Stockton Farmworker-Turned Astronaut Rockets Local Students Into Artemis Era
Stockton native José Hernández used the Artemis II launch to urge local students toward STEM and spotlight the outreach programs he runs back home. His foundation and school partnerships deliver hands‑on science to Central Valley youth.
Water Wars, Gas Gripes and Valley Voters: Governor Hopefuls Duke It Out at Fresno Forum
Six governor candidates pressed their plans for water, energy and the Valley’s pocketbook at a Fresno State forum focused on affordability and farms. Positions ranged from deregulation to large water projects and a push for EV chargers.
BART Touts 41 Percent Crime Drop, Skeptics Want Receipts
BART says systemwide crime fell 41% after new fare gates and stepped‑up patrols, and it reports fewer police‑related delays. Researchers say enforcement can carry real human costs and want more transparency.
Yes, That Earthquake Was Real — And No, It Wasn't the Big One (But the USGS Did Downgrade It)
The Santa Cruz Mountains sent their regards at 1:41 a.m. Thursday, and the Bay Area received them. The USGS has since walked back the magnitude — but the shaking, and the Reddit spiral that followed, were very much real.
San Francisco Crowned America’s Happiness Capital in Global City Showdown
A new international index puts San Francisco ahead of every other U.S. city, ranking 45th worldwide. The Happy City Index credits parks, governance and health and mobility measures.
Standoff At Peralta Cabins As Oakland Shutters Tiny Home Village
Oakland closed the Peralta Cabins tiny‑home village this week, but several residents are refusing to leave. They say the alternative shelter offered is unsafe and inadequate.












