On Sunday, a state Senate committee considered a plan that has backing from the House and the governor.
Some local governments want to levy their own taxes on recreational pot sales and are pressuring the Oregon Legislature.
After a failed attempt to fix a potentially hazardous ignition problem, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles initiates a second recall of 703,000 vehicles to try again.
Legal weed in 2014 became a $2.7 billion industry, a 74 percent jump from 2013, making it the fastest growing U.S. industry.
A coal mine tragedy comes as the state considers repealing mining safety regulations.
People tend to have more heart attacks and traffic accidents than usual on the day after they “spring forward,” studies say.
The tech giant's CEO is expected to formally unveil the price and final features of the Apple Watch.
Traders who have stashed oil supplies in recent months are selling some of the fuel, threatening to push prices down again.
The automaker reached a compromise with shareholder Harry Wilson, agreeing to a $5 billion stock buyback.
India's growing wireless market is drawing investors betting the economy will eventually offer significant opportunities.
As digital advertising gains ground worldwide, mobile technologies that can help businesses better target their potential customers become valuable.
Local media reports suggest that nearly 180 employees will be fired from the California-based company's China outlet.
The Indian prime minister's visit is part of his government's diplomatic offensive to re-exert India's waning influence in the region.
Oil prices had risen in January and February after falling by almost two-thirds over the last year.
The system will replace a patchwork of networks and allow hassle-free renminbi transactions.
Greece's government has scrambled to secure an agreement with its European creditors that would avoid austerity measures.
An interim report released Sunday points to confusion between Kuala Lumpur air traffic control and their counterparts in Vietnam.
Solar Impulse-2, a project co-founded by a Swiss businessman and an aeronaut, took off from Abu Dhabi early on Monday.
Such changes in policy suggest some foreign banks are preparing for a rise in defaults in the world's second-largest economy.
U.S. non-farm payrolls (NFP) data on Friday showed the unemployment rate hit a 6-1/2-year low of 5.5 percent in February.
European leaders praised Greece's reform outline, but said it still needs oversight.
The unemployment rate among blacks has been double the rate among whites for half a century, according to studies of U.S. labor conditions.
Friday's stronger-than-expected jobs report boosted expectations of a U.S. rate increase as soon as June.
An ECB board member says time is running out for a solution to Greece's bailout woes.
Issued on the first anniversary of Flight 370's disappearance, the report has some new information, but offers little insight into its fate.
The country's prime minister offers prayers for the missing passengers, and pledges to continue searching for the aircraft.
The proposal came to light in a leaked letter from Greece's finance minister, but attracted derision at home and abroad.
A train carrying crude oil came off its track in northern Ontario and exploded Saturday.
Daylight saving time is a longstanding feature in the U.S., but not all states observe it.
Latest round of EU sanctions against Syria indicate secret oil deals with the regime are providing ISIS with funding.