CITY HALL — The Rent Control Board will wait until the day before its drop dead date to decide whether or not to stand in the way of a development that
CITY HALL — The Rent Control Board is sure that it wants to raise registration fees on rent-controlled apartments to close its yawning budget gap, but how much and who should
SM PIER
Starting this Memorial Day weekend, the Santa Monica Pier Aquarium will begin offering free admission to military families from May to Sept. 2.
This is the third year
SMC — Santa Monica College psychology student Scott Pine was recently awarded with the Jack Kent Cooke scholarship, the largest privately funded scholarship of its kind in the nation. The generous
SMC — Santa Monica College quarterback Alfonso Medina — who led the Corsairs to back-to-back Conference Championships for the first time in 30 years — was named 2012-13 Student Athlete of the Year
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
This weekend, drivers on the Westside can expect a lane opening instead of a closure for a change.
Metro, the I-405 Sepulveda Pass Improvements Project contractor and Caltrans announced they
Get some hands-on, hands-only CPR training for free, in honor of National CPR Week.
The American Heart Association is collaborating with the Los Angeles County Emergency Medical Services Agency to
The Big Blue Bus announced that buses will run on Memorial Day.
BBB will run its Sunday schedule on Monday, May 27, to accommodate users of public transportation during the
The Los Angeles County Coroner's Office declared on Thursday that a body found near Boelter Hall at UCLA was that of a Santa Monica resident who committed suicide.
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