Recovery
Latest Stories
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Providers in St. Louis were awarded the money through the Missouri Department of Health’s Crisis Counseling Program, which has for decades been funded by FEMA to help build hope and resiliency in disaster survivors.
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When Typhoon Halong devastated Western Alaska last month, the hardest-hit communities were accessible only by air or water. That complicated response efforts and makes rebuilding a challenge.
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Although no locally transmitted cases have been reported in the continental United States, Zika has been diagnosed in more than three dozen returning travelers, including two northeast Ohio residents who became ill in January.
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Although the phone has been taken as evidence, there is still no way to find out what information it holds due to the encryption key that only the owner can unlock.
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Nixle will be replaced by Smart911, allowing users to create a “safety profile” for their homes that provides 911 dispatchers information in case of an emergency.
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Nearly five years have passed since the Great East Japan Earthquake and restoration projects are in full swing.
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U.S. Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker noted an increased need for improved communication with private-sector companies, something spurred further by the ever-growing number of devices connecting to the Internet of Things.
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Snowpacks melted rapidly. River waters, with nowhere else to go, swelled higher than anyone had seen in at least half a century.
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What makes Dallas appealing to people also attracts diseases.
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After back-to-back years of catastrophic forest fires, some state lawmakers want that to change.
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FEMA urges preparedness and offers tips to be ready when it counts.
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The increasing uncertainty stems not only because of the first case reported in Minnesota but also because a Texas case was attributed to sexual contact, amid previous assertions that only infected Aedes aegypti species of mosquitoes spread the disease
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St. Paul also offers SnowAlerts via e-mail and text messages in four languages.
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Also on Tuesday, President Barack Obama signed an executive order to institute seismic safety codes for all federal buildings, similar to the executive order issued last year requiring flood protection for federal buildings near bodies of water.
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'We’ve had a lot of people who have come to us and they’ve said this appeared to be a perfect response. But we know that internally we still had some pretty chaotic things going on.'