In The News

Senate Bill 442, from Los Angeles Sen. Lola Smallwood-Cuevas, who chairs the Senate committee on labor and public employment, would require stores to have at least one dedicated worker there to help self-service customers. Stores would also be required to operate at least one traditional staffed checkout lane at all times and restrict the type and number of items a customer could bring through self-checkout.

“This is about supporting our workforce, to make sure that they’re safe, but mostly to also make sure that they’re providing the level of service that customers expect and deserve,” said Smallwood-Cuevas on the Senate floor earlier this summer before the bill passed that chamber 26-10.




Hate self-checkouts? Good news if you live in California, where lawmakers are voting on rules to rein in the machines.




A NEW bill that would bring about a massive self-checkout change at stores like Walmart and Target has moved one step closer to reality.




It’s Bigger Than Us (IBTU) brought their 6th Annual Back 2 School Festival to the Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Mall with over 2,500 families, elected officials, and community partners for what they call a day of resilience, celebration, and collective care.




California legislators are wrestling with mounting financial and logistical challenges as the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics approach, with state officials warning that budget constraints could undermine preparations for what organizers describe as the most complex Games in Olympic history.




For the first time in its history, the City of Los Angeles has seen two consecutive years of decline in homelessness, according to new data released by the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority (LAHSA). The 2025 Greater Los Angeles Homeless Count shows a 17.5% reduction in street homelessness since December 2022, when Mayor Karen Bass took office. But while city officials and community leaders are celebrating the progress, advocacy groups caution that the crisis remains severe and systemic change is still urgently needed.




As outrage mounts over federal immigration raids across California, members of the state legislature gathered at the Capitol on Thursday to urge the state to formally condemn federal raids targeting immigrant communities.




As California enters yet another perilous wildfire season, state lawmakers unveiled a sweeping legislative package aimed at honoring the labor and sacrifice of incarcerated firefighters and removing the reentry barriers they face after release.