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Park Advisory Board to Meet

Palisades Recreation Center
Photo by Arden Seretean

The Pacific Palisades Recreation Center Park Advisory Board will meet on Tuesday, December 9, at 6:30 p.m. in person at the small gym as well as virtually via Zoom.

The agenda includes updates from Senior Facility Director Jasmine Dowlatshahi regarding sports and programming activities, and park facilities from Department of Recreation and Parks General Manager Jimmy Kim (including ground and soil testing, Quimby funds status, and the temporary library).

The agenda also includes a proposal for synthetic turf athletic fields, which will be presented by Pali Community Center Committee and Youth Sports Organizations representative Bryan Whalen. There will be public comment on the item (in person and by Zoom), as well as a PAB discussion and vote.

A link to the agenda, which includes a link to the Zoom, can be found at laparks.org/reccenter/palisades.

—SARAH SHMERLING

MKPOA to Host Annual Block Party

Marquez Knolls Property Owners Association will host its annual block party—described as an “informal gathering for all residents of Marquez Knolls, as well as their friends, families and friendly pets”—on Saturday, December 6, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.

“We celebrate the vibrant spirit of our community and embrace the occasion to come together and strengthen the bond within our neighborhood,” MKPOA wrote ahead of the event. “Celebrate our LAFD and LAPD first responders, and most of all, enjoy the camaraderie of our marvelous community.”

There will be music, food trucks, drinks, tables and chairs, informational stations, and representatives from Los Angeles Fire Department, Los Angeles Police Department and Council District 11.

This year’s party will take place near the 1300 block of Duende Lane cul-de-sac, off Lachman Lane. Admission is free. There will be a “brief program” at 1 p.m. Reservations can be made at marquezknolls.org.

—SARAH SHMERLING

griefHaven Offers Free Grief and Trauma Support

Pacific Palisades-founded nonprofit griefHaven is offering free grief and trauma support via Zoom twice per month for people who lost their homes in the Palisades fire. The next meeting will be Monday, December 1, from 6 to 7:30 p.m.

GriefHaven Founder and CEO Susan Whitmore and Dr. Denise Mandel have been facilitating the groups for five months. Whitmore described the groups as a “loving, confidential and educational place to deal with the impact of the fire.”

It is a drop-in group, so people can “come as needed” and “meetings vary in size.” The meetings include writing prompts, educational information about grief and trauma techniques, and time to share.

“This is not a place for people to exchange information about rebuilding,” she explained. “This is a therapeutic meeting for people to talk about their grief and trauma from the fire.”

Based in the Palisades, griefHaven lost its office space in the fire. It has been temporarily relocated to Water Garden in Santa Monica.

To get on the mailing list for the Zoom group, email hope@griefhaven.org or call the office at 310-459-1789. A few days prior to the meeting, an email reminder will be sent to those on the mailing list with the Zoom link.

—SARAH SHMERLING

A Window Between Worlds Plans Virtual ‘Wellness Day’

Palisades resident and mom Yvonne Hsieh shares her creative recovery art piece.
Photo courtesy of Cathy Salser

A Window Between Worlds—founded by Palisadian Cathy Salser—will host “Wellness Day: Art in Times of Crisis” on Tuesday, December 2, from 1 to 3 p.m. via Zoom.

“When life feels uncertain, art offers a way to breathe, reflect and begin again,” read information about the event.

During the free virtual live event, attendees will experience “shared stories of resilience” from Salser and Youth Facilitator Sonia Hsieh Schumacher, a “hands-on art experience” “Beyond the Break: A Kintsugi Journey,” led by Kiyomi Knox, and “reflection and renewal.”

“Whether you’re seeking calm, inspiration or connection, this gathering offers space to begin again and reminds us that healing is something we build together,” AWBW Executive Director Zachery Scott-Hillel said.

For additional information or to register to attend, visit awbw.org/a-year-of-healing-and-rebuilding-together-registration.

—SARAH SHMERLING

Green Tip

Photo by Amanda Iyana Michaels

The Palisadian-Post has partnered with locally founded environmental organization Resilient Palisades to deliver a “green tip” to our readers in each newspaper. This edition’s tip was written by Sara G. Marti, Resilient Palisades board member and communications director.


This Thanksgiving

This Thanksgiving, our community is gathering around tables forever changed.

And yet, look at what we have done together.

Neighbors showed up. Volunteers became leaders. Grief became fuel. We learned how to take care of each other and how to take care of the land that holds us.

Today’s Green Tip is simple, but profound: Honor this year by choosing one regenerative act.

Plant something native because the land we love is still healing. Every plant you add is a promise to those waiting to return.

Support a neighbor who is still finding their way because community grows through consistent, quiet acts of kindness.

Swap a gas appliance for electric because safer homes and cleaner air are not abstract ideals. They are choices we make one device, one circuit, one family at a time.

Leave a little less waste behind because everything we discard eventually touches the soil, water and future our children will depend on.

Restore one small corner of the world you touch because restoration always begins at the scale of a single backyard, a single habit, a single moment of care.

These gestures matter. They are how we begin healing the place we love and the place that has shaped us.

To everyone who kept showing up in ways seen and unseen, thank you.

Thank you for being Resilient, Palisades.

‘Jimmy Dunne Says’

Sun sets over the marina jetty in Marina del Rey, CA as boats enter the harbor

The Palisadian-Post presents an homage to Will Rogers’ column, “Will Rogers Says,” with a column by Palisadian Jimmy Dunne—on life in the “greatest town in America.


All ’Long the Way
A story of gratitude

The happiest of Thankgivings to you and those who touch your life …

I drift in a harbor in a boat built for one,

The water is still, the day almost done

The noise of the world has faded from me,

Just quiet and sky—and a soft, breathing sea

In the smallest of boats, I float and I sway,

Wrapped in a hush at the end of the day

It feels, for a moment, like I got me here,

Like every good thing is my doing, my steer

But when you trace back—your life in soft light,

You see you were carried through so many nights

By arms that first cradled you close, skin to skin,

A mother’s low humming that rocked you within

By siblings you sparred with, then found at your side,

Believing in you, with unconditional pride

By teachers and mentors, and the dearest of friends,
You’re stitched out of pieces of all that they’ve been

From all who have loved you and played their small part,
You carry their fingerprints, etched in your heart

You thought you were drifting alone in that bay …
Then you start to remember …

All ’long the way

————–

Joy changes its face as the calendar turns,
Its colors grow softer—a deep gladness burns

As a child, it’s a moment—a toy, a new day,
To young parents, it’s simply, “We got through today”

But later, joy deepens in quieter things,
In knowing you showed up when showing up stings

It’s seeing yourself in the light of your kids,
In stories your pals tell of kind things you did

In grandkids who laugh at your old, borrowed jokes,
In towns where you planted a few sturdy oaks

It’s leafing through scrapbooks of chapters gone by,
Those rich, messy seasons when dreams learned to fly

The moves and the losses, the worries, the wins,
The good fights you fought, new doors you walked in

You see that your mark isn’t set into things
Not houses or titles or bright, shining rings

Your mark lives in people whose paths crossed your own,
In hearts where a small seed of kindness was sown

When your most precious gift was that you were just there,
And said with your eyes just how deeply you cared

So here in your harbor, at close of the day,
You whisper a thank you for all of the ways

Life gave you the chance to love and to stay,
To be shaped and to shape …

All ’long the way


Jimmy Dunne is a modern-day Renaissance Man; a hit songwriter (28 million hit records), screenwriter/producer of hit television series, award-winning author, an entrepreneur—and a Palisadian “Citizen of the Year.” You can reach him at j@jimmydunne.com or jimmydunne.substack.com.

‘Still Here’

Kathleen Katims
Photos courtesy of Saved By A Story

Palisades-Founded Saved By A Story Hosts Wildfire Survivor Writing Workshop, Fundraising Storytelling Salon

By SARAH SHMERLING | Editor-in-Chief

Palisadian Kathleen Katims has been “empowering voices, building community” and “changing lives—one story at a time” for over 10 years. Now, following the January fires, she has built a space for wildfire survivors from Pacific Palisades and Altadena to come together to share their stories.

Founded a decade ago, Saved By A Story hosts “free community writing workshops for under-resourced and under-served populations” to “empower voices and build connection.” More than 500 storytellers have participated in programming to date.

“I really wanted to bring community together,” Katims, who has lived in the Palisades for 30 years, said of the launch of her efforts a decade ago. “I love writing and storytelling and music.”

Katims was in graduate school when she had a project that needed to connect writing and social justice, she explained. She said she thought of a project to bring people together around writing that could also be a healing experience.

“The first workshop I did was with foster youth,” Katims said. “I read an article about how for some foster youth, one of the most painful aspects is that you don’t have anybody to hold your story.”

Saved By A Story was officially launched when Katims began to bring these workshops to additional populations, running free workshops for women and teens in recovery, former foster youth, neurodiverse teenagers, parents raising neurodiverse kids, teachers, and seniors.

Beginning in November 2023, Katims started hosting Senior Writing Workshops, which took place at Palisades Branch Library. About 60 people have participated in the drop-in workshop, which now meets at Westwood Branch Library.

A meeting of the Wildfire Survivor Writing Workshop

Saved By A Story also partners with other nonprofits to facilitate writing groups.

“It’s emboldening voices that we don’t usually hear from to get people to tell their story and get their story to the page,” Katims said. “In that process of sharing, there’s a lot of community that comes together. People become friends.”

Some of the prompts Katims has used include writing about something the person has worn that has been powerful or a love/hate relationship.

Then, in 2025, following the Palisades and Eaton fires, Katims was inspired to launch a new group.

“After losing my Pacific Palisades home in the 2025 wildfires, I created an ongoing group for other survivors to process and heal,” Katims said. “I lost more than my home in the wildfire. For me, the diaspora of community was a profound grief. I also was so overwhelmed with all the things that needed to be done that I wanted to create a space apart from the doing. I wanted to come together in community and give voice to all the things we lost and all that we were finding.”

Katims, who lost her home on the Swarthmore Bluffs, launched the Wildfire Survivor Writing Workshop in April, which originally met at the Peter Fetterman Gallery and now meets monthly at Wende Museum. She said it “helped knit our community together,” adding it gives “voice to our pain and our hope.”

“I’ve gotten to know neighbors in this extraordinary way that I never knew … what we share in the group stays in the group,” Katims said, “but it has really created connection for me and I think many people feel more connected to their neighbors … it’s a way to come together with people who have a shared, traumatic experience.”

She said the workshop offers participants a chance to set “aside the doing” of post-fire life, like fighting with insurance companies, and “getting to process what happened” through writing. Some people have written from the perspective of their house to tell the story or about their neighbors.

Pictured, from left: Tom Freund, mehro and Priscilla Ahn perform.

“Participants who have been impacted by the fires come together to write about the history of the cherished places we have been, what we have lost (and found), and how we will chart a way forward,” read a description of the workshop. “We will write to timed prompts to spark creativity, share and savor stories, and connect with friends and neighbors. Come together and write, choose to share (or not, you decide), listen and write some more.”

Writing workshop participants said they have found them “transformative,” Katims said, with “professional writers and budding voices” invited to “explore and experiment” while “writing to prompts,” which have included a “goodbye you feel like you need to say.”

“There’s a lot of understanding,” Katims said of the workshop. “I will say too, remarkably, there’s also a lot of laughter … there are tears, there is laughter, there is kind dreaming into the future, there is remembering.”

To sustain the Wildfire Survivor Writing Workshop, as well as other work, Katims hosted Saved By A Story’s annual fundraising event—a storytelling salon—on Saturday, November 1, in Venice. To date, the salons have raised more than $190,000 to help “under-resourced and under-represented people tell their story.”

“I had really wanted to bring together community after such a wrenching year,” Katims said of the event. “I also really wanted to both tell the story of the wildfire, but I also wanted to uplift people. It was, I think, the hardest show I’ve had to curate, to try to find that balance.”

While putting the show together, Katims said she was thinking about resilience and “how are we going to go forward,” but also to “face what we lost” and “the trauma of it as well.”

“The show raised $38,000 to further our mission to offer free community writing workshops for people going through difficult transitions and for under-resourced, under-represented people,” Katims said.

The salon, attended by 175 people, featured storytellers from the Palisades, Altadena and greater Los Angeles area, who shared stories and songs on the theme of “Still Here,” which Katims said “honors the resilient Palisades and Altadena communities.”

Wildfire survivor writers and performers at the fundraising salon

“We were curating the evening both trying to tell the story of the fire and trying to uplift people,” Katims described. “Some stories were about coming through the fire and others were about resilience in the face of other difficult circumstances: a difficult divorce, a falling out with a parent after coming out. The music by three singer/songwriters also dealt with the theme of resilience and finding your power.”

Wildfire Survivor Writing Workshop participants who performed were Shermaine Barlaan (from Altadena) and Tamara Rawitt, Jason Katims and Karen Leigh Hopkins from the Palisades.

Additional writers and storytellers who participated were Megan Chan Meinero, Chris Douridas, David Israel, Jessica Goldberg and Al Madrigal. Musicians included Priscilla Ahn, mehro and Tom Freund, curated by Liza Richardson. They closed the evening with a performance of “Forever Young” by Bob Dylan.

Israel spoke on an 11,000-mile trip across the country he took with his wife after the fire, while Douridas shared on “the day of the fire and what he did in response,” Katims described. Both writers lost their homes in the fire.

Katims’ husband, Jason, told a story from the perspective of his first plays and a short story he had written when he was younger that had not been digitized and were lost in the fire.

Kathleen and Jason Katims

“Many people wrote and reflected that they were so moved and inspired by the show,” Katims said. “They were happy to be in community again, and also to get to laugh and cry about all that has happened.”

The Storytelling Salons date back to 2016, Katims said. Past performers have included Sara Bareilles, Cindy Chupack, Natasha Rothwell, K’naan, Winnie Holzman and Daveed Diggs.

Katims invited interested community members to join the Wildfire Survivor Writing Workshop, which will next meet on Saturday, December 20, from 10:30 a.m. to 12 p.m. at the Glorya Kaufman Community Center in the Wende Museum in Culver City, 10808 Culver Boulevard.

With residents displaced, people attend from as far away as Carpinteria and Ventura: “There’s people coming from everywhere,” Katims said.

“It’s an opportunity to connect with neighbors and process what’s happened and listen to what you’re hoping to find afterward,” Katims continued. “We laugh, we cry, we connect.”

For more information or to sign up for a future workshop, visit savedbyastory.com.

Your Two Cents’ Worth

Trees

Driving through the Palisades over the weekend, it was nice to see the big tree up at Palisades Village.

Honorees

Congratulations to PPCC’s award honorees and thank you for all of the work you’ve done for the community this year and beyond.

Turkey Trot

I hope to see the community at this year’s Turkey Trot.

Dog Park

Glad to see the dog park is moving forward. Grateful for the good news to share with my pup.


Got something to say? Call 310-454-1321 or email 2cents@palipost.com and get those kudos or concerns off your chest. Names will not be used.

St. Matthew’s Music Guild Season Continues With Bach Collegium San Diego

Bach Collegium San Diego
Photo by Gary Payne Photography

By SARAH SHMERLING | Editor-in-Chief

St. Matthew’s Music Guild will continue its season of concerts with Bach Collegium San Diego and an “all-star cast” in a complete performance of the “immortal holiday classic”: George Frideric Handel’s “Messiah.”

The performance will take place on Friday, December 5, beginning at 7:30 p.m. at St. Augustine by-the-Sea Church, which is located at 1227 Fourth Street in Santa Monica.

“Handel’s great oratorio ‘Messiah’ springs to life by way of the fruitful collaboration of Charles Jennens’ carefully conceived libretto and Handel’s supreme skill as a composer for the theatre,” read a statement about the concert. “BCSD’s performance of ‘Messiah,’ delivered by a dynamic cast brought together from throughout the U.S., in the manner of Handel’s dramatic operas, has become one of its crown jewels.”

Bach Collegium San Diego was founded in 2003 and has become one of the nation’s “premier early music ensembles,” which is recognized for its “vibrant and historically informed performances.”

“Now in its 23rd season, BCSD has earned acclaim for its expressive artistry and innovative programming,” the statement read. “The ensemble made its European debut at the Paulinum during Bachfest Leipzig 2024, with additional performances at historic Bach sites throughout Thuringia, Germany. BCSD is a new Resident Company at the La Jolla Music Society.”

The Music Guild performance will include 30 early music instrumentalists, as well as 20 singers and five vocal soloists. There will be three performances in Southern California, including in LA and San Diego.

“St. Augustine by-the-Sea, with its lively acoustic, provides a resonant and welcoming space for the audience,” according to Music Guild.

“St. Matthew’s Music Guild presents ‘World-Class Music close to Home’ in Pacific Palisades and Santa Monica,” read a statement from Music Guild. “Now in its 41st season (2025-26), the Guild is anchored by the critically acclaimed Chamber Orchestra at St. Matthew’s, led by Music Director Dwayne S. Milburn, and presents distinguished guest soloists and ensembles. Each season offers seven thoughtfully curated programs, complemented by the Guild’s Choral Initiative, new-music commissions and community concerts at local service organizations.”

Typically, Music Guild concerts take place at St. Matthew’s Church on Bienveneda Avenue in the Palisades. The program is anticipating its return to its home performance space in the near future.

Tickets for the December 5 concert are $45 for general admission or $10 for students at the door with ID.

For more information, visit musicguildonline.org or call 310-573-0722.

Palisades Fire Recovery Organizations, Pali High Receive LABC Awards

Exterior of the Pali High campus at the former Sears space
Photo courtesy of LABC

By SARAH SHMERLING | Editor-in-Chief

Several Palisades community organizations that are “guiding wildfire recovery and rebuilding efforts” and Palisades Charter High School received Los Angeles Business Council awards, which were announced on Friday, November 21.

Pali High was honored in the Adaptive Reuse category of LABC’s 55th Architectural Awards for its “rapid conversion of the vacant Sears building in Santa Monica after the Palisades fire.”

“It took just four weeks to turn the space into a 100-000-square-foot temporary campus, featuring classrooms, offices and labs,” read a statement, “demonstrating how adaptive reuse can deliver safe, functional learning spaces under urgent conditions.”

Gensler served as the architect of the project, with CW Driver as the general contractor.

“The LABC Architectural Awards recognize innovative projects that exemplify excellence in architecture, design and community building throughout the LA region,” read a statement. “Winners were selected by a jury panel of industry experts, including architects, construction firms, owners and developers from a pool of hundreds of submissions.”

The Pali High campus, which was damaged in the fire, remains closed, with plans to reopen in January 2026 in temporary buildings while permanent rebuilding is underway. Students have been at Pali South, the Sears building, since April 2025.

“This is an important first step for our Palisades Charter High community, and gives us the necessary space for all of our students and faculty to come back together for in-person learning, support and connection,” Executive Director and Principal Dr. Pam Magee said at the time. “We are grateful to secure a space that can accommodate our 2,400 Pali students along with our faculty and staff.”

Palisades organizations that were part of 19 groups that received Community Impact Awards were Palisades Recovery Coalition, Team Palisades, Pacific Palisades Community Council and Resilient Palisades.

“Recognizing that the greatest local architecture and planning challenge is recovering from the Eaton and Palisades fires, the LABC jury made an unprecedented decision to recognize 19 local organizations with the Community Impact Award,” read the statement. “These grassroots groups and charitable organizations are taking the lead in helping rebuild communities, lives, homes, schools and businesses devastated by the January fires.”

The award was accepted by LA County Board of Supervisors Chair Kathryn Barger, whose district includes Altadena, Councilmember Traci Park and California Community Foundation CEO Miguel Santana.

“It has been inspiring to work alongside so many committed Angelenos who are proving that no matter how difficult this recovery may be, it will be community-led and government supported and achieved through broad collaboration,” Park said.

Additional groups that were honored include Steadfast LA, California Community Foundation, Altagether, Clergy Community Coalition, Eaton Fire Collaborative Leadership Council, Eaton Fire Survivors Network, PostFire, UCLA Ziman Center for Real Estate, LA Unified School District, Department of Angels, Altadena Rising, Community Women Vital Voices, Eaton Fire Residents United, Project Passion, and Legacy Land Project.

This year’s Architectural Award Grand Prize went to Los Angeles County Museum of Art for its David Geffen Galleries, with the Chairman’s Award going to LAX/Metro Transit Center and Intuit Dome.

“Keynote speaker Andy Cohen, global co-chair and former co-CEO of Gensler, was honored with the Legacy Award,” the statement read. “Over his remarkable 45-year career, Cohen has led award-winning projects that have reshaped skylines and strengthened communities from Los Angeles to Shanghai.”

More than 500 architects, designers, building owners, developers, and city and state officials attended the awards ceremony on November 21 at Beverly Wilshire.