Julie Gill Shuffield, the executive director for the California branch of advocacy organization Patients Come First, said pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) have been "harming the very people they are supposed to protect."
Last week, Governor Gavin Newsom announced that California awarded 20 communities with $789 million for 24 affordable housing and sustainable infrastructure projects across the state through California’s Affordable Housing and Sustainable Communities (AHSC) Grant Program.
As a new academic year begins, Chancellor Rich Lyons welcomes UC Berkeley’s students, staff, and faculty back with a video message. In the address, he discusses the values and aspirations that will guide his tenure in office, reaffirms the commitment to UC Berkeley’s seven principles of community, and solicits feedback and partnership as the university embarks on a new era of excellence.
Governor Gavin Newsom and First Partner Jennifer Siebel Newsom marked the start of the new school year by celebrating the deployment of literacy coaches and reading specialists in hundreds of California’s highest needs schools. This initiative is part of several strategies aimed at strengthening literacy instruction and intervention for California students.
California continues to rapidly expand the most extensive electric vehicle charging network in the country, installing over 24,000 chargers in the first half of 2024.
Fish are now swimming freely in the Klamath River for the first time in more than 100 years, thanks to collaboration between state, federal, and tribal partners.
As of July 2024, California experienced a 19.6% increase in prices of goods and services since January 2021, compared to the nationwide trend of a 20.2% increase.
Governor Newsom signed into law two bills aimed at expanding housing options and providing greater stability for Californians experiencing homelessness. The new laws facilitate the use of hotels and motels for emergency shelter beds and streamline the construction of Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs) across the state.
From the earliest moments of his childhood, Gary May was building. He recalls spending countless hours assembling structures with Lego bricks and Erector sets and creating imaginary worlds and characters inspired by the comic books he loved reading and collecting.
A new school year at UC Berkeley brings a fresh cohort of students and several notable changes, including the arrival of a new chancellor, Rich Lyons. The campus is also introducing a new academic department, additional student housing, programs aimed at bridging divides, and sports for students with disabilities.
The University of California, Davis, has been ranked No. 11 among public universities and No. 26 among all 438 national universities in the Washington Monthly 2024 College Rankings released on August 25.
SACRAMENTO—Today, August 27, State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond reconvened the Closing the Digital Divide Task Force to address smartphones, social media, and youth wellness from 8:30 a.m. in the Legislative Office Building in Sacramento.
The Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Office has welcomed six new Custody Deputies following their graduation from the Allan Hancock CORE Custody Deputy Academy. The deputies were sworn in by Sheriff Brown on Friday, August 23, 2024, just before the graduation ceremony. Sheriff Brown also delivered the keynote speech for the CORE Custody Academy Class #17, which included Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Office Custody Deputies Justin Albicker-Davies, Raymond “Lamar” Dawson, Cedric Garrett, Andrew Reyes, Sara Rodriguez, and Emily Vasquez.