LATEST NEWS
The Black Lives Matter demonstration demanded an end to police violence against people of color.
A coronavirus outbreak swept through one Bay Area facility, leaving 16 dead. Was the home a disaster waiting to happen?
A veteran photojournalist captures one tumultuous weekend in a city gripped by angry protests against police brutality.
In the midst of a pandemic, Rev. William Barber’s June 20 March on Washington goes digital.
Thousands of California stylists and barbers are anxiously wondering: What’s the best way to reopen and start doing hair again – safely?
Capital & Main’s new series examines the challenges and concerns of employees working in close contact with the public or each other.
The COVID-19 crisis hits the state after a decade of rising economic inequality.
Even porn actors must work from home as one of the most intimate industries remains in lockdown.
Critics charge DeVos is exploiting a national public-health crisis to promote her agenda of privatizing public education.
Guest: Jose Martinez Gonzales, Detainee at Otay Mesa Detention Center
A survey of 23,000 nurses found that 87 percent of respondents must still reuse disposable masks while attending to COVID-19 patients.
More than half of the county’s COVID-19 deaths have occurred at nursing homes. Where was the public health department?
To break the corporate grip on our food, we need to stop looking to fields far away and look closer to home.
Gov. Newsom’s revised budget puts programs aimed at addressing disparities in access to vital services on the chopping block.
The activist-writer was deeply planted in the here and now: What was at stake. What still needed to be done. What we couldn’t lose sight of.
COVID-19 is spreading throughout central Washington state. One agricultural county has the highest infection rate on the West Coast.
People say they care about climate. So why don’t they vote like it?
The lights are going out in America’s rural hospitals and clinics at the moment they are most needed.
Pandemic-battered California faces another falling domino as paychecks vanish and rents come due.
A veteran photographer records the stories of Los Angeles street vendors pushed to the edge by a pandemic.