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California School Boards Association sues state over ‘unconstitutional’ budget revisions
The lawsuit against the state and Joe Stephenshaw, the director of the Department of Finance, stems from Newsom’s proposal to address the state’s $27.6 billion budget deficit by changing Prop 98, the 1988 voter-approved, constitutional mandate that guarantees minimum funding amounts for California public schools and community colleges.
Cannabis Can Help Soreness After Summertime Activities
Summer is time to be outdoors and garden, play random sports or other activities reactivating muscles not used a while…cannabis can be your friend in helping with soreness.
Home decor: Get your home ready for fall but don’t overdo it
Fall means autumn chores — clean those rain gutters, check your heater — but also delightful decorating tasks.
Sharks first-rounder gets a little help from new teammate, on ice and off
Alexander Wennberg has been helping fellow Swede Filip Bystedt navigate life as a professional
49ers linebacker carted off from practice; Deebo Samuel makes surprise return
While Deebo Samuel returned to 49ers practice perhaps a week earlier than expected, linebacker Curtis Robinson was carted off early on with an apparent leg injury.
Sale closed in San Ramon: $1.5 million for a four-bedroom home
The property located in the first block of Palamos Court in San Ramon was sold on Aug. 13, 2024.
Blaze breaks out at vacant Bo Town Restaurant building
The restaurant closed in 2019, and the site was purchased by developers.
Study finds travel can reduce impacts of premature aging
Entropy research suggests tourism could trigger entropy changes, including positive travel experiences mitigating entropy and enhancing health.
States, hospital systems try less punitive drug testing of pregnant women and newborns
Some of the nation’s most prominent hospital systems and a handful of states have enacted or are considering less punitive approaches, as long as the baby is in no imminent danger.
Abortion clinics — and patients — are on the move, as state laws keep shifting
America’s abortion patients are traveling to navigate the patchwork of laws created by the Supreme Court’s Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization decision, which left policies on abortion to the states.