A couple hundred overlooked public officials control the U.S. power grid — and some of them are on your ballots.
Dozens of Wisconsin communities will receive more than $273 million from the state for drinking water projects that include removing lead pipes and addressing PFAS contamination. Gov. Tony Evers ...
In 2019, Sacred Grounds was launched in Detroit. Since then, the program has grown across four Great Lakes cities — Cleveland ...
With lots of domestic well users and plenty of polluting industries, Michiganders are among the nation’s most likely to have ‘forever chemicals’ in their well water, according to a landmark federal ...
We spoke with Rebeka Ndosi, founder of the Maji ya Chai Land Sanctuary, a Black-led healing sanctuary just outside of Two ...
Advocates say Democrats and Republicans are leagues apart on climate change, so when looking for a climate-minded candidate, ...
As Chinese electric vehicle maker BYD puts down roots in Mexico, Harris pledges “the next generation of breakthroughs” will be built in the U.S. Trump promises gasoline vehicles “for a long, long time ...
Issues like the economy, abortion and immigration — not climate change, Lee said. He noted less than 1 percent of likely ...
The biochemical benefits of manoomin, or wild rice, according to collaborative research being done at the University of ...
As the season shifts and the air chills, the warmth and sustenance that the wild foods of fall offer become evermore ...
If voters approve the measure, the state will keep tax revenues above $29 million annually and use them for water projects.
In 1998, a hunter named Mitch Rompola claimed he’d shot the biggest whitetail in North America. It was all over the news, but instead of becoming a famous hunter, he became an infamous one.