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California's 26th senatorial district

Bel Air, Los AngelesBeverly Hills, CaliforniaBrentwood, Los AngelesCalifornia State Senate districtsChannel Islands of California
Data missing from July 2023Data missing from June 2023El Segundo, CaliforniaFairfax, Los AngelesGovernment of Los AngelesGovernment of Los Angeles County, CaliforniaHermosa Beach, CaliforniaHollywood, Los AngelesHollywood HillsHolmby Hills, Los AngelesLomita, CaliforniaManhattan Beach, CaliforniaMar Vista, Los AngelesMarina del Rey, CaliforniaPacific Palisades, Los AngelesPalos Verdes PeninsulaPlaya Vista, Los AngelesPlaya del Rey, Los AngelesRancho Park, Los AngelesRedondo Beach, CaliforniaSanta Monica, CaliforniaSanta Monica MountainsSouth Bay, Los AngelesTorrance, CaliforniaUse mdy dates from August 2023Venice, Los AngelesWest Hollywood, CaliforniaWest Los AngelesWestchester, Los AngelesWestside (Los Angeles County)Westwood, Los Angeles
California's 26th Senatorial district (2021)
California's 26th Senatorial district (2021)

California's 26th senatorial district is one of 40 California State Senate districts. It is currently represented by Democrat María Elena Durazo of Los Angeles.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article California's 26th senatorial district (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

California's 26th senatorial district
Park Drive, Los Angeles Echo Park

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: California's 26th senatorial districtContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 34.0897 ° E -118.2439 °
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Address

Park Drive 2299
90026 Los Angeles, Echo Park
California, United States
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California's 26th Senatorial district (2021)
California's 26th Senatorial district (2021)
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Nearby Places

Chavez Ravine Arboretum
Chavez Ravine Arboretum

The Chavez Ravine Arboretum, in Elysian Park, just north of Dodger Stadium, at 929 Academy Road, Los Angeles, California, contains more than 100 varieties of trees from around the world, including what are believed to be the oldest and largest Cape Chestnut, Kauri, and Tipu trees in the United States. Admission to the arboretum is free. The Arboretum was founded in 1893 by the Los Angeles Horticultural Society, and planting of rare trees continued through the 1920s. Most of the original trees are still standing. The Arboretum was declared a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument in 1967. Trees in the Arboretum include: Acacia dealbata Acer (maple) Acer campestre (field maple) Acer negundo (box elder) Acer paxii Acer saccharinum (silver maple) Aesculus x carnea Afrocarpus gracilior Agathis robusta Alnus rhombifolia (white alder) Angophora costata (rose apple) Araucaria bidwillii (bunya pine) Archontophoenix cunninghamiana (king palm) Baphia chrysophylla Bauhinia Bauhinia forficata (Brazilian orchid tree) Bauhinia variegata (orchid tree) Betula nigra (black birch) Brachychiton (bottletree) Brachychiton acerifolius (Illiwarra flame tree) Brachychiton acerifolius (Herman hybrid) Brachychiton discolor Brachychiton populneus (Kurrajong) Brahea (Hesper palm) Brahea armata (Mexican blue palm) Brahea brandegeei Brahea edulis (Guadalupe palm) Butia capitata (jelly palm) Calocedrus decurrens (California incense cedar) Calodendrum capense (Cape chestnut) Caryota urens Castanospermum australe Casuarina cunninghamiana Cedrus (cedar) Cedrus deodara Cedrus libani Ceiba (cypress) Ceiba insignis Ceiba speciosa (silk floss tree) Celtis australis Chamaerops humilis Chionanthus retusus Cryptocarya rubra Cryptomeria japonica Cupaniopsis anacardioides Cupressus Cupressus glabra Cupressus species Dalbergia sissoo Dracaena draco (Canary Islands dragon tree) Ehretia Ehretia anacua (sandpaper tree) Ehretia tinifolia Eriobotrya Eriobotrya deflexa Eriobotrya japonica (loquat) Erythrina (coral tree) Erythrina coralloides (naked coral tree) Erythrina falcata (Brazilian coral tree) Erythrina humeana (dwarf kaffirboom) Eucalyptus Eucalyptus camaldulensis (river red gum) Eucalyptus citriodora Eucalyptus cladocalyx (sugar gum) Eucalyptus globulus Eucalyptus robusta (swamp mahogany) Eucalyptus rudis (flooded gum) Eucalyptus viminalis (manna gum) Ficus (fig tree) Ficus microcarpa Ficus racemosa Ficus religiosa (sacred fig) Ficus species Fraxinus (ash) Fraxinus uhdei Fraxinus velutina Handroanthus impetiginosus (pink lapacho) Heteromeles arbutifolia Jacaranda acutifolia Jubaea chilensis (Chilean wine palm) Juglans nigra (eastern black walnut) Lagerstroemia indica (crepe myrtle) Liquidambar formosana (Chinese sweet gum) Liriodendron tulipifera Livistona Livistona australis (cabbage-tree palm) Livistona chinensis (Chinese fan palm) Macadamia ternifolia Magnolia grandiflora Metasequoia glyptostroboides (dawn redwood) Metrosideros excelsa (pohutukawa) Nyssa sylvatica (black tupelo) Phoenix Phoenix canariensis (Canary Island date palm) Phoenix dactylifera (date palm) Phoenix reclinata Phoenix reclinata (hybrid) Phoenix roebelenii x rupicola Phoenix rupicola (cliff date palm) Phytolacca dioica (ombú) Pinus (pine) Pinus canariensis (Canary Island pine) Pinus edulis (Colorado pinyon) Pinus halepensis (aleppo pine) Pinus thunbergii (Japanese black pine) Pittosporum (cheesewood) Pittosporum phillyraeoides Pittosporum tenuifolium (black matipo) Pittosporum undulatum Plinia cauliflora (jabuticaba) Podocarpus totara Psidium guajava (apple guava) Quercus (oak) Quercus agrifolia (coast live oak) Quercus alba (white oak) Quercus cerris (turkey oak) Quercus coccinea (scarlet oak) Quercus macrocarpa (bur oak) Quercus palustris (pin oak) Quercus rubra (northern red oak) Quercus suber (cork oak) Quercus virginiana (southern live oak) Rhapidophyllym hystrix (needle palm) Rhapis excelsa (broadleaf lady palm) Rhodosphaera rhodanthema Rhopalostylis baueri Rhus integrifolia Sabal Sabal causiarum (Puerto Rican hat palm) Sabal species Salix babylonica (weeping willow) Schinus (pepper tree) Schinus molle (Peruvian pepper) Schinus polygamus (Cabrera Hardee peppertree) Sequoiadendron giganteum Syagrus romanzoffiana (queen palm) Taxodium distichum Tipuana tipu Toona ciliata Trachycarpus Trachycarpus fortunei (windmill palm) Trachycarpus wagnerianus Tristaniopsis laurina (water gum) Trithrinax acanthocoma Ulmus americana (American elm) Umbellularia californica (California bay laurel) Washingtonia Washingtonia filifera (desert fan) Washingtonia robusta (Mexican fan palm) Zelkova serrata (Japanese zelkova)

KBLA

KBLA (1580 AM) is a broadcast radio station in the United States. Licensed to Santa Monica, California, KBLA serves the Greater Los Angeles area. The station is owned by Multicultural Broadcasting, through licensee Multicultural Radio Broadcasting Licensee, LLC, and operated by pending owner Tavis Smiley with a progressive talk format. For much of its early history, the station had music formats and was aimed towards a black audience. The station was founded in 1947 as KOWL and played middle of the road music; Gene Autry was an early investor in the station. From 1956 to 1991, the station had call sign KDAY and had top 40, rock, and R&B formats through the early 1980s. In 1983, KDAY became the first station in Los Angeles to play hip hop music; as a result, KDAY became the most popular station among black listeners in the area. KDAY went through multiple ownership and format changes in the 1990s, beginning with a purchase by Fred Sands in 1990. A year later, KDAY changed its call sign to KBLA and its format to business news. The business format lasted just one year, as KBLA changed to a Korean format afterwards. Keymarket Communications purchased KBLA in 1993; subsequent mergers of its parent company landed KBLA under the ownership of River City Broadcasting in 1995 and Sinclair Broadcast Group in 1996. KBLA was sold in 1998 to Radio Unica, which added KBLA to its national Spanish radio network. Multicultural Broadcasting bought KBLA in 2003 and converted KBLA to a Spanish Christian format. Tavis Smiley bought KBLA in 2020 and launched a progressive talk format on the station.