Teachers at the charter school will decide whether to remove the teachers’ union after more than a year of stalled contract negotiations.
“His investments of time and energy and relationships, it has a much bigger impact than an athletic director or anybody else," athletics director Laird Veatch said.
The former top baseball operations boss of the Red Sox is quietly learning the Cardinals from top to bottom while the team foreshadows an eventual transition in front-office leadership.
Jones, first elected in 2021, is the first major candidate to announce plans to run for the city’s top job next year.
City SC midfield star Eduard Lowen is ready to return from a hamstring injury, and he's also been dealing with his wife's battle with brain cancer
The disagreement threatens to kill other bills pending in the Senate.
The court upheld the closures of St. Francis of Assisi parish in Franklin County and St. Catherine of Alexandria in Ste. Genevieve County.
In some areas, like pitching and defense, the Cardinals have made gains. Those have been offset by big offensive declines. The result: a small improvement and a big red flag.
The NHL playoffs are no place for the weak and timid. Teams clear the path to victory with punishing hits.
Bring your Cards, Blues, Mizzou, SLU and MLS questions and comments, and talk to columnist Jeff Gordon in his weekly live chat.
After guiding Vashon to unparalleled success, coach Tony Irons has stepped away from the basketball program and will assume the head coaching duties at Mineral Area College.
There’s an existential question at the heart of writer/director John Krasinski’s new kid-friendly semi-animated movie “IF.” It’s a simple query, but it speaks to the limitless potential of a child’s imagination, and it gets asked again and again: “what if?”
St. Louisans may take the Eads Bridge for granted. But 150 years ago, it was considered one of the wonders of the modern world, an engineering marvel with Gilded Age backers and a creator compared to Leonardo da Vinci.
The pace of restaurant openings in St. Louis remains rapid. Can't keep up? Ian Froeb's got you.
Brian Viamontes started doing shows around St. Louis in 2012 where he built a following for his dynamic art works.
Letter: Should the taxpayers pay for the thoughtless, reckless behavior of our elected officials simply because they hide behind the shield of “legislative immunity”?
Letter: Logically, if all zygotes are "persons," this means that many "persons" are routinely killed during the in vitro fertilization process. Are these considered abortions or homicides?
Letter: Stigmatization is among the major impacts of scabies. Sensationalized articles without adequate reporting add to this risk rather than helping to inform our community.
Letter: Pig moms, for example, deserve humane treatment. But they are not vegan. If not confined to a crate, they sometimes eat their babies.
Conversations with St. Louis leaders. Presented by Purina
Curtis Francois, owner and CEO of World Wide Technology Raceway, explains his goals for the track and the impact of having 100,000 fans stream into the St. Louis area.
Carlton Adams, chief operating officer of Operation Food Search, explains how the group is using education programs and a mobile farmer’s market to help with food deserts.
In part two, Jason Hall, CEO of Greater St. Louis Inc., discusses how welcoming immigrants and refugees will help the area’s population grow.
In part one of this interview, Greater St. Louis Inc. CEO Jason Hall explains the 2030 jobs plan and focusing on the region’s strengths.
The St. Charles County Planning and Zoning Commission has recommended approval of a new, less dense subdivision proposed for the southern part of the Tall Tree project rejected last year.
The $40 million rehabilitation facility is the fourth in the St. Louis region operated by The Rehabilitation Institute, a partnership between Encompass Health and BJC HealthCare.
The case involved a Clayton-based private equity group that buys up Walmart-adjacent properties in strip malls.
In a legal marijuana market full of flowers, vapes and pre-rolled joints, cannabis-infused meals have are carving out a space for themselves.
Nation & World
Donald Trump’s lawyers are grilling Michael Cohen in a bid to discredit his testimony in the hush money trial, which has Friday off so Trump can attend son Barron’s graduation.
A proposed rule sent to the federal register recognizes the medical uses of cannabis and acknowledges it has less potential for abuse than some of the nation’s most dangerous drugs.
President Joe Biden will have his most direct engagement with college students since the start of the Israel-Hamas war when he speaks at Morehouse College's commencement.
Whistleblower questions delays and mistakes in way EPA used sensor plane after fiery Ohio derailment
The U.S. government has a specialized plane loaded with advanced sensors that the EPA brags is always ready to deploy within an hour of a chemical disaster. But the plane didn’t fly in eastern Ohio until four days after last year's disastrous Norfolk Southern derailment.
Interact With Us
City SC beat writer Tom Timmermann and guest co-host Carter Chapley talk about Eduard Lowen’s return from both an injury and his wife’s fight with brain cancer, as well as City SC’s weekend meeting with FC Cincinnati, one of the top teams in Major League Soccer.
🎧 The hosts talk about why too few residential units are being built, and what actions are needed to make change at the local level.
The curtains eventually fall on every popular television program. Sure, "The Simpsons" is still going strong at 35 seasons, but that's the exception rather than the rule.
Jennifer Narramore, owner and co-founder of Tornado Talk, and her team have been sharing tornado survival stories from the last 70 years.