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Wednesday, Jan. 14 | βοΈ 81Β°/59Β° |
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Happy Warm Wednesday, everyone. If you joined us after Mark's appearance on The Roggin Report last night, we're glad you're here. As Fred mentioned, weβre into "accountability journalism" β believing someone has to be present when decisions are made, even the boring ones, to hold officials to account. For more about why we focus on municipal affairs, see our About page, and thanks for joining us!
πΆ Setting the mood: "Somebody's Watching Me" by Rockwell |
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LEADING OFF |
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The Palm Springs Police Department monitors a vast network of cameras and license plate readers from the new Real-Time Intelligence Center. |
Palm Springs police outline details of AI crime center with civil liberty safeguards |
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Palm Springs Police Department officials detailed the new Coachella Valley Real-Time Intelligence Center to the city's Human Rights Commission on Monday. The system uses drones, license plate readers, and artificial intelligence to fight crime while including extensive civil liberty protections.
Driving the news: Police Chief Andy Mills told commissioners the department implemented specific protections requested by councilmembers including Grace Garner and then-councilmember Christy Holstege when the program went to the City Council.
- "We want to make sure we do it correctly, and we want to put the protections in place to ensure that as we move forward, that something that our community can be proud of," Mills said.
How it works: The center, operational since early December, brings together law enforcement databases, citywide cameras, license plate readers, and drones to provide immediate information to officers in the field.
- Lt. William Hutchinson said the automated license plate reader technology recently helped solve an Indio homicide and respond to a Cathedral City bomb threat.
Privacy protections: The system does not use facial recognition technology, which is illegal on drones in California. When drones fly to calls for service, cameras point at the horizon rather than at streets or backyards.
- The department conducts monthly audits and requires users to document their reason and case number before accessing data, creating an audit trail.
By the numbers: The department's transparency portal shows 215 cameras throughout the city detected 457,440 vehicles in the last 30 days.
What's next: Cathedral City already partners with the center, while Desert Hot Springs and Indio plan to join the regional approach.
Dive deeper with Kendall Balchan's complete story |
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BRIEFLY |
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Plans call for the site of a former Days Inn on North Palm Canyon Drive, which also housed a former Rickβs restaurant, to eventually see new life as a resort hotel. |
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π¨ Opposition to remodel called out as βdisingenuousβ as expansion of blighted property approved
- The Palm Springs Planning Commission on Tuesday approved plans to remodel and rebrand the former Days Inn on North Palm Canyon Drive, allowing the property owner to expand the hotel from 107 to 179 rooms and construct a new two-story building.
- The commission received about 70 written public comments opposing the project's CEQA exemption, raising concerns about noise, traffic, and dust impacts. Planning Director Chris Hadwin said city staff found the project met all criteria for the exemption, noting the site's use as a resort hotel is close to its previous use as a Days Inn motel.
- Bottom line: Vice Chair Lauri Aylaian called the last-minute letters "disingenuous" and urged residents concerned about the environment or traffic to get involved with the city's Sustainability Commission or Active Transportation rather than oppose "a project that is removing blight" from the neighborhood.
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ποΈ What to watch for at tonight's City Council meeting
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The Palm Springs City Council will consider major funding commitments for two affordable housing projects when it meets at 5:30 p.m. this evening, including a proposed $3.8 million loan for an 82-unit development on West San Rafael Drive and $2.25 million to assist with land acquisition for a 115-unit affordable housing project at McCarthy Road and San Rafael Drive.
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Councilmembers will also hear an appeal related to the 82-unit project and decide whether to uphold the Planning Commissionβs prior approval. The agenda (view it here) also includes routine Consent Agenda items such as contract amendments, infrastructure-related appropriations, and second readings of previously introduced ordinances.
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Details: Residents may attend in-person, view the meeting live online on the cityβs YouTube channel or at palmspringsca.gov β or watch on Community Television Channel 17. Comments can be submitted online at this website.
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TODAY'S FEATURED EVENTS |
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Flourish: An Edible Garden Workshop Series
9 a.m. | Prescott Preserve
Join us for Flourish, a 6-week, edible garden workshop series designed to connect people, purpose, and place. The series blends the core principles of the Blue Zones Power 9 β natural movement, eating wisely, and creating a sense of belonging.
Heart of the City Walking Tour
9:30 a.m. | Palm Springs Historical Society
Explore the dynamic past and vibrant present of this world-famous desert getaway while strolling the Walk of Stars. Learn how Hollywood stars, part of our local scene, made Palm Springs their playground. ($40)
Chinese Mah Jong Open Play
2 p.m. | Mizell Center
Practice your skills and play with others. This is a FREE library program; you do not have to be a member of Mizell Center to attend.
Palm Springs City Council
5:30 p.m. | City Hall
The city council meets this evening in a closed and open session. Check out the agenda here.
Cherstruck
7 p.m. | PS Underground
Join us in celebrating the remarkable and legendary life of Cher through an enchanting musical and culinary experience. ($170)
The Gand Band: Elvis Birthday Celebration
8:30 p.m. | Agua Caliente Casino Palm Springs
The Gand Band ignites 2026 with a thrilling birthday tribute to the King of Rock βnβ Roll β celebrating Elvis Presley with all the electrifying energy, style, and musical fire that made him a legend. ($22) |
| π View all events |
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AND FINALLY ... |
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Palm Springs Mayor Naomi Soto gets help from children as she cuts the ribbon at new Ruth Hardy Park playground equipment Tuesday afternoon. |
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Palm Springs officials celebrated the opening of the cityβs largest and most inclusive playground Tuesday at Ruth Hardy Park, a $1.5 million project that can accommodate 358 children at once and features the only shaded βsuper towerβ of its kind in the United States.
Driving the news: The fully ADA-compliant playground marks the cityβs fourth such installation in just two years, funded through Parks capital improvements and Measure J revenue as part of Palm Springsβ ongoing commitment to accessible recreation spaces.
What makes it special: The playground is designed for children of all abilities to play together, with full shade coverage throughout and enough space to avoid feeling crowded even during packed weekend mornings when families gather in large numbers.
Why it matters: City officials say the investment goes beyond equipment and fresh paint, reflecting Palm Springsβ values around creating safe, welcoming spaces that encourage physical activity, social interaction, and community connections across the entire park.
The response: City Manager Scott Stiles reports seeing βtons of kidsβ at the playground daily since opening, while Mayor Naomi Soto observed the transformation extends throughout the facility.
What theyβre saying: βWeβre making some core memories here for the parents,β Soto said at Tuesday's ribbon-cutting ceremony. βYou know core memory when you see it, when you feel it, and those are happening all the time here at Ruth Hardy Park.β
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IN CASE YOU MISSED IT Recently published stories
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πΊ Kendall enjoys songs that make her feel as if she's walking like John Travolta in the opening seen of "Saturday Night Fever".
π Mark doesn't think there's enough Ibuprofen in the world to help his body handle playing on some of the new-fangled playground equipment they're installing these days.
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Copyright Β© 02/06/2026 Valley Voice Media, All rights reserved.
The Post is proudly produced in District 1. Typos are intentional
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