In a wide-ranging talk, the 92-year-old rebel with many causes discusses the role of activists, intellectuals and Joe Biden in America.
The impact of underground injection wells on aquifers is not well understood, but the state continues to allow their proliferation.
The “changemakers” of one Minneapolis activist group use art and community outreach to help their city understand George Floyd’s death.
It could be a case of California vs. Californians, as policy and politics clash with the latest medical information and suggested guidance.
LAUSD survey data shows most families prefer online instruction for the remainder of the school year.
Energy companies use a greenhouse gas to force out more oil in a little-known process that can bring headaches to rural communities.
A look at how L.A.’s top universities treated their students, campus workers and professional staff during the pandemic.
After years of neglect, U.S. border policy remains in crisis.
Los Angeles County’s reopening leads to anxiety for workers, families and advocates — and to hope, too.
As the trial of George Floyd’s alleged killer unfolds in Minneapolis, a nation takes a long look at itself in the mirror.
Richmond Mayor Tom Butt was publicly optimistic about a Chevron oil refinery spill. In private he offered a much more critical assessment.
America’s governors and mayors are loosening safety restrictions, while a pandemic weary populace behaves as if the crisis is over.
Two wells, two accidents — but no answers.
After the water stopped flowing, a grassroots effort in Jackson is organizing the Black community for future climate and political crises.
Hundreds gathered Thursday evening to protest the eviction of the unhoused community from nearby Echo Park Lake.
The city of L.A., in partnership with Councilman Paul Krekorian, has brought the first tiny home village to Los Angeles.
Co-produced with USA Today
In the Los Angeles area alone, 11 new tank projects are underway, mainly in communities of color.
Hundreds gathered Wednesday to protest the impending closure of Echo Park Lake, where a large houseless community currently resides.
Nancy Feinstein and Carol Rothman first started organizing older women in 2016—a demographic they see as an under-utlized resource.
New legislation requiring paid time off for COVID-related issues excludes businesses with 25 employees or less.