Updating . .
For one week, high-capacity ammunition magazines were legal in California. Hundreds of thousands may have been sold -- A ban on the sale of ammunition magazines that hold more than 10 rounds has been a linchpin of California’s efforts to prevent mass shootings for nearly two decades. Matthias Gafni in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/11/19
Nipsey Hussle’s Marathon store is sacred ground for mourners from far and wide -- Surrounded by street signs covered in notes commemorating Nipsey Hussle, fans waited patiently Wednesday to honor the slain rapper and activist in the lot of a shopping center where he was shot dead. In the days since Hussle was killed there more than a week ago, the lot has become a symbol of his vision for a South L.A. community that sees hope in unity. Alexa Díaz in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/11/19
Obama's tribute to Nipsey Hussle: 'A legacy worthy of celebration' -- Here is the letter written by former President Obama about the death of Nipsey Hussle. The letter was read at the rapper’s memorial on Thursday: The item is in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/11/19
Hundreds of teachers at Sacramento City Unified walk out on one-day strike -- Hundreds of teachers across the Sacramento Unified School District walked out of their classrooms and onto picket lines Thursday morning for the first time in 30 years, staging a one-day strike alleging unfair labor practices by the district. The Sacramento City Teachers Association expected a majority of its 2,500 teachers to join the walkout. Sawsan Morrar, Benjy Egel, Alexandra Yoon-Hendricks, and Mila Jasper in the Sacramento Bee$ Pauline Bartolone Capital Public Radio -- 4/11/19
As teachers strike, Sacramento schools superintendent focuses on avoiding ‘nuclear option’ -- As hundreds of teachers across the Sacramento City Unified School District walked out of schools, district officials stuck to familiar talking points Thursday morning. Alexandra Yoon-Hendricks in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 4/11/19
Sheriff Villanueva’s reinstatement of deputies at odds with reforms, federal monitor says -- For several years, Los Angeles County’s vast jail system has been under careful monitoring by a team of court-appointed watchdogs who’ve helped implement policies to curb excessive force and retaliation against inmates. Maya Lau in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/11/19
Gas price hits $4 in San Francisco, highest in four years -- Gas prices in San Francisco hit an average of $4 per gallon on Thursday, with the city leading the state in average fuel cost. California’s average gas price — now $3.91 per gallon — is the highest it’s been in more than 18 months, according to GasBuddy, a site that tracks city, state and national numbers. Sophia Kunthara in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/11/19
Californians favor life without parole over executions, poll says -- California voters favor keeping the worst criminals in jail for life instead of putting them to death, although there’s a sharp partisan divide on the issue, according to a new poll from Quinnipiac University. John Wildermuth in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/11/19
67 percent of Bay Area homeless are unsheltered. In New York, it's 5%. -- A new report says the Bay Area's homeless population is the third-largest in the country with more than 28,000 people across the nine-county region lacking housing. Amy Graff in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/11/19
Trial date set for Fresno Assemblyman Arambula’s misdemeanor child abuse charge -- Democratic Assemblyman Joaquin Arambula will go to trial April 23 on the misdemeanor child abuse charge filed against him by the Fresno County District Attorney’s office in March. He’s accused of injuring his 7-year-old daughter in December. Rory Appleton in the Fresno Bee -- 4/11/19
Devin Nunes’ lawsuits put spotlight on his attorney’s suspension, GOP defamation lawsuits -- When Rep. Devin Nunes appeared on Fox News to announce his defamation lawsuit against Twitter and a parody account, “Devin Nunes’ cow,” he declared the legal filing would be the first of many. He followed through with another lawsuit this week against McClatchy, parent company of The Fresno Bee. Both lawsuits were filed by an attorney based in Charlottesville, Virginia, a solo-practitioner named Steven S. Biss who is making a name for himself suing media organizations for defamation. Kate Irby in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 4/11/19
California wildfires: A wicked problem with no easy answers -- More than 2.7 million Californians live in areas that are at very high risk for wildfires, according to our analysis of census data and state fire maps. They live in more than 1.1 million housing units, or in about one in 12 of the state’s homes. That’s right: one in 12 homes in California are at high risk of burning in a wildfire. Lauren Gustus Associated Press -- 4/11/19
Millions live in parts of California threatened by wildfires -- Impoverished towns in the shadow of Mount Shasta. Rustic Gold Rush cities in the Sierra Nevada foothills. High-dollar resort communities on the shores of Lake Tahoe. Ritzy Los Angeles County suburbs. They all could be the next Paradise. Ryan Sabalow, Phillip Reese and Dale Kasler Associated Press -- 4/11/19
When a home is built may determine if it burns in a wildfire -- The sky was turning orange and the embers were flying from the Camp Fire when Oney and Donna Carrell and Donna’s father sped away from their Paradise home. “I thought, ‘Oh, well, the house is done,’” Oney Carrell said. A few days later, they learned otherwise. Dale Kasler and Phillip Reese Associated Press -- 4/11/19
Efforts to clear fire-prone California forests face hurdles -- With nearly 40 million people living in California and development spreading into once-wild regions, some of the state’s best tools toward preventing wildfires can’t be widely used. Steve Schoonover Associated Press -- 4/11/19
Sabalow: Fires, floods, quakes are part of California living -- In the winter of 2009, my wife and I found a house that looked like a great place to start our family, a three-bedroom in a hilly subdivision surrounded by dry brush just outside the Redding city limits. Ryan Sabalow Associated Press -- 4/11/19
Driver charged in crash that killed CHP sergeant had prior DUI conviction -- A Winchester man pleaded not guilty Wednesday to a second-degree murder charge in connection with a crash that killed a veteran California Highway Patrol officer in Lake Elsinore over the weekend. Hannah Fry in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/11/19
Politifact CA: Kamala Harris calls her LIFT plan ‘the most significant middle-class tax cut in generations.’ Is it? -- Early in her run for president, California Sen. Kamala Harris has described a "cost-of-living crisis" in America where the price of everything from housing to health care to education is on the rise. Chris Nichols Politifact CA -- 4/11/19
Participation in California's Paid Family Leave Program is Growing, But Who's Benefiting? -- Unlike workers in a lot of other states, many Californians have access to a state-run paid family leave program. Participation in the program is growing. But some lawmakers and others are concerned about who’s benefiting the most from paid leave -- and who can’t afford to. Katie Orr KQED -- 4/11/19
Ron Burkle, Billionaire Investor, Is Said to Be in Talks to Buy National Enquirer -- The owners of The National Enquirer are in talks to sell the tabloid to Ronald W. Burkle, a supermarket magnate with ties to President Bill Clinton, according to two people with direct knowledge of the negotiations. Edmund Lee and Andrew Ross Sorkin in the New York Times$ -- 4/11/19
Gentlemen, Start Your Algorithms -- A racetrack veteran compares the Self Racing Cars contest in California to hot-rod modders of old: “This event, with its hackers, tinkerers and engineers, is just like that.” Bradley Berman in the New York Times$ -- 4/11/19
The 6 most potentially damaging congressional investigations for Trump, ranked -- Ever since Democrats took control of the House of Representatives, they’ve focused much of their investigative firepower on President Trump. Half a dozen committees have begun probes into everything from his tax returns to whether he obstructed the investigation into his campaign and what he told the Russian president behind closed doors. But not all investigations are created equal. Amber Phillips in the Washington Post$ -- 4/11/19
California Policy & Politics This Morning
Nipsey Hussle memorial: LAPD and Nation of Islam will provide security -- The Los Angeles Police Department will pull in officers from divisions across the city to maintain a peaceful and respectable memorial event, officials said. The police presence, according to officials, will be substantial but mostly for traffic and peacekeeping if needed. Richard Winton in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/11/19
Death penalty sought for Golden State Killer suspect -- Joseph James DeAngelo Jr. is suspected of raping some 50 women and holding entire families hostage during a reign of terror in Sacramento and the Bay Area in the late 1970s, then progressing to murder. Paige St. John in the Los Angeles Times$ Don Thompson Associated Press -- 4/11/19
New Analysis Raises Questions About Gov. Gavin Newsom’s Juvenile Justice Proposal -- Gov. Gavin Newsom proposed major changes to the juvenile justice system during his State of the State in January. A new report from the nonpartisan Legislative Analyst’s Office shows it’s unclear whether the move would lead to tangible change for the state’s youth. Sammy Caiola Capital Public Radio -- 4/11/19
Walters: Community colleges wracked by data dispute -- Two years ago, the state board that oversees California’s 114 community colleges and its new chancellor, Eloy Ortiz Oakley, launched an ambitious effort to improve student outcomes, especially by increasing the numbers of associate degrees and transfers to four-year colleges. Dan Walters Calmatters -- 4/11/19
L.A. takes next step toward clamping down on developer donations -- Los Angeles officials took a tentative step Wednesday toward clamping down on political donations from real estate developers, as a City Council committee pressed forward with plans to ban donations from people seeking City Hall approval for their building projects. Emily Alpert Reyes in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/11/19
AP Interview: Pelosi: ‘I don’t trust Barr; I trust Mueller’ -- House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Wednesday questioned Attorney General William Barr’s independence from President Donald Trump, arguing Barr’s pursuit of Trump’s claims about “spying” during the 2016 campaign undermines his position as the nation’s top law enforcement officer. Lisa Mascaro Associated Press -- 4/11/19
Rep. Scott Peters releases “climate playbook” as alternative to Green New Deal -- The congressman said revisiting bipartisan ideas to rein in climate change is a better use of time than focusing on the Green New Deal, a wide-ranging resolution aimed at wiping out greenhouse emissions by 2030 and creating new jobs. Joshua Emerson Smith in the San Diego Union-Tribune$ -- 4/11/19
Former State Sen. Joel Anderson to run for seat on County Board of Supervisors -- Anderson, a known commodity in East County due to his tenure in the state Assembly and Senate, will officially announce his candidacy for the District 2 supervisor seat at Gillespie Field Airport in El Cajon Thursday. The announcement makes him the second Republican candidate vying for the position occupied by Dianne Jacob, who is leaving office in 2020 due to term limits. Charles T. Clark in the San Diego Union-Tribune$ -- 4/11/19
Skelton: Trump won’t publicly release his tax returns. Politicians shouldn’t have to -- President Trump is right about one thing: He shouldn’t have to publicly release his tax returns. Even a president has some right of privacy. And politics-playing Democrats are trying to invade it — in Congress and the California Legislature. But it’s a delicate line. George Skelton in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/11/19
Yucaipa mayor apologizes over offensive Facebook posts, but Muslim advocacy group demands resignation -- Bobby Duncan takes down the memes on his social media account, tells residents he will "be more cautious" Joe Nelson in the Los Angeles Daily News$ -- 4/11/19
Appeals court strikes down state law that banned early parole for youthful violent sex offenders -- Two men who received life sentences for a brutal sexual assault and robbery in Oakland when they were 19 must be given parole hearings during their 25th year in prison, a state appeals court ruled Wednesday, striking down a state law that made them ineligible. Bob Egelko in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/11/19
KQED: New president and CEO takes reins at station -- KQED formally introduced Michael Isip as its new president and CEO on Wednesday. He succeeds John Boland, who recently announced his retirement and will remain with the station as president emeritus through September. Isip joined KQED in 2001 and has served in a number of senior-level roles for the PBS and NPR member station. Chuck Barney in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 4/11/19
Economy, Employers, Jobs, Unions, Pensions
JetBlue gives up gate slots at Long Beach Airport after city warning -- JetBlue Airways has given up nearly a third of its gate slots at Long Beach Airport only days after being warned that it was in danger of violating new city regulations designed to prevent airlines from sitting on under-used slots to keep competitors out. Hugo Martin in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/11/19
Taxes, Fees, Rates, Tolls, Bonds
‘It’s too much.’ PG&E rates could double if big wildfires persist, analyst tells Gov. Newsom -- In a grim forecast to Gov. Gavin Newsom, a public policy analyst warned Wednesday that PG&E’s rates could double if it’s found liable for another round of wildfires on the same scale as the disasters that drove the utility into bankruptcy. Dale Kasler in the Sacramento Bee$ Marisa Lagos KQED J.D. Morris in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/11/19
‘The federal government really jacked us’: How Trump’s tax cuts are working out for Californians -- For communications professor Jason Jarvis and his wife, Jun, California just got more expensive. The Inglewood couple, who last year paid $16,000 in state and local taxes, were only able to deduct $10,000 of it from their federal taxes this year. The federal Tax Cuts and Jobs Act—signed last year by President Donald Trump and cheered by Republicans in Congress—cost the Jarvis family between $4,500 and $5,000 in deductions, raising their bill from the Internal Revenue Service even after a larger child tax credit for their 15-month-old son, Kellar. Judy Lin Calmatters -- 4/11/19
Transit
It’s steel on steel as Transbay center repairs progress; early June opening possible -- Repairs to the fractured steel girders that hold up the Transbay Transit Center are moving faster than expected, officials said Wednesday, but they still have no projected date for reopening the transit hub, which has been closed for more than six months. Michael Cabanatuan in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/11/19
Homeless
A shelter in all 15 of LA’s council districts? Maybe not -- Roughly one year after Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti announced plans for an emergency shelter program to address the city’s homeless crisis, representatives from two council districts haven’t yet proposed a single site where a shelter could be built. Elijah Chiland Curbed LA -- 4/11/19
Housing
San Francisco supervisors reject 63-unit SoMa development over shadow concerns -- A developer who wants to build a 63-unit building in San Francisco’s SoMa neighborhood next to Victoria Manalo Draves Park was turned down again Tuesday, this time by the SF Board of Supervisors, which shut down the project over concerns that a shadow cast over the park might diminish quality of life. Adam Brinklow Curbed San Francisco -- 4/11/19
LA Wants To Stop Landlords From Rejecting Section 8 Vouchers -- Scroll to the bottom of listings for apartments in Los Angeles, and you'll often find a list of things landlords won't accept: No pets. No smoking. And no Section 8. David Wagner laist -- 4/11/19
Education
Charter-mageddon: Lawmakers advance a raft of union-backed charter school curbs -- As charter school advocates rallied en masse and California’s teachers’ unions flexed their political muscle, a cluster of bills that would dramatically curb the growth of charters in the state cleared the Assembly Education Committee on Wednesday. The votes were the first in what figures to be a lengthy, high-stakes battle this session between two of the state’s most powerful education interests. Ricardo Cano Calmatters Andrew Sheeler and Hannah Wiley in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 4/11/19
Bretón: Sac Unified teachers at crisis point, part 3: Where are the answers? -- Is this one-day strike illegal? It sure seems that it is. Sacramento teachers are currently under contract. They secured that contract 18 months ago by threatening to strike. Marcos Bretón in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 4/11/19
Palo Alto High to students: If you take state tests, we'll give you free stuff -- While the Palo Alto School School District is extremely well regarded — its two high schools are ranked best in the Bay Area by Niche — the district is a low performer in one area: Getting students to take state assessment tests, especially at Palo Alto High. David Curran in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/11/19
San Diego Unified to require ethnic studies for graduation by 2022 -- San Diego Unified School District students will soon be required to take an ethnic studies course to graduate from high school. Kristen Taketa in the San Diego Union-Tribune$ -- 4/11/19
USD will rename Serra Hall to also honor Native American saint -- Joining a national reckoning over how historic figures are remembered and honored, the University of San Diego will change the name of two campus buildings to acknowledge the complicated legacy of the California missions and their impact on Native Americans. John Wilkens in the San Diego Union-Tribune$ -- 4/11/19
Cannabis
$350,000 in cash? California marijuana taxes still make growers - and tax collectors - nervous -- On tax days, it’s not hard to spot marijuana growers waiting to exhale in downtown Eureka. They haul cash in grocery bags and boxes, making their way to a state office where they can pay their taxes. Adam Ashton and Andrew Sheeler in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 4/11/19
California bill to block home delivery of cannabis sidelined for year -- A state bill that would have allowed cities to prohibit home deliveries of marijuana has been sidelined for the year amid concerns that doing so would further hamper California’s lagging market for cannabis. Patrick McGreevy in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/11/19
Immigration / Border
An immigration detainee fell into a coma and died at 27. His family wants to know why -- José Ibarra Bucio, 27, had been detained at the Adelanto ICE Processing Center for about a week when he called his wife in early February, saying he was desperate to get out. Their baby had been born three days earlier and Ibarra was terrified of being deported without knowing him, to Mexico, which he left when he was 4 years old. Paloma Esquivel in the Los Angeles Times$ Amy Taxin Associated Press Roxana Kopetman in the Orange County Register -- 4/11/19
Environment
San Diego County to develop “electric vehicle roadmap” to boost electric vehicle use -- The county will look to bolster electric vehicle usage in the region by developing a plan for building charging infrastructure. Charles T. Clark in the San Diego Union-Tribune$ -- 4/11/19
Valero's March Pollution Release Exposes Weaknesses in Benicia's Air Monitoring System -- When a major malfunction caused Valero's Benicia refinery to spew out pollution last month, leading city officials to warn residents with respiratory issues to stay indoors, the agency that regulates air in the Bay Area had to send a van to monitor the situation. That’s because there is no stationary air monitoring device in Benicia's residential areas, even though the city is home to one of the largest refineries in California. Ted Goldberg KQED -- 4/11/19
LA leads nation in solar power, Riverside is up and coming, report says -- Los Angeles produces more solar power than any city in America, with San Diego a distant second, according to a new study that looked at sun-generated electricity in 57 U.S. cities from 2013-2018. Steve Scauzillo in the Riverside Press Enterprise$ -- 4/11/19
Also . . .
DMV said a USC professor’s vanity plate request had racial connotations. Now he’s suing -- A USC professor is suing the California Department of Motor Vehicles for denying his application for a personalized license plate supporting an English soccer team known as “the Whites” on the grounds that the plate could have racial connotations. Javier Panzar in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/11/19
Big Hazard gang member says he orchestrated firebombing of black families in Boyle Heights -- Carlos Hernandez, 34, pleaded guilty to five felonies, including using fire and carrying explosives to commit a federal felony and conspiracy to violate civil rights, the U.S. attorney’s office announced Tuesday. Alejandra Reyes-Velarde in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/11/19
Kim Kardashian West is studying to be a lawyer, and you can blame the White House -- “I had to think long and hard about this,” the 38-year-old tells Vogue for its May issue, referring to her decision to do a four-year apprenticeship with a law firm in San Francisco ahead of taking the bar, hopefully, in 2022. It was a decision she made last summer, the magazine says. Christie D'Zurilla in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/11/19
POTUS 45
What Donald Trump Doesn’t Get About George Washington -- There’s a reason he didn’t name his estate after himself. And it’s exactly why he’s so revered now. Peter Canellos Politico -- 4/11/19
Beltway
Most California Women Not Too Bothered by Joe Biden Allegations, Poll Says -- In fact, the poll of 1,005 California voters shows Biden is currently the top choice of 26 percent of Democrats and "Democratic leaners," followed by Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders with 18 percent. California Sen. Kamala Harris came in close behind Sanders, with 17 percent. Scott Shafer KQED -- 4/11/19
Democratic presidential candidates expected to attend forum in Orange County later this year -- Democrats running for President in 2020 are expected to come to Orange County in September for a first-of-its-kind candidate forum that’s being organized by local and national Asian American groups. The event, expected to draw leading contenders for the nomination, is another signal of the county’s growing role in national Democratic politics and the emerging power of Asian American voters. Brooke Staggs in the Orange County Register -- 4/11/19
Gregory Craig, ex-Obama White House counsel, expects to be charged in relation to Ukrainian work with Manafort, his lawyers say -- The expected indictment — which his attorneys called “a misguided abuse of prosecutorial discretion” — stems from work Craig did with GOP lobbyist Paul Manafort on behalf of the Ukrainian Ministry of Justice in 2012. Rosalind S. Helderman and Tom Hamburger in the Washington Post$ -- 4/11/19
-- Wednesday Updates
‘Solar Bill of Rights’ advances in California Legislature -- Clean energy advocates advanced legislation on Wednesday that aims to make it easier for Californians use solar power despite concerns about the possible impact on customers who remain fully reliant on the electric grid. J.D. Morris in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/10/19
Gas prices spike in Southern California as refinery outages take their toll -- The price of gas in Southern California has climbed rapidly over the last few weeks as oil refineries across the state experience maintenance problems. Suhauna Hussain in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/10/19
‘A fiasco from the beginning’ — Caltrans’ costs soar on $1.1 billion San Francisco tunnels -- Former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger celebrated when the California Transportation Commission voted, despite a host of warnings, to pay a contractor more than $1 billion to build two tunnels and a stretch of road outside San Francisco nine years ago. Wes Venteicher in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 4/10/19
A new Nipsey Hussle shooting mystery: Gunman injured 2 women at memorial vigil -- Los Angeles police suspect that a gunman tried to kill another person at a vigil outside Nipsey Hussle’s store, another burst of violence in the same spot where the rapper was fatally shot the day before. Matt Hamilton and Richard Winton in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 4/10/19
One of California’s last black enclaves threatened by Inglewood’s stadium deal -- But now that Inglewood is on the come up, longtime residents and city officials face a different challenge: Many who have weathered decades of hardship no longer can afford to live there and are being left out of the economic renaissance. Angel Jennings in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/10/19
California proposed ban on ‘Big Gulp’-style sodas is shelved -- California lawmakers have shelved a measure to outlaw “Big Gulp”-style sodas to avoid dragging down the rest of a package of bills that sponsors say is aimed at reducing obesity, including a soda tax and health warning labels on sugary drinks. Patrick McGreevy in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/10/19
When this farmworker shelter started taking in asylum seekers, it lost its biggest donor -- The Our Lady of Guadalupe Shelter doesn’t seem like much, but for the migrant farmworkers who descend on this impoverished desert town, it’s a welcome retreat from the fields and dirt parking lots they once called home. Brittny Mejia in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/10/19
Bretón: Sac Unified teachers at crisis point, part 2: A culture of dysfunction -- Laughter is not the best medicine for solving the budget issues that face Sacramento schools, not with a strike coming and insolvency on the horizon. But that’s some of what we are seeing right now. Let’s work through what that means. Marcos Bretón in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 4/10/19
Paradise High School principal resigns, unable to find housing after Camp Fire -- The principal of Paradise High School says he is resigning because he was unable to secure housing after November’s devastating Camp Fire destroyed more than 10,000 homes in and near the Butte County community. Michael McGough in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 4/10/19
LA approves hefty fines for drivers who misuse disabled placards -- Local laws already make it illegal to use placards that are lost, stolen, or belong to someone who’s not in the vehicle, but on Tuesday, the Los Angeles City Council unanimously voted to hit violators with a fine of $1,100, the maximum penalty allowed under state law. Elijah Chiland in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/10/19
SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy launches its first satellite into a rapidly changing market -- A lot has changed since SpaceX first unveiled its huge Falcon Heavy rocket in 2011. Samantha Masunaga in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/10/19
Homelessness: Regional plan needed to solve Bay Area crisis, business group says -- The Bay Area has the third-largest homeless population — and one of the most problematic — in the United States, and the only way to make real headway toward clearing the streets is to systematically tie together tracking systems, housing strategies and other efforts from the region’s nine counties, a study released Wednesday contends. Kevin Fagan in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/10/19
Fox: Affordable Housing Not the Key to End Homeless Crisis -- Politicians tell us if we can just build enough affordable housing, California’s difficult homeless situation would end. To that end they have encouraged voters to support tax increases while searching for legislative remedies to ease the crisis. Yet, a simple formula of affordable housing will not address the problem by itself. Joel Fox Fox & Hounds -- 4/10/19
Net Neutrality Bill Passes House, Fulfilling Promise by Democrats -- The House passed legislation on Wednesday that would guarantee broadband internet users equal access to online content, in a crucial step toward bringing back so-called net neutrality regulations overturned at the start of the Trump administration. Cecilia Kang in the New York Times$ -- 4/10/19