Internet Explorer 11 is not supported

For optimal browsing, we recommend Chrome, Firefox or Safari browsers.

News

Constructive relationships and complementary policies are emerging in the quest for affordability.
After securing a hefty financial settlement from Purdue Pharma last month, Oklahoma Attorney General Mike Hunter is training the state’s legal armaments on a much bigger pharmaceutical player: Johnson & Johnson.
Six states and the District of Columbia charge President Trump's Department of Agriculture weakened nutritional standards in school breakfasts and lunches when it relaxed the requirements limiting salt and refined grains in 2018.
This comes a year after President Donald Trump signed legislation requiring states and federal agencies to add more records to the database gun dealers use when running a background check during a gun purchase.
The Trump administration abruptly ended "safe release" in late October, leaving thousands of migrants all but stranded in San Diego County.
With 8,700 low-income communities competing for private investment, some places are topping on the incentives to make themselves stand out.
Vanessa Tyson -- one of the women accusing Virginia Lt. Governor Justin Fairfax of sexual assault -- during an interview with CBS. She and Meredith Watson stepped forward with their allegations in February after a racist yearbook photo surfaced of Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam.
80
The number of years it will take to repair more than 47,000 structurally deficient bridges in the U.S., according to a new report.
Democrats fully acknowledge that there is unfinished business in all this. But they cite the lack of resolution as a reason to slow down on those immediate calls for resignations.
Lesley McSpadden lost Tuesday in a three-way race in Ferguson's 3rd Ward. Unofficial St. Louis County election results show the winner was Fran Griffin.
Young adults sentenced to lengthy prison terms for most crimes will be eligible for a parole review after serving 10 years, under a measure Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed into law Monday.
U.S. District Judge William Alsup decided at a hearing in San Francisco to impose his latest proposal on the utility, which includes making compliance with vegetation management rules a new probation term, among other measures.
Robert Hayes, a former five-term congressman, is accused of trying to bribe the state's insurance commissioner in exchange for regulatory help for a multinational investment company owned by a major Republican donor.
Opponents said the legislation violates a state law prohibiting municipalities from regulating firearms and have threatened to sue the city and file private criminal complaints against council members and the mayor.
Medicaid work-requirement legislation stalled last year in the majority-GOP Legislature, but the Edwards administration suggested talks would continue.
It's unclear how far back those convictions go, but many involve possessing a small amount of marijuana and could date back decades.
No black woman or openly gay individual has led a city as large as Chicago. She will have to confront chronic budget shortfalls, population loss and a high murder rate.
D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser, on professional baseball player Bryce Harper who joined the Phillies this season after seven years with the Washington Nationals. She posted -- and then deleted -- a tweet that compared Harper to Revolutionary War-era traitor Benedict Arnold.
Money raised by 2020 Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg. The South Bend, Ind., mayor is the first to reveal his fundraising totals from the first few months of 2019.
Minnesota and Ohio are weighing whether to repeal loopholes that make it legal to rape your spouse.
Expanding the eligibility criteria of West Virginians for Medicaid coverage in 2014 correlated with a growing number of enrollees being diagnosed and treated for opioid use disorder in one of the states most heavily impacted by the nationwide opioid crisis, a new study finds.
Many spoke on the floor against the revenue portion of the budget, which contained the bulk of the policy; 17 Democrats in the Assembly voted against it — a number unseen in the past eight years of Mr. Cuomo’s tenure.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers will increase water releases from Gavins Point Dam this week to clear room for runoff from melting snow in the Dakotas.
Oklahoma is one of seven states that allow election officials to remove names from the state’s voter registration list if they haven’t voted in several election cycles and don’t respond to address confirmation mailings.
Responding to the bill, actress Alyssa Milano started a petition to urge Kemp to veto the bill otherwise she, and others, would not be able to work in Georgia "in good conscience."
Ahead of the interviews, Fairfax's office issued a statement again denying the allegations. In the statement, Fairfax called for "a serious, fair, and impartial investigation" into the matter.
Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh is facing a call by Gov. Larry Hogan for a criminal investigation into the book deal that paid her hundreds of thousands of dollars.
As we move away from mass incarceration, we need to figure out how visits by case officers are effective -- or aren't.
In a forcefully worded ruling, a federal judge in San Diego on Friday struck down a state law banning gun magazines that hold more than 10 bullets, handing gun rights advocates a sweeping victory.
The Supreme Court ruled Monday that the Constitution does not guarantee a "painless death" for condemned murderers, deciding that a Missouri inmate may be executed by a lethal injection despite a rare condition that could cause him to suffocate.