I went to Union Station today to document the Oscars. Instead, I ended up talking with a neighbor, Ash (they/them), who said that the event had prevented them and others with disabilities who live nearby from accessing Union Station for the last month. 🧵
Ash made a direct address to Academy members, asking if the ceremony was worth the cost to the community.
Ash says that access to Union Station has been limited for nearly a month. The event also limited parking in the front of the station, one of the more convenient parking areas.
None of the neighbors were consulted in advance of the closures, Ash says. They were given a few days notice via email.
Ash points out that numerous other venues are close by that would not disrupt use of a public utility.
At no point in the last month had Ash heard from city or county staff or representatives, they say.
Ash, who is Black, adds that they have felt afraid going outside their home given the increased private security and police presence.
There were no flyers or other forms of information telling the public what would be closed and when, Ash says.
“There’s been no easy to access information on what people need to do to plan ahead.”
“Who agreed that it was appropriate to use this public space for this for-profit event at the detriment to the community?” Ash asks. “Who signed off on that?”
After our interview, Ash texted me a few photos their girlfriend took of the bus stop on Caesar Chavez & Alameda showing multiple semi trucks blocking the stop. They believe the trucks were from the Oscars.
I forgot to tag Ash earlier in the thread. Thank you again so much for speaking with me! @somuchpanash
Here is a thread of all of my clips with captions. Super thankful to @i_miss_the_days for putting this together and for others who made sure that captions were available. I'll prioritize captions going forward whenever possible!
Additional context: Reporter @ACatWithNews spoke with a local unhoused man who lived in a park near Union Station. He said that he was told to leave in the lead up to the Oscars and was not offered housing or shelter.
This map that supposedly contradicts Ash has been upvoted a bunch on Reddit, so I asked Ash about it.
First, Ash says neither they nor their roommates got it. They acknowledge they could have missed it, but that they saw no additional signage to point them toward relocated entrances.
Ash also points out that the relocated ADA entrance was still not accessible to them.
“How is it accessible if you can’t go directly there,” they tell me.
Ash says that accessibility means “having protocol in advance to not unit burden disabled people who aren’t asking for privilege or priority, but access.”
Finally, although Ash is only one voice, other neighbors voiced similar complaints as them.
As @jessicagelt reported that day, a worker at the COVID testing site at Union described the Oscars as “a fiasco.” The neighbor behind the “Oscars Suck” sign told Jessica, “For weeks it has been a nightmare of construction before dawn every single day.” latimes.com/entertainment-…
Filmmaker Sean Meredith witnessed a man in a wheelchair try to get to the station, only to be told he had to “go the equivalent of 10 blocks to get into the station that’s right in front of him.”
Happening now: large crowd in support of abortion rights at Pershing Square in downtown Los Angeles.
Illustrating just how many protests are happening today: Just as one group leaves Pershing Square for City hall, hundreds more march by Pershing Square.
Hundreds of protesters are marching onto the 110 freeway
The other week, the @nypost ran a story about concern over crime in Beverly Hills. It quotes a resident saying her neighbor’s house was “firebombed with Molotov cocktails” during the 2020 BLM protests. Neither BHPD nor BHFD could find any evidence of this happening.
BHPD Lt. Giovanni Trejo told me "I tried every buzz word I can think of. It is possible it’s in the system, but it was entered under a different title."
BHFD Deputy Chief Joe Matsch said the most recent record for a Molotov cocktail he could find was Nov. 5, 2019.
It took both agencies time to go through their systems and run down possibilities before they could respond to me. In that time, the article circulated across the web and within a community already shaken by legitimate tragedy.
Twitter locked me out of my account for nearly 2 days because of false claims of violating its new policy on posting private media. Both reported tweets are from an anti-mask protest & have clear news value. I have reached out to Twitter for comment.
The first reported Tweet shows a protester calling a shopper at Ralph’s a “mask Nazi.” This took place at a “maskless shopping” protest in January that subsequently received major media attention after @emilyytayylor and my reporting.
The second tweet shows the same protester, a rightwing activist and videographer, refusing to leave the Westfield Century City Mall, telling a mall official that “no other group is oppressed like Trump supporters.” He compares Trump supporters to Black people in the 40s.
New in @BHCourier: I got the arrest data for BHPD's Rodeo Drive Team, a task force charged with policing the Business District after an uptick in calls. The subject of a proposed class action by @AttorneyCrump, RDT made 90 arrests, 80 of whom were Black. beverlyhillscourier.com/2021/10/24/bhp…
This number is lower than the widely-cited 106 arrests with 105 arrests of Black individuals claimed in the lawsuit.
However, the data shows that BHPD made 107 arrests for unemployment insurance fraud, 99 of which were of Black people.
This figure includes arrests by the RDT, but also adds in arrests by officers not on the task force.
A group of anti-vaccine/anti-vaccine mandate activists protested at Walk to School Day in Beverly Hills today. Protesters followed Mayor Bob Wunderlich from the civic center to Hawthorne Elementary School, engaging in heated exchanges with parents.
In the morning around 8:15, the group confronted Mayor Robert Wunderlich. He proposed that three members of the group meet him in the afternoon to allow him to walk to school with parents and kids.
A number of Beverly Hills Police Department officers provided security throughout the event.
UCLA anesthesiologist Dr. Chris Rake, a COVID-19 vaccine mandate opponent, was escorted out of the UCLA medical plaza yesterday and placed on unpaid administrative leave for refusing to get vaccinated or request an exemption.
“I’m willing to go lose everything…even my life.”
UCLA Health said in a statement that it was acting in accordance with the state public health order and UC policy.
Dr. Rake has not responded to a request for comment or to additional questions.