Rebecca Ellis covers Los Angeles County government for the Los Angeles Times. Previously, she covered Portland city government for Oregon Public Broadcasting. Before OPB, Ellis wrote for the Miami Herald, freelanced for the Providence Journal and reported as a Kroc fellow at NPR in Washington, D.C. She graduated from Brown University in 2018. Ellis was a finalist for the Livingston Awards in 2022 for her investigation into abuses within Portland’s private security industry and in 2024 for an investigation into sexual abuse inside L.A. County’s juvenile halls.
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L.A. County plans to ramp up services for pregnant women living on the street after the deaths this month of two newborn babies in Skid Row.
The left-leaning Board of Supervisors will funnel millions in funding to support immigrants and transgender residents during another Trump presidency.
Supervisors Lindsey Horvath and Holly Mitchell have different ideas for carrying out Measure G, which will expand the Board of Supervisors and add an elected county executive.
Election returns showed the measure to expand L.A. County’s Board of supervisors with a narrow lead, securing just over 51% of the vote.
Nonprofit groups warned they may pull out of some interim homeless housing sites if the city fails to approve a significant increase in their rates.
The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors on Wednesday approved the county’s purchase of the Gas Company Tower, one of downtown L.A.’
Measure A would double the quarter-cent sales tax for homeless services. Measure G would dramatically shift power within L.A. County government.
A three-year-long forensic audit found no pattern of fraud in county contracts entered into during Mark Ridley-Thomas’ time on the Board of Supervisors. But the authors said they can’t give the county a clean bill of health.
According to an Oct. 24 county analysis reviewed by The Times, the ethics reforms in Measure G could cost as much as $21.9 million a year.
Supervisor Janice Hahn said this week that the board was the most divided she’s ever seen it. At the root of the division: Measure G.