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The Gateway

Wednesday, Feb. 5 - Questions of amendments, motives, funding, and energy

1 month 3 weeks ago
The latest on hearings seeking to add abortion restrictions in Missouri, develop a plan for Rams settlement money in St. Louis, and oust the city's Personnel Director. Plus: The University of Missouri is launching a new research center that aims to provide information and context to the often controversial topics of renewable energy and transmission lines that cut through small communities. But Jana Rose Schleis reports, some are concerned its funding may cloud its findings.

Tuesday, Feb. 4 - Her false confession could help free others

1 month 3 weeks ago
Sandra Hemme served 43 years in a Missouri prison for a murder she did not commit. One key detail in her exoneration was her false confession. Reporter Sam Zeff checked in with her attorney, Sean O’Brien, to talk about how that detail sets the stage for future exoneration cases.

Monday, Feb. 3 - A sweet expansion, and a salty board meeting

1 month 3 weeks ago
We have the latest from the St. Louis Board of Aldermen after contentious debate Friday devolved into online accusations over the weekend. Plus, beloved vegan restaurant SweetArt is branching out after 16 years in St. Louis’ Shaw neighborhood with a City Foundry location: Owner Reine Keis speaks with STLPR's Jessica Rogen.

Friday, January 31 - To the Statehouse, and the stars

2 months ago
Missouri Governor Mike Kehoe gave his first State of the State Address on this week. St. Louis Public Radio’s Sarah Kellogg and Jason Rosenbaum sat down with Kehoe to discuss his priorities for the state. Plus, St. Louis band Starwolf makes music inspired by synthwave and yacht rock. STLPR's Chad Davis takes us on a journey through their latest album and musical evolution.

Wednesday, January 29 - Navigating through grief to make a change

2 months ago
This month, Missouri began enforcement of a distracted driving law: using a cell phone behind the wheel without hands-free technology can come with fees of hundreds of dollars. The Missouri Department of Transportation reports – distracted driving costs about 100 lives in the state each year. Randall Siddens is one of them. STLPR's Abby Llorico speaks with his wife Adrienne about navigating through her grief to enact change at the state level.

Monday, January 27 - Studying the Holocaust through music

2 months ago
Today is Holocaust Remembrance Day, a time to honor the millions of people murdered by the Nazis. Students in middle school and high school will soon be learning some of that history through music, in a curriculum created by the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra and the St. Louis Kaplan Feldman Holocaust Museum. Three contributors to the project speak to STLPR's Jeremy Goodwin about what they took away--and hope students do, too.

Friday, January 24 - A familiar STL County battle: Executive vs. Council

2 months 1 week ago
St. Louis County Executive Sam Page is encountering a familiar problem. After the latest election, he only has one reliable ally on the St. Louis County Council — and a host of adversaries who want to exert their power over Missouri’s largest county. St. Louis Public Radio’s Jason Rosenbaum reports on why voters could have the final say over who gets the upper hand.

Tuesday, January 21 - Jan. 6 pardon recipients include defendants from Missouri and Illinois

2 months 1 week ago
Donald Trump’s first day back in the oval office included issuing pardons to more than 1,500 people charged with attacking the U.S. Capitol at the end of his last term. Plus: A case in federal court is aiming to dismantle a decades-old wetlands law, best known for its nickname: "swampbuster." Harvest Public Media's Rachel Cramer reports on why a landholding company says the wetlands law is unconstitutional and how sustainable agriculture groups are pushing back

Friday, January 17 - An oasis in a pharmacy desert

2 months 2 weeks ago
Larger retail pharmacies are closing stores around the country, including in St. Louis. That leaves some communities vulnerable to becoming “pharmacy deserts.” A new pharmacy in north St. Louis hopes to fill the need created when a big chain drug store closed.

Thursday, January 16 - Despite IL police transparency law, many cases remain in the dark

2 months 2 weeks ago
Prosecutors in Illinois are required by law to publicly release a report if they determine they won’t bring charges against a police officer for killing someone. But Madison and St. Clair counties are some of the more populous counties in the state not doing so. St. Louis Public Radio Metro East reporter Will Bauer and Invisible Institute reporter Sam Stecklow discuss.

Wednesday, January 15 - Fluoride and public health

2 months 2 weeks ago
President elect Donald Trump’s nominee for Secretary of Health and Human Services wants cities and towns to stop adding fluoride to drinking water. St. Louis on the Air host Elaine Cha spoke with Dwight McLeod, dean of A.T. Still University’s Missouri School of Dentistry & Oral Health, about what fluoride has meant to public health.

Friday, January 10 - Repairing a broken glass recycling system

2 months 3 weeks ago
More than 28 billion glass bottles and jars end up in U.S. landfills every year, but a company in St. Louis is collecting some of those glass items and giving them new life. St. Louis Public Radio’s Ulaa Kuziez takes us to a glass processing center in North St. Louis.

Thursday, January 9 - “I gravitated to the hard things:" reflections from outgoing MO DSS Director

2 months 3 weeks ago
Missouri Department of Social Services director Robert Knodell is leaving state government next week to become city manager of Poplar Bluff. The southeast Missouri native became well known in state political circles for leading the House Republican Campaign Committee. But in an in-depth conversation with St. Louis Public Radio’s Jason Rosenbaum, Knodell detailed what drew him to lead the complex and challenging agency.

Wednesday, January 8 - A preview of MO's legislative session

2 months 3 weeks ago
For the first time since 2018, Missouri lawmakers will work with a new governor. While outgoing Gov. Mike Parson pushed a more budget-focused agenda, Gov.-elect Mike Kehoe already has established policy goals. STLPR's Sarah Kellogg has a preview on the issues expected to be front and center this year.