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Your fun redistricting news for the day

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Now that you've surely had a total blast reading my story about the battle during yesterday's final redistricting hearing before the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors, let's take a brief look a some nitty-gritty details. 

The more-or-less status quo map that was approved on a 4-1 vote makes minimal changes to existing boundaries, shifting just about 277,000 residents from one district to another. 

In the South Bay, only two communities will be affected: Westchester and Playa del Rey. There, Supervisors Don Knabe and Mark Ridley-Thomas will swap two areas under a plan introduced by Knabe.

Knabe's Fourth District will gain all of Playa del Rey and a portion of Westchester west of Lincoln Boulevard -- an area that includes Westchester High, Otis College of Art and Design and most of the Ballona Wetlands. 

Ridley-Thomas' Second District will include Westchester east of Lincoln Boulevard, gaining most of the Westchester community's homes as well as Playa Vista and Loyola Marymount University.

I hate to send you to a competitor, but the LA Times has a great interactive map that lets you compare current districts to future ones, including failed proposals from Supervisors Gloria Molina and Ridley-Thomas, who both wanted to see a second majority-Latino district created.

Minor last-minute tweaks to Knabe's "A3" map were made Tuesday at the suggestion of county staff. The changes affected mostly unpopulated areas, including a portion of Hawthorne that will join the rest of that city in Ridley-Thomas' district. The county's map, without those tweaks, can be found here.

However, the map is likely to be challenged in court, so who knows what we'll really get?

Meanwhile, a new website has been created at Los Angeles city and the giant Los Angeles school district prepare to undergo their own redistricting pains in coming months. Check it out here.

Several local low-income areas dubbed 'food deserts'

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USDAmpa.jpgParts of North Carson, Westchester and Harbor City make it difficult for largely low-income residents to get healthy meals because of a lack of supermarkets, according to data recently released by the federal government.

Dubbed "food deserts," these neighborhoods are home to a total of 13.5 million Americans in a "low-income census tract where a substantial number or share of residents has low access to a supermarket or large grocery store," according to a definition that was part of a report from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. About 85 percent of food deserts are in urban areas.

An interactive map that was part of the USDA report shows food deserts in east of LAX, in Carson north of the Artesia (91) Freeway, and in Wilmington near Harbor College and Ken Malloy Harbor Regional Park and in a Harbor City corridor along Normandie Avenue (including the Kaiser Permanente South Bay Medical Center.

As California Watch reported last week, the data comes from the 2000 census but should be updated later this year with information from the 2010 census.


South Bay, bonjour: It's Dec. 11

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Readers, here's your morning news:

Hanukkah begins today at sundown. What are your holiday traditions?

The county Coroner's Office has officially ruled the shooting death earlier this week of a Rolling Hills Estates attorney outside his home was a homicide.

Some Los Angeles International Airport workers are learning how to be nice during naughty holiday airport run-ins.

A Torrance researcher participating in a massive women's health study, has found that women who take a popular bone density drug had reduced rates of breast cancer of about 30 percent.

The Metropolitan Transportation Authority governing board has moved ahead with the South Bay extension of the Green line as well as the Crenshaw light rail line, sans rail yard in El Segundo or Westchester.

After long maintaining he had nothing to do with the cliff death of his brand-new wife, Brandon Manai said in court Thursday that his bride fell off the Rancho Palos Verdes shoreline.

Mira Costa's football team heads to the Western Division final tonight with a stellar offensive front five. Check out some pictures.

A San Pedro man has turned a love of music into a a more commercial career.

South Bay, good morning: It's Dec. 3

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Readers, so much news today:

Break out the tissues for this one: A Redondo Beach police dog, which won three consecutive championships and was stabbed a few years ago, was put to sleep Wednesday afternoon. Valor was suffering from kidney failure.

Check out pictures of Officer Ken Greenleaf saying goodbye to his dog.

Torrance celebrated Wednesday the grand opening of the biggest hotel built in town in 20 years.

Westchester and Del Rey residents are angry about a Los Angeles Department of Water and Power plan to build a high-voltage power line from its Scattergood generating facility near El Segundo to a substation at Olympic Boulevard and Centinela Avenue.

Rancho Palos Verdes city leaders will redesign their City Council badges to look less like those for cops. Meanwhile, the city has tapped the former city manager of Lomita, who kept a dossier of alleged city incompetence and corruption, as its new parks and recreation manager.

Our business section and news columnist John Bogert are both all over the Los Angeles Auto Show. Scroll through some shots of the new rides.

Mira Costa High's football team is a top seed in the CIF-SS semifinals. Check out pictures of the team.

South Bay, howdy: It's Aug. 31

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Readers, let's hit it:

The Rancho Palos Verdes fire is out, but blazes continue to rage in the rest of the region, including the massive Station wildfire, in which two firefighters died Sunday.

Scroll through pictures of the aftermath of the PV fire here and here.

Sheriff's deputies are looking for four men believed to be involved in the shooting of a man in Lawndale last night.

Loyola Marymount University opened its brand spanking new library Sunday. Check out pictures of the $63 million facility.

Old Torrance hosted its first ever block party Sunday.

A Long Beach man was first to paddle Sunday into Manhattan Beach in the 34th Catalina Classic Paddleboard Championship. Check out pictures of the event.

And some weekend stragglers...

Shell Oil Co. has discovered methane and benzene contamination beneath a south Carson housing tract.

Patrons of a popular San Pedro cigar shop are fasting for Ramadan in solidarity with the store's owner.

The election for the 51st Assembly seat is Tuesday.

South Bay, what's up? It's May 14

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Let's roll, readers:

Police have cracked a 30-year-old Torrance murder case in which a young woman was stabbed and strangled in her apartment. Police arrested her old boyfriend, now an Orange County engineer.

Manhattan Beach teachers, parents and students showed a homemade video Wednesday on the statewide "Day of the Teacher" to draw attention to the the 78 instructors in danger of losing their jobs.

Los Angeles city leaders Wednesday approved the first phase of a controversial jet fuel pipeline that would run from Wilmington to Carson.

A Gardena man was found guilty Wednesday of murdering his former girlfriend about a year ago.

The state Attorney General has filed a civil lawsuit against two brothers who allegedly rigged a property tax scam that ripped off homeowners in the South Bay and other parts of the state.

A stellar season has shot Loyola Marymount's Ryan Wheeler up to the major league draft ranking. The Torrance High grad plays first base.

Make sure you check out the Daily Breeze's guide to this weekend's Armed Forces Day parade in Torrance.

South Bay, hola! It's May 13

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Readers, without further ado:

South Bay high school campuses showed mixed dropout statistics for local districts and campuses, according to figures released Tuesday. See how your child's school measures up here.

Mediation is gonna pump your brain up, a study released today shows. Ommmm.

San Pedro's Eastview Little League grapples with what the league will do when their Knoll Hill permit expires in January 2011.

Container traffic at the Port of Los Angeles and Long Beach will drop by nearly 14 percent this year, the Los Angeles County Economic Development Corp. forecasts.

Mira Costa High's lacrosse team lost the Los Angeles County tournament finals to Loyola in the second period of sudden death overtime Tuesday. Make sure you check out pictures of the game.

Learn how to make homemade tasty treats for your pups.

Arrr! The South Bay has about a dozen shipwrecks hiding beneath its waters. Check out our interactive map of their locations, but no information on any treasure.

South Bay, good day! It's April 27

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It's Monday, folks. And you know what that means: Tons o' news coming at you:

A Los Angeles photographer  has worked since 2006 to photograph as many World War II veterans as he can. Thomas Sanders' "Faces of WWII" will be on display at a Rancho Palos Verdes assisted-living home in July.

The Best Friends Animal Society tried to get 1,000 orphan pets adopted Sunday in Westchester.

Finally, the new $40 million Los Angeles Police Department's harbor station opened Saturday.

Planes leaving and arriving at Los Angeles International Airport struck birds 940 times in the last 18 years, according to a new database released to the public last week. Check out the database yourself.

A Baha'i' woman from Manhattan Beach reflects on a bittersweet time for the faith.

Check out pictures of children getting rides in airplanes at Hawthorne Airport this weekend.

What you talking 'bout, South Bay? It's April 2

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Here's what's happening today, readers:

Lingering vacancies at San Pedro's new high-rise condominium building have lead developers to lease some of the homes. Get a tour of the Vue here.

South Bay school districts will get $12 million in federal stimulus money. Torrance Unified tops the list with an expected $2.6 million.

Some Hermosa Beach teens have tapped out their free beer supply. A homeowner there has set up a camera to catch the booze burglars who kept sneaking into his backyard to pilfer pilsners from a refrigerator.

A new documentary chronicles a Manhattan Beach couple's journey to raise a child with an Austism-like syndrome.

Banks aren't doing so hot right now, but that's not stopping John Polen from opening a new depository in Rolling Hills Estates this summer.

Bishop Montgomery's Justin Cobbs is the Breeze's boys basketball player of the year, and Westchester's Ed Azzam takes the coach's title. See pics of the All Area Team here.

Holla at your boy, South Bay! It's March 27

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Put down your NCAA brackets for a minute to read the morning news:

If you live in Hawthorne, your kids are stuck in the schools. In an effort to retain state funding dollars, the school district there will no longer allow K-8 students to transfer out.

El Segundo is looking at ways to swankify the restaurant inside its municipal golf course.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation now believes the boys kidnapped by their Westchester fathers a few months ago are in Guatemala, giving at least some hope to their frantic mothers.

Need a good au pair? This Rancho Palos Verdes woman matches parents with nannies.

San Pedro's girls softball players overtook Banning High on Thursday. See the action here.

Our L.A. Love Story columnist went and got married on us! But Melissa traded poof, fuss, muss and a year of planning, for a sweet, small and low-key wedding arranged in just a month's time. 

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