As communities up and down California ban homeless encampments, one Bay Area city is trying to go a step further.
The East Bay city of Fremont is set to vote
The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) will use the parking lot at Will Rogers State Beach to handle toxic waste being cleared out of the Palisades Fire zone, despite earlier
In the aftermath of the devastating fires that have scorched communities across Los Angeles, one thing is abundantly clear: our city is in desperate need of leadership. As we struggle
Not far from where Ceci Carroll lives, a rock-mining company has polluted the air with dust across the San Gabriel Valley, she said.
Now, as crews clean charred remains from
The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors moved to strengthen its fight against human trafficking Tuesday, giving unanimous approval to explore the creation of a countywide prevention coordinating body and
After more than two years, California’s political ethics watchdog has closed its investigation into a controversial campaign donor network, concluding that the group followed legal advice from the state
For the past two decades three California governors have committed the state to reducing its greenhouse gas emissions to battle climate change.
The official goal is to achieve carbon neutrality
By Dan Walters
Three weeks ago, Gov. Gavin Newsom proposed a $322 billion state budget for the fiscal year that begins on July 1, emphasizing that it would be balanced
GAGA. WONDER, JONI, ,many more -courtesy photo
EILISH, STING, NICKS, JELLY ROLL, OLIVIA, FOGERTY
Alanis, Katy, Stills, Nash, RHCP, EW&F, many more. Two concerts on one night, tonight,
The leader of the California Senate has reappointed the former chair of the chamber’s insurance committee, despite uncertainty over her possible involvement in a federal corruption probe.
On Friday,
Does Donald Trump truly believe the nonsense he spouts about California water — the mythical “valve” connecting the state to Canada, or the imagined “half-pipe” that stands ready to soak the
At the Pasadena City College disaster resource center, the long, methodical work of putting lives back together is underway.
Residents who have lost everything — most in the Eaton fire that