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Sharon McNary
Infrastructure Reporter (she/her)
I cover infrastructure, which I define as all the different things we build together to make life better. So we’re talking the power grid, our systems for managing rainfall, sewage and drinking water, air quality, roads, ports and more. Part of that is reporting on how well and equitably they serve my fellow Angelenos.
I’ve worked my entire career in SoCal journalism, in TV, wire service, newspapers, radio and online, and I welcome your questions about how L.A. works.
I’m a native Angeleno, a 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.
Stories by Sharon McNary
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One tunnel opponent says the proposal, if included on a list of potential projects could sour voters on a new sales tax ballot measure next year.
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Fire official says Edison reps had too little knowledge of the power grid to help city emergency responders, hampering information flow amid widening outages
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The plan spends $750,000 a year — a tenfold jump over the current contract — to keep pest control workers on site around the clock.
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The airport spends $70,000 a year on exterminators who come when called. The new approach envisions having pest control workers at LAX 24/7
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A consultant will help Southern California Edison figure out why its downtown electrical vaults blew up, leaving thousands in the dark for days last month.
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Five of 14 flood control dams in L.A. County have high levels of sediments from fire scorched hillsides. A wet winter could swamp reduced flood storage capacity.
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After underground vaults exploded last week, Edison has inspected 300 vaults in Long Beach. It's part of a vast inspection program.
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Edison said it would send crews to inspect vaults downtown starting at 10 a.m. and anticipates power would be back for all customers by 6 p.m., according to Long Beach police.
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JetBlue has paid more than $4 million in noise violation fines since 2003. That money goes to the nonprofit Long Beach Public Library Foundation.
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L.A. DWP welders used old-school math and measurements taken with string to fabricate replacement parts for a massive broken pipe for which no blueprints existed.
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The flood highlights DWP's case to raise water prices to pay for proactive pipe replacement, but it also raise questions about the utility's repair priorities.
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Nobody was harmed when three Long Beach underground power vaults exploded, but deaths and injuries have occurred in prior blasts