Across California, CA|News|
Will Congress Finally End The Subminimum Wage For Workers With Disabilities?
Representatives could end what critics say is an outdated, “exploitative and discriminatory” legal framework.

Representatives could end what critics say is an outdated, “exploitative and discriminatory” legal framework.

The GOP seeks to spark an improbable conservative comeback in a true-blue state in the Sept. 14 vote.
The proposal suggests removing protections for groundwater reserves underneath 1,500 square surface miles in western Kern County.
In a survey of nearly 150,000 Americans, people with private insurance were the most likely to say their access to care was poor.
The state’s lagging vaccination efforts in low income neighborhoods will once again put those populations at unequal risk.
As Los Angeles County reopens, enforcement of street vending regulations has spiked in recent weeks.
The state has hit record oil and gas production, but the industry jobs outlook remains bleak.
"L.A.’s alternative-media wars of a quarter century ago still resonate for a city whose media landscape never fully recovered."
As the state gradually emerges from the pandemic, an economic hangover lingers over the wine industry.
Soaring rents are placing intense pressure on tenants' incomes and pricing people out.
As Americans celebrate Independence Day, we asked social justice activist Dorian Warren where we are as a nation.
Questions over DTSC competency complicate taxpayer-funded plans to rehabilitate polluted properties.
A year and a half after COVID-19 touched down in California, Venice Beach has the second highest unhoused population in Los Angeles County.
As summer rolls on, some are predicting kids will be vectors for new, more contagious COVID strains.
Despite Democrats' supermajority and an environmental emergency, climate bills are hitting a wall in the California Senate.
Biden's ban on new drilling operations on public lands has been blocked for now, but the political battle rages on.
U.S. inequality has returned to levels not seen since the early 1900s.
Is it too late for L.A. County to learn from its pandemic mistakes?
Pandemic restrictions are ending, whether we're ready or not.
For millions in the Golden State, economic inequality brings a different kind of peril to daily life.