Gabrielle LaMarr LeMee, Los Angeles Times

Gabrielle LaMarr LeMee

Los Angeles Times

Washington, DC, United States

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Recent:
  • Unknown
Past:
  • Los Angeles Times
  • Chalkbeat

Past articles by Gabrielle:

Household water wells are drying up in record numbers as California drought worsens

Household wells in California are drying up in record numbers due to drought and groundwater overpumping. Rural families are the hardest hit. → Read More

Did your neighborhood vote for Bass or Caruso for L.A. mayor?

Explore your precinct level results from the 2022 California midterm election → Read More

How L.A. became the most overcrowded place in the U.S.

More homes are overcrowded in L.A. than in any other large U.S. county, a Times analysis of census data found — a situation that has endured for three decades. → Read More

2022 California proposition 31: Track the fundraising

Here's who has raised the most money for Proposition 31 and where it is coming from ahead of the 2022 California election. → Read More

Track the money flowing into the California attorney general's race

Here's who has raised the most money and where it is coming from ahead of the 2022 California attorney general's election. → Read More

Track the money flowing into the California governor's race

Here's who has raised the most money and where it is coming from ahead of the 2022 California governor's election. → Read More

2022 California propositions 26 and 27: Track the fundraising

Here's who has raised the most money for Propositions 26 and 27 and where it is coming from ahead of the 2022 California election. → Read More

2022 California proposition 29

Here's who has raised the most money for Proposition 29 and where it is coming from ahead of the 2022 California election. → Read More

The June primary for California attorney general is a fight for second place

Two Republicans and an unaffiliated independent are running to unseat Democratic Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta. Their fight starts now, and against each other. → Read More

Water well drilling is depleting aquifers in California

Despite a California law intended to end over-pumping of aquifers, a frenzy of agricultural well drilling continues in the San Joaquin Valley. → Read More

Newsom recall election results map: Southern California analysis block by block

Explore the latest precinct results from Los Angeles, Orange, San Diego and Ventura counties. → Read More

After enrollment dips, America’s schools hope for fall rebound

School districts that saw declines in student enrollment during COVID are looking to the fall. But there are early signs that enrollment may not fully rebound. → Read More

MAP: Legislation on critical race theory in schools

Chalkbeat is tracking efforts to restrict teaching about race and bias in schools, as well as efforts to expand it, on this map. → Read More

How we used data to tell the human stories behind Michigan’s high teacher turnover rates

When Chalkbeat obtained a trove of data about the teacher workforce in Michigan, we saw an opportunity to tell the stories of the humans behind the numbers. → Read More

This is the best available count of COVID-19 cases in Michigan schools. Here’s what it means.

Michigan collects more information about COVID-19 than many other states, but it has not published a reliable count of coronavirus cases linked to schools. The charts below contain the best... → Read More

Chicago schools are watching this student engagement metric closely. Here’s why.

New data gauging how many Chicago students turned in schoolwork remotely this spring reveals a wide range of outcomes, even at schools with similar demographics. → Read More

Chicago schools are watching this student engagement metric closely. Here’s why.

New data gauging how many Chicago students turned in schoolwork remotely this spring reveals a wide range of outcomes, even at schools with similar demographics. → Read More

Hundreds of NYC schools repeatedly tested positive for peeling lead paint, records reveal

The findings revealed troubling questions about how lead remediation is conducted in schools, observers say. → Read More

Five takeaways from Colorado’s 2019-20 student census

Enrollment this year grew by less than 0.2%, with 913,223 students enrolled this year — 1,687 more than in 2018-19. It’s a slightly bigger increase than last year. → Read More

Database: Find out how many home-schoolers were left out of Indiana’s 2019 graduation rates

Those students were wiped off the books because they were labeled as leaving to home-school — a designation that helps boost graduation rates for high schools. → Read More