Ten years after Capital & Main was founded, one thing is still clear: we ignore economic inequality at our peril.
Amid drought and wildfire crises, the state’s powerful industries have stymied 12 bills meant to address climate change and industry accountability.
The college program is after state grants to rebuild and expand natural gas production in the San Juan Basin.
It seems everyone in the state wants more housing, but not necessarily in their own backyards.
The city’s housing plan may not create the integrated and balanced communities that state law requires.
Disappointing numbers call into question the state’s market-based prescription for resolving the housing shortage.
Three bills would give trucking companies less incentive to misclassify full-time drivers as contractors.
A Capital & Main investigation finds the city’s fair housing programs are littered with problems.
A look at the median pay of the average American worker compared with the salary and compensation of the nation’s top CEOs.
A Capital & Main photo essay honors the American workers whose critical work keeps our nation moving forward.
Other districts may well be watching — and wondering how soon they can enact a similar policy.
Eyal Press asks us to look at the labor no one wants to celebrate.
Even as retail and hospitality workers see pay hikes, the wealthiest Americans got even bigger raises during the pandemic — widening income inequality even further.
Voices from inside the 2021 March on Washington for Voting Rights.
A sloppy stat underscores the need to watch carefully as corporate America tosses out numbers to show how it has embraced stakeholder capitalism.
Despite gains in educational attainment and income, the wealth gap experienced by Black Americans is persistent.
As the Delta variant rages, caregivers face dual battles against the virus and burnout.
The civil rights activist is remembered for fighting on behalf of the most vulnerable.
The drastic increase in permits comes at a time when climate science shows that new drilling and production should be winding down.
The second-largest metropolitan area in the U.S. is in limbo — and wasting time.