Squad can’t quite take down House Dems’ policing plans

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SPOTTED: JEFF BARTOS, two-time statewide GOP candidate in Pennsylvania and co-chair of MEHMET OZ's Senate campaign, at a Wednesday fundraiser for Democratic gubernatorial nominee JOSH SHAPIRO in Philadelphia. You'll recall that our Holly Otterbein scooped in Playbook on Wednesday that Bartos' wife was co-hosting the Shapiro fundraiser, though Bartos wouldn't say if he was supporting Shapiro or far-right Republican DOUG MASTRIANO. A person familiar with Bartos' thinking tells Holly that "he was proud to support his wife and was there at her request to accompany her."

Rep. Cori Bush, D-Mo., speaks with students at Sumner High School Monday, March 14, 2022, in St. Louis. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

Rep. Cori Bush (D-Mo.) announced this morning that she'd vote no, citing her "strong opposition" to one of the four bills. | Jeff Roberson/AP Photo

GOOD COP, BAD COP — House Democrats thought they'd finally broken through a stalemate of several months to land a deal on a package of policing bills Wednesday. They were slated for an initial vote this morning. Then the House unexpectedly went into recess and Speaker NANCY PELOSI delayed her morning presser by a couple of hours as a progressive revolt threatened to derail the bills.

Progressive leaders PRAMILA JAYAPAL (D-Wash.) and ILHAN OMAR (D-Minn.) helped land the compromise this week, but not all of their caucus was on board: Rep. CORI BUSH (D-Mo.) announced this morning that she'd vote no, citing her "strong opposition" to one of the four bills. Dems could afford only four defections without Republican support. Now the party was scrambling to shore up support for what they hoped would be a boon to vulnerable moderates in November.

Finally, Dems got their house in order — just barely. Voting kicked off around 12:30 p.m., and leadership lost only Bush, JAMAAL BOWMAN (N.Y.), ALEXANDRIA OCASIO-CORTEZ (N.Y.) and RASHIDA TLAIB (Mich.). AYANNA PRESSLEY (Mass.) was convinced to vote "present," as CNN's Manu Raju reported. With the vote sitting at 216-215-1, House Minority Leader KEVIN McCARTHY requested to hold it open a few more minutes for another GOP member to arrive. But DIANA DeGETTE (D-Colo.) brought down the gavel, and the rule squeaked through. Final votes are expected later this afternoon.

Rep. MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE (R-Ga.) slammed Rep. LIZ CHENEY (R-Wyo.) for missing the vote, saying she "clearly supports the Democrat war on police." But Cheney was actually out due to a family health issue, per Nick Wu. Still, Dems aren't out of the woods yet: Pressley plans to vote no on one of the four bills, from Rep. JOSH GOTTHEIMER (D-N.J.), per Scott Wong.

ECA REFORM HITS THE MAGIC NUMBER — Sen. PAT TOOMEY (R-Pa.) is signing onto the bipartisan Senate overhaul of the Electoral Count Act to prevent election subversion, becoming the crucial 10th Republican co-sponsor, the Philly Inquirer's Jonathan Tamari scooped . If all Democrats and independents sign on, that would be enough GOP support to clear a filibuster. "It is past time Congress act," Toomey said in a statement. But the future still remains uncertain, as the Senate version is competing with a bill the House passed Wednesday. Sen. SUSAN COLLINS (R-Maine) said there was a second new co-sponsor, per CBS' Jack Turman III.

WHETHER PERMITTING — Sen. SHELLEY MOORE CAPITO (R-W.Va.) and JOE MANCHIN (D-W.Va.) have competing energy permitting reform bills, but Capito told reporters today that she'll support Manchin's bill, per Bloomberg's Erik Wasson — a crucial vote of GOP support.

CANNON FODDER — After an appeals court granted a partial stay requested by the Justice Department in the Mar-a-Lago case, Judge AILEEN CANNON today revised her ruling to allow investigators access to classified materials. More from Law&Crime

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BIG PICTURE

HISTORY LESSON — What if this year isn't a 2010 or a 2018, but a 1978 or 1982? Kyle Kondik at Sabato's Crystal Ball has an interesting new analysis of two lesser-known years in which "one could argue that both of these elections could or should have been worse for the president's party than they otherwise were." Inflation was high, and the parties out of power made smaller gains than expected. But with margins tight this year, as they were in 1978, it doesn't take much: The pendulum doesn't always swing far, but even a red ripple would flip both chambers to the GOP.

THE BIDEN QUESTION — When President JOE BIDEN heads to Florida next week, he'll campaign with Democratic gubernatorial nominee Rep. CHARLIE CRIST — but Senate nominee Rep. VAL DEMINGS won't be there, NBC's Marc Caputo and Natasha Korecki report. "The divergent whereabouts of the two candidates says as much about their respective campaigns as it does about Democrats' approach-or-avoid conflict with the president": Crist faces a greater polling and cash disadvantage than Demings does.

BATTLE FOR THE SENATE

CASH DASH — Democratic Senate nominees raked in the dough on ActBlue in August, making for the best online fundraising month yet for many top candidates, Jessica Piper reports in a new analysis. The platform overall saw a 40% increase from July. Georgia Sen. RAPHAEL WARNOCK ($6.7 million), Wisconsin's MANDELA BARNES ($6.3 million), Arizona Sen. MARK KELLY ($5.7 million) and Pennsylvania's JOHN FETTERMAN ($5.5 million) were especially successful. But nobody pulled in more money than Demings, who raised $7.8 million.

HOT POLLS

— Colorado: Democratic Sen. MICHAEL BENNET leads JOE O'DEA 46% to 36%, per Emerson/The Hill. And Democratic Gov. JARED POLIS has a 53% to 36% advantage over HEIDI GANAHL.

— Washington: Democratic Sen. PATTY MURRAY is ahead of TIFFANY SMILEY 50% to 37%, per Crosscut/Elway. Murray and Bennet's leads indicate that the Senate GOP's "stretch" targets remain a stretch.

— Michigan: Democratic Gov. GRETCHEN WHITMER is extending her lead over TUDOR DIXON to a 55%-39% rout, per the Detroit Free Press/EPIC-MRA.

— Alaska: Forget ranked-choice: Democratic Rep. MARY PELTOLA is hitting 50% in the first round of voting, per Dittman Research.

HOT ADS

Via our colleague Steve Shepard:

— Nevada: The abortion issue has hurt GOP Senate nominee ADAM LAXALT, but Laxalt's allies at the conservative Club for Growth have a new ad designed to help him recover among women, touting his work as state AG — where he replaced now-Sen. CATHERINE CORTEZ MASTO, his opponent this fall — to clear a backlog of rape kits.

— Wisconsin: After weeks of withering GOP attacks on crime, Barnes is out with a response , featuring an endorsement from a retired Racine police sergeant. "Mandela Barnes doesn't want to defund the police," the retired officer, identified as "Rick," says in the ad. "He's very supportive of law enforcement."

 

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CONGRESS

WITH FRIENDS LIKE THESE — A hot mic caught South Korean President YOON SUK-YEOL blasting members of Congress who oppose additional global public health funding: "It would be so humiliating for Biden if these idiots don't pass it in Congress," he said, per WaPo's Amy Wang. Agence France-Presse has a slightly different wording: "How could Biden not lose damn face if these fuckers do not pass it in Congress?" The incident is already kicking up a political firestorm in Seoul.

2023 DREAMING — Many House Dems expect their top leaders to leave their posts if Republicans flip the chamber, though the leaders themselves haven't said they'll do so, WSJ's Natalie Andrews surveys the coming leadership battles, with HAKEEM JEFFRIES (N.Y.) and ADAM SCHIFF (Calif.) making moves to succeed Pelosi.

Rep. JIMMY PANETTA (Calif.): "I respect Adam and I love Adam and I'd love to see him as a senator from California."

— The race to lead the House Homeland Security GOP has gone topsy-turvy in recent months, Olivia Beavers reports in Congress Minutes: Former contenders DAN BISHOP (N.C.), MICHAEL GUEST (Miss.) and SCOTT PERRY (Pa.) are no longer angling for the spot. Now the frontrunners are MARK GREEN (Tenn.) and DAN CRENSHAW (Texas), with CLAY HIGGINS (La.) also in the hunt.

Olivia also obtained a sneak peek at House Republicans' Commitment to America agenda blueprint if they retake the chamber, which highlights everything from a parents' bill of rights in education to hiring 200,000 more police officers.

ONE TO WATCH — "First House office will hold union vote today," by WaPo's Tobi Raji: "Rep. ANDY LEVIN's (D-Mich.) Capitol Hill and district offices will hold the vote today and the results will be tallied Monday."

THE ECONOMY

THE UNEMPLOYMENT PICTURE — New jobless claims ticked up last week for the first time in six weeks, rising to 213,000, per Bloomberg. But the level is still low overall, indicating continued strength in the labor market even as the Fed raises interest rates.

MORE POLITICS

2024 WATCH — Former VP MIKE PENCE will headline the Kaufmann Family Harvest Dinner in Wilton, Iowa, next week, Fox News' Paul Steinhauser scooped.

ICYMI — "Braun to Run for Governor," by Indy Politics' Abdul Hakim-Shabazz: "Senator MIKE BRAUN plans to run for Governor next year. … Braun has been contacting Republican chairman across the state, informing them of his plans. Braun reportedly will announce sometime after the election."

— Braun today, per Burgess Everett and Marianne LeVine: "Where'd you hear that? I'll make my mind up here down the road. … I'll make a formal announcement somewhere probably late November, early December."

DONOR DIFFICULTIES — Los Angeles lawyer TOM GIRARDI has long been a notable Democratic donor, spending millions over the years across politicians like Biden, HILLARY CLINTON, BARACK OBAMA, California Gov. GAVIN NEWSOM and Sen. DIANNE FEINSTEIN. But he also faced major financial woes. "How did a deeply indebted lawyer obtain money to shower on candidates and campaigns?" the L.A. Times' Harriet Ryan and Matt Hamilton explore. "No ready explanation has surfaced. But a Times review of contributions and law firm financial records raises questions about whether Girardi used clients' funds to make the donations." Most of the beneficiaries of Girardi's largesse haven't returned his contributions.

TEFLON DON — The latest NYT/Siena poll earlier this month found DONALD TRUMP's favorability rating holding steady at 44% — the same as in July and very similar to where his numbers have stood for years, NYT's Ruth Igielnik reports.

 

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ABORTION FALLOUT

HEADS UP — Months after a 10-year-old rape victim drew national attention for traveling out of state to get an abortion, Ohio Capital Journal's Marty Schladen reports that two more minors who became pregnant after being assaulted had to leave Ohio to terminate their pregnancies, according to new court affidavits.

IN THE STATES — A judge temporarily blocked Indiana's restrictive abortion law today, saying there's a "reasonable likelihood" that a women's right to make that decision is protected under the state constitution. More from the Indianapolis Star

TRUMP CARDS

THE FACEBOOK BAN — Meta's NICK CLEGG told Semafor's Steve Clemons today that when Trump's Facebook ban comes up for review in January, the company "will talk to experts, weigh the risk of real world harm and act proportionally," per Gina Chon.

BEHIND THE TISH JAMES LAWSUIT — The tax scheme of gaming the "conservation easements" system that the New York AG accused the Trumps of committing has long been a target of lawmakers, Toby Eckert and Bernie Becker report. "But progress on putting a stop to it has been halting, at best. … The IRS and lawmakers from both parties have been trying to rein in the fraud."

MEDIAWATCH

THE REPORTER AND THE PRESIDENT — Iranian President EBRAHIM RAISI refused to sit down for a planned interview with CNN's CHRISTIANE AMANPOUR in NYC because she wasn't wearing a headscarf, Amanpour said today. "I couldn't agree to this unprecedented and unexpected condition. … And so we walked away."

 

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PLAYBOOKERS

SPOTTED: Boris Epshteyn meeting over breakfast at Bourbon Steak this morning with Aaron Cutler, head of Hogan Lovells' lobbying practice.

OUT AND ABOUT — SPOTTED at the 21st annual Samuel J. Heyman Service to America Medals, hosted by the Partnership for Public Service at the Kennedy Center: second gentleman Doug Emhoff, Anthony Fauci, VA Secretary Denis McDonough, Matt Kaminski, Max Stier and Florence Pan, Raj Shah, Darren Walker, Michael Lewis, Alicia Menendez, Brian McKeon, Julie Su, Andrea Palm, Kiran Ahuja and Ronnie F. Heyman.

The National Independent Avenue Association held its first annual reception at The Anthem celebrating the enactment of the Save Our Stages legislation. Reps. "DJ Dizzy Dean" Phillips (D-Minn.) and Anthony Gonzalez (R-Ohio) guest DJ-ed. SPOTTED: Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), Rep. Brian Higgins (D-N.Y.), Dayna Frank, Audrey Fix Schaefer, Tobi Parks, Howie Kaplan, Hal Real, Steven Giaier, Charlie Chamness, Tyler Grimm, Jacob Smith, Joshua Bell, Alex Moore, Amanda Yanchury, Kaitlin Hooker, Meghan Pazik, Victoria Oms, Harvey Mason Jr., Todd Dupler, John Riccardi, Jerry Golden, Casey Higgins and Ed Pagano.

VIEWPAC held its 25th annual guest bartender reception Wednesday night, when male GOP lawmakers took turns making drinks for their female colleagues and attendees. SPOTTED: Sens. Deb Fischer (R-Neb.), Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) , Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.), Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.), and Susan Collins (R-Maine), Reps. Young Kim (R-Calif.), Michelle Steel (R-Calif.), Kat Cammack (R-Fla.), Ashley Hinson (R-Iowa), Marianette Miller-Meeks (R-Iowa), Victoria Spartz (R-Ind.), Julia Letlow (R-La.), Lisa McClain (R-Mich.), Michelle Fischbach (R-Minn.), Yvette Herrell (R-N.M.), Nicole Malliotakis (R-N.Y.), Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.), Claudia Tenney (R-N.Y.), Stephanie Bice (R-Okla.), Nancy Mace (R-S.C.), Diana Harshbarger (R-Tenn.), Beth Van Duyne (R-Texas) and Carol Miller (R-W.Va.).

UltraViolet celebrated its 10th anniversary with an award presentation and party hosted by Karen Finney at Culture House, where Women Donors Network, Rep. Cori Bush (D-Mo.), Monica Simpson, Shaunna Thomas and Nita Chaudhary were honored. SPOTTED: Brook Kelly-Green, Maureen Pelton, Michelle Ringuette, Sophie Vaughan, Rachael Hartford, Arisha Hatch, Gus Rossi, Wendy Wolf, Bridget Todd, Susan Gibbs, Kristina Wilfore, Jenny Lawson, Carlissia Graham, Matt Butler and Donna Hall.

MEDIA MOVES — CNN is shuffling its lineups temporarily for a month leading up to the midterms, Oliver Darcy reports: Jake Tapper will move to anchor the 9 p.m. hour starting Oct. 10. Alisyn Camerota and Laura Coates will anchor 10 p.m. to midnight. John Berman and Brianna Keilar will fill in at 4 p.m. And Wolf Blitzer will expand his anchoring, taking on 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. … Dylan Wells will be a campaign reporter at WaPo. She previously has covered Congress and campaigns at USA Today. Announcement

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Christina Hale is now associate administrator for the Office of Communications and Public Liaison at the SBA. She most recently was head of comms for the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation, and was the Democratic nominee for Indiana's 5th Congressional District in 2020..

NSC ARRIVAL LOUNGE — Elizabeth Kozey is now deputy senior director for response in the resilience and response directorate at the NSC. She most recently supported the Office of Counterterrorism and Emerging Threats at DHS as a senior policy adviser.

TRANSITION — Matt Boyse is now an adjunct lecturer at Johns Hopkins University's Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies and George Washington University. He most recently was deputy assistant secretary with the Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs at the State Department.

Correction: Wednesday's Playbook PM misspelled Rebecca Angelson's name.

 

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California Today: The Bay Area’s elusive fog

Some scientists are concerned that San Francisco's most iconic meteorological phenomenon is on its way out.
Author Headshot

By Soumya Karlamangla

California Today, Writer

It's Thursday. Why fog is so vital to life in California. Plus, new research shows that worsening smoke from wildfires may have reversed decades of improvements in Western air quality.

Nina Riggio for The New York Times

Coastal fog isn't unique to the California coast, but few places in the world are so deeply linked with the ghostly meteorological phenomenon. Even the emoji for "foggy" shows what appears to be the Golden Gate Bridge shrouded in clouds.

My colleague John Branch recently wrote about San Francisco's fog and concerns that it may be fading as the world warms. A reduction in fog could harm California's agriculture industry and its oldest trees, and could change the identity of the Bay Area.

John spoke to me about his article from his home about 20 miles north of the Golden Gate Bridge, which he believes may be "the most famous foggy place on the planet." We talked about why he wanted to report on fog, the role it plays in California's ecology and what he believes is San Francisco's soundtrack of the summer. Here's our conversation, lightly edited for clarity:

Soumya: How did you come to this story? Why focus on fog?

John: I have a strange infatuation with the fog. I find it mystical and fascinating. It's such a life force around here in ways that I think people don't realize. And it's beautiful, too. I love foggy days. I love driving around or running around and seeing the fog blowing over the hills or through the Golden Gate.

I have a lot of friends here who grew up in the Bay Area who certainly believe that fog is disappearing. That's anecdotal, but there have been some studies that have suggested as much. Between my fascination with fog and the idea that fog could be disappearing, I wanted to try to tell that story and dive into why that would even matter.

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Soumya: You write that it's hard to quantify fog, and therefore difficult to know for certain if fog is decreasing. But if it is, how would that affect California's agricultural areas?

John: Without the fog, presumably the temperatures warm and you have more direct sunlight. That would really change, for example, the kinds of varieties of grapes you would have. For people who spend time in Sonoma or Napa Valleys, they might know that close to the Bay is a certain kind of grape that is accustomed to cooler temperatures and foggy, less sunny climates. And the farther north you go tends to be thicker-skin grapes better for hotter, drier weather. So without fog, it would completely alter that.

And the same thing happens down in the Salinas Valley. Not with grapes, but would you be growing strawberries if it wasn't foggy and cool? Probably not.

Soumya: I was surprised to learn that the coastal redwoods, the world's tallest trees, get a third of their water supply from fog. What role does fog play in California's ecosystems?

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John: In the Bay Area, we go, for the most part, from the first of May to about the first of October, often with zero rain. Fog is the thing that bridges the gap between the rainy seasons, and feeds and nourishes the redwoods. Not only does it do that, but that water that drips off the redwoods feeds everything from lichens to mosses to newts and salamanders to salmon. It's why the streams in the hills around here don't entirely dry up in the summer and allow for salmon to not completely die off. To lose fog and lose that and to lose redwoods, potentially, is really frightening.

And then you add the more human component of that: What does it mean for temperatures, without the cloud cover? What would it mean for things like power grids, if everybody suddenly has to buy air-conditioning, which most of us around here don't have? And what does it mean for us culturally? What is San Francisco without fog? It's part of its reputation. It's part of its feeling. San Francisco's not San Francisco without fog.

Soumya: You write about real estate agents in San Francisco becoming fog experts because it's such a defining factor for neighborhoods in the city. What role does fog play in the microclimates S.F. is famous for?

John: Within San Francisco, which is a tiny city geographically, people still know which are foggy neighborhoods and which ones are not. The differences between one neighborhood that might be socked in by fog for much of July and August is huge compared to a different neighborhood that might be two miles away and, simply because it's over the top of a hill, it's known to be sunny most of the time of the year. The reason SFO is where it is is because it's the least foggy part of the peninsula. It's not on the coast like LAX because it would be foggy all the time. So the way the city is built, in some ways, is due to fog.

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Soumya: As part of your reporting, you toured the Golden Gate Bridge's five foghorns, which typically aren't open to the public. Why did you want to visit and write about them?

John: You think about fog as this kind of visceral thing: It cools our temperatures. It's really beautiful to look at. But what it also does is present the need for foghorns. And for a lot of people around here the foghorns are the soundtrack of summer.

They will be shopping down Chestnut Street or they'll be sitting on their balcony somewhere in the Mission and they can hear foghorns coming all the way from the Bay somewhere or from near the Golden Gate Bridge. And it's just this backdrop. The way some people might have crickets at night, they have foghorns, and I just love that. I think there'd be something missing if suddenly we didn't have fog and had no need for foghorns.

Mira Rojanasakul/The New York Times

If you read one story, make it this

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A child receiving a dose of Pfizer's Covid-19 vaccine in Los Angeles.Frederic J. Brown/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The rest of the news

  • Covid: California is easing mask recommendations as conditions improve, The Los Angeles Times reports.
  • Protecting bees: The California Supreme Court allowed the state on Wednesday to consider protecting threatened bumblebees under a conservation law listing for fish, The Associated Press reports.
  • Legalized sports betting: The campaign that could bring legalized sports betting to California is the most expensive ballot-initiative fight in U.S. history at about $400 million and counting, The Associated Press reports.
  • Diesel sale ban: California regulators could ban the sale of diesel big rigs by 2040, The Los Angeles Times reports.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Fentanyl overdoses: A 15-year-old L.A.U.S.D. student has overdosed on what the authorities believe to be fentanyl-laced pills, making him the seventh student to overdose over the past month, The Los Angeles Times reports.
  • Corruption probe: California's attorney general took over a Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department investigation of a county supervisor who had called the probe an act of political retaliation, The Associated Press reports.
  • Ghacham Inc.: A Los Angeles County clothing brand has agreed to plead guilty to submitting fake customs forms to skirt almost $6.4 million in tariffs, The Los Angeles Times reports.
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
  • District Attorney: Fresno County Democrats called on Rob Bonta, the California attorney general, to investigate Lisa Smittcamp, the Fresno County district attorney, saying that she "weaponizes" her office against elected Democrats of color, The Fresno Bee reports.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Oakland shootings: Oakland's leaders were going to meet to address the shootings that have plagued their city, but the City Council meeting was cut short by a shooting just outside City Hall, The San Francisco Chronicle reports.
  • Whale-ship collisions: Four whales have died near San Francisco this year after ships crashed into them, and scientists hope to drive that number to zero with new technology.
  • Rise of homeless population: Sacramento, if the courts allow, will be drawing harder lines on homeless encampments and will start policing a new ban on public camping at the end of this month, Politico reports.
Chicken with shallots.Christopher Testani for The New York Times

What we're eating

A simple, excellent one-pot recipe for a midweek feast, full of rich flavor, with a sauce that you won't want to waste.

Damian Dovarganes/Associated Press

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Caitlin Manley, who recommends the "Galápagos of North America":

"One of my favorite places to go off-grid and decompress is right in my backyard. The Channel Islands National Park is a hidden gem of California, often referred to as the 'Galápagos of North America' due to its high productivity and resulting abundant marine life. A one-hour boat ride from Oxnard or Ventura harbors gets you to this beautiful and unique island and away from the hustle of southern and central California. There you can find lush kelp forests perfect for snorkeling, kayaking, and diving — some of my favorite summer activities. Campsites are cheap but hard to come by, so book early and check rec.gov often!"

Tell us about your favorite places to visit in California. Email your suggestions to CAtoday@nytimes.com. We'll be sharing more in upcoming editions of the newsletter.

Tell us

Today is the first day of fall. What do you love about the season in California? What are the best fall activities in your corner of the state?

Email us at CAtoday@nytimes.com with your stories, memories and recommendations.

A male southern white rhino calf.Ken Bohn/San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance via AP

And before you go, some good news

The recent birth of a southern white rhino at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park may help another closely related rhino species in Kenya that's at risk of going extinct.

The San Diego calf's mother, Livia, is a member of a small herd of six southern white rhinos that were brought to Southern California from South Africa in 2015. The birth of the calf proves that Livia can get pregnant, carry a calf to term, and care for her offspring, KPBS reports.

That's important because scientists are hoping Livia and the other southern white rhino females in San Diego could one day be surrogate moms to the related northern white rhino. That species is on the precipice of extinction, thanks to war and poaching. (There are only two northern whites still living, but both are too old to breed.)

The potential surrogates in San Diego could be a lifeline to keep the northern whites from going extinct. "That's the goal for all of us," said Barbara Durrant, the San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance's director of reproductive sciences.

Thanks for reading. I'll be back tomorrow. — Soumya

Briana Scalia and Miles McKinley contributed to California Today. You can reach the team at CAtoday@nytimes.com.

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