Last fall, Missouri inked a no-bid contract worth more than $30 million with a Texas company. Despite the company's promise to send the state hundreds of healthcare workers, there were many no-shows ā and the costs for services were high. Missouri Independent reporter Tessa Weinberg digs into the story.
A brochure Mario Coronadoās uncle found for the Best Healthcare Institute led Coronado to the free summer school program ā and his job as a pharmacist. Institute co-founder Steven Player of BJC Healthcare joins Coronado to discuss how the program prepares minority high school students for future studies in pharmacy and other health care fields.
The Pulitzer Arts Foundationās new exhibition āAssembly Requiredā asks visitors to engage with, construct, deconstruct and even step on art. Curatorial Associate Heather Alexis Smith gives a preview of the show ahead of its opening day on March 4.
Javad Khazaeli represents a retired Air Force lieutenant colonel swept up in the mass arrests that followed St. Louis Policeās ākettlingā tactics in 2017. He explains his shock that the city is appealing a recent appeals court verdict ā and who he thinks is really driving the cityās strategy.
Eureka native Matt Jordan talks about making a name for himself in the country-rock genre and going against the grain by emphasizing his Midwestern roots.
The nonprofit organization Forest ReLeaf has distributed tens of thousands of free trees around St. Louis. Executive director Meridith McAvoy Perkins explains how itās removing barriers to make it easier for underserved neighborhoods to plant and sustain more trees.
Since 2006, Fontbonne University has sought to record oral histories from survivors of the Bosnian War. Now the Bosnian Memory Project has a new name, a permanent home and an expanded mission. Director Adna Karamehic-Oates and Srebrenica massacre survivor Behedin Piric discuss the importance of preserving this history.
Monica Butler says gospel music history is being lost. To salvage it, she wants to open a gospel music hall of fame on the site of a historic Central West End church. She discusses her inspiration for the project and her reaction when fire broke out in the church last fall.
In the past four decades, smaller-brained birds have been shrinking, but a Wash U study finds thatās less true of their bigger-brained counterparts. Study co-author Justin Baldwin shares whatās driving the changes, as well as his passion for birds both as a researcher and bird watcher.
After Glenda Seim, 81, became the victim of a Nigerian scam artist, she herself victimized others. Seim was sentenced in federal court yesterday after pleading to two felonies. Assistant U.S. Attorney Tracy Berry and journalist Ryan Krull discuss online scams and the heartbreaking details in Seimās case.
The Agave pelona is nearly extinct, thanks to its extremely limited native habitat and threats from humans. One is in bloom now at the Missouri Botanical Garden, offering a once-in-decades opportunity to shore up the speciesā future.
The Legal Roundtable discusses how companies could face liability over their employeesā actions ā even when the employees arenāt on the clock. The panel also digs into a new lawsuit against the stateās administration of federal SNAP benefits and lawsuits challenging Missouriās new gun law.
The Legal Roundtable discusses how companies could face liability over their employeesā actions ā even when the employees arenāt on the clock. The panel also digs into a new lawsuit against the stateās administration of federal SNAP benefits and lawsuits challenging Missouriās new gun law.
The Legal Roundtable discusses how companies could face liability over their employeesā actions ā even when the employees arenāt on the clock. The panel also digs into a new lawsuit against the stateās administration of federal SNAP benefits and lawsuits challenging Missouriās new gun law.
As COVID-19 cases drop in the St. Louis region and across the U.S., researchers are wasting no time in the development of vaccines for other emerging diseases. SLU researcher Dr. Sarah George discusses vaccines in the works now and answers listener questions about antibodies, boosters and public health precautions.
Pam Hupp is now a suspect in three murders (and has been convicted of one). Defense attorney Joel Schwartz discusses the long road to exonerate his client Russ Faria and bring attention to the OāFallon, Missouri, woman now charged with killing Fariaās wife.
St. Louis-area pedestrian deaths increased in 2021 from the prior year. And while car crashes with injuries slightly decreased, thatās no reason to celebrate ā 2020 saw record-high numbers. Trailnetās Sam McCrory discusses a new study outlining the problem and offering possible solutions.
Kim Daniel waited 10 years to get housing through her Section 8 voucher. Eventually, her voucher was approved in her ideal neighborhood, but a surprise health issue left her disabled ā and almost cost her the housing she waited so long for.
Kim Daniel waited 10 years to get housing through her Section 8 voucher. Eventually, her voucher was approved in her ideal neighborhood, but a surprise health issue left her disabled ā and almost cost her the housing she waited so long for.
Since 2014, Humans of St. Louis has crafted approximately 3,500 portraits of St. Louisans. Now, highlights are compiled in a book. Co-author Lindy Drew and poet Pacia Elaine Anderson explain how it came together.