News

Changes in US government support for electric vehicles have led to a buying bonanza—and a darker long-term future for the US auto industry.
Rising temperatures and chronically broken cooling systems are turning the lunch rush into a deadly risk for some workers.
"We buy homes" companies are procuring disaster-damaged properties for cheap. Survivors say they're taking advantage of tragedy.
The city’s $14 billion flood system faces new threats from climate change, land subsidence, and Trump budget cuts.
A judge sided with the Miccosukee Tribe and said the ICE detention center must close. Florida officials have already appealed ...
Ramirez lives in a home on Chicago’s Southeast Side that’s serviced by a lead water pipe, a toxic relic found in most old homes in the city and many across the country. Exposure to lead can cause ...
The Department of the Interior, or DOI, has such a wide-ranging set of duties that it’s sometimes referred to in Washington, ...
Those on the “not a crisis” side (which included Jurassic Park author and nonscientist Michael Crichton) argued that much of ...
At low tide on Tybee Island, Georgia, the beach stretches out as wide as it gets with the small waves breaking far away ...
For about two decades, Americans for Prosperity, the conservative political network, has poured hundreds of millions of dollars into stalling climate action nationwide. Founded by Charles and David ...
The community had big plans for the facility site, until the Trump administration ordered it to stay open, a move it extended ...
Workers at FEMA worry that demanding disaster survivors access services using email could shut out people without internet ...