An Overland Park college student is getting an unwelcome crash course in the U.S. drug development and approval process after a new company gained the exclusive rights to a life-saving drug and plans to charge $375,000 a year.
Kansas City-area restaurants and grocery stores with seven or more priority or critical health code violations. Includes operations in the Crossroads, Crown Center, Lawrence, the Northland and Overland Park.
An incredible day on Wall Street, which saw major indexes finishing at least 5 percent higher, is spurring early gains in Asia as some traders returned from a Christmas break.
Nordstrom released more renderings for its proposed Plaza location showing a contemporary design with a curving facade. Historic Kansas City has issued a statement of approval on the project.
Kansas City-area restaurants and grocery stores with seven or more priority or critical health code violations. Includes operations in Lenexa, Olathe, Overland Park, south Plaza, Ward Parkway and Westport.
Gov. Rick Snyder on Friday signed $1.3 billion budget legislation that is tied to a contentious plan to shift tax revenue for schools to other priorities such as roads, environmental cleanup and recycling.
Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina is poised to win re-election as critics question whether the nation's tremendous economic success has undermined its fragile democracy.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency has reversed course and will go back to issuing and renewing National Flood Insurance Program policies, despite the ongoing government shutdown.
Across Asia, there are pockets of optimism but also a pervasive feeling of disquiet as 2018 closes, a lot of which is linked to the twin political behemoths whose presence has been felt this year in every corner of Asia: China and Trump.
Mississippi's pension system is asking Attorney General Jim Hood to clarify a ruling that retired public employees can collect their pensions while serving in the Legislature.
Asthma-related emergency room visits rose significantly between 2006 and 2015, according to data compiled by the Kansas City Health Department. Health officials have a few theories about why, but want further study.