LATEST NEWS
Digital activists are building tools to monitor the havoc caused by Trump-era policies — from deportations to funding cuts.
A husband-and-wife ministry’s efforts to rebuild after a devastating wildfire reveal the fragile future of the area’s historically Black community.
Key California weather forecast offices will remain “criminally understaffed” while new hires get on board, former NWS meteorologists warn.
Jarrod McNaughton, who leads Inland Empire Health Plan, says the math points to a crisis California’s safety net can’t sustain.
A promise of $1,000 and a free plane ride home tempts many who’ve grown weary of being locked up in crowded detention centers.
In his first term, Trump promised to build new roads, bridges, airports and railways.
This time he seems more invested in tearing things down.
Recently retired Colorado scientist Lisa McKenzie chased the link between fracking and adverse birth outcomes, cancer and cardiovascular disease.
Capital & Main has documented nine Americans who have been held in federal custody after observing or protesting immigration raids.
Gov. Gavin Newsom agreed to changes to Medi-Cal that will make treatment for migrants more expensive — and less common, raising a question: Why?
Attorney General Rob Bonta has joined a national lawsuit to halt Republicans’ war on Californians.
After 29 months without a contract, a new hospice union resists the financialization of end-of-life care.
Western Environmental Law Center attorney discusses New Mexico, the president’s energy emergency and how we can emerge from the “ruins.”
Amid increasingly intense weather, the Chemical Safety Board is the lone independent agency watching over the Gulf Coast’s petrochemical corridor.
The L.A. City Councilmember and daughter of undocumented immigrants speaks about immigration raids and recent LAPD activity.
Why a state senator may finally win his battle against powerful pharmacy benefit managers.
Director, producer of The Last Class discuss Reich’s skill in the classroom and his career-long focus on economic disparities.
Even for those who worked alongside the U.S. military, the Trump administration has taken away ways for Afghans to reach safety — and loved ones — in the U.S.
Old oil wells on the reservation spew chemical-laden water. The feds have done little to honor treaty obligations to clean them up.
A lone young man taunted an army of immigration cops and a street erupted with the firing of tear gas and crowd-control munitions.
BlueOval SK workers asked for a union vote six months ago. Trump administration changes could extend delays.