Sabrina Barger-Turner and her son, Aiden Turner, 13, go through her to-do list last week in Abingdon, Md. (Maansi Srivastava/The Post)
Rising housing costs, combined with persistent inflation for basic necessities like gas and food, have left more Americans newly homeless and millions more fearing they’ll soon lose their homes.
By Abha Bhattarai and Rachel Siegel
By Yvonne Wingett Sanchez, Patrick Marley and Matthew Brown
Lawyer Bobby DiCello holds a photograph of Jayland Walker, whom police fatally shot in Akron, Ohio, on June 27. (Reuters)
Police fatally shot Jayland Walker, a 25-year-old Black man, while he fled a traffic stop Monday. His death drew protesters to city buildings and prompted officials to cancel Akron’s Fourth of July festival.
Moscow’s claim to have seized the last major Ukrainian stronghold in the Luhansk region signaled a potential turning point in Russia’s effort to gain control of eastern Ukraine.
By Annabelle Timsit, Victoria Bisset, Annabelle C. Chapman and Nick Miroff
Opinion by Richard Danzig
Only From The Post
Advertisement
Advertisement
Scott Merryman, a combat veteran, has struggled with PTSD for years after mistakenly shooting a child in Afghanistan. His latest mental break brought in the Secret Service.
By Paul Duggan
Hart Island, a scruffy one-mile slice of land in Long Island Sound, is the nation’s largest public cemetery. It was created for the poor, but it increasingly serves a surprising range of people as the pandemic has fueled a surge in unclaimed bodies.
By Mary Jordan
The 50th anniversary of the gathering has drawn thousands but set off conflicts with environmental groups worried that the influx will harm vulnerable species in the Colorado national forest.
Story by Karin Brulliard | Photos by David Williams
Most Read
Latest Headlines
Don’t Miss
July Fourth
Travelers wait for their luggage at Reagan National Airport on Saturday. (AFP via Getty Images)
By The WayA Post Travel Destination
By Alexis Benveniste
Advertisement
Advertisement
For YouRecommended Stories
The new depiction of the Secret Service — which has endured controversy from a prostitution scandal and security missteps during the Obama years to allegations of politicization under Trump — has cast new doubt on the agency's independence and credibility.
For volunteers from Taiwan, the war in Ukraine is a chance to bring battlefield experience back home — where debate is raging over military readiness.
By Lily Kuo and Vic Chiang
(Marcelo Endelli/Getty Images)
Activists have worn the color for nearly two decades — but its roots go further back.
By Heba Farouk Mahfouz and Paul Schemm
Advertisement
Advertisement
(The Post)
Climate change is altering the summer months — turning a time of joy into stretches of extreme heat, dangerously polluted air, anxiety and lost traditions.
Silver Spring and Rockville recorded up to 7 inches of rain in just a few hours as streams overflowed, flooding roads and homes.
Just over 40 years ago, golf's biggest stars flocked to play in South Africa, then under a brutal apartheid system. The current situation with Saudi Arabia feels familiar.
(Rochester Red Wings)
Clippard, 37, pitched for the Nationals from 2008 to 2014. Now he badly wants to again.
Advertisement
Twins Olivia and Savannah Hernandez play with slime at the Sloomoo Institute in New York. (Jeenah Moon for The Post)
So much of life is hard, dismally serious. But at least there is slime, to make it a little more fun.
By Trinidad Escobar and Meredith Coons
One of the latest "Wordle" copycats challenges players not with letters, but with images plucked from the museum.
By Jess Eng
TravelIncluding news and tips from By The Way