"No life is in danger. No private property is threatened. No structure. This is just want happens in a fire adapted ecosystem," said Mark Twain National Forest District Ranger, Cody Lunsford.
The Springfield-Greene County Health Department has a special Outreach Team whose job is to educate and recommend guidelines in all things COVID-19 to both businesses and the public.
At least 66 Republican state lawmakers from Missouri on Thursday signed a letter calling on Congress to reject presidential electoral votes from swing states that went for President-elect Joe Biden.
The Southeastern Conference’s signature mid-afternoon Saturday game will move from CBS to ABC starting in 2024 as part of a new 10-year contract with ESPN and the powerhouse football league announced Thursday.
The U.S. Senate unanimously passed bipartisan legislation Thursday aimed to improve the safety of duck boats following the 2018 tragedy on Table Rock Lake.
Nearly 27 days after a Willard couple was shot and killed outside their home, the Willard Police Chief said he is confident that the primary parties involved in the crime will now be held accountable.
Through the coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES Act,) nearly $3 million in federal coronavirus aid has helped Missourians find employment opportunities.
Arkansas’ and Missouri’s Republican attorney generals have brought the state into an effort by GOP officials across the nation to reverse President Donald Trump’s election loss.
Springfield Pool and Spa service technicians out on their daily work see a man stealing a package from a mailbox and track him down, retrieving the package and showing us all there are still Good Samaritans in the world.
As a part of CARES Act funding, the U.S. Department of Commerce, Economic Development Administration (EDA), awarded Cox College funding to benefit future nurses.
One of the things that has made the Kansas City Chiefs’ quarterback so dynamic is his ability to unload a pass to his deep and talented group of wide receivers from seemingly impossible spots.
The funeral director at Gorman-Scharpf Funeral Home in Springfield says the pandemic has added stress as they work to follow Centers for Disease Control precautions.
Thirty miles of rural Missouri separate the two churches, and so much else. One is mostly white; the other hosts services in five languages for a flock that spans the world.