Georgia has a winter storm warning in place until Saturday morning, but state officials are urging people to stay home until ...
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released data that shows a recent spike in outbreaks of norovirus — a highly ...
U.S. employers added more than a quarter-million jobs in December, according to the Labor Department. That's far more than ...
Mike Braun will be sworn in as the 52nd governor of Indiana Monday, while Micah Beckwith will take the oath of office as ...
The official numbers are in: 2024 is the hottest year on record. Climate change is the main culprit. But there might be ...
TikTok will be asking the Supreme Court to strike down a law that could ban the app in a matter of days. The Justice Department says the law should be upheld, since it considers China a national ...
People from Venezuela, El Salvador and Honduras has had Temporary Protected Status, TPS, for the longest time. With the Trump administration promising to end TPS, Central Americans are bracing for the ...
Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona talks with NPR's Juana Summers about what went wrong and what went right in his department during the Biden administration.
NPR's Brian Mann spends time with a Ukrainian mobile artillery unit as they prep their Soviet-era mobile cannon for a nighttime attack. Their goal? Stop Russia from crossing the Dnipro River and ...
Despite some progress, the biggest blazes — the Palisades and Eaton fires — rage uncontrolled as anxious residents receive ...
The prison population has been creeping back upward. New laws in some states instituting harsher punishments threaten to further fill prisons, many of which are already understaffed and overcrowded.
About 24 million people have signed up for Affordable Care Act plans with about a week to go in open enrollment. But that could all change when President-elect Trump takes office.