North Dakota Lawmakers heard testimony on a bill that would increase infrastructure to combat food insecurity in the state.
Currently offenders are required to register for at least 15 years. The bill would allow low-risk offenders to petition the courts to get out of registering after 7 years.
The legendary film critic, who appears this weekend at New York's Metrograph in conversation, tells IndieWire about his ...
Congressional Republicans have reintroduced legislation that would amend Title IX to explicitly prohibit transgender girls ...
Illinois residents may soon be able to present state identification by opening an app on their smartphone or smartwatch. Here ...
A new guided missile Navy destroyer ship will be named in honor of former Mississippi governor and U.S. Secretary of the Navy ...
Abner Green, executive secretary of the American Committee for the Protection of Foreign Born (ACPFB), was sentenced by a New ...
A dozen more current and former local elected officials, including three mayors, have endorsed Jersey City Steve Fulop for ...
William Joseph Gerdeman, age 75, passed away peacefully, surrounded by family on December 14, 2024, after a brief battle ...
The Investor Protection Unit (IPU) of the Delaware Department of Justice has joined a $17 million settlement with Edward D. Jones & Co., L.P. (“Edward ...
Jan. 14—LIMA — Lima schools Superintendent Jill Ackerman will retire in August. The superintendent announced her retirement Monday when the Lima school board accepted her resignation ...