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The Supreme Court on Monday ruled to allow the Trump administration to resume its efforts to dismantle the U.S. Department of Education. What will that mean to schools, students and families?
How are states and local school districts preparing for a future without the Department of Education? NPR asks Robert Taylor, superintendent of the Wake County Public School System in North Carolina.
Wimberley, Texas, was the site of a devastating flash flood on Memorial Day weekend in 2015. Now, 10 years later, the town ...
The Senate voted by a razor-thin margin late Tuesday to advance debate on a package of funding cuts requested by President ...
In Colombia, drug gangs are waging a new kind of war — by air. Armed with cheap drones, they're targeting rivals in a ...
The small plastic instrument has long been the go-to instrument in elementary schools. But it is capable of so much more than ...
Members of QAnon believe Donald Trump is destined to defeat a Satanic cabal that included Jeffrey Epstein. How are they reacting to the Justice Department's decision not to release more information?
The withdrawal accounts for nearly half of the soldiers sent to Los Angeles in June to suppress protests over the Trump ...
Daughter of the late Congressman Raúl Grijalva wins big over Gen-Z activist Foxx in district that stretches from Tucson to Yuma, Somerton and San Luis. Daniel Butierez wins Republican nomination, to ...
The Yuma Union High School District will be starting the new school year soon on Tuesday, July 29. As families work through ...
Many state nursing home oversight agencies are understaffed. Advocates for residents say that is increasingly putting people who live in nursing homes at greater risk of abuse and neglect.
Pam Bondi sought to move past questions about her handling of the Justice Department's files from the Jeffrey Epstein ...