AltWeeklies Wire

Medical Marijuana Dealer Convicted on Federal Trafficking Chargesnew

Charles Lynch was found guilty in federal court on five charges related to growing and distributing marijuana, despite California law that authorized his business, and testimony by local officials who welcomed the dispensary.
San Luis Obispo New Times  |  Kylie Mendonca  |  08-11-2008  |  Drugs

A Safe Space for Gay Meth Addicts in Santa Ana Struggles to Get Goingnew

If you visit Metheds.org, all you'll see is a white page, black text and a brief explanation: "Metheds. A place about recovery and community. Opening soon in Santa Ana. For more information, contact Ed McKie." But that's all Metheds is right now: an idea, some wishful thinking and a name.
OC Weekly  |  Vickie Chang  |  08-05-2008  |  Drugs

Burned by the Gap: Not Everyone Escaped Goleta Blaze Unscathednew

Much of the community breathed a sigh of relief when the Gap Fire entered its final days, having only claimed a few outbuildings and some lemon and avocado orchards. Not everybody was fortunate, however, as residents of the county's wilderness-adjacent communities can attest.
Santa Barbara Independent  |  Ben Preston and Kathleen Zaratzian  |  08-05-2008  |  Disasters

Rising Independent Voters are Really the Decidersnew

As California secretary of state Debra Bowen has tracked the increasing trend of declining to state party affiliation, presidential contenders Barack Obama and John McCain are probably paying attention, too.
Sacramento News & Review  |  Greg Lucas  |  07-24-2008  |  Politics

Monterey Bay Wildlife Has Come Back This Year, but Will the Resurgence Last?new

Cooling currents have sparked a huge comeback for life in the Bay this year. But scientists say global warming could put an end to the extraordinary conditions that breathe new life into local waters.
Metro Silicon Valley  |  Steve Hahn  |  07-24-2008  |  Animal Issues

Out-of-State Same-Sex Couples May Soon Wed in Mass.new

Massachusetts moved one step closer to parity for same-sex couples last Tuesday, when the state Senate unanimously passed a bill repealing a 1913 law prohibiting out-of-state gay couples from marrying here.
Dig Boston  |  Scott Sayare  |  07-24-2008  |  LGBT

A Sunken Tanker Off the California Coast Will Someday Leak Oil if Nothing is Donenew

There are growing concerns that the Montebello could offer up a second adventure/disaster story, this one of an ecological nature. Researchers are confident that the tanker still entombs its cargo, more than 3 million gallons of Santa Maria crude loaded from the Union Oil facility in Avila Beach.
San Luis Obispo New Times  |  Patrick Howe  |  07-21-2008  |  Environment

Summer Blazes Reveal the Real Cost of California's Money Problemsnew

As Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger explained how he's get a handle on the fires, a man-made disaster erupted, as the annual financial crisis that paralyzes the state every budget season reeled out of control.
Metro Silicon Valley  |  Eric Johnson  |  07-17-2008  |  Disasters

A Look at the Ecological Impacts of the Big Sur Wildfiresnew

Big Sur enthusiasts may be horrified to see the wildfires turn postcard-quality forests into black moonscapes. But scientists remind us that fire is a critical ingredient in Big Sur's fire-adapted beauty, and the ecological challenges arise less from the flames than from human meddling. As long as the wildfires are burning, their precise ecological impacts will be shrouded in smoke -- but experts do have a sense of how the flames will affect non-human life in Big Sur.
Monterey County Weekly  |  Kera Abraham  |  07-11-2008  |  Disasters

Saving Birds from Burning in Big Surnew

As the wildfire in Big Sur carpeted more and more of the region's steep coastal mountains, the biologists of Ventana Wildlife Society's condor rehabilitation project realized the uncontrolled blaze could prove deadly for eight condors contained in a large aviary directly within the fire's predicted path.
Monterey County Weekly  |  Stuart Thornton  |  07-11-2008  |  Disasters

What if Courageous California Pols Had Put a $2/Gallon Tax on Gas Five Years Ago?new

The SUVs and Hummers would be long gone. Public transit would be booming. And with 1.5 billion gallons of gas sold per year in the state, there would be $3 billion more each year in new revenue. Enough to fund huge improvements in urban transportation systems. The high-speed rail line to Los Angeles would be well underway. Traffic (and pollution, and global warming) would have dropped dramatically.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Tim Redmond  |  07-10-2008  |  Transportation

Big Oil in Little Richmondnew

Back in 2004, the Chevron Corporation proposed a billion dollar "Energy and Hydrogen Renewal Project" at its 2,900-acre Richmond, Calif., refinery. Critics worry that the renovations will end up fouling the air in the already-blighted Richmond neighborhoods downwind of the refinery, and have taken up arms to halt the project's progress.
East Bay Express  |  Anna McCarthy  |  07-10-2008  |  Business & Labor

Gay Couples from South Carolina Hear Wedding Bells in the Golden Statenew

When California began issuing marriage licenses to gay and lesbian couples after the state's Supreme Court invalidated the prohibition against same-sex weddings, it opening up marriage licenses to folks from any state. South Carolina's gay and lesbian couples are taking advantage of the opportunity.
Charleston City Paper  |  Greg Hambrick  |  07-09-2008  |  LGBT

Big Pharma is After Your Confidential Medical Recordsnew

A state bill that would have eroded California's strong medical privacy laws nearly passed last month. The Mental Health Association of California, the National Association of Cancer Patients, and other important health advocacy organizations supported the measure, saying they believed it would improve compliance and save lives. But the bill's opponents, which included the California Medical Association and many consumer groups, asserted that the legislation was not really about helping patients.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Jake Whitney  |  07-02-2008  |  Science

Is California Witnessing the Return of the Abalone?new

The culture of abalone diving saw its heyday in the 1970s, and even though sea snail searching will never again be the same, a San Miguel Island fishery may be in the works.
Santa Barbara Independent  |  Alastair Bland  |  06-30-2008  |  Animal Issues

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