City News
Hundreds of Boston-area hotel workers go on strike
Wages, pensions, work rules and insurance ...
Read More Washington lawmakers to introduce ban on flavored tobacco products, including menthol cigarettes
The "Flavors Hook Kids Washington" campaign ...
Read More Washington state puts $29 million toward loans for communities most impacted by ‘war on drugs’
Gustavo Sagrero Álvarez September 03, 2024 / 6:03 ...
Read More Councilmember Zahilay proposes $1B for middle-income public housing
The plan would use bonds to ...
Read More Former Suns employee files discrimination complaint, seeking $60 million in damages, per ESPN
The former employee is seeking $60 ...
Read More ABC15 follows up with Yuma mayor to discuss immigration, border security
Mayor Doug Nicholls continues to call ...
Read More Queen Creek Council unanimously approves policy to ban DEI practices
A town representative says the policy ...
Read More Chicago to close 3 migrant shelters by end of October, city says
By Rob Hughes Tuesday, September 10, ...
Read More Wrongfully convicted man awarded $50M in lawsuit against City of Chicago, police detectives
By Nate Rodgers Published September 9, 2024 ...
Read More Disney no longer magical to guests denied Disability Access Service
By Andrew J. Campa Sept. 1, 2024 6:30 ...
Read More Search Posts or Subscribe
Search Posts or Subscribe
[searchandfilter fields="category" hierarchical="1" types="select" submit_label="Search (Scroll down for result)" all_items_labels="Select Cause" ]
Travel time after Dobbs spiked in states that curbed abortion access, with Arizona seeing surge from Texas
Emma Bradford/Cronkite News July 14, 2025 WASHINGTON – In 14 states that made abortion all but impossible to obtain after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, women seeking to end a pregnancy had to drive four times further on average – 11.3 hours, up from 2.8 hours. “People are spending a lot of time…
Read More Core of who we are: ‘Black Folk Photography’ inspires reflection at Carver Museum
Travis Bradley/Cronkite News July 2, 2025 PHOENIX — The George Washington Carver Museum and Cultural Center wasn’t always a national landmark. Nearly 100 years ago, it was the Phoenix Union Colored High School – a symbolic representation of the reprehensible race relations in the Valley during the 1920s. Today, it is affectionately known as “The…
Read More Valley program helps people and the animals they can’t live without
ABC15 talked with Marion and her husband, Bob Auray, who founded what is now the Companion Animal Program at St. Vincent De Paul in Phoenix. By: Kaley O’Kelley Posted 6:48 AM, Jul 01, 2025 PHOENIX — It started with a simple question asked over lunch. Marion Auray, who had spent years working in animal rescue, was chatting…
Read More As tensions boil over Trump policy, Arizona high school athletes contend with immigration uncertainty in their communities
Sebastian Mondaca Sepulveda/Cronkite News June 9, 2025 PHOENIX – While President Donald Trump’s decision to deploy National Guard troops to Los Angeles has garnered national attention, a quieter storyline is unfolding at high schools in Arizona. Young athletes from diverse backgrounds are speaking out as they witness the growing fears in their communities surrounding deportation.…
Read More Hundreds march in Chicago Disability Pride Parade that celebrates diversity, demands accessibility
Katherine Weaver, Chicago Tribune Sat, July 26, 2025 at 2:31 PM CDT You wouldn’t guess that Matt Keeth has a severe visual impairment from the way he skateboarded up and down Chicago’s Disability Pride Parade in the Loop — if not for the red-and-white striped cane he rolls in front of him. Keeth, 31, a…
Read More Berkeley activist uses Disability Pride Month to promote disability quilt project
By Ryan Yamamoto Updated on: July 28, 2025 / 9:27 AM PDT Every July, Pride Disability Month gives Maya Morya Selkie Scott another reason to celebrate and cover herself in sequins, color, and a lot of fabulous glam. “I am a living, breathing, dancing, rainbow,” said Scott. But for Scott, who uses an electric wheelchair…
Read More A Brand-New Disability Cultural Center Opens in San Francisco
Janea Melido Jul 15 Liz Henry first became a wheelchair user in 1993, while living in poverty and navigating a world of uncertainty. The tools aiding their transition were sparse: a few issues of New Mobility magazine, a library book written by an author with arthritis and a manual wheelchair stolen out of necessity from Valley Medical…
Read More Los Angeles weighs a disaster registry. Disability advocates warn against false assurances.
By Miranda Green July 14, 2025 / 5:00 AM EDT In the wake of January’s deadly wildfires, Los Angeles County leaders are weighing a disaster registry intended to help disabled and senior residents get connected to emergency responders to bring them to safety during disasters. County supervisors approved a feasibility study this spring for such a voluntary database.…
Read More Mother shares struggles obtaining help for her children through early intervention disability program
By Lauren Victory July 11, 2025 / 6:45 PM CDT About 60,000 children with developmental disabilities qualify for a free Illinois program that provides speech, physical therapy, and other services. It’s called “early intervention” and can be a game-changer. The problem is that the service is delayed for more than 2,000 kids. Meet the Heath…
Read More San Jose mayor, leaders ask for alleged racist text messages between councilmembers to be released
ABC7 News reached out to every one of the people allegedly involved, but has not received a response back from anyone By Dustin Dorsey Monday, June 9, 2025 SAN JOSE, Calif. (KGO) — The San Jose Silicon Valley NAACP and San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan are calling for the release of text messages between City Councilmembers…
Read More