, Klabouch, and Schwartz. Several community members also recorded videos thanking the various outgoing board members.

The Chamber awarded Rossmoor Community Services District Director Jo Shade, also a real estate executive, as member of the month.

Meryl Cohn, of Watersafe Swim School, and Kristin DiMiceli, of Garage Pilates, will serve as co-chairs for the coming year. Susan Morales, of Los Al Medical Center, will serve as 2nd Vice President.

Other members of the board are Debbie Flannagan, of Financial Partners Credit Union, who will serve as Vice Chairman of Budget and Finance and John Pettus, of CIU Networks, will serve as Vice Chair of Community Development.

Jenna Garikian, of Universal Waste Systems, will serve as Vice Chair of Correspondences while Past Chairwoman of of the Board Nesi Stewart, of Printmasters, will continue to serve as a Past Chairwoman.

Toni Hauger will remain as Chamber staff and the Directors for 2024 will be Richie Barnes, F&M Bank, Dave Boyer, Boyer Wealth, Matthew Harrison, Roadrunner Spirits, Dr. Andrew Pulver, Superintendent of the Los Alamitos Unified School System and Donna Wolf of Epson America.

Hertz-Mallari joins We Care, resigns from Boys and Girls Club

Anne Hertz-Mallari, a member of the Cypress City Council and long-time nonprofit executive has been named Executive Director of We Care, one of the area’s largest nonprofits.

Hertz-Mallari, a longtime executive with the Boys and Girls Club of Cypress and later the Boys and Girls Club of Greater Anaheim-Cypress, has resigned her position to accept the new job, the organization has announced.

“The Board of Directors of Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Anaheim-Cypress has announced the retirement of CEO Anne Hertz-Mallari, effective January 2024. Mallari has served in the position of CEO for the past 17 years. Under her leadership, Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Anaheim-Cypress has grown from one location serving 65 children a day to 16 Clubhouses and 2 Teen Centers located within the Anaheim, Cypress, La Palma, and Stanton communities. Mallari has announced her retirement from Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Anaheim-Cypress,” the organization said in a prepared statement.

“During her time with the organization, Anne oversaw substantial growth and expansion,” said Chuck Emanuele, Chairman of the Board of Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Anaheim-Cypress.

Meanwhile, the We Care Board of Directors released its own statement, saying the We Care Board “is excited to announce that Anne Hertz-Mallari will join We Care as the new Executive Director beginning February 5, 2024.”

“We are excited to have Anne on board. Anne has a history of success in developing and implementing innovative approaches and solutions to serve underserved families. She is particularly skilled at the strategic planning, marketing, public relations, fundraising, and community engagement needed to develop resources and leaders for long-term sustainability and success of the mission of We Care,” said We Care Board President Scott Miller.

We Cares Mission Statement provides “The purpose of We Care is to offer a variety of vital resources and provide a safety net that will equip families in our community for self-sufficient futures.”

In deciding to join We Care, Hertz-Mallari said in the statement “now, more than ever, families need supportive services to help them overcome the economic impacts of rising housing prices and overall cost of living increases, while still adapting to the long-term impact of the pandemic on the social and emotional well-being of themselves and their loved ones. I am thrilled to have the opportunity to lead We Care in meeting its crucial mission in our communities.”

The nonprofit executive attended the Los Al Chamber meeting at Epson America on Friday where she personally announced her position at the meeting of local business people.
We Care will hold the 17th Annual From the Heart Fundraiser on April 27, 2024 at the On The Greens Center located at the Navy Golf Course, 5660 Orangewood Ave, Cypress, CA. Information will be available on the We Care website starting on February 1, 2024, at www.WeCareOrangeCounty.org.

Cypress sets public hearings on district mapping

Now that Cypress has formally voted to redistrict their city, they are under time pressure to produce suitable districts called for in the settlement agreement the Council has approved (see related story).

Following the Council’s vote to switch to by-district elections, Cypress City Clerk Alisha Farnell issued a public notice outlining dates and times for six public hearings called to get citizen input on drawing the maps that will now presumably govern future elections.
According to the Settlement Agreement signed by the city, they must select an electoral map no later than Feb. 26, 2024, and identify the two districts that will elect Council Members in November 2024.

The other three districts will elect Council Members in November 2026. This approach preserves the City’s current Council Member election sequence and respects the terms voters elected Council Members to serve in the November 2020 and November 2022 elections, city staff confirmed in its staff report.
According to Farnell’s notice, the by-district electoral meeting schedule has been set as follows:
• Monday, Jan. 22, 2024 at 6 p.m.
• Monday, Jan. 29, 2024 at 6 p.m.
• Monday, Feb. 12, 2024 at 6 p.m.
• Monday, Feb. 26, 2024 at 6 p.m.
• Monday, March 11, 2024 at 6 p.m.

“The public hearings will be held at 5275 Orange Avenue, Cypress, CA in the Council Chambers. At the January 22 and January 29 public hearings, the public is invited to provide input regarding the composition of the districts. Following the second public hearing, draft maps of potential City Council election district boundaries will be published on or before February 5, 2024, for consideration and public input at the third and fourth public hearings.”

Farnell said that at the February 12 and February 26 public hearings, the public is invited to provide input regarding the content of the draft maps and the proposed sequence of elections.

She said all interested persons are invited to attend the public hearing(s), in person or virtually, and are invited to express opinions or submit information. The public may also provide comments in writing prior to the public hearing(s) via email to the City Clerk’s office (cityclerk@cypressca.org) by 3:00 p.m. on the day of each hearing to allow sufficient time for comments to be included in the online agenda packet. Instructions for participating in the public hearing virtually will be published with each City Council agenda, at least 72 hours prior to each meeting, available online at https://www.cypressca.org/government/city-council-meetings.

Information about district elections, why the city is making this change, and the process is available on the city website at https://www.cypressca.org/government/district-elections.
According to the notice, for questions, residents are asked to contact the City Clerk’s Office at (714) 229-6685. Accommodation requests should be made at least three working days prior to the hearing so reasonable arrangements can be made.

Bridge of Light sets annual Solidarity Walk to support human trafficking victims

By Rosemary Lewallen

St. Irenaeus’ Bridge of Light Ministry will “turn the light on” human trafficking to honor those who have suffered and survived this heinous crime on Tuesday, February 6th from 6:55 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. The evening will start with Taize Prayer in St. Irenaeus Catholic Church located at 5201 Evergreen Ave., Cypress, CA 90630.

This will be followed by an on-site candlelight procession and prayer vigil. Then walkers will return to the church for a brief educational program to raise awareness about human trafficking in our midst. We will discuss how human trafficking affects every community via the commercial exploitation of adults and children, the online vulnerability of our youth, and how human trafficking is connected to child marriage, which is legal in 40 states in the U.S., including California.

We are honored to have Rima Nashashibi, the Founder and President of Global Hope 365, as our featured presenter. Global Hope 365 is a local nonprofit dedicated to ending child marriage, human trafficking, and other forms of gender-based violence. Rima is an internationally recognized speaker, political and community leader and activist. She was listed in the Orange County Register Newspaper OC’s top 125 most influential people in Orange County and was the winner of the Los Angeles Times B2B Publishing Inspirational Woman of the year in the nonprofit executive category.

Join in fighting human trafficking by participating in Bridge of Light Ministry’s Solidarity Walk and Prayer Vigil, uniting with others to honor victims and survivors. If you have any questions, please contact Monica Kovach, Bridge of Light Ministry Chair (part of Health Ministry) at 310-490-6113.

Johnny Cash concert experience coming to Segerstrom

Whether you were a president, prime minister or preacher’s son, legendary singer Johnny Cash treated you with the same dignity.

According to promoters of a new multi-media experiential stage show, Cash is “one of the most important, influential, and respected artists in the history of recorded music. From the monumental live prison albums to his extraordinary series of commentaries on the American spirit and human condition to a mesmerizing canon of gospel recordings to his remarkable and unprecedented late-life artistic triumphs of will and wisdom, his impact on our culture is profound and continuing.”

The legend of Cash, a country music star who passed away 21 years ago, endures as a musical experience packaged by the singer’s son, John Carter-Cash, will hit the Segerstrom stage on Jan. 21.

The show is entitled Johnny Cash – the official concert experience and brings songs and stories from the “Man in Black” to the stage in a way that audiences haven’t seen or heard before.

The show contains video of Johnny from episodes of The Johnny Cash TV Show projected on a screen above the stage, a live band and singers will accompany him in perfect sync.
Promoters said in a statement that “this concert experience will showcase iconic performances from the TV show and highlight the spirit of the legend by revisiting some of his memorable words and anecdotes. Cash will perform some of his biggest hits, including “Folsom Prison Blues,” “Ring of Fire,” and “I Walk the Line,” and share stories of people he met along the way whose causes he championed – the working man from all walks of life. Plus, onstage, male and female singers will split vocal duties, performing their own takes on Cash hits,” The music never stops in this concert event.

While many of the performers and musicians selected for the show were too young to have ever experienced a live Johnny Cash concert, the event features Debbie Horton, the only female ever to play lead guitar on stage with Cash.

Horton, who grew up a fan of Cash, happened to convince her parents while visiting Nashville to bring her to a church where Cash worshipped, hoping he would happen to be there, Horton said in an interview this week.

As fate would have it, she met Cash as a child and ultimately became a lifelong acquaintance of the “Man in Black.” Even as a global superstar, she said Cash’s enduring legacy is built around his sincere humility.

“He validated everybody,” she said. “He would be with presidents, and then he would be with the bums on the street; I mean, he treated everyone equally, you know,” said Horton. Cash “wasn’t a person of like… I’m a star kind of guy…I knew him for over 20 years still, that persona still rings true,” said Horton.

Debbie Horton, a longtime friend of Cash and the noly woman ever to play lead guitar for him.
Courtesy photo

“I was backstage with Cash at many, many shows,” she said, “and this was a time when you did not have to pay for a VIP experience or to have a picture with him.” The story that I love the best, he told this story in an interview one time. They asked Johnny, ‘What do you do when people come to your table if you’re out to dinner and you know they want to autograph something how do you handle that?’ and he said, ‘I just put my foot down and I give it to them and I’m nice too because I…appreciated where it all came from’ and he never forgot that’… he never forgot that,” says Horton.

Deep down, says Horton, Cash was like many of his southern counterparts who started off just wanting to sing gospel on the radio.

“It’s so funny, all those guys from that era, Johnny Cash, Elvis, Jerry Lee Lewis, they all had this real deep gospel faith, they were like preachers, you know they should have been preachers…and I’m not the first one to say that,” she said. “They all loved gospel music so much and that was from their humble roots and all that.”
She said the show will also feature on-screen narration by Cash’s only son, John Carter

Cash and “really cool” multi-media that manages to make Johnny Cash the star of the show.

“My father’s music has resonated deeply with fans around the world and we’re looking forward to bringing this music experience to cities across North America,” says Cash. “I will help narrate the evening and share some intimate stories from my father’s personal life and career in music,” said Carter Cash in a statement.

“Johnny Cash is one of the most important, influential, and respected artists in the history of recorded music. From the monumental live prison albums to his extraordinary series of commentaries on the American spirit and human condition to a mesmerizing canon of gospel recordings to his remarkable and unprecedented late-life artistic triumphs of will and wisdom, his impact on our culture is profound and continuing,” he said.

The North American tour launched in Fayetteville, AR and continues across 85 U.S. cities. Horton said she was hired directly by Carter Cash to play lead guitar in the show. “The Johnny Cash Concert experience has attracted large and very enthusiastic audiences at every show,” says Horton.

JOHNNY CASH – The Official Concert Experience is produced by GEAlive, Quatro Entertainment, Maple Tree Entertainment, the Estate of Johnny Cash, John Carter Cash, and Sandbox Succession. For more information, visit www.JohnnyCashConcertExperience.

Tickets start at $29. Segerstrom Center for the Arts, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. For info, www.scfta.org • Box Office 714.556.2787.

Griffin boys soccer team falls to Corona del Mar in OT

0

Los Alamitos High’s boys soccer team forced overtime with goal in the closing minutes of regulation, but eventually suffered a 3-2 loss in the extra period against Corona del Mar, on Friday at Corona del Mar High.

Corona del Mar led 2-1, with the game dwindling down to stoppage time, when the Griffins used a short corner kick to set up shot from an angle by Nishimoto. The shot hit a defender in front of the goal, then bounced around a mass of players in front of the goal box.

The ball came out in front, near the top of the box and senior Enoch Gonzalez got off hard shot that found its way through traffic and into the net to tie the game up 2-2.

The loss dropped the Griffins to 7-9-1 overall and 0-1-1 in Surf League play. Corona del Mar is 1-1-0 in Surf League and 4-4-4 overall. The Griffins had some early pressure, notably a solid shot from Jack Nishimoto from the top of the goal box that glanced just high off the crossbar.

The Sea Kings began to take control of the game flow, putting pressure of their own on the Griffin defense. They too, had some quality attacks, including a nice crossing pass and shot back against the grain that went just wide of the goal.

The game remained 0-0 at halftime, but the Sea Kings struck first in the second half. A sliding defensive steal attempt by the Griffins resulted in a penalty kick for the Sea Kings, which was converted for a 1-0 lead. But a few minutes later, the Griffins were on the attack and Corona del Mar was called for a hand ball penalty in the goal box.

Los Alamitos was awarded a penalty kick of their own and Nishimoto converted the shot to tie the game, 1-1. Around the 58th minute, the Sea Kings again took the lead, this time on a crossing pass that was headed back to the far corner for a 2-1 lead.

After the Griffins sent the game to overtime, the Sea Kings ended the contest when a shot from top of the box, in front of the right post, went across the goal and slipped inside the left post. The Griffins find themselves tied for third with Edison. Corona del Mar is second behind Newport Harbor, which is 2-0.

The Griffins host Newport Harbor on Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. and will play Fountain Valley at home on Friday at 5:30 p.m.

More than 30,000 Holiday Legos displayed at local home

In 2020, Debbie Marcusson and Terry Schumacher, who lived across from the Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station, started a Lego Holiday Collection during Covid as a zoom display to share some festive cheer.

In 2021, Debbie and her wife, Terry, moved to a house in Huntington Beach, and that’s when the village expanded into their garage. Each year, Debbie has added more elements—a winter area with Santa’s workshop, elf house, gingerbread house, and a motorized ski resort. The village includes a town with houses, businesses, a motorized trolley, and even a Loop Roller Coaster that transformed part of it into an amusement park a year ago. Most structures are LEGO sets with some modifications, but she has also added custom builds, like the working ski lift.

Marcusson, a California State University of Long Beach Chancellor’s Office employee, and Schumacher ,a local Police Department volunteer, share their festive LEGO village with the community, spreading joy during the holiday season. People of all ages, especially LEGO fans, enjoy the display.

“Hopefully, it inspires others to create their own traditions that bring family, friends, and the community together,” said Marcusson.

You can tour their display on Thursday, December 21st and Friday, December 22nd from 5:30pm to 8:30pm and on Christmas Day Monday, December 25th from 5:30pm to 9pm at 5121 Skylark Drive in Huntington Beach, just off Bolsa Chica and Robinwood. Look for Emmitt Lego in their front yard. Contact Debbie with any questions at: 714 581-3836.

 

World famous Los Al show choir performs at Rush Park

Photo by David N. Young
The Los Alamitos Show Choir performs at Rush Park in Rossmoor Friday for the annual Chamber of Commerce holiday breakfast. Under the direction of David Moellenkamp, the show choir has become a favorite of the community and is celebrated across the nation. During Moellenkamp’s tenure as Director of Choral Activities at Los Alamitos High School, the choirs have been named Grand Champions over 175 times, including 17 National Grand Championship titles.

JFTB commander lights Christmas tree in military tradition

The newly installed commander of the Joint Forces Training Base in Los Alamitos continued his community relations assault this week with the official lighting of the first ever official Christmas tree at the 80-year-old base.

“I want to show the local community that we are about a community relationship,” said Lt. Col. Dan Fox said in an interview with ENE Saturday evening before the event.

With a tree donated by the City of Los Alamitos, the 30-foot tree sat in a trailer hitched to a military jeep in the median to the main entrance of the base. Connected also was a trailer filled with large, gift-wrapped packages.

Photo by David N. Young
Santa and Mrs. Claus wave the service members, families and guests just after Staff Sgt. Pearl Jardinasso flipped the switch and the humvee mounted tree lit up.

Even as a military band played military and holiday songs, Fox milled around the large area on the base speaking with members of the public.
Even so, Fox said he wanted to ensure that the “fun” event was steeped in military tradition.

“Even in a fun environment of a tree lighting,” said Fox, “I want to add to the holiday spirit, which is what the purpose of the tree lighting is, but we did it with our military attributes to show the community how we do things,” said Fox.

“Too many people see the military base from the outside only and probably have no idea what goes on in. I think that they’re probably curious as to what all happens in and within the limits of what I am able to show, I would like for them to be able to see what I see; what soldiers, sailors and service members at large do when they come to work,” the commander said.

Fox said he would be listening for a while before developing a more permanent community relations plan.

He also had a surprise for one service member Saturday.

“To begin this tradition, and to continue on every year after, we’re going to select an honorary service member from the base to do the honors of lighting the tree,” he said.
Now addressing the public, Fox said “everyone knows this was a surprise. I didn’t let her know she was doing this. I selected her because she pretty much spearheaded the decorating of the tree.”

He recognized Staff Sgt. Pearl Jardinasso and asked her to come forward.

“I asked who wanted to volunteer to decorate the tree, and she jumped all over it, and with very little guidance, put all that together. So she rounded up everyone with the ‘bah humbug’ spirit and made them get to work,” said Fox.

“You get to do the honors of lighting the tree,” the commander told her.

“Honestly I’m very humbled, but it’s that none of this could have happened without the cooperation of everybody on base,” she said. “It was a collective event so I cannot take any credit for it,” the staff sergeant said. “I thank you,” said Jardinasso.

Los Alamitos Mayor Tanya Doby and Council member Shelley Hasselbrink attended along with key staff members representing the city.

 

Judge okays Cypress closed door sessions on redistricting

0

Repeated discussions behind closed doors by the Cypress City Council to discuss the potential of changing the voting system within the city did not violate the state’s open meetings law, an Orange County Superior Court has ruled.

Californians Aware, a statewide group promoting open government filed suit against the city in 2022, alleging the city had a responsibility to citizens to discuss the issue in open session, though the Brown Act did provide “a basis for meeting in closed session,” it was not required as a first step.

Superior Court Judge Erick L. Larsh has ruled, however, that “there is no evidence that the members of the Cypress City Council did not comport themselves in conformance with the Brown Act,” according to a press release issued by the city early this week.

The ENE has requested a complete copy of the judge’s ruling and also reached out to Californians Aware for comment but have not heard back.

Californians Aware’s lawsuit originally argued that the City Council was not authorized to meet in closed session because there was no actual threat of litigation after the original demand letter was issued by the Malibu law firm of Shenkman and Hughes.

After the City Attorney’s office pointed out that the letter from SVREP specifically threatened “to seek judicial relief”, Californians Aware pivoted to arguing that the decision to reject the threat of litigation was somehow a policy decision that should have been made

in open session. Judge Larsh was not persuaded, city said in their statement.
The City of Cypress prevailed in the lawsuit filed by Californians Aware that alleged the City Council failed to follow California’s open meeting law, the Brown Act, when it reviewed a threat of litigation during closed session with the City Attorney.

The lawsuit accused the City Council of violating the Brown Act when it reviewed a threat of litigation arising from a threat by the Southwest Voter Registration Education Project (SVREP) threatening to sue the City for allegedly violating the California Voting Rights Act (CVRA) unless the City transitioned to district elections. The CVRA claim is currently subject to a separate lawsuit, the statement said.

“While I am pleased that Judge Larsh rejected Californians Aware’s ill-conceived lawsuit and its efforts to make Cypress taxpayers pay for their lawyers,” said Cypress Mayor Anne Hertz-Mallari, “I am deeply troubled that special interests from outside Cypress continue to use the legal system to blindly pursue an agenda that threatens our community and our democracy.”

The statement was issued before Monday’s meeting when Council member Scott Minikus was elected Mayor for 2024 and Hertz-Mallari gave no further explanation of how a redistricting lawsuit threatens our democracy.

“As we head into 2024, Mayor Hertz-Mallari continued in the statement, “I am glad the City Council can refocus on serving the community and ensuring Cypress continues to be a great place to live, work and play.”

Cypress City Attorney Fred Galante added, “The City of Cypress is committed to complying with the Brown Act and embodies transparent and responsive government. We’re pleased that the court recognized that and vindicated the City completely.”

Currently, the city is in mediation on the redistricting lawsuit. Without explanation to the public, and now with the court’s blessing, the city continues to conduct itself in execution session on the issue, meeting for its first mediation session on the redistricting lawsuit in early November, according to plaintiff attorney Kevin Shenkman.

Though the city protested a report by ENE in September that they voted in secret to discuss mediating the redistricting lawsuit, Shenkman confirmed that city officials indeed met with a court-appointed mediator during the first week of November.

While the Nov. 1 session in Encino had to be cancelled because the court-appointed mediator was sick, Shenkman confirmed the two sides met with a second mediator the same week. He provided no details on what transpired.

RCSD lights tree during WinterFest ceremony

The Rossmoor Community Services District and visiting elected officials joined each other on stage during the district’s annual WinterFest event to officially light the neighborhood’s Christmas tree.

“On behalf of the Rossmoor Community Services District Board of Directors, we welcome you to our annual Christmas festival and Tree Lighting Ceremony,” said General Director Joe Mendoza in introducing the event.

Photo by David N. Young
Rossmoor residents clap as the community tree lights up.

“At this time, we’re going to have a little ceremony for the tree lighting, and I would like to introduce our president of the Rossmoor Community Services District Tony DeMarco.
DeMarco was the Master of Ceremonies for the event, and he was joined on stage by Director Jo Shade. Shade introduced Los Al High School student Mesa Valley, who performed the national anthem.

“Good evening, Rossmoor family and friends. What a great crowd we have out here tonight,” she said.

DeMarco thanked State Sen. Janet Nguyen, who also attended the event.
“I’m very excited to be here. I’ve represented Rossmoor since 2014, “ said Nguyen, and I’ve been here at every one of these.”

The state Senator also thanked the staff and volunteers helping to produce the Rossmoor annual WinterFest event.

“Without them, we don’t get to enjoy these kinds of festivities,” she said. “Merry Christmas, Happy holiday. Enjoy, be safe. And if you can help a little bit, let’s help somebody else who might not be able to get that Christmas gift. We would all appreciate it,” said Nguyen.
Assembly member Tri Ta attended the first WinterFest event since being elected to the post. He is the former Mayor of Westminster serving now in the State Assembly in a district which includes the community of Rossmoor.

“So happy to be here,” said Tri Ta. “Rossmoor is in my assembly district. It’s my honor to serve you in Sacramento. I want to thank the leadership of the board president and the vice president and the rest of the Rossmoor CSD and the many other nonprofit organizations who

“So Merry Christmas, happy Hanukkah and happy holidays to you and your family,” he said.
Shade also thanked the Hopkinson Elementary school choir, the Rossmoor Elementary choir, St. Hedwig Choir, Lee Elementary Choir, Weaver elementary Choir, McAuliffe and Oak Middle School Choirs, the Impact Dance Center and the hula group for all contributing the WinterFest entertainment.

DeMarco thanked title sponsors Dr. Kenneth Huh of MemorialCare Miller Children’s & Women’s Hospital Long Beach along with Brad and Jenny Simon from the Simon Law Group for being the event’s title sponsor.

DeMarco thanked other sponsors, including Friday Night Lights, Rossmoor Homeowners Association, Tomlin Real Estate, Jones & Meyer, CR&R, OCFA, OCSO, Braithwaite Chiropractic and The Youth Center.

Menorah lighting attracts crowd of 500

Today, Thursday, Dec. 7, is the first day of Chanukah, which ends Dec. 15.
The 20th Pre-Chanukah Menorah Lighting was held Sunday evening, Dec. 5, in Eisenhower Park. The park was already beginning to fill up before the sun set, before the ceremony officially began at 5 p.m. Most participants wore jackets. Many wore scarves.

Perhaps 500 people attended this year’s event. “We completely ran out of hot coco and cups,” wrote Rabbi Shmuel Marcus, of Los Alamitos/Cypress Chabad, in a Dec. 4 email.
“We also gave away over 500 donuts. We usually plan for 500, and this year people got there early and we gave away all our menorah kits. I would estimate at 500,” Marcus wrote.
(Last year, Marcus put the crowd size at 300 to 400.)

Several members of the audience waved small Israeli flags.

This year’s event included a prayer for Israel.

The four-member Los Angeles band Emotional Intelligence performed live music, including “Blowing in the Wind” and “Light One Candle,” a Chanukah song from folk singers Peter, Paul, and Mary, as well as original songs.
Students from Hebrew High distributed free donuts, menorah kits, dreidels and chocolate coins.

Rabbi Shmuel Marcus, of Los Alamitos/Cypress Chabad, greeted the audience. Marcus told the audience that people asked if the menorah lighting would go forward this year.
“When they go dark, we go bright,” Marcus said.

“We are awake, we are alive, we are alight,” he said.

“Light attracts,” he said.

“Give yourselves a round of applause for being the light and goodness that will save this planet,” Marcus said.

Seal Beach Police Chief Michael Henderson attended this year’s event. “We are so grateful to our Jewish community,” Henderson said.

Marcus gave an unscheduled prayer for Israel.

Assemblymember Josh Lowenthal and Assemblymember Diane Dixon also spoke briefly. Lowenthal described them as friends, though they are from different districts and different parties. Lowenthal is a member of the state’s Jewish Caucus.

He spoke briefly about anti-Semitism. He said there was one difference between anti-Semitism and other “isms.” “Anti-Semitism is about blame,” Lowenthal said.

He also said the California Legislative Jewish Caucus was not going to hide.
Dixon said she was honored to be there with him.

Dixon asked if she could be an honorary member.

“I stand with Israel in love an honor,” she said.

After Emotional Intelligence performed “Light One Candle,” Rabbi Marcus said that 20 years ago, they had a smaller menorah.

The current menorah is 9 feet high.

Nine families lit each of the candles of the menorah. The middle candle is the Shamash (the service candle). The Reyngold family lit the Shamash, Dennis and Clair Singer lit the first candle, the Roth family lit the second candle, the Prince family lit the third candle, Mercedes Neves-Hatchwell lit the fourth candle, Richard Wolpow and Tali Bercovitz lit the fifth candle, the Posner family lit the sixth candle, the Erman family lit the seventh candle, and the Rubin family lit the eighth candle.

Marcus encouraged everyone to spread light and goodness when they went home from the ceremony. He asked the audience for applause for the Hebrew High students who gave the coffee, the donuts, and the dreidels.

According to Chabad.org (not to be confused with Los Alamitos /Cypress Chabad), in the second century BCE, the Seleucids tried to force the Israelis to worship according to the ways of the Seleucids. The Maccabees took up arms in the defense of their way of life.
“The Chanukah victory allowed Jews to practice freely, and Jewish education was finally permissible once again, therefore, there is a custom to give Chanukah money ‘Gelt’ to help pay for a Jewish education the Chanukah chocolate coins are a sweet tribute to the Chanukah Gelt,” according to the Seal Beach menorah lighting program.

Service Beyond Self

0

Sometimes you can just feel it in your bones when another human is truly committed to what they say.

For years, Art Garcia, the owner of Maderas Steakhouse in Los Alamitos, has been faithful to the troops. Nearly every time troops are deployed for new missions overseas; Art is at the base serving them with either breakfast or lunch.

When troops return, he and his team are there as well, with home cooking and refreshments to welcome them back, but mostly, to let them know we, as a people appreciate what they have done for us.

His latest victory, however, is worthy of some note.

When I was at the base for the Regional Military Affairs Committee meeting last week, Art was there. As I waited to interview Lt. Col. Fox, there was Art, waiting to see him as well.
For many years, Art Garcia, in addition to his other well-meaning pursuits with the troops, has been fiercely dedicated to serving the most wounded of the wounded confined to the spinal cord injury unit at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Long Beach.

Men and women whose service injuries are so severe that they are strapped to beds, in many cases cannot move. “Men and women who have lost legs, lost their mind, but served for us,” said Art. “They need to enjoy Christmas.”
Art said he showed up to serve in Vietnam, but the war was ending so since then, he said

God put it on his heart to do everything possible for those who have served and especially those who have paid a price to keep us safe.

He began many years ago by working with Boeing to feed veterans and then began offering free meals to homeless veterans at his restaurant.

But after a call to serve some needed veterans at a VA Hospital, “I never served Christmas dinner at my restaurant again. I saw there was absolutely no Christmas at the VA Hospital and I said to myself, ‘this is where they need Christmas.’”

Since then, Garcia has been serving hundreds of filet mignon meals at the VA Hospital. With his crew of volunteers and Bethany Baptist Church Christmas Carolers, Garcia delivers steak dinners to the spinal cord unit, the psychological rehab unit and throughout several buildings where our most wounded veterans live.

“Sometimes it’s not pretty,” he warns volunteers, noting it can be emotional yet truly rewarding to feed wounded veterans on Christmas. “This is not a trip to Disneyland,” he says wryly.

But then COVID hit, and he was banned from the VA Hospital.

“I didn’t stop,” he said, noting that he still prepared more than 200 meals and brought them to the facility and made sure they were delivered as Christmas carols were sung in the hallway so the brave men and women would know they had not been forgotten.

“It’s been a battle since COVID,” he said, noting he has been “lobbying anyone” who might be able to help him regain access to the VA Hospital at Christmas. “I’d even call their 0mothers if I thought it would help.”

Now, back to Garcia’s appearance at the Regional Military Affairs committee, where he finally did get a word with Lt. Col. Fox. Fox most recently worked at the Pentagon, so his Rolodex is likely broad.

Garcia said he asked Fox like he has asked hundreds of others over the past four years, to try to reopen access to the wounded vets at Christmas.

And like the parting of Red Sea, Garcia said he “got a call seven days ago. They said you can come back in. No restrictions. I was really moved,” said Garcia. “I was really moved,” he says again, his voice trailing off.

His one-man war over the past four years has paid off. The steak dinners are headed back to the VA Hospital this Christmas, and this would-be warrior for good could not be happier.
Persons who want to volunteer can sign up at Maderas on Katella, and those who want to donate $25 for a prime filet mignon meal for a wounded veteran can call (562) 598-0401 to donate.

He’s hoping to feed 250 wounded service members this year, but what he truly wants is to simply find a way to say thank you from the bottom of his heart to these men and women and all those they represent.

Indeed, one can truly feel it when someone is committed to what they say. For this one Los Al businessman, his one-man war for good has been won by sheer persistence and a devotion to service beyond self

Never ending battle against dreaded Medfly centered around Los Al operation

Quietly, yet efficiently, a small army of dedicated government employees engaged in what can only be described as a logistical ballet, wages war against one of the world’s most dreaded pests every day.

Operating from a proverbial Medfly Village, an enclave of metal buildings built in 1996 in a remote corner at the Joint Forces Training Base in Los Alamitos, the teams of state and federal workers are engaged in a battle with the wild Mediterranean Fruit Fly (Medfly), considered one of the world’s most dreaded pests.

Program Director Ian Walters.
dnyphoto

Medfly program director Ian Walters, who has been with the program since its inception in the early 1990s, directs the attack like a general on a battlefield.
On the job, he walks briskly through the elongated rows of incubation units, refrigeration trailers, and testing chambers, checking with technicians, scanners, and processors along the way.

“The Medfly Preventative Release Program (MPRP)is a cooperative program of the California Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA) and the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA),” said Walters during an extensive visit with ENE.

“The Medfly is one of the world’s most significant pests,” he said, “and that’s because it consumes about 250 different kinds of fruit, nut, berry, and vegetable crops, about 170 of which are grown in California and are protected by the program.”

Coiled electrical cords power the small compressors that keep the pupae alive as they emerge within one of the incubation units at JFTB.
dnyphoto

In this role for more than three decades, Walters has become the de facto lord of the Medflies program, guiding a delicate environmental and logistical ballet that results in the targeted release of nearly 100 billion sterile male fruit flies over southern California each year.

Walters said the state has battled the Medfly since the 1970s, engulfing then-Gov. Jerry Brown in a showdown with the federal government over spraying the toxic pesticide Malathion to bring the infestation under control.

According to a New York Times Retro Report, the state declared victory against the Medfly in 1990, but two months later, more wild Medflies were found, prompting some to believe the pest had established a small, but firm foothold in the state.

Though some state officials deny it, James R. Carey, Distinguished Professor of Entomology at the University of California, Davis, said the Medfly is here to stay.

Medfly pupae, after being treated with orange dye that will eventually show up in traps after the flies complete their lifecycle, are added to the pupae before they are shipped to the Medfly program at Los Alamitos.
dnyphoto

“The Medfly is really established throughout the state,” he told the Times. “There’s absolutely no question, but they’re very low populations and so what the state has done is really suppressed them, but they haven’t contained them,” said Carey.

“I do not agree with his assertion,” notes Walters, saying the breakthrough in the fight against the Medfly came with the development of SIT (Sterile Insect Technique), which of course, lies at the heart of the preventative release program.

Today, the release of millions of sterile male fruit flies lies at the heart of the state’s strategy to keep the Medfly at bay.

As the SIT technology emerged, state agriculture officials switched strategies, to an environmentally friendly pesticide. The program began with a test in 1992, he said, then built the Medfly Village on the base in 1994 and when the results were positive, announced the Preventative Release Program in 1996.

After they arrive at the facility, they are processed into specially designed trays. Here, a worker adds a gelatin pad that will act as food and water for the pupae as they take four days to emerge as Medflies.
dnyphoto

According to Walters, most flies have a life cycle of approximately 30 days. Yet, in that span, the male and female will mate, and the only way to stem the flow of wild Medflies into the environment is to have willing male Medflies ready to mate, yet sterile so there are no eggs.

Therefore, since flies have a 30-day life span, it takes an effort seven days a week, 24 hours a day and 365 days a week of strategically releasing sterile males into the environment to prevent outbreaks of wild and virile Medflies.

Walters said the Medfly is critical to control because it destroys the crops by injecting their eggs under the skin of fruits and vegetables and other crops. “The female will have her eggs fertilized and she will lay her eggs under the skin of the fruit,” said Walters.

“The female Medfly has an ovipositor, an appendage on the tip of the abdomen that will pierce the skin of the fruit. The female will lay the eggs under the skin of the fruit and those eggs will hatch and become larvae. The larva will consume the fruit,” he said.
With a $10 million annual budget, Walters said the program saves billions in losses.

Even as new flies are being processed to be sent into the environment, workers in the lab analyze Medflies caught in more than 100,000 traps around the state by using UV light to ensure the flies have the orange dye. Otherwise, the potential wild flies are sent out for further inspection by higher powered microscopes.
dnyphoto

“If Medflies were to become established in California, it would have a devastating impact,” said Walters. He said experts predict it would result in an estimated $2 billion in losses.
He said the losses would include direct losses from loss of crops, loss of export market, increased use of pesticides, and other cultural impacts.

Therefore, he said, “the program is charged with keeping the Medflies from gaining a foothold in the agriculturally rich SoCal and L.A. basin.”

The Los Al program serves an area of approximately 1,800 square miles within Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, and San Bernardino counties.

The process of supplying 175 million sterile male Medflies each week is intricate and fascinating. The process from fly production to release over the skies of SoCal is intricate and always in motion.

How the Medflies are processed at Medfly village at JFTB is equally fascinating and how they are safely released into the skies owes its prowess to endurance and ingenuity.
Walters said the process starts at Medfly production facilities in Hawaii and Guatemala. It is truly a complex network that keeps the aerial Medfly preventative release program flying.

“We (CDFA) don’t keep a breeding colony of flies here in California. Because we don’t want to risk that any of those wild flies escape the facility and start an infestation,” said Walters.

Accordingly, all the current production is done offshore at one of these two facilities, he said. There are four stages in a fly’s life, said Walters, including egg, larvae, pupae, and emergence (adulthood).

Once processed the Medflies are sent to the chiller refrigerated trucks where they are chilled for release in the sky by special devices on USDA contracted airplanes.
dnyphoto

Once the larvae reach the pupae stage, the last stage before adulthood, Walters said production workers “apply a marker dye to the pupae that will fluoresce under a UV light so we will be able to differentiate that sterile fly from a wild fly.”

The marker dye will only become critical to researchers when the Medflies complete their life cycle and end up in traps.

While still at the production facilities, after the dye is applied to the pupae, they are collected and put in special plastic bags and sent to USDA lab facilities for irradiation.

The bags are zapped with gamma rays and eventually loaded onto commercial cargo carriers that arrive daily from Guatemala and Hawaii. The radiation is measured so that the Medflies will eventually emerge from the pupae sterile, but the rays have no other impacts.
Walters said special couriers pick up the pupae and deliver them to the labs within the Medfly village at JFTB, where workers methodically process the incoming supply.

After a quality control check, the pupae are taken from the bags and put on special racks of layered trays, complete with two gelatin bars in each tray that will supply the incubating pupae with food and water.

Walters said the Guatemala Medflies are slightly smaller, so it takes 46 trays to house one million Medflies while the Hawaii Medflies take 56 trays to make a million fly “stack.”

A pilot from one of four USDA contracted King Airs from Dynamic Aviation does a routine flight check near the World War II era hanger utilized by the Medfly program.
dnyphoto

The stacks are then taken to one of many “incubation chambers” in the village of container-size buildings. Walters points out small, computer-type compressor fans that are placed above each stack.

“This supplies air to the entire stack to keep the flies alive until they emerge,” he said.
It takes about four days for the flies to emerge from the pupae, he said, and on the third day, the sterile males get a bath of fly cologne, yes cologne of sorts, to make them more attractive to the waiting females.

After an overnight bath of ginger root oil, the Medflies are prepared for their trip into the wild. By giving the Medflies a scent of ginger root oil, scientists believe the sterile male Medflies will have a better than even chance of attracting a female, said Walters.

By releasing millions of sterile males into the population of wild flies, the population of wild flies that could fertilize the eggs is theoretically held at bay. For three decades, the program has worked and is beginning to attract worldwide attention.

Workers roll the chilled Medflies onto the tarmac to be loaded into special carriers that release the Medflies at 2000 feet.
dnyphoto

The last stop for male Medflies is a trip to one of several refrigerated trucks located in Medfly Village, where technicians slowly induce a “chill coma” by lowering the temperature just to the point of inactivity.

By the time the flies are loaded onto the planes and are ultimately released, they will be awake and ready for their missions to mate.

A few hundred feet from the village sits an aging World War II-era hanger, which the program uses as a flight staging area.

“The aerial releases are conducted by Dynamic Aviation Group, Inc. (DAG) a private release operator under contract with USDA,” he said. The release program uses a fleet of four Beechcraft King Air, Model 90 turboprop planes.

Special devices and chutes have been retrofitted into the planes that hold the trays and can release the flies over the designated area. All planes fly with a crew of two, said Walters, to ensure proper release.

He said Medflies are released seven days a week, with at least three to four flights per day. A large map of the 1800-mile target area sits on the wall of Walters’ office that is divided into quadrants.

Pilots check the special metal devices that have been designed to safely release the flies in midflight.
dnyphoto

Flight controllers, such as Irma Zamora, Release Operations Supervisor, stay in constant touch with each flight to coordinate the Medfly release. In addition, the program uses “Flight Aware” to track each flight and is stored for backup if questions ever arise, said Walters.

Two months ago, when wild Medflies were found in Leimert Park in Los Angeles, the Los Al-based Medfly program was in the news again.

After two wild Medflies were found, authorities immediately set up a 69-square-mile quarantine area covering parts of Central L.A., Culver City, and South L.A.

Walters said the Medfly team scrambled to target the area to pepper the affected area with sterile males. “We were able to ramp up quickly and then drop 125,000 sterile males per mile to ensure there was no breakout,” he said.

Another small army collects samples from more than 100,000 traps across the area, said Walters, and couriers daily deliver those traps to Medfly Village for inspection.
“They have a microscope and a UV light,” said Walters. Looking at those traps are really cool,” he said.

Another Medfly flight heads for the runway at the Joint Forces Training Base in Los Alamitos.

“The marker dye will fluoresce on the sterols, but if they don’t detect the marker dye then they have a suspected wild fly,” he said, which raises alarm bells. The suspect fly is then sent out immediately for a secondary inspection.

Thus, the battle against the Medfly goes on, around the clock, every day of the year. While government workers across oceans create billions of flies for release, another group is testing the traps every day to complete the cycle of protection against the dreaded fly.

“The program has proven to be a success, both in preventing and eradicating infestations when they do occur,” said Walters.

“I am proud of the work that has been done by the program and I personally derive great satisfaction in the fact that we have contributed to efforts to protect agriculture in California.”

New base commander ready to create change at JFTB

Like the new sheriff walking in at high noon, the newly appointed commander of the Joint Forces Training Base in Los Alamitos told a group of military and community officials Tuesday he means business and plans big changes to the base.

Lt. Col Dan Fox has been reassigned from his Pentagon job with the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs to assume command of a base that he suggested is in need of significant revitalization.

The 1940’s base occupies exactly half of the entire land area of Los Alamitos and this California native told a group of regional military officials Tuesday that his new job is to “nest” the base with surrounding communities.

“The big bosses up in Sacramento sent me here to bring a little bit more beautification to this base,” said Fox, knowing also “that we have to reinvigorate our community outreach programs and make the linkage between our soldiers, sailors, and Marines that work here on this base nested with the local communities.”

Moreover, Fox announced that the Secretary of Defense, Lloyd J. Austin, had planned to visit Los Alamitos to tour the base last Friday, but had to cancel because of the war in Israel.

”He (Secretary Austin) called me the other day,” said Fox, “I’m looking forward to seeing you but I can’t make it. You’ve probably seen what’s going on in the news,” he said.
Nevertheless, Fox said he understands his mission at JFTB and that he planned extensive collaboration with neighboring communities to carry it out.

“As far as community outreach, I’ve had the honor to work with many of the local leaders,” he said, including representatives of the city of Los Alamitos, Rossmoor, Cypress and others.

While Fox said he could not yet remember all of their names, he said “I’ll get better at it.”
Fox said with some certainty the “Race on the Base” will return as well as offering the swimming pool and other facilities on the base to local teams.

“We’re exploring the possibility of having more interaction with the city of Los Alamitos and being able to provide more community interaction,” he told the community and military offiials.

“There’s been some changes in in policies that have that have come up,” said Fox, “so I’m not a politician, I tell people to directly but I don’t have authority to say certain things so I’m I am doing what I can to get it an agreement that we can all benefit from,” he noted.

“I do the best I can to work with everybody,” said Fox. “I am all about the win-win. If you win and I don’t lose, that is also a win-win. I am here to manage the space, but as it is a fairly significant portion of the City of Los Alamitos and also the adjacent community, what happens here reflects on you or impacts on you and therefore, this is your base,” said Fox. “Although it is not,” he quickly added, tongue firmly in cheek.