News

It will be the hottest weather of the year in most of Massachusetts Thursday and the first time Boston has hit 90 in 2025.
The "No Kings National Day of Mobilizations" is scheduled to take place in Framingham, and nationwide, on Saturday, June 14.
For the next few days, Massachusetts will be on the edge of a large storm system, spinning around a few hundred miles to the east. Cities and towns north and west of Boston likely won't see more ...
While western Massachusetts is not in the direct path of totality, most of the state will still see 94 percent of the eclipse. The solar eclipse will begin at 2:13 p.m. and will max eclipse at 3: ...
New Jersey, Massachusetts, California, New Hampshire and Pennsylvania have the most highly contaminated drinking water systems, according to the Environmental Working Group's (EWG) interactive map.
If you're looking to track Santa Claus's flight over Massachusetts' cities and towns this Christmas Eve, there are a few ways you can track the big guy with nearly the same accuracy as a late ...
If you missed seeing the northern lights last night, parts of Massachusetts, including Central Mass., have a chance to see them again tonight. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's ...
This map shows the current sea levels of Massachusetts. NOAA. If sea levels were to rise by six feet, portions of Boston and Cambridge would be flooded, particularly the areas on the Charles River.
Officials placed bans on Massachusetts as it faced over 100 brush fires in the last week and an enhanced brushfire risk. Over 120 brush fires have burned around 450 acres in the state in the last ...
The drought situation in Massachusetts is getting better. The Drought Management Task Force in Massachusetts downgraded the western, central, southeast and Connecticut Valley regions of ...
The Drought Management Task Force in Massachusetts downgraded the western, central, southeast and Connecticut Valley regions of Massachusetts to "mild" droughts as of April 9.
A WBUR and ProPublica investigation found that no one was living in nearly 2,300 state-funded apartments in Massachusetts, as of the end of July. Most had been sitting empty for months or years.