California
California doubles down on the Verizon/Frontier deal over DEI
- Verizon faces California scrutiny over its DEI reversal
- California could block the Frontier deal if it finds the merger at odds with state law
- Frontier also happens to be California’s second-largest carrier of last resort (COLR)
Verizon may have scored federal approval of its $20 billion Frontier acquisition, but the coast is far from clear stateside. California is scrutinizing the operator for ending its diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programs.
The California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) this week began conducting hearings to seek input on whether the Verizon/Frontier deal serves the public interest. Further, it’s asking Verizon to clarify which DEI policies and practices “could be associated with discrimination,” referencing the letter Verizon wrote to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) on May 15.
And given Verizon said it will no longer maintain any workforce diversity goals, CPUC wants to know how the company plans to comply with California’s DEI laws.
The state requires telecommunications providers and utilities to submit annual reports that describe their employment of “women, minority, disabled veteran, and LGBT individuals at all levels” as well as the policies that promote “equitable recruitment and hiring.”
California’s probe places Verizon in a sticky situation, as CPUC could block the Frontier deal if it finds the merger at odds with state law. But New Street Research policy analyst Blair Levin thinks CPUC just wants Verizon to clarify its commitment to DEI, rather than outright reject the merger.
“Verizon must figure out how to thread the needle between what Carr demanded and what California law requires,” Levin said in a note to investors Monday.
FCC chief Brendan Carr has cracked down on telecom and media companies for allegedly promoting “invidious discrimination,” probing Verizon, Comcast and T-Mobile, among others.
But because Carr hasn’t been clear on what exactly he means by that, companies don’t really know which DEI rules the FCC does and doesn’t allow, Levin added. So, Verizon’s lawyers have some leeway in figuring out how to address California’s concerns without contradicting the company’s letter to Carr.
For instance, Verizon could articulate “while it no longer is setting diversity employment goals, it will comply with California law and report on the demographics of its employment patterns,” he explained.
Verizon/Frontier and the COLR conundrum
Apart from the DEI debacle, Verizon may encounter conflict between its acquisition and California’s Carrier of Last Resort (COLR) requirements.
A COLR is a telco that’s required to offer basic telephone service to anyone who requests it in a certain area. Frontier is the second largest COLR in California, after AT&T.
AT&T previously requested relief from its COLR duties in the state, but CPUC denied the request. The agency argued AT&T “failed to demonstrate” the availability of replacement providers willing to serve as COLR.
Verizon could perhaps try the same to accelerate its copper retirement post-Frontier. The operator’s new fiber deployments “will enable the retirement of old copper networks,” said the FCC in May, “ensuring that more communities benefit from advanced technologies.”
California
California sheriff running for governor seizes over 650,000 ballots from 2025 election
A California sheriff who is running as a Republican for governor has seized more than 650,000 ballots from last year’s election, escalating an ongoing conflict with state officials.
Chad Bianco, Riverside county’s sheriff, says he is carrying out an investigation into allegations that ballots were unlawfully cast in last year’s election that resulted in the passage of Proposition 50. The proposition redrew congressional districts to help gerrymander the state in favor of Democrats, in response to similar measures in Republican states like Texas.
Election officials and the California attorney general, Rob Bonta, have both dismissed those allegations. The discrepancy between the machine count and the final count submitted to the state is only 103 votes, according to the Riverside Record.
Bianco’s investigators obtained the ballots after serving the registrar of voters with search warrants last month, he said Friday at a press conference. A Riverside superior court judge appointed a special master to count the ballots, Bianco said.
“This investigation is simple: physically count the ballots and compare that result with the total votes recorded,” Bianco said.
Bianco has pushed the investigation for months, after a group called the Riverside Election Integrity Team, composed of local residents, contended that a discrepancy of 45,896 votes exists between the final vote count and handwritten records that tallied hand-counted ballots.
“There is no indication, anywhere in the United States, of widespread voter fraud,” Bonta said in a statement, according to the Los Angeles Times. “Counts, recounts, hand counts, audits, and court cases all support this.”
Bonta, a Democrat, called Bianco’s move unprecedented and says it is designed to sow distrust in elections.
Bianco is one of the two most prominent Republicans running in California’s crowded gubernatorial primary that includes more than half a dozen Democrats. California runs a top-two primary system that puts all candidates on the same ballot, regardless of party, and sends the two candidates who get the most voters on to the November general election.
Bonta has repeatedly sent letters to Bianco’s office over the last two months saying his staff is not qualified to conduct a recount. In one of the letters, Bonta wrote that the ballot seizure was “unacceptable” and “sets a dangerous precedent and will only sow distrust in our elections”.
California voters last year decisively passed the redistricting ballot initiative championed by Gavin Newsom, the state’s governor, in response to Donald Trump’s attempts to gerrymander new conservative seats in red states. California Republicans, joined by the Trump administration, challenged the measure, but the US supreme court denied an emergency petition to keep the new maps from moving forward.
The Associated Press contributed reporting
California
California warns against Fresno company’s raw cheddar after multistate E. coli outbreak
Saturday, March 21, 2026 11:35PM
FRESNO, Calif. (KFSN) — The California Department of Public Health is advising consumers and businesses not to eat, serve, or sell raw cheddar cheese manufactured and distributed by Fresno-based company ‘RAW FARM.’
The products involved are “RAW FARM” block and shredded varieties from the facility located on Jameson Avenue.
The Food and Drug Administration says at least seven people total have gotten sick in Texas, California, and Florida. More than half of the illnesses are in children.
The FDA has suggested that the farm remove its raw cheese products from the market. The CDC is suggesting people consider not eating the cheese.
However, the company has declined, while also refusing to comply with a mandatory recall.
More information on the outbreak can be found on the FDA’s and CDC’s websites.
Copyright © 2026 KFSN-TV. All Rights Reserved.
California
I booked a bedroom and a roomette on the same overnight Amtrak train. The bedroom is worth the splurge for longer rides.
If you’re traveling somewhere between Chicago and San Francisco, I highly suggest making a trip of it by taking the California Zephyr, an incredibly scenic overnight Amtrak train through the American West.
I’ve ridden it twice. In January 2025, I took a 15-hour leg of the route from Denver to Salt Lake City and booked a roomette for $400. Then, in February 2026, I took the entire 53-hour journey from Chicago to Emeryville, California, and booked a bedroom for $2,200.
If you’re wondering if the bedroom was worth the upgrade, I think it depends on how long your trip is. But I’ll give you all the details so you can decide for yourself.
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