Lauren Hepler is an investigative reporter at CalMatters focused on labor issues and California’s housing crisis. She has spent the past decade covering housing, labor and climate issues for the New York Times, the San Francisco Chronicle, the Guardian, the LA Times and others.
She was previously a staff housing reporter at the San Francisco Chronicle, the managing editor of the alt-weekly newspaper Good Times Santa Cruz and an economic reporter for the Silicon Valley Business Journal. Lauren has also worked as a fixer, a translator and a researcher for the BBC, Der Spiegel and on the book “Golden Gates: Fighting for Housing in America.”
Her work has won awards from the Sacramento Press Club, the California News Publishers Association and others. Lauren’s coverage has been featured on local and national radio and TV stations, podcasts and at a range of live events.
She grew up in Ohio, graduated from George Washington University and the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism and is based in Los Angeles.
Public agencies are funding private security guards in homeless shelters and on the street, opening a new front in the state’s housing crisis — one ripe for violence and civil rights issues, but thin on oversight.
Read this story in English. Pierde tu trabajo, solicita el desempleo, recibe unos cientos de dólares a la semana del estado para pagar lo esencial mientras encuentras un nuevo trabajo. Suena simple, en teoría. Pero eso está lejos de la realidad que experimentaron muchos trabajadores cuando la red de seguridad laboral del estado se desmoronó […]
Read this story in English. Cinco años, unos 1,200 millones de dólares. Y un nuevo modelo de contratación gubernamental en el estado del país que es sede del Silicon Valley pero que enfrenta problemas tecnológicos. Eso es lo que los funcionarios de California dicen que se necesitará para reformar una red de seguridad laboral que […]
Read this story in English. 20 de abril de 2020: Nueve llamadas telefónicas realizadas. La semana siguiente, otras seis llamadas desde el teléfono celular de Shane Balogh, de 28 años, a las congestionadas líneas telefónicas del desempleo de California. Dos más en mayo. Quince a principios de junio. Patti Balogh está más atormentada por las […]
From lost homes to mounting debt, workers from across the state share how they were impacted by payment delays, fraud panic and mass confusion about unemployment benefits.
Read this story in English. En el primer verano durante la pandemia del COVID, nadie sabía quién era quién. En Nigeria, un ingeniero informático de una empresa petrolera supuestamente estaba solicitando desempleo en California y también de otros 16 estados con cuentas de Gmail falsas. En una prisión estatal desierta en el condado de Imperial, […]
The EDD is getting a rebuild from the likes of Salesforce and Amazon as pandemic payment disputes drag on and fraud hits other state benefit systems. Workers, advocates and tech experts are hopeful, but wary.
One California family is haunted by their youngest son’s increasingly frantic — and futile — attempts to break through the EDD’s jammed unemployment lines.
Scammers pulled off one of the biggest suspected frauds in U.S. history while laid-off workers scrambled to survive. A CalMatters investigation finds that the EDD missed red flags and failed to make long-promised changes before the pandemic — and that once the twin crises hit, the state and its top contractors kept making money but were slow to deliver relief.
Lauren Hepler is an investigative reporter at CalMatters focused on labor issues and California’s housing crisis.
CalMatters
California, explained
Lauren Hepler
Lauren Hepler is an investigative reporter at CalMatters focused on labor issues and California’s housing crisis. She has spent the past decade covering housing, labor and climate issues for the New York Times, the San Francisco Chronicle, the Guardian, the LA Times and others. Lauren has also worked as a fixer, a translator and a researcher for the BBC, Der Spiegel and on the book “Golden Gates: Fighting for Housing in America.” Her work has won awards from the Sacramento Press Club, the California News Publishers Association and others. She grew up in Ohio, graduated from George Washington University and the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism and is based in Los Angeles. Other languages spoken: Spanish (fluent)