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Effective immediately, family planning clinics that are funded by taxpayers must stop referring women for abortions, the Trump administration said Monday.
County officials and sheriffs from around the U.S. are ramping up an effort to press for changes to a federal policy that strips Medicaid coverage and other federal health care benefits from people who are in jail but who have not been convicted of crimes.
Troy Phillips was repairing a propane filling station on Cape Cod one afternoon last October when his mother called, her voice frantic.
A Colorado state email account that was created to report suspected child abuse and neglect went unchecked for over four years, and five possible cases that were undiscovered until May are now being investigated, officials said.
Jeffrey Epstein, the New York financier, managed to evade federal prosecution a decade ago in a Florida sex case involving dozens of teenage girls, in part by agreeing to register as a sex offender.
Claire Sarnowski of Lake Oswego, Oregon, met Holocaust survivor Alter Wiener at a school event five years ago when she was 9 years old.
The majority of these kids likely lost their coverage because of late, incomplete or unreturned eligibility forms.
Ryan O'Neill, the officer who fatally shot Eric Logan last month, has resigned from the Police Department.
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Medicaid expansion, education funding and tax breaks are at the heart of the stalemates this year. The delays may hurt some states more than others.
The policy failed another court test, this time in New Hampshire. Despite the rulings, other states are moving forward with work requirements.
Tweet from U.S. Republican Sen. Ted Cruz after GOP Gov. Bill Lee recognized Saturday as "Nathan Bedford Forrest Day." He was also a Confederate general.
Puerto Ricans calling for the resignation of Gov. Ricardo Rosselló. Tens of thousands marched and rallied in Old San Juan on Wednesday in a massive protest.
Letter to the U.S. Department of Energy from Nevada's governor and U.S. senators after the agency said it may have mistakenly shipped dangerous nuclear materials to the state over the past six years.
Version of Microsoft software that thousands of election systems -- even new ones -- are using. In January 2020, Microsoft will stop automatically securing it, making those systems more vulnerable to cyberattacks.
Time that people in much of Manhattan went without power on Saturday. It's unclear what caused the blackout, but the utility ruled out a cyberattack.
91%
County clerks in Arkansas who are women. There isn't a single state in the country where women make up less than half of the county clerks.
The state of Texas alleges that San Antonio had a general policy against complying with federal authorities on immigration laws, a claim the city denies.
Mayors representing cities located on or near the U.S.-Mexico border expect to blow through $30 million Congress allocated in a recent supplemental funding bill for humanitarian costs associated with record-high numbers of migrant families arriving at the border.
Many of these new systems still run on old software that will soon be outdated and more vulnerable to hackers.
With power restored in the heart of Manhattan after Saturday's blackout cut electricity to nearly a quarter-million people, attention Sunday turned to why it happened and what can be done to prevent another outage.
Call it good news and bad news for President Donald Trump's reelection campaign when it comes to leadership of the Republican Party in Pennsylvania.
The Washington State Supreme Court has upheld Seattle's pioneering "democracy vouchers" program, which allows residents to contribute taxpayer money to qualifying political candidates.
In 2018, 42 of 148 agencies required to submit data did not, according to the commission.
When Gov. Laura Kelly's administration said in June it planned to allow thousands of Kansans to remain on welfare without meeting work requirements, Republicans relentlessly attacked the policy.
Though women racked up electoral gains in 2018, they are still underrepresented in politics at all levels.
The evolving technology of 'digital twins' can provide a dynamic, real-time view of the urban environment and the impact of ideas for improving it.
Debbie Baker, a plaintiff in a lawsuit filed last week against the Department of Education over the loan forgiveness program for public service workers. Baker was told her student debt would be forgiven after she taught for 10 years. It wasn't.
Length of the six-lane, high-speed “smart” intersection that companies and researchers are using to test driverless vehicles in Ohio. It's touted as the industry's longest.
Lawmakers failed to override the Republican governor's decision to cut 40 percent of the university system's state funding.