News

One in every six Tri-Cities households receive SNAP benefits, according to USDA data. That’s nearly 17,000 Tri-Cities ...
Steve Ghan, a retired PNNL scientist and a member of Friends of PNNL, told the Herald the impacts of jobs that would be lost ...
From Medicaid and food stamps to cutting edge scientific research, this is what the tax cuts will cost the Tri-Cities.
Republican Rep. Dan Newhouse’s advocacy for nuclear energy is being credited with securing a key win for the Tri-Cities and ...
Kayaking in the Tri Cities of Washington's wine country is a mix of epic cliffs and rolling farm country. Top spots to kayak ...
The Trump Administration says it is withholding nearly $7 billion across the 50 states to conduct a review to ensure federal ...
Travelers will no longer need to slip off their shoes going through the security checkpoint at the Tri-Cities Airport in ...
Recreational fireworks create dangers beyond fires and injuries. Explosives in neighborhoods can traumatize veterans ...
The Tri-Cities are among the fastest growing parts of Washington, according to 2020 Census data. Here’s how they’re dealing with explosive growth Aug. 21, 2022 Updated Sun., Aug. 21, 2022 at 4 ...
Tri-Cities DOE officials left work early Thursday afternoon as snow closed the nuclear site, and they were not due back at work until Tuesday after the long Washington’s Birthday weekend.
The Tri-Cities population grew to an estimated 316,600 this spring, a gain of nearly 13,000 people since the 2020 Census. With a 4.3% growth rate, the Tri-Cities is outpacing Washington state ...
The Tri Cities have a combined population of about 316,000 people. A century ago, it was a sleepy out of the way place too dry for conventional agriculture. Change came when two massive federal ...