Paul Duginski
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Paul Duginski was a data and graphics journalist at the Los Angeles Times from 1996 to 2024. A native of Minnesota, he has a bachelor’s degree in English from Moorhead State University.
Latest From This Author
What are king tides and will they get worse with climate change?
The farm barons of Tulare Lake Basin want to continue pumping groundwater at volumes collapsing the San Joaquin Valley. That puts the region at greater risk of damaging floods — and in greater need of taxpayer bailouts.
Firefighters and meteorologists look to a little-known metric called “mixing height†to understand how explosive wildfires spread in California without wind.
America needs lots of clean power, fast. Should it go on public lands or on rooftops?
Apache tribe members say Arizona land slated to be destroyed for a copper mine is sacred. Their legal battle is now a major religious liberty test.
Southern California’s May gray has been stubborn. Here’s an explanation. But be prepared for June gloom.
Members of the Southern Sierra Miwuk Nation became the latest Indigenous tribe to watch homes burn despite knowing it could have been avoided.
The only thing preventing floodwaters from inundating the city of Corcoran is an aging, 14-mile-long wall of dirt. Can it hold?
As historic storms fill once-dry Tulare Lake and submerge prime California farmland, tensions are building over how to handle the swiftly rising floodwaters.
A 12th atmospheric river is possible early next week and could affect the California coast.