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Sharon McNary
On-call host
What I cover
These days, you're most likely to hear more on air filling in for one of the LAist hosts. Before that, I covered infrastructure, which I define as all the different things we build together to make life better, for LAist for many years.
My background
A lifelong resident of Southern California, I'm military veteran, a former Peace Corps Volunteer and an endurance athlete. My favorite places to be are on the starting line of the L.A. Marathon and riding my bike up Glendora Mountain Road. I also swim, knit, cook, sew, and weave.
Best way to reach me
Email me at smcnary@laist.com.
Stories by Sharon McNary
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State voters enacted the time shift 68 years ago. Now a bill in the state Legislature could ask voters if they want to keep Pacific Standard Time year-round.
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A state study says leaks in California's gas distribution system, from meter leaks to big pipe leaks, put more methane into the atmosphere in a year than the massive Aliso Canyon leak did in four months.
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Southern California Gas Company was close to completing safety requirements to resume injecting gas into the underground field, but the county lawsuit seeks to stop it.
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Los Angeles County voters will decide on a sales tax for homeless services. In L.A. city, the mayorship, eight council seats and several measures are on the ballot.
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The plan aims to cut smog by more than 50 percent over within ten year period.
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The utility and air quality agency completed the deal that drew objections from an independent air hearing board over the small size of the health study.
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Newly strengthened provisions of California's toxic spill law allow cities to require refineries to evaluate their technology and identify safer alternatives.
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A City Council workshop Tuesday will include a city fire official making the case that MHF, as used at the Torrance Refinery, is safe.
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The chair of the AQMD's governing board complains they hire and pay members of a hearing board that enforces air rules but has no power to remove those members.
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There were no evacuations or injuries as a result of this explosion, which came exactly two years after the explosion at the refinery that was so massive it registered as a magnitude-1.7 tremor.
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The refinery has had to flare off gases during power outages that were outside its control, caused by reasons from Mylar balloons to fog. A new power line could prevent that.
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Environmentalists sued Los Angeles County over plans to clear the basin behind Devil's Gate Dam north of the Rose Bowl. A judge found flaws in the plan