Across Wisconsin, WI|News|
Poorest Patients Hit Hardest By Roe Decision: Milwaukee Doctor
For some women, having the ability to choose when and when not to have children is the difference to escape poverty, a clinic owner said.

The Wisconsin Examiner, a nonpartisan, nonprofit news site, offers a fresh perspective on state politics and policy through investigative reporting and daily coverage dedicated to the public interest. The Examiner is part of States Newsroom, a national 501(c)(3) nonprofit supported by grants and a coalition of donors and readers.
For some women, having the ability to choose when and when not to have children is the difference to escape poverty, a clinic owner said.

A dissenting justice questioned if technology could be used for warrantless searches and arrests, therefore violating peoples' rights.
School board members called a book about Japanese Americans placed into internment camps in World War II "diverse" and "too sad."
Pregnant patients have a right to self-determination, and decide to terminate pregnancies for different reasons, an OB-GYN doctor said.
Current and former university students and faculty called on investigators to be more thorough after a doctoral student was battered.
Wisconsin residents have been waiting a long time for federal officials to approve of vaccines for those under 5, a local pediatrician said.
The state's unemployment will probably stay near historic lows for the foreseeable future, Wisconsin's top economist said.
Caring for health in Wisconsin will take political will, an Environmental Protection Agency administrator said.
This would be the second Starbucks in the Milwaukee area and fifth location in Wisconsin where baristas wanted to join a national movement.
Both Rebecca Kleefisch and Kevin Nicholson said they would recall and replace Gov. Tony Evers' university regent picks.
WI Dems decided not to appeal candidate Tim Michel's access to the ballot to prevent strain on election administration, an attorney said.
Someone made an excessive force complaint against an officer in February, and the police department received 10 complaints in 2019.
Teachers said the district's statements celebrating diversity were hollow, while officials said the rate of teachers leaving was regular.
Wisconsin is susceptible to those who were involved in orchestrating the insurrection at the capitol, the chair of a nonprofit said.
The incentive at the pump would stimulate the economy, Republicans said. But smog would hurt people's health, a clean energy advocate said.
The public has a right to know pandemic-related information gathered by public health authorities, an open records advocate said.
A discrepancy between addresses would invalidate over 3500 signatures for Michels' gubernatorial nomination, the lawsuit complaint said.
Milwaukee's mayor called invitation for the Republican National Convention a business decision, not a political one.
The investigation closed after someone made threats against the school district, and a conservative law firm celebrated.
"We need to take a precautionary approach to how we manufacture and use chemicals," an environmental group attorney said.