Previous Issues
Previous
|
Next
Return To Today's News
|
Saving our past
Chattanooga community’s history preserved in UTC Special Archives vault
Her hand shook as she signed her name. The lawsuit before her would challenge the way Chattanooga governed itself. At issue was a commissioner system built on at-large voting – a structure that diluted minority representation and concentrated power.
Sharber finds familiar home at Miller & Martin
By David Laprad On the 10th floor of the Volunteer Building, Evan Sharber studies dirt for a living. Not the red clay that stains a pair of running shoes during a long stretch on a Chattanooga trail or the soil packed beneath a construction site, but the dirt that exists on paper – in boundary lines, legal descriptions, survey notations and title commitments.
‘What’ll you have?’ Success, if you follow Scott’s lead
On a 2019 evening at a Berkshire Hathaway event in Chattanooga, Chris Scott was doing what he’d done for years – slinging drinks. At the time, Scott was juggling shifts at nine different Chattanooga establishments. He’d poured cocktails at Songbirds, Memorial Auditorium and Tivoli Theatre events, worked gatherings at The Tennessee Aquarium and The Signal and helped set up bars at State of Confusion and Stir. He was as plugged into the city’s hospitality scene as anyone.
Newsmakers: Martin named subcommittee chair
Cameron Sexton has appointed State Rep. Greg Martin, R-Hixson, as chairman of the House Agriculture and Natural Resources Subcommittee. The nine-member panel oversees legislation related to energy, forestry, conservation, game and fish, mines and minerals, environmental matters, parks and recreation and watershed districts.
Local Beat UTC: UTC student earns MOHC Fellowship
Abby Clark, a junior elementary education major at UTC, has been selected as the first preservice teacher to receive a fellowship from the National Medal of Honor Heritage Center. Clark and other fellows will spend the next year visiting historic landmarks such as Gettysburg National Military Park, meeting Medal of Honor recipients and studying history from a teaching perspective, with the goal of better incorporating it into the classroom.
7 at UTC honored with Distinguished Student Award
By Herald staff Seven students from the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga’s Gary W. Rollins College of Business have been recognized for their academic excellence, leadership and service as recipients of the 2025-2026 John C. Stophel Distinguished Student Award.
211 Helpline helps residents weather crisis
Crisis happens every day in our community. And it doesn’t always look the way you’d expect. For neighbors living paycheck to paycheck, a flat tire, a sick child or an unexpected bill can be the tipping point. A missed shift at work can quickly spiral into an eviction notice, an empty pantry or the heat being shut off during the coldest weeks of winter.
Erlanger celebrates those committed to its success
Erlanger welcomed physicians, community leaders and supporters to its 22nd Annual Dinner of Distinction Feb. 6 at The Westin Chattanooga, honoring four individuals whose careers and service have left a lasting imprint on health care across the region.
New bill could set ‘exorbitant’ fees to view public records
NASHVILLE — A bill cosponsored by a Johnson City state representative would eliminate the public’s right to free inspection of public records. These records can include detailed spending records; police bodycam footage; or internal communications between government employees.
Roger column: Dig a little deeper before arguing immigration crime statistics
If you trust the Tennessee Conservative website as your primary source of news and information, you probably agree with it that state officials are insufficiently hostile to undocumented immigrants. A bunch of dang RINOs. As a result, those immigrants flock to Tennessee to flout the laws and generally foment havoc. A bunch of dang criminals.
Financial Focus: Your credit score matters more than you might think
Your credit score can play a surprisingly big role in your financial life. From renting an apartment to getting a cellphone plan, your credit score can open doors or close them. Your credit score predicts how likely you are to pay bills on time. Lenders, landlords and even some employers use this number to evaluate how responsible you appear to be. A higher score signals that you’re reliable with money, which can lead to lower interest rates on loans, better insurance premiums and easier access to credit. Some service providers might even waive security deposits if you have a strong score.
Behind the Wheel: Finding the perfect match on four wheels
Even if Valentine’s Day didn’t go as planned, you can still find love in the form of the perfect car for you. Love, after all, isn’t about roses and candlelight. It’s about chemistry, the kind you feel instantly, irrationally and sometimes against your better judgment.
Pryor drops 22 in Texas A&M women's 82-74 win over No. 21 Tennessee
KNOXVILLE (AP) — Ny'Ceara Pryor scored 22 points and dished 10 assists, Fatmata Janneh added 17 and Lemyah Hylton put up 12 in Texas A&M's 82-74 win over No. 21 Tennessee on Thursday night. The Aggies (11-11, 4-9 Southeastern Conference) jumped ahead early with a 10-0 run to start the game, with half the points coming from Pryor. She scored 13 in the first quarter.
How extreme cold is affecting Americans' lives: AP-NORC poll
WASHINGTON (AP) — Millions in North America kicked off 2026 with bitterly cold temperatures, with many saying it's been years since they've experienced such frigid winter weather. "Pipes that never froze on me for 15 years froze," said Chris Ferro, 58, from Brooklyn, New York, about the abnormally cold temperatures he experienced in January and February. Ferro owns several residential properties in Albany and said multiple days of below-freezing temperatures prevented him from doing repairs and renovations. He said he was thankful that none of the pipes burst and that this winter had the same bitter cold he remembers from when he was young, which contrasts with the relatively warmer winters he experienced in recent years.
Social media companies face legal reckoning over mental health harms to children
For years, social media companies have disputed allegations that they harm children's mental health through deliberate design choices that addict kids to their platforms and fail to protect them from sexual predators and dangerous content. Now, these tech giants are getting a chance to make their case in courtrooms around the country, including before a jury for the first time.
Why Texas' redistricting plan isn't a sure bet
WASHINGTON (AP) — Texas set the stage for this year's redistricting battle by drawing a new congressional map intended to boost Republicans in the midterm elections. Now, with primaries underway, the party's hopes hinge on a key question — whether voters who helped elect President Donald Trump two years ago will show up for other Republican candidates when he's not on the ballot.
Trump says he doesn't know if aliens are real but directs government to release files on UFOs, more
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump said Thursday that he's directing the Pentagon and other government agencies to identify and release files related to extraterrestrials and UFOs because of "tremendous interest." Trump made the announcement in a social media post hours after he accused former President Barack Obama of disclosing "classified information" when Obama recently suggested in a podcast interview that aliens were real.
Trump visits Georgia, a target of his election falsehoods, as Republicans look for midterm boost
ROME, Ga. (AP) — The White House insisted that President Donald Trump was visiting Georgia to promote the economy. But in the opening minutes of his first stop at a local restaurant before touring a steel company, the president raised debunked claims of voter fraud, talked up his plan to require voters to show identification before casting ballots, and discussed the recent FBI raid of election offices in the state's most populous county.
US economy grows at 1.4% rate in the fourth quarter, slower than expected
WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. economic growth slowed in the final three months of last year, dragged down by the six-week shutdown of the federal government and a pullback in consumer spending. The nation's gross domestic product — the output of goods and services — increased at a 1.4% annual rate in the fourth quarter, the Commerce Department reported Friday, down from 4.4% in the July-September quarter and 3.8% in the quarter before that.
Inflation rose more quickly than expected in December
WASHINGTON (AP) — A key inflation gauge accelerated in December to the fastest pace in nearly a year, showing how prices are still rising more quickly than most Americans would prefer — and faster than the Federal Reserve's target of 2% a year. Prices rose 0.4% in December from the previous month, up from 0.2% in November, the Commerce Department said Friday in a report that was delayed by the six-week government shutdown last fall. The monthly increase was the highest since last February. Compared with a year ago, inflation rose 2.9% in December, up from 2.8% in November. That is the largest yearly increase since March 2024.
|