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Californians can use library card to visit state parks for free

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Californians can use library card to visit state parks for free

Calling all Californians! Dig up that library card to take a look at a state park cross free of charge out of your native library.

Beginning this week, California State Library Parks Passes shall be distributed to public libraries throughout the state for checkout by library patrons. The brand new cross will permit free car day use entry at greater than 200 collaborating state parks, California State Parks and the California State Library introduced.

As a part of a three-year pilot program beginning in April, every library jurisdiction will obtain no less than three cross hangtags per department for checkout by library patrons, together with cellular libraries.

Park passes will enter circulation on a rolling foundation all through April and Could for checkout by library patrons.

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Library-card holders will be capable of try the cross for the allotted variety of days allowed by the native library, then return the cross to the library for others to make use of.

The cross is legitimate for entry of 1 passenger car with capability of 9 individuals or much less or one freeway licensed bike at collaborating state park items.

“Libraries are trusted group hubs the place Californians know they’ll discover what they should work, play, and thrive,” state librarian Greg Lucas mentioned in an announcement. “This partnership with State Parks now permits Californians to ‘try’ California’s nice outside at their group library.”

Analysis reveals that spending time within the outside is related to higher psychological and bodily well being, and that many Californians face limitations to accessing their parks, CA State Parks mentioned in a information launch.

“California has a wealth of state parks, and lots of public libraries are seemingly inside driving distance of 1,” the discharge states. “By decreasing limitations to park entry and partnering with entities similar to public libraries, the state may help extra Californians discover the outside and generate constructive impacts within the space of well being, pure useful resource stewardship, and historic and cultural connections.”

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There are 1,184 public library buildings within the state, and greater than 23 million Californians have library playing cards. From 2019 to 2020, these libraries circulated over 97 million gadgets freed from cost, similar to books, know-how, Wi-Fi hotspots, movies, music, devices, instruments, telescopes and extra. And now, the California State Library Parks Move program is yet another method residents may be empowered by means of their libraries.

Moreover, the California State Library shall be offering grant funding to libraries for outdoor-related gadgets for checkout, packages that train pure useful resource stewardship and outside expertise, or to encourage their library patrons to benefit from the outside and make historic and cultural connections to parks.

Detailed data on the brand new California State Library Parks Program is accessible at CheckOutCAStateParks.com.

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Los Angeles, Ca

Concrete barriers mysteriously placed on streets across the San Fernando Valley 

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Concrete barriers mysteriously placed on streets across the San Fernando Valley 

The mystery remains over who is responsible for placing a series of concrete barriers on streets throughout the West Valley in Southern California.

Some believe the concrete cinder blocks are an effort to prevent homeless encampments and recreational vehicles (RVs) from parking in the area long-term.

Recently, the heavy, bright-colored blocks were installed in an industrial area of Chatsworth, just off Nordhoff Avenue. In other areas, rows of large 60-gallon barrels of water were placed on the street instead. 

Both city officials and the mayor’s office confirmed they did not install the barriers or water barrels. 

Residents in the area remain puzzled. Although the motive remains unclear, homeless advocates said the blocks are not a helpful solution to issues of homelessness.

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However, residents and nearby business owners confirmed the barriers have been an effective deterrent against encampments and excess trash. 

  • Large, 60-gallon barrels filled with water were inexplicably placed on streets across the West San Fernando Valley area in a possible attempt to prevent homeless encampments and long-term RV parking. (KTLA)
  • Heavy, brightly-colored concrete barriers have been inexplicably placed on streets across the West San Fernando Valley area in a possible attempt to prevent homeless encampments and long-term RV parking. (KTLA)
  • Heavy, brightly-colored concrete barriers have been inexplicably placed on streets across the West San Fernando Valley area in a possible attempt to prevent homeless encampments and long-term RV parking. (KTLA)
  • Heavy, brightly-colored concrete barriers have been inexplicably placed on streets across the West San Fernando Valley area in a possible attempt to prevent homeless encampments and long-term RV parking. (KTLA)
  • Heavy, brightly-colored concrete barriers have been inexplicably placed on streets across the West San Fernando Valley area in a possible attempt to prevent homeless encampments and long-term RV parking. (KTLA)
  • Heavy, brightly-colored concrete barriers have been inexplicably placed on streets across the West San Fernando Valley area in a possible attempt to prevent homeless encampments and long-term RV parking. (KTLA)

Pastor Kathy Huck is the CEO of About My Father’s Business Homeless Outreach, a nonprofit organization dedicated to helping and advocating for homeless residents.

Huck said the blocks and barrels are actually hurting the unhoused population.

“These barriers are not the answer,” Huck said. “To live in an RV is, I would say, discouraged because there’s no barrier for tents, but there are barriers in streets all over the West Valley for RVs.”

Huck said about 75% of the people she serves across the San Fernando Valley rely on their RV for shelter.

Many of her clients’ vehicles are in danger and subject to towing or destruction on a daily basis. With these blockades in place, they’re essentially displaced because they can’t find a safe place to park. 

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Huck said it also makes the job of homeless outreach workers more difficult because they can’t locate these individuals to help.

“We’re spending money trying to find people so we can get them immediate needs so that they’re taken care of until they are placed,” Huck explained. “How are people finding their clients? So, this undermines the City’s efforts to house people because you can’t house people that you can’t find.”

Tobie Von Bloes and Rob Lowe, a couple who lives in their RV, said it’s been tough to find a safe place to stop and rest.

“I just think people don’t really understand what we’re going through,” Lowe said. “They don’t like us here for some reason.”

“It’s getting really hard to find a place to park,” Von Bloes said. “And we’re just doing the best we can to live our lives. I think there are people that have given us a bad name and so the businesses really frown down on the motor homes.” 

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The L.A. Department of Water and Power also said they are unaware of the barriers. KTLA has reached out to the Department of Transportation and is awaiting a response.

If a private group or citizen is responsible for installing the barriers, the legality of the move remains in question. 

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Los Angeles, Ca

Suspected crime tourism ring targeting Southern California neighborhoods

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Suspected crime tourism ring targeting Southern California neighborhoods

Residents are on high alert after a group of burglars targeted homes in the Santa Clarita Valley.

In the last week alone, at least three homes inside a gated community in Valencia were burglarized. 

Neighbors believe their community is being targeted by a South American crime ring and the suspects may even be tracking their every move with drone surveillance.

“A few days ago, we noticed that there were drones flying above our house,” a resident, who did not wish to be identified, told KTLA’s Ellina Abovian.

Surveillance cameras captured the burglars’ images as they trespassed onto victims’ properties and smashed their way into homes.

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“It appears they’re using sophisticated technology to surveil the home to see who’s home and who’s not,” the resident said.

  • The entrance to the gated Valencia neighborhood where multiple burglaries were reported in the last several weeks. (KTLA)
  • Home security cameras captured a male suspect trepassing through a backyard.
  • Several burglary suspects were captured on surveillance video after breaking into homes in a Valencia neighborhood.
  • The glass window of a victim's door was smashed into by burglars.
  • Home security cameras captured a male suspect trepassing through a backyard.
  • Several burglary suspects were captured on surveillance video after breaking into homes in a Valencia neighborhood.

Some neighbors decided to follow the drones which led them to a nearby parking lot outside a La Quinta Inn where a group of men were spotted. The men reportedly fit the description of the burglars seen in victims’ surveillance images. 

“There’s five of them who were hanging out together and as soon as they noticed that they were being watched, they all took off and ran in different directions,” the resident said.

The victims suspect the burglars are part of a crime tourism burglary ring from South America. 

Crime tourism often involves foreign nationals who visit the U.S. with the sole purpose of committing theft. 

Recently, an uptick in crime tourism has been reported across the Southland and beyond. The homes of Kansas City Chiefs stars Patrick Mahomes and Travis Kelce were burglarized in October by what investigators believed was a South American crime ring.

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“It’s frustrating,” Mahomes said of the break-ins during a recent press conference. “It’s disappointing.”

In August, six people in Southern California were arrested in connection to a tourism burglary ring after a Van Nuys car rental business was reportedly facilitating the illicit deeds.

For now, residents in the Valencia community remain frustrated as they’re forced to be on high alert. Some have even hired security patrols to protect their properties while also keeping an eye on their neighbors’ homes.

“There have been extra patrols, but it’s just very hard to get anything done with the current crime sprees happening in California,” the resident said.

Authorities are aware of the incidents and are investigating the burglaries, but so far, no arrests have been made.

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Los Angeles, Ca

Chinese agent who targeted Shen Yun group gets 20 months in pris

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Chinese agent who targeted Shen Yun group gets 20 months in pris

A Chinese man living in Los Angeles was sentenced to almost two years in federal prison for his role in trying to bribe an IRS official at the behest of the Chinese government.

Earlier this year, John Chen, 71, admitted that he served as an unregistered agent of the Chinese government and tried to bribe who he thought was an IRS agent to revoke the tax-exempt status of Falun Gong, a U.S.-based new religious movement. The scheme was first reported by Seamus Hughes’ Court Watch.

Falun Gong, perhaps best known for the Shen Yun dance performances and news outlet The Epoch Times, opposes the Chinese Communist Party’s control of the country.

Alongside co-conspirator Lin Feng, 44, Chen “worked inside the United States at the direction of the [People’s Republic of China] government … to further the PRC government’s campaign to repress and harass Falun Gong practitioners,” the U.S. Department of Justice said in a news release.

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Using multiple payments of several thousand dollars each and promising at least $50,000 if an audit were opened, Chen and Feng worked with government officials from the People’s Republic of China to “carry out the PRC government’s aim of ‘toppl[ing] . . . the Falun Gong,’” prosecutors wrote.

As a result, Chen was sentenced to 20 months in prison and three years of supervised release, and he’ll forfeit $50,000 as well.

Feng was sentenced in September to a time-served sentence of 16 months in prison.

Each faced a maximum sentence of 25 years in prison.

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