Commentary and analysis from veteran journalist Dan Walters, who has covered the state of California for more than six decades. 가입하기 for his Weekly Walters newsletter.
The Private Attorneys General Act is a unique California law making it easier for employees to sue their bosses. For two decades, it's been the subject of political and legal infighting but a pending ballot measure would decide its fate.
California is the state that the rest of the nation loves to hate, but a new poll finds that Californians, by a wide margin, are also sour on the state's direction.
California could see another very wet winter, or it might not. The unpredictability proves that the state should be building infrastructure to handle climate swings.
California's Employment Development Department got a much-deserved black eye for mismanaging unemployment insurance benefits during the pandemic. There's a lingering aspect to the meltdown, and it could cost the state billions.
California faces the prospect of ongoing, multibillion-dollar gaps for the remainder of Gavin Newsom's term as governor. Will he solve the underlying problems or leave them for his successor?
California Gov. Gavin Newsom's new budget and the Legislature's budget analyst have widely differing estimates of the state's revenues and deficit. That means they also diverge on how much money should go to the state's schools.
California has plenty of existential issues. A chronic shortage of workers may have joined the list as public and private employers scramble to fill open positions.
The contest to succeed the late Dianne Feinstein in the U.S. Senate had been a three-way duel among Democrats. However, a Republican, former baseball star Steve Garvey, could finish second in the March 5 primary.
A new scorecard gives California low marks when it comes to the wellbeing of its youth, and calls for spending billions of extra dollars to improve their outlook.