• Governor Gavin Newsom is pushing back in a court filing against an $11 billion settlement agreement that PG&E has with insurers. Echoing the sentiments of fire victims, Newsom says that the settlement prioritizes insurers' claims over those of victims, and gives insurers too much leeway to "obstruct plans for resolving the [bankruptcy] case that are different from the one being pursued by PG&E." [Chronicle]
  • Allegations blew up on Twitter over the weekend that the Apple credit card approval process is biased against women. In a couple of noted cases, including that of Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, wives who share joint assets were given much smaller credit limits than their husbands. [CNN]
  • The Supreme Court today heard arguments in a case about the legality of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals Program, or DACA. At issue is whether President Trump had the legal authority to end the program, and some Dreamers in California spoke at a news conference today. [Chronicle]
  • A rolled-over fuel tanker on 101 in Santa Clara caused a huge traffic mess in the South Bay today. [ABC 7]
  • Books that are critical of President Trump keep going missing from an Idaho public library. [CNN]
  • Kamala Harris is now polling at just 1 percent in New Hampshire. [SFGate]
  • New York Magazine discusses Chesa Boudin's election as part of a "wave of recently elected 'progressive prosecutors' across the country who, rather than promising to crack down on civilian lawbreakers, have vowed to end cash bail, rein in police misconduct, reduce jail and prison populations, and expand alternatives to incarceration."
  • Local landscape architect and MacArthur "genius grant" recipient Walter Hood is designing a park for the new residential development on Yerba Buena Island. [Curbed]
  • Impossible Foods is going to make plant-based bacon. [SF Business Times]