Currently in Los Angeles — October 4, 2023: A warmup is underway

Plus, could a coalition Speaker of the House avoid a shutdown?

The weather, currently.

A warmup is underway

The warm up is on across the southland. Yesterday, temperatures were in the low 80s away from the beaches. Today, downtown L.A. will hit about 87. Thurs and Friday look to be the warmest days on tap with low 90s away from the coast, and 80s at the beaches as those Santa Anas really ramp up. Not bad at all.

What you need to know, currently.

A US government shutdown just become more likely — again.

On Tuesday, the House of Representatives voted out their leader for the first time in national history. What comes next isn’t readily apparent.

While the House is in a chaos of their own making, no business will get done. And the deal to stop a shutdown last weekend gave only a 45-day window — until November 17th — to formulate and pass funding bills for the entirety of the federal government.

The Washington Post has a good overview (gift link) of all the effects on the environment, climate, and weather operations of the federal government if the government shuts down. Some highlights:

Less enforcement of clean air and water protections. Closure of national parks and other public lands. Interruption of some environmental cleanups. Delays in new federal rules aimed at boosting clean energy.

Those are some of the potential effects of a federal shutdown — consequences that could compound the longer Congress is unable to agree on a way to keep the government operating.

While we are in the middle of an escalating climate emergency, having a functioning federal government is in everyone’s best interest — it helps direct disaster aid, it helps coordinate greenhouse gas regulations, it can stimulate investment in renewable energy.

There’s also a scenario in all this mess that Republicans effectively lose control of the House — and form a coalition government with Democrats — something that has hardly ever been tested in national American politics but is common in other parts of the world. Here’s hoping.

What you can do, currently.

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One of my favorite organizations, Mutual Aid Disaster Relief, serves as a hub of mutual aid efforts focused on climate action in emergencies — like hurricane season. Find mutual aid network near you and join, or donate to support existing networks: