California
CalMatters journalism honored as ‘impeccable,’ ‘beautifully-written’ and ‘the definition of public service’ in Golden State Journalism Awards
By Sonya Quick, CalMatters
This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters.
CalMatters won five of this year’s Golden State Journalism Awards, for public health reporting, criminal justice reporting, education reporting, courage in journalism and impact in journalism.
The awards are given by the Sacramento Press Club for politics and public policy reporting across the state.
Byrhonda Lyons won for impact in journalism.
The award recognizes “exceptional journalism that holds powerful institutions and/or people accountable for their actions and, by doing so, leads to demonstrable change that benefits Californians.”
Lyons is recognized for her reporting on how the California Department of Motor Vehicles has made millions from auctioned car sales, and kept the money without notifying owners that they were entitled to proceeds. After CalMatters journalism engineer Mohamed Al Elew created an interactive tool for towed vehicle owners to see if their car was sold for a profit, the DMV decided to do the same. According to a CalMatters analysis of DMV data, between 2016 and 2024, the DMV collected more than $8 million in surplus proceeds from nearly 5,300 vehicle auctions. In March, Sen. Kelly Seyarto, a Republican from Murrieta, cited Lyons’ reporting when introducing SB 1029, which would require the California Department of Motor Vehicles to “notify vehicle owners when surplus funds from a lien sale may be owed to them.”
“Thanks to CalMatters, Californians are getting their money back. This is the definition of public service journalism.”
Judges for the Golden State Journalism Awards
Judges wrote, “CalMatters’ Byrhonda Lyons followed the money — or perhaps more accurately followed the state keeping the money — to root out the fact the state’s DMV was keeping funds raised from cars sold at auction beyond the cost of towing. Thanks to good old-fashioned reporting and the Public Records Act, Lyons found out DMV had pocketed more than $8 million that belonged to the cars’ former owners from 2016 to 2024. But CalMatters didn’t stop there. It created a searchable database that the public could use to look up whether they were owed money. As reported, DMV thought it such a good idea that it copied it. Thanks to CalMatters, Californians are getting their money back. This is the definition of public service journalism.”
Sergio Olmos was one of the journalists honored for courage in journalism.
The Press Club judges said this year’s award for “exceptional courage to bring necessary coverage to the public” is presented to “journalists who continued reporting despite being struck, detained, or otherwise targeted while covering protests against federal immigration enforcement actions in Los Angeles in 2025.”
The club honored all journalists whose experiences were cited in legal action brought by the Los Angeles Press Club and Status Coup against the Los Angeles Police Department. The lawsuit alleged journalists were targeted despite clearly identifying themselves as members of the press. A court later granted an injunction ordering law enforcement not to interfere with journalists performing their duties.
“This award recognizes the journalists who kept reporting the news with great bravery,” Sacramento Press Club President Ashley Zavala said during the ceremony. “Please join me in honoring their courage — and the role of a free press.”
Olmos, a CalMatters investigative reporter, was included after he was struck in the chest by a crowd-control munition fired by police officers while covering an immigration protest in downtown Los Angeles, California, on June 8, 2025. Olmos told The Washington Post that he was wearing a press pass and shooting video of a protest a few blocks from a complex of federal buildings when Los Angeles Police Department officers shot crowd-control munitions at demonstrators. Olmos believes he was hit with a 40 mm sponge grenade.
In the past year, Olmos relentlessly pursued the on-the-ground realities of immigration raids across California. His investigative series shows that immigration agents engaged in a pattern of force and questionable detention, aggressive tactics that courts have said likely violated the constitution, as they moved from Bakersfield to Los Angeles, and then Chicago and Minneapolis.
Anat Rubin won for criminal justice reporting.
Rubin was honored for her investigation, “The Man Who Unsolved a Murder.” The project found that poor people accused of crimes, who account for at least 80% of criminal defendants, are routinely convicted in California without anyone investigating the charges against them. Close to half of California’s 58 counties do not employ any full-time public defense investigators. Among the remaining counties, defendants’ access to investigators fluctuates wildly, but it’s almost always inadequate.
Judges wrote, “This CalMatters package provided a sharp, well-reported and beautifully-written look at the dearth of investigators at public defender’s offices and the consequences for defendants. The package also included a well-reported look at the perils of using flat-fee defense attorneys in lieu of public defenders.”
Joe Garcia was also a finalist in this category for his reporting inside California’s prison system: on the realities of shared cells, and how rehabilitative programming is increasing while the success rate of prisoners found suitable for parole is gradually declining.
Judges wrote, “This CalMatters package offered insightful reporting and writing about problems with California’s parole system, as well as the physical risks of housing people in shared cells.”
Jocelyn Wiener, Marisa Kendall and Erica Yee won for public health reporting.
These CalMatters journalists joined together for an 8-part series examining the realities of California’s CARE Court program – a program to allow families or first responders to petition courts for care on behalf of someone with severe mental illness and empowers judges to order treatment in some cases.
Judges wrote: “CalMatters’ reporters Jocelyn Wiener, Marisa Kendall and Erica Yee left no stone unturned in Courting Disappointment, an 8-part series that both explains and viscerally demonstrates why Governor Newsom’s ambitious CARE Court program has failed to deliver. Through rigorous data collection, point-by-point analysis of the legislative process and deep interviews with affected individuals, family members, court, state and county officials, the reporters captured the exhausting and heartwrenching experiences of parents trying to get their mentally ill family members off the streets and into psychiatric treatment, as well as the courts’ legal limitations to follow through on these petitions. Most compelling was the explanatory work illustrating how a well-intentioned law was watered down to the point of being largely ineffective. The breadth of this series, along with its impeccable writing and editing, merits first place in the Golden State Journalism Awards Public Health category.”
Adam Echelman won for education reporting.
Echelman was honored for his reporting, which found that community colleges were seeing unprecedented reports of fraud, with scammers stealing millions more dollars of student aid than in any previous period, according to reports submitted by colleges to California’s Community Colleges Chancellor’s Office.
After CalMatters reported on the rise in fraud last year, Republican U.S. Congress members called for a federal investigation, a Democratic state legislator launched a state audit and later, California’s Community Colleges Chancellor’s Office approved a new ID verification policy for students. Colleges now are more vigilant about policing fraud, said Jory Hadsell, an executive in technology initiatives for the chancellor’s office, who pointed to better filtering practices and new software to detect fraud.
Judges wrote: “Adam Echelman’s reporting on financial fraud in California’s community college system highlights a critical issue for faculty and students with deep reporting, statistical evidence, crisp writing and, importantly, voices from those most affected. The articles aren’t just a collection of important information, they’re engaging narratives that underscore what’s at stake – not just for students, faculty and staff, but for taxpayers as well.”
This article was originally published on CalMatters and was republished under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives license.
California
Activists demand Black English be pushed on kids in California preschools
Activists are pushing for Black English to be legitimized in preschool as a way to build children’s literacy skills in California.
The Black Californians United for Early Care & Education (BlackECE) is part of a movement to challenge “harmful language hierarchies and affirm Black English as a legitimate, rule-governed language rooted in Black history, culture, and community.”
The movement also seeks to “address how language bias shows up in early learning spaces–and how it can be dismantled.”
“I don’t want my son to walk into any room and feel like his voice is not valued or his perspective can’t be heard because he’s not saying it one way or the other,” the co-founder of BlackECE Ashley Williams told PBS.
She also remembered how speaking Black English is full of slangs and grammatical errors so it came with a lot of embarrassment.
BlackECE is a nonprofit organization centered around a 10-point policy plan that seeks to gain reparations and help Black children, families, and workers.
California released a plan promoting early dual language learning and calling on the state’s education system to support bilingual children in their development in 2020, but the advocacy group believes that Black vernacular should be included.
“We talk about multilinguals, but we don’t include Black children who may be African-American English speakers,” the Director of the Children’s Equity Project Xigrid Soto-Boykin said.
Williams also recalled her experiences in having to “talk white” and talking in her comfortable English and feeling insecure.
Around 20% of American children and 44% of five to seventeen year-olds in California are considered to be bilingual, according to the National Library of Medicine’s research in 2020.
However, only 89% of African-Americans solely speak English at home.
California
Jackie and Shadow fled during Big Bear fireworks but returned to nest and eaglets the next day
Fireworks can frighten animals and send them scattering, but Jackie and Shadow’s eaglets apparently are made of sterner stuff.
Chicks Luna and Sandy were seen safe and sound Sunday morning around 6 a.m. on the popular livestream nest cam aimed at their Big Bear pine tree, snacking on fish in the family aerie.
Mom and Dad did fly off when the nearby Fourth of July holiday show promoted by tourism organization Visit Big Bear began on Saturday night, Big Bear Valley media and website manager Jennifer Voisard told the Orange County Register on Sunday morning.
But both bald eagles flew back to their nest Sunday morning to care for their eaglets, who had remained around the nest during the show.
The fireworks show has faced controversy regarding the famous avians, spawning a Change.org petition to move the festivities farther away or switch to an environmentally friendlier drone show.
More than 45,000 people signed the petition. But the show went on for the sake of the local economy.
There was particular anxiety this year among environmental advocates as the eaglets were on the cusp of flying as the event was planned. The pair took their first flights just days beforehand. They had been spotted in nearby trees but didn’t immediately return to the nest.
The nonprofit that operates the webcam, Friends of Big Bear Valley, wrote a letter to officials warning that, “whether they are still in the nest or newly fledged, they will depend on Jackie and Shadow to care for them.”
“If, as in the past, Jackie and Shadow were to flee the habitat area for a few days, this could put the eaglets in danger at this important time of their lives.”
To the relief of their fans, the parents did return.
The fireworks event is an important economic driver in a year when Big Bear saw less snow than usual during its peak winter months, the travel organization said.
“The fireworks show is a long-standing community tradition and an important economic driver for Big Bear’s local businesses, workers, restaurants, lodging properties, recreation providers, and families. That context is especially important this year after another low-to-no snow winter, which directly impacted many of our neighbors, employees, and small businesses,” Visit Big Bear said in a statement.
It said the show happens about two miles away from Jackie and Shadow’s nest and lasted only about 30 minutes.
The eagles — and occasionally their chicks — could be seen on Friends of Big Bear Valley’s livestream heading into Sunday evening.
California
A Dividend Portfolio That Out-Earns the Average California Family
© PeopleImages / Shutterstock.com
California’s median household income landed at $100,600 in 2024, according to Census data compiled by the St. Louis Fed. That is the number a portfolio has to replace to hand a Golden State family the same paycheck without anyone clocking in. The wrinkle: California’s 2024 regional price parity was 110.7, meaning prices were about 10.7% above the national average. Replacing that income with dividends carries a built-in purchasing-power headwind.
The core equation: income target divided by yield equals the capital required before taxes. What changes across yield tiers is the risk, growth trajectory, tax treatment, and whether the check keeps up with California living costs over the next decade.
The Sleep-At-Night Tier: 3.5% to 4%
At a 3.5% blended yield, replacing $100,600 requires roughly $2,874,000 in invested capital. This is the dividend growth lane. PepsiCo (NASDAQ:PEP | PEP Price Prediction) yields about 4% and just raised its payout for the 54th consecutive year, with a $1.48 quarterly dividend up from $1.4225. Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ) yields a leaner 2% but just delivered its 64th consecutive annual raise to $1.34 quarterly.
The tradeoff is capital-heavy but growth-rich. PepsiCo’s annual dividend climbed from $4.02 in 2020 to $5.62 in 2025, roughly a 40% raise in five years. That is how this tier beats the California cost-of-living treadmill.
The Middle Path: 5% to 6.5%
At a 5% blend, the required capital drops to roughly $2,012,000. Push to 6.5% and the number falls to about $1,548,000. This tier is where net-lease REITs, gaming REITs, and pipeline partnerships live.
Realty Income (NYSE:O) yields about 5%, pays monthly, and just declared its 114th consecutive quarterly increase at an annualized $3.246 per share. Portfolio occupancy sits at 99%. VICI Properties (NYSE:VICI) yields almost 7% off a $1.783 payout backed by triple-net leases on Caesars Palace and MGM properties with 100% occupancy. Enterprise Products Partners (NYSE:EPD) yields near 6% on a $2.20 annualized distribution, though its K-1 tax form adds filing complexity in a high-tax state.
The tradeoff: growth slows. VICI’s quarterly dividend rose from $0.4325 to $0.45 over the past year, a mid-single-digit bump. Realty Income’s payout grew about 3% to 3.7% per its 2026 AFFO guide. That still edges past inflation, barely.
The High-Yield Tier: 8% and Above
At 8.3%, the required capital collapses to roughly $1,212,000. Main Street Capital (NYSE:MAIN) is the archetype. Its regular monthly payout of $0.26 annualizes to $3.12, and four $0.30 supplementals per year add another $1.20, for a total of roughly $4.32 per share. Against a $52 stock price, that is a total yield near 8.3%.
The catch: BDC supplementals are tied to net investment income and portfolio performance, not contractual. Non-accruals sat at about 1% of the portfolio at fair value at quarter-end, which is healthy, but the extras can shrink in a credit downturn. The 10-year Treasury yields about 4.5% for comparison, so an 8% equity yield is nearly double the risk-free rate for a reason.
Why the Cheapest Portfolio Is Often the Worst Deal
A 3.5% yield growing 8% per year doubles the income stream in nine years. A flat 8% yield stays exactly where it started. Nine years from now, that $100,600 California household budget needs to be closer to $130,000 just to hold ground against typical inflation. The high-yield portfolio funds today’s paycheck. The growth portfolio funds today’s paycheck and next decade’s.
California’s top marginal state rate reaches 13.3%, and MLP K-1s, REIT ordinary-income distributions, and BDC dividends are almost all taxed as ordinary income. Qualified dividends from PepsiCo or Johnson & Johnson get preferential federal treatment. That gap matters in Sacramento’s tax bracket.
Before Chasing Yield, Run These Three Numbers
- Calculate spending, not salary. California households often need to replace only 70% to 80% of their working income once payroll taxes, retirement contributions, commuting costs, and other job-related expenses disappear. Replacing $75,000 of actual spending requires far less capital than replacing a $100,600 paycheck.
- Compare total return, not just today’s yield. Run a simple ten-year spreadsheet comparing a 3.5% dividend-growth portfolio with an 8% high-yield portfolio, assuming dividends are reinvested. The higher-yield option often wins early, but the growth portfolio frequently catches and passes it over time.
- Model after-tax income. California’s 9.3% and 13.3% state tax brackets can change the ranking. Qualified dividends, REIT distributions, BDC dividends, and MLP distributions all receive different tax treatment, so the portfolio with the highest stated yield may not produce the most spendable income.
Replacing California’s median household income with dividends is possible, but the cheapest portfolio is not always the one that leaves you in the strongest position ten or twenty years from now. The right choice depends on whether your priority is maximizing today’s income, protecting tomorrow’s purchasing power, or striking a balance between the two. For most investors, the real goal is not simply matching a paycheck. It is creating one that never requires punching a clock again.
Contact [email protected] for any questions or corrections.
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