Archives

Audio: 
Shared via
WPR
Federal, state, local and tribal partners are roughly halfway to their goal of cleaning up one of the largest polluted hotspots on the Great Lakes. The St. Louis River is one of 43 sites listed under the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement as an area of concern.
Audio: 
Shared via
WPR
Milwaukee city officials announced plans to build the largest solar energy system in the city's history. The 8-acre project will be located close to General Mitchell International Airport.
No matter how methods have changed over the ages, a lot of time and energy go into transforming the springtime sap flows of maple trees into sweet, sugary syrup.
Audio: 
Shared via
WPR
It's a busy afternoon at Sherman Phoenix on Milwaukee's north side. The 30 restaurants and small shops at the business incubator are nearly all owned by African Americans. Many of the owners are women.
Shared via
PBS Wisconsin
Wisconsin is prepared to test up to hundreds of potential COVID-19 cases with new test kits from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Audio: 
Shared via
WPR
Researchers with UW-Madison and others analyzed groundwater data collected by the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources from 2000 to 2018. They found radium levels were trending upward in wells drawing from a regional aquifer underlying the southern two-thirds of the state.
Audio: 
Shared via
WPR
Within the health care system, there’s increasing recognition of the role that housing plays in health. Hospitals, insurers and government officials around the country are taking steps to fix health issues that have links to poor housing.
Audio: 
Shared via
WPR
As the U.S. Department of Agriculture forecasts a slight decline in farm income in 2020, Wisconsin agriculture experts continue to worry about the financial resilience of the state's farms.
Audio: 
Shared via
WPR
Two labs in Wisconsin can now test for the novel coronavirus locally instead of sending samples to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for testing in Atlanta.
Shared via
PBS Wisconsin
The Center for Disease Control and Prevention has declared that the novel coronavirus has the potential to spread more widely in the U.S. Wisconsin Department of Health Services deputy administrator Chuck Warzecha discusses what the state is doing to prepare for an outbreak.