Call for fair representation in Anaheim

With 336,265 residents and growing, Anaheim is the tenth largest city in California today, and yet the largest city in the state to hold at-large elections. This means there are no districts from which voters can elect a local resident to represent their community on city council.

By Elvia Meza

California isn't waiting: Immigrants' rights bills signed into law in 2014

By Kiran Savage-Sangwan

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New safeguards for students' social media in California

By Brendan Hamme When students at Glendale Unified School District learned through news reports last year that their Facebook and other social media accounts were being monitored by the district through a third-party company known as Geo Listening, students and parents were shocked, and so were we.

By Marcus Benigno

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Warrant for drones veto was the wrong decision

By Natasha Minsker, @nminsker California had the chance to be a leader in requiring police to get a warrant to use surveillance technology. But Gov. Brown vetoed a bill, AB 1327, that would have done just that for police drones.

By Marcus Benigno

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An important first step in fixing school discipline in California

By: David Sapp This video contains all-too common stories in California: young students, even kindergartners, kicked out of school for minor incidents, conduct labeled “willful defiance.”

By Marcus Benigno

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Yes on Proposition 47

By Jessica Farris, @jessraefarris

By Marcus Benigno

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Cops don't need tanks

By Hector Villagra, @OHectorV

By Marcus Benigno

A police officer prepares to break up a protest in downtown Anaheim in July 2012. (Photo: Nick Gerda/Voice of OC)

In television directing, still a boys club

By Melissa Goodman, @mg718 and Ariela Migdal, @ArielaMigdal

By Marcus Benigno

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Can you be arrested in California for refusing to provide ID to police when detained?

The Los Angeles Police Protective League (PPL) has, as a "public service," published an announcement concluding "that when you are detained by a police officer, you must provide identification when asked to do so, or face arrest for obstructing or delaying a police officer." This conclusion is incorrect, and we want to set the record straight on this important issue that has recently been at the center of public debate.

By Hector Villagra

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