Next Up:
0:00
0:00
-
Listen Listen
-
Listen Listen
Climate & Environment
Three years of cancelled salmon seasons have devastated the industry. Now, salmon fishing is expected to finally reopen. Will it be enough for the industry to survive?
Support your source for local news!
In case you missed it
-
Person with ‘history of sleeping on the job’ held critical role during Eaton Fire, complaint allegesAn L.A. County employee makes the allegation in a whistleblower complaint and in interviews about the response to the deadly fire. County officials dispute the allegations.Listen 29:16
-
Ready to give up backyard composting because it's too difficult? It may surprise you to learn that prolific (and kind-of-cute) black soldier fly larvae could be the answer.Listen 3:58
-
Hear from fire survivors, read stories of resilience and and get helpful resources to mark the anniversary of the January 2025 L.A. fires.
Sponsored message
More Stories
-
The decision lowers the investor-owned companies' profits by about 0.3%. It's likely to have a small effect on Southern Californians' energy bills.
-
The sewage was accidentally discharged into the San Gabriel River on Tuesday, according to the California Office of Emergency Services.
-
Biologists have attached tiny, solar transmitters to the monarch butterflies, allowing researchers and everyday visitors to help track the butterflies’ movements in real time.
-
Echoing state and local officials, a new analysis agrees: hydrant failures in the Palisades fire were ‘the rule rather than the exception.’
-
California’s snowpack is about 20% of normal for this time of the year, according to the state’s snow-tracking website.Listen 0:43
-
Will California OK lower utility company profits? How a pending vote could affect your electric billCutting utility rates of return is one way the state is trying to address the energy affordability crisis.Listen 0:43
-
Officials are urging people in Altadena to steer clear of wildlife equipment after a bear trap was tripped by a member of the media.Listen 48:15
-
A state regulator is requiring California’s last nuclear power plant to conserve 4,000 acres of surrounding land to keep operating until 2030.
-
Local mountain lions are struggling due to development and urban sprawl.
-
Single-use cartridges, without a take-back program, can’t be recycled and are toxic in landfills.