News

Lower-income people will be the hardest hit. Over the next 10 years, 3.4 million Californians could lose coverage.
Santa Clara County officials fear that Republicans’ “big, beautiful bill” will rip a “seismic tear” in the country’s social ...
A week after the Republican-led House sent its $4 trillion budget bill to President Donald Trump, California Rep. Mark ...
In the coming years, the mismatch of revenue growth and expense growth for providers of health care will result in ...
Fossil fuel companies can challenge California setting stricter emissions standards for cars, the U.S Supreme Court ruled Friday.
California lawmakers on Friday approved a budget proposal to freeze enrollment in a state-funded health care program for immigrants without legal status to help close a $12 billion deficit.
Challenges can come from anti-LGBTQ+ stigma, family rejection, homophobic hate speech and violence, among other factors.
Nurses graduating from UC take on one of the biggest challenges facing our state: A shortage of clinicians that makes it too hard for too many people to get the medical care they need.
California is facing a $12 billion deficit that Gov. Gavin Newsom wants to help close by freezing enrollment in a state-funded health care program for immigrants living in California without legal ...
Gov. Newsom proposes pausing expansion of health care to low-income immigrants without legal status The decision is driven by a higher-than-expected price tag on the program and economic ...
Youth Recovery Connections in Hollister is set to receive $1.2 million from California's $3.3 billion initiative to address mental health and homelessness, aiming to significantly increase its ...