
Trump tariffs raise concerns across the political spectrum
Voices across the political spectrum are voicing concerns about President Donald Trump’s news tariffs, expressing fears of higher prices, difficult markets and chaotic supply chains.
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Voices across the political spectrum are voicing concerns about President Donald Trump’s news tariffs, expressing fears of higher prices, difficult markets and chaotic supply chains.
Milwaukee County’s Chief Medical Examiner will no longer allow timely access to preliminary reports on deaths such as homicides, fatal car accidents and other causes, according to a March 4, 2025 story in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
Daryl Wermedal discussed his life and 34-year career at Agri-View with another member of the Agri-View’s Jason Maloney in a Feb. 27 story because he officially closed his career as an Agri-View sales representative on Feb. 28, 2025.
“Your Right to Know” is available for publication at no cost. For the 19th consecutive year, the Wisconsin Freedom of Information Council is bestowing its annual Openness
For the 19th consecutive year, the Wisconsin Freedom of Information Council is bestowing its annual Openness in Government Awards, or Opees, meant to recognize outstanding efforts to protect the state’s tradition of open government, as well as highlight impediments.
This March, Wisconsin is set to come alive with an array of unique festivals across the state!
As the Marinette City Council weighed legal options stemming from a court ruling finding in favor of a plaintiff, the city’s mayor said Marinette has spent $240,000 on the 2020 Open Meetings lawsuit.
Volume 113, Number 41 of the Wakefield News-Bessemer Pick & Axe — the issue published Feb. 28, 2025 — will be its last one, according to editor and publisher Andy Hill in an interview printed Feb. 27 in The Daily Globe of Ironwood.
NNA members are encouraged to contract their members of Congress to counteract reports that President Donald Trump will impose a 25% tariff on imports from Canada on March 4, 2025.
State and local governments in Wisconsin have begun to spend funds they have received from the state’s opioid settlements, which have totaled $208 million so far and will total roughly $780 million by 2038.