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Metro’s Olympics plans rely on federal funding. Will Trump threaten it?

Because the Trump administration continues to threaten federal funding for a big selection of departments, applications and tasks throughout the nation, native officers and transit specialists are on alert to know how or if Metro can be affected, as the town waits for thousands and thousands of allotted {dollars} to develop the rail traces, in addition to a solution to a multibillion greenback request for the 2028 Olympics.
The Metropolitan Transportation Authority depends considerably on federal funding for on a regular basis transit operations and for main tasks together with development of the Purple Line extension venture, that may lengthen the route from Koreatown by means of the Miracle Mile, and the East San Fernando Valley line, which was awarded nearly $900 million in grant funds beneath the Biden administration final yr.
Metro is continuous to evaluate how a lot federal funding that has been promised continues to be susceptible.
“We’ve not had any disruption to the circulation of our federal funding at this level,” stated Michael Turner, Metro’s govt officer of presidency affairs. “For many years right here, we’ve labored with our congressional delegation, we’ve labored with Republican and Democratic administrations in Washington to advance our program, and we’re going to proceed to try this right here.”
A query that looms is how the Trump administration will reply to final yr’s request for $3.2 billion to fund transportation tasks for the Olympics. A bulk of the request was for $2 billion to lease almost 3,000 buses as a part of the town’s push to develop its transit community for the video games throughout the county.
“We’re going ahead with our plans as if we’re totally funded. And we actually don’t have any indication that they gained’t fund our tasks and our Olympic aspirations,” stated County Supervisor Janice Hahn, who chairs the Metro board. “So we’re going beneath the idea that we’re going to work with them.”
The Division of Transportation released a memo earlier this yr stating that funding can be prioritized for areas with excessive marriage and beginning charges and the place vaccines weren’t mandated. Hahn stated it learn like a “veiled menace” that funds can be steered from blue states towards crimson states, and prompted concern over what selections might observe.
“I hope that’s not true, however assume that’s why we grew to become just a bit bit conscious that there could be totally different standards for funding our tasks different than simply the importance and the advantages that tasks would ship to Californians,” she stated.
Whereas Hahn stated that the primary Trump administration labored nicely with Metro, there could also be broader wants from the state this time round if the Division of Transportation makes main adjustments to its insurance policies.
Assemblymember Nick Schultz (D-Burbank) just lately launched a invoice that might ask voters in 2026 to approve a $20 billion bond to fund transportation tasks all through California. The invoice has been supported by Metro.
Eli Lipmen, the manager director of transit advocacy group Transfer L.A., stated that voters have supported gross sales tax measures up to now, making Los Angeles “much less depending on who’s in Congress or who’s within the White Home.” However issues stay over how the present administration might have an effect on mega tasks with regard to public transit.
To this point, the Division of Transportation’s most important focus in California has been the state’s high-speed rail venture, which is presently present process a compliance review that would have an effect on its future federal funding. Throughout a current information convention at Union Station, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy known as the practice a “crappy venture” and stated that the state should be held accountable for its spending. The venture, which has confronted ongoing challenges over its funds and timeline, has spent greater than $13 billion. No stretch of the route has been accomplished and the authority estimates the funds is greater than $100 billion greater than initially proposed.
Transit specialists have stated {that a} choice to tug federal {dollars} from the high-speed rail venture might trigger a ripple impact throughout different main tasks within the state.
Tariffs might additionally current an impediment for infrastructure tasks if the price of development supplies, akin to metal, lumber and concrete, continues to rise.
“These tariff threats are instantly at odds with the aim of decreasing prices for unusual People, however they’re additionally at odds with decreasing prices for giant tasks that I imagine we have to be making on this nation,” Rep. Laura Friedman (D-Glendale) stated.
Friedman, who sits on the Home Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, just lately burdened California’s standing as a donor state to make a case for why it ought to proceed to obtain federal funding.
“California sends much more cash to the federal authorities that will get dispersed throughout the nation than we get again,” she stated throughout a recent tour of the almost accomplished Wilshire/La Brea Metro subway station, a part of the Purple D-Line extension project.
“We’re not asking for different states to ship us cash — we’re asking simply to maintain a few of our cash in our time of want, after we’re recovering from fires, after we’re internet hosting the Olympics for the entire United States.”
Instances employees author Ian James contributed to this report.
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What is the Moon Made Of? (Hint: It’s Not Cheese)

A set of instruments shut off almost 50 years ago are still producing useful results. It’s the seismometers left by the Apollo missions to monitor moonquakes, which as the name suggests are earthquakes but on the Moon. First off, the Apollo seismometers were the first to reveal that the Moon does indeed have quakes, which is an impressive achievement in its own right. And once we realized that the Moon shakes, we’ve been able to use the natural seismic vibrations produced inside the Moon to map out its interior structure.
It’s the same way that we can map out the interior of the Earth. Vibrations travel at different speeds through different kinds of materials, just like sounds are different in the air versus under water.
The reason that the Apollo-era seismometers, which were shut off in 1978, still provide useful results is that even though they’re not producing data, our analysis techniques and understanding have improved. This means we can squeeze more information out of the data we already have, and decades after the seismometers went silent, we were able to use their data to find evidence for the existence of the Moon’s core.
So the Moon’s got a core, that’s nice. What’s the big deal? The big deal is that it’s best to stop thinking of the Moon as merely the natural satellite of the Earth. Instead, think of it as small rocky terrestrial world in its own right. It’s stepping out of the shadow and into the limelight, and it’s got something to say.
I’m reframing this because the Moon is our keystone to understanding how ALL terrestrial planets – Mercury, Venus, Mars, and yes, even Earth – evolved in their early history. That’s because the Moon still retains a record, a memory, of its younger days, frozen in place for billions of years. The Earth doesn’t remember most of its ancient history because of all our plate tectonics. We haven’t landed on Mercury. We’ve technically landed on Venus, but that wasn’t for very long so it doesn’t count. And yes, we’ve landed a lot on Mars, and even collected some samples…but we haven’t figured out how to get those samples back to Earth.
So not only does the Moon retain a memory of what all terrestrial planets go through, it’s right there and we’ve been able to touch it! And bring some back! And, and smell it! By cracking open Moon rocks, by looking at seismometer data, by looking at core samples, by looking at heat flow data, we can piece together what happened on the Moon and use that knowledge to inform what happens to Mars, Venus, Mercury…and Earth.
And what happened to the Moon was, put simply, not very pretty. We now know that there was a phase, shortly after it formed, when the Moon was covered in a single magma ocean with a depth of around 500 kilometers. What we call the Lunar highlands are simply the slightly-less-dense rock that floated to the surface of that magma ocean and then solidified first. What floated to the top and cooled was largely minerals containing oxygen and silicon, with iron sinking down to form the core – hey wait a minute, that’s exactly like the Earth! I told you the Moon could tell us about our own planet.
Shortly after the surface of the Moon largely cooled and the crust formed, it suffered a series of intense impacts, an epoch between 3.85 and 4 billion years ago called the Late Heavy Bombardment. Just strike after strike after strike, like a brutal uneven boxing match that you just can’t look away from. Each of those impacts formed breccias, which comes from the Italian word for rubble. Why we didn’t just call it rubble, I don’t know.
Breccias are formed when you have a bunch of different kinds of rocks and minerals doing their own thing, minding their own business, when WHAM a meteorite comes crashing in, smashing and mixing and fusing everything together, and then all those minerals are forced to cohabitate in the same rocks.
Finally, after the late heavy bombardment, the moon suffered periods of major volcanism, which would explode and pour liquid hot magma across their surroundings, generating the mare, or seas, that we see today.
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GOP widens UC antisemitism investigations, hitting UCLA, UC San Francisco medical schools

The UCLA and UC San Francisco medical schools have been given two weeks to submit years of internal documents to a Republican-led congressional committee about alleged antisemitism and how the schools responded, widening the federal government’s far-reaching investigations into the University of California.
The demands from House Education and Workforce Committee Chair Rep. Tim Walberg (R-Mich.) cited reports of Jewish people “experiencing hostility and fear” at each campus and that universities had not proved that they “meaningfully responded.”
Walberg’s letters said the committee would be investigating whether the schools violated Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color and national origin in programs and activities receiving federal financial assistance.
The additional investigation comes as top UC officials and the Justice Department have begun negotiations over allegations that the UCLA campus overall has been hostile to Jewish students, staff and faculty. The federal government has suspended more than $500 million in health, medical and energy research grants from UCLA and is seeking $1 billion and major campus changes before restoring the funds.
The Trump administration cited alleged Title VI violations when pulling the money.
The House committee said Monday it wanted “all documents and communications” since Sept. 1, 2021, tied to complaints of antisemitic incidents at UCLA and UC San Fransisco. A similar letter was also sent to the University of Illinois College of Medicine.
Some UCLA medical school faculty are members of a broader campus organization, the Jewish Faculty Resilience Group, that has aired complaints publicly for months at UC regents meetings about antisemitism.
The group’s chair, medical school assistant clinical professor of psychiatry Kira Stein, is mentioned in the Monday letter to UCLA as a faculty member who has reported anti-Jewish incidents.
“Federal lawmakers, in their letter released today, echoed what many of us have experienced firsthand: Antisemitism at UCLA is common, corrosive, and continues to be met with silence and inaction from the university administration and local leaders,” Stein said in a statement Monday.
The committee has asked for communications with UCLA’s medical school dean, administrators who work on diversity or restorative justice-related programs, and several other positions as well as data on specific events and courses, including one on “structural racism and health equity.”
It also asked for emails from administrators “referring or relating to antisemitism or the terms Jewish, Israel, Israeli, Palestine, or Palestinian.” And it requests information about a January report focused on the medical school that a UCLA task force on anti-Palestinian, anti-Muslim and anti-Arab racism prepared.
That 35-page report said “students, residents and faculty in the David Geffen School of Medicine who express support for Palestinian human rights, and who offer any criticism of Israel’s violation of them, face harassment from within and outside the medical school.”
The House committee has asked for “all documents and communications since October 7, 2023 in the possession of the office of the executive vice chancellor” — UCLA Provost Darnell Hunt — related to that task force. Members of the task force have accused UCLA of not taking complaints of bias incidents against Muslims, Arab Americans and Palestinian Americans as seriously as it has reports of antisemitism.
Walberg said that, in addition to Title VI enforcement, he would use the documents to “aid the committee in considering whether potential legislative changes, including legislation to specifically address antisemitic discrimination, are needed.”
The UCLA medical school is also under a Department of Health and Human Services investigation over accusations that it “discriminates on the basis of race, color, or national origin in its admissions.” UCLA denied the charges and the department has not formally announced the results of its investigation that began in late March. But when it canceled hundreds of millions in grants to UCLA last month, the Trump administration said the action was due in part to its belief that the university illegally uses race in admissions.
In a Monday statement, a spokesperson for the UCLA medical school said it opposed antisemitism.
“Antisemitism has no place at UCLA’s medical school. Protecting the civil rights of our Jewish community members remains a top priority,” the statement said. “We are committed to fair processes in all our educational programs and activities, consistent with federal and state anti-discrimination laws and continue to take specific steps to foster an environment free of antisemitism and other forms of discrimination and harassment.”
A spokesperson for UC San Francisco did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Tense disagreements have erupted at the UCLA medical school between pro-Israel and pro-Palestinian students, faculty and staff since the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attack on Israel and Israel’s ensuing war in Gaza. Each has accused the other of discrimination, doxxing and harassment. Incidents at the school have been cited by two UCLA task forces, one that looked at antisemitism and anti-Israeli bias and the other that researched anti-Palestinian, anti-Muslim and anti-Arab racism.
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