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Legal marijuana is delivering a powerful buzz to the typically unglamorous Denver industrial real estate market.
New Jersey is one of only five states in which the governor selects the top law enforcement official.
After 31 days and one and a half snow days, Oregon’s 2014 Legislative session came to an end at 5 p.m Friday.
The bill would remove Indiana from the ranks of 26 states that require utilities to offer programs that reduce energy use, part of a growing national effort to reduce electricity demand, lower prices and cut carbon emissions.
For Republicans, it's troubling that the last two Iowa caucus winners were favorites of Christian conservatives but couldn't win the party's nomination.
Why did Maryland have one of the worst roll outs in the country?
Ann Visalli, director of Delaware's Office of Management and Budget, on the need for public-private partnerships to help develop workforce skills in cyber technology.
Estimated cost of the damage this season's winter weather has caused the country.
Sheriff's officials plan to propose a "risk-based" system that supporters say would help select jail inmates for early release who are less likely to commit new crimes.
The fast train failed once, but It's back for another go.
The state legislator ended his campaign Friday after finishing second in the Republican primary.
In immigration court, there is generally no right to free legal counsel and many immigrants represent themselves.
Mark Funkhouser, the former mayor of Kansas City, Mo., and director of the Governing Institute, will replace outgoing publisher Erin Waters.
Facing a national shortage of experts able to battle the growing number of cyberthreats, Delaware's new initiative to boost its cybersecurity workforce could be a model for other states.
The high court ruled that cuts in education funding since 2010 led to an unconstitutionally imbalanced playing field between rich and poor schools.
The General Assembly adjourned its 60-day session Saturday but will head back to Richmond in two weeks to fulfill what it failed to do: enact a state budget.
The leader of the Republican Party of Iowa announced without explanation Saturday that he will resign later this month, signaling a new direction for a party beset with divisions in recent years.
After a months-long cold war over Newark Mayor Luis Quintana’s hiring practices and his approach to city budgeting, state officials today raised the specter of a takeover of the city’s finances.
Mourning mixed with celebration and commemoration Saturday in Jackson for Mayor Chokwe Lumumba, the civil rights activist who led the city to a new vision.
Public transit ridership in the United States last year hit its highest level since 1956, in what transit officials say is a sign of how much Americans’ everyday travel habits have changed.
When it comes to trying something new in the public sector, we're especially averse to risk. But there are ways to gain support for these kinds of initiatives.
Metropolitan areas are the homes of our economic engines, and that's where the need for infrastructure investment is greatest.
The annual cost to doctors of obtaining multiple state licenses, which are necessary for them to give medical advice remotely.
Louisiana officials are telling liberal advocacy group MoveOn.org to take down its billboard attacking Gov. Bobby Jindal for refusing to expand Medicaid.
Many states are embracing telemedicine by encouraging it in their Medicaid programs and requiring private insurers to pay for it. But doctors still have to get separate licences to give medical consultation in different states.
The justices wrote that the Legislature should fix the law.
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, to the audience at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) last Thursday.
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