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The Trump administration has suspended family visa applications – and Trump has ordered an end to the census count three weeks early.
Many progressive electeds have ignored an initiative that would revise California’s constitution to assess commercial property at higher rates.
What California’s nursing home COVID crisis can teach us about taking better care of essential health workers.
In an eleventh hour move, Sacramento extended the statewide eviction moratorium for renters suffering COVID-related hardships.
Are COVID deaths going unreported? Or has living on the street become more dangerous?
While many struggle in the shadow of COVID-19, CEO compensation has never been so good.
Frank Lara, a teacher in San Francisco’s Mission District, discusses the challenges of distance learning as the fall semester begins.
Why climate advocates say funding the unproven technology is a costly mistake.
Defenders of L.A.’s public health chief see a fierce advocate for equity but many question her record and leadership style.
Co-published by L.A. Taco
At least a dozen White House figures have ties to racist and anti-immigrant groups. But there’s a long history of this.
At least 12 past and present Trump administration staffers have ties to neo-Nazi and anti-immigrant hate groups.
Could Trump’s effort to tackle the opioid crisis be overshadowed by his handling of COVID?
The dual public health and economic crisis has driven Native American leaders to ponder diversifying gaming-dependent tribal economies.
A key Wisconsin voting bloc pushes back against corporate consolidation.
Could lives have been saved if the state had a 90-day supply of PPE on hand when COVID-19 erupted?
Budget overruns, conflicts of interest and bankruptcy hound the quarter-billion-dollar Exide cleanup.
What impact could 34 million poor nonvoters make if they started participating in elections?
So why is the opposition using the solar industry to defeat it?
The headless-chicken days of March. Zoom crashes. Parents against PPE. And yet teacher stress levels are returning to normal.
Middle school is where many students branch out academically. Some seem to thrive online, while others have “dropped off the map.”