California
Día de los Muertos events in Southern California
Here’s a list of 2025 Día de los Muertos events around Southern California. Share your Día de los Muertos celebrations with #abc7eyewitness!
Día de los Muertos Family Day
October 8, 12 p.m.
La Plaza de Cultura y Artes
501 N Main St., Los Angeles
The dead come to life at LA Plaza! Watch performances that pay homage to the dead through music and dance.
díadelosmuertosfamilyday.com
Panteón Fest x Pipiripau
October 11, 12 p.m. – 9 p.m.
Heritage Square
715 South A Street, Oxnard
Celebrate our second annual Day of the Dead festival with a lineup of activities, including a desfilada procession, Aztec dance, musical performances, a theatrical play, and more!
panteonfestpipiripau.com
Downtown Día de los Muertos
Oct. 25 – Nov. 2
200 N Grand Ave, Los Angeles
Join at Gloria Molina Grand Park, which transforms into a space of remembrance, healing, and celebration with altars, art, music, and community gatherings.
downtowndíadelosmuertos.com
Día de los Muertos Festival
October 25 – Nov. 2
Olvera Street
A nine-day festival, with a nightly procession, community altars on display, and entertainment.
díadelosmuertosfestival.com
Día De Los Muertos at the Pier
Santa Monica Pier
November 1-2
Santa Monica Pier pays tribute to the cultural tradition of Día de los Muertos – Day of the Dead- with a two-day public art installation taking place from November 1st through November 2nd, 2025. The sixth annual Santa Monica Pier’s Día de los Muertos Celebration honors people, places, and ideas that are important to Santa Monican’s through free, family-friendly programming.
díadelosmuertoscelebration.com
Día y Noche de los Muertos
Nov. 1, three time slots: 1:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m., 4:30 p.m. – 9:00 p.m ., and 9:30 p.m. – 1:30 a.m.
Hollywood Forever Cemetery
6000 Santa Monica Blvd., Los Angeles
This all-day and night event will feature a children’s plaza, altars, art exhibitions, Aztecs, folk dances, performers, arts, and food!
díaynochedelosmuertos.com
Downey Dia de los Muertos Festival
Oct. 29
11111 Brookshire Ave, Downey
Now in its 10th year, Downey Dia de los Muertos features live music, ballet folklorico, Aztec dancers, car altar displays, papel picado, calaveras, face painting, food trucks, and more. No tickets required.
downeydíadelosmuertos.com
Día De Muertos Family Festival
Nov. 1, 6:00 p.m. – 10:00 p.m.
Catalina Museum
26101 Magic Mountain Pkwy, Valencia
Families and friends of all ages are invited to experience the colorful Mexican tradition celebrating life and death while honoring family members and friends who are no longer with us. Event features: Kids art project, local food vendors, tequila tasting, live music and performances, and the 2025 Barbie Signature Collection Dia de Muertos doll raffle.
catalinamuseum.org
Los Muertos 5k
Nov. 1
Historic Olvera Street
Downtown Los Angeles
Run and celebrate on the Day of the Dead. Tour historic Olvera Street and enjoy music along the course, beautiful finisher medals, and a post-race Dia de los Muertos celebration.
losmuertos5k.com
Riverside Day Of The Dead
Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025, from 1 p.m. to 10 p.m., through Sunday, Nov. 2, 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Downtown Riverside
Market St. between University Ave. & 14th St.
Celebrate the 20-year anniversary in Riverside with art, altars, food, performers, lucha libre, and more!
riversidedayofthedead.com
Viva la Vida Santa Ana
Nov. 2, from 2 p.m. to 10:00 p.m.
Bowers Museum
2002 North Main Street, Santa Ana, CA 92706
Enjoy live performances, art making, face painting, and complimentary treats at the Bowers Museum.
mexicandayofthedeadbowersmuseum.com
If you know about a great local Día de los Muertos event, share it with us on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram using #abc7eyewitness!
Copyright © 2025 KABC Television, LLC. All rights reserved.
California
Opinion: California is about to get a windfall. Let’s not blow it.
The IPOs of SpaceX, OpenAI and Anthropic could deliver billions of dollars to California’s coffers.
We’ve seen this movie before.
In 2022, California recorded a nearly $100 billion surplus, saved just $10 billion in its rainy day fund and then spent the rest. Two years later, a $56 billion deficit loomed.
Now, with the state facing ongoing operating deficits of more than $10 billion, we’re back in familiar territory.
The coming IPO windfall is a rare second chance. But we’ll only benefit from it if we first fix the structural flaw that’s caused us to squander every previous boom — a budget reserve that isn’t built to hold what we put in it.
The stakes this time are higher than ever. The war in Iran raised recession risk, and the federal government is systematically dismantling the funding streams California has depended on for decades.
When Washington retreats, Sacramento has to choose: cut services, raise taxes or have enough saved to bridge the gap. Right now, we don’t have enough saved.
We’re not outside observers wringing our hands. We helped shape the fiscal architecture the state is now straining against, and we’re here to say: It needs to be rebuilt.
As California state controller, one of us campaigned alongside Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to pass Proposition 58 in 2004 — creating California’s first Budget Stabilization Account. The other authored the Assembly Constitutional Amendment that became Proposition 2 in 2014 — the stronger, harder-to-raid replacement that voters approved with 69% support.
California’s tax system is the envy of progressive states and the nightmare of budget directors. We tax the wealthy at high rates, capture enormous capital gains revenue in boom years and then discover — every single time — that the peak doesn’t last.
If California treats the IPO windfall from SpaceX, Anthropic and OpenAI as permanent revenue, our state would repeat exactly the mistake we made four years ago.
Gov. Gavin Newsom and Assemblymember Avelino Valencia have each proposed important reforms to strengthen the fund. First, they call for requiring the state to make deposits until the fund reaches 20% of the general fund total, rather than the current 10%. Second, they propose changing an arcane accounting rule that treats saving for future downturns as spending.
We see one additional opportunity to make the rainy day fund even stronger.
If we want a larger budget reserve, we have to do more than merely allow it — we need to require it. Proposition 58 taught us everything we need to know on this front: Between 2004 and 2014, with that proposition fund in place, only two deposits were made. If we want consistent deposits during the boom times, they can’t be optional.
These reforms should be a win-win for the California Legislature. A larger reserve is the most durable protection that public sector workers, social service recipients and education advocates have against the kind of emergency cuts that have repeatedly gutted programs during downturns.
It’s also the strongest argument against tax increases in a recession because you don’t need to raise taxes if you actually save during the booms.
Building a stronger rainy day fund isn’t the cautious choice. It’s the visionary one — the closest thing we have to investing in the next generation of Californians.
We built the last rainy day fund because we’d lived through the consequences of not having one. We’re making the same argument again, for the same reason except now the stakes are higher. This time, the federal backstop is weaker, and the next storm is closer than it looks.
Fix the fund this year. The next generation of Californians will thank us for it.
Mike Gatto served in the state Assembly between 2010 and 2016, and he authored the measure that created California’s current rainy day fund. Steve Westly served as state controller between 2003 and 2007, and he co-championed Proposition 58, California’s original rainy day fund. Westly chairs the 21st Century Alliance, a nonpartisan organization focused on solutions to the state’s most pressing challenges.
California
Shooting at a Northern California library kills 2, and a suspect is in custody
CHICO, Calif. — A shooting at a library in Northern California on Monday left two people dead and a suspect is in custody, according to police.
Police responded to a 911 call soon after 5 p.m. in which the sounds of gun shots and people screaming could be heard coming from inside the Chico branch of the Butte County Library, Billy Aldridge, the city’s chief of police, said during a news conference.
Once officers were inside the library, the suspect fled out of the back, he said. Additional law enforcement behind the library took the suspect into custody, according to Aldridge.
“The incident this evening was obviously very sad, traumatic for a lot of people. Very traumatic for our community,” he said.
The streets around the library were closed temporarily and a family reunification center was set up for the people who were inside the building.
A child was also taken to the hospital with a minor injury.
Aldridge said there is no serious threat to the public and law enforcement are investigating the shooting.
The police didn’t release the suspect’s name nor details on what prompted the shooting. Law enforcement said they believe the shooter acted alone.
Law enforcement are also not releasing the names of the people killed until next of kin have been notified.
The county urged the public to avoid the area and said all Butte County library branches will be closed Tuesday.
The county in a post on Facebook offered “deepest condolences to everyone affected, including the victims, their loved ones, library staff, and all those impacted by this heartbreaking incident.”
Copyright © 2026 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
California
One child dead, another hospitalized after dog attack at Central Park in California City
CALIFORNIA CITY, Calif. (KERO) — A 12-year-old boy is dead and another child was hospitalized after two unleashed dogs attacked a group of children at Central Park in California City on Friday, June 18.
California City Mayor Edwin Hawkins said police responded to the scene after reports that four children had been mauled.
Fernando Torres Moreno, 12, jumped into a nearby lake to escape the charging dogs. Officers pulled Fernando from the water, and he was taken to the hospital, where he died the next day.
A second child suffered serious, though non-life-threatening, dog bite wounds and has since been released from the hospital. Two additional children were shaken but did not require medical treatment.
Authorities say the dogs, both mixed breed, were off-leash but in the presence of their owner when the attack unfolded.
The investigation remains active and ongoing. No arrests have been made.
This story was reported on-air by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.
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