Co-published by Fast Company
Why is the starting team of one of the most multicultural cities so vanilla?
The Society of American Business Writers and Editors has recognized Capital & Main for excellence in business journalism.
Evelina Fernández’s poignant new play, set in 1968, focuses on a Boyle Heights mother in a world gone awry.
Why Los Angeles researchers are looking differently at Skid Row.
Published by Buzzfeed
The alleged arson attack comes less than a month after 50 people were killed in a mosque in New Zealand.
Co-published by the American Prospect
Diseases don’t respect borders, nor do they care about passports, citizenship or residency.
Developers blame a half-century-old law for slowing development. Studies show there are other factors at work.
Alex Gibney has become the filmic Freud of frauds, a master at dissecting sparkly but flawed personalities.
Financial assurance flaws leave taxpayers potentially liable for massive clean-up costs.
Bay Area seventh grader helps to organize San Francisco student protests as part of Friday’s “Climate Strike.”
Wealthy parents caught gaming the system. Eli Broad spends on privatization. The price of each vote for L.A. school board race.
State investigations raise concerns about human rights abuses in federal detention facilities.
The California Immigrant Policy Center and Capital & Main invite you to a conversation to explore the disparate economic and social impacts of the Trump Administration’s immigration policies, from heightened detention and deportation to a proposed “public charge” rule to punish immigrant families.
Co-published by Fast Company
As cities struggle to rein in the short-term rental service, a detente in San Francisco may show the way.
An election reversal for L.A. charter school forces. Oakland teachers’ uneasy victory. Betsy DeVos backs a bill everyone hates.
Co-published by The Guardian
Love and energy aren’t always enough to provide what Allensworth, a historic African-American town, needs most: clean water, accessible to all.
Arsenic and poverty run high in the Central Valley.
In our national effort to hold Trump accountable, it’s dangerous to accept at face value Andrew McCabe’s uncritical praise of the FBI without remaining alert to the bureau’s serious constitutional violations.
A UCLA study found that 84 percent of the city of Los Angeles’ 147,000 retail employees lack fixed schedules.
Negotiators have been trying to hammer out a deal for smaller classes, more student resources and wages capable of retaining teachers squeezed by gentrification.