It's too late to mail you ballot. Here's where to drop it off.
Funding for schools across the region is a large part of the election
When a Spare the Air Day is called, it is illegal to burn wood, manufactured firelogs or any other solid fuel, both indoors and outdoors.
Residents being asked to eliminate sources of standing water, where mosquitos lay eggs.
Trains will begin running in the morning. Full restoration of service is expected by afternoon.
New tunnel underneath San Francisco Bay is being built to survive even a major earthquake, which is likely in the Bay Area in the coming years.
BART workers walked off the job and onto the picket line this morning.
You can head to Yosemite after all to catch some beautiful fall colors.
Map shows how much Peninsula-Santa Cruz area individuals and corporations owe to the Franchise Tax Board.
Space is limited, so you need to register for the free seminar.
Workers at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory in Menlo Park are among thousands in the Bay Area facing furlough this week due to the government shutdown.
One of the bills directly impacts the Peninsula.
New law to help schools discipline for bullying via text, email or otherwise.
The discovery of the Yellow Fever Mosquito, which carries the hemorrhagic Yellow Fever, resulted in an urgent response from multiple agencies.
Brown signed six legislative proposals that would clean up the water coming out of our faucets.
The legislation strengthens protections for immigrant workers.
A bill guaranteeing retroactive payment for 800,000 workers is finding bipartisan support in an otherwise fractious Congress.
Gov. Jerry Brown signed the bill, authored by local Rep. Luis Alejo, into law Thursday.
NASA's website has been shuttered; most USGS sites down too.
Covered California is one of the state-run health care marketplaces being set up around the U.S. as mandated by the act, passed by Congress in 2010.
National parks will bear the brunt of a government shutdown, should one occur on Monday night.
To find out about your eligibility and coverage options or enroll in Obamacare, visit www.coveredca.com or call 888-975-1142.
Supporters of decriminalization are angling to put a new proposition on next year’s ballot.
Almost 100 chefs asked Gov. Jerry Brown to put a stop to the practice.
Seniors will pick up some tips on how to protect against phone scams, and financial, insurance and mail fraud.
The local minimum wage will be $10 per hour by Jan. 1., 2016.
eSlate machines make voting as easy as whirling a dial and clicking a button.
In 2011, BART officials cut off cellphone service to underground stations to prevent a planned protest. A bill sitting on the governor’s desk would require government agencies to get a court order before doing the same.
Jackie Speier's props meant to point out the inequity in members of Congress traveling with generous food allowances while voting against food stamp programs that give Americans just a few dollars a day to eat.
The county is looking for citizens to fill some Election Day jobs.
The legislature passed a bill that would raise the minimum wage for all Californians.
Governor Brown could sign a bill that allows even illegal immigrants to drive legally.
Assemblyman Rich Gordon is advocating for guaranteed financial training to elected officials.
A new assembly bill looks to reduce greenhouse emissions to 1990 levels by 2020.
Assembly Bill 260 will continue a child care program for kids of working families.
Catch up with news from around the state.
Find out what's going on with California state politics.
Senate Bill 132 was introduced after two starving cubs were fatally shot in Half Moon Bay.
Transit planners say by 2035 the bridge and other Bay Area commuter carriers will exceed their limit.