Jerry Brown is still the Governor of California. But not for long. He’s termed out – and on his way out – in January, when Gavin Newsom is set to take over as the state’s chief executive. Brown has been in public service for nearly half a century and when you service that long, you build a reputation for yourself. He’s known as being fiscally responsible. However, his legacy infrastructure projects – from high speed rail to water tunnels – have been mired in controversy, so far. So, when it comes to criminal justice reform, just how will the Governor be remembered?
Knee Deep in LA’s Infrastructure: Who Pays?
High LA Rents; Are Wages Keeping Up?
The State of a Border State, Where Murrieta Marks the Spot
A Brit Reports from LA
Fujioka Leaves, So Do TV Pilots
Pot Shops and Rubber Sidewalks
Smooth Electric Technology, Bumpy LA Roads
Election Recap: SoCal Races Bring Few Voters, But Some Surprises
Isla Vista, One Week Later, and an Election on the Way
A Deputy Mistrial and Metro Fare Hikes
LAPD Shooting and San Diego Wildfires
A New Jail, and a New Clippers Owner
Union Investments and Toyota Jobs
Digging into the DWP Trusts
Gas Prices and Sidewalk Repairs
Sheriff's Union Battle, and LAUSD Spending
Yee and Others Get the Soft Senate Boot
Fire Department Recruiting, and the Supervisor's Race
A Pot Shop Crackdown
Bitcoin's Founder, and Runaway Production
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