California Water Wars
By 1928, the City of Los Angeles owns 90 percent of the water in Owens Valley.
RELATED STORIES
The River and Elysian Valley
Decades ago, Ceci Dominguez remembers a very different LA River than the one undergoing rapid revitalization by way of nearby gentrification today. The word “river” might even be a bit generous here, as “flood channel” or “sewage line” could better describe its function in those days. “My kids would ride their bikes and wander down…
A Dream Turned Reality
Since she was a little girl, Micaela Solís has always had to be independent. Originally from Puebla, Mexico, the experiences and lessons she learned during her childhood have deeply impacted her current role as small business owner. Growing up, she learned about the importance of punctuality, being serviceable and attending to the needs of others,…
Land Back in Los Angeles
Following the first land return in 200 years to the Indigenous peoples of Los Angeles County, the Tongva Taraxat Paxaava Conservancy was formed. Located in the Altadena hills, the Conservancy represents the beginning of a process meant to rematriate and reestablish connections between tribal members and California native plants to their ancestral and unceded lands.…
Atwater is Home
When Joyce Cooper was thirteen, she along with her mother and younger brother moved from Koreatown to Atwater Village. Only a few miles apart, but a world of a difference. “We lived on the eighth floor of an apartment building. I went to Hobart Elementary and I had a lot of cool friends. Our class…