A state oversight board is expected to reconsider a range of programs, including money for county coroners, initiatives connected to district attorney offices, and media campaigns.
-
The Internal Revenue Service said Wednesday that it had decided that most of the more than $21 million people who live near East Palestine, Ohio, received to help them pay for temporary housing or replace their belongings aren’t taxable.
-
Calling for “500 in 500,” the push by Allegheny County leaders aims to move unhoused people out of shelters and into more permanent, stable housing.
-
On Friday, Gov. Josh Shapiro and Department of Aging Secretary Jason Kavulich formally unveiled a 10-year strategic plan called "Aging Our Way, PA," which is designed to serve as a roadmap for providing older adult services in Pennsylvania.
-
Leaders of a pro-Palestinian protest have accused University of Pittsburgh administrators of mischaracterizing their movement. They accuse school leaders of planning the forcible removal of the protesters early Tuesday morning.
-
Currently, paid time off to care for a child or relative depends on where someone lives and works. New legislation would mandate it.
-
Election officials said Pennsylvania’s redesigned mail ballot envelope was a success, but state data points to a new type of voter mistake affecting rejections.
-
Now, appeals for 2025 tax bills will be due this fall, rather than next spring.
-
State lawmakers will soon consider a bill Democrats say could close funding gaps between the Commonwealth’s poorest and wealthiest school districts.
-
A pro-Palestine demonstration on the University of Pittsburgh campus in Oakland ended early Tuesday, nearly two days after protesters marched to the Cathedral of Learning and erected a makeshift encampment on the lawn of the campus landmark.
-
A company official blamed a lack of state Medicaid reimbursements for the impending shutdown. DHS officials say the facility owes the Commonwealth approximately $800,000.