From CalMatters...
Send CA Your Social Security Complaints
04/17/2025If you’ve experienced any trouble or hiccups receiving your Social Security recently, California Attorney General Rob Bonta unveiled a new complaint page on Tuesday for residents to report disruptions they faced when accessing their benefits.
From The Sacramento Bee...
California Democrats Leaving X in Droves
03/27/2025Democrats in the state legislature are leaving the X social media platform, citing the increase in hate speech and discomfort in relying on the private service to communicate with constituents.
From YubaNet...
Apply to Serve on the Nevada County Youth Commission
03/21/2025Read on to learn how Nevada County residents ages 14-19 can apply to serve on the Nevada County Youth Commission and advise on issues impactful to local youth.
From CalMatters...
California’s Cities and Schools Face Big Budget Gaps, Few Options
03/12/2025California’s state budget is mired in what fiscal authorities call a “structural deficit,” meaning its revenues cannot keep up with spending mandated by current law.
From YubaNet...
Hundreds of Nevada County Residents Attend Town Hall
03/10/2025A town hall held by a staff member of Representative Kevin Kiley on March 10 was attended by hundreds of Nevada County residents, and they had a lot to say. Read on to learn more.
From CalMatters...
‘It’s a Garbage Fire’: Some CA Legislators Leave X
02/27/2025In the past few months, some Democratic state legislators have joined the reported exodus of users on the social media site X, formerly known as Twitter.
From Local News Matters...
‘Engaged California’: New Statewide Initiative Aims to Give Public a Voice in Policy Decisions
02/26/2025A new program dubbed “Engaged California” aiming to give the public a greater voice in government is launching soon, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced. Described as an exercise in “deliberative democracy,” the program is designed to help the public influence and inform government actions such as the ongoing Los Angeles firestorm rebuilding and recovery, the governor’s office said.
From CalMatters...
02/14/2025The audit by the state’s Fair Political Practices Commission followed CalMatters’ revelations that a law requiring trip organizers to annually disclose their major donors had been used only twice in seven years — even as interest groups continued paying millions for lawmakers’ travel.
From The Mercury News...
PG&E Receives $15 Billion Federal Loan
01/18/2025Read on to learn more about the $15 billion loan guarantee to PG&E granted in the final hours of the Biden Administration.
From CalMatters...
California Fails to Track Its Homelessness Spending or Results, a New Audit Says
04/09/2024There’s so little data available, it’s impossible to even tell if several of California’s largest homelessness programs are working, according to a statewide audit released Tuesday.
From CalMatters...
CA Budget Deal Gets Early Start on Deficit
04/05/2024Not filling open positions in state government, cutting a school facilities program and several climate initiatives, delaying funding for public transit — these are some of the first steps that California officials plan to take to deal with a looming multibillion-dollar budget deficit.
From CalMatters...
These Californians Just Got Protection From Big Rent Hikes
04/05/2024Tenants in many new privately owned, low-income units will be protected from double-digit increases. So will some in existing units, after a state committee on affordable housing imposed a rent cap.
From CalMatters...
CA Fast Food Workers Get Higher Wages, but Which Ones?
03/29/2024According to emails obtained by CalMatters Capitol reporter Jeanne Kuang in response to a public records request, a range of employers have been trying to figure out if they must pay $20 ever since the law was signed late last September.
From EdSource...
Homeless Infants and Toddlers Largely Unenrolled in Early Ed Programs
03/28/2024Evictions have exacerbated homelessness nationwide, increasing the rate of homeless infants and toddlers. Most of those children are not enrolled in early education programs.
From California Healthline...
Your Doctor or Your Insurer? Little-Known Rules May Ease the Choice in Medicare Advantage
03/28/2024Disputes between insurers and providers can lead to entire hospital systems suddenly leaving the plans.
From Los Angeles Times...
California Unlikely to Meet Landmark Goals for Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions
03/15/2024California will miss its goals unless it can increase emission reductions threefold, according to a new study.
From CalMatters...
Border Patrol Is Dropping Off Hundreds of Migrants at San Diego Trolley Station
02/27/2024“Street releases” have resumed after the nonprofit that operated a migrant welcome center announced its “finite resources have been stretched to the limit.”
From Los Angeles Times...
With State Approval, Rancho Palos Verdes to Fast-Track Landslide Mitigation
02/26/2024State officials determined that Rancho Palos Verdes can utilize an already-established state of emergency to expedite landslide stabilization efforts as the crisis escalates.
From YubaNet...
Conservation Groups Initiate Legal Action Against Feds for Failing to Protect Wolves
02/07/2024Ten conservation groups filed an intent to sue the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for its failure to list western wolves under the Endangered Species Act.
From YubaNet...
How a City Is Organized Can Create Less-Biased Citizens
02/07/2024A study in the latest issue of Nature Communications helps explain why there is more unconscious, or implicit, racial bias in some cities than others.
From YubaNet...
Mayor Jan Arbuckle Appointed to Lead National League of Cities’ Small Cities Council
02/06/2024Grass Valley Mayor Jan Arbuckle has been appointed as 2024 chair of the National League of Cities’ Small Cities Council. She was elected to a one-year term to develop and guide programs among local elected officials.
From CalMatters...
California Gave Fast Food Workers a Seat at the Table. What Comes Next?
01/28/2024A first-in-the-nation council will set work rules in the state’s fast food industry, but can labor and business agree?
From Los Angeles Times...
L.A. Is Being ‘Stripped for Parts.’ Here’s What the City Council Wants to Do About It
01/26/2024Among growing concern over copper wire thefts, L.A. City Councilmembers Kevin de León and Traci Park proposed a task force anchored by the LAPD.
From YubaNet...
Biden Has Issued More Immigration-Related Executive Actions Than During Entire Trump Term
01/23/2024The Migration Policy Institute has tallied that President Joe Biden and his administration have taken 535 immigration-related executive actions in three years, surpassing 472 during the Trump administration.
From The California Aggie...
01/23/2024The numbers and letters on your car can reveal more than you think.
From Daily Democrat...
Will $20 Minimum Wage Crush Fast Food in California?
01/22/2024Fast food lives in a consumer sweet spot: demand, convenience and relative affordability. And this pay hike—equal to minimum wage increases during the past five years—will create grand economic unknowns.
From CapPublicRadio...
How California Budget Rules Can Prevent Saving for a Rainy Day—and Why Newsom Wants to Change That
01/21/2024The swing from a $100 billion surplus to a deficit somewhere between $38 and $68 billion in just two years illustrates the volatility of California’s tax system.
From CapPublicRadio...
California Court Ruling Could Threaten Key Source of Funding for Disputed Delta Water Tunnel Project
01/19/2024A California judge says a nearly 65-year-old law does not give the state permission to borrow the billions of dollars it would need to build a large water project.
From Los Angeles Times...
Newsom Blocks Proposed Ban on Youth Tackle Football
01/17/2024Proposed California legislation that would ban tackle football for kids under 12 had gained momentum until Gov. Gavin Newsom made it clear he’d veto the bill.
From CalMatters...
Program to Clear Encampments Shows Signs of Success, But Housing Remains Elusive
01/16/2024A multi-year, $750 million California program aimed at doing away with homeless encampments has had mixed results. Local leaders say ongoing funding is needed.
From SFGate...
Fourth Graders Might Lose Free Access to California State Parks
01/12/2024California’s projected budget deficit of close to $38 billion likely means some cuts are coming. Among them, Gov. Gavin Newsom has proposed ending the California State Park Adventure Pass, which offers free access to some state parks for fourth graders.
From Los Angeles Times...
LAPD Chief Announces Departure at End of February
01/12/2024Michel Moore, chief of the Los Angeles Police Department, announced he will resign. The departure of Moore, who has been in the job since 2018, will spur the appointment of an interim chief and a nationwide search for his replacement, according to Mayor Karen Bass.