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Teen View: California Wildfires Are Fueling Climate Change, But It Doesn’t Have to be This Way

The Palisades fire, captured in May
Rich Schmitt/Staff Photographer

By SAMANTHA SONNETT | Intern

Once an occasional natural disaster in our community, wildfires have become incredibly common and a regular by-product of climate change. Brush fires plague much of Los Angeles, often near the California Incline, the Palisades Highlands, by the 405 freeway and in our neighboring mountains.

I remember evacuating our home here in the Palisades on more than one occasion in elementary and middle school, having to decide on the most important things in my life that I could pack into a little suitcase.

Besides the risk of property damage and severe injury, if the current wildfire crisis is left uncontained, the resulting greenhouse gas emissions would reverse much of the progress being made by a recent rush of state, federal and international greenhouse gas reduction initiatives.

The federal government announced plans in February to use $179 million to help contain the situation, according to a report by California Wildfire & Forest Resilience Task Force. However, this won’t solve the problem. As citizens, it is our duty to continue calling on our government to take action to reduce environmental pollution and climate change.

In addition to an influx in carbon emissions, forest fires cause methane emissions. Methane is a potent greenhouse gas and effectively warms our atmosphere 86 times more than carbon emissions, as reported by Climate and Clean Air Coalition.

As discussed in an article I authored for the Palisadian-Post last month, California recently convinced several states and countries to join in its goal of reducing methane levels by 40% by the year 2030. But, according to a study published last year in Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, the amount of emissions from California fires in a recent year equaled nearly 14% of the state’s total emissions, compared to an average of 1% in years past.

Further, a UCLA study concluded that the wildfires in 2020 released approximately 127 million megatons of greenhouse gases, which is twice the amount of total emissions that California had managed to cut from 2003 to 2019. This statistic is sobering, and facts like these should incite a need to encourage more awareness and action by our community members.

Climate change is a top issue for voters, not just because they necessarily care about the environment, but because they feel the effects of climate change daily. Twenty-five million acres—which make up a quarter of the state—are considered very high or extreme fire threat regions, according to California Air Resources Board, and more than 25% of California’s residents live in those areas.

Six of the largest wildfires in California have occurred in the last four years, as reported by Reuters. The Dixie fire is the most recent one, and the largest single-source fire in our state’s history. PG&E claims the fire may have started from its equipment, which quickly spread due to drought-causing brush and burned for almost an entire month in 2021.

What can we do to address the wildfire crisis? First, the environment must continue to be a focus in government policy making, as there are more wildfires due to climate change.

Second, priority should be given to proper forest management, as we’ve seen with the recent $179 million funding from our U.S. Forest Service. The money will be used to further California’s action plan to—among other things—create more beneficial fires, increase monitoring of electric utility equipment that could cause fires, encourage private landowners to properly maintain their trees and brush, and create fuel breaks, which are corridors of land that have been cleared of smaller trees, brush and twigs to stop fires from spreading.

It is worth noting that almost 70% of Gen Z voters (currently 18 to 27 years old) rank climate change as a top issue to ensure a sustainable planet for future generations, according to Pew Research Center. More and more of these young voters are running for office in the future, according to a 2022 study by Tufts University.

I hope the voices of our future elected officials will be heard and echoed by voters across the country so that later generations of children can enjoy our beautiful community.


Samantha Sonnett is a student at Palisades Charter High School and passionate about saving the environment. She is an activist with the American Conservation Coalition. She can often be found at the beach or strumming on her guitar. Sonnett hopes that the world can continue to fight for a more sustainable future, in order to preserve the planet and avoid further climate change.

Maureen Anne O’Sullivan

1945 – 2024

Maureen Anne O’Sullivan, a one-woman force field of creativity, mindfulness, humor and compassion, passed away on February 28 in Santa Monica. She was 78 years old.

Maureen, or “Mo” to her many friends, was born May 29, 1945, in Lakeland, Florida. She is survived by a sister, Cathy Shorr, and three brothers, James, Michael and William. She was pre-deceased by one sister, Barbara, and a brother, John.

For many years, she made her home in the Santa Monica area, but she was also an avid traveler, residing for a time in London and Paris, and sailing out of Nantucket to the West Indies. Her many passions, including photography, prompted travel to far flung places, from Moscow to Morocco.

Maureen graduated from Syracuse University with a B.A. in 1972 and later received a J.D. from Southwestern University School of Law in 1994. Prior to moving to California, she worked as a video and radio producer in New York, hosted a radio program on WOCB in Nantucket, and hosted a weekly television program in which she interviewed Richard Nixon, George H.W. Bush, and Ted Kennedy.

She moved on to a career in marketing and public relations at Friedman-O’Sullivan Communications where she produced television and music specials, as well as events such as “A Rock ‘N Roll Summit” for Showtime. She was a cofounder of MusiCares with Michael Greene. She served on the board of directors for the Institute for Cinema Studies and the LACMA Photographic Arts Council.

In her last job, as an attorney for Disney Interactive, Business and Legal Affairs Division, she negotiated production, development and entertainment agreements.

When she retired in 2017, she was looking forward to more traveling. Her cancer diagnosis derailed those plans, but her spiritual journey took flight. A longtime devotee of Buddhist meditation and teachings, and sober for over 40 years, Mo’s ability to celebrate each and every moment of every single day was inspirational.

“We’re all going over those falls eventually,” she told friends, “and I am enjoying the ride.”

Mo loved collecting fine art photography and scarves. Her greatest pleasure, says her brother Michael, came from helping others.

“She was happiest making connections,” he added, “and helping people be their true selves.”

A memorial service will be held on Sunday, May 5, from 2 to 5 p.m. at Pacific Palisades Woman’s Club, 901 Haverford Avenue.

Core Principles

Rob Hockley takes a break from practice on the Carl Lewis Track at Stadium by the Sea.
Photo: Steve Galluzzo

Palisades High Cross Country and Track Coach Rob Hockley Specializes in Physical, Mental and Spiritual Training

By STEVE GALLUZZO | Sports Editor

It is no wonder Rob Hockley has made a name for himself. He has dedicated his life to training and coaching young athletes and now the Palisades High cross country and track coach has a new website dedicated to Tri Core Coaching.

Originally from Bermondsey, a tough, working class part of Southeast London, he arrived in the United States in the late 1980s, doing commercials like Adidas, Coke, Nike, Coors Lite and playing soccer with the SoCal Champions and at the LA Coliseum and Rose Bowl.

In the mid-1990s he began to immerse himself in movement, training and coaching education and by the end of the decade he was training soccer players, runners and then female pro beach volleyball player Elaine Roque. He coacheds his son Jack at Pali High and the testimonials from individuals he has trained are plentiful.

“His training made a huge difference in my speed and strength as a runner,” says former Dolphins runner and Palisadian-Post Cup Award winner Ava Baak, who now attends the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. “He always motivated me to stay consistent and push my limits, even when I felt like giving up. More than that, he cared about the health and well-being of both me and others he coached. Rob allowed me to see my full potential as a runner and I’m so thankful I was able to work with him.”

To Hockley, health and and performance must be thought of as partners. The mother of another athlete trained by Hockley added: “My daughter did soccer specific speed training with Rob with great results on the field. Her ball skills, fitness and speed all improved.”

Hockley teaches that simplicity is on the other side of complexity.

“We all think we know about training and the human body, but nothing in comparison to what we don’t know and don’t worry about… the one to two percent, if not nailing the 98. Super shoes, thera guns, etc. are no good if sleep and nutrition are poor. my goals for athletes.”

Rob Hockley with his son Jack, who ran cross country and track and played soccer at Palisades High.
Photo: Steve Galluzzo

When it comes to speed, Hockley offers the following words of wisdom:

“Before we ever offer a solution to the puzzle of improving athlete performance, we must first identify the correct problem. When assessing movement, consider not only the athlete’s body but also, the task and environment they perform in.Knowing KPI’s (key performance indicators and inhibitors and considering both content and context are crucial to this process.”

The secret is assessing postures, shapes and rhythms from multiple viewpoints qnd working on them to help improve speed. So when SPEED training is viewed as skill acquisition, rather than a grind to exhaustion, small doses can be done more frequently.

“The goal is to get athletes to their most efficient and effective movement given their specific and unique constraints,” says the four-time Iron Man and 11-time Escape from Alcatraz finisher, who has led the Dolphins to great success, including multiple City cross country titles and state finals appearances and assisted in the boys’ first ever track and field team championship by half a point in 2019.

A USTA Level II coach, Hockley ran the Leona Divide 50-mile race in Lake Hughes in 12:05:39 in 2013 and ran the 50K in 6:57:40 the next year. In 2010, he did the Bulldog 50K Ultra Run and 25K Trail Run in Calabasas.

Coach Rob Hockley with Palisades’ boys cross country team at the Woodbridge Invitational.
Photo: Steve Emery

“Having always been an avid student of past distance coaching legends like Arthur Lydiard, Mihaly Igloi, Gordon Pirie, Percy Cerutty and the like…the lastfour or five years have taken a deep educational dive on all things “speed” and use of critical thinking, from the world class sprint coaches at ALTIS, who have ccached 120 Olympians,” Hickley adds. “It’s been an incredible experience and it’s still ongoing and has given me another lens to view training through.”

“Responsive coaching is a holistic practice, where the entirety of the unique individual and his or her surroundings must be considered, constantly observed and adjusted to,” Hockley says. “Health and performance must be thought of as partners. Athletes will not perform at their best if health is compromised.”

For the last 15 years, Hockley has focused predominantly on high school athletes, coaching hundreds of teenagers in multiple sports to fulfill their potential and help them win numerous individual and team titles.

Core principles he teaches are:

1. Coach the unique individual

2. Observe, observe, observe

3. Repeat frequently with variability

4. Elevate health and performance

Hockley is a certified coach with more than 25 years of experience in multiple sports and has studied with

incredible resources, including Pete Egoscue (posture, alignment, movement); Bobby McGee (distance running); world class coaches at ALTIS (distance, sprinting and sports speed); and a 30-year marriage and learning from former professional and world champion dancer Lisa Nunziella (rhythm, coordination and performance under pressure).

“The journey has always been an endless search for fluid efficient and effective movement,” he adds.

With a background in semi-pro soccer (he was once teammates with singer Rod Stewart), running, martial arts and triathlon, he has trained soccer and female pro beach volleyball players, runners and triathletes since the late 1990s in addition to being a conditioning consultant to the Hofstra University women’s volleyball

team and being invited as a trainer and presenter at two U.S. Olympic Training Centers while sending multiple qualifiers to the Ironman World Championships.

“Train to improve the five basic bio motor abilities: coordination, speed, endurance, strength and flexibility,” Hockley says. “Fostering adaptability, confidence, resilience, emotional and psychological wellness, elevating health and performance and preparing athletes not only for now, but importantly for what comes next.

The human body is a dynamic complex system, but this doesn’t mean simplicity in training won’t work; you have to nail the fundamentals and repeat frequently. To coach is to speak and teach, but more importantly it is to listen & learn.”

To contact Hockley, email rljhockley@msn.com or call 310-628-3346.

Tennis Team Seeks to Continue Title Streak

Tristan Kiperman
Photos by Steve Galluzzo
Tristan Kiperman

Photos by Steve Galluzzo

Caleb Scott

The City Section Open Division boys tennis finals will feature two familiar teams. Palisades High will try to win its 15th title in a row when it takes on Granada Hills at 11 a..m. next Wednesday at Balboa Sports Center in Encino.

The Dolphins secured their annual spot in the final with a 21.5 to 8 win against Eagle Rock on Monday while the Highlanders beat Marshall 18 to 11.5 in the other semifinal.

“Granada Hills will be a formidable opponent,” Palisads coach Bud Kling said. “We had to

replace five players who were three or four year starters. We have uncertainties at key spots so a couple guys will have to step up and play better.”

The teams have met in the finals every year since 2015.

Born to Run

Freshman Amelia Sarkisian won the varsity girls 3200 meter race last Friday at the Gold Coast League Finals.
Photo: Steve Galluzzo

By STEVE GALLUZZO | Sports Editor

For Palisadian Amelia Sarkisian, running is not merely a recreational activity, it has become a way of life.

The 15-year-old freshman is off to a fast start at Brentwood School, having won the Gold Coast League cross country championship in the fall, earning the girls Most Valuable Award and qualifying for the CIF state meet. Last Friday, she won her heat in the 800 meters in 2:32.25 and lapped several of her competitors on her way to first place in the 3200 meters in 12:06.36 at the league track prelims.

In the finals Wednesday at Brentwood the Eagles’ rising star completed the sweep of the distance races by winning the 800 meters by over one second in 2:39.34 and winning the 1600 meters by almost 11 full seconds in 5:30.07.

Growing up in the Alphabet Streets with athletic siblings, Sarkisian went to pre-school at United Methodist Church on Via de La Paz and has attended Brentwood School since kindergarten. She played basketball at the Palisades Recreation Center as a youngster but had to stop during the coronavirus pandemic and decided running was a nice, safe alternative. She has competed in cross country since sixth grade and took to the sport like a fish to water.

Although she knows some of the Palisades High runners and thinks they are amazing, Brentwood was a natural choice for her because her parents Keith and Trisha both worked there (her dad is still a geometry and algebra teacher) and her older brother Wyatt (who ran cross country at Brentwood and just graduated from NYU) and older sister Sadie (who played soccer at Brentwood and is now a junior at Stanford) are both Eagles alums.

“They’ve taught me to always do what makes me happy and about the importance of prioritizing,” Amelia says. “I’ve been able to stay focused on running. I honestly love it and I’ve made lots of friends being on the team.”

Sarkisian considers herself more of a cross country runner and averages 30 miles per week.

“I like cross country because of the terrain and the hills but I like track too,” she says. “I talk a lot with my coaches about strategy, whether to go out hard and take the lead or sit back and wait to make my move.”

Sarkisian likes to run on the bike path to Santa Monica, she goes to the Farmers Market on Sunday mornings she enjoys walking her beloved mountain dog Boone and eating at Cafe Vida. “I love their sweet potato fries!” she says. Not too worry, she burns off the calories fast!

“In the 800 I’ve hit 2:21, which surpassed my season goal,” she says. “For the mile, 5:20 is my goal and for the two-mile 11:40 is my goal.”

Lacrosse Teams Make Finals

Van Buck goes on the attack.
Photos by Steve Galluzzo

The Palisades High boys and girls lacrosse teams won City titles on the same day last year and now they are poised to do it again.

The boys routed University 16-2 on Friday and the girls handed the Wildcats a 21-2 thrashing Saturday to advance to Tuesday’s finals at Birmingham High in Lake Balboa. Both were seeded No. 1 and took on No. 2 El Camino Real for the title.

Dominic Zuniga takes a shot.

The boys were vying for an eighth straight section crown and ninth in 11 years (there were no playoffs in 2020 due to COVID) while the girls were seeking their second straight and third overall. Last spring, the boys took care of El Camino Real 19-2 after the girls doubled up their nemesis Birmingham 18-9 in a doubleheader at Stadium by the Sea. The girls won their initial City title in 2019, ending Birmingham’s five-year reign.

Golfers Beat Granada Hills

Ian Monahan holes a par putt.
Photo: Steve Galluzzo

Three matches last week resulted in three wins and Palisades High boys golf coach Dave Suarez could not have asked for more.

On April 15 the Dolphins edged Harvard-Westlake 202-204 at Wilson in Griffith Park, where freshman Jake Norr was the medalist with a nine-hole score of 39 and Liam Hussain took second with a 40 and three Dolphins carded scores of 41.

Two days later the Dolphins took on reigning City champion Granada Hills at Rancho Park and prevailed 184-203. This time, Michael Conner was the medalist with a 35, one shot better than teammate Mason Geller.

Last Thursday, the Dolphins faced Windward at Woodley Lakes and won 180-185. Jake Norr was again the medalist with a 34, Geller shot a 35, Husain fired a 36 and Luke Schultz shot a 37.

Nic Wilson chips to the green.

Bats Come Alive for Dolphins in 14-3 Triumph over LACES

Logan Bailey is pumped after a bases-clearing triple in the fourth inning last Friday against LACES.
Photos by Steve Galluzzo

The situation was grim for the Palisades High varsity baseball team entering the fourth inning of last Friday night’s Western League game against LACES. Having lost the first of the two-game set two days earlier the Dolphins trailed 3-0 and were in danger of being swept by the Unicorns for the first time in program history. All of that changed in a span of 30 minutes as the boys in blue exploded for 11 runs, the big blow being a bases-clearing triple by Logan Bailey (his second three-bagger of the day) that paved the way to a 14-11 five-inning victory that kept Palisades tied for second in the standings with two games left.

“It helps anytime you have runners on because the other team’s margin for error gets smaller,” Coach Mike Voelkel said. “Hopefully this gives us momentum heading into the last two weeks of the [regular] season.”

Alex Loos runs the bases

Palisades batted around in the fourth, capitalizing on eight walks and two errors to get their struggling offense in gear.

Bailey had three hits and stole two bases, Ian Sullivan had a two-RBI double, Yonah Cohen drove in a pair of runs and Reece Frankel pitched a two-hitter with six strikeouts.

The following day the Dolphins hosted San Fernando in the Tiger Invitational and prevailed 2-1 on base hits by Frankel, Andres Trujillo, Jack Kurland and Alex Loos and a strong outing on the mound by John Iacono, who lasted 5.2 innings and struck out out five batters while allowing five hits.

Palisades (10-13 overall, 6-4 in league) is back in action Saturday at Verdugo Hills and wraps up league play against Westchester next week.

Still Best in the West

Outisde hitter Enzo Torres tries to spike over a University blocker in Palisades’ four-set win on April 12.
Photo: Steve Galluzzo

As the season winds down the Palisades High boys volleyball team is in a familiar position—atop the Western League standings.

Coach Carlos Gray’s squad hosts fifth-place LACES in its league finale this afternoon having already clinched first place, but while their league fate is already decided where they get seeded in the City playoffs is a mystery.

Tournament losses to West Valley League opponents Birmingham and Chatsworth earlier in the season likely cost the Dolphins the No. 1 seed and they could be placed anywhere from two to five in the eight-team bracket depending on how the rest of the regular season plays out.

Palisades (25-9) lost 2-1 to Birmingham at the Venice Invitaitional in early March but upset Chatsworth in another three-setter en route to the finals, where they fell to Windward 15-13 in the deciding set. A month later at the Chatsworth Invitational the Dolphins were swept in back-to-back matches by Chatsworth and Royal and did not get out of the first round in the Gold Division. Meanwhile, Chatsworth reached the finals of its own tournament to move back into the No. 1 spot in the City rankings, followed by Northern League champion Eagle Rock. Also in the mix for Open berths are LA Marshall (Northern runner-up), Venice (Western runner-up to Palisades) and Granada Hills, El Camino Real, Taft and Birmingham from the West Valley. Chatsworth finished 9-1 in league to take first.

The Chancellors (38-7) swept Palisades in the Open Division finals last spring. In 2022, Palisades beat Chatsworth in four sets in the finals.

Palisadians Lead Teams to NCAA Volleyball Tourney

The NCAA Division I men’s volleyball championships get underway Tuesday in Long Beach and three of the eight participating teams have a Palisadian on the roster.

The first quarterfinal pits top-seeded UCLA, the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation regular season champion, against No. 8 Fort Valley State, the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference winner. The Bruins are paced by outside hitter Cooper Robinson, who is second on the team in kills (221), third in service aces (33), tied for third in blocks (57) and tied for fifth in digs (65). A 6-foot-7 redshirt sophomore, Robinson played for SCVC and helped the club win the gold medal in the Open Division 17s at Junior Nationals in 2019. He led Loyola High to the CIF Southern Section semifinals in 2018, 2019 and 2021. His sister Charlie played at Marymount High, then at UC Santa Barbara. Also on UCLA’s squad is 6-foot-5 freshman middle blocker and fellow Loyola alum Spencer Graves, though he has not seen action this season.

Cooper Robinson
PhotosCourtesy of UCLA Athletics
Akhil Tangutur

Leading fourth-seeded UC Irvine, the Big West Conference runner-up, against No. 5 Penn State, the Eastern Intercollegiate Volleyball Association champion, in the second quarterfinal will be 6-foot-2 outside hitter Akhil Tangutur, who has amassed 97 kills, 13 aces, 112 digs and 24 blocks in 93 sets this season. He played for Pac6 Volleyball Club, helped Palisades High win three straight section titles (2017-19) and was named CIF Los Angeles City Player of the

Justin Howard

Year in 2018. He earned an Economics degree from UCI last year and is currently pursuing a Masters in Business Analytics.

One of Tangutur’s Pac6 and Pali High teammates was middle blocker Justin Howard, now a 6-foot-6 redshirt senior at No. 6-ranked Ohio State, which won the Midwestern Intercollegiate Volleyball Association tournament to earn a spot in the NCAAs. Howard has 172 kills and 76 blocks (second on the team) in 114 sets.

Big West champion Long Beach State is No. 2 and opens versus No. 7 Belmont Abbey, the Conference Carolinas tournament winner. The semifinals are next Thursday and the final is Saturday, May 4 at Walter Pyramid.