New battles over laws designed to help Los Angeles fire victims recover


Burnt remains of a hillside house reduced to rubble, with concrete walls, twisted metal and ash in the foreground, while two charred palm trees stand by a railing overlooking a misty valley in the distance under a partly cloudy sky.
The remains of an Altadena home that burned in the Eaton fire on January 26, 2025. Photo by Jules Hotz for CalMatters

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A year and a half after the deadly wildfires tore through Southern California, state lawmakers are wondering what regulations they should impose to support people looking to rebuild.

One method aims to enable regulators to block developers from snapping up properties after a natural disaster. This tactic is played out through an account that would give more power to the California Coastal Commission.

It would require any new owner, including developers, of wildfire-destroyed homes to get approval from the building commission. People who keep their properties after a disaster will still be exempt from the commission’s oversight.

But critics, including San Francisco Sen. Scott Wiener, say it would be unfair to impose tougher regulations specifically on new owners.

  • Wiener: “It could set a troubling precedent that we’re more focused on just empowering the original owner to build. … that’s why I felt the need to vote no.”

Another approach is in the other direction eliminating new housing density regulations which Los Angeles area fire victims say allow developers to take advantage of post-disaster situations.

The proposal would pause two state laws that make it easier for developers to build tiny houses on land reserved for single-family homes and divide the land into smaller lots.

The bill would exempt Altadena — where the Eaton fire destroyed more than 9,000 buildings — from density regulations until 2030. Although critics have raised concerns that the bill could make it harder for some fire survivors to rebuild, Nick Arnzen, Altadena City Council president and a supporter of the bill, says the bill does not reflect NIMBYism.

  • Arnzen: “I don’t think it’s unreasonable to say, ‘We’re still in an emergency. Let’s recover.’

Read more about coastal commission and Changed accounts by Nadia Lathan and Ben Christopher of CalMatters, respectively.


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Reassurance for Transgender Veterans

A man wearing a white navy uniform with black details stands on a gravel path overlooking a small bridge in a bay during sunset. Two small bushes can be seen in the blurred foreground.
U.S. Navy Seaman Chase Humes, a transgender man, at Liberty Station in San Diego on June 22, 2026. Photo by Adriana Heldiz, CalMatters

Transgender service members face uncertainty after President Donald Trump’s executive order barring them from serving in the armed forces, and some California lawmakers want to reassure them that they can get help hereCalMatters’ Kate Wolfe reports.

Trump’s policy left transgender soldiers with a choice: either separate and receive an honorable discharge — which would preserve access to veterans’ benefits like health care — or say nothing and risk a more unfavorable discharge.

A state Senate committee last week advanced a bill that supporters say could help people who have received unfair dismissals lose their benefits. It would also require the state Department of Veterans Affairs to establish a grant program to assist veterans with housing.

But how many people the proposal would help remains unclear, and supporters are not aware of any cases of people who have been fired less than decently for hiding their transgender identity.

Read more.

Record low kill rate

Reading yellow police tape "THE POLICE LINE IS NOT CROSSED" stretches in the foreground as several police cars block a city street, with a policeman standing between two SUVs in the background.
A police barricade blocks a street in Sacramento on July 4, 2022. Photo by Rich Pedroncelli, AP Photo

California reported a record low homicide rate last yearpart of a nationwide trend that has reversed the spike in crime that many communities experienced during the COVID-19 pandemic, CalMatters’ Nigel Duara writes.

That’s the main takeaway from the annual crime report released Wednesday by Attorney General Rob Bonta. He and Gov. Gavin Newsom said the trend partly reflects their policies.

  • Newsom: “These results show that when we invest in our communities, support law enforcement, fight organized crime, and expand prevention and intervention efforts, we can save lives and improve public safety.”

But it’s a national trend in red and blue states that experts are trying to understand. Magnus Lofström of the California Institute for Public Policy was struck by the dramatic increase in arrests after murders, which pushed the so-called clearance rate to 79 percent.

  • Lofstrom: “This is very encouraging, but it will be important to unpack the remarkable jump to determine what efforts led to the striking improvement.”

Read more.

Finally: Promoting diversity in STEM

A worker sits at a cluttered electronics workbench looking at a computer monitor in a workshop with shelves of parts tanks, tools and equipment in the background.
Tré Willingham, a PhD student, works in a lab in Rowland Hall at UC Irvine on June 15, 2026. Photos by Ariana Drehsler for CalMatters

Founded in 2015 in partnership with the University of California, the Cal-Bridge program aims to close the diversity gap in science by helping Cal State University students pursue a Ph.D. in STEM. Because a doctorate degree takes several years to complete, only 15 Cal-Bridge participants have earned their doctorates so far. But its founder expects to see as many as 50 a year getting their Ph.D. Read more by Brittany Oseguera of CalMatters College Journalism Network.



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Is a UC degree still worth it? New report shows payout taking longer // San Francisco Chronicle

Lynn La is a newsletter writer for CalMatters, which focuses on the top political, policy and Capitol stories in California each weekday. She produces and curates WhatMatters, CalMatters’ flagship daily newsletter…

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