As California farmers wonder who will grow and harvest our food, falling birthrates are likely to soon force nations to compete for immigrants.
The U.S. has repeatedly tried to remove nonwhite people from society, often leading to generational trauma.
En el nuevo número de teléfono se podrán denunciar detenciones y enlazar a familiares de los afectados con abogados.
The phone number can be used to report apprehensions and connect families to lawyers.
Experts say the move was redundant and amounts to unfair criticism of environmental protections.
The union and health care provider are split over pension and prep time issues.
For those moved to detention facilities elsewhere in the country the odds of winning asylum decrease greatly.
After wildfires devastated the island, homelessness spiked. Advocates fear L.A. could face a similar fate without strong renter protections — and enforcement.
In areas like California’s rural Shasta County, school campuses may be the most effective places to care for children’s mental health needs, and such care will now be covered by insurance.
The Eaton fire ravaged a historic Black community in Altadena. Now, people are using the words of one of its most famous residents as a guide to rebuild.
National Education Association leader Becky Pringle says her union is preparing to fight for “our students, our public schools and, honestly, our democracy.”
Head of the California Immigrant Policy Center said the state’s leaders and people are ready to stand against deportations and nativism.
They won status as state employees to get union rights. Now they’re fighting for an election and better jobs.
Officials withdrew a rebid of a $6.6 billion contract requiring “labor harmony” 25 days after the $5 billion corporation holding it filed suit.
In a vicious cycle, the sector’s financing of oil and gas is having an impact on its bottom line.
Newly unionized Caltech, Occidental workers got union rights under Biden. Trump’s inauguration has them seeking quick contracts.
Companies are using a shortcut to build ever larger centers that use diesel generators as an emergency power source.
Workers optimistic about national coordination even as a second Trump administration threatens labor rights and immigration crackdowns.
From Uber and Lyft drivers to home care workers, the fate of far-reaching labor organizing efforts hangs in the balance.
Historian Sean Wilentz warns Trump’s second term could mark an unprecedented concentration of power in the hands of a reactionary movement.