-
Miami's iconic Spanish-language radio station WAQI — Radio Mambí — will take its news and talk programming off the air, in a further sign that an effort to create more moderate Latino broadcasting in South Florida hasn't panned out.
-
Local officials, attorneys and community leaders gathered in Venice to warn that state preemption and developer influence have eroded meaningful local control over growth, citing laws like SB 180 that limit regulation and weaken environmental protections.
-
Farmers said intense immigration enforcement is creating fear among their employees who work on H-2A visas.
-
The Rays' new owners are talking about a "public-private partnership" being the only way a new stadium could be built in the Tampa Bay area. There are a few ways that could take shape.
-
Council members unanimously accepted the U.S. Housing and Urban Development grant and have already appropriated $13 million.
-
In addition to exhibits, students across the greater Tampa Bay region will have free access to marine STEM education with three teaching labs.
-
Florida ranked fourth, behind New York, Georgia and Texas, respectively, in states with the highest denial rate for loans, lines of credit and merchant cash advances.
-
The Florida Public Service Commission began what could be a two-week hearing as FPL seeks to increase base electric rates.
-
"The Rays and St. Pete can negotiate that land, and they’ll stay out of it."
-
It was one of several policy recommendations discussed by housing experts at a recent Debate-A-Bull speaker event at the University of South Florida.
-
After more than 40 years in business, owner John Wong says Wong Kai Imports, one of the few Asian markets in Manatee County, may shut down by the end of the year.
-
The Trump administration's tariff war is hurting textile and fiber artists as well as their overseas suppliers. Many of the specialty items these artists use are not available domestically.
-
Citrus County concluded this year's scallop season, which business officials described as good, but not great. "We think that people are pumping their brakes a little bit, you know, because they're uncertain about the economy," said Josh Wooten, Citrus County Chamber of Commerce president and CEO.
-
The Rays’ new ownership group, if it chooses to stay in St. Petersburg beyond 2028, will have significant space to build a new stadium.