LATEST NEWS
After years of contentious battles amid a rural health crisis, the state voted to expand the program.
Puzzling denials and delays still plague some who seemed to qualify for help.
Some experts say banks should be financing renewables at a much higher rate, for climate and ROI reasons.
With water use growing, arid Western states are asking for new regulations.
Reaching across diverse backgrounds and kinds of work, thousands of union members are sharing strategy and stories of the struggle to live and work in Los Angeles.
The president’s new economic paradigm for large-scale government intervention is largely untouched by the deal with Republicans.
Community schools reduce health disparities by bringing medical, mental health, and wellness resources to the campuses students and families visit daily.
New studies call for reparations from oil companies and governments responsible for climate change.
Ending the pandemic emergency increases burdens for people with long COVID.
Richard and Leah Rothstein’s new book is an organizer’s guide to integrating communities.
Manjusha Kulkarni, co-founder of Stop AAPI Hate, talks about the surge in anti-Asian harassment and violence during the pandemic and the communities that are pushing back.
After a deal last year kneecapped regulators’ ability to address the crisis of abandoned oil and gas wells, Dems aim to reset environmental law.
Two California cases probe who is pocketing those extra fees tacked onto your restaurant tab.
Lawsuit argues the state is not equally upholding environmental protections enshrined in its constitution.
Natalia Molina, historian, author and MacArthur fellow, discusses gentrification and her family’s history of nurturing community.
Rossana Pérez, healer and activist in the Salvadoran community of Los Angeles, talks about the transgenerational trauma that the COVID-19 pandemic exposed.
Though the state is set to spend plenty in effort to meet the goals of its emissions reduction plan, more permanent solutions seem far off.
Ten years on, a law meant to help urban farmers feed hungry Californians continues to underperform.
How to follow the heat to the next disease; and how following the science got a researcher in trouble.
The plan by Extraction would have led to horizontal drilling under hundreds of acres of scenic Boulder County lands purchased with taxpayer dollars.