Why Republican-led states keep leaving a group that verifies voter rolls
the Electronic Registration Information Center, commonly called ERIC, compares voter registration data from participating states with federal death and postal records to help states rid voter rolls of...
View ArticleRepublican states arm teachers, fortify buildings in another year of school...
Rows of flowers and candles in front of Central Visual and Performing Arts High School in St. Louis, following the shooting on Oct. 24, 2022 that left two dead and several others wounded (Rebecca...
View ArticleDrought hits the Midwest, threatening crops and the world’s food supply
Corn grows at a farm in Belvidere, Ill. Many farmers throughout the Midwest are dealing with the fallout of a drought that has harmed corn and soybean growth. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)City leaders in...
View ArticleCities have ways to curb gun violence; feds are giving them more money
Police in Minneapolis unravel crime scene tape in 2020, a year marked by a stark rise in homicides. Community violence intervention programs offer a data-backed alternative to policing (Brandon...
View ArticleIn reversal, some states make it harder for people with felony convictions to...
Voters in Minneapolis, Minn., line up to vote during the 2018 midterm elections. Minnesota is one of two states this year that expanded the right to vote to people with felony convictions upon release...
View ArticleAs ranked choice voting gains momentum, parties in power push back
Voters cast their ballots in Boise, Idaho, during the May 2022 primary. Idaho was one of three states this year that banned the use of ranked choice voting. (Otto Kitsinger for Idaho Capital Sun)Over...
View ArticleCourts, state officials hesitate to keep Trump off 2024 ballots
A pro-Trump mob breaks into the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021 in Washington, DC. (Win McNamee/Getty Images).Some scholars say a little-known, Civil War-era provision in the U.S. Constitution should...
View ArticleIn face of threats, election workers vow: ‘You are not disrupting the...
Since the 2020 presidential election, state and local election officials nationwide have been bombarded with threats, as lies perpetuated by former President Donald Trump and his allies around “rigged”...
View ArticleFrom flush to faucet: More places look to turn sewage into tap water
Wastewater is forced through microscopic holes in tightly wrapped membranes wound in these fiberglass vessels during the reverse osmosis stage of purification at Orange County’s Groundwater...
View ArticleKids are flooded with social media and news. Some states want to help them...
More students are receiving media literacy education nationwide to combat the spread of social media misinformation and disinformation (Chris McGrath/Getty Images)Young people may be digital natives,...
View ArticleGunfire, screams, carnage: As mass shootings proliferate, training gets more...
Deputies in the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department carry an actor playing a gunshot victim to an ambulance during a January mass casualty simulation (Matt Vasilogambros/Stateline).SAN DIEGO, Calif....
View ArticleFeds deliver stark warnings to state election officials ahead of November
Late last month, local governments in Colorado, Missouri and Pennsylvania were hit with ransomware attacks (Stephen Maturen/Getty Images).WASHINGTON — Federal law enforcement and cybersecurity...
View ArticleFearing political violence, more states ban firearms at polling places
Over the past several years, national voting rights and gun violence prevention advocates have been sounding the alarm over increased threats around elections, pointing to ballooning disinformation,...
View ArticleCash-strapped election offices have fewer resources after bans on private grants
(Stephen Maturen/Getty Images) This month, Wisconsin joined 27 other states that have banned or restricted local governments’ use of private donations to run cash-strapped election offices, buy voting...
View ArticleElection monitors nervously practice for the ‘big dance in November’
Lamont Hart, a voter protection volunteer for the New Georgia Project, waits to speak with voters outside the Cobb County Senior Wellness Center in Marietta, Ga. He was one of many election monitors...
View ArticleWhy Republican-led states keep leaving a group that verifies voter rolls
the Electronic Registration Information Center, commonly called ERIC, compares voter registration data from participating states with federal death and postal records to help states rid voter rolls of...
View ArticleRepublican states arm teachers, fortify buildings in another year of school...
Rows of flowers and candles in front of Central Visual and Performing Arts High School in St. Louis, following the shooting on Oct. 24, 2022 that left two dead and several others wounded (Rebecca...
View ArticleDrought hits the Midwest, threatening crops and the world’s food supply
Corn grows at a farm in Belvidere, Ill. Many farmers throughout the Midwest are dealing with the fallout of a drought that has harmed corn and soybean growth. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)City leaders in...
View ArticleCities have ways to curb gun violence; feds are giving them more money
Police in Minneapolis unravel crime scene tape in 2020, a year marked by a stark rise in homicides. Community violence intervention programs offer a data-backed alternative to policing (Brandon...
View ArticleIn reversal, some states make it harder for people with felony convictions to...
Voters in Minneapolis, Minn., line up to vote during the 2018 midterm elections. Minnesota is one of two states this year that expanded the right to vote to people with felony convictions upon release...
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