It’s now official — Chron.com has launched NewsWatch: City Hall, a blog about city government. City Hall reporter Matt Stiles will be the main blogger, and he writes that Chronicle colleagues Alexis Grant and Kristen
Reader Vernon Guy passes along a Chronicle story about a slashing that took place on the Main Street Square Danger Train station earlier: A man was taken to Ben Taub General Hospital after being slashed
Last week, a citizen complained to me that it was difficult for him to get to a city office by using the bus. The recent changes in service had moved the only bus route serving
Don Gallagher posts a San Francisco story of some local interest to the MET Yahoo Group. Here’s a snippet from the reporting from San Francisco’s CBS television affiliate: Help is on the way for residents
Earlier this week, the Chronicle‘s Rad Sallee reported that northside business owners and residents are complaining that METRO has not been forthcoming about its plans for the North line: Several business owners on North Main
Isiah Carey posted two fine stories this week for KRIV-26 that can definitely be filed under the “watchdog media” heading. First, he looked into possible payment discrepancies to a company the city’s IT department uses
Earlier this week, the Chronicle ran a “Washington Notebook” with this tidbit: Senate foes swap barbs at Press Club They come from worlds apart: Sen. Edward Kennedy, iconic liberal and a millionaire’s son from Massachusetts,
The Chronicle‘s Jennifer Friedberg reports from a neighborhood meeting in Midtown: Something needs to be done about a vacant lot that has become a hang out for the homeless in Midtown, a local resident told
The city got some good financial news at the end of last week — a boost in its financial rating — but there was this ominous tidbit tucked away at the end of Matt Stiles’
The Houston Dynamo are trying to squeeze city officials for a nice, taxpayer-subsidized playpen. That’s certainly “olds” rather than news, but the Chronicle‘s recent characterization of the team’s latest demands of city officials struck us