-
The Cuyahoga Valley National Park owns and maintains about 300 buildings. Even though the park is operating without federal funding due to the government shutdown, its budget is typically limited for preservation and upkeep, officials say.
-
How tech companies and government officials handle local impacts will shape the industry's future in the U.S.
-
The East Archwood site will replace the aging facility at Fountain Street. WM says conversations will continue regarding community's concerns.
-
WM defends proposal to build a waste transfer station on Akron's east side. Residents want more timeWM has proposed building a waste transfer facility on Akron's east side. The plan includes closing an aging facility that has long been a problem for the neighborhood around it on Fountain Street.
-
The city of Cleveland and its partners are working on plans to better address poisoning from lead-based paint at rental properties following last week’s report highlighting 11 positive cases in children from properties that had been deemed lead-safe.
-
As climate change makes hurricanes stronger and more intense, island communities like Longboat Key are particularly susceptible to catastrophic damage from hurricanes. Residents say they are sticking around.
-
Many residents impacted by inland flooding near Tampa can't return home as floodwaters slowly recede. One church in Valrico is providing food and other resources to residents in the neighborhood.
-
The plight of the river, which empties into Lake Erie at Cleveland, helped inspire the Clean Water Act. Now it attracts kayakers and anglers and could soon be removed from an EPA watchlist.
-
Import and export teams from the United States and the Philippines visited the farm in Farmersville, Ohio, to learn more about the U.S. Grain Marketing system.
-
As Floridians returned to their homes after Hurricane Milton, more than 1 million residents were still without power Saturday night. Power outages caused hours-long waits for fuel at gas stations.
-
Florida residents are being encouraged to shelter in place, as hazards such as storm surges, tornadoes and high winds and flash flood warnings were extended into early Thursday morning.
-
A severe solar storm is headed to Earth that could stress power grids even more as the U.S. deals with major back-to-back hurricanes, space weather forecasters said Wednesday.