The results are in and the winner is … ? Of course, I'm talking about the annual homeless count results. The good news is that our homeless population seems to
How do you get to Carnegie Hall? Practice — and a contribution from City Council.
Santa Monica High School musicians from lower-income families will get to travel to New York City
In one of the most divisive votes on an otherwise agreement-filled night, City Council voted to deny an appeal by a union to create a collective bargaining unit for 11
Three months ago, City Council piled on criticisms about proposed plans for a public site next to the Downtown Expo station.
On Tuesday, council quickly approved of new, toned-down plans
Editor:
I find it quite disturbing that we have an airport commission that is anti-airport and would have the gall to suggest raising the rents on the people that conduct
Water rates will jump 9 percent this year and, unless City Council intervenes, 9 percent in each of the following four years, for a 53.9 percent total increase over
The Airport Commission wants month-to-month, market rate leases for tenants at the Santa Monica Airport until a plan for the future of the controversial land is determined.
The commission voted
Today marks the beginning of the end for much-discussed Zoning Ordinance Update at Planning Commission.
Within the coming few weeks, the commission will finish its review of the Redline Draft
Editor's note: This story is part of an ongoing series that tracks the city's expenditures appearing on upcoming Santa Monica City Council consent agendas. Consent agenda
Aside from water rate hikes and a proposed transit hub, which the Daily Press wrote about previously, City Council will consider banning wild animals from a slew of public spaces
Editor:
Regarding Bill Bauer's urging to protest the water rate increases: Has he not heard about the drought? Has he not heard about the Megadrought expected to last
All that super-helpful campaign literature that clogged your mailbox and gave your mail carrier a hernia last election season cost political supporters a fortune.
While voter turnout was abysmally low