13 minutes

Iowa Capital Dispatch
Feed icon

The Iowa House passed a bill Friday restricting access to abortion medication, even as nationwide restrictions on mifepristone are taking effect due to a court order. House File 2788, passed 57-29, would require abortion-inducing mediation to be prescribed in person and dispensed in a medical setting, restricting Iowans’ ability to receive these medications through telehealth […]

Feed icon
Iowa Capital Dispatch
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

The Iowa House passed a bill Friday restricting access to abortion medication, even as nationwide restrictions on mifepristone are taking effect due to a court order. House File 2788, passed 57-29, would require abortion-inducing mediation to be prescribed in person and dispensed in a medical setting, restricting Iowans’ ability to receive these medications through telehealth […]

Da periferia de Salvador (BA) para o Tiny Desk Brasil, o cantor, compositor e instrumentista Giovani Cidreira lança seu novo disco “Coração Disparado”, segundo ele, um reencontro com quem um dia ele foi. Gravado na Casa de Francisca, em São Paulo (SP), o álbum traz Cidreira com voz e violão. Em conversa com Thiago França […] Fonte

Feed icon
Brasil de Fato
CC BY-ND🅭🅯⊜

Da periferia de Salvador (BA) para o Tiny Desk Brasil, o cantor, compositor e instrumentista Giovani Cidreira lança seu novo disco “Coração Disparado”, segundo ele, um reencontro com quem um dia ele foi. Gravado na Casa de Francisca, em São Paulo (SP), o álbum traz Cidreira com voz e violão. Em conversa com Thiago França […] Fonte

The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled that mifepristone must be obtained in person.

Feed icon
The Texas Tribune
Attribution+

The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled that mifepristone must be obtained in person.

法國《世界報》周五報道了3月底發生在北京的一起“報復社會”事件,但這一事件被從中國輿論中抹去,彷彿這一事件根本不存在。

Feed icon
法國國際廣播電台
Attribution+

法國《世界報》周五報道了3月底發生在北京的一起“報復社會”事件,但這一事件被從中國輿論中抹去,彷彿這一事件根本不存在。

法国《世界报》周五报道了3月底发生在北京的一起“报复社会”事件,但这一事件被从中国舆论中抹去,仿佛这一事件根本不存在。

Feed icon
法国国际广播电台
Attribution+

法国《世界报》周五报道了3月底发生在北京的一起“报复社会”事件,但这一事件被从中国舆论中抹去,仿佛这一事件根本不存在。

Más de 60 mil personas participaron en Santiago en la marcha del Día del Trabajador convocada por la CUT, según...

Feed icon
BioBioChile
CC BY-NC🅭🅯🄏

Más de 60 mil personas participaron en Santiago en la marcha del Día del Trabajador convocada por la CUT, según...

(The Center Square) – The California High-Speed Rail Authority missed the May 1 deadline to submit a report to the Legislature about the long-delayed project and its estimated cost of $126.2 billion. The agency’s 2026 business plan, a draft of which was released in February, was due Friday. “The authority now anticipates a revised timeline for adoption of the business plan, with board consideration at its planned June 1, 2026 meeting and transmittal to the legislature on that same day,” a spokesperson with the High-Speed Rail Authority wrote in an email to The Center Square on Friday. “This adjustment will allow the authority to better align the business plan with the fiscal year 2026-27 budget cycle. This alignment is particularly important given ongoing project delivery discussions that will help inform the final business plan.” Among other pieces of required information, under a law passed in 2025, Assembly Bill 377, the High-Speed Rail Authority is supposed to include information in its final business plan that addresses gaps in funding for the Merced-to-Bakersfield segment of the high-speed rail. The authority is also supposed to address how the agency plans to acquire the money to pay for the segment that would span the middle of California’s agricultural heartland. "When we passed AB 377, it was to make sure we had high accountability with the California High-Speed Rail," Assemblymember David Tangipa, R-Fresno and author of AB 377, told The Center Square on Friday afternoon. "It is what I like to describe as a 'Do your business or get off the pot' type of bill. It seems that what the High-Speed Rail Authority is failing to do and why they need more time is to come into compliance with that bill." Officials with the agency should have had required information in the final business plan be ready to go, Tangipa said. "For them to say that they need more time to just come into normal safeguards and compliance with state law, I think really should give the general population and every single person that pays taxes a large-scale worry," Tangipa said. Agency officials have touted publicly that the High-Speed Rail Authority was allocated $1 billion a year of funds from California’s cap-and-trade program, often referred to as cap-and-invest. The high-speed rail would be the recipient of that amount of money every year until 2045. However, critics have expressed doubt that money will actually come through to finish building what has been described as a boondoggle. Local officials who represent communities that would line the Merced-to-Bakersfield segment said they are concerned that despite previously-identified funding sources, there won’t be enough money to continue paying for the high-speed rail as construction moves forward. The communities include some in western Fresno County. “When I look at the cap-and-trade program, I have major concerns with it,” Nathan Magsig, a member of the Fresno County Board of Supervisors, told The Center Square on Friday. “Where that money comes from is businesses.” Fees and costs imposed by the state’s cap-and-trade program have driven out many of California’s oil refineries, Magsig told The Center Square, which poses a problem for how the cap-and-trade program could keep generating revenue. “I think any reliance on a continued funding stream through cap-and-trade is concerning for me, because I’m seeing the tax regulations that are being put on businesses that are driving them out of the state, and we may continue to see diminishing revenues in California because of some of the policies in place,” Magsig told The Center Square. Local officials in Central California’s cities aren’t optimistic that $1 billion in cap-and-trade money will come through every year, either. “That’s the concern right there, yes,” Kelly Smith, the mayor of Chowchilla, told The Center Square on Friday. The rail would go through Chowchilla, an agricultural city in Madera County. “Politicians change and policies change, and I’m in fear that that could dry up. In the budget shortfall the state is currently in, something’s got to give.” The High-Speed Rail Authority board met on Wednesday to discuss the cost of the project and other matters. It was expected that members would discuss the 2026 draft business plan, as the plan was on their agenda that day. But the board delayed discussion on the plan for a future board meeting date. According to that draft business plan, the entire San Francisco-to-Los Angeles segment is projected to cost $126.2 billion, well over the $9.95 billion bond that passed in 2008. The Merced-to-Bakersfield segment is expected to cost $34.76 billion, according to figures in the draft business plan. The completed high-speed rail project was initially projected to be finished in 2020. It is now expected to be finished in 2040.

Feed icon
The Center Square
Attribution+

(The Center Square) – The California High-Speed Rail Authority missed the May 1 deadline to submit a report to the Legislature about the long-delayed project and its estimated cost of $126.2 billion. The agency’s 2026 business plan, a draft of which was released in February, was due Friday. “The authority now anticipates a revised timeline for adoption of the business plan, with board consideration at its planned June 1, 2026 meeting and transmittal to the legislature on that same day,” a spokesperson with the High-Speed Rail Authority wrote in an email to The Center Square on Friday. “This adjustment will allow the authority to better align the business plan with the fiscal year 2026-27 budget cycle. This alignment is particularly important given ongoing project delivery discussions that will help inform the final business plan.” Among other pieces of required information, under a law passed in 2025, Assembly Bill 377, the High-Speed Rail Authority is supposed to include information in its final business plan that addresses gaps in funding for the Merced-to-Bakersfield segment of the high-speed rail. The authority is also supposed to address how the agency plans to acquire the money to pay for the segment that would span the middle of California’s agricultural heartland. "When we passed AB 377, it was to make sure we had high accountability with the California High-Speed Rail," Assemblymember David Tangipa, R-Fresno and author of AB 377, told The Center Square on Friday afternoon. "It is what I like to describe as a 'Do your business or get off the pot' type of bill. It seems that what the High-Speed Rail Authority is failing to do and why they need more time is to come into compliance with that bill." Officials with the agency should have had required information in the final business plan be ready to go, Tangipa said. "For them to say that they need more time to just come into normal safeguards and compliance with state law, I think really should give the general population and every single person that pays taxes a large-scale worry," Tangipa said. Agency officials have touted publicly that the High-Speed Rail Authority was allocated $1 billion a year of funds from California’s cap-and-trade program, often referred to as cap-and-invest. The high-speed rail would be the recipient of that amount of money every year until 2045. However, critics have expressed doubt that money will actually come through to finish building what has been described as a boondoggle. Local officials who represent communities that would line the Merced-to-Bakersfield segment said they are concerned that despite previously-identified funding sources, there won’t be enough money to continue paying for the high-speed rail as construction moves forward. The communities include some in western Fresno County. “When I look at the cap-and-trade program, I have major concerns with it,” Nathan Magsig, a member of the Fresno County Board of Supervisors, told The Center Square on Friday. “Where that money comes from is businesses.” Fees and costs imposed by the state’s cap-and-trade program have driven out many of California’s oil refineries, Magsig told The Center Square, which poses a problem for how the cap-and-trade program could keep generating revenue. “I think any reliance on a continued funding stream through cap-and-trade is concerning for me, because I’m seeing the tax regulations that are being put on businesses that are driving them out of the state, and we may continue to see diminishing revenues in California because of some of the policies in place,” Magsig told The Center Square. Local officials in Central California’s cities aren’t optimistic that $1 billion in cap-and-trade money will come through every year, either. “That’s the concern right there, yes,” Kelly Smith, the mayor of Chowchilla, told The Center Square on Friday. The rail would go through Chowchilla, an agricultural city in Madera County. “Politicians change and policies change, and I’m in fear that that could dry up. In the budget shortfall the state is currently in, something’s got to give.” The High-Speed Rail Authority board met on Wednesday to discuss the cost of the project and other matters. It was expected that members would discuss the 2026 draft business plan, as the plan was on their agenda that day. But the board delayed discussion on the plan for a future board meeting date. According to that draft business plan, the entire San Francisco-to-Los Angeles segment is projected to cost $126.2 billion, well over the $9.95 billion bond that passed in 2008. The Merced-to-Bakersfield segment is expected to cost $34.76 billion, according to figures in the draft business plan. The completed high-speed rail project was initially projected to be finished in 2020. It is now expected to be finished in 2040.

41 minutes

The Center Square
Feed icon

(The Center Square) - Colorado Gov. Jared Polis is expected to sign the state’s $46.8 billion budget for 2026-27. The bill arrives largely along party lines with the legislature's Democratic majority forced to make significant cuts to Medicaid and other spending programs after a $1.5 billion shortfall for the state. “Every year that I have been on this committee I have said, ‘I have no idea how we are going to do this,’ and then we always do,” said Joint Budget Committee Chair Emily Sirota, a Democratic member of the state House, at the JBC Tuesday meeting. “It is pretty remarkable.” The JBC’s short Tuesday meeting finalized the state’s $48.6 billion spending plan for 2026-2027, House Bill 26-1410, or the Long Appropriations Bill. Once signed, the budget will be put into effect July 1 and run until June 30, 2027. The six-person committee is tasked with drafting the state’s budget, before the House and Senate vote on the bill. With both chambers having approved the bill, it is expected to be signed by the Democratic governor in the coming days. “Federal actions cut $1 billion in our revenue, erasing our TABOR [Taxpayer's Bill of Rights] surplus and [threatening] our ability to keep property taxes low for seniors,” said Rep. Kyle Brown, D-12th District (Boulder and Broomfield counties), during the bill’s final House vote earlier in April. “Our Medicaid budget has continued to grow unsustainably. The average growth rate over the last four years has been 19% annually.” TABOR is a constitutional cap on tax revenue the state of Colorado can collect. Any surplus revenue is refunded to taxpayers, unless voters approve it to be otherwise spent. The state has had to cut down on spending across a variety of sectors to make up a $1.5 billion budget shortfall that has largely come about from low estimates on the cost of programs. Some of the largest price shocks came from Medicaid programs, including $104.5 million for pregnant women and children whose immigration status means they would not otherwise be covered by Medicaid. The original estimate for the Cover All Coloradans program was $14.7 million, according to the Colorado Sun. “Being opposed to this budget is not a matter of unappreciation of the work that was involved,” said Rep. Ken DeGraaf, R-22nd District (El Paso County), during the bill’s final House vote. “It’s not a matter of being cold and heartless. It’s a matter of, when something can’t go on forever, it does not … We have a collision of reality versus ideology.” DeGraaf argued the state was overpaying for services and should be more thoughtful with its spending. He specifically named Medicaid, housing construction and overregulation. “These are self-inflicted injuries, not headwinds.” The point outlined a largely party-based divide within the Colorado legislature, where Democratic members have argued the state’s issues stem from unforeseen costs and federal cuts and mismanagement, while the Republican minority has argued the state has recklessly overspent. One point nearly all legislators seemed to agree on was that the budget process has been difficult. “This budget, as my colleagues have already said, was extremely difficult to develop,” Rep. Rick Taggart, R-District 55 (Mesa County), told the House members of the drafting issues the JBC faced. “It challenged each and every one of the six of us in our value systems, almost on a daily basis.”

Feed icon
The Center Square
Attribution+

(The Center Square) - Colorado Gov. Jared Polis is expected to sign the state’s $46.8 billion budget for 2026-27. The bill arrives largely along party lines with the legislature's Democratic majority forced to make significant cuts to Medicaid and other spending programs after a $1.5 billion shortfall for the state. “Every year that I have been on this committee I have said, ‘I have no idea how we are going to do this,’ and then we always do,” said Joint Budget Committee Chair Emily Sirota, a Democratic member of the state House, at the JBC Tuesday meeting. “It is pretty remarkable.” The JBC’s short Tuesday meeting finalized the state’s $48.6 billion spending plan for 2026-2027, House Bill 26-1410, or the Long Appropriations Bill. Once signed, the budget will be put into effect July 1 and run until June 30, 2027. The six-person committee is tasked with drafting the state’s budget, before the House and Senate vote on the bill. With both chambers having approved the bill, it is expected to be signed by the Democratic governor in the coming days. “Federal actions cut $1 billion in our revenue, erasing our TABOR [Taxpayer's Bill of Rights] surplus and [threatening] our ability to keep property taxes low for seniors,” said Rep. Kyle Brown, D-12th District (Boulder and Broomfield counties), during the bill’s final House vote earlier in April. “Our Medicaid budget has continued to grow unsustainably. The average growth rate over the last four years has been 19% annually.” TABOR is a constitutional cap on tax revenue the state of Colorado can collect. Any surplus revenue is refunded to taxpayers, unless voters approve it to be otherwise spent. The state has had to cut down on spending across a variety of sectors to make up a $1.5 billion budget shortfall that has largely come about from low estimates on the cost of programs. Some of the largest price shocks came from Medicaid programs, including $104.5 million for pregnant women and children whose immigration status means they would not otherwise be covered by Medicaid. The original estimate for the Cover All Coloradans program was $14.7 million, according to the Colorado Sun. “Being opposed to this budget is not a matter of unappreciation of the work that was involved,” said Rep. Ken DeGraaf, R-22nd District (El Paso County), during the bill’s final House vote. “It’s not a matter of being cold and heartless. It’s a matter of, when something can’t go on forever, it does not … We have a collision of reality versus ideology.” DeGraaf argued the state was overpaying for services and should be more thoughtful with its spending. He specifically named Medicaid, housing construction and overregulation. “These are self-inflicted injuries, not headwinds.” The point outlined a largely party-based divide within the Colorado legislature, where Democratic members have argued the state’s issues stem from unforeseen costs and federal cuts and mismanagement, while the Republican minority has argued the state has recklessly overspent. One point nearly all legislators seemed to agree on was that the budget process has been difficult. “This budget, as my colleagues have already said, was extremely difficult to develop,” Rep. Rick Taggart, R-District 55 (Mesa County), told the House members of the drafting issues the JBC faced. “It challenged each and every one of the six of us in our value systems, almost on a daily basis.”

Clipe mistura linguagens e traz referências indígenas para refletir sobre cultura, território e natureza O post Choka Choka: novo clipe de Anitta e Shakira traz referências indígenas e homenagem ao cacique Raoni apareceu primeiro em Mídia NINJA.

Feed icon
Mídia NINJA
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

Clipe mistura linguagens e traz referências indígenas para refletir sobre cultura, território e natureza O post Choka Choka: novo clipe de Anitta e Shakira traz referências indígenas e homenagem ao cacique Raoni apareceu primeiro em Mídia NINJA.

Un operativo antidrogas realizado por carabineros del OS7 de Talca logró la detención de un sujeto con alerta roja internacional...

Feed icon
BioBioChile
CC BY-NC🅭🅯🄏

Un operativo antidrogas realizado por carabineros del OS7 de Talca logró la detención de un sujeto con alerta roja internacional...

The U.S. Department of Justice on Thursday announced an investigation into 36 public school districts in Illinois "to determine whether they have included sexual orientation and gender ideology (SOGI) content in any class for grades pre-K-12."

Feed icon
Capitol News Illinois
CC BY-ND🅭🅯⊜

The U.S. Department of Justice on Thursday announced an investigation into 36 public school districts in Illinois "to determine whether they have included sexual orientation and gender ideology (SOGI) content in any class for grades pre-K-12."

Blake Gettys, a retired U.S. Air Force brigadier general, will run for lieutenant governor alongside Republican gubernatorial candidate Shelley Hughes, the duo announced Thursday in Anchorage. Incumbent Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy, a Republican, is term-limited after serving from 2018 to 2026. Hughes is one of 18 candidates for Alaska governor. Blake Gettys, 60, of Eagle […]

Feed icon
Alaska Beacon
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Blake Gettys, a retired U.S. Air Force brigadier general, will run for lieutenant governor alongside Republican gubernatorial candidate Shelley Hughes, the duo announced Thursday in Anchorage. Incumbent Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy, a Republican, is term-limited after serving from 2018 to 2026. Hughes is one of 18 candidates for Alaska governor. Blake Gettys, 60, of Eagle […]

Tenants at two mobile home parks in Bozeman are set to begin a rent strike Friday after their outgoing landlord notified residents of $97 monthly rent hikes. Bozeman Tenants United, the strike organizers, said in a press release that this is the first rent strike in Montana in nearly 50 years. The post Bozeman mobile home parks’ landlord promises eviction proceedings if tenants strike  appeared first on Montana Free Press.

Feed icon
Montana Free Press
CC BY-NC-SA🅭🅯🄏🄎

Tenants at two mobile home parks in Bozeman are set to begin a rent strike Friday after their outgoing landlord notified residents of $97 monthly rent hikes. Bozeman Tenants United, the strike organizers, said in a press release that this is the first rent strike in Montana in nearly 50 years. The post Bozeman mobile home parks’ landlord promises eviction proceedings if tenants strike  appeared first on Montana Free Press.

La autora reivindica la dignidad de quienes creen en la palabra ajena y desmonta la idea de que ser engañado implica debilidad o torpeza. Al afirmar que “las buenas personas son fáciles de engañar”, desplaza la culpa hacia el verdadero responsable.

Feed icon
Mundiario
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

La autora reivindica la dignidad de quienes creen en la palabra ajena y desmonta la idea de que ser engañado implica debilidad o torpeza. Al afirmar que “las buenas personas son fáciles de engañar”, desplaza la culpa hacia el verdadero responsable.

DES MOINES, Iowa—In a press conference at the state capitol on Friday, Gov. Kim Reynolds announced a “comprehensive legislative package” that will boost funding for utilities struggling to meet federal drinking water standards and combat high nitrate pollution from agriculture. The plan would have the state spend more than $100 million on water treatment infrastructure […]

Feed icon
Inside Climate News
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

DES MOINES, Iowa—In a press conference at the state capitol on Friday, Gov. Kim Reynolds announced a “comprehensive legislative package” that will boost funding for utilities struggling to meet federal drinking water standards and combat high nitrate pollution from agriculture. The plan would have the state spend more than $100 million on water treatment infrastructure […]

59 minutes

Daily Montanan
Feed icon

Before Zayne Hert ever put on a Colstrip High School basketball uniform – before he was even born – Montana Supreme Court Justice James Nelson predicted his future, when the justice wrote about student athletes who may try for an extension of eligibility, only to have the season or school year end before a court […]

Feed icon
Daily Montanan
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Before Zayne Hert ever put on a Colstrip High School basketball uniform – before he was even born – Montana Supreme Court Justice James Nelson predicted his future, when the justice wrote about student athletes who may try for an extension of eligibility, only to have the season or school year end before a court […]

دعوای حقوقی ایلان ماسک و سم آلتمن بر سر آینده اوپن‌ای‌آی

Feed icon
صدای آمریکا
Public Domain

دعوای حقوقی ایلان ماسک و سم آلتمن بر سر آینده اوپن‌ای‌آی

1 hour

Utah News Dispatch
Feed icon

Reporters with Utah News Dispatch claimed 11 awards in the regional Top of the Rockies contest, put on by the Colorado Pro Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists. The chapter’s 2026 journalism contest included more than 2,000 entries from 100 news outlets and 25 freelancers from Colorado, New Mexico, Wyoming and Utah. It was […]

Feed icon
Utah News Dispatch
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Reporters with Utah News Dispatch claimed 11 awards in the regional Top of the Rockies contest, put on by the Colorado Pro Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists. The chapter’s 2026 journalism contest included more than 2,000 entries from 100 news outlets and 25 freelancers from Colorado, New Mexico, Wyoming and Utah. It was […]

The United Nations Special Envoy for the Horn of Africa, Guang Cong, has called for The post UN envoy urges faster progress on Abyei peace benchmarks after first visit appeared first on Radio Tamazuj.

Feed icon
Radio Tamazuj
Attribution+

The United Nations Special Envoy for the Horn of Africa, Guang Cong, has called for The post UN envoy urges faster progress on Abyei peace benchmarks after first visit appeared first on Radio Tamazuj.

Durante esta jornada, la Dirección del Trabajo (DT) cursó 60 multas y suspendió a 88 trabajadores y trabajadoras en el...

Feed icon
BioBioChile
CC BY-NC🅭🅯🄏

Durante esta jornada, la Dirección del Trabajo (DT) cursó 60 multas y suspendió a 88 trabajadores y trabajadoras en el...