• Associated Press

    Honolulu agrees to 4-month window to grant or deny gun carrying licenses after lawsuit over delays

    Honolulu has agreed to grant or deny applications to carry guns in public within four months of submission in response to a lawsuit by residents who complained of delays of up to a year, according to a stipulation signed by a federal judge Friday. The March lawsuit alleged that the long delays were the city’s way of keeping the permitting process as restrictive as it was before a 2022 U.S. Supreme Court decision in a case, New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, that upended gun laws nationwide. Before the Bruen decision, which held that people have a right to carry for self-defense, Hawaii’s county police chiefs rarely issued licenses for either open or concealed carry.

  • PA Media: UK News

    What the papers say – May 11

    A range of stories feature on the front of the nation’s newspapers on Saturday.

  • Local Journalism Initiative

    Matheson holds first meeting since council was given the boot

    BLACK RIVER-MATHESON - A Northern Ontario township has held its first meeting since its council was kicked out last month. A special council meeting was held today (May 10) by provincial bureaucrat Kathy Horgan, manager of local government and housing for the Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing's northern regional office. Horgan has been appointed to make any decisions of council until a new council is elected. "The procedures followed for council meetings will be followed and modified as