A woman is suing the transit agency, alleging the uniformed safety ambassador showed her an explicit picture and then inappropriately touched her.
A tattoo museum aboard the Queen Mary? Prominent artists are making their pitch for one
Long Beach already has deep ties to tattoo culture past and present. Now a nonprofit formed by well-known tattoo artists wants to enshrine that history aboard the iconic ocean liner.
Officers arrest early morning prowler who was on East Village rooftop, LBPD says
Officers were called to the scene around 4:30 a.m. when someone reported “a prowler sitting on the rooftop of a residence,” police said.
Long Beach will show dozens of free movies in the park this summer; here’s the full schedule
The free outdoor movie screenings start on June 17. Here’s where and when to catch them all.
Ex-LBCC president to file wrongful termination lawsuit after college fails to pay arbitration fees, lawyer says
Reagan Romali, the former superintendent-president, will withdraw from mediation and proceed with a civil lawsuit in open court, which could provide more details on her allegations that members of the Board of Trustees have violated the law.
How shots instead of pills could change California’s homeless crisis
Doctors on the front lines of California’s homelessness and mental health crises are using monthly injections to treat psychosis in their most vulnerable patients.
Neighbors sue to block rare affordable housing project in East Long Beach
Long Beach is under pressure to build affordable housing in more affluent areas. One group of neighbors is pushing back in court.
Greenhouse gas emissions rose 18% in Long Beach, new data shows
City officials said it’s difficult to pinpoint the exact causes for the 2021 rise in emissions, though “it stands to reason” that the pandemic — and its record-setting cargo volumes — played a role.
Long Beach plans to lease Vagabond Inn Downtown to house homeless
The city will pay $110 per room, per day to lease the facility, which includes all utilities, parking, cleaning and amenities.
Forget the first 220 failures to split California. This developer has a new plan to secede
The latest bid to break up California is the brainchild of a real estate developer in San Bernardino County. It taps into growing resistance to the state’s liberal governance by more conservative residents.