From The WQCS Newsroom
Rates for water and sewer service will rise 10%; electric and gas rates will climb 9.5%.
-
Both the suspect and the victim knew each other but neither their identities, nor the nature of their relationship, are not being released at this time.
-
These aerial missions are necessary to prevent large adult mosquito populations, typically caused by tidal exchange in salt marshes.
-
Mosquito larvicides affect only mosquito larvae and are not harmful to beneficial insects, wildlife, or people.
-
Anna Upton will lead the Everglades Trust as it moves its headquarters to Tallahassee and restructures its organization.
-
Guerrero has over 20 years public safety and emergency management experience at the county, state, and federal government levels.
-
The temporary injunction would freeze implementation of the new congressional district boundaries. However the appeal, filed with the 1st District Court of Appeals in Tallahassee, automatically puts a stay on the injunction preventing it from taking effect.
In Focus - with IRSC Public Media
-
Indian River County’s Poet Laureate Sean Sexton and Light House Art Center Curator Janeen Mason
-
Ana Paula Tavares, the Executive Director of Save the Chimps (left); and Jessica Parrish, the President of 'Port St. Lucie Business Women' (standing) with Dorothy Kamm, Public Relations Chair for 'Port St. Lucie Business Women'.
RiverTalk from Indian River State College
From The NPR Newsroom
-
NPR's Ari Shapiro talks with Polish young adults about how the war in Ukraine and the influx of refugees is affecting their country.
-
Five states hold primaries Tuesday, with Senate races in Pennsylvania and North Carolina getting top billing.
-
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with New York state Attorney General Letitia James, who appeared in Buffalo with President Biden after the mass shooting, about gun violence and extremism in the state.
-
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with Kristy Ironside, a Russia historian at McGill University, about the significance of McDonald's leaving Russia.
-
The first recorded sighting of a river otter in the Detroit River in more than 100 years is an indicator that the environment is improving.
-
The FDA is taking emergency steps to increase the supply of baby formula after a plant closure led to shortages. Federal policy may have contributed to over-reliance on a handful of formula suppliers.
-
The White House announced it will lift some of the Trump era restriction on travel and remittances on Cubans. Hit hard by COVID and other missteps, the Cuban economy is barely functioning for many.
-
This year's winner is a songwriter from Boston, Mass., whose winning song is an ode to feeling like she doesn't fit neatly into any one box.
-
NPR's Ari Shapiro talks with Ukrainian refugee Daria Bietschasna about what life is like some two months after she fled Ukraine.
-
The man accused of murdering 10 people in Buffalo said he'd been radicalized by a racist conspiracy theory, No one in a position of prominence has done more to promote that theory than Tucker Carlson.
WQCS Weather Station
From The WQCS Weather Center
Amazon Echo/Google Home
Now Playing: WQCS-FM & HD1
Now Playing: WQJS-FM & WQCS - HD2
Now Playing: WQCS - HD3
Now Playing: WQCP-FM
The Latest From NPR's Morning Edition
Skywatch with Jon Bell