

Set up test site on Pantheon for the build of the Storefront.Implemented the Bootstrap icon set into EDGEL 5.Presented at the College Web community and gained insight around their needs as a community.Along this line, Figma has delivered enhancements for designers such as Tidy Up, Smart Selection, Components, and Constraints. Developed a design/development hand off process.Auto Layout has recently joined this group, as they continue to iterate on our workflow. This feature allows frames to automatically resize according to their content, based on rules you’ve set. Waiting for senior management sign off to publish the Inclusive Language Guide.Development resource and UX resource slim due to competing priorities with WPP and staff leave.Development of new Design System front end storefront.A clear content strategy which outlines how content will be developed through stages starting with identifying the content that the Design System will launch with.Test the contribution process with the Web Publishing Platform product by introducing a new component (the navigation).Working alongside the WPP to better understand the navigation as a whole, global, horizontal and vertical.Release Design System v0.1 with a core set of components and variants.Continued work to build out the UI Design Library in Figma. From de-escalation on city streets to rehabilitative programs like yoga, which our students loved trying, these programs that would receive funding from AB 28 make our city safer and save lives.Look at the multibadging and inclusion of subsite logos.This will launch with some desktop and mobile components. This summer, I saw the exceptional work that violence intervention programs do firsthand when I worked with Urban Peace Institute to spotlight their work to high school student activists. To the editor: As a UC Davis student and Glendale native, I’m thrilled that Assembly Bill 28 passed in the state Senate. The insurance companies would salivate to expand with this new area of business. This proposal would cause owners to secure their weapons more assuredly, or consider seriously insuring their weapons, and it would provide a fund to partially compensate those injured by firearms. There could also be a modest fine for the open carrying of an uninsured firearm. The gun owner would face a large fine if his uninsured weapon caused injury to another. Requiring gun owners to insure their guns against injuries to others caused by their use would be more effective. It will be bitterly opposed and do little to reduce gun violence. To the editor: Recently, the California Legislature passed a measure to tax firearms and ammunition. Newsom signing this bill and in doing so, saving lives. I never will be able to unsee these things, but I can see Gov. Having worked on the frontlines of this epidemic, I know what it looks like when bullets ravage a body and the pain survivors feel in the wake of this violence. Instead of letting firearm-related profits solely benefit the gun industry, this bill would impose a modest 11% excise tax on gun sellers and manufacturers to fund programs remediating and mitigating the harms firearms too often cause in our communities. The gun industry continues to reap historic profits while its products fuel a costly public health epidemic.

As survivors, families, communities and taxpayers, we all pay the enormous costs associated with gun violence, whether we own a firearm or not.

To the editor: As a former paramedic and firefighter, I applaud the California Senate for passing AB 28.
