LATEST NEWS
The Glade Run Recreation Area is a destination for cyclists, hikers, birders and other outdoor enthusiasts in the middle of a declining oilfield.
Undocumented workers help fund public services, fill essential jobs and generate billions in economic activity, study finds.
How Vicky Hernandez and her customers at the Buckshot Deli & Diner in Niland view plans to turn Imperial Valley into a green energy hub.
Those who helped families cope with child care, financial instability and mental health are being replaced with uniformed service members.
Wildlife habitat, endangered animals and recreation could all be at risk in state’s biggest public land sale in modern history.
In the governor’s race, Steyer backs sweeping reforms and Becerra stresses enforcement.
The incurable lung disease has killed 31 countertop workers and sickened 560, numbers that are expected to keep climbing while regulators draft emergency rules.
A state Department of Justice inspection of seven California facilities found overcrowding, poor medical care, inadequate food and excessive force from guards.
While frontrunners Steyer and Becerra slug it out, they’re clashing over their commitment to clean energy.
Once an advocate for a universal system, he now focuses on incremental reforms and shielding Californians from federal cuts.
It’s a towering example of the contentious debate over what to do with the state’s ever-growing supply of oilfield waste.
The discussion missing from the primary campaign is how — and whether — Mayor Karen Bass has benefited L.A.’s Black community.
Market Match program could disappear — unless lawmakers step in to fund an initiative that boosts access to farmers’ markets and supports small farms.
Proposed hazardous waste oversight changes are years behind schedule and fail to account for a community’s health risks from pollution, environmental groups warn.
A hospital CEO says looming Medicaid reductions threaten vulnerable residents and the state’s health system.
Spouses of deployed military say they’re struggling with the costs of child care, groceries, housing.
Stuck in immigration limbo, the woman needs a Russian Sign Language translator for her pending asylum case.
As lakes, reservoirs and groundwater wither away, some Gulf Coast residents see costly desalination plants as the last hope.
The man believed he would be sent to supermax prison where the Salvadoran government, paid by the U.S., tortured Venezuelan deportees last year.
As Trump-backed law threatens Medicaid and SNAP eligibility for millions, a proposed change to state data collection aims to preserve coverage.