Long Beach resident Jane Vargas was able to vote before 7 a.m. at the registrar headquarters in Norwalk, which is between her home and her work in Santa Fe Springs. If you're planning on casting your vote today, here's what you need to know:The Board of Supervisors is already crafting its own plan, with input from experts and advocates, for diverting more inmates with mental illness to non-jail alternatives. The line grew even longer into Tuesday afternoon, practically stretching back to 9th Street.Michael Atallah went there because it was the closest vote center to where he lives — plus his friend’s coffee shop is next store.“Honestly, I could have mailed [my ballot] in,” he said, “but I kind of did want to participate in being in a line and going to the ballots. We've got your response: The state officially has one month to certify election results.. As long as you’re registered, you can vote at any center in L.A. County. The Sanders campaign wanted polling places to offer provisional ballots to any voters who arrived after 8 p.m.Democracy is in action — but moving at roughly a snail’s pace — at the Ace Hotel in downtown Los Angeles, where hopeful voters are waiting hours to cast their ballot in Tuesday’s primary election.County officials scrambled to add more voting machines and staff Tuesday morning as images of people lined up along Broadway and complaints of the long waits began . However, former supervisor From 2005 to 2015, the board had a controversial program, known as 287(g), that allowed federal In 2018, the board appointed Nicole Tinkham as interim public defender, despite a letter signed by 390 public defenders who were concerned that Tinkham lacked criminal law experience and the potential for a conflict of interest, given Tinkham’s prior representation of the In 1991, a federal court ruled that the board denied Latinos a chance to be elected to the board. Schmerelson’s campaign has called that mailer “anti-Semitic.”The ad is part of a line of criticism against Schmerelson over his finances. Last August, the county's number of registered Democrats for the first time surpassed Republicans. )Schmerelson was one of the few LAUSD board members to openly support LAUSD board members during their strike last winter. Since this morning, the center is now well-staffed, she said. Never before has an LAUSD primary seen more negative advertising.And no candidate has been hit harder than incumbent LAUSD board member Scott Schmerelson.The California Charter Schools Association’s political arm has endorsed a challenger, Marilyn Koziatek, and also poured more than $1 million into ads attacking SchmerelsonOne CCSA ad portrayed Schmerelson, who’s Jewish, in gold chains with a fanned-out wad of cash. "Sherman Oaks, Toluca Lake, Hollywood, Hollywood Hills, Los Feliz, Silver Lake, Miracle Mile, Hancock Park, Windsor Square, Larchmont and a portion of Koreatown.That includes if you're going to the polls to drop off a mail-in ballot.If there's a line when the polls close, a poll worker will stand at the back of the line to let people arriving after 8 p.m. know that the polls have closed. They’ve spent $1.6 million to help Koziatek, who’s on staff at Granada Hills Charter High School.And a third candidate — Elizabeth Badger, the founder and CEO of a non-profit called the Minority Outreach Committee — entered the primary’s final weekend with more campaign cash on hand than either Koziatek or Schmerelson (about $25,000).For more than a decade, District 7 has been home to the Los Angeles Unified School Board’s “swing vote”: Since first winning the seat in 2007, Vladovic has won endorsements from groups on both sides of LAUSD’s charter school debate. We continue to actively monitor our store and remove offers that violate our policies. Contact. So when something like the coronavirus affects the Chinese economy, it affects L.A. workers, too. has overseen charter schools in the Compton Unified and Oakland Unified school districts, and for the L.A. County Office of Education. From our It's getting increasingly challenging for the GOP in Orange County. (Natalie Chudnovsky/LAist) statewide proposition on the California primary ballot.$15 billion in bonds to fund a long list of projects for California public schools and higher education systems, including earthquake retrofitting, fire safety, removing lead from water, and building affordable student housing.For decades, the state and school districts have built educational facilities with bond funds.