The latest New England stories on topics like climate change and the environment, the economy, health, racial equity, culture and politics — as reported by newsrooms of the New England News Collaborative, a 10-station consortium of the region's top public media organizations.
Our new video series, Conexión: Rooted in New England's Outdoors, tells first-person stories on how spending time outdoors inspires deeper connections with others, heritage, and nature itself.
In our series Beyond Normal, we looked at how climate change is affecting what we know, love and rely on in New England summers.
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Find news from across our region at nenc.news.
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While many students kept to business as usual on Harvard Yard, community members, particularly professors, focused on research expressed anxiety over the government's review.
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Nearly nine of out 10 Americans subscribe to video streaming services like Netflix, YouTube or Hulu. Two companies are creating similar on-demand programming for people living with dementia and their caregivers.
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The money funds birth control, STI testing and other non-abortion reproductive health care for low-income patients.
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A group of New Hampshire parents sensed trouble and hatched a plan to hold onto their child care.
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A new study from the University of Vermont takes the first-ever look at how much carbon is stored in wood in streams across the Northeast.
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Connecticut’s housing leaders are announcing a new, three-pronged approach to make it more affordable to buy and maintain a home.
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The dams in Walpole, Lebanon and Hinsdale were last licensed in 1979.
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A Wells police captain said it would save time and resources in specific scenarios. But an immigration lawyer said ICE is using the program to expand detention and deportation efforts nationally.
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Travis Cushman is accused of illegally baiting deer and night hunting following an eight month investigation by New Hampshire Fish and Game.
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While most people who have been vaccinated — or had measles as children — are protected from the virus, there are some exceptions.
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States aren’t technically members of ISO-New England, the regional grid operator. So leaving would mean instructing utilities and other organizations that own transmission lines to withdraw from the organization themselves.
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The push for more safety on the roads comes amid what the state calls a growing trend of wrong-way drivers.