State governments have become dynamic proving grounds on public policy, as evidenced by recent battles over health care, gender, housing, education and energy. Yet with the decline of local news, fewer journalists are holding state officials accountable. My most recent assignment tracked abortion legislation and litigation in the states following the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade. My goal is to illuminate the trends and trial balloons, profile the people and the groups driving public policy and tell the stories of the everyday constituents affected by those decisions.
My Background
Previously, I was a sports reporter. I investigated sports betting, Title IX and sexual abuse cases. Before that, I was a Metro reporter and served as The Times’ bureau chief in City Hall and Trenton, N.J. My investigation into the City College of New York forced the school’s president to resign, even before the story was published.
Before joining The Times in 1995, I worked for The Associated Press in Hong Kong and the San Jose Mercury News in the Bay Area. As the oldest son of Chinese immigrants, I grew up in New Jersey and participated in Taiwan’s Love Boat program. I studied history at Yale, received a master’s in international affairs at Columbia, and almost went to law school before disappointing my parents and becoming a journalist.
Journalistic Ethics
I do my humble best to be careful, respectful and fair to the people I write about. I don’t make political donations or participate in political causes, and I always identify myself as a reporter for The Times when working. I share the values and adhere to the standards of integrity outlined in our Ethical Journalism Handbook.
The shooting in which a gunman killed four and injured 10 at a grocery store in a town of 3,400 appeared to be a “completely random, senseless act,” the police said on Sunday.
The small town of Fordyce, Ark., was beginning to absorb the impact of the bloodshed, as a few details began to emerge. A fourth victim died on Saturday.
Homeowners in areas battered by climate disasters are facing dizzying insurance rate increases. But builders of housing for the homeless and other low-income families are also struggling.
The bill, if signed by the governor, would be the first state law to allow a judge to order surgical procedures for those who commit sex crimes against children.
Arizona’s former governor, Doug Ducey, expanded the court to seven justices. All solid conservatives, they upheld a 160-year-old abortion ban that presents a political risk to Republicans.
The collapse of the Key Bridge in Baltimore has prompted a reassessment of critical bridges around the country that may be similarly vulnerable to a ship strike.
By Mike Baker, Anjali Singhvi, Helmuth Rosales, David W. Chen and Elena Shao
A surge of new residents into Rocky Mountain states drove up home prices. The result was property tax increases of 40 percent or more for some of those already there.
Experts have long pondered the question of improving protections, and several bridges have undergone adjustments. But the size of today’s vessels leads to immense challenges.
The urgency underscores the bind for the party, which has long maintained that life begins at conception but must now reconcile that stance with broad support for I.V.F.
A law that would allow state and local law enforcement officers to apprehend and expel unauthorized migrants is enmeshed in a legal and political firestorm.
Seven states tried but failed in 2023 to add new taxes on assets and income. Attempts are underway in at least 10 states this year, and proponents are optimistic about their chances.
A federal appeals court halted a lower court’s block on the law, which prohibits firearms in certain places such as playgrounds and libraries, allowing it to take effect on Monday.
Chinatowns in the United States and Canada have long been squeezed by development projects. Will a proposed arena in Philadelphia’s struggling downtown be the next?
Donations to U.S. universities reached $59.5 billion last year, and they come increasingly from a smaller group of wealthy donors. Many of them expect their money to buy a voice in university affairs.
The rulings in Maryland and Oregon come amid a shifting legal landscape in the wake of a Supreme Court decision that has imposed new limits on gun regulation.