Katie Licari
Follow Us
Katie Licari was a 2022-23 data and graphics fellow at the Los Angeles Times. She is a lifelong resident of Southern California and recent graduate of UC Berkeley’s Graduate School of Journalism, where she focused on data journalism and investigative reporting. She studied political science and journalism at Santa Ana College and UC Irvine.
Latest From This Author
Under the terms of the WGA’s new contract, AI is here to stay — with limits.
Más de una década después de que California aprobara la Ley de Derecho Humano al Agua, alrededor de 1 millón de residentes todavía carecen de acceso a agua limpia, segura y asequible.
Check your water supplier’s levels of arsenic, nitrate and 1,2,3-TCP, and any steps they are taking to make the water safe.
More than a decade after California passed the Human Right to Water Act, about 1 million residents still lack access to clean, safe, affordable water.
On the first day of summer, skies across Southern California are finally sunny after weeks of mostly overcast weather. But forecasters say the clearing will likely be short-lived.
A Bay Area developer has agreed to lower rent for several tenants and pay hundreds of thousands of dollars in fines and penalties as part of California’s first settlement under the Tenant Protection Act, the state attorney general announced Friday.
High school students in Los Angeles are much more likely than those elsewhere in the U.S. to have witnessed violence, a burden that falls disproportionately on young Black Angelenos, a Times analysis shows.
Los Angeles police are searching for leads after Quincy Reese, 16, was shot and killed in Manchester Square. He is believed to have been a bystander.
Annie Lam’s consulting business has flourished during her husband’s unusually long tenure as speaker.