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Chase Scheinbaum

chase-scheinbaum-reporter-bio

Chase Scheinbaum is the Agenda editor. His work has been featured in Businessweek, Village Voice, Men's Journal, Nature Medicine and other publications. Formerly, he covered Los Angeles Superior Court for the Daily Journal.

He is a 2012 graduate of Columbia Journalism School, where he focused on magazine writing, investigative journalism and video storytelling. He is the winner of a 2008 Associated Press feature-writing award. He lives in Los Angeles.

chase-scheinbaum-reporter-bio
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Hiking at Torrey Pines State Beach.
With its urban waterfront, dramatic bluffs, wetlands, and golden sand, San Diego County hosts more than its share of coastal hikes, with nothing more difficult than negotiating a trail up or down bluffs.
Pull up some chairs from the campground at Silver Strand and this could be y our view, too.
San Diego's beaches are an embarrassment of riches: wide stretches of golden sand, endless sunshine, rugged bluffs, and cool green seas. Add those characteristics to huge, nearby population centers, and you can see why it might be a good idea to plan e...
California Coastal Trail
Still being built today, the California Coastal Trail's roots can be thanked to a ballot measure from over 40 years ago.
California's proposed aid in dying bill, SB 128, the End of Life Option Act, received yet another nod from lawmakers on Tuesday when it passed the Senate Judiciary Committee.
The End of Life Option Act received yet another nod from lawmakers on Tuesday.
Los Angeles' FasTrak freeway lanes have become less so -- and they might get pricier.
Data from San Diego suggests camera use has led to more peaceful confrontations with officers.
A bill that would allow terminally ill patients to take a life-ending prescription is advancing.
In most cases, it takes more than a glance at the bottle to find out what's in cleaning products.
With the debate over vaccines reaching a fever pitch, it's only logical a bill on the subject would hit the legislature, and one has.
It's only logical a bill on the subject would hit the legislature, and one has.
Though it's been nearly 20 years since Proposition 215, no regulatory framework exists.
While all other states prohibit lane-splitting, the Golden State does not explicitly.
A rear bicycle light.
Riding a bicycle in California, especially at night, is a dangerous prospect.
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