News

Advertisement -by Christopher Shea, Rhode Island Current July 10, 2025 For the first time in half a dozen years, the number ...
If you’re not first, you’re last. But sometimes you can be both. If the kei car harassment wasn’t bad enough, a recent study ...
Portuguese food may not be very widespread in the United States, but these restaurants serve up delicious examples of the ...
Maine has the highest vacancy rate in the U.S.—and lawmakers are weighing property tax reform. Could a “Taylor Swift Tax” be ...
Rhode Island might have the oldest continuous Fourth of July celebration in the country with the Town of Bristol parade - but ...
Spending cuts feared by state officials − including cuts in federal Medicaid payments − do not become effective until 2028, ...
Where have all the children gone? While the nationwide under-18 population fell by 1.4 percent from 2010 to 2020, and in ...
Fentanyl is the prime cause of an overdose death rate that has tripled over the last decade. In 2013, there were 3,105 deaths ...
The Narrow River Preservation Association and John H. Chafee National Wildlife Refuge work to protect and maintain the river ...
The Trump administration wants to reverse the decline in the US birthrate. But in 21 states, deaths already outnumber births.
It used to be jokingly asserted that Congress did less damage when Washington, D.C., was much less air-conditioned than now.
University of Rhode Island oceanographer Jaime Palter speaks out on what she thinks the impacts will be of cuts to federal science funding.