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Tribune News Service

The state Supreme Court yesterday unsealed hundreds of pages of records connected to the looming criminal trial of state Attorney General Kathleen Kane, including pornographic emails that were sent and received by a former state prosecutor.
Reed Hall announced Tuesday he is retiring as CEO of the troubled Wisconsin Economic Development Corporation.
Hundreds of districts have reported that they are covering all or some of the pension contributions that teachers, by law, are required to make.
The National Rifle Association, along with the National Shooting Sports Foundation and the Second Amendment Foundation, filed a lawsuit in King County Superior Court on Monday accusing the city of violating a state law that prohibits local municipalities from regulating firearms.
The San Francisco company's lobbyists are pushing lawmakers to exempt its drivers from obtaining commercial licenses before they can ferry passengers.
Republican governors in several states have announce a cutoff of Medicaid funds to the group's clinics. But it's not clear politicians have such power under federal law.
Less than 62 percent of Ohio children 19 to 35 months old have all the vaccines recommended by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Can the state's new day-care and preschool vaccine law make a difference?
As early as the spring of 2016 the city may have 350 bicycles at 35 stations in the downtown area.
Nearly half of all adults in the city lack the basic skills necessary to obtain good jobs.
With more than 70 percent of California now classified in a state of "exceptional" or "extreme" drought, Uncle Sam is floundering.