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The New York City Correction Department’s top internal affairs official, who was demoted last week amid accusations that he eavesdropped on telephone conversations between city investigators and their jailhouse informers on Rikers Island, was quietly fired this week.
Former acting Attorney General Sally Yates is dismissing calls from Democrats for her to enter the 2018 Georgia gubernatorial race.
As the GOP health care bill moves from the U.S. House of Representatives to the Senate, many consumers and lawmakers are especially worried that people with preexisting conditions won’t be able to find affordable health coverage.
The infrastructure finance cohort convening in Washington, D.C., proved that local ingenuity combined with the right partners can push projects ahead.
Women working in public administration make, on average, 25 percent -- or $16,900 -- less than men.
But observers disagree about whether it will work.
Missouri state Rep. Holly Rehder, who sponsored a now-dead bill this year to establish a prescription drug monitoring program in an effort to crack down on the opioid crisis. It's the only state that doesn't have one.
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Students packed into one classroom in New Jersey because the elementary school can't afford to build walls and instead creates classroom boundaries using pieces of furniture. Since 2010, two-thirds of the state's school districts haven't been getting the funding they were promised.
Testing their luck with the Trump administration, Texas officials are asking for federal money to help support the state's women's health program even though it has barred Planned Parenthood as a provider.
With the support of consumer advocates, film studios and police chiefs, California lawmakers decided last year, without a dissenting vote, to require sellers of autographed collectibles to include a certificate authenticating the signature or face substantial financial penalties.
In South Carolina one political consulting firm represents more than 25 lawmakers, a couple of large state agencies and a quartet of the state's biggest corporations.
After months of debate, Missouri remains the only state in the country without a prescription drug monitoring program.
For school districts still getting their financial footing after the Great Recession, the Medicaid changes being advanced as part of the health care overhaul are sounding familiar alarms.
Opponents of strict voter ID laws won a closely watched, but perhaps temporary, victory Monday, as the Supreme Court declined to revive a 4-year-old North Carolina measure.
Charlottesville, Va., Mayor Mike Signer, after white nationalists carrying torches marched through the city this weekend in protest of its decision to sell a Confederate statue.
Eligible voters in Wisconsin who lacked a valid photo ID and may have been blocked from casting a ballot in November, the first presidential election with the state's strict voter ID law in effect.
Utah continues to reject federal guidelines meant to prevent prison rape — and now is one of only two states that won't comply, according to a recently released U.S. Department of Justice report.
Thousands of Flint children are expected to receive extra money this month for nutritional foods that can limit the effects of lead exposure.
Kentucky State Police announced Thursday that the agency will change its requirements for becoming a state trooper recruit.
EL CENIZO -- Leo Ayala parked his white pickup on the Texas banks of the Rio Grande and cast fishing lures toward Mexico into the muddy waters of the Rio Grande on a warm, still Wednesday afternoon.
It's not fraud. It's tens of millions of inaccurate registration records. Election administrators need better tools.
A group of white nationalists carried torches Saturday night in Charlottesville, Virginia while protesting the planned removal of Confederate statues in the city -- an incident that has provoked anger and frustration from politicians and activists.
Anthem announced Friday morning that it will stop pursuing Cigna, a merger that long ago turned into a hostile takeover bid.
Behaviorally informed interventions can improve outcomes. Louisville's approach shows the wisdom of starting small.
Gov. Chris Christie's veto statement for a bill that would have made New Jersey the first in the nation to ban marriage for anyone under the age of 18.
Non-English-speaking children in Oklahoma that state Rep. Mike Ritze wants to let federal immigration agents question to determine if they're U.S. citizens. Under federal law, children have a right to attend public school regardless of immigration status.
Many predict severe, long-term consequences for the 2020 count and all the programs that rely on it.
Attorney General Ken Paxton has dropped a lawsuit against the city of Brownsville over a 2010 ordinance that imposed a $1 per-transaction fee on plastic bags offered at grocery stores and other retailers.
The email or letter looks official, and it contains an attention-grabbing message: The state is holding on to your unclaimed property, which may be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. All you have to do is pay a fee upfront or provide your personal information and the money is yours.
John Legend, the award-winning singer-songwriter and University of Pennsylvania graduate, has pumped a little celebrity into Tuesday’s Democratic primary election for district attorney in Philadelphia.