Good morning, and welcome to the
Essential California newsletter. It’s Monday, May 13, and here’s
a quick look at the week ahead:
Elite cyclists set off from Sacramento on
Sunday for
the 2019 Amgen Tour of California, which will wind
across 778 miles of California terrain before finishing in Pasadena at the end of the week.
On
Tuesday, the
72nd Cannes Film Festival will open in the south of France. Expect Hollywood to be watching how the big streaming companies play in the French Riviera sandbox this year: Netflix and Amazon both plunked down serious coin at the Sundance Film Festival earlier this year, leaving rival studios to “wonder if Netflix and Amazon are temporarily done buying or if they’ll carry their checkbooks on the journey,”
according to Variety. The L.A. Times’
Kenneth Turan,
Amy Kaufman and
Justin Chang will all be in France covering the action.
Plus,
seven of the most-talked-about films at the fest this year.
Also
Tuesday: Jackie Goldberg and Heather Repenning will face off in a Los Angeles
runoff election for a seat on
the board that governs the nation’s second-largest school district.
Los Angeles Unified’s
District 5 spans an oddly shaped district that includes more affluent, hipster neighborhoods like Silver Lake and Echo Park, as well as the lower-income, majority-Latino cities of Bell, Huntington Park, South Gate and Cudahy in southeast L.A. County.
Nearly 90% of the students in the district are
Latino, which has
left some questioning why the two candidates in the runoff are white.
(See also: “Pre-election rundown: Where Jackie Goldberg and Heather Repenning stand on hot-button issues in LAUSD’s school board race”from LA School Report)On
Thursday, television’s No. 1 comedy “The Big Bang Theory”
will air its final episode on CBS.
Friday marks an
obscure but important legislative deadline in the state Capitol. First, some background: Any bill that’s projected to cost the state more than $150,000 typically gets sent to
the “suspense file,” which is where “bills that would cost taxpayers money are held in
legislative limbo,” as Sacramento bureau chief John Myers
put it in an explainer a few years ago.
Any bill with a fiscal impact
has to make it out of the fiscal committees of each house and onto the Senate or Assembly by the close of business Friday, or die a quiet death. Bills that don’t clear the hurdle are
“essentially killed without a recorded vote,” with no public explanation of their fate. “That means,” as Myers wrote in his explainer, “that no one will know for sure whether a bill is really killed because of its price tag or its politics.”
And now,
here’s what’s happening across California:
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