Senator touts conservation: New $154 million program’s goal is to assist farmers
Matthew and Samatha Stahlnecker raise beef cattle and grow alfalfa at their farm just north of Williamsport. [Read More]
Matthew and Samatha Stahlnecker raise beef cattle and grow alfalfa at their farm just north of Williamsport. [Read More]
State Senator Gene Yaw (R-23) has prepared for a busy and productive legislative session in 2023 with a variety of priorities and proposed bills. [Read More]
State Senator Gene Yaw (R-23) discussed his viewpoint on the current partisan split within the commonwealth’s legislature. [Read More]
Three elected officials from the state level made a recent visit to a local manufacturer to tour its facilities. [Read More]
State Sen. Gene Yaw (R-23) honored the YWCA Northcentral Pennsylvania on the momentous occasion of its 130th anniversary. [Read More]
The Pennsylvania Department of Transportation (PennDOT), the Highway Safety Network, the Pennsylvania State Police and Geisinger Medical Center Trauma Unit today joined at Mansfield University's Alumni Hall Student Center to urge designated driving and responsible party hosting for this Sunday's Super Bowl. [Read More]
A state lawmaker is keen on not just letting water in streams go where it wants to, which often results in property and structural damage to bridges and roadways, leading to expensive repairs or replacements. [Read More]
The possibility of rolling blackouts — which allegedly neared fruition across Pennsylvania at Christmastime — could be connected to using less reliable and “green” forms of energy such as solar and wind power, according to a state lawmaker. [Read More]
"We deal them the cards based on our policies." State Sen. Gene Yaw, R-Loyalsock Township, recently sat down with Sun-Gazette newsroom staff and explained the latest developments on a number of issues - one of the most important being energy policy and the power grid that serves our region's families. [Read More]
The possibility of rolling blackouts — which allegedly neared fruition across Pennsylvania at Christmastime — could be connected to using less reliable and “green” forms of energy such as solar and wind power, according to a state lawmaker. [Read More]