Dozens of disabled workers hired through the nonprofit PRIDE industries are losing their jobs at a California prison in a union outsourcing dispute.
Seven finalists still in the running to take over the Alameda County District Attorney’s Office gave their pitches to the Board of Supervisors on Tuesday. With supervisors expected to make their final ...
Firefighters continue to battle fires across Southern California as the area prepares for a presidential visit Friday and ...
MALONE — Union officials confirmed that on Wednesday multiple correction officers and staff were recently treated at a ...
When discussing marginalized populations, society often overlooks and even exploits one group: the incarcerated. This is ...
The award-winning cartoonist is barred from contacting minors while out of custody ahead of his Feb. 4 court hearing in Sacramento ...
Students throughout the Lake Cumberland region can earn their Western Kentucky University (WKU) degree close to home and be ...
Governor Henry McMaster Names Next Director of the S.C. Department of Probation, Parole, and Pardon Services ...
OEWD strives to create a thriving and resilient economy, where barriers to economic and workforce opportunities are removed, and prosperity is shared equitably by all. San Francisco's central point of ...