Undocumented college students face financial straits, isolation and curbed opportunities in higher education, but California is still working to make their path easier.
You have the power to make local journalism strong!
Help keep LAist independent, paywall-free, and ready to meet the needs of our city by making a donation today.
Your Questions Answered
We're here to explain L.A. Your questions drive our journalism:
-
Can a candidate for L.A. mayor win outright in the June primary?
-
What do doulas do and how can I find one in L.A.?
-
What are some tips for buying an electric vehicle?
-
My kids are sick. Can I get the day off?
The Brief
Subscribe to the Morning Brief
Delivered weekday mornings, we brief you on what you need to know about LA today.
Sponsored Content
Sponsored by:

-
Get a taste of deli history @skirball_la's new exhibition “I’ll Have What She’s Having”: The Jewish Deli—on view now. Explore how Jewish immigrants imported and adapted traditions to create a uniquely American restaurant.
Featured Events
-
Ask All Your Questions! Pregnancy and Birth, the Real Deal - A Live AMA
6:00 PM - 7:00 PM on Thursday, June 2, 2022Pregnancy is a time of transition, with so many unknowns. Your body’s changing in all kinds of ways and you’re feeling all the feels. There are so many questions and in this live virtual event, we’ve got answers! -
COVID-19 and Kids - A Live AMA
6:00 PM - 7:00 PM on Wednesday, June 8, 2022COVID-19 and Kids: A Live AMACOVID-19 has challenged parents to manage their children’s health in a setting of unprecedented risk. In this live virtual event, KPCC/LAist health reporter Jackie Fortiér will delve into the effects of COVID-19 on kids and the upcoming vaccination for kids under five years old.
The Best Of LAist
-
Health reporter Jackie Fortiér's story revealed people with developmental disabilities wanted their in-home aides to be added to the list of health workers required to get the shot. Her story won a 2022 regional Edward R. Murrow Award in Hard News.
-
After a surge in anti-Asian incidents, support is growing to build a memorial at the massacre site in downtown L.A. Josie Huang's story won a 2022 regional Edward R. Murrow Award in the Excellence in Writing category.
-
Child care was labeled essential during the coronavirus pandemic. Still, preschool teachers, family child care providers, relatives and nannies have long been doing the critical work of helping young kids grow and thrive. Mariana Dale's and Stefanie Ritoper's project won a 2022 regional Edward R. Murrow Award in the Excellence in Innovation category.
-
California has consolidated nearly every medical parole patient at a single facility — one with a troubled track record.
-
Current and former medical staff describe a working environment that is dysfunctional, abusive and detrimental to providing health care, with Chief Medical Officer Dr. Sean Henderson at the center of the storm.
-
As one scholar puts it: “The hidden curriculum is the rules of the game that some people get the rulebook for and some other people don’t."
Spring Gardening
-
It’s the best time of year to tear up your yard and plant sustainable foliage.
-
They're beautiful, grow delicious fruit, and are so moist that they could potentially work to protect against fires. Could large scale banana plantings be the solution to some of our fire woes?
-
Can't maintain your own compost pile? Consider community composting. It's kind of like a community garden but for food scraps.
More Stories
-
The layoffs are the latest signal of a major shift within the streaming giant as it recently reported a decline in subscribers for the first time in a decade, as well as slowing revenue growth.
-
Spiegel and Kerr, who have been married since 2017, gave the commencement speech and got honorary degrees from Otis College of Art and Design. Then they surprised graduates with a gift of their own.
-
Here's what you need to know today.
-
The fire burned about six acres before being contained.
-
In December, state utility regulators quietly postponed a vote on a proposal that would have made getting and keeping solar panels on rooftops more expensive. But public outcry has caused a reconsideration.
-
The theory began in white supremacist circles and has slowly integrated into the mainstream of Republican politics.
-
Hospitals call for more options as blood suppliers move to an expensive treatment method.
-
That's up from 143 incidents in a report issued in 2021. Officials partly credited reducing stigma around the issue for the new reports, many of which are older and went unmentioned at the time.
-
And it’s not just the mayor’s race, either.
-
Feuer had struggled to gain traction in his bid to replace Eric Garcetti
-
Pfizer and BioNTech are poised to formally ask the Food and Drug Administration to authorize the first COVID booster shot for kids ages 5 to 11.
-
Households in the U.S. will receive eight test kits via the U.S. Postal Service. The release comes as cases have risen more than 60% in the U.S. over the past two weeks.
New From Our Reporters