Live updates: Wisconsin votes in 2022 elections
[12:16 a.m. CST] Tyler Katzenberger: The Daily Cardinal News Team is wrapping up coverage as the clock hits midnight. Here’s what you need to know before we sign off:
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[12:16 a.m. CST] Tyler Katzenberger: The Daily Cardinal News Team is wrapping up coverage as the clock hits midnight. Here’s what you need to know before we sign off:
Assisted living facility Cedarhurst of Madison notified residents they must find new homes by Dec. 10, when the facility will stop accepting Medicaid payments.
Six candidates have thrown their hats in the ring to be Madison’s next District 17 alder, filling the remainder of former Ald. Gary Halverson’s term. He resigned in late September.
Stu Levitan, a longtime resident of Madison, is famous for his books documenting the city’s history. His most recent book, “Madison in the Sixties,” focused on the cultural and political upheavals the city faced in the 1960s surrounding urban development, racial equality and the Vietnam War.
Dane County Executive Joe Parisi announced a proposal for $740,000 in funding to reduce opioid-related overdoses and deaths in the community during a press conference on Thursday.
Businesses on the 400 block of State Street have moved to new locations in anticipation of a plan to demolish and redevelop the block.
Former Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker spoke at Grainger Hall on Wednesday, describing the University of Wisconsin-Madison as a place of Marxist indoctrination and touching on several issues including the 2024 presidential election and Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” bill.
President Joe Biden and Governor Tony Evers spoke at UW-Superior this Wednesday, where they discussed the expected impact of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, which was passed in under the Biden administration in Nov. 2021.
The Common Council narrowly voted 13-7 Tuesday night to accept a $750,000 federal matching funds grant from the Department of Justice’s Office of Community Oriented Policing (COPS) Hiring Program. The grant provided by the DOJ is expected to provide funding for six additional Madison Police Department officer positions in 2023.
The Dane County Executive Committee voted 5-2 to indefinitely postpone a symbolic proposal made by Dane County Supervisor Anthony Gray, Dis. 14, to end qualified immunity for Dane County law enforcement agencies.
The Wisconsin Boys & Girls Clubs announced plans to coordinate with the Wisconsin Office of Emergency Management to distribute over 450,000 N95 masks to communities across the state at no cost to residents.
The UW Health Trauma Center reported an 80% increase in firearm injuries in 2020 and is expected to see similar levels in 2021.
In the past decade, the city of Madison has grown substantially, having gained an additional 75,361 residents with much of that growth being centered in the downtown area.
The Madison City Council is scheduled to vote to temporarily halt funding for the Bus Rapid Transit project (BRT) until it approves plans for alternate routes that avoid the State Street and Capitol Square areas.
Deputies at the Dane County Jail facility located in the City-County Building intervened in an unnamed inmate’s suicide attempt — the fifth such incident to take place in 2021.
A former Madison East High School teacher, David Krutchen, was sentenced Friday to 12 years in prison for secretly recording students in various states of undress during overnight field trips.
Madison’s Community Alternative Response for Emergency Services program, or CARES, has responded to 37 emergencies since its implementation on Sept. 1 — an average of three 911 calls per day.
The new Dane County jail currently under construction is predicted to exceed its $148 million budget approved by the Dane County Board by an additional $22 million.
Several State Street businesses have displayed signs in their storefronts voicing their disapproval with the city’s approval of two new Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) stations on the upper half of the street, claiming the new structures will drive away business.
The Common Council is slated to discuss purchasing two properties, located at 2002 Zeier Rd. and 1902 Bartillon Dr., for the construction of two separate housing facilities for homeless residents at its upcoming Tuesday meeting.