My goal every Domestic Violence Awareness month is to open up the conversation about DV, who perpetrates it, who facilitates it, and who benefits from it. The sad reality is
As a teenager who has experienced much of my high school career being plagued by the tragic COVID-19 pandemic, I think it is important that the point of view of
I want to congratulate the Santa Monica City Council for adopting a Zero Emissions Building Code on all new construction beginning January 1st, 2023. This code will ban natural gas
Parent Teacher Associations are meant to be apolitical, but there are paid adverts by the “Santa Monica Malibu PTAs council” (SMMPTA) that say vote yes on measure SMC.
The SMMPTA
This letter is in response to the Santa Monica Police Officers Association’s (SMPOA) most recent public editorial, “Police Reform Commission Members Should Do Their Jobs”
On September 22, 2022,
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HOT TUNA – When Jefferson Airplane co-founder (1965) Jorma Kaukonen and childhood buddy and JA bassist Jack Casady released an album in ‘69 of acoustic blues they had recorded
On February 2, 2021, Santa Monica City Council adopted an ordinance adding Santa Monica Municipal Code Chapter 2.50 to establish a Public Safety Reform and Oversight Commission (PSROC). The
“Do the right thing. It will gratify some people and astonish the rest.” Mark Twain
The Santa Monica Coalition for Police Reform urges the City Council to reject the Police
For two years, the Police Officers Association (POA) has thrown repeated roadblocks at the City’s effort to implement meaningful oversight and reform of the SMPD.
The Public Safety Reform
Merriam-Webster defines Public Service as: a service rendered in the public interest, and Environmentalism as: advocacy of the preservation, restoration, or improvement of the natural environment, especially the movement to
During Hurricane Ian, I inadvertently saw Tucker Carlson on Fox say, “You hate to hype hurricanes because everyone’s kinda on to that scam.” I immediately turned off the TV
California’s water laws are stuck in the past. The Legislature can—indeed, it must—make the changes to state law necessary to address the 21st century’s complex water