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Thousands of low-income patients cannot survive without MLK Hospital. The South L.A. hospital cannot survive on what it is paid by public insurance.
Contributions rise for Democrats as Legislature debates industry regulation.
El Sereno residents used grants and their own money to open a store selling healthy foods at affordable prices.
“Polluting behemoth” Homer City Generating Station was the state’s largest coal-fired power plant.
Years behind bars for drug dealing led the influential proto-punk rocker to work for criminal justice reform.
Concerns over working conditions and patient care amidst hospital consolidation drove Louisiana’s largest union victory since 1993.
For many, premiums and deductibles now take three times more out of one’s budget than 20 years ago, UC Berkeley study shows.
Joanne Marie Erickson, battling post-polio syndrome, grapples with the looming threat of homelessness.
New and updated regulations, a royalties increase and enforcement funding await major debate.
From food to finding flights, volunteer groups send support to the airport nightly to help asylum seekers.
A pay system that does not guarantee raise agreements is a key reason.
The closer the state gets to reaching its groundbreaking clean energy goals, the harder it will be to achieve them.
Facing eviction after 30 years, Mike Balog says moving out would mean losing his community, part of his identity and having nowhere else to go.
Ten years of meetings and plans abruptly dumped; future plans uncertain.
Author Nick Romeo lays out a plan for an economy that puts workers and the planet above profits.
Running Mamis creates a safe space to run — away from road hazards, harassment and the strains of postpartum depression.
The Office of the City Attorney says state law allows the evictions.
Despite a 10% raise, professors, lecturers, coaches, counselors and others will return to contract negotiations within months.
Migrants released by ICE after dark often must rely on the kindness of strangers and sheer luck or risk spending long nights on the street.
Campaign leaders say gender identity is not a factor. They say they want two newer councilmembers out for reasons including being anti-business, soft on crime and holding meetings in Spanish.