Podcast: Consider This

Consider This from NPR and KERA helps you make sense of the biggest stories of the day in North Texas and beyond. It’s the first podcast - ever - to offer a mix of community and national news based on where you are, a feature currently available in North Texas and several other regions (with more on the way). We tackle a few timely topics with careful attention to their complexity, and go beyond the headlines with a quick, but thorough, take on the news. New episodes publish every weekday evening.
SUBSCRIBE:
Stories From The Podcast
-
As with nurses, the U.S. is also short on doctors. The Association of American Medical Colleges estimates a U.S. shortage of about 48,000 primary care physicians by 2034.
-
The Texas Legislature is in the midst of redrawing voting districts, a process that happens after the census every 10 years.
-
Because early autism research focused largely on white boys, girls and children of color aren't screened as closely or might be misdiagnosed. New research aims to close those gaps.
-
From a helicopter high above the desert landscape dotted with scrub brush, row after row of large white tents stand out against the golden brown terrain. Each tent can house up to 100 “guests” as the Army refers to the Afghan evacuees. About 10,000 people from Afghanistan are living at Fort Bliss, one of eight army installations temporarily housing the evacuees.
-
You may remember filling out a census questionnaire some time last year. Now, the data is being funneled into a process known as redistricting.
-
Plano resident Mustafaa Carroll says being Black in America has helped prepare him to face the rise of Islamophobia after Sept.11.
-
Despite not being old enough to have seen the Twin Towers fall, Dallas native Razan Bayan says the event shaped her upbringing.
-
Without a legal standard setting out what must be done to prevent heat deaths, workplace regulators have a hard time making violations stick.
-
Palo Pinto Mountains State Park is finally under construction, a decade after the first swath of land was bought. Here's a sneak peek at the park, which is projected to open in 2023.
-
Immigrant advocates say DACA was only a Band-Aid. U.S. District Judge Andrew Hanen's recent order to halt new DACA applications puts the pressure on Congress to act.