• Jenna ChandlerPatch Staff Verified Patch Staff Badge

  • Lake Forest, CA

Jenna Chandler is the editor of Santa Monica Patch (read her introduction to the site here). She studied journalism at Chapman University, where she was editor-in-chief of the student newspaper, <i>The Panther</i>, and interned in the newsroom at the <i>Orange County Register</i> and NBC News Los Angeles. In 2008, she was distinguished as the Register&#39;s Outstanding Student Journalist of the Year. 

Jenna joined Patch in October 2010 as the editor of San Juan Capistrano Patch after covering crime and government at the <i>Porterville Recorder </i>in California&#39;s Central Valley. There she built a portfolio of stories that had resounding effects in the community, including a series that forced the City Council to reallocate thousands of dollars in misspent funds, and a weeklong report on public-sector salaries that led to the resignation of a city manager.  

When she&#39;s not working, you&#39;ll find Jenna perusing record stores for Neil Young vinyl, eating pizza and hiking. 

Posting Activity

Santa Monica, CA|News|

Chabad House Bomb Investigators Awarded

Detective Derek Leone, Assistant Fire Marshall Eric Binder, Sgt. David Thomas and Sgt. Robert Almada are credited with a "relentless" work that led to the arrest of a man accused of detonating a pipe bomb at the Chabad House Lubavitch of Santa Monica.

Chabad House Bomb Investigators Awarded
Santa Monica, CA|News|

Denny's Property Sold for $11 Million

Two neighboring sites home to Norm's and Wertz Brothers Antique Mart are currently on the market. The listing agent says there's potential for some major development projects.

Denny's Property Sold for $11 Million
Santa Monica, CA|News|

This Weekend in Santa Monica!

Learn about the man for whom Wilshire Boulevard is named, get free admission into the Santa Monica Pier Aquarium, support the Samohi choir program and more.

This Weekend in Santa Monica!
Santa Monica, CA|News|

City Ready to Give Up On Anti-Nuke Sculpture

The Arts Commission says there's not enough money to restore cartoonist Paul Conrad's mushroom-cloud work. But commissioners want to give the public and Conrad's family time to come up with the nearly half-million dollars.

City Ready to Give Up On Anti-Nuke Sculpture