Suhauna Hussain is a reporter who covers labor and all things workers in the California economy for the Los Angeles Times. She previously wrote for the paper’s business desk. She currently works with the breaking news team, where she also dabbles in coverage of tech and immigration. She joined the paper as a reporting fellow in December 2018. She has previously written for the Tampa Bay Times, the Center for Public Integrity, the East Bay Express and the Chronicle of Higher Education. She got her start in journalism at Berkeley’s independent student-run newspaper, the Daily Californian. Hussain was raised in L.A. and graduated from UC Berkeley with a degree in political economy.
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Thursday’s sweep came less than a year after the Trump administration kicked off its mass deportation campaign at the Fashion District, a popular shopping area covering more than 100 blocks of L.A.’s downtown and home to more than 4,000 independently and minority-owned businesses.
The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department called the pig drawing ‘offensive, inappropriate and unacceptable’ in a statement.
Sprinkles abruptly shut down all its locations on Dec. 31, leaving hundreds of retail employees across Arizona, California, Washington, D.C., Florida, Nevada, Texas and Utah in a lurch with little notice, no severance and scrambling to fulfill a surge of orders.
A UC Merced study used U.S. census data to track changes in the number of Californians reporting private sector employment across several months in 2025.
Some Altadena residents say a Rose Parade float featuring firefighters pouring syrup over pancakes feels insensitive to firestorm survivors.
Ventura Foods sold the recalled goods to retailers including Costco and Publix. The condiments were recalled because they could contain ‘foreign objects,’ according to an alert from the Food and Drug Administration.
Rabbi Yisroel Goldstein learned his niece’s husband, Rabbi Eli Schlanger, who was leading services at the Bondi Beach event, was among more than 15 people killed.
Parkgoers looking to get their hands on the Mickey gingerbread cookie — described by fans as buttery-soft, perfectly spiced and not overly sweet — in the shape of Disney’s iconic rodent character, are facing waits up to 11 hours.
Six Flags will remove a 70-year-old coaster called the Magic Flyer, and the 40-year-old swing ride Tweety’s Escape, named after the iconic Looney Tunes character.
A group of activists, frustrated by the city of Los Angeles’ delays in painting crosswalks at intersections, took on the task in Westwood. One activist was cited for vandalism.