The more reporting trips we made, the more immigrants we spoke to who described dangerous conditions and persistent problems ...
Veteran photographers Robert Maryland and Larry Dalton became their own support system when they both found themselves caring ...
Thousands of farmworkers are working well into their sixties and seventies with no safety net built for retirement.
Food insecurity affects farmworkers at higher rates than the general U.S. population, and it can increase their risk of ...
Zongjin Wu, 76, dedicates himself to caring for his wife Alice, who has advanced Alzheimer’s, despite financial strain and ...
As Latino immigrants age, those without families face loneliness and those with families worry about being a burden and ...
A call came into our newsroom. A caller told our assignment desk about a woman at Santa Elizabeth church in the San Fernando ...
Our California Fellowship is designed to support reporters in the Golden State pursuing ambitious, enterprising projects on overlooked health and health equity issues. You decide what stories need to ...
The Center for Health Journalism’s “Just One Breath” collaborative on valley fever brought together reporters from the Bakersfield Californian, Radio Bilingüe in Fresno, Valley Public Radio in Fresno ...
Our Data Fellowship offers journalists an opportunity to transform their reporting by training them to “interview the data” as if it were a human source. They finish the five-month program equipped ...
In a studio space in Hayward, Calif., genocide survivor Robert Chau and his daughter Dorothy Chow set up for a new season of their shared podcast Death in Cambodia, Life in America. A chair holds the ...
Our competitive Fellowship programs offer individualized mentorship, generous reporting stipends ranging from $2,000 to $10,000, and a week-long training institute that includes inspiring trips in the ...