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How Bad Is California’s Drought Ahead of Dry Season?

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At this time marks the ultimate day of California’s wet season.

December, January and February are usually the wettest months within the Golden State, with 75 % of the state’s annual precipitation falling between November and March.

Now we’re about to enter our dry season, and the drought is nowhere close to over. Gov. Gavin Newsom this week, in an try and curb water utilization, proposed banning companies from watering their lawns. Greater than 93 % of California is taken into account to be in extreme or excessive drought.

“We’re positively very a lot on the tail finish of our moist season in California,” Jeanine Jones, drought supervisor with the California Division of Water Assets, instructed me. “We’re not anticipating any vital quantity of extra precipitation — definitely not one thing that may make any distinction for the drought.”

Jones added: “In different phrases, most of what we’re going to get, we’ve gotten.”

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So the place does that depart us?

All of California’s main reservoirs are presently at below-average ranges. The state’s snowpack on Wednesday was a dismal 39 % of what it usually is that this time of yr, based on state information. Newsom hasn’t but introduced obligatory water cuts for Californians however faces rising strain to take action.

The water yr in California runs from Oct. 1 to Sept. 30 and is outlined that means in order that the winter wet season falls inside a single water yr.

Between October and December — the beginning of this water yr — California acquired extra rainfall than it had over the earlier 12 months. Atmospheric rivers shattered information and replenished reservoirs.

However then we entered 2022. January and February represented the driest two-month begin to a yr on file in California, based on state officers. March is unlikely to be significantly better, even after this week’s storms.

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The whiplash isn’t uncommon within the Golden State; we’ve extra local weather variability than another state within the nation, Jones mentioned. And the climate has not too long ago change into much more unpredictable due to the consequences of local weather change.

Nonetheless, the heavy rains from the top of 2021 weren’t sufficient to beat the previous three exceptionally dry months.

On the finish of December, the state had acquired 150 % of the precipitation it usually has at that time within the water yr. That determine has since dropped to under common — to roughly 70 %.

Sadly, with March coming to an in depth and no storms on the horizon, we will say with close to certainty that California’s drought in 2022 will preserve getting worse.

For extra:

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  • Lease reduction: At this time is the deadline to use for monetary help for unpaid lease and utilities throughout the pandemic, KTLA studies.

  • Gender in meals service: Many eating places are not greeting friends as “sir” or “ma’am” however are as a substitute choosing gender-neutral language.

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA

  • L.A. Mayor: Eric Garcetti’s affirmation to be U.S. ambassador to India is more and more doubtful due to harassment allegations towards a high adviser, Politico studies.

  • Gun invoice: A California invoice requiring dad and mom to inform faculty officers in the event that they preserve weapons in the home failed to maneuver forward within the Legislature, The Related Press studies.

  • Unlawful weapons: State regulation enforcement seized almost 1,500 unlawful weapons in 2021, The Related Press studies.

CENTRAL CALIFORNIA

  • Elephant welfare: Fresno Chaffee Zoo is taken into account one of many worst zoos for elephants by a global animal safety group, The Fresno Bee studies.

  • Kristin Good homicide trial: A choose on Wednesday ordered that the trial within the 1996 killing of school scholar Kristin Good be moved out of San Luis Obispo County, The Related Press studies.

NORTHERN CALIFORNIA

  • Predatory gross sales safeguard: Enlisted members of the navy would get an computerized 30-day cooling-off interval in California once they purchase or lease automobiles beneath a brand new proposal, The Related Press studies.

  • Newt crossing: Volunteers are working to guard newts which might be crossing the Petaluma hills streets by the hundreds, The Guardian studies.

  • College settlement: A San Jose faculty district has been ordered by a jury to pay $102.5 million to 2 former college students who had been sexually abused by a trainer, The Related Press studies.

  • Historic houses bought: A single purchaser bought 15 houses that had been constructed on the identical block within the Nineteen Twenties for $10 million, The Related Press studies.

  • Hospital beneath evaluate: San Francisco’s Laguna Honda Hospital might lose essential funding after two sufferers overdosed final yr, The San Francisco Chronicle studies.


$630,000 houses in California, Louisiana and Ohio.


A information to sizzling springs within the West.

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Inform us about your favourite locations to go to in California. Electronic mail your ideas to CAtoday@nytimes.com. We’ll be sharing extra in upcoming editions of the e-newsletter.


We’ve not too long ago been publishing your notes about why you’re keen on your nook of California.

If you happen to’d prefer to submit a love letter to your California metropolis, neighborhood or area — or to the Golden State as an entire — please e mail us at CAtoday@nytimes.com. We’ll preserve sharing your missives within the e-newsletter.


Non-obligatory pic right here

Not less than a thousand years in the past, the Cahuilla Indians often walked a protracted, winding path within the mountains above the Coachella Valley.

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The trail, via a panorama of distant peaks and pure springs, was used to go to kinfolk from different Native villages and to attend ceremonies. When vital messages should be relayed, runners would jog sections of the 30-mile path in simply hours.

However till not too long ago, many Cahuilla had not stepped foot on the ancestral route in additional than a century.

This month, tribal members representing Agua Caliente, the Torres Martinez Desert Cahuilla Indians and the Santa Rosa Band of Cahuilla Indians hiked and camped for 3 days alongside the traditional path, The Desert Solar studies.

“Once I stroll this path, I stroll it for my household,” mentioned Mario Alejandre, a member of the Santa Rosa tribe and the Sawish-pakiktem clan. “We stroll this path as a result of our ancestors walked it earlier than us. This was sanctuary. This was heaven.”


Thanks for studying. I’ll be again tomorrow. — Soumya

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P.S. Right here’s at the moment’s Mini Crossword, and a clue: Shalom : Hebrew :: ___ : Hawaiian (5 letters).

Briana Scalia and Mariel Wamsley contributed to California At this time. You’ll be able to attain the crew at CAtoday@nytimes.com.

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Joe Biden tries to calm nerves of wealthy backers after debate debacle

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Joe Biden tries to calm nerves of wealthy backers after debate debacle

Joe Biden and top allies have sought to reassure Democratic donors that he can defeat Donald Trump, after a disastrous debate performance left wealthy backers divided over whether the US president should abandon his re-election bid.

Biden conceded that he “didn’t have a great night” as he met donors at a fundraiser in East Hampton, New York, on Saturday, where the cost of entry ranged from $3,300 to $250,000 per person, according to the invitation.

“I understand the concern about the debate. I get it,” Biden told supporters in the wealthy resort town.

But the president argued that “voters had a different reaction,” adding: “Since the debate, the polls show a little movement, moved us up actually.”

Few polls have been released since Thursday night’s debate, but betting markets moved dramatically against Biden during and after the showdown. A Morning Consult poll conducted on Friday found roughly half of Democratic voters said Biden should step aside in favour of another candidate.

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Three donors familiar with the East Hampton fundraiser described the mood in the room as subdued, despite the president appearing stronger than he did on the debate stage on Thursday night.

Biden was expected to attend another fundraiser later on Saturday in Red Bank, New Jersey, hosted by the state’s Democratic governor, Phil Murphy.

Senior Democratic lawmakers and party grandees have also reached out to donors in recent days. Chuck Schumer, the most senior Democrat on Capitol Hill, has tried to reassure several backers about Biden’s candidacy since the debate, said two party fundraisers.

There have been mounting calls for the president to step aside and allow another Democrat to be the party’s nominee for the White House ahead of November’s election.

At 81 years old, Biden has faced questions for months about his age and fitness for office. But any concerns that Democratic insiders had privately about the incumbent president spilled out into the open on Thursday night, after nearly 50mn Americans watched Biden struggle through a live, televised debate against Trump. The president rambled, appeared to lose his train of thought and struggled to complete sentences.

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Biden has insisted that he will stay in the race, and campaign officials say he will participate in a second presidential debate planned for September.

The campaign has touted what it says has been a record influx of grassroots, or small-dollar, donations, since Thursday. A campaign official said on Saturday morning that the campaign had raised more than $27mn between the debate and Friday evening.

“It wasn’t his greatest debate. But it is 90 minutes . . . in a campaign and in an administration, where he has achieved enormous things,” Anita Dunn, a longtime senior adviser to Biden, said on MSNBC on Saturday. “Maybe it wasn’t a great debate. But he has been a great president.”

Asked if Biden’s inner circle had discussed him dropping out after the debate, Dunn replied: “No, the conversation we had is, ‘OK, what do we do next?”

Jen O’Malley Dillon, chair of the Biden campaign, accused the “beltway class” of “counting Joe Biden out”.

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“If we do see changes in polling in the coming weeks, it will not be the first time that overblown media narratives have driven temporary dips in the polls,” O’Malley Dillon said.

But the White House assurances have done little to quell public unease. Late Friday, the influential New York Times editorial board published a leader urging Biden to step aside.

On Saturday in East Hampton, reporters travelling with the president saw a group of onlookers holding signs that read: “Please drop out for US,” and “Step down for democracy,” and: “We love you but it’s time.”

The debate fallout has divided Democratic donors, whose support is critical to fund a campaign that is set to spend hundreds of millions of dollars in an effort to secure another four years in the White House. Biden’s long fundraising advantage over Trump has eroded in recent months. Trump outraised Biden in both April and May amid a swell of support following his conviction on 34 criminal charges in New York last month.

While some donors have redoubled their efforts to rally people around Biden, others are more skittish. One Democratic fundraiser noted some Wall Street megadonors intend to keep bankrolling the Biden campaign while trying to convince him to make way for another candidate. Another camp intends to withhold their donations altogether.

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Still, several high-profile Democratic donors have come to Biden’s full-throated defence.

LinkedIn founder and billionaire Democratic donor Reid Hoffman sought to calm fellow deep-pocketed Biden supporters in a letter on Friday in which he acknowledged that the president had a “very bad debate performance”. But he added that it would be a ‘bad idea” to launch a public campaign to get him to step aside.

“This election is very close, and I don’t know who will win,” Hoffman wrote. “But as a political philanthropist, with 129 days until the election, I am doubling down on my bet that America will choose Biden’s decency, care, and proven success over Trump’s violence, lies, and chaos.”

Trump narrowly leads Biden in national opinion polls, according to the latest FiveThirtyEight average, as well as in most of the key swing states that will decide the outcome of November’s election.

One Democratic fundraiser said donors would be looking at polling in the coming days to plot their next move.

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Several are already contemplating who they would throw their weight behind if Biden were to step aside, with Michigan governor Gretchen Whitmer among the most popular names being floated. Three donors and bundlers also said Democratic House minority leader Hakeem Jeffries was gaining interest from Wall Street elites.

“The results of those polls will help donors decide what to do next . . . if the result is negative there will be consequences,” the fundraiser said.

But the Biden campaign showed little outward signs of concern about the polls at the weekend.

Geoff Garin, president of Hart Research and a pollster for the Biden campaign, said in a post on X Saturday evening that two surveys he had conducted in battleground states following the debate showed it had “no effect on the vote choice”.

“The election was extremely close and competitive before the debate, and it is still extremely close and competitive today,” Garin said.

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Additional reporting by Alex Rogers in Washington

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7 injured, including 4 children, at Nebraska home after neighbor opens fire

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7 injured, including 4 children, at Nebraska home after neighbor opens fire

Seven people, including four children, were shot by a neighbor at a Nebraska home Friday evening, according to authorities, who said the crime could potentially be racially motivated.

At about 4:33 p.m., multiple 911 calls were made to report an active shooter situation on the 1200 block of Crestline Drive in Crete, a town in southeastern Nebraska, Nebraska State Patrol Col. John Bolduc said at a news briefing Saturday. Local officers and deputies responded to the scene, where they could still hear gunshots, including a single gunshot that came from a home across the street.

About 15 people were at the home at the time of the shooting, most of whom were outside in the yard, according to a news release. At least one of the victims was inside the home. It’s not clear at this time who was a resident and who was visiting.

“It was quickly determined that all gunfire had come from a single residence at 1810 Parkland Street,” Bolduc said, adding that a SWAT team responded to the home to apprehend what was believed to be “a barricaded subject.”

The SWAT team entered the home at about 6:40 p.m., where it found the 74-year-old suspect, Billy Booth, dead with a self-inflicted gunshot wound. A shotgun was found near Booth’s body, Bolduc said.

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“Preliminary investigation shows that all rounds fired by Booth came from inside of his house,” Bolduc said. “Investigators are still actively working this investigation to understand everything that occurred, but at this point, we don’t believe there was any verbal contact between the suspect and any of the victims in the moments that led up to the shooting.”

Three of the victims found on the scene were adults, ranging in age from 22 to 43. Four were children, ranging in age from 3 to 10, Bolduc said. All of the victims are believed to be Hispanic, according to Crete Police Chief Gary Young Jr.

Six victims were taken to the hospital initially and a seventh realized he was injured later that evening, according to the state patrol. Four have been released from the hospital and three are still receiving care — two of whom are in a children’s hospital. All are expected to survive.

There was a history between the suspect and the victims’ families, according to Bolduc. The Crete Police responded to “several complaints” since 2021, most of which came from Booth regarding “driving behavior” in the neighborhood, according to Young, who also spoke at the news briefing.

“Not necessarily associated with the victims’ house, but cars driving too fast in the neighborhood, improper parking, nuisance properties, quality-of-life type issues,” Young said. “There was a single report from the victims that the suspect had flipped them off, told them to ‘Go home’ or ‘back to where they came from,’ to ‘Speak English.’”

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A responding officer who interviewed the family and the suspect at the time was willing to escalate the case, but the family declined, saying they would contact police, Young said.

“That resolved the situation, so we had no further contact,” Young said.

When asked if there could be a racial element to the shooting, Young said, “There could be, we don’t know.”

“Certainly the context of ‘Go home’ and ‘Speak English’ lends itself to that,” he said.

A motive is still under investigation, Young said.

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State patrol said they were on the scene of “an active situation” on the east side of Crete Friday evening and warned the public to “stay clear of the area.”

“The active situation has been resolved. There is no threat to the public,” state patrol posted on X an hour later.

Authorities are asking anyone with information on the case to come forward. The shooting remains under investigation.

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Target loses cachet with shoppers as inflation and competition bite

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Target loses cachet with shoppers as inflation and competition bite

The big-box US retailer Target is struggling to return to growth a year after backlash against LGBT+ themed merchandise triggered sharp declines in sales, while arch-rival Walmart is luring more of the affluent customers that form the backbone of its business. 

Target won legions of fans starting in the 1990s with stylish in-house brands and advertising that lent its stores an aura of affordable chic. Annual revenue exploded to more than $100bn after the onset of Covid-19 as cash-rich consumers found they could buy most anything they wanted in a single place, minimising the risk of contagion. 

But sales have faltered as inflation leads shoppers to put fewer items in its iconic red plastic shopping carts. Some observers wonder if Target — affectionately called “Tarzhay” by regulars — is losing cachet. 

“They have a pandemic hangover,” said Chris Walton, a former Target executive who runs Omni Talk, a retail sector-focused media company. Target declined to make executives available for interviews.

In the past week Target announced a series of changes as it tries, in the words of chief executive Brian Cornell, to “get back to growth”. The Minneapolis-based company started a search for a new chief marketing officer less than a year after the current one, Lisa Roath, took the job (she is moving to a new role next year). 

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Target also announced a deal to allow some third-party merchants from Shopify, the Canadian ecommerce platform, to sell products through its online marketplace. And it rolled out plans to load a generative AI chatbot on the devices carried by clerks at its nearly 2,000 US stores to improve efficiency. 

To boost sales volumes, Target is cutting prices on thousands of products from sports drinks to laundry soap this summer.

The changes come after a dismal year for Target even as several other mass merchandisers flourish. Comparable sales have declined in each of the past four quarters. Executives predict a modest improvement over the course of the fiscal year, with sales ranging between unchanged and up 2 per cent. 

The sales decline began a year ago, when in addition to the effects of inflation and higher interest rates Target dealt with a backlash — including bomb threats to stores — against LGBT+ oriented merchandise prominently displayed to celebrate Pride month in 2023. Complaints centred on items for children and “tuck-friendly” women’s-style adult swimsuits with extra room for a wearer’s penis.

Comparable sales in the second quarter of 2023 shrank by 5.4 per cent, the most since the global financial crisis, in part due to what an executive called a “strong reaction to this year’s Pride assortment”.

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The controversy illustrated how consumer brands endorsing social issues have become enmeshed in American culture wars. On Thursday, Tractor Supply, a farm and garden retailer, eliminated diversity and inclusion goals and said it would stop sponsoring Pride festivals after pressure from rightwing critics began to drive down its share price.

Pride merchandise  at a Target store
Target received negative feedback around its Pride collection © Seth Wenig/AP

Target this year said it would sell Pride month merchandise online and in some, but not all, stores. One store visited by the Financial Times this week contained no signs of it, while another featured a Pride kiosk in the middle of the store with rainbow-adorned dresses, shirts and totes and packs of multicoloured “LED Pride string lights”.

The amount of negative feedback around the Pride collection, both internally and externally, has been significantly lower this year than in 2023, a company representative said.

Steven Shemesh, a retail analyst at RBC Capital Markets, said the financial impact of the Pride controversy was temporary, making the continued softness in sales a sign of deeper issues.

Target was particularly vulnerable to the inflation surge because of its heavy dependence of discretionary items such as linens, home decor and toys, which consumers spent less on as they stretched their dollars on staples. Groceries accounted for 23 per cent of its sales last year compared with 60 per cent for Walmart. “Whenever there’s a macro slowdown, they’re more exposed,” Shemesh said. 

This exposure has been reflected in Target’s share price: up 2 per cent in the past two years, while the S&P 500 index has rallied by 43 per cent and Walmart by 66 per cent.

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Cornell’s plan to restore growth includes adding more than 300 stores to increase annual sales by about $15bn in 10 years, while remodelling hundreds of others. New private-label brands will be launched as they “help keep our edges sharp on the newness, discovery and affordability consumers crave in the market and find at Target”, he told an investor event earlier this year. The company aims to return to the 6 per cent operating profit margins it routinely surpassed before the pandemic.

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Survey data from Numerator, a market research group, showed Target customers are more likely to be middle or high income, younger, female and urban or suburban. They include shoppers such as Stacy Irwin, a resident of an affluent suburban New Jersey town who this week dropped into a Target store to buy bedsheets. 

“If there was a Walmart nearby I’d end up there more for its prices, but the vibe here is a little bit . . . cooler,” the mother of two said. 

Walmart has been making inroads with richer consumers, however. The world’s largest retailer’s US sales have been rising, in contrast with Target’s, and it recently flagged households making more than $100,000 a year as a major source of demand. 

“My immediate reaction was, ‘That is bad: they are Target’s bullseye,’ so to speak,” said Toopan Bagchi, a former vice-president at Target who leads Starship Advisors, a retail consultancy. “It’s concerning from Target’s perspective that Walmart saw an increase in traffic from Target’s traditional stronghold of higher-income consumers, because Target’s business model relies on those consumers to buy a lot of discretionary, non-food items with higher margins.” 

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Target’s heavy reliance on in-house private-label brands means that its announced price cuts could cause a bigger sales hit than markdowns where outside vendors share the pain. “Historically, price wars do not benefit retailers’ margins,” said Jodi Love, a portfolio manager at T Rowe Price who holds Walmart but not Target in her funds.

Walmart, Target and other store-based retailers have poured money into ecommerce as Amazon disrupted their brick-and-mortar businesses. Amazon has a 40.4 per cent share of US retail ecommerce, far surpassing Walmart’s 7.8 per cent and Target’s 1.7 per cent, according to Emarketer.

Oliver Chen, a TD Cowen analyst, said Walmart’s ecommerce business was on a quicker path to profitability than Target’s. BNP Paribas Exane, the only broker with a sell rating on Target, argued that online market share gains from rivals including Amazon, Walmart and China-based deep discounter Temu threatened Target’s $106bn in total sales, not just online sales. 

Target has tied most of its digital growth to its store footprint, enabling online customers to pick up orders at their local outlet or receive a speedy home delivery. “So if you think store shopping will wind down anytime in the next decade, we’ll politely disagree on that point,” Cornell told analysts earlier this year.

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