CalMatters
@calmatters.org
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CalMatters is a nonpartisan and nonprofit news organization. We write stories about California, for Californians.
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We’re here to answer any questions you have about Proposition 50 or how to vote.
jfallows.bsky.social
Great interactive voter guide from excellent @calmatters.org

It's on Prop 50, to re-district CA /gain Dem seats. Enter your address and see how district would change. Eg, w minor shift of lines, would change my home district from 37/33 GOP to 44/25 Dem. (cont.)

calmatters.org/california-v...
Map of San Bernardino county, showing how current congressional district is 37/33 GOP. Change would make it 44/25 Dem.
calmatters.org
After pushback from some Democrats, a controversial bill that would have banned short kids from the front seat was watered down. But small children face new seat belt rules under a law Gov. Gavin Newsom signed last week. https://cal.news/4mZMt95

Photo via iStock
Photo via iStock of child putting on a seat belt.

HED:  Think your kid’s done with a booster seat? New California law says maybe not
calmatters.org
In the fight over preventing antisemitism in schools, no one disputes the need to protect Jewish students. Lawmakers and critics diverged sharply on how to do it. https://cal.news/4729OkA

📷 Salgu Wissmath
Students in a classroom at a high school in California on March 1, 2022. Photo by Salgu Wissmath for CalMatters

HED:  Protecting Jewish students or chilling speech? Inside California’s ‘hardest’ fight over antisemitism
calmatters.org
Dr. Richard Pan, who is best known for his school vaccine bills, wants to hold Republicans accountable for slashing health care. https://cal.news/4hc09MX

📷 Ringo Chiu, AP Photo
Dr. Richard Pan, a former state senator, speaks at a news conference after visiting a Kaiser Permanente warehouse in Downey on March 18, 2023. Photo by Ringo Chiu, AP Photo

HED:  A well-known Sacramento Democrat is taking on this suddenly vulnerable California Republican
calmatters.org
It’s been nearly a year since Californians overwhelmingly approved Proposition 36, a tough-on-crime measure providing what backers called “mass treatment” for those facing certain drug charges. Here's what the data shows: https://cal.news/4n2lNEU
California’s Prop. 36 promised ‘mass treatment’ for defendants. A new study shows how it’s going
The biggest study yet on California’s tough-on-crime ballot measure Proposition 36 shows few people are finding their way into the treatment it promised.
cal.news
calmatters.org
Gov. Newsom today announced that he has signed Senate Bill 243, legislation that adds guardrails to AI-powered chatbots that operate in the state.

The legislation had divided tech industry representatives and child safety advocates. https://cal.news/4oij2jN
New California law forces chatbots to protect kids' mental health
California Gov. Gavin Newsom approved mandatory monitoring and reminders when kids use chatbots. Child advocates backed a different bill.
cal.news
calmatters.org
Commentary:

Although the mistakes of my past do not define who I am today, my old record still stands in the way of simple things, such as passing a background check so I can volunteer at my grandchildren’s school. https://cal.news/479Ni9I

📝 Joanna Hernandez
Opinion | California expungement law offers a fresh start to rehabilitated people held back by a conviction
A 2022 law gives many Californians a chance to expunge old convictions and make greater contributions to their communities.
calmatters.org
calmatters.org
Gov. Newsom introduced CARE Court to bring more people experiencing severe mental illness into treatment. It has helped fewer people than projected, but a new law will make more eligible for it. https://cal.news/4mXd9Hq

📝 @jocelynwiener.bsky.social & @marisakendall.bsky.social
📸 Adriana Heldiz
Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a law today expanding eligibility for CARE Court, one of his signature mental health programs. Here, he announced a successful 2024 mental health ballot initiative at Alvarado Hospital in San Diego on March 19, 2023. Photo by Adriana Heldiz, The San Diego Union-Tribune via AP, Pool

Hed: Newsom signs law expanding one of his marquee mental health programs
Will it help more people?
calmatters.org
Thousands of residents from Altadena and surrounding areas say Eaton fire victims are excluded and shortchanged by Edison's compensation plan https://cal.news/4mTV25d

📝 @malenacarollo.bsky.social
📸 Ted Soqui
Altadena residents say Southern California is not offering enough compensation for the Eaton fire, coming up short on funds for temporary housing and excluding some residents. Firefighters attempt to put out a fire at a home in the unincorporated community on Jan. 8, 2025. Photo by Ted Soqui for CalMatters

Hed: Edison’s Eaton Fire compensation plan isn’t enough, residents say
calmatters.org
Prop. 50 would redraw California's congressional districts to favor Democrats. Both sides claim their map better represents communities. Here's the reality. https://cal.news/4q3eyPH

📝 @jeannereporter.bsky.social
Jerome Jones, 56, casts her ballot while holding her two-year old grandson at the Kenneth Hahn Hall of Administration polling station in Los Angeles on Nov. 8, 2022. Photo by Pablo Unzueta for CalMatters
 
Hed: Does Prop. 50 divide California communities?
Depends how you measure it
calmatters.org
After weeks of waiting, California's governor signed a bill that will allow mid-rise apartment buildings near major transit stops in California's biggest metro areas. https://cal.news/4n3hzge

📝 @frombenc.bsky.social
📸 Ray Chavez
Passengers look on as a BART train didn’t stop at the Rockridge BART station due to a systemwide closure that affected all BART stations, in Oakland on March 9, 2025. Photo by Ray Chavez, Bay Area News Group

Hed: Breaking: Gov. Newsom signs massive California housing overhaul
calmatters.org
For the record: An earlier version of this article contained a number of erroneous characterizations and conclusions based on an incorrect interpretation of campaign finance data. The article has been corrected to reflect that Prop. 50 is not the third most expensive campaign in state history.
calmatters.org
With five weeks until election day, the fight over changing congressional districts in California to favor Democrats has already become one of the most expensive ballot measures in recent state history. https://cal.news/4mJ8eK7

📊 Jeremia Kimelman
A bar graph that shows that Prop. 50 is already the third most-expensive ballot measure in California history.
calmatters.org
Commentary:

Decades ago, I quoted two researchers who projected California’s future as “the possible emerging of a two-tier economy.” Any objective description of 2025 California would conclude they hit the nail squarely. https://cal.news/4q0pAoD

📝 Dan Walters
Opinion | California's two-tier economy mirrors Great Britain's 'Upstairs, Downstairs' past
The state's upper class espouses equality politics and social justice, while pushing policies that keep low wage workers living in poverty.
cal.news
calmatters.org
Rep. Mike Levin said Congress members have proposed the “Pay our Troops Act,” which would extend military pay during the shutdown.

“I don’t think our service members should be caught in the middle of that,” he said. https://cal.news/4mPswlf

📷 U.S. Marine Corps
U.S. Marine Corps recruits with India Company, 3rd Recruit Training Battalion present arms during a final drill evaluation at Marine Corps Recruit Depot in San Diego, on Sept. 19, 2025. Photo by Corporal Sarah M. Grawcock, U.S. Marine Corps

HED: This California city will feel the government shutdown hardest. Its many service members are bracing
for missed paychecks
calmatters.org
California’s K-12 students are emerging from the pandemic malaise, posting the most significant academic improvements in years, according to state test scores released today. https://cal.news/4pYIfl3

📷 Miguel Gutierrez Jr.
Students at a classroom at St. HOPE's Public School 7 Elementary in Sacramento on May 11, 2022. Photo by Miguel Gutierrez Jr., CalMatters

HED:  Student test scores surge, but still lag behind pre-pandemic levels
calmatters.org
An El Segundo refinery fire has renewed questions about who is investigating the state’s oil industry after serious accidents. With the U.S. Chemical Safety Board defunded, California has yet to fill the gap. https://cal.news/3KFsCi8

📷 Daniel Cole, Reuters
Flames and smoke from a large fire rises from the Chevron refinery in El Segundo on Oct. 2, 2025. Photo by Daniel Cole, Reuters

HED:  Federal oversight is disappearing as multiple refineries explode. Who’s in charge now?
calmatters.org
Exclusive - California’s outgoing cybersecurity commander tells us the state is mismanaging its limited cybersecurity resources by letting unqualified officials set priorities. https://cal.news/4q1i1hH

📝 @khari.bsky.social
After getting fired, California's top cybersecurity official calls for change
The governor fired the top California cybersecurity official. He says the people who oversaw him were unqualified.
cal.news
calmatters.org
On Wednesday the U.S. Department of Justice said it arrested a former Pacific Palisades resident suspected of starting the fire that eventually became the Palisades Fire, which killed 12 people and destroyed over 6,000 structures in January. https://cal.news/4pTJ3HE

📝 Lynn LA
calmatters.org
Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a measure that requires K-12 schools to phase out foods with potentially harmful ultraprocessed ingredients over the next 10 years. https://cal.news/47i6Fyo

📷 Richard Vogel, AP Photo
Cafeteria workers prepare pizza for student lunches at Firebaugh High School in Lynwood, on April 3, 2024. Photo by Richard Vogel, AP Photo

HED:  Newsom signs first-in-nation law to ban ultraprocessed school meals
calmatters.org
Los Altos Hills agreed to legalize some apartment buildings. Now, with a project proposed at Twin Oaks that would include the town’s first-ever affordable housing units, the wealthy Bay Area suburb is having second thoughts. https://cal.news/47hCdV6

📝 @frombenc.bsky.social
Why this wealthy Bay Area suburb is at the center of the next big fight over California housing
Los Altos Hills agreed to legalize some apartment buildings. Now it wants a do-over.
cal.news