CBS News
Thieves pilfer Los Angeles’ iconic 6th Street Bridge for metal, leaving the landmark in the dark
Los Angeles — Hundreds of people every day walk on Los Angeles’ 6th Street Bridge, but at sundown they disappear, and the “Ribbon of Light” goes completely in the dark.
“About 7 miles from end to end of copper wire that has been stolen,” L.A. City Councilman Kevin de León told CBS News. “So these lights are becoming ATM machines.”
The eye-catching bridge — which traverses the L.A. River and the 101 Freeway, connecting the historic Boyle Heights neighborhood to the downtown L.A. Arts District — opened to great fanfare in July 2022 and at a cost of nearly $600 million, but now has Angelenos shaking their heads in dismay.
Over the past year, thieves have gradually stripped the lights, poles and copper wiring that illuminate the bridge’s arches. The stolen metal in total is worth about $11,000, according to de León.
“What they’re getting, actually, is pennies on the dollar,” de León said. “It costs taxpayers millions of dollars in repairs.”
A special city task force is trying to crackdown on the thefts and the recycling centers that buy the stolen copper wire.
Hundreds of fire hydrants across the city have also been stolen for scrap metal since last year. Security video showed suspects using a truck to knock one down and haul it away.
“It’s mind boggling that somebody would just come into a neighborhood and steal a fire hydrant,” Angeleno Krystal Cousins said.
Many replacements now have locks to prevent access to the bolts.
Meanwhile, city officials don’t plan on replacing the bridge’s lights until they can find a way to stop the thieves from picking the bridge apart.
CBS News
Nature: Salmon run in Washington State
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
CBS News
Peggy Noonan reflects on a “troubled, frayed” America
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
CBS News
Biden to stress climate action in first visit by sitting U.S. president to Amazon Rainforest
Washington — President Biden is set to deliver remarks on climate conservation in Manaus, Brazil, on Sunday during a visit to the Amazon rainforest that marks the first such trip by any sitting U.S. president in history.
Mr. Biden has made addressing climate change a key part of his policy agenda, approving legislation that reduces emissions, while setting the country on a path toward a transition to green energy. With the visit Sunday, the president is set to highlight his commitment to combatting global deforestation and conserving forests as part of what the White House calls Mr. Biden’s “historic climate legacy.”
The president is set to announce during the visit that the U.S. has reached its goal of increasing its climate finance to over $11 billion a year, up from $1.5 billion when Mr. Biden took office. He will also designate Nov. 17 as International Conservation Day, while the administration announces new conservation efforts including $50 million for the Amazon Fund, among other initiatives.
Mr. Biden is set to meet local and Indigenous leaders, take an aerial tour of the Amazon rainforest and tour a local museum, before heading to Rio de Janeiro for the G20 summit with world leaders. The trip comes after the president has been attending the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Peru in recent days, where he met with his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping.
The historic visit comes as climate advocates have warned of the environmental consequences of President-elect Donald Trump’s plans to rollback the Biden administration’s efforts to combat climate change.