A pátria apostadeira
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12 minutes

Observatório da Imprensa
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A explosão das apostas online durante a Copa do Mundo gerou três efeitos visíveis. Em primeiro lugar, o impulsionamento dos lucros de um punhado de milionários sagazes, tão sagazes que sabem se manter invisíveis (a gente deduz que eles se locupletam, mas não consegue enxergar quem eles são). O segundo efeito visível é a ruína […] O post A pátria apostadeira apareceu primeiro em Observatório da Imprensa.

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Observatório da Imprensa
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A explosão das apostas online durante a Copa do Mundo gerou três efeitos visíveis. Em primeiro lugar, o impulsionamento dos lucros de um punhado de milionários sagazes, tão sagazes que sabem se manter invisíveis (a gente deduz que eles se locupletam, mas não consegue enxergar quem eles são). O segundo efeito visível é a ruína […] O post A pátria apostadeira apareceu primeiro em Observatório da Imprensa.

A reportagem sobre hiperestimulação digital e autodiagnóstico entre crianças e adolescentes nasceu como toda boa pauta: no debate coletivo. Em uma reunião de pauta, duas propostas com temáticas convergentes foram discutidas e reunidas. As duas propostas tinham em comum o incômodo com o apelo à atenção em plataformas como o TikTok e a curiosidade por […] O post Os desafios da investigação sobre os efeitos das telas no bem-estar de crianças e adolescentes apareceu primeiro em Observatório da Imprensa.

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Observatório da Imprensa
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A reportagem sobre hiperestimulação digital e autodiagnóstico entre crianças e adolescentes nasceu como toda boa pauta: no debate coletivo. Em uma reunião de pauta, duas propostas com temáticas convergentes foram discutidas e reunidas. As duas propostas tinham em comum o incômodo com o apelo à atenção em plataformas como o TikTok e a curiosidade por […] O post Os desafios da investigação sobre os efeitos das telas no bem-estar de crianças e adolescentes apareceu primeiro em Observatório da Imprensa.

17 minutes

Dengê Amerîka
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Serokê Amerîkayê Donald Trump dê Pêncşemê êvarê gotarekê pêşkeşî gelê Amerîkayê bike. Li gorî Koşka Spî gotar dê li dor parastina bawerîpêanîna hilbijartinên welêt be. Berdevka Koşka Spî Karoline Leavitt di civîneke çapemeniyê bê ku pir hûrgulî bide got ku gotara serok Trump dê tekezê li ser "hilbijartinên herî ewle û pêbawer" bike. Ji hilbijartinên serokatiyê yên 2020-an vir ve, serok Trump bi berdewamî Îsrar kiriye ku encamên hilbijartinê bi sexteyî li hember wî pêkhatine. Serokê...

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Dengê Amerîka
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Serokê Amerîkayê Donald Trump dê Pêncşemê êvarê gotarekê pêşkeşî gelê Amerîkayê bike. Li gorî Koşka Spî gotar dê li dor parastina bawerîpêanîna hilbijartinên welêt be. Berdevka Koşka Spî Karoline Leavitt di civîneke çapemeniyê bê ku pir hûrgulî bide got ku gotara serok Trump dê tekezê li ser "hilbijartinên herî ewle û pêbawer" bike. Ji hilbijartinên serokatiyê yên 2020-an vir ve, serok Trump bi berdewamî Îsrar kiriye ku encamên hilbijartinê bi sexteyî li hember wî pêkhatine. Serokê...

18 minutes

Maryland Matters
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The Trump administration is moving more aggressively than prior administrations to trim the federal government’s massive real estate portfolio, but what happens next for these recently sold buildings — and those marked for disposal — is still coming into focus.

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Maryland Matters
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The Trump administration is moving more aggressively than prior administrations to trim the federal government’s massive real estate portfolio, but what happens next for these recently sold buildings — and those marked for disposal — is still coming into focus.

Growers who farm within two miles of the Friant-Kern Canal in southern Tulare County should be prepared for a pumping moratorium as early as April 2027, water managers learned Thursday.  The move is part of Phase I of the state Water Resources Control Board’s proposed pumping plan, which zeroes in on damage to the canal […]

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Growers who farm within two miles of the Friant-Kern Canal in southern Tulare County should be prepared for a pumping moratorium as early as April 2027, water managers learned Thursday.  The move is part of Phase I of the state Water Resources Control Board’s proposed pumping plan, which zeroes in on damage to the canal […]

L.A. County education officials say the district is at risk of financial insolvency — and the loss of local control — without more spending cuts.

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LAist
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L.A. County education officials say the district is at risk of financial insolvency — and the loss of local control — without more spending cuts.

A formação de jornalistas passa, necessariamente, pelo exercício de questionar narrativas consolidadas e ampliar o repertório de vozes presentes no debate público. Foi esse o desafio assumido pela estudante Berta Thiesen ao investigar a história de Martinho Bugreiro, personagem frequentemente citado na colonização de Santa Catarina, mas raramente abordado a partir da perspectiva dos povos […] O post Reportagem sobre história de Martinho Bugreiro mostra como jornalismo pode reconstruir memórias invisibilizadas apareceu primeiro em Observatório da Imprensa.

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Observatório da Imprensa
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A formação de jornalistas passa, necessariamente, pelo exercício de questionar narrativas consolidadas e ampliar o repertório de vozes presentes no debate público. Foi esse o desafio assumido pela estudante Berta Thiesen ao investigar a história de Martinho Bugreiro, personagem frequentemente citado na colonização de Santa Catarina, mas raramente abordado a partir da perspectiva dos povos […] O post Reportagem sobre história de Martinho Bugreiro mostra como jornalismo pode reconstruir memórias invisibilizadas apareceu primeiro em Observatório da Imprensa.

De Volta à Casa Abandonada é um podcast narrativo que reflete sobre a relação entre o campo da Comunicação e os podcasts de true crime. Tendo como gancho uma revisita ao podcast A Mulher da Casa Abandonada, produzido por Chico Felitti e publicado pela Folha de S.Paulo em 2022, o projeto investigou como jornalistas e […] O post Podcast propõe reflexão sobre as fronteiras entre narrativas true crime e jornalismo sensacionalista apareceu primeiro em Observatório da Imprensa.

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Observatório da Imprensa
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De Volta à Casa Abandonada é um podcast narrativo que reflete sobre a relação entre o campo da Comunicação e os podcasts de true crime. Tendo como gancho uma revisita ao podcast A Mulher da Casa Abandonada, produzido por Chico Felitti e publicado pela Folha de S.Paulo em 2022, o projeto investigou como jornalistas e […] O post Podcast propõe reflexão sobre as fronteiras entre narrativas true crime e jornalismo sensacionalista apareceu primeiro em Observatório da Imprensa.

22 minutes

Nashville Banner
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Use this tool to help find your re-drawn U.S. House district. The post Here’s How to Find Your Nashville Congressional District appeared first on Nashville Banner.

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Use this tool to help find your re-drawn U.S. House district. The post Here’s How to Find Your Nashville Congressional District appeared first on Nashville Banner.

La estructura colapsó sobre una obra en construcción y parte de su brazo cayó sobre un condominio en el sector La Herradura, afectando viviendas, vehículos y el tendido eléctrico. Al menos una persona resultó herida y una menor sufrió lesiones leves. Este artículo Videos muestran impactante caída de grúa sobre viviendas en Coquimbo tras intensas ráfagas de viento fue publicado originalmente en El Diario de Antofagasta.

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El Diario de Antofagasta
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La estructura colapsó sobre una obra en construcción y parte de su brazo cayó sobre un condominio en el sector La Herradura, afectando viviendas, vehículos y el tendido eléctrico. Al menos una persona resultó herida y una menor sufrió lesiones leves. Este artículo Videos muestran impactante caída de grúa sobre viviendas en Coquimbo tras intensas ráfagas de viento fue publicado originalmente en El Diario de Antofagasta.

35 minutes

Santa Barbara News Press
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In a win for Santa Barbara County on Tuesday, Chief U.S. District Court Judge Dolly Gee granted motions made by the county and the Environmental Defense Center, an intervenor in the case, to dismiss those legal claims made by Sable The post Federal district judge dismisses legal claims made by Sable against Santa Barbara County appeared first on Santa Barbara News-Press.

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Santa Barbara News Press
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In a win for Santa Barbara County on Tuesday, Chief U.S. District Court Judge Dolly Gee granted motions made by the county and the Environmental Defense Center, an intervenor in the case, to dismiss those legal claims made by Sable The post Federal district judge dismisses legal claims made by Sable against Santa Barbara County appeared first on Santa Barbara News-Press.

The group works to inform the PCA on environmental justice issues. Applications are due July 22, 2026.

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KAXE
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The group works to inform the PCA on environmental justice issues. Applications are due July 22, 2026.

دولت دونالد ترامپ، رئيس‌جمهوری آمریکا، مقررات جدیدی را نهایی کرده است که بر اساس آن، دانشجویان خارجی بدون دریافت مجوز دولت فدرال، نمی‌توانند بیش از ۴ سال در آمریکا اقامت داشته باشند.

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صدای آمریکا
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دولت دونالد ترامپ، رئيس‌جمهوری آمریکا، مقررات جدیدی را نهایی کرده است که بر اساس آن، دانشجویان خارجی بدون دریافت مجوز دولت فدرال، نمی‌توانند بیش از ۴ سال در آمریکا اقامت داشته باشند.

37 minutes

Dengê Amerîka
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Artêşa Kuweytê îro ragihand ku berevanîya esmanî ya wê êrîş û dronên “dijminane” yên Îranê vedigerîne. Fermandarîya Giştî ya Artêşê di daxuyanîyekê de li ser platforma X’ê got, “Niha, piştî êrîşa Îranê ya gunehkar, berevanîya esmanî ya Kuweytê êrîşên mûşekî û dronan ên dijminane vedigerîne.” Fermandarîyê destnîşan kir ku “eger dengê teqînê were bihîstin, ew encama sîstemên berevanîya esmanî ne ku êrîşên dijminane asteng dikin.” “Ji her kesî tê xwestin ku pîvanên silametî ewlehîyê yên ku...

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Dengê Amerîka
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Artêşa Kuweytê îro ragihand ku berevanîya esmanî ya wê êrîş û dronên “dijminane” yên Îranê vedigerîne. Fermandarîya Giştî ya Artêşê di daxuyanîyekê de li ser platforma X’ê got, “Niha, piştî êrîşa Îranê ya gunehkar, berevanîya esmanî ya Kuweytê êrîşên mûşekî û dronan ên dijminane vedigerîne.” Fermandarîyê destnîşan kir ku “eger dengê teqînê were bihîstin, ew encama sîstemên berevanîya esmanî ne ku êrîşên dijminane asteng dikin.” “Ji her kesî tê xwestin ku pîvanên silametî ewlehîyê yên ku...

This story was published in partnership with WBEZ and the Chicago Sun-Times.Sign up for Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter to keep up with the latest news on Chicago Public Schools.Campaign fundraising in the race to serve on Chicago’s first fully elected school board is picking up momentum, with $1.6 million raised since last October and contribution caps now lifted in the competition for president. A WBEZ and Chalkbeat analysis of money candidates received from Oct. 1, 2025 to June 30 found the majority of that total – $1.1 million — went to people running to lead the 21-member board. The board president is the only member who is elected citywide. Attorney Victor Hendorson gave himself half-a-million dollars in loans, which lifted donation limits for all five candidates vying for the president role. These candidates have done the most fundraising, with the exception of former Chicago Teachers Union organizer Hilario Dominguez, who has reported no donations so far. The other candidates for president are Jessica Biggs, Jennifer Custer, and Sendhil Revuluri.About 30 school board candidates have brought in less than $10,000 and eight did not file a report for the period from April 1 to June 30. Illinois law requires that candidates begin reporting campaign money once they’ve raised or spent $5,000.The sizable early donations point to the historic nature of the race. In November, for the first time, Chicago residents will elect all 21 members of the school board, which is currently half-appointed by the mayor and half-elected. For three decades before that, the mayor controlled the board. Although the school board president does not get to vote on board decisions unless there is a tie, that person plays an outsize role in helping set the board agenda and the tone during meetings. Sean Harden, a Mayor Brandon Johnson appointee who serves in the role now, is not running for the seat. It’s no surprise that fundraising for that role is heating up, said Hal Woods of the education advocacy group Kids First Chicago. “You need to be able to build a ground game and campaign infrastructure that covers the entire city, and you have a competitive race with really credible candidates,” he said. By looking strong early, Woods said, “You are showing the donor class you are the horse to get behind.” Meanwhile, the CTU, the Illinois Network of Charter Schools, and other organizations that have said they plan to spend big on school board races are largely holding their fire for now, as several candidates are still facing challenges to their attempt to get on the November ballot. The Illinois Network of Charter Schools’ war chest is by far the largest among political action committees with a stake in the election at more than $4 million. That’s fueled by sizable checks from wealthy residents, including some outside of Chicago. The charter advocacy group, which got outspent by the CTU in the 2024 school board election, hasn’t yet thrown its support behind a candidate for president or made formal endorsements in the 20 district races. The teachers union, which is backing Dominguez for board president, brought in $500,000 since April 1. It spent about $130,000, some of it on defending candidates, including Dominguez, against challenges intended to knock them off the ballot. The CTU’s coffers get replenished with union dues. The Illinois Network of Charter Schools and two other political committees, the Common Ground Collective and The Urban Center, have been bolstered by big donations from Paul Finnegan, the chairman of the private equity firm Madison Dearborn Partners. Since April, campaign records show Finnegan, whose address is listed in Evanston, has given almost $1 million to seven school board candidates, including Custer and Biggs, and a handful of political groups interested in the school board race. Fundraising push heats up in board president race Illinois campaign law limits individual contributions to candidates to $7,300, while corporations and labor unions can contribute up to $14,600. But if a candidate contributes more than $100,000 to his or her own campaign, like Henderson did, or if a super PAC spends more than that amount in support of a candidate, those donation limits fall away for all contenders in that race. Henderson said he decided to make a sizable loan to his campaign because “if I’m asking other people to invest, they want to know that I’m doing the same thing.” Henderson also said his campaign staff suggested that he do it and, since he’s never run for elected office before, he listened to them. He now has a commanding fundraising lead with more than $659,000 between his loans and donations from supporters.Henderson, who is a member of the Urban Prep Charter School network’s board, said he has met with some of the political action committees, including those of the Illinois Network of Charter Schools and CTU, and would be happy to take donations from them. But he wants special interest groups to know that, regardless of whether they donate to him, he wants to work “with them” not “for them.” “I’m not going to carry anybody’s water,” he said. “There’s too much politics in CPS, and that’s not the right thing to do.”Other candidates for president said they are not daunted by Henderson’s campaign cash. Biggs, a current board member, raised at least $146,000 as of June 30, most of it in smaller contributions from individuals. She said she didn’t think the lifting of contribution limits in the hotly contested race would shift the dynamics considerably. “I’m continuing to build the broadest coalition possible,” she said. “It’s what this moment calls for.” Biggs was outspent roughly 10-to-1 in her South Side district in 2024, but handily won her current seat representing district 6a, which includes Bronzeville, Hyde Park, and other neighborhoods. Sendhil Revuluri, a former vice president of the board appointed by former Mayor Lori Lightfoot, also said he didn’t expect the lifting of the spending cap to make a major difference. He has raised more than $311,000 so far, including $68,000 that he loaned to his own campaign. He said he tapped his broad professional network to get other donations from across the country. Still, Revuluri said his campaign is focused on student outcomes and experiences. “The money is not the goal,” he said. “It’s a means to reach voters and get my message across.” Custer, an incumbent board member who represents parts of Chicago’s Far Northwest Side, also raised mostly small amounts from individual donors. She says she was surprised the limit was blown so early, but she expected the race would be an expensive one. “To commit in a citywide race, you are going to need a significant amount of money,” she said. Like other candidates, she says she’ll take money from PACs as long as they know that her “north star is always what’s good for the children”Dominguez, the CTU’s pick for president, has not reported any donations or expenses. He said he’s going to do his best to raise enough money to compete, but, in the end, he’s hoping that “people power” will fuel his campaign. He said he and his team will be “hitting those doors hard.”“We’re always going to have to rely on the organized power of moms, of educators, of students,” he said. Special interest groups prepare to spend bigA number of organizations with connections to Chicago Public Schools are gearing up to jump into the political fray, including the race for school board president. Andrew Broy, executive director of the Illinois Network of Charter Schools, said the group plans to make endorsements in August and then start spending more. “We want to be competitive in all the races where we see a pathway to victory,” he said. He said the citywide presidential race will be expensive, estimating that the cost of mailers and other outreach to voters across the city would easily surpass $1 million.In the 2024 school board race, the CTU’s two political action committees spent $4.3 million on races, but rather than donate directly to candidates, they spent a lot hiring companies to create mailers, conduct surveys, and organize canvassing in support of particular candidates. CTU announced 15 endorsements earlier this week and chose to sit out six races. Service Employees International Union Local 73, which represents support staff in CPS, also announced their endorsements this week. After decades of being seen as allies, SEIU has recently had some public disagreements with CTU, including over who represents school support staff.In the 13 races where SEIU endorsed candidates, only four are also endorsed by the CTU. Some, like Che “Rhymefest” Smith and Angel Guiterrez, have consistently voted against the current school board majority, which is aligned with CTU.Dian Palmer, president of SEIU Local 73, one of three SEIU local affiliates in Illinois, said the union was not going to endorse a presidential candidate, but they are now considering backing someone. She’s hopeful her union can help balance some of the big-money interests getting involved in the race with door-knocking and member donations. “The amount of money is mind-boggling,” she said.SEIU’s two PACs had about $719,000 on hand at the end of June.Other groups are starting to dip their toes in the school board races. The Common Ground Collective, led by staffers from former CPS CEO Pedro Martinez’s cabinet, has made some donations to incumbents who are up for reelection, including Biggs and Custer. Rooted & Ready, a PAC affiliated with U.S. Rep. Delia Ramirez, a CTU ally who represents parts of Chicago and the west suburbs, cut $3,500 checks to school board candidates Claudia Perlata, Jason Dónes, and incumbent Norma Rios Sierra, all endorsed by the CTU. The group hasn’t yet made contributions in the president’s race. Mila Koumpilova is Chalkbeat Chicago’s senior reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Mila at mkoumpilova@chalkbeat.org. Sarah Karp covers education for WBEZ. Contact Sarah at skarp@wbez.org.

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Chalkbeat
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This story was published in partnership with WBEZ and the Chicago Sun-Times.Sign up for Chalkbeat Chicago’s free daily newsletter to keep up with the latest news on Chicago Public Schools.Campaign fundraising in the race to serve on Chicago’s first fully elected school board is picking up momentum, with $1.6 million raised since last October and contribution caps now lifted in the competition for president. A WBEZ and Chalkbeat analysis of money candidates received from Oct. 1, 2025 to June 30 found the majority of that total – $1.1 million — went to people running to lead the 21-member board. The board president is the only member who is elected citywide. Attorney Victor Hendorson gave himself half-a-million dollars in loans, which lifted donation limits for all five candidates vying for the president role. These candidates have done the most fundraising, with the exception of former Chicago Teachers Union organizer Hilario Dominguez, who has reported no donations so far. The other candidates for president are Jessica Biggs, Jennifer Custer, and Sendhil Revuluri.About 30 school board candidates have brought in less than $10,000 and eight did not file a report for the period from April 1 to June 30. Illinois law requires that candidates begin reporting campaign money once they’ve raised or spent $5,000.The sizable early donations point to the historic nature of the race. In November, for the first time, Chicago residents will elect all 21 members of the school board, which is currently half-appointed by the mayor and half-elected. For three decades before that, the mayor controlled the board. Although the school board president does not get to vote on board decisions unless there is a tie, that person plays an outsize role in helping set the board agenda and the tone during meetings. Sean Harden, a Mayor Brandon Johnson appointee who serves in the role now, is not running for the seat. It’s no surprise that fundraising for that role is heating up, said Hal Woods of the education advocacy group Kids First Chicago. “You need to be able to build a ground game and campaign infrastructure that covers the entire city, and you have a competitive race with really credible candidates,” he said. By looking strong early, Woods said, “You are showing the donor class you are the horse to get behind.” Meanwhile, the CTU, the Illinois Network of Charter Schools, and other organizations that have said they plan to spend big on school board races are largely holding their fire for now, as several candidates are still facing challenges to their attempt to get on the November ballot. The Illinois Network of Charter Schools’ war chest is by far the largest among political action committees with a stake in the election at more than $4 million. That’s fueled by sizable checks from wealthy residents, including some outside of Chicago. The charter advocacy group, which got outspent by the CTU in the 2024 school board election, hasn’t yet thrown its support behind a candidate for president or made formal endorsements in the 20 district races. The teachers union, which is backing Dominguez for board president, brought in $500,000 since April 1. It spent about $130,000, some of it on defending candidates, including Dominguez, against challenges intended to knock them off the ballot. The CTU’s coffers get replenished with union dues. The Illinois Network of Charter Schools and two other political committees, the Common Ground Collective and The Urban Center, have been bolstered by big donations from Paul Finnegan, the chairman of the private equity firm Madison Dearborn Partners. Since April, campaign records show Finnegan, whose address is listed in Evanston, has given almost $1 million to seven school board candidates, including Custer and Biggs, and a handful of political groups interested in the school board race. Fundraising push heats up in board president race Illinois campaign law limits individual contributions to candidates to $7,300, while corporations and labor unions can contribute up to $14,600. But if a candidate contributes more than $100,000 to his or her own campaign, like Henderson did, or if a super PAC spends more than that amount in support of a candidate, those donation limits fall away for all contenders in that race. Henderson said he decided to make a sizable loan to his campaign because “if I’m asking other people to invest, they want to know that I’m doing the same thing.” Henderson also said his campaign staff suggested that he do it and, since he’s never run for elected office before, he listened to them. He now has a commanding fundraising lead with more than $659,000 between his loans and donations from supporters.Henderson, who is a member of the Urban Prep Charter School network’s board, said he has met with some of the political action committees, including those of the Illinois Network of Charter Schools and CTU, and would be happy to take donations from them. But he wants special interest groups to know that, regardless of whether they donate to him, he wants to work “with them” not “for them.” “I’m not going to carry anybody’s water,” he said. “There’s too much politics in CPS, and that’s not the right thing to do.”Other candidates for president said they are not daunted by Henderson’s campaign cash. Biggs, a current board member, raised at least $146,000 as of June 30, most of it in smaller contributions from individuals. She said she didn’t think the lifting of contribution limits in the hotly contested race would shift the dynamics considerably. “I’m continuing to build the broadest coalition possible,” she said. “It’s what this moment calls for.” Biggs was outspent roughly 10-to-1 in her South Side district in 2024, but handily won her current seat representing district 6a, which includes Bronzeville, Hyde Park, and other neighborhoods. Sendhil Revuluri, a former vice president of the board appointed by former Mayor Lori Lightfoot, also said he didn’t expect the lifting of the spending cap to make a major difference. He has raised more than $311,000 so far, including $68,000 that he loaned to his own campaign. He said he tapped his broad professional network to get other donations from across the country. Still, Revuluri said his campaign is focused on student outcomes and experiences. “The money is not the goal,” he said. “It’s a means to reach voters and get my message across.” Custer, an incumbent board member who represents parts of Chicago’s Far Northwest Side, also raised mostly small amounts from individual donors. She says she was surprised the limit was blown so early, but she expected the race would be an expensive one. “To commit in a citywide race, you are going to need a significant amount of money,” she said. Like other candidates, she says she’ll take money from PACs as long as they know that her “north star is always what’s good for the children”Dominguez, the CTU’s pick for president, has not reported any donations or expenses. He said he’s going to do his best to raise enough money to compete, but, in the end, he’s hoping that “people power” will fuel his campaign. He said he and his team will be “hitting those doors hard.”“We’re always going to have to rely on the organized power of moms, of educators, of students,” he said. Special interest groups prepare to spend bigA number of organizations with connections to Chicago Public Schools are gearing up to jump into the political fray, including the race for school board president. Andrew Broy, executive director of the Illinois Network of Charter Schools, said the group plans to make endorsements in August and then start spending more. “We want to be competitive in all the races where we see a pathway to victory,” he said. He said the citywide presidential race will be expensive, estimating that the cost of mailers and other outreach to voters across the city would easily surpass $1 million.In the 2024 school board race, the CTU’s two political action committees spent $4.3 million on races, but rather than donate directly to candidates, they spent a lot hiring companies to create mailers, conduct surveys, and organize canvassing in support of particular candidates. CTU announced 15 endorsements earlier this week and chose to sit out six races. Service Employees International Union Local 73, which represents support staff in CPS, also announced their endorsements this week. After decades of being seen as allies, SEIU has recently had some public disagreements with CTU, including over who represents school support staff.In the 13 races where SEIU endorsed candidates, only four are also endorsed by the CTU. Some, like Che “Rhymefest” Smith and Angel Guiterrez, have consistently voted against the current school board majority, which is aligned with CTU.Dian Palmer, president of SEIU Local 73, one of three SEIU local affiliates in Illinois, said the union was not going to endorse a presidential candidate, but they are now considering backing someone. She’s hopeful her union can help balance some of the big-money interests getting involved in the race with door-knocking and member donations. “The amount of money is mind-boggling,” she said.SEIU’s two PACs had about $719,000 on hand at the end of June.Other groups are starting to dip their toes in the school board races. The Common Ground Collective, led by staffers from former CPS CEO Pedro Martinez’s cabinet, has made some donations to incumbents who are up for reelection, including Biggs and Custer. Rooted & Ready, a PAC affiliated with U.S. Rep. Delia Ramirez, a CTU ally who represents parts of Chicago and the west suburbs, cut $3,500 checks to school board candidates Claudia Perlata, Jason Dónes, and incumbent Norma Rios Sierra, all endorsed by the CTU. The group hasn’t yet made contributions in the president’s race. Mila Koumpilova is Chalkbeat Chicago’s senior reporter covering Chicago Public Schools. Contact Mila at mkoumpilova@chalkbeat.org. Sarah Karp covers education for WBEZ. Contact Sarah at skarp@wbez.org.

Beach and Bay Press: July 17, 2026
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41 minutes

Times of San Diego
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Beach & Bay Press highlights: Pacific Beach headlines include a pioneering tiny-home village for unhoused workers, a lawsuit over a fatal hit-and-run involving a young cyclist, Mission Bay restroom closures, redevelopment of the former IHOP site into housing, SeaWorld's long-range resort vision, and local debates over pedestrian safety and e-bike regulations.

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Times of San Diego
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Beach & Bay Press highlights: Pacific Beach headlines include a pioneering tiny-home village for unhoused workers, a lawsuit over a fatal hit-and-run involving a young cyclist, Mission Bay restroom closures, redevelopment of the former IHOP site into housing, SeaWorld's long-range resort vision, and local debates over pedestrian safety and e-bike regulations.

43 minutes

Mongabay
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Tourism often brings large promises to small places. It can bring money to forests, beaches, villages, parks, and old towns. It can make a family guesthouse viable or give a young person a reason to stay. It can help persuade a government that a forest has value standing. It can also strain the places it […]

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Mongabay
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Tourism often brings large promises to small places. It can bring money to forests, beaches, villages, parks, and old towns. It can make a family guesthouse viable or give a young person a reason to stay. It can help persuade a government that a forest has value standing. It can also strain the places it […]

47 minutes

Tennessee Lookout
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A state-appointed airport board in Chattanooga voted Thursday to withdraw from a city lawsuit filed to avert a state takeover. The Chattanooga Times Free Press reported that five of nine board members present at a meeting voted unanimously to pull out of a lawsuit in which the city of Chattanooga and the previous locally-appointed board […]

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Tennessee Lookout
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A state-appointed airport board in Chattanooga voted Thursday to withdraw from a city lawsuit filed to avert a state takeover. The Chattanooga Times Free Press reported that five of nine board members present at a meeting voted unanimously to pull out of a lawsuit in which the city of Chattanooga and the previous locally-appointed board […]

The Mary Clay School used innovative curriculum to make quality pre-school available to middle-class Black families.

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LAist
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The Mary Clay School used innovative curriculum to make quality pre-school available to middle-class Black families.

Voter’s Guide: U.S. House
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48 minutes

Nashville Banner
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Here are the candidates for the Aug. 6 primaries in the U.S. House 4th, 6th and 7th Districts, which comprise Nashville. For detailed information about a candidate’s background and positions, click on their name. Early voting begins on Friday, July 17 and runs through Aug. 1. For information about polling locations and voting requirements, check […] The post Voter’s Guide: U.S. House appeared first on Nashville Banner.

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Nashville Banner
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Here are the candidates for the Aug. 6 primaries in the U.S. House 4th, 6th and 7th Districts, which comprise Nashville. For detailed information about a candidate’s background and positions, click on their name. Early voting begins on Friday, July 17 and runs through Aug. 1. For information about polling locations and voting requirements, check […] The post Voter’s Guide: U.S. House appeared first on Nashville Banner.