Buy Tickets now for KBIA's Science Friday Live Remote Taping at Jesse Auditorium on May 10, 2025 from 6-8p.m.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services appears poised to cut a $56 million annual grant program that pays for some of Missouri's overdose reversal medication and training.
MISSOURI NEWS
-
They’ve been studying to work at agencies including NOAA. Then those jobs got cut.
-
Protesters voice concerns about federal cuts to National Institute of Health funding in Missouri
-
Legislation that could reach the governor’s desk this week would replace local control of the department with a state board.
-
Federal Labor union members protest against DOGE job terminations.
-
Missouri Republicans are gearing up for an unusual 2026 election cycle in which state legislative and countywide contests and ballot items could take precedence over statewide races.
-
This is the first line of duty death in the department's history.
NPR TOP STORIES
-
Meet Bridgette and Paula Powers, identical twins who speak in synch and dedicate themselves to animal conservation.
-
On Thursday, three federal judges in Maryland, New Hampshire and Washington, D.C., said Trump's anti-DEI efforts were on shaky legal ground.
-
There's still a lot of need in Baltimore's Sandtown-Winchester neighborhood, where Freddie Gray lived. People from the neighborhood work to meet it.
MORE FROM KBIA and the Missouri News Network
-
A manufacturer of industrial circuit breakers announced Tuesday that it will expand its Columbia plant as part of a broader investment in facilities across the county.
-
The company plans to hire 225 to 250 employees at its new Mexico processing facility.
-
University of Missouri Health Care and UnitedHealthcare announced an extension of their existing contract today that will last until April 30, 2027.
-
"The convenience of it is something we're all seeking." -- Megan Steen, Burrell Behavioral Health COO (North/Central Region), on the benefits of Telehealth medicine in a post-COVID world March 26, 2025
-
With less than a week to go to negotiate insurance plans, MU Health Care says it's likely that customers with Anthem will see their insurance plans falter.
-
No-excuse absentee voting opened Tuesday in Boone County for the April 8 municipal election.
In this episode, hosts Eric Fey and Brianna Lennon speak with married election officials Akyn and Noah Beck in Georgia. Akyn is the Elections Supervisor in Floyd County, and husband Noah is the Elections Director in neighboring Polk County. They spoke about how the couple met and fell in love – over poll books and precinct population data, and about how they have seen the landscape of Georgia election administration change in the last few years.
KBIA Newscasts
Missouri Health Talks
Sager | Reeves 2025 The Women
The Daily Blend