Sarah Lehr
Sarah Lehr is a state government reporter for Wisconsin Public Radio. She joined Wisconsin Public Radio in September 2022. Previously, she worked as a politics and civics reporter for WKAR News from 2021 to 2022. Prior to WKAR, Lehr covered government as the city watchdog reporter at the Lansing State Journal. She began her career at the Youngstown Vindicator, a daily newspaper in northeast Ohio. Lehr is a graduate of Kenyon College, where she served as editor-in-chief of the student newspaper.
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Los cánticos de “forced procreation, no celebration” resonaron en el centro de Lansing el lunes por la mañana cuando lo que comenzó como un pequeño grupo de personas se separó de una manifestación por el derecho al aborto en el Capitol lawn, desplegó una pancarta y formó una línea bloqueando la desfile Independence Day de la ciudad.
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Hundreds of abortion rights supporters eventually joined a downtown march during what had been scheduled to be Lansing's Independence Day parade.
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Jackson County's prosecutor and Michigan's Attorney General are at odds about whether medical providers can be held criminally liable at present if they conduct abortions.
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Lansing police are investigating after fire fighters saw a man running away from the scene of a burning Pride flag early Tuesday.
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Mayor Andy Schor is asking Lansing City Council to place a property tax on the November 2022 ballot, so the city can borrow money for construction.
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A new report finds older adults make up a disproportionate number of Michigan’s longest-term prisoners.
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Unenforceable "whites only" language remains on the books in housing deeds across the country. A bill is advancing in Michigan to make it easier for residents to formally reject that discriminatory language.
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The Lansing City Council agreed this week to place the measure before voters on November's ballot.
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Two Capital Internal Medicine Associates employees have filed federal discrimination complaints.
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Severe winds could knock out power before extreme hit bakes mid-Michigan.