Levi Sumagaysay covers the California economy for CalMatters with an eye on accountability and equity. She reports on the insurance market, taxes and anything that affects the state’s residents, labor force and economy.
Before joining CalMaters, Levi was a tech and business reporter and editor. She has written and edited stories about the rise of the dot-coms, the booms and busts of Silicon Valley and technology’s effects on everything, including the news media. She now works in a hybrid remote newsroom for an online publication, but previously worked in newsrooms with printing presses, paste-up artists, pica poles, pneumatic tubes and unforgettable personalities. She worked at a Seattle newspaper that had only one internet-connected computer.
The news business has changed, but what drew her to it hasn’t: She wants to tell stories to help people make informed decisions about their lives.
Levi, a longtime Bay Area resident, is a graduate of the San Francisco State journalism department. Her stories at MarketWatch and commentary at the Mercury News have won awards; she has received two National Press Foundation fellowships; and was a Dow Jones Newspaper Fund editing intern.
Los jueces de la Corte Suprema de California parecen dispuestos a defender la Proposición 22, una iniciativa respaldada por los votantes y aprobada en 2020.
Si se rechaza la Propuesta 22, la clasificación de Uber, Lyft, DoorDash e Instacart de los trabajadores autónomos como contratistas independientes estaría en peligro, lo que revolucionaría la economía de los autónomos.
If Proposition 22 is thrown out, Uber, Lyft, DoorDash and Instacart’s classification of gig workers as independent contractors would be in danger — upending the gig economy.
Los legisladores quieren que se rastree, actualice y contabilice las medidas de mitigación para ayudar a la disponibilidad y asequibilidad de los seguros.
Una organización sin fines de lucro contra la reincidencia ayuda a personas anteriormente encarceladas a iniciar negocios y conseguir trabajos en el sector tecnológico.
El comisionado de Seguros de California, Ricardo Lara, dijo que las aseguradoras deben proponer ideas más allá de aumentar las tarifas para ayudar a resolver la crisis de los seguros
Levi Sumagaysay covers the economy for CalMatters. She is based in the Bay Area.
CalMatters
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Levi Sumagaysay
Levi Sumagaysay covers the California economy for CalMatters with an eye on accountability and equity. She reports on the insurance market, taxes and anything that affects the state’s residents, labor force and economy. Before joining CalMaters, Levi was a tech and business reporter and editor. She has written and edited stories about the rise of the dot-coms, the booms and busts of Silicon Valley and technology’s effects on everything, including the news media. Levi, a longtime Bay Area resident, is a graduate of the San Francisco State journalism department. Her stories at MarketWatch on the tech economy and about janitors at Facebook won awards from the San Francisco Press Club; her tech news stories and commentary at the Mercury News won awards from Editor & Publisher and the Peninsula Press Club; she has received two National Press Foundation fellowships; and was a Dow Jones Newspaper Fund editing intern. Other languages spoken: Tagalog (fluent)