U.S. Steel shareholders voted overwhelmingly in favor of the company's proposed sale to Nippon Steel Corporation, according to preliminary tallies released Friday.
Delay sought by plaintiff attorneys, not by Bell, and will push trial to Jan. 27. Bell is running in Aug. 6 Democratic primary to unseat U.S. Rep. Cori Bush
At a 75th-anniversary celebration for the World Affairs Council in St. Louis, two ex-diplomats addressed our divisions. And how about another World Expo here?
There's comedy galore this week with Mike Epps, Tim Meadows and Theo Von in town. Plus, the Chain of Rocks Park is opening. What are your plans this week?
A St. Louis judge has ordered Planned Parenthood to turn over certain documents to Attorney General Andrew Bailey in his ongoing investigation of transgender health care providers.
Councilmen Randy Hein, an accountant, and Don Hood, a former police chief, are running to complete three years of an unexpired term left vacant after the death of longtime Mayor Terry Briggs in February.
A first-of-its-kind survey of Medicaid enrollees found that nearly a quarter who were dropped from the program in the last yearβs unwinding say theyβre now uninsured.
A Rockwood school board member who made headlines in recent years for mocking students with disabilities and calling a teachers' union "terrorists" is resigning from the school board.
Trailnet's fourth annual report on local crashes said the 28 pedestrian-vehicle fatalities in the county was up from 21 in 2022 and the most in more than two decades.
A former East St. Louis police officer pleaded guilty Thursday to federal charges accusing him of failing to intervene when another officer pepper-sprayed two sleeping jail detainees.
Metro Transit officials hope that pay raises in a new contract with its paratransit van operators will help fill longstanding vacancies and improve the service that has faced sharp criticism.