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California Leads Fight to Protect Abortion Access During Medical Emergencies

California Leads Fight to Protect Abortion Access During Medical Emergencies
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California Attorney General, Rob Bonta, co-led a multi-state coalition on Tuesday in a legal fight to protect Americans' access to abortion during life-threatening medical emergencies. 

In an amicus brief, the coalition supported the Biden administration’s defense of its Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA) guidance, which reaffirms hospital obligations by requiring physicians nationwide to perform abortions when necessary in emergency situations. 

In July 2022, Texas filed a lawsuit challenging EMTALA's guidance, and in August 2022, a judge in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas barred the guidance from being enforced in Texas. 

In response, California and the coalition wrote in their amicus brief that the district court's ruling, if upheld, would not only endanger Texas patients but would also have serious repercussions on health care systems in other states.

"Emergency treatment can mean the difference between life and death for a patient," Bonta said. 

“Those seeking to exclude abortion from emergency medical care are putting the lives of countless patients at risk. That is why I stand with my coalition partners in urging the Fifth Circuit to reverse the Texas court’s decision and secure critical emergency medical care for all. California will not stand idly by as anti-choice states like Texas trample on the rights and protections that allow people to live healthy, safe lives,” she added.

Every hospital in the United States that operates an emergency department and participates in Medicare is subject to EMTALA. Under the law, emergency rooms are required to provide all patients who have an emergency medical condition with the treatment necessary to save their lives. 

In June 2022, the Biden administration issued guidance reaffirming hospitals’ obligation to provide abortion services when necessary to stabilize a patient experiencing an emergency medical condition.

In a statement, the California Attorney General's Office said that the district court ruling blocking the implementation of the EMTALA guidance in Texas has already put the lives of multiple patients at risk by plunging providers into a climate of uncertainty and fear about the legal and criminal repercussions they may face for performing abortions on patients in emergency situations. 

In Texas, for example, a pregnant woman who suffered a miscarriage, she said, was forced to carry a dead fetus for two weeks because of her providers' fears of violating the law in the state.

Another Texas woman who went into premature labor at 18 weeks was forced to wait until she was too weak to walk, had a 103-degree fever and contracted sepsis, a life-threatening medical emergency, before her doctors agreed she was sick enough to legally end her pregnancy.

On March 10, 2023, the Biden Administration filed an appeal with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, asking it to overturn the Texas district court's ruling. 

The amicus brief was led by Attorney General Bonta and New York Attorney General Letitia James. They were joined by the attorneys general of Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Washington.

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Property Taxes Collected in San Mateo County Reach 1TP4Q3.3 Billion

Property taxes collected in San Mateo County totaled $3.3 billion for the 2021-22 fiscal year, an increase of $129 million, or 4 percent, over the prior year for 11 consecutive years. property tax growth.

That's according to the San Mateo County Executive's Office, which noted in a statement that the countywide 1 percent General Tax is vital to public services, totaling $2.7 billion, that local government agencies receive. 

Image: San Mateo County Executive's Office

About 51 percent of the general taxes collected are distributed to school districts, 26 percent to the county, 15 percent to cities/towns, 7 percent to special districts, and 1 percent to successor agencies. former development agencies.

He also said school parcel taxes and special charges from cities and special districts for services such as sewer maintenance, mosquito abatement and flood control totaling $342 million are included in property tax bills. 

Additional taxes to pay debt service amounts totaled $313 million, primarily paid for by voter-approved bonds from local school districts.

“It’s important to our team that we provide taxpayers and residents with visibility into the property tax dollars they pay and where those dollars go,” said Deputy Controller Kristie Silva.

In that regard, the official said that these taxes help fund the operations of local cities/towns, school districts, special districts and the county, which provide essential services to county residents. For his part, County Comptroller Juan Raigoza encouraged all interested residents to visit the web site your office for more information about property taxes and County finances.

You may be interested in: California takes another step against hate crimes and launches CA vs Hate

California takes another step against hate crimes and launches CA vs Hate

California takes another step against hate crimes and launches CA vs Hate
Image: cavshate.org

En respuesta al aumento de los delitos de odio y al comienzo del Mes de la Herencia de los Asiáticos e Isleños del Pacífico ‒AAPI‒, el gobernador Gavin Newsom, junto con el Departamento de Derechos Civiles de California ‒CRD‒, lanzaron oficialmente CA vs Hate, una nueva línea directa y sitio web estatal multilingüe que ofrece una opción de denuncia anónima y segura para víctimas y testigos de actos de odio.

El Programa CA vs Hate busca ser una respuesta directa al aumento de los delitos de odio denunciados en California, que en los últimos años alcanzó sus niveles más altos desde 2001, saltando casi un 33 por ciento de 2020 a 2021.

«Aquí en California, estamos enviando un mensaje inequívoco de que no se tolerará el odio», dijo Newsom. 

«Nos mantenemos firmes por una California para Todos y es importante que responsabilicemos a los perpetradores por sus acciones y proporcionemos recursos para aquellas personas que son víctimas de crímenes de odio. Ahora, los californianos tienen otra herramienta para garantizar que no solo se haga justicia, sino que las personas tengan acceso a recursos adicionales para ayudar a lidiar con las heridas persistentes que quedan después de que ocurra un crimen tan horrendo».


Image: cavshate.org

En su oportunidad, la esposa del gobernador, Jennifer Siebel Newsom, señaló que «es horrible que los crímenes de odio estén en aumento, así que quede claro: apoyamos a nuestras comunidades diversas y estamos comprometidos a garantizar que se sientan seguros y escuchados. Aquí no hay lugar para la intolerancia y la violencia alimentada por el odio».

El asambleísta Al Muratsuchi inició la conversación para crear una línea directa estatal para denunciar delitos de odio en 2021: este programa ayudará a las personas y comunidades que son objeto de odio, incluidos asiático-americanos, latinos, afroamericanos, personas LGBTQ+, minorías religiosas y otras comunidades que conforman la diversidad y fortaleza de California. 

Los servicios de la línea directa son confidenciales y gratuitos, independientemente del estatus migratorio.

Estos servicios se ofrecen de una manera culturalmente competente y ayudarán a las personas a identificar opciones y los siguientes pasos después de que haya ocurrido un incidente de odio o un crimen de odio. 

Los actos de odio se pueden denunciar en 15 idiomas diferentes a través del portal en línea y en más de 200 idiomas al llamar a la línea directa.

«Con el lanzamiento de la Línea y Red de Recursos Ca vs Hate, afirmamos inequívocamente que no hay hogar ni lugar para el odio en California», señaló Lourdes Castro Ramírez, secretaria de la Agencia de  Negocios, Servicios al Consumidor y Vivienda. 

«Estamos redoblando nuestro compromiso de combatir el odio al aprovechar la fuerza de nuestra diversidad y empoderar a los californianos con recursos y apoyo para prevenir y acabar con el odio en todas sus formas», agregó.

La línea directa también se complementará con una campaña de divulgación multilingüe, que enfatizará la participación de la comunidad, además de tener como objetivo apoyar los esfuerzos que fomentan la presentación de informes y el acceso a los recursos a través de anuncios de servicio público específicos, marketing directo y otras actividades. 


Image: cavshate.org

CA vs Hate también buscará superar los desafíos de la denuncia, ya sea por temor a represalias, falta de confianza u otros problemas, al ofrecer a las personas objeto de odio un enfoque centrado en la comunidad que no requiere compromiso con el sistema legal penal.

La línea y red de recursos CA vs Hate son para denunciar incidentes y delitos motivados por el odio que no son de emergencia. 

Los informes se pueden realizar de forma anónima llamando al (833) 866-4283 o al 833-8-NO-HATE, de lunes a viernes de 9:00 a 18:00 horas o en línea en cualquier momento. 

Las personas que deseen denunciar un delito de odio a la policía de inmediato o que se encuentren en peligro inminente, llamen al 911. 

Para obtener más información sobre CA vs Hate, los interesados pueden visitar www.cavshate.org

This publication was supported in whole or part by funding provided by the State of California, administered by the California State Library.

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They recognize 20 years of the founding of the Castellano Family and its support for the Latino community in Silicon Valley

Photo: P360P

By Pamela Cruz and Anna Lee Mraz / Peninsula 360 Press

Silicon Valley Community Foundation ‒SVCF‒ recognized and celebrated the 20th anniversary of the founding of the Castellano Family at an event on May 4 at the De Anza Hotel in downtown San José, a non-profit organization that was born out of luck and love for roots, and that provided opportunities and support to the Latino community in Santa Clara County for two decades.

"It was all the fruit of the love between my parents, of the love my mother had for her community," said Armando Castellano, Emeritus Trustee of the Castellano Family Foundation to Gina Dalma, Executive Vice President of Community Action, Policies and Strategies of the Silicon Valley Community Foundation, about how the organization that closed its doors after 20 years began.

During the talk, Armando Castellano highlighted the love that his father Alcario always had for his mother Carmen and continued his legacy even when she was gone.

With a completely Latino focus, this foundation created by Alcario and Carmen Castellano, who earned 141 million dollars in California in 2001, money with which they decided to help the community to which they belong, the Latino community, was a pillar in the Silicon Valley community.

Photo: P360P
Photo: P360P

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20 years have resulted in thousands of scholarships for children, youth and adults who promoted Latin arts and culture in the region. 

In addition, they added programs focused on helping low-income, at-risk, or incarcerated Latino youth achieve their educational goals, such as Summer Bridge, mentoring and tutoring to promote retention and follow-up; and to promote awareness and knowledge among parents/families about university requirements, academic support, and the academic socialization of their children.

Likewise, over the course of two decades the Castellanos created strategies to promote Latino leadership and diversity such as leadership development focused on Latinas and youth, training/education programs designed to increase the diversity of local nonprofit boards, and collaboration with nonprofit partners to create or expand paid internships for Latinos.

At the tribute to the Castellano family, it was announced that their foundation is ending its work and a $1 million fund was allocated to SVCF to support Latinx leadership and Latinx-serving nonprofits in San Mateo and Santa Clara counties. 

At the nonprofit panel, Manuel Santamaría, SVCF’s vice president of community action, Diane Ortiz, executive director of Youth Alliance, and Dr. Adriana Ayala, executive director of Chicana Latina Foundation, highlighted that only 1 percent of philanthropic resources support Latinx organizations, and called for increased funding for Latinx-led and Latinx-serving organizations.

This, they specified, so that these communities can build their power and realize a bright future.

To support the LatinXCEL Fund, launched in 2021 by SVCF and the Castellano Family Foundation, please contact donate@siliconvalleycf.org. The LatinXCEL Fund seeks to raise $10 million over five years to support nonprofits and leaders serving the Latinx community in Santa Clara and San Mateo counties.

Photo: P360P

You may be interested in: Makerspace celebrates its first anniversary at the Redwood City Library

5 men wounded in shooting in Redwood City

5 men wounded in shooting in Redwood City
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This Sunday, May 7, at around 4:30 a.m., a shooting occurred in Redwood City, in the 400 block of Redwood Avenue, where five men were injured, reported the city Police Department.

Authorities said in a statement that an unidentified male suspect approached a group of people drinking on the sidewalk and then opened fire on them with a 9mm handgun, wounding four adult men and a 16-year-old boy. 

All of the injured were taken to the hospital with serious but non-life-threatening injuries.

The Redwood City Police Department He said he is actively working on this case in which, so far, no arrests have been made.

Authorities have asked anyone with information about this case to contact Detective James Schneider at 650-780-7607.

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Huddart Park will be partially closed for annual fire training

By Bay City News.

Parts of Huddart Park in Woodside will be closed this week due to an annual multi-agency wildfire training.

From May 8-13, fire departments from Redwood City, Woodside and Menlo Park will be using the county park to prepare for this summer's wildfire season.

Residents and park users can expect to see fire trucks and hear equipment in some areas of the park. Helicopters will fly over the area and practice landing and taking off at the site, park officials said.

Firefighters will be in the Redwood, Meadow, Werder and Madrone areas from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Residents are advised to avoid the marked areas.

This training program will not involve fire or smoke.

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8 Killed in Texas Mall Shooting by White Supremacist

8 killed in mass shooting in Allen, Texas at the hands of white supremacist
Image of Allen Premium Outlet google maps.

One more. This Saturday, May 6, a mass shooting in Allen, Texas, claimed the lives of innocent people.

It was Saturday afternoon when a gunman opened fire at Allen Premium Outlets, a shopping center on the outskirts of Dallas, Texas. Eight people were killed and seven more were injured by bullets fired by 33-year-old Mauricio Garcia.

According to local officials, the man was interacting with neo-Nazi and white supremacist content online.

The horrific act occurred around 3:30 p.m., when the outdoor mall was packed with people. Videos circulating on social media show people running in the opposite direction of the shooter and seeking shelter.

Others ran through the parking lot, not sure what was happening.

Garcia, the perpetrator, died at the scene after being fatally shot by a police officer who was on an unrelated duty at the mall, who upon hearing gunshots ran in the direction they were coming from and killed the attacker.

The Allen Police Department said in a statement that they, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the Texas Rangers and the Texas Department of Public Safety are conducting a joint investigation and providing ongoing security at the mall.

In this regard, he said that the agencies are working to provide citizens who have personal belongings and vehicles in the area of the shopping center with a safe and fast plan to recover their belongings.

According to Allen, Texas, Police Chief Brian E. Harvey, the perpetrator acted alone, and the act is not yet classified as an act of domestic terrorism.

In this regard, President Joseph Biden and his wife regretted and condemned the events.

"Eight Americans, including children, were killed yesterday in Allen, Texas, the latest act of gun violence to devastate our nation. Jill and I are praying for their families and those critically injured. We are grateful to the first responders who acted quickly and bravely," the president tweeted.

He also said that the attacker had tactical equipment and was armed with an AR-15 rifle.

"Such an attack is too shocking to be so familiar. We need more action, faster to save lives," he wrote.

“Once again, Congress must send me a bill banning assault weapons and high-capacity magazines. Enact universal background checks. Require secure storage. End immunity for gun manufacturers. I will sign it immediately. We need nothing less to keep our streets safe,” Biden stressed.

At the time, the governor of California, Gavin Newsom, reproached the little effort of Congress for gun control on his Twitter account.

“Is this freedom?? To get shot in a mall? Shot in a school? Shot in a church? Shot in a movie theater? We have become a nation that focuses more on the right to kill than the right to live. This is not what the American people want. Do your damn job, Congress.”

For its part, the Mexican Ministry of Foreign Affairs reported on its Twitter account that the Allen City Police has confirmed that ‒so far‒ there are no Mexican victims among the deceased or among the wounded, and deeply regretted the tragic shooting.

This publication was supported in whole or part by funding provided by the State of California, administered by the California State Library.

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Makerspace celebrates its first anniversary at the Redwood City Library

Makerspace celebrates its first anniversary at the Redwood City Library
Photo: P360P

The space dedicated to collaborative creation in technology, art and crafts, Makerspace celebrates its first anniversary in the Redwood City Public Library.

The Makerspace opened in early March 2022, following years of effort by the Redwood City Library Foundation, and is open seven days a week.

According to its website, “The Library’s Makerspace is designed to provide community members with equitable access to technology and other tools that may not be readily accessible or affordable to individuals.”

This collaborative space allows people and groups of all ages to come together to create, experiment and learn about technology, computers, art, science, electronics and sewing.

What's in the Makerspace

  • In terms of technology, the Makerspace has 3D printers, digital modeling and design software, and the opportunity to learn about robotics and electronics.
  • For those interested in sewing, the collaborative space has sewing and embroidery machines, as well as tools for creating all kinds of crafts.
  • To collaborate, the Makerspace offers whiteboards, screen monitors, space for video conferencing and audio recording, and reconfigurable tables and seating.

While the space offers all these benefits, there are still improvements that can be made.

For Gene Suarez, senior library assistant at the Redwood City Public Library, one of the tools that could help is more podcast-friendly microphones and a wider variety of editing software, since they currently use free software like Audacity.

And it is that in this collaborative space different activities are offered such as sewing classes, The portal to creativity —where some classes are taught in Spanish—, classes for learning English, workshops, coding clubs and even activities related to STEAM areas —Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts and Mathematics—.

In this regard, Suárez pointed out that the photography classes are given in Spanish and have had a good reception from the public; as well as the coding club and the special robotics club for children and adolescents from 3 to 18 years old. However, adults also tend to attend these activities.

"Whatever they are doing, they are doing a good job," Suárez acknowledged of the classes and activities taught in Spanish, such as photography classes. 

Those interested can access the Makerspace at the Redwood City Public Library located at 1044 Middlefield Rd in Redwood City.

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Artificial intelligence could be the future of humanity

Artificial intelligence could be the future of humanity
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Over the past year, Artificial Intelligence (AI) has become one of the most important topics of conversation across all media, and there is a chance that it could be the future of humanity.

AI has proven to be a useful tool for education, journalism, science and art, however Lina Khan, president of the Federal Trade Commission The FTC recently noted that while AI can bring about great innovations, it can also “turbocharge fraud and automate discrimination.”

Artificial Intelligence offers users the possibility of finishing work faster, complementing tasks, creating pieces of art, writing texts, perfecting and facilitating different activities of daily life and even having a conversation, however this has generated discussions about the advantages and disadvantages that this has for humanity.

Hector Palacios, scientific researcher at ServiceNow Research, he explained at a press conference organized by Ethnic Media Services in which experts met to discuss the phenomenon that has caused AI, that Artificial Intelligence is "a computer program" which uses another type of language that comes from mathematics.

"We have texts that look like they were written by humans, but they are not," Palacios said. 

And today there are programs like ChatGPT, which is a chat system developed by the company Open AI –which is dedicated to Artificial Intelligence research– that is based on the GPT-4 AI language model and that automatically generates responses in a chatbot.

Despite all the benefits that Artificial Intelligence offers, Palacios pointed out that there are risks such as misinformation, manipulation and even polarization due to the generation of content with these tools.

"We have to think about the dangers and the opportunities it offers," he said.

Sean McGregor, PhD in machine learning, founder of Responsible AI Collaborative, chief technical advisor for IBM Watson AI XPRIZE and creator of the AI incident database, noted that there are racial biases in Artificial Intelligence that have caused conflicts for some communities.

McGregor showed a video in which Joy Boulamwini shows through poetry how AI does not recognize the gender of people from communities of color.

“Let’s say the data itself is perfectly unbiased, it does and can produce a good performing system. The question remains as to how the camera is adjusted. As for contrast, is it going to be brighter or darker, which changes the performance of the system for people with different skin tone which is completely outside the scope of what the data is expressing?” he questioned.

McGregor also noted that these types of problems stem from those who have the power to make the decisions that lead to racial biases in AI.

Artificial Intelligence in science fiction 

For some time now, many science fiction writers have included Artificial Intelligence in their stories and have managed to fascinate the world with films such as Her, Terminator, Blade Runner or 2001: A Space Odyssey. 

Chris Dede, a researcher at the Harvard Graduate School of Education and associate director of research at the National AI Institute for Adult Learning and Online Education, said that artificial intelligence has been a part of science fiction for decades, and that in addition to causing fascination, it has also managed to cause fear in some.

“When I was a graduate student, I saw the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey, where AI goes crazy and starts killing astronauts. But the other theme in science fiction is AI as a companion, a complementary relationship between human and AI. We see, for example, in Star Trek: The Next Generation, where we have Picard, the wise human captain of a starship, and then we have Data, who looks like a person, but is actually an AI-based android,” he said. 

Finally, Dede pointed out that “AI is like a mirror that we put on the internet and it reflects what it sees of us –human beings– and society.”

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Lake Tahoe water the clearest in 40 years thanks to return of native plankton

Image: Brant Allen, UC Davis TERC

According to the Davis Tahoe Environmental Research Center According to the University of California's TERC, during the last five months of 2022, Lake Tahoe was the clearest since the 1980s, thanks in large part to a resurgence of the lake's native zooplankton. 

Researchers at the center emphasized that the process is still in its early stages and they expect the improvement in clarity to continue in 2023. 

Image: University of California, Davis Tahoe Environmental Research Center (TERC).

The main factors affecting lake clarity are the concentration of particles in a specific size range, such as silt and clay, and tiny phytoplankton or algae. Cyclotella phytoplankton, a single-celled algae, is found in this size range and has affected clarity in most years.

Image: University of California, Davis Tahoe Environmental Research Center (TERC).

Zooplankton are small, microscopic animals. Some zooplankton, particularly Daphnia and Bosmina, are specialized to consume particles in this critical size range.

“Daphnia and bosmina largely disappeared from the lake after they were wiped out following the introduction of Mysis shrimp in the 1960s,” said Geoffrey Schladow, director of the UC Davis Tahoe Environmental Research Center. “In late 2021, the Mysis population unexpectedly plummeted, and it took 12 months for Daphnia and Bosmina to build up their numbers and begin their natural cleanup.”

Other factors are known to influence changes in clarity from year to year. These include the magnitude of runoff, warming of the lake surface and the depth at which the lake was mixed in the previous winter. The report examined all of these factors and concluded that only the change in the zooplankton community could explain the magnitude of this year's change.

Water clarity is measured as the depth at which a 10-inch white disk, called a Secchi disk, remains visible when submerged in water. 

In 2022, Lake Tahoe's average annual clarity was 71.7 feet compared to 61 feet in 2021. The key finding for 2022 was the large improvement in lake clarity from August to December, when the average Secchi depth was 80.6 feet. This coincided with the highest numbers of the zooplankton Daphnia and Bosmina.

The states of California and Nevada, which share a border on Lake Tahoe, are actively working to restore the lake's clarity to its historic 97.4 feet.

“We expect the impact of Daphnia and Bosmina to grow through 2023, and clarity may return to 1970s levels, despite the large runoff expected from this year’s record snowpack,” said TERC ship captain and Secchi disk observer Brant Allen. 

"These events support the hypothesis we put forward several years ago that the food web is an important factor in controlling lake clarity," he added.  

However, the assistance provided by Daphnia and Bosmina plankton may only be short-term, the centre said in a statement.

In turn, it is expected that mysis shrimp populations will recover as they consume Daphnia and Bosmina, so that clarity will return to what has been seen in the last 20 years.

Image: University of California, Davis Tahoe Environmental Research Center (TERC).

“Future management actions should explicitly seek to incorporate ways to control the Mysis population,” said Geoffrey Schladow. “We have a short window of time to monitor the lake in the absence of Mysis and then track the impacts of its return on lake clarity.”

This would add to the strenuous efforts being made to keep fine particulate matter and nutrients out of Lake Tahoe. Management agencies in the watershed report that more than 500,000 pounds of fine sediment and other clarity-impairing pollutants are kept out of the lake each year through erosion control projects and road maintenance.

TERC scientists are currently monitoring zooplankton communities through donor funding. They are also working with local fishing guides to monitor changes in fish. Kokanee salmon, for example, are expected to be larger in 2023, as daphnia are their preferred food source.

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