Suhauna Hussain is a business reporter covering California labor and workplace issues for the Los Angeles Times. 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 and 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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As confusion swirls around whether Trump will exempt farms and other businesses from immigration raids, businesses are emphasizing the importance of their immigrant workforce.
Unite Here Local 11 filed paperwork for a ballot initiative to raise the minimum wage for all workers in the city of Los Angeles to $30 by July 2028.
The flurry of immigration raids across Los Angeles in recent days has cast a pall over the historical Fashion District in downtown.
Unite Here Local 11 on Wednesday filed a complaint with state officials alleging that a hotel industry coalition violated state election rules in its campaign to overturn a wage boost for Los Angeles airport and hotel workers.
Nine car washes in Los Angeles and Orange counties have been targeted for federal immigration raids in recent days, according to CLEAN Carwash Worker Center, a labor advocacy nonprofit. At least 26 people, mostly workers, were taken.
An hours-long standoff between protesters and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents erupted Saturday morning near a Home Depot in Paramount.
Supreme Court rejects a double standard for deciding claims of workplace discrimination.
A former marketing executive alleged he was fired after opposing discriminatory comments made by Terranea Resort President Ralph Grippo.
Labor advocates and some elected officials are calling on Los Angeles County to adopt a minimum wage of at least $25 an hour.
In the lawsuit, Vietnamese American salon owners say California’s labor code is discriminatory because it unfairly requires nail technicians to be classified as employees.