Critics say the lessons of COVID-19 have not been heeded in the U.S. response to the latest viral threat.
The HMO needs to hire more clinicians to ensure that patients wait no more than the legally mandated 10 days between appointments, says veteran therapist.
Striking Kaiser therapist says patients stuck without appointments ‘don’t have that backup.’
Her patients are waiting months for therapy. ‘This strike is not about money,’ says Sacramento therapist Jane Kostka.
Resolutions calling for companies to align their political spending with stated values gain ground.
Weeks before the California Legislature considers a bill to end the prison-to-deportation pipeline, You was sent to the country his family fled when he was 4.
In praise of writer Mike Davis: prophet, burr, spellbinder and friend.
‘People’s lives haven’t really changed much. In fact, they’ve worsened around us.’
Supporters say the legislation would protect farmworkers from employer intimidation.
The state risks health and highway funding if it doesn’t pass regulations on oil and gas pollution.
The South Coast air district is investigating dozens of complaints about toxic emissions seen in the ‘shocking’ footage.
If baseball is America’s pastime, unions are Hollywood’s. Dodgers broadcaster Vin Scully symbolized both.
School districts are struggling to address the ‘homework gap’ faced by students without adequate web access.
Oilman Simon Kukes has more risky idle wells under a state waiver than anyone else.
The best option for many overloaded borrowers may be to just say no, argues an organizer in the debt strike movement.
Gloves off, departing L.A. Councilmember Mike Bonin says that’s what voters demand to know about homelessness, climate, policing and other crises.
The shipment of materials from one toxic disaster to another has prompted outcry from activists and politicians alike.
Long waits for care, understaffing lead 2,000 workers to give walkout notice.
Major overhaul of labor laws circumvented by employers, say workers and advocates.
But where they don’t, millions of workers are stuck at the record-low federal floor.