Got alphabet?
Think you’re a good speller? Maybe even a great speller?
Have fun and challenge your mind to keep it healthy. Enter this year’s Kiwanis Kupuna Spelling Bee.
AARP announced that four organizations on Oahu, Maui and Kaua`i will receive $70,000 in 2025 Community Challenge grants. The grants are part of AARP’s $4.2 million commitment to fund 383 quick-action projects aimed at making communities more livable for people of all ages, with a focus on the needs of older adults. The funds will support efforts to improve public places, transportation, housing, digital connections, and other key areas.
Most people have property they want to pass on to their family or others. This guide aims to help you understand how to pass your property in the manner you choose. This material is for educational purposes only. It is not legal advice.
The Tampa Bay Times, in partnership with AARP Florida, will host a free community conversation on Social Security at the upcoming Spotlight Tampa Bay event, “Securing the Future: Social Security at 90.” The forum will take place at 5 p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 14, at Feeding Tampa Bay, 3624 Causeway Blvd., Tampa.
Find upcoming election dates, registration deadlines and voting options in Louisiana, such as voting by mail, early voting or voting with a disability.
The City of Hialeah, just north of Miami, is one of the 2025 AARP Florida Community Challenge Grant winners. As the second-largest city in Miami-Dade County, Hialeah is known for its rich Cuban-American heritage and vibrant Latino community. The city received $19,000 to enhance pedestrian safety and visibility along Palm Avenue by upgrading crosswalks with cultural inspiration and improving signage and street markings to make pedestrians more noticeable to drivers.
AARP is launching Countdown to 90 Years—a recognition and call to action leading up to the 90th anniversary of Social Security on August 14, 2025. For nine decades, Social Security has been a stable and reliable foundation of retirement security for millions of Americans—and we believe it must remain that way for generations to come.