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On Monday morning, about 35 protestors gathered at Gainesville City Hall to fight for reproductive freedom. The strike was in commemoration of the second-year anniversary of the overturning of the 1973 Supreme Court case Roe v. Wade, which established a woman’s legal right to have an abortion.
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For more than a decade, Grace Marketplace has been providing housing, meals and other services to Gainesville’s most vulnerable.
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The nine people arrested Monday evening at the University of Florida during protests criticizing the war in Gaza made their first court appearances Tuesday morning.
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On Saturday, three Florida physicians spoke at Voices from the Frontline, an event hosted by the organization Alachua County Healthcare Workers for Gaza.
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The U.S. census will make a change for the first time in 27 years regarding race and ethnicity in its data collection. One updated standard includes adding a Middle Eastern or North African American category.
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The Gainesville Regional Utility Authority Board voted to confirm a change in solar policy in a meeting Wednesday evening. The decision comes after debates surrounding the practice of net metering, the current method of billing for solar power in Gainesville.
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Rayvon Rollins is a poet in Gainesville and he’s getting ready for a poetry slam about cancer.
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Emmanuel Espinoza, 21, drove from Gainesville to his mother's house in Frostproof in Polk County on for a family event.
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In honor of Women’s History Month, WUFT-FM spoke with three students at Pace Center for Girls Alachua to get their thoughts on what it’s like growing up as young women in North Central Florida.
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In honor of Women’s History Month, WUFT spoke with historian Dr. Peggy Macdonald about Gainesville’s surprising and forgotten history as one of the major birth spots of the women’s rights movement.
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That comes after months of pushback and a lawsuit from Gainesville residents questioning the governor’s ability to appoint board members who don’t live within the city.
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Both the number of farms and total acreage of farms in the US and Florida decreased between the previous census in 2017 and 2022. But Alachua County’s numbers increased.