A plan to renovate the Kansas City International Airport, rather than demolish and replace it, is unrealistic and more expensive than originally suggested, a consultant for airlines that use the airport said. Lou Salomon, chief operating officer of AvAirPros, told ...
Read More »Ed dept. gives states ways to cut standardized testing
The Obama administration is offering states and local school districts a lesson plan of sorts to cut the amount of time that students spend on those fill-in-the-bubble and other standardized tests. The Education Department released guidance Tuesday to states and ...
Read More »Missouri bill aimed at block censorship of student reporters
A Missouri lawmaker is touting a bill he said will protect the state’s student journalists from censorship, written in part as a response to a recent confrontation between a University of Missouri assistant professor and a student videographer during protests ...
Read More »Kansas House GOP testing support for Supreme Court changes
Top Republicans in the Kansas House plan this week to test the support for changing how state Supreme Court justices are selected to potentially give the governor and legislators more influence. “We’ll see where people are,” House Speaker Ray Merrick, a ...
Read More »Merit selection of Arkansas justices gets new look
An AP News Analysis The March judicial elections featuring two contested Supreme Court races won’t just be a referendum on the direction voters want for a court that’s been in the middle of an unusually public dispute. It could also offer ...
Read More »Missouri lawmakers look to enforce gender-specific bathrooms
A Missouri high school’s protest over a transgender teen’s locker room use has prompted state legislators to file several bills that would make schools enforce gender-specific bathrooms and locker rooms. The Kansas City Star reports that more than 100 Hillsboro ...
Read More »Airlines restore tiny perks, like pretzels, to pacify fliers
After 15 years of near austerity, U.S. airlines are restoring some small perks for passengers crammed into coach. Don’t expect ample legroom or free checked bags. But fliers will find improved snacks, a larger selection of free movies and — ...
Read More »Federal coal sales moratorium shakes industry stronghold
Like a trusty pickup truck, Gillette has bounced through tough times before and pulled through, thanks to coal. Lately the bumps for an industry that’s brought wealth and jobs to this town are getting bigger — bankruptcies of major producers, ...
Read More »Midwest economic survey figures rise for 1st time in months
January results from a survey of supply managers in nine states in the Midwest and Plains suggest some improvement in the regional economy, but the conditions apparently didn’t engender much optimism from those surveyed, according to a report released Monday. ...
Read More »Law enforcement leaders examine new use-of-force principles
Police across the United States are rethinking how they use force amid national outrage over questionable shootings and violent arrests. The changes include efforts in Dallas to train officers to de-escalate situations by moving backward during target practice and arming ...
Read More »With Rams gone, St. Louis fights to keep federal spy agency
The departure of the Rams to Southern California killed a plan to build a $1 billion riverfront stadium to keep the team in St. Louis, making city officials more anxious than ever to keep the federal government from moving a ...
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