Vaccine triumph: In 2015, California lawmakers passed one of the toughest mandatory vaccination requirements in the nation. This
graphics story shows how, as a result of the law, the state’s falling measles vaccination rate reversed.
Hot chicken hotbed: Los Angeles has become a hotbed of Nashville hot chicken, with
more than two dozen restaurants, pop-ups and food trucks open in and around the city in the last three years.
Antagonizing Trump: California has already sued the Trump administration more times in the last two years than Texas took President Obama to court during his eight years in office. And the state is winning
nearly all its environmental cases.
Tech activism: More than 200 workers at Riot Games
walked out of the video game developer’s Los Angeles headquarters Monday to protest the company’s use of forced arbitration to handle sexual discrimination lawsuits. Also this week, ride-hail drivers
went on strike in L.A. and around the country to protest pay rates and working conditions ahead of Uber’s massive planned IPO.
Share the wealth: Gov. Gavin Newsom has assigned a team to create a “data dividend” — a
payment that businesses would make to the state or to consumers if their personal data are sold.
USC problems: USC’s social work school
might be forced to lay offnearly half its staff and eliminate the vast majority of its part-time teaching positions after the revelations of severe budget problems that began under a former dean.
Nipsey’s vision: At the time of his death, Nipsey Hussle was reaching out to a diverse array of partners — from fellow musicians and L.A. politicians to a Republican senator from South Carolina — to make the
revitalization of Hyde Park something larger and potentially longer-lasting.
Racial profiling? The California Department of Justice is expected to release newly proposed standards for
how law enforcement can use CalGang, the state’s gang database, to identify gang members. Critics say CalGang remains a vehicle for racial profiling.
May the Force be with you: “Star Wars” fans have spent years waiting for Disneyland to let them enter a galaxy far, far away. How then does the Magic Kingdom
get them to leave?
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