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Harnessing the Protective Power of Sunscreen
Safeguard against skin cancer with guidance from the Skin Cancer & Dermatology Institute Living in the Reno-Tahoe area, we cherish our time outdoors, reveling in a plethora of activities, dining [...]
Community Emergency Radio Association
Listed under: Resilience
Gov. Gavin Newsomâs signature mental health policies allow the involuntary treatment of more Californians with severe mental illnesses. Some fear the new laws will infringe on the civil liberties of people confined against their will.
Police canât force homeless people from encampments unless the city in question has âadequate shelterâ for those who are displaced, according to courts. Now everyone involved wants to know what âadequateâ means.
Gov. Gavin Newsomâs big new experiment to push people with mental illness off the streets and into treatment starts this fall. Counties responsible for the rollout say it may end up being more modest than advertised.
By channeling funds to a number of nonprofits working on various issues in a given region, community foundations help solve big problems throughout California.
Renter protections and eviction bans put in place for the COVID-19 pandemic have expired. By keeping them in place, California could slow the spread of homelessness. But that's not happening.
Gov. Gavin Newsom wants to rethink how California spends its millionaires tax by directing more money toward housing. Some county-run mental health programs could lose out.
The homeless population fell by a third in Texas over the past decade as it surged in California. The cost of living is a big reason Texas is doing a better job at alleviating homelessness.
Los Angelesâ new homelessness solution is meant to quickly get people out of encampments and into housingâas the city grapples with the stateâs largest population of unhoused residents. But the program is struggling to house people and connect them with âŚ
Housing First policy works to reduce homelessness, evidence shows. But in California the policy has proven ineffective. What is the state doing wrong?
Gov. Gavin Newsom poured âunprecedentedâ money into homelessness, but providers say his use of one-time grants does not allow for long-term solutions to the stateâs biggest crisis. That's what happened in Grass Valley.
After weeks of negotiations, the governor and top Democrats in the Legislature say they have a budget deal. Legislators will start voting today on bills related to the agreement, which sets spending and policy across a wide range of issues âŚ
2022 was a year that needed a lot of explaining. And California Local was there. Here are our 10 most important explanatory journalism stories from the year gone by, from immigration to cryptocurrency to wealth inequality and more.
New laws banning toxicity testing on dogs and cats, and making rental housing more pet friendly are among a slate of new animal welfare legislation signed by Gov. Newsom in September.
The links between homelessness and crime are complex, and the idea that unhoused individuals present a danger to their community seems to be exaggerated.
Gov. Newsom and the state legislature should consider allocating $40 billion of the state's $97 billion surplus to subsidize the building of low-income housing.
How the California mental health crisis emerged out of the stateâs history of deinstitutionalization and laws designed to protect the mentally ill, as well as the communities around them.
In which we ponder how to make things better in a climate of no.
A State Senate bill would allow quick rezoning for multi-family housing, as a new research study reveals the high cost of single-family zoning laws.
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