KQED's The California Report KQED
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- News
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KQED's statewide radio news program, providing daily coverage of issues, trends, and public policy decisions affecting California and its diverse population.
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How Have Wage Increases Affected Fast Food Workers?
It’s been over a month since California started requiring most fast food employers in the state to pay a minimum wage of $20 dollars an hour -- a big jump from the state’s general minimum wage of $16 dollars.
Reporter: Farida Jhabvala Romero, KQED News
San Francisco State University’s top administrator is promising to provide more transparency about financial ties to Israel … and to explore school divestment. That’s in a public meeting Monday with pro-Palestinian student protesters... who’ve camped out on campus for the past week.
Reporter: Joe Fitzgerald Rodriguez, KQED News
The Shasta County Board of Supervisors is set to meet today to discuss next steps now that the longstanding County Registrar of Voters has retired, but it’s unclear exactly how her position will be filled.
Reporter: Alec Stutson, North State Public Radio
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Small Houses Pose Solution to Housing Crisis
Can solutions to California's housing crisis be found in how we used to design and build homes in the past, namely smaller multifamily dwellings in neighborhoods and cities with fewer zoning restrictions. That topic is explored by Los Angeles urban planner Max Podemski. In his new book, A Paradise of Small Houses. I met up with Podemski in the L.A. neighborhood of Eagle Rock.
In California, tens of thousands of immigrants with Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals will soon be able to get health insurance. That’s after President Joe Biden on Friday announced that those with DACA can enroll in Affordable Care Act coverage.
The union representing some 48 thousand academic workers in the UC system is planning to hold a strike authorization vote as early as this week over what they say is the university’s crackdown on pro-Palestinian protests. The decision to consider striking gained momentum after police action at UCLA that led to more than 200 arrests early last week.
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College Protests Draw Cross-Generational Support
As pro-Palestinian student movements persist on college campuses up and down the state, the movement at UC Berkeley has drawn cross-generational support.
Reporter: Laura Fitzgerald
The Cal Poly Humboldt campus remains closed, even after the arrests of 30 Pro-Palestinian protesters, who took over two university buildings last week. But the student-run radio station is still up and running, thanks to some quick thinking.
Reporter: Keith Mizuguchi, The California Report
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Pro-Palestinian Encampment Cleared At UCLA
Hundreds of law enforcement officers descended on the UCLA campus on Wednesday night, eventually breaking up a large Pro-Palestinian encampment. Dozens of people were taken into custody.
Guests: Saul Gonzalez, The California Report and Sergio Olmos, Investigative Reporter, CalMatters
While we've been reporting this week about some of the chaotic scenes at UCLA, USC and Cal Poly Humboldt, for the most part, protests on campuses across the state have been peaceful. That includes at UC Santa Cruz, where hundreds of students and faculty gathered on Wednesday,
Reporter: Erin Malsbury, KAZU
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Violence Breaks Out At UCLA Encampment
A large group of counter-protesters tried to tear down barricades that had been surrounding a pro-Palestinian encampment at UCLA on Tuesday night. That led to several fights breaking out.
The FAIR plan is known as California's home insurance of last resort. But the plan is now the only option for many homeowners, especially in rural communities.
Reporter: Scott Rodd, KPBS
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College Protests From the Eyes Of Student Journalists
Protests over the war in Gaza have increased at college campuses across the state. Encampments have now been set up at Sacramento State, San Francisco State, UC Irvine and UC Riverside, along with Occidental College, a liberal arts school in Los Angeles. Student journalists have been covering the events as they unfold on campus.
Guests: Dezmond Remington, Reporter, The Lumberjack, Catherine Hamilton, Editor, The Daily Bruin, Aarya Mukherjee, Reporter, The Daily Californian
Members of congress have launched an investigation into a San Diego County-based credit union. This after a KPBS investigation revealed the credit union collects millions of dollars in overdraft fees from young marines every year.
Reporter: Scott Rodd, KPBS
A federal program that has helped millions of Californians afford internet expires on Tuesday. The end of the Affordable Connectivity Program will affect a wide swath of Californians.
Reporter: Khari Johnson, CalMatters
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Customer Reviews
Good review of current events
This podcast keeps me up-to-date on what’s happening in California and I think generally fair
Repulsive bias
This show is so rabidly pro-war and pro-Trump it is getting unbearable
Too many other podcast promotions
State news coverage is decent. Too many ads of other podcasts.