Latest from the WQCS Newsroom
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"K-9 Officer Graham's specialized training in providing comfort during stressful situations makes him an invaluable asset to our campus safety efforts,” said Chief of Campus Safety Sal Cardella
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The anonymous hotline to give police, firefighters or EMS a way to seek help for trauma they receive on the job.
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Among a series of other weather records, Hurricane Milton set a one day State tornado record as well
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The project would reduce boat moorings along popular sections of Intracoastal Waterway and Loxahatchee River.
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Port St. Lucie may increase permitted locations for food trucks, but first wants to hear from residents and business owners.
In Focus - with IRSC Public Media
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From left: Impact 100 St. Lucie Vice President Canieria Gardner and President Janet Maffucci
RiverTalk from Indian River State College
From The NPR Newsroom
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The latest on the war in Ukraine and peace negotiation efforts, critics say Trump administration deportation efforts skirt due process rights, Sudanese capital of Khartoum destroyed by civil war.
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NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Tina Knowles, the mother of artists Beyoncé Knowles-Carter and Solange Knowles, about her new memoir, "Matriarch."
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NPR's A Martinez speaks to Juan Carlos Cruz, a friend of Pope Francis and a survivor of clergy sex abuse, about the pope's legacy.
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A new Trump executive order remakes the way the White House handles government regulations. NPR's Planet Money tries to make sense of what this new idea will mean.
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Tesla sales are falling dramatically, and industry analysts say it's largely due to how customers view CEO Elon Musk. NPR speaks with Matt Hiller, who designs anti-Musk stickers for Tesla owners.
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For National Poetry Month, "Morning Edition" pays homage to cowboy poetry.
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The Ukrainian capital of Kyiv is recovering from Russian attacks on Thursday that killed at least 12 people. Hear the latest on efforts to reach a peace agreement.
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NPR's Michael Martin talks with Johns Hopkins University historian Sergey Radchenko about Europe's response to U.S. peace proposals for Ukraine and Russia.
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Dan Bigley was on a fishing trip in Alaska when he accidentally came between a bear and her cubs. In this StoryCorps, he talks about the attack that left him blind and about adjusting afterward.
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Khartoum, Sudan's capital city has recently been liberated by the Sudanese army after two years of occupation. NPR visited found a hollowed out and shattered city devastated by the civil war.
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