Janitor turned journalist based in Southern California. Current and past bylines with the Daily Pilot, South Pasadena Review and Orange County Register.
via Gabriel San Román
“I do believe that these funds need to go back to the constituents that they were intended to serve,” Supervisor Vicente Sarmiento said. “I just want to make sure that all those constituents are being addressed."
https://t.co/ih7viQNgq2
via Lauren Hepler and Marisa Kendall
For small and rural communities, the program provided crucial cash for their first-ever homeless housing. Meanwhile, projects involving about 3,000 homes weren’t finished as of the end of last year.
https://t.co/IyzfdxIomD
“When you look around at who gets access to [SCUBA certification], it’s typically more affluent people who have the ability to travel to exotic places or afford all this equipment, afford all this training,” OC Coastkeeper spokesman Matt Sylvester said.
https://t.co/XOvJEt6xfP
story via Sara Cardine
About 70% plan to continue their education at two-year colleges, and about 27% of seniors have their sights set on a four-year degree, while a handful of students will pursue a trade and a single grad preps for military service.
https://t.co/vj88ntUkx1
via Sara Leon and Hosam Elattar
"I don’t want to live in a world where my movements, going to visit friends, volunteering in my community, or going to the grocery store are being tracked by cameras," Orange resident Janet Anderson said.
https://t.co/Hr2Daom4Tf
story via Carol Cormaci
"Every single graduate sitting here today represents a story of persistence, a story that deserves to be told, a story that will continue long after this ceremony ends," Back Bay Principal Scott Mazurier said.
https://t.co/oMvpBoG5hZ
via Alejandra Reyes-Velarde
Three facilities in Commerce, Compton and Hayward stored 1 to 10 million pounds of methyl methacrylate. A fifth, Arkema Coating Resins Plant in Torrance, stored similar amounts to GKN Aerospace.
https://t.co/z3s2Vj4XBV
Astronomers have found that the supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, known as Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*), is blowing a hot cosmic wind — something scientists have been hunting for over 50 years.
READ MORE >> https://t.co/zU3am4PPBA