The latest in Kepler's Books "Story is the Thing" reading series on Feb. 12 features authors Rita Billwinkel, Yangsze Choo, Anita Felicelli and Cary Groner reading from their books.
The Atherton City Council unanimously passed an urgency ordinance to once more regulate backyard chickens after inadvertently ...
An aerial view of the Palisades Fire devastation at the Palisades Bowl Mobile Home Park on Feb. 8, 2025. Photo by Ted Soqui, SIPA USA via Reuters The Palisades Fire that ignited in January and killed ...
In summary San Gabriel Valley areas scarred by the Eaton Fire are at “high to very high risk” of debris flows this week. How do they happen? What is being done to prepare? And what do survivors of a ...
California has the nation’s largest population of undocumented immigrants with roughly 1.8 million people. Over the last three decades, Californians’ attitudes about that fact have undergone an ...
In summary Democratic attorneys general have different views on whether the U.S. is in a constitutional crisis during the new Trump administration. California Attorney General Rob Bonta sees a ...
Come back for Secret Season Road Trip -Part 3 when we drive home two ways with overnights in Cloverdale, ( Farmhouse Inn) and Healdsburgh, ( Harmon House ). Plus we’ll unexpectedly stumble onto one of ...
“Our mission [is] to serve our community — everyone, regardless of status,” Norris said in an email. He added that police ...
After saying it would run out of funds by March, California’s last-resort fire insurance provider will impose a special charge of $1 billion on homeowners and insurance companies, the first such move ...
The Portola Valley Women’s Book Club is keeping local residents' minds sharp through intellectual conversations about ...
A person uses their laptop at the UCLA campus in Los Angeles on Feb. 18, 2022. Photo by Raquel Natalicchio for Following President Donald Trump’s directive in January to temporarily freeze certain ...
‘It was just a regular morning’: Californians picked up in recent ICE raids include kids, volunteers
In summary Interviews suggest some people swept up in Trump’s immigration crackdown are dedicated to their families and communities — not hardened criminals. A church-going agricultural worker. An ...
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