California
California’s Climate Whiplash

Within the Talmudic parable of Honi the Circle Maker, the drought-stricken individuals of Jerusalem ship up a prayer that God ought to ship them rain. And certain sufficient, after a number of false begins, he does. Besides that when the rain begins, it gained’t let up. It pours and pours till the persons are pressured to flee to greater floor, their houses flooded by the reply to their prayer.
That, minus the entire divine-intervention half, is roughly the scenario the state of California presently finds itself in. After years of just about unremitting drought, the state is now abruptly, tragically, swamped with an overabundance of water. Over the previous couple of weeks, a collection of intense storms has induced large, widespread flooding. On Sunday night, the president declared a state of emergency, and by the following day, greater than 90 % of the state’s residents have been below flood watch. Not less than 17 individuals have died—that quantity is prone to rise—and tens of hundreds extra have been pressured to evacuate. When the storms lastly subside, the price of the injury is predicted to exceed $1 billion. However we nonetheless have a methods to go: Climate forecasters anticipate the heavy rain to proceed for at the very least one other week, together with lightning and hail. Tornadoes will not be out of the query.
The flooding is the product of a climate phenomenon often known as an “atmospheric river,” an extended, skinny channel of water vapor like a river within the sky. Atmospheric rivers funneled in from the Pacific are pretty frequent in California and will not be in and of themselves unhealthy information. Every year, the state is determined by them to replenish its reservoirs forward of the summer time months, when it hardly sees any rain in any respect. Daniel Horton, a local weather scientist at Northwestern College, instructed me that atmospheric rivers usually provide greater than 50 % of the state’s annual water.
What’s uncommon and problematic concerning the present scenario is the atmospheric rivers’ frequency. “It’s undoubtedly an excessive amount of of an excellent factor,” Horton mentioned. In simply the previous two weeks, six have made landfall in fast succession, delivering torrential quantities of rain to a state unaccustomed to coping with a lot water so quick. Three extra rivers are on their approach. “It’s usually true that we’ll get one, after which a number of weeks later we would get one other one, and some weeks after that we would get one other one,” Peter Gleick, a local weather scientist and a co-founder of the Pacific Institute, instructed me. “It’s uncommon to see the persistence and the depth of the storms we’re seeing now.”
It’s no shock that local weather change has seemingly performed a task in all of this. California has at all times had one thing of a “boom-or-bust hydrological economic system,” Horton instructed me, however the booms are getting even wetter and the busts even drier. Because the ambiance warms, it’s in a position to maintain increasingly more moisture—because of this hand-dryers blow heat air, to maximise the quantity of moisture that air can wick off your pores and skin—and atmospheric rivers develop wetter and wetter. Once they make landfall and deposit that moisture within the type of precipitation, the ensuing storms are extra intense.
These shifts, Gleick instructed me, have thrown off the historic patterns reservoir operators depend on to make essential selections. The trick is to stroll the fragile line between guaranteeing that there’s sufficient water saved by the point the dry season rolls round and guaranteeing that there isn’t an excessive amount of water saved too quickly, which might result in flooding. “We’ve to consider working the reservoirs otherwise,” Gleick mentioned. “They’re designed and operated for yesterday’s local weather, not for the local weather of immediately or tomorrow.”
Local weather change may be contributing to the chaos in a barely extra roundabout approach. The connection between warming temperatures and California’s longer, deadlier, extra damaging wildfire seasons has been properly documented lately. And even after the final embers are extinguished, wildfires alter the land they’ve burned for years to come back. Torched vegetation depart behind a waxy, water-repellent movie that renders fire-scarred soil much less absorbent, Horton instructed me. Hearth, in consequence, leaves California extra vulnerable to flooding. And by burning away the bushes and different vegetation that stabilize the soil, it makes floods extra prone to set off landslides.
This previous hearth season was blissfully quiet. However in mild of that, California’s present plight can really feel in a couple of approach like a really darkish punchline to a not-very-funny joke. What do you get after a summer time of respite from lethal wildfires? A winter of catastrophic flooding. And what do you get after years of desperation for water? A lot rain you’ll pray it should cease.

California
Filipino mom’s death galvanizes California community

HOMESICK. Caregiver Lorna Escusa was planning to come home for good to the Philippines when tragedy struck. —Facebook photo
LONG BEACH, California — On the eve of Mother’s Day here, the sons and daughters of the Filipino diaspora in this part of America are preparing a parade to honor the life of an illegal immigrant mother and widow from Manila killed by a hit-and-run driver last year.
Friends and community activists gathered on Friday afternoon (Saturday morning in Manila) at the Filipino Migrant Center (FMC) along Burnett Avenue here to remember Lorna Escusa, a 75-year-old Filipina caregiver, the victim of a hit-and-run last Sept. 4, on her way to the St. Lucy Catholic Church at the corner of Santa Fe Avenue and 23rd Street.
“Lorna was going to Mass that morning when the accident happened. Such a tragic fate for a member of our faith community,” said Fr. Budi Wardhana, the pastor at St. Lucy where some of the 20,000 Filipino immigrants in this city come to worship.
Wardhana visited Escusa as she lay comatose at St. Mary’s Hospital. It was the immigrant Catholic priest from Indonesia who administered the last rites to her.
Cause célèbre
“My heart broke when I learned that she had died. I was devastated,” said Nanette Apacible, a retired nurse and Escusa’s best friend.
Escusa’s death became a cause célèbre for a community made unsafe by disappearing street lighting and broken street signs which activists claim were responsible for her untimely death.
They say the money that should have been used for public infrastructure is being diverted to build sporting arenas for the 2028 Olympics.
“We deserve the right to confidently walk in our streets without fear for our lives,” said Theresa Jaranilla, one of the FMC officials.
As part of their call, they demand from city officials the immediate repair of old and neglected road infrastructure that endanger lives and limbs of the citizens here.


HONORING A MOM. Volunteers at the Filipino Migrant Center in Long Beach, California prepare for Saturday’s parade honoring Filipina caregiver Lorna Escusa. —Danny Petilla
Immigration crackdown
Escusa’s death has also galvanized the local Filipino community that is already threatened—some to the point of being traumatized—by the shadowy arrests of immigrants across America on orders of President Donald Trump with his policy of mass deportations.
The FMC’s unimposing office has become a sanctuary of sorts for Filipino TNTs (tago nang tago) migrants who are victims of human trafficking and illegal labor practices like wage theft and nonpayment of overtime work.
On this Friday afternoon, youthful volunteers at the center are preparing to honor the memory of Escusa for a parade on the eve of Mother’s Day.
Sacrifices for family
“She was a mother. That is all I need to know,” said 20-year-old Matthew Samar, one of the volunteers, driving the last nail to a placard he will use on Saturday’s parade.
“I think of my own mom as we celebrate her,” Samar said.
“She (Escusa) was living alone here in America. She was working hard every day to provide for her two sons and their families back in Manila,” added the 70-year-old Apacible, who hails from Kawit, Cavite province.


CAUSE CELEBRE. Volunteer Matthew Samar shows a sign he will carry for the parade to honor Filipina caregiver Lorna Escusa. —Danny Petilla
Boxes ready
After retiring as an employee of the Pag-Ibig Fund in Manila, Escusa got a visitor’s visa to the United States and arrived in California 11 years ago.
She overstayed her visa and started working as a caregiver to the elderly, earning decently by sometimes working around the clock, according to Apacible.
“Lorna was the ultimate testament of how a mother sacrifices for her loved ones. Her monthly remittances paid for her two sons, Michael and Jade, to finish their education,” Apacible said.
She said her friend—whose husband died in Manila in 2022 —had become increasingly despondent and miserable.
She was also fearful that she could be deported if Donald Trump wins the presidential elections, Apacible said.
Escusa’s death on that fateful September morning made all that immaterial.
After her remains were cremated, her friends went to her rented apartment to prepare all the things she had accumulated from working for 10 years in America.
They were surprised to find her belongings all bundled in balikbayan boxes that had been neatly piled up.
She was ready to go home.
California
California track meet turns to political rally over trans athletes as schools speak out vs. state

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A girls’ track meet in California was turned into a political rally on Saturday amid a growing controversy over a trans athlete who has dominated in the girls’ high-jump, long-jump and triple-jump this season.
The rally came less than two days after three of the state’s esteemed Christian high schools sent a letter to the California Interscholastic Federation (CIF) challenging its longstanding policy that allows biological males in girls’ sports.
JSerra Catholic High School, Orange Lutheran High School and Crean Lutheran High School sent a joint letter to the CIF Thursday, referencing the trans athlete who competed in Saturday’s state semifinal prelims.
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“For young women, CIF’s Gender Identity Policy means lost opportunities and an unlevel playing field. The consequences of this Policy will be felt this weekend as CIF’s state semi-final competitions for track and field events take place. Star female athletes, some of whom attend our schools, will soon compete in multiple track and field events against a male athlete who self-identifies as a female,” the letter read.
“CIF’s Gender Identity Policy also fosters an environment that is increasingly hostile to religious member schools. CIF’s expectation that all faith-based schools facilitate the CIF Gender Identity Policy puts religious schools in the untenable position of adhering to the tenets of their faith in their classrooms and communities but practicing something contrary to their faith on their athletic fields.”
The letter went on to suggest that some of the female athletes competing for the three Christian schools considered not competing against the trans athlete in Saturday’s semifinal prelims.
And then prior to Saturday’s meet at Yorba Linda High School, multiple girls’ athletes, parents and school officials spoke at a press conference organized by California Family Council outreach director Sophia Lorey.
“No matter how hard we train, how many hours we put in, reality will always set in that men and women are different,” said Olivia Viola of Crean Lutheran. “To me, this just doesn’t seem fair. CIF is doing nothing to protect us female athletes.”
The CIF is currently under investigation by the U.S. Department of Education for allowing trans athletes to compete in girls’ sports, and potential Title IX violations.
CALIFORNIA GIRL OPENS UP ON FIGHTING LEGAL AND POLITICAL BATTLE OVER TRANS ATHLETES AFTER LIFE-CHANGING PAIN
California was one of the first states to openly defy President Donald Trump’s “Keeping Men Out of Women’s Sports” executive order after he signed it on Feb. 5.
“The CIF provides students with the opportunity to belong, connect, and compete in education-based experiences in compliance with California law [Education Code section 221.5. (f)] which permits students to participate in school programs and activities, including athletic teams and competitions, consistent with the student’s gender identity, irrespective of the gender listed on the student’s records,” the CIF previously said in a statement to Fox News Digital.
California Governor Gavin Newsom said during an episode of his podcast that he believes trans athletes competing with girls is “deeply unfair.” But the governor still justified policies that enable it for the sake of empathy for the trans community.
The state has seen multiple controversies erupt over the past year regarding the issue, and many other residents and even some schools are taking stands against the state officials enforcing the inclusion policies.
The Redlands Unified school board in San Bernardino voted in late April to adopt a new policy that would keep transgender athletes out of girls’ sports.
A bipartisan survey by the Public Policy Institute of California found that the majority of California residents oppose biological male trans athletes competing in women’s sports.
That figure included more than 70% of the state’s school parents.
“Most Californians support requiring transgender athletes to compete on teams matching the sex they were assigned at birth,” the poll stated.
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“Solid majorities of adults (65%) and likely voters (64%) support requiring that transgender athletes compete on teams that match the sex they were assigned at birth, not the gender they identify with. An overwhelming majority of public school parents (71%) support such a requirement.”
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California
Decades-old death in Oregon potentially linked to notorious California serial killer

A man who was found dead along Interstate 5 in Oregon has been identified after nearly 45 years and police say a notorious California serial killer is the sole person of interest in the case.
The 30-year-old was identified Friday as Larry Eugene Parks. Oregon State Police spokesperson Kyle Kennedy said Randy Kraft, who has been dubbed the “Scorecard Killer,” is the only person under investigation for the 1980 killing.
“There’s some evidence that we’re processing to determine that link,” Kennedy said. “We are very confident that we have the correct person of interest.”
Kraft, now 80, was convicted in 1989 of brutalizing and killing 16 men over a decade in California and sentenced to death. He remains incarcerated at San Quentin State Prison and has denied killing anyone.
On July 18, 1980, police responded to a report of a body now identified as Parks along I-5 south of Portland near Woodburn. Police opened a homicide investigation at the time and unsuccessfully tried to identify the victim.
Parks, a Vietnam veteran whose family had lost contact with him in 1979, had last been seen in Pensacola, Florida, police said.
Kraft was pulled over in his vehicle on a California freeway in 1983 after a trooper spotted him driving erratically. In the passenger seat of the vehicle was a strangled U.S. Marine. In the trunk of Kraft’s vehicle was a coded list believed to tally 67 victims in California, Oregon and Michigan, according to police.
Prosecutors described Kraft, a former computer programmer, as a fetishist who kept some of the dismembered parts of his victims in his freezer.
In 2024, an Orange County Sheriff’s Department investigator reached out to the Oregon State Police Cold Case Unit and offered to help identify the remains using forensic investigative genetic genealogy. A genetic profile was developed from a blood sample and Parks’ identity was confirmed after possible family members submitted DNA profiles for comparison, according to police.
Until his identification last month, the circumstances of his disappearance were unknown to the his family, police said.
In 2023, the remains of a teenager believed to have been killed by Kraft in California were also identified using investigative genetic genealogy.
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