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COMMUNITY CALENDAR

Announcements Unapologetically Black

Santa Cruz Art League, 526 Broadway, Santa Cruz Hours: Wed.-Sat. 1-4 pm • Admission: Free

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Through April 8, the Santa Cruz Art League presents Unapologetically Black, an exhibition featuring 18 Black visual and performing artists from Santa Cruz and the Bay Area, showcasing 80+ original artworks that represent a rich cultural her-itage. Artists in the exhibition:

• Abi Mustapha • Asual

Aswad • Bhavananda

Lodkey • Chris “Moze”

Mosley • Cyrus Howard • Deshaun Myles • Devi Pride • Dylyn Turner-Keener • Elijah Pfotenjauer • Gregory Speed

• Jimi Evins • Joseph Jason Santiago LaCour • Madonna

Camel • Naomi Wells-Sokumbi • Nikia Chaney • Rica De La Luz • Rick Bell • Yolanda Cotton Turner

This exhibition is core to the Art League’s commitment to support artists at all ca-reer levels and to highlight the work of local BIPOC creatives.

DJ Monk Earl from AfroBeats Santa Cruz will play at the First Friday opening recep-tion 6-8 p.m. March 3, and there will be Jambalaya from Chef Madlyn Torrance, made with loving hands to feed your soul. Jason Joseph Santiago LaCour will per-form spoken poetry and Tia McCord will be do face gems for anyone interested.

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On March 24, Nexties Musician of the Year Maknova will perform live at The Broadway Playhouse.

Red Cross Blood Drives

The Northern California Coastal Region of the Red Cross is honoring heroes during the 80th annual American Red Cross Month celebration, a national tradition that began in 1943. Blood drives:

March 8: 8:30 a.m. – 1:30 p.m.

• Boulder Creek

Fire Department, 13230 Central Avenue (Hwy 9)

March 11: 9 a.m. – 2:30 p.m. • St Phillip’s Episcopal Church, 5271 Scotts Valley Drive, Scotts Valley

March 17: 11:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. • The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ben Lomond, 9545 Love Creek Road, Ben Lomond

March 25: 8 a.m. – 1 p.m. • Live Oak Grange, 1900 17th Ave., Santa Cruz

March 28: 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. • The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 220 Elk St., Santa Cruz. Make an appointment at RedCrossBlood.org

Read Sing Play Count

Each year in collaboration with the American Libraries Association the Santa Cruz Public Libraries produces an Early Literacy Calendar in English and Spanish.

Based on the Every Child Ready to Read practices of reading, writing, singing, talking, playing, and counting, each calendar contains 12 months of learning activities, book lists, nursery rhymes, and more. Explore the daily literacy-building prompts and activities with your child.

February kicks off with a drawing activity: “Draw all the people in your family. Talk about each person while drawing them.”

Santa Cruz Public Libraries supports early literacy with programs and resources for children and families: Story time, Read to Me kits, 1000 Books Before Kindergarten program, and more.

Calendars can be picked up at local library branches or downloaded at www.santacruzpl.org/kids/birth/

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Habitat For Humanity Women Build 2023

Habitat for Humanity of Monterey Bay is celebrating Women Build 2023 with a full month of builds from March 8–April 1. The site is Rodeo Creek Court, 2340 Harper St., Santa Cruz.

Habitat has been building this 11-home development since August 2020.

So far, six families have moved into their homes. Volunteers work alongside the professional construction crew, and future homeowners earning sweat equity toward the purchase of their home.

Women and men encouraged to participate.

Volunteers need not have previous experience.

Volunteers are invited to sign up for shifts on Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday from March 8 to April 1. Go to https://www.habitatmontereybay.com/copy-ofwomen-build and click on “volunteer”

Donations are also being accepted. Fundraising goal is $15,000.

Women Build, which celebrates and uplifts women’s roles in construction and affordable housing development, is sponsored and presented by Bay Federal Credit Union and Granite Construction.

Disaster Recovery Deadline March 16

Disaster Recovery Centers in Santa Cruz County will remain open in March to assist residents impacted by the December-January atmospheric rivers that caused widespread damage. The centers are staffed by personnel from the Federal Emergency Management Agency and U.S. Small Business Administration. The deadline to apply for assistance is March 16.

The Felton center has moved to Santa Cruz, in the basement of the County Governmental Building, 701 Ocean St., Santa Cruz, and is open from 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Monday through Friday.

The center in Watsonville at the City Government Center, 250 Main St., will be open 8 a.m.-5 p.m., Monday through Saturday.

County recovery staff will be available during regular business hours at 701 Ocean St. To reach the Recovery Permit Center, call 831-454-5323 or email rpc@ santacruzcounty.us during business hours.

More resources at the Virtual Recovery Center at https:// santacruzcounty.us/OR3/Emergency.aspx.

Grand Jury Seeks Applicants

Have you wanted to serve your community and wondered how to get involved? Does governmental waste, inefficiency, or lack of responsiveness concern you?

The Santa Cruz County Superior Court is accepting applications for the 2023-2024 Civil Grand Jury. The application deadline is April 28. Information is at https://www.santacruz.courts.ca.gov/ divisions/civil-grand-jury. Questions can be emailed to jury. information@santacruzcourt.org.

Irs Tax Deadline Now May 15 Due To Storm Emergency

In response to the havoc wreaked by winter storms slamming the Bay Area and California, the Internal Revenue Service is extending the deadline to May 15 to file federal tax returns and make payments.

The IRS said it will provide “tax relief” to people who have been impacted by the storms as part of a coordinated effort by federal agencies. The extension applies to several deadlines for federal tax filing and payment that began as early as Jan. 8. Individuals and businesses will have until May 15 to file federal income tax returns and make any payments. Eligible individuals can wait until May 15 to make 2022 contributions to their health savings accounts and individual retirement accounts, officials said. The deadline extension also applies to quarterly estimated tax payments, quarterly payroll and excise tax returns normally due on Jan. 31 and April 30, and farmers who elect to forgo making estimated tax payments and normally file their returns by March 1. For information on the state deadline, see https://www. ftb.ca.gov/ • For IRS tax tips, see https://www.irs.gov/ newsroom/irs-tax-tips

COUNTY FAIR BOARD MEETINGS

1:30 p.m., Santa Cruz County Fairgrounds, 2601 E. Lake Ave., Watsonville

Here are the dates of the remaining County Fair Board meeting dates in 2023. Each meeting takes place on a Tuesday:

March 28, April 25, May 23, June 27, July 25, Aug. 22, Oct. 24, and Dec. 5, all at the fairgrounds. Meetings also take place on Zoom. For agendas, see santacruzcountyfair.com.

TRICIA MONTALVO TIMM: EMBRACE THE POWER OF YOU

Thursday March 16

5-6 p.m., Scotts Valley Library, 251 Kings Village Rd. Scotts Valley local Tricia Montalvo Timm will talk about her book, Embrace the Power of You, at the Scotts Valley Library. A Q&A session follows.

The book includes her own story as a first-generation Latina board director, venture investor and speaker and those of other top executives.

She is on a mission to inspire anyone who has ever felt like an “other” in the workplace and will offer powerful strategies on how you too can show up as your authentic self at work and achieve success and fulfillment in life.

Books will be available to purchase. Sponsored by the Santa Cruz Public Libraries and the Friends of the Scotts Valley Library. The event is free and all are welcome.

/ Scotts Valley Times www.tpgonlinedaily.com

BIG CREEK LUMBER SCHOLARSHIP

Big Creek Lumber will be offering the McCrary Family Scholarship for the third consecutive year to graduating high school seniors who will be pursuing careers in the skilled trades or forestry.

Past scholarship recipients are invited to apply for a one-time scholarship renewal for continued support of their education.

The deadline to apply is April 28.

To apply see: www.bigcreeklumber.com/scholarships

BAY FEDERAL CREDIT UNION EDUCATION SCHOLARSHIP

Bay Federal Credit Union’s Education Scholarship is for students pursuing education and career training opportunities after high school. Up to three applicants will receive $1,500 to pay for expenses directly related to their continuing education.

Those who wish to be considered for an award must meet all eligibility requirements. Applicants must submit a completed 2023 Education Scholarship Application and all required documents by 11:59 p.m. Friday, March 17.

Award recipients will be notified via phone call and/or email by April 28.

See the 2023 Student Scholarship Application for complete details and rules. Questions? Email scholarship@bayfed.com.

Ongoing Events

Mondays BRIDGE CLUB

10:30 a.m.-Noon, Capitola Branch Library, 2005 Wharf Road The Capitola Branch Library will host Bridge Club sessions on Mondays (except holidays). Everyone is welcomed from beginners to social players. Make new friends and sharpen your mind. Bridge Club is a partnership between Santa Cruz County Parks and Santa Cruz Public Libraries. Register at scparks.com or in-person the day of the event.

Third Thursdays and Fourth Tuesdays

HOUSING MATTERS NEIGHBORS

Thursdays: 4:30-6 p.m., Garfield Park Library, 705 Woodrow Ave., Santa Cruz

Tuesdays, 5:30-7 p.m., Capitola Library, 2005 Wharf Rd. A meet-up for people who want to learn how to take an active role in their neighborhood to bridge divides on the topic of homelessness.

At these monthly in-person meet-ups for neighbors can:

• Learn from local experts about real solutions to homelessness together

• Problem-solve and create solutions in your neighborhood together

• Help to foster compassion and equity in Santa Cruz County neighborhoods together

For information call Marsa Greenspan, Housing Matters Volunteer Program Manager: (831) 226-2486

Second Sundays of the Month

SANTA CRUZ ANTIQUE STREET FAIRE

9 a.m.-5 p.m., Pacific Ave., Lincoln St. and Cedar St. More than 40 vendors participate in this monthly outdoor fair.

Weather updates are posted on Facebook at https://www. facebook.com/santacruzantiquefaire

Dated Events

Sunday March 5

KIDS’ BICYCLE SAFETY EVENT 10 a.m.-1 p.m., Capitola Mall parking lot, 1855 41st Ave. The local California Highway Patrol will host a bike safety event in the Capitola Mall parking lot.

The event will consist of a bike rodeo safety course, bike safety check, and helmet fitting. Open to children of all ages. The event is designed to be entertaining while improving bike safety knowledge.

To sign your child up, please call (831) 219-0200 or email: Israel.murillojr@chp. ca.gov to reserve a spot — space is limited.

Tuesday March 7

ASSEMBLYMEMBER GAIL PELLERIN TO SPEAK

6 p.m., Online Meeting

Assemblymember Gail Pellerin will be the guest speaker for the next meeting of the Democratic Club of North Santa Cruz County.

Newly-elected Pellerin will report on her first weeks in the State Assembly and discuss priorities for her constituents in the 28th Assembly District.

Pellerin will also discuss plans to address housing affordability, climate change, and increased health care access in the state 2023-24 budget proposal. Members of the public are invited. For the Zoom meeting link, visit www.svslvdemocrats.org. Social time starts at 6 p.m. and the club meeting begins at 6:30 p.m.

Thursday March 9

MENTAL ILLNESS AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE

5:30-7 p.m., Online Webinar

Interim Inc. will host an online webinar via Zoom, “Mental Illness & Navigating the Criminal Justice System.”

Are you close to someone living with a mental illness and responsible for their care? Have you ever thought about what might happen to them if they were arrested? Have they been arrested and you didn’t know what to do?

The workshop will cover: How to engage with law enforcement during a crisis or arrest, alternatives to incarceration, access to treatment following an arrest and Care Courts. A 30-minute question-and-answer session will be at the end.

Speakers include: Monterey Police Sgt. Mickey Roobash, Greg Peterson, assistant district attorney, Monterey County, and Melanie Rhodes, deputy director, Monterey County Behavioral Health Bureau.

The workshop is organized by Interim, Inc. with Monterey County Behavioral Health, the Monterey County District Attorney’s Office, and the Monterey Police Department.

To RSVP, go to https://navcrimjust.eventbrite.com. For information, call (831) 649-4522, Ext. 205.

Friday March 10

NADHERNY/CALCIANO SYMPOSIUM: SUICIDE PREVENTION

8:15 a.m. to 4 p.m., Coconut Grove, 400 Beach St., Santa Cruz

The 25th Annual Jon E. Nadherny/Calciano Memorial Youth Symposium will at the Coconut Grove, with a focus on youth suicide, prevention, recovery and resilience.

Featured speakers are Christine Yu Moutier, M.D., chief medical officer for the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, and DeQuincy Meiffren-Lezine, Ph.D., director of the Lived Experience Academy and author of “Eight Stories Up: An Adolescent Chooses Hope Over Suicide.”

Once Upon A Time In Corralitos

Friday March 24 and Saturday March 25

Fri: 2-3:30 p.m. • Sat: 4-7:30 p.m., Corralitos Grange Hall, 165 Little Corral Way, Watsonville Corralitos Woman’s Club presents Once Upon A Time in Corralitos, a murder mystery play in 3 acts. There are two shows: a Friday matinee and a Saturday dinner show at Corralitos Grange Hall. Tickets are $20 for matinee and $40 for dinner show at EventBrite.com. Proceeds benefit scholarship and club programs.

At 9 a.m., Moutier will speak on science and solutions for preventing suicide.

Moutier authored Suicide Prevention, a Cambridge University Press clinical handbook. She co-anchored CNN’s Emmy Award-winning Finding Hope suicide prevention town hall with Dr. Sanjay Gupta.

At 10:45 a.m., there will be a panel: Andrea Tolaio, program director, Santa Cruz County Suicide Prevention Services, Andrea Turnbull, LCSW, program manager for access services and interim program manager, crisis services, County Behavioral Health, Carly Memoli, president, Applied Crisis Training and Consulting Inc., and Faris Sabbah, Ed.D., Santa Cruz County Superintendent of Schools.

Lunch is at 11:55 a.m.

At 12:40 p.m., Meiffren-Lezine will speak.

At 2:10 a.m., Jen Hastings, M.D., will moderate a panel of local experts and keynote speakers including: Ben Geilhufe, LPCC, program manager, Gender Specialty Clinic, Santa Clara County Behavioral Health.

Continuing education credits are available. Reservations are required. Walk-ins cannot be accommodated. Admission is $100. RSVP at https:// calcianoyouthsymposium.org/event/2023-jon-e-nadhernymemorial-youth-symposium/

UPLIFT CENTRAL COAST

10-11 a.m., Online meeting

The six-county Uplift Central Coast Coalition — led by REACH, which is pushing to attract high-wage industries to Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties, the Economic Development Collaborative, which started in Ventura and Santa Barbara counties, and Monterey Bay Economic Partnership, which includes Santa Cruz, Monterey and San Benito counties—will kick off the regional Community Economic Resilience Fund process at a virtual gathering.

The CERF grant funds a two-year process to create an economic development plan for six Central Coast counties with a focus on equity, sustainability, job quality, economic competitiveness, and resilience. Learn about opportunities. Register in advance at https://reachcentralcoast.org/upliftcentralcoast/ to receive Zoom meeting link .

Saturday March 11

SCIENCE & ENGINEERING FAIR

Judging begins at 9 a.m., Set up Mar. 10 8 a.m.-8 p.m., Santa Cruz County Fairgrounds, 2601 E Lake Ave, Watsonville This year, the Santa Cruz County Office of Education is moving from a traditional science fair model to a STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, Mathematics) EXPO in order to advance equitable access to inquiry-based learning.

The STEAM Expo provides a competitive and a noncompetitive showcase opportunity for students in grades TK-12. For the Competitive section, students design individual or team (max of 3 members) inquiry projects to compete for awards, scholarships and prizes.

Top award winners represent Santa Cruz County at the California State Science Fair, the International Science and Engineering Fair, and the California and National Invention Conventions.

The 2022-23 Santa Cruz County Science & Engineering Fair will be in-person at the Fairgrounds. More information at https://sites.google.com/santacruzcoe.org/santacruzsteamexpo/home

Are you a site fair coordinator? Interested in sponsoring the fair? Do you have questions? Email hwygant@ santacruzcoe.org.

Sunday March 12

GABRIELE BALDOCCI

4 p.m., Peace United Church, 900 High St. Santa Cruz Distinguished Artists Concert Foundation presents pianist Gabriele Baldocci performing LisztBeethoven Symphony No. 5 plus improvisations on Beethoven by Baldocci, and works by Douglas Finch and Michael Williams at Peace United Church.

Baldocci is professor at Trinity Laban Conservatory of Music and of the Purcell School in London, founder and director of the London Piano Centre and of the Milton Keynes Music Academy.

Tickets are $45 at: www.distinguishedartists.org

Tuesday March 14

COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS MEETING

9 a.m., County Governmental Center, 701 Ocean St., Room 525, Santa Cruz

After three years, the Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors has had its last hybrid meeting due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

The next meeting will be in person at the County Governmental Center board chambers. For future meeting dates, see https://www.co.santa-cruz. ca.us/Government/BoardofSupervisors.aspx

Thursday March 16

IMPACT LAUNCH ALUMNI SPEAK

Noon-1 p.m., Online Forum

March’s Alumni Speak topic is Best Practices Engaging Youth in Transformational Leadership. Presenters via Zoom:

• Pamela Velazquez, United Way of Santa Cruz County

— Jovenes SANOS program

• Heidi Merchen, SURJ — Upstander program

• Don Carney, Youth Transforming Justice — paid internship program

Time for Q&A and conversation. Register at https://tinyurl.com/impact-alumni-zoom.

Thursday March 16 and Saturday March 18

GROW PLANTS FROM SEED, CUTTINGS & MORE

Thurs 5-6:30 p.m. online class / Sat 10 a.m.-Noon, inperson at UC Master Gardeners Greenhouse, 1432 Abbott Street, Salinas

The UC Master Gardeners of Monterey and Santa Cruz Counties propagation team grows hundreds of plants every year. Now, Propagation Team Leads Charlene McKowen and Dyan Apostolos will share their techniques to create new healthy plants from seeds, cuttings, and division.

Cost: $20 (includes materials for hands-on portion)

Save money by propagating a favorite plant — no need to look for an identical one in the nursery! Many plants need to be divided periodically to thrive.

Both the class and workshop are aimed at those both new to propagation, or those who want to review their techniques for better results.

To register, go to mbmg.ucanr.edu

Saturday March 18

BOOK SALE

10 a.m.-2 p.m., Scotts Valley Public Library, 251 Kings Village Rd.

The Friends of the Scotts Valley Library will hold their yearly sale of books for children and young adults. The sale will take place in the Fireside Room at the Scotts Valley Public Library.

The extensive selection sells for $1 to $2 each.

“Reparations” from page 16

In doing so, the City of San Francisco closed 883 businesses, displaced 4,729 households, destroyed 2,500 Victorian homes, and damaged the lives of nearly 20,000 people. The city then left the land empty for many years.

Schools

In 1874, the California Supreme Court ruled segregation in the state’s public schools was legal, a decision that predated the U.S. Supreme Court’s infamous “separate but equal” 1896 case of Plessy v. Ferguson by 22 years.

In 1966, as the South was in the process of desegregating, 85 percent of Black Californians attended predominantly minority schools, and only 12 percent of Black students and 39 percent of white students attended racially balanced schools.

Like in the South, white Californians fought desegregation and, in a number of school districts, courts had to order districts to desegregate.

Any progress attained through courtenforced desegregation was short-lived. Throughout the mid- to late-1970s, courts overturned, limited, or ignored desegregation orders in many California districts, as the Supreme Court and Congress limited methods to integrate schools.

In 1979, California passed Proposition 1, which further limited desegregation efforts tied to busing.

In the vast majority of California school districts, schools either re-segregated or were never integrated, and thus segregated schools persists today.

California remains the sixth most segregated state in the country for Black students.

In California’s highly segregated schools, schools mostly attended by white and Asian children receive more funding and resources than schools with predominately Black and Latino children.

Environment

Black Californians are more likely than white Californians to live in overcrowded housing, and near hazardous waste.

Black neighborhoods are more likely to lack tree canopy and suffer from the consequences of water and air pollution.

For instance, Black Californians in the San Joaquin Valley were excluded from most urban areas with access to clean water as a result of redlining policies, racial covenants, and racially-motivated violence.

In Tulare county, the largely Black community of Teviston had no access to sewer and water infrastructure, while the adjacent white community of Pixley did.

This discrimination continued until recently: the town of Lanare, formed by Black families fleeing the Dust Bowl, had no running water at all until the 1970s, and was subjected to dangerous levels of arsenic in the water even after wells and pipes were drilled.

The town’s residents did not get access to clean drinking until 2019.

In the 1950s, a developer in Milpitas tried to build a housing development for both white and Black homebuyers. In response, the Milpitas City Council increased the sewer connection fee more than tenfold to thwart the development.

Black Families

Recent California Attorney General investigations have found several school districts punish Black students at higher rates than students of other races.

Investigations at the Barstow Unified School District, the Oroville City Elementary School District, and the Oroville Union High School District showed that Black students were more likely to be punished and/or suspended, and were subjected to greater punishments, than similarly-situated peers of other races.

A 2015 study ranked California among the five worst states in foster care racial disparities. Black children in California make up approximately 22% of the foster population, while only 6% of the general child population, far higher than the national percentages.

Some counties in California—both urban and rural—have much higher disparities compared to the statewide average. In San Francisco County, which is largely urban and has nearly 900,000 residents, the percentage of Black children in foster care in 2018 was more than 25 times the rate of white children.

Cultural Life

In California, city governments decimated thriving Black neighborhoods with vibrant artistic communities, like the Fillmore in San Francisco.

Local governments in California have discriminated against, punished, and penalized Black students for their fashion, hairstyle, and appearance.

State-funded California museums have excluded Black art from their institutions.

California has criminalized Black rap artists, as California courts have allowed rap lyrics to be used as evidence related to street gang activity.

California has been home to numerous racist monuments and memorials for centuries.

Jobs

Several California cities did not hire Black workers until the 1940s and certain public sectors continued to avoid hiring Black workers even in 1970.

The San Francisco Fire Department, for example, had no Black firefighters before 1955 and, by 1970 when Black residents made up 14% of the city’s population, only four of the Department’s 1,800 uniformed firefighters were Black.

During the New Deal, several California cities invoked city ordinances to prevent Black federal workers from working within their cities.

Labor unions excluded Black workers in California. Today, by some measures, California’s two major industries, Hollywood and Silicon Valley, disproportionately employ fewer African Americans.

Justice

Like the rest of the country, California stops, shoots, kills, and imprisons more African Americans than their share of the population.

Data show that law enforcement most frequently reported taking no further action during a stop with a person they perceived to be Black, suggesting there may have been no legal basis for the stop.

A 2020 study showed that racial discrimination is an “ever-present” feature of jury selection in California.

The lingering effects of California’s punitive criminal justice policies, such as the state’s three-strikes law, have resulted in large numbers of African Americans in jails and prisons.

Health

The life expectancy of an average Black Californian was 75.1 years, six years shorter than the state average.

Black babies are more likely to die in infancy and Black mothers giving birth die at a rate of almost four times higher than the average Californian mother.

Compared with white Californians, Black Californians are more likely to have diabetes, die from cancer, or be hospitalized for heart disease.

Black Californians suffer from high rates of serious psychological distress, depression, suicidal ideation, and other mental health issues.

Unmet mental health needs are higher among Black Californians, as compared with white Californians, including lack of access to mental healthcare and substance abuse services.

Black Californians have the highest rates of attempted suicide among all racial groups.

A 2014 study of the Los Angeles metro area found that the median value of liquid assets for native born African American households was $200, compared to $110,000 for white households.

California’s homestead laws similarly excluded African Americans before 1900 because they required a homesteader to be a white citizen.

Throughout the 20th century, federal, state and local governments in California erected barriers to Black homeownership and supported or directly prohibited African Americans from living in suburban neighborhoods. In 1996, California passed Proposition 209 in 1996, which prohibited the consideration of race in state contracting. One study has estimated that, as a result of Proposition 209, minority- and womenowned business enterprises lost about $1 billion.

The findings were included in the task force’s interim report to the Legislature issued in June 2022. The interim report includes preliminary recommendations for policies that the California Legislature could adopt to remedy harms. •••

Afinal report will be issued before July 1, 2023.

To read the report, see https://oag. ca.gov/ab3121/reports

Task force members are: Sen. Steven Bradford, Dr. Amos Brown, Dr. Cheryl Grills, Lisa Holder, Assemblyman Reginald Jones-Sawyer, Dr. Jovan Scott Lewis, Kamilah Moore, chair, Councilmember Monica Montgomery Steppe, and Donald Tamaki. n

The meeting will be live streamed at https://oag.ca.gov/ab3121.

To provide public comment during the public comment period, call and enter the participant code.

Toll-Free: 844-291-5495

Participant Code: 3968101

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