The National Park Service rescinded roughly 400 job offers for seasonal positions, prompting concerns that parks could be short-staffed during the summer.
National Park officials fear they will be stuck in the middle again of Trump’s crowd size boasts - Experts estimate that between 800,000 and 1 million people attended Obama’s 2009 inauguration, compar
Sai Varshith Kandula, 20, of St. Louis, will spend nearly a decade in prison after an attempted attack on the White House using a rented box truck
Thousands of people will gather on the National Mall on Monday to watch President-elect Donald Trump take the oath of office. How many thousands? We won't be able to tell you that. And neither will the National Park Service. For decades, that agency ...
It's too early to say what Republican plans will take root in Congress, but already there are proposals to both sell off federal lands and pull back National Park Service funding budgeted for helping parks respond to climate change.
With Trump's second inauguration a week away and his fixation with attendance numbers at his public events undiminished, crowd size will be front and center.
When their terms end, US presidents must move out of the country's most famous address and make other living arrangements.
It is still unclear who will be granted access to Capital One Arena, and who has been invited inside the Rotunda.
Indian national Sai Varshith Kandula, 20, on Thursday was sentenced to eight years for an attempted attack on the White House with a rented truck on May 22, 2023.
The grounds include gardens, a teahouse, a skeet range, and a putting green, and the home features a marble mantle from the White House, according to the National Park Service. President Lyndon B.
John M. Bridgeland, former director of the White House Domestic Policy Council, and Alan Khazei, co-founder of the education nonprofit City Year, co-chair More Perfect, working to advance national service. As the United States approaches its 250th birthday in 2026, it faces a host of civic challenges in search of a solution:
Shane Kearney had been working in tech for most of his career. But after a battle with cancer and some restorative time in the great outdoors, Kearney, 39, found himself applying last September for seasonal jobs with the National Park Service.