News

Often overlooked as a dimension of the health effects of war, the impacts of conflict on the environment are gaining increasing attention. Rebecca Sers reports.
Gov. JB Pritzker should sign a bill that permits a person filing a case in an Illinois court to include out-of-state ...
The United States and Mexico signed an agreement on Thursday to end the flow of raw sewage into the Tijuana River, which ...
They want the fossil fuel industry — instead of Illinois taxpayers — held responsible for funding green, resilient ...
When Michael Flores paid $20,000 to remove asbestos from his attic, he didn’t expect to find the toxic material still there — ...
The Sterigenics subsidiary of Broadview Heights-based Sotera Health Co. (Nasdaq: SHC) has settled more ethylene oxide claims ...
Another round of excessive heat is on the way through much of the United States next week, with heat indices predicted to reach 110 degrees Fahrenheit ...
No-till and cover crops are among the best ways to counter topsoil erosion, but Trump administration may reduce federal ...
Agustin and Ricarda Toledo loaded eight empty 5-gallon jugs onto their truck and drove to a water store some 14 miles from ...
We appear to be done bombing Iran, and to be back to helping Ukraine repeal invaders from Russia. Plus, it looks like the ...
This week in D.C. Dispatch, Sen. Chuck Grassley, along with Senate Judiciary Committee Republicans, voted to advance several ...
Their aim is to speed up meaningful regulation to mitigate high nitrate concentration in southeastern Minnesota, arguing it has a detrimental effect on human and ecological health.