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May 1, 2026 LCCN

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LOS CERRITOS

Winner of Nineteen LA Press Club Awards from 2012-2021 Serving Cerritos and ten other surrounding communities • May 1, 2026 • Vol. 41, No. 26 • LOSCERRITOSNEWS.NET

Norwalk-La Mirada USD Deal for Controversial Attorney Dies After Public Scrutiny After an LCCN report published before the meeting raised red flags, Norwalk-La Mirada trustees refused to advance the $240,000 Sarega contract without a second motion. By Brian Hews The Norwalk-La Mirada Unified School District’s proposed $240,000-a-year legal services contract with Sarega Law, APC abruptly collapsed this week after a failed board vote—marking a dramatic reversal for a deal that Andrew Sarega had been quietly placed on the consent calendar. The agreement, which would have paid attorney Andrew Sarega $20,000 per month for general counsel services, was initially

slated for routine approval with other non-controversial items. But trustees Espie Free and Becky Langenwalter pulled the contract from the consent calendar, forcing a public discussion and separate vote. What followed underscored the growing discomfort surrounding the hire. Board President Rudy Cancio attempted to revive the contract by bringing it forward for approval. However, when the motion was made, it failed to receive a second from any other trustee—effectively killing the proposal on the spot. Under standard parliamentary procedure, a motion without a second cannot proceed to a vote, rendering the contract dead on arrival. The collapse comes after Los Cerritos Community News raised significant concerns about both the cost and the candidate. District documents showed the contract included not only the

See NLMUSD, Page 4

Facing 25% Policing Cost Surge, Santa Fe Springs Pulls Plug on Whittier PD Contract City cites cost control, local oversight, and flexibility as key drivers behind police transition. By Brian Hews

SANTA FE SPRINGS — The City of Santa Fe Springs, California will establish its own municipal police department, with full operations set to begin March 1, 2028, ending more than three decades of contracted law enforcement services in a move driven in part by rising costs, according to city officials and sources familiar with the discussions. For more than 30 years, the city has contracted with the Whittier Police Department for policing services, following an earlier arrangement with the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department. The current contract is valued at about $18 million annually. Sources told Los Cerritos Community News that the contract was set to increase by 9 percent this year, followed by 8 percent increases in each of the next two years—pushing annual

Community Pride Shines at Hawaiian Gardens Parade HAWAIIAN GARDENS ELEMENTARY: Students, staff, and parents from Hawaiian Gardens Elementary School—an award-winning campus—march proudly during the city’s 62nd Annual Anniversary Parade, celebrating community pride, education, and local achievement.

Hawaiian Gardens Draws Thousands for 62nd Anniversary Parade By Brian Hews

costs toward roughly $23 million within three years if the city remained under the agreement. City officials said those escalating costs, combined with a desire for greater local control, factored heavily into the decision. “This was not a decision made lightly,” said Mayor Joe Angel Zamora. “After extensive review and discussion, the Council believes that establishing a Santa Fe Springs Police Department is the best longterm fiscally responsible approach to ensure exceptional, responsive, and community-focused public safety services.” The transition to an in-house department will take approximately 22 months and will include hiring and training personnel, acquiring equipment, developing policies, and establishing facilities needed for full-service operations. The department is expected to include patrol, investigations, traffic enforcement, and community engagement functions, along with coordination with existing public safety and code compliance teams. Officials emphasized that

HAWAIIAN GARDENS — The City of Hawaiian Gardens, California celebrated its 62nd anniversary with a packed parade that drew thousands of residents, families, and community groups to city streets in one of the largest turnouts in recent years. The annual parade showcased the city’s schools, businesses, and public safety agencies, with a procession that highlighted student achievements, local entrepreneurship, and the diverse neighborhoods that make up the community. Marching groups, family floats, and civic organizations joined city officials in a display of unity and hometown pride. Mayor Maria Teresa Del Rio said the event reflects more than just a milestone. “The anniversary parade is more than just a celebration; it is a statement about who Hawaiian Gardens is, where we’ve been, and where we’re going,” Del Rio said. “For over 62 years, Hawaiian Gardens has been built on heart, hard work, and family, on neighbors who look out for one another.” She added that the parade continues to serve as a central tradition for the city, bringing together generations of residents while highlighting ongoing progress. “This parade is our tradition. It’s our pride. It’s our community coming together, not just to celebrate our history, but to

See POLICE , Page 10

See PARADE, Page 8

Proposed SSI Rule Could Cut Checks for Up to 70,000 in Los Angeles County Advocates warn cuts could push vulnerable residents into deeper poverty and strain local economies. By Brian Hews A proposed federal rule change pushed by the Trump administration could slash monthly disability payments for tens of thousands of Los Angeles County residents, targeting some of the region’s poorest households— those where disabled adults or seniors live with family simply to survive. Nationwide, the impact could be sweeping. As many as 400,000 Supplemental Security Income (SSI) recipients across the United States could see their benefits reduced or eliminated under the proposal, according to reporting by ProPublica. For many, the change would mean losing roughly one-third of their monthly income—about $300—amounting to as much as $3,600 a year for some of the country’s poorest and most vulnerable residents. The plan would reduce or eliminate benefits for SSI recipients living in households that also receive food assistance. The proposed change is not legislation passed by Congress. It is a regulatory action being developed within the executive branch, initiated by White House officials and advanced through the Social Security Administration as part of the administration’s broader policy agenda. The change would undo a long-standing rule that recog-

nizes these families as already struggling financially. Instead, it would treat living with family as if the person is getting extra help—basically counting a place to live as income—even when no money is being exchanged, which could reduce their monthly benefits. The impact in Los Angeles County could be massive—and immediate. Federal data show approximately 349,000 residents in the county receive Supplemental Security Income, a program that provides monthly payments to people with severe disabilities and low-income seniors. Of those, roughly 285,000 are disabled individuals under age 65, while about 64,000 are elderly recipients. Data is based on Social Security Administration county-level statistics. Applied locally, that translates to roughly 50,000 to 70,000 people in Los Angeles County who could see their benefits reduced. For many, the cuts would be severe. The maximum SSI benefit is about $994 per month. Under existing rules governing “inkind support,” recipients who are deemed to be receiving housing assistance can lose up to a staggering one-third of that amount— roughly $300 per month, or about $3,600 annually. A significant number of recipients rely on both Social Security and Supplemental Security Income to get by. In Los Angeles County, an estimated 80,000 to 100,000 residents fall into this category, receiving smaller Social Secu-

See SSI CUTS, Page 8


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