LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles has become the biggest city in the country to ban free plastic bags in grocery stores.
City News Service reports the City Council voted 9-1 Tuesday
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
The California Department of Fish and Wildlife seeks public comments on whether the northeastern Pacific Ocean population of white sharks should be listed as a threatened or endangered species under
LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles is one council vote away from becoming the nation's largest city to pass a ban on plastic grocery bags, which officials say will stop
Santa Monica-based environmental watchdog Heal the Bay has received $30,000 from the California Coastal Commission to continue its Adopt-A-Beach Program in Los Angeles County.
Officials with the commission awarded
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
MALIBU — The designers of an iPhone app that identifies public access points to Malibu beaches successfully reached a fundraising goal of $30,000 last week to make it free to
MALIBU — An endangered California bird species is nesting in the Malibu Lagoon for the first time in decades.
The state Department of Parks and Recreation says it's the
Two members of a team advising City Hall on water-saving measures have traveled to Australia to examine how that dry country manages its water resources.
Connor Everts and Mark Gold,
SM PIER — Water quality near the Santa Monica Pier dropped in 2012, reversing much-celebrated gains from the year before, according to a report released Thursday by local environmental group Heal
KEN EDWARDS CENTER — Members of the Urban Forest Task Force ripped into consultants' reports on the health of Santa Monica's trees Wednesday, and vowed to send their
CITYWIDE — Taking a shower, flushing toilets, watering the lawn — daily life requires water, and managing that need in a town of 90,000 residents and upwards of 200,000 workers