Fishermen and foodways begin to feel the squeeze of Orange County's oil spill
For some fishermen, income from an entire season may be at risk.
For some fishermen, income from an entire season may be at risk.
"She's been dead since the first day she was shot," Mona Rodriguez's brother said. "We just kept her artificially alive just so we could kiss her goodbye."
Los Angeles police officers mishandled their response to a gunman inside a Ralph's grocery store last year, the LAPD's oversight panel rules.
Crews in Huntington Beach and Newport Beach are trying to protect coastlines as much as possible ahead of an approaching storm.
Customers must present proof of vaccination to enter indoor businesses in Los Angeles starting Nov. 4 under an ordinance approved by the City Council.
The spill has left many residents questioning the oil industry off its shore and officials calling for a ban on drilling off the coast.
In the back of the plane with the cargo door open, two flight mechanics looked for oil sheens in the dark teal ocean while reporters on board watched.
COVID-19 hospitalizations have dropped by half from the summer peak, as California continues to steadily shake off the worst of the Delta surge.
Project Roomkey, made possible by the pandemic, sheltered thousands of homeless people. Here's how it both succeeded and failed.
Like many places in the American West dependent on agriculture, Stratford is now a shell of its once vibrant heyday. Ever-rising temperatures and years of drought are making it wither.
Legal experts said the need for an investigation into whether administrators knew about alleged sexual abuse by Dr. George Tyndall and failed to act should have been obvious.
A final determination for the cause of the spill may take months, but Coast Guard investigators have come up with no other explanation than anchor drag, federal sources said.
L.A. will use more Colorado River water to reduce reliance on the hard-hit supplies from the State Water Project.
The woman was taken to a trauma center following the Tuesday night incident.
Oil industry experts say the U.S. Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement has long failed to adequately monitor offshore drilling operations.
The class-action lawsuit filed in Los Angeles Monday alleges lost wages and potential exposure to health hazards.
The legislation was signed into law shortly after after Newsom survived a recall election in which those seeking to remove him from office cited problems that included long waits for unemployment benefits for hundreds of thousands of jobless Californians.
A man wanted on suspicion of killing one family member and wounding two others was fatally shot by police on the side of a freeway, according to law enforcement officials.
At a news conference focused on the oil spill, the California governor made a point about the need to shift away from oil industry-based jobs. "It's time once and for all to disabuse ourselves that this has to be part of our future," Newsom said of drilling. "This is part of our past."
After a long hiatus, the movement to establish a public bank in Los Angeles is once again moving forward.
The company that operates the pipeline received an alert of a possible failure at 2:30 a.m. Saturday, federal regulators said.
Oil industry and government officials will tout technology's potential to mitigate the damage on thousands of gallons of oil leaked into the ocean. They know better.