Editorial: Snow, cleaner cars, Barbie and other 'gifts' we received in 2023

LOS ANGELES CALIF. - FEB. 26, 2023. Visitors to Kenneth Hahn Regional Park get a look at mountains covered in snow on Sunday, Feb. 26, 2023. More rain and snow is forecast for Southern California as a another storm front passes through the region in coming days. (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)
Visitors to Kenneth Hahn Regional Park get a look at mountains covered in snow on Feb. 26. (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

Today Christians around the world celebrate the birth of Jesus by giving gifts, which has become a central part of the holiday. But not all gifts are tangible or made on Dec. 25. In fact, the best are actions rather than objects, and received when we weren't expecting them. Here are some of our favorite "presents" from 2023.

Water

Rain and snow this year came in such abundance that the precipitation broke records and ended more than a decade of nearly unbroken drought. It quenched our thirst, returned life to a desiccated land and awed us with rare phenomena such as the return of the superbloom and the long lost Tulare Lake. Still, the rain and snow brought hardships, too, such as flooding to some communities.

Bee sheds and farmland are flooded just south of Tulare River Road.
Bee sheds and farmland are flooded as the resurgence of Tulare Lake continues. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

Read more: Editorial: Drought and flood, California's double whammy

A resilient economy

Remember how economists said a recession was inevitable in 2023 (after one failed to materialize in 2021 or 2022)? Well, it didn't happen, though things got a little scary for a time last spring with the failure of three regional banks. Consumer prices are still high, but they have stabilized. The U.S. is ending the year with lower inflation than we started with, and a stock market that has rebounded on the prospect of no new interest rate hikes and rate reductions next year.

Falling crime

The national plunge in violent crime was a welcome, if widely unacknowledged, gift in 2023. Robbery and murder dropped from the previous year in California and around the nation, according to figures tabulated and reported by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and other organizations.

Read more: Ending Cash Bail

Curbs on money bail

The Los Angeles Superior Court severely limited the use of money bail between arrest and arraignment for nonviolent crimes despite howls of protest from law enforcement agencies and a lawsuit by more than a dozen cities, who continue to insist the program will increase crime. It hasn’t.

The site of a fire under Interstate 10 in Los Angeles.
The site of a fire under Interstate 10 in Los Angeles on Nov. 13. (Eric Thayer / For The Times)

A speedy freeway fix

After a fire in a pallet yard damaged a section of the 10 Freeway in downtown Los Angeles, it looked like the route would be closed for weeks or months for repairs, throwing traffic in one of the most congested areas into chaos. But the Palletpocalypse did not come to pass. The structural damage wasn't as bad as anticipated, and Caltrans and contractors worked overtime to get the road fixed and reopened in a little over a week. The fast turnaround is a testament to what is possible when leaders put their energy, organizations and funding toward delivering quick results.

Read more: Editorial: The 10 Freeway was fixed in days. Why can’t more transportation projects get fast tracked?

A healing stratosphere

In a rare bit of unadulterated good news for planet Earth, we learned this year that the ozone layer, the shield-like layer in the stratosphere that protects us from ultraviolet radiation, is healing so rapidly that it’s now on track to be restored to 1980s levels over much of the planet by 2040. This recovery, which is the result of the global ban on ozone-depleting chemicals, shows what can happen when the world’s nations come together to take collective, sustained action against an environmental threat. Now we just need to do the same for greenhouse gas pollution.

Read more: Editorial: The healing of the ozone layer gives hope, but addressing climate change will be harder

Cleaner cars

Californians are starting to move to electric vehicles en masse. The latest figures show that about 1 in 4 new car sales in the state were zero-emission. There’s still a long way to go toward making EVs more affordable and accessible to people of all income levels — we can’t all afford Teslas after all — but the surging popularity of electric cars is a promising trend that will help slow climate change and improve air quality.

A man charging his blue Kia EV6 vehicle.
Electric vehicle sales zoomed in 2023. Here Los Angeles Times reporter Russ Mitchell tops off an electric Kia EV6 at the Walmart Supercenter charging station in Santa Clarita in July. (Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)

Reproductive rights

Ohio voters gave residents in that state the gift of reproductive freedom — or at least the possibility of it. In a conservative state with a six-week abortion ban (temporarily blocked by the courts), Ohio voters resoundingly passed Issue 1 in November, enshrining the right to abortion into the state constitution. It wasn't easy. First they had to vote down a sneaky measure put on an August special election ballot by antiabortion state legislators that would have raised the vote threshold for passing a constitutional amendment. Then abortion rights advocates had to battle a misinformation campaign waged against Issue 1. It was all a reminder of how fiercely people will fight to protect bodily autonomy.

Read more: Editorial: Thanks to Ohio, people who value reproductive rights have another victory

Billionaire Barbie

The exuberant “Barbie” movie about a doll’s life opened in July and by September had skyrocketed to a box office take of more than $1.4 billion, eventually becoming the highest-grossing movie on the planet for the year. It also made its director, Greta Gerwig, the first sole female director to have a movie top the billion-dollar mark. The movie broke a bunch of other records for Gerwig, for the studio and for toys come to life — and it showed Hollywood how powerfully women can command a movie.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.