Initial damage assessment reports indicate that this month’s flood damage will not meet the requirements to request federal assistance.
Cassville residents and leaders are in the dark about who would build a $1B center or where it would go. They used zoning to block the plan.
Wisconsin Watch readers are submitting researched, thoughtful commentaries on issues from poverty and water policy to the state’s drinking culture.
Mandela Barnes was the only Democrat who split from the governor’s executive order allowing commutations for murder convictions.
The swift pace of the changes highlights how school district leaders rely on referendums to keep their budgets balanced — and how, for many, the ask to voters was a final effort before resorting ...
Yes. Incarcerating someone in Wisconsin correctional institutions costs far more than tuition at a state technical college.
The Public Service Commission approved a new rate structure for We Energies’ largest data center customers, requiring them to cover the full cost of new power generation and fuel.
Designed to lure data centers, the sales tax break is now drawing scrutiny. But some say the development boom will boost other types of revenue.
Rock County has an all-hands-on-deck approach to keep new clerks in the field as Wisconsin wrestles with unprecedented turnover.
A Sherman Park kid tapped into a new way to help the homeless in Milwaukee by founding a new youth-led nonprofit that collects aluminum cans for cash.
A conservative group led by one of the investigators involved in the Michael Gableman 2020 election probe brought the case.
As a Pixar movie depicts the benefits of beavers, Wisconsin continues to have an antagonistic relationship with nature’s builders.