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This is the California Report.
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I'm Medi-Bolanyos in San Francisco.
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California's two largest pension funds are tied to billions of dollars in federal immigration
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and security contracts.
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That's according to a new analysis from the non-profit Stand.Earth.
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The report found that CalPERS and CalSTERS have invested more than $2.7 billion into companies
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working with ICE and the Department of Homeland Security.
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We're talking about big names like the tech firm, Palantir, and weapons manufacturers
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like General Dynamics.
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The funds cover retirement for everyone from state employees to public school teachers.
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A federal judge in California says border patrol violated a federal court order barring
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them from making illegal stops and arrests.
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Sergio, almost with our California newsroom partner CalMatters, explains.
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The ruling was handed out two weeks ago, but it wasn't unsealed until this Thursday morning.
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Judge Jennifer Thurston of California's Eastern District issued a preliminary injunction
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last year after former Border Patrol chief Gregor Bavino took 65 agents into Kern County
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to conduct roving patrols.
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In that case, Thurston said, quote, you can't just go up to people with brown skin and say
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show me your papers.
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Despite this injunction, Bavino went on to conduct another raid in Sacramento, which is
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also in the Eastern District where Thurston's injunction was in effect.
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This ruling is about that Sacramento raid and formally cites the Department of Homeland
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Security for violating the earlier injunction.
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This is the first time this has happened in court since President Trump launches mass deportation
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That was CalMatters reporter Sergio Olmos.
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The Nuclear Regulatory Commission just gave California's only operating nuclear power
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plan approval to run for an extra 20 years.
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KCBX's Kendra Hanna reports.
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Diablo Canyon located on the central coast produces almost 10% of California's electricity.
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It's in Congressman Salud Carbohel's District.
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He says that trying to meet California's carbon-free energy goals without the plant operating
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could lead to blackouts.
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We could be in a challenging predicament not having the energy reliance that we need
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here in the state of California.
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The state has fought for years over how long the plant should operate.
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Anti-nuclear activists have argued that multiple nearby fault lines makes it too risky to run.
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The Nuclear Regulatory Commission has said the plant is safe from possible earthquakes.
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The state of California will have the final word on how long the plant runs.
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For the California report, I'm Kendra Hanna reporting from San Luis Obispo.
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This week, indie musician Mitzky is playing a series of sold-out shows at an unexpected
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LA venue, Hollywood High School's auditorium.
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She's literally coming to our freaking school.
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I think it's like kind of surreal.
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I'm definitely going to cry.
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LAist reporter Mariana Dale talked to students about the residency and learned about the
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schools more than 100-year-old history.
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Hollywood High Senior Angel Cueto says she first heard Mitzky in middle school.
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A very, like, angsty teen part of my life.
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One of her favorite songs is 2016's Your Best American Girl.
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There's so many times where I've just bought my eyes out in the shower to her music and
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she's always like the crying artist that I go to when I just want a good cry.
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For sophomore London James, it's the poetry of her music.
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Mitzky speaks to me like I understand her like she's me and I'm her.
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However, neither James nor Cueto was optimistic they'd be able to score tickets to her show.
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Mitzky is built a dedicated following since she self-released her first album in 2012.
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I didn't even bother texting the ticket prices because I knew it would be like a normal
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Hollywood High is one of just two US stops for Mitzky's tour to support her new album.
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Nothing's about to happen to me.
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She told the show World Cafe why she chose venues like a school auditorium.
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I wanted it to feel special.
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I wanted it to feel like an experience.
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I wanted to recreate even the feeling that I had going to shows, going to DIY shows,
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Mitzky isn't the first artist to play the auditorium.
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Former Smith's frontman Morrissey played the school back in 2013.
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But Hollywood High School's connection to the arts goes back decades.
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The campus's de facto historian and my tour guide is Samuel Dove Latian.
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I am the principal at the world famous Hollywood High School.
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Because we graduate so many artists and people in entertainment.
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Alumni names line the school's hallways in red stars.
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The iconic Carol Burnett.
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We have Mickey Rooney on this side.
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Of course we cannot miss the famous Judy Garland of the Wizard of Oz.
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The actress Brandy came here as well.
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The arts are also a core part of the school's present.
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Noena Acorley is in the new media academy where students learn video and film production.
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She says as a black girl, she doesn't always see herself in media.
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I want to make stories and films that people can relate to and make them feel seen.
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The same auditorium where Mitzky will host her residency is also home to the school's
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performing arts program, which includes theater, dance and music.
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They do not make auditoriums like this anymore.
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Principal Dove Latian says there are more than a thousand wooden seats between the first
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floor and the mezzanine, a thick red stage curtain and a pipe organ embedded in the walls.
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We rival some of the playhouses on Hollywood Boulevard.
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Student Angel Cueto has a different take on the space.
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It's in my head a jinky auditorium that I spent like four years in, like sometimes it hurts
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my butt sitting in there for too long.
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But Cueto is looking forward to seeing the space transformed for Mitzky's show.
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I'm definitely going to cry.
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We want a pair of donated tickets in a contest for good attendance, along with 45 other students,
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including London James.
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And I don't think it's enough.
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Since Cueto is a senior, this will be one of the last events she experiences at the
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It's like not just us watching artists that we like so much, but us also maybe like getting
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a pick into our future.
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James, who's part of the theater program, also encourages people to check out performances
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created by students.
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If you can go see Mitzky, you can come see into the world.
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John over this auditorium is Hollywood highs spring musical starts in mid-April.
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That's LAest Mariana Dale reporting.
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And that is the California report for Friday, April 3rd, where production of KQED news.
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Our engineers are Danny Bringer, Christopher Beale, Brendan Willard, Brian Douglas, and Jim
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Our producers are Catherine Monahan and Keith Miziguchi.
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Our senior editor is Angela Corral.
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Our managing editor is Ted Goldberg, and our editor in chief is Ethan Tobin-Lindsay.
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Thank you for listening and have a great weekend.
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Support for the California report comes from the Wesley Foundation, investing in California's
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underserved children and youth.
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Paint care, making paint recycling easy at more than 800 sites in California.
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Paint care dot org and Eric and Wendy Schmidt, whose philanthropy works to create a healthy,
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resilient, secure world for all on the web at the Schmidt dot org.