بينما تضطر مئات المراهقات في كولومبيا لترك مقاعد الدراسة سنويًا بسبب الحمل، وقفت أنا في سن الثالثة عشرة لأتخذ قراري: قصتي ستكون مختلفة.

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Global Voices
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بينما تضطر مئات المراهقات في كولومبيا لترك مقاعد الدراسة سنويًا بسبب الحمل، وقفت أنا في سن الثالثة عشرة لأتخذ قراري: قصتي ستكون مختلفة.

. La demora la atribuyen justamente a la compleja situación por la que atraviesa el magistrado y por eso van a solicitar que la Corte Suprema entregue el caso a otro juez. La sentencia es por la denuncia que dirigentes políticos presentaron contra el alcalde Juan Pablo Spoerer, después que a principios de año negara … Continua leyendo "Dirigentes y alcalde de San Pedro esperan hace 5 meses fallo que debía redactar ministro Simpertigue" The post Dirigentes y alcalde de San Pedro esperan hace 5 meses fallo que debía redactar ministro Simpertigue appeared first on BioBioChile.

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BioBioChile
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. La demora la atribuyen justamente a la compleja situación por la que atraviesa el magistrado y por eso van a solicitar que la Corte Suprema entregue el caso a otro juez. La sentencia es por la denuncia que dirigentes políticos presentaron contra el alcalde Juan Pablo Spoerer, después que a principios de año negara … Continua leyendo "Dirigentes y alcalde de San Pedro esperan hace 5 meses fallo que debía redactar ministro Simpertigue" The post Dirigentes y alcalde de San Pedro esperan hace 5 meses fallo que debía redactar ministro Simpertigue appeared first on BioBioChile.

40 minutes

Tennessee Lookout
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WASHINGTON — U.S. lawmakers who oversee armed services policy split along party lines Thursday when examining the deployments of the National Guard to cities across the country under what President Donald Trump describes as a crime-fighting strategy. Members of the Senate Committee on the Armed Services questioned for nearly two-and-a-half hours high-level Department of Defense […]

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Tennessee Lookout
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WASHINGTON — U.S. lawmakers who oversee armed services policy split along party lines Thursday when examining the deployments of the National Guard to cities across the country under what President Donald Trump describes as a crime-fighting strategy. Members of the Senate Committee on the Armed Services questioned for nearly two-and-a-half hours high-level Department of Defense […]

Un sujeto lanzó bombas molotov contra un domicilio particular en Emaús de Lo Barnechea. Toda la acción quedó registrada por una cámara de vigilancia del sector. De acuerdo con los antecedentes, el ataque se produjo a raíz de rencillas anteriores. El hecho generó un alto riesgo de incendio y puso en peligro a las personas … Continua leyendo "Detienen a sujeto que roció líquido acelerante a vecino y lanzó molotovs a vivienda en Lo Barnechea" The post Detienen a sujeto que roció líquido acelerante a vecino y lanzó molotovs a vivienda en Lo Barnechea appeared first on BioBioChile.

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BioBioChile
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Un sujeto lanzó bombas molotov contra un domicilio particular en Emaús de Lo Barnechea. Toda la acción quedó registrada por una cámara de vigilancia del sector. De acuerdo con los antecedentes, el ataque se produjo a raíz de rencillas anteriores. El hecho generó un alto riesgo de incendio y puso en peligro a las personas … Continua leyendo "Detienen a sujeto que roció líquido acelerante a vecino y lanzó molotovs a vivienda en Lo Barnechea" The post Detienen a sujeto que roció líquido acelerante a vecino y lanzó molotovs a vivienda en Lo Barnechea appeared first on BioBioChile.

Sejarah kuda sering dikaitkan dengan kecepatan dan ketangkasan, namun catatan fosil di Amerika Utara menyimpan cerita yang berbeda. Di masa Pleistosen, pernah hidup spesies kuda yang berevolusi bukan untuk berlari cepat, melainkan untuk memiliki ukuran tubuh yang masif. Spesies tersebut adalah Equus giganteus, sebuah anomali evolusi yang massa tubuhnya setara dengan salah satu mamalia darat […] The post Equus giganteus: Kuda Purba Raksasa dengan Bobot Seberat Badak Jawa appeared first on Mongabay.co.id.

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Mongabay
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Sejarah kuda sering dikaitkan dengan kecepatan dan ketangkasan, namun catatan fosil di Amerika Utara menyimpan cerita yang berbeda. Di masa Pleistosen, pernah hidup spesies kuda yang berevolusi bukan untuk berlari cepat, melainkan untuk memiliki ukuran tubuh yang masif. Spesies tersebut adalah Equus giganteus, sebuah anomali evolusi yang massa tubuhnya setara dengan salah satu mamalia darat […] The post Equus giganteus: Kuda Purba Raksasa dengan Bobot Seberat Badak Jawa appeared first on Mongabay.co.id.

(The Center Square) - Republican legislators pushed back Friday against California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s announcement that almost $865 million acquired from some of the state’s biggest emitters will pay for affordable housing and clean transportation projects, among other efforts funded by the state’s cap-and-trade program. “We saw that in 2022, wildfires erased nearly 20 years of emission progress,” Assemblymember Tom Lackey, R-Palmdale and a member of the Assembly Transportation Committee, told The Center Square. “I’m a bit frustrated by that, and unfortunately, the administration still has no comprehensive wildfire prevention strategy. I think it’s a little bit disingenuous to brag about climate leadership while doing so little to stop the biggest source of our pollution and devastation - the wildfires.” State Sen. Meghan Dahle, R-Redding, and a member of the Senate Transportation Committee, added that while she sees good housing projects being developed by the state’s cap-and-trade program, especially in rural communities, she also sees cap-and-trade increasing living expenses for most Californians. “I am also very mindful that the cap-and-trade program is a tax on energy that drives up the cost of fuel for California drivers, who pay the highest pump prices in the nation to drive to work,” Dahle told The Center Square. “I recognize the good work being done, but we can’t tax our way out of the cost-of-living crisis in California.” Six Democratic legislators, including the chairs of the transportation committees in the Assembly and Senate, were not available to speak to The Center Square on Friday. Five Republican legislators who are members of each chamber's transportation or housing committee were also not available to comment. According to a press release sent out by Newsom’s office, the projects that will get portions of the cap-and-trade money include an expansion of public transit. Other projects include building affordable housing and rebuilding infrastructure damaged in this year’s wildfires, among other efforts. Projects also include buying 30 new zero-emission public transit vehicles, construction of 150 bus shelters, and the creation of 45 miles of bikeways and 20 miles of walkways, the governor’s office said. The cap-and-trade program requires big emitters to buy “allowances” for the greenhouse gases they emit, the governor’s office said, generating billions of dollars in funding over the years that go into projects that reduce greenhouse gas emissions. In all, 39 affordable housing projects in 21 communities across the state will get some of this money and major sustainable transportation upgrades, the governor’s office said. According to a report from the Center for Climate and Energy Solutions, California’s cap-and-trade program is one of the largest cap-and-trade projects in the world. The program is a big part of the state meeting its greenhouse gas emission goals. Five billion dollars has been generated since the Golden State launched the cap-and-trade program in 2012. A database from the International Carbon Action Partnership identifies agriculture, forestry fuel use, mining and extractives, transport, buildings and power as the economic sectors or industries that are included in the program. Lindsay Buckley, the communications director for the California Air Resources Board, said the money comes from the state’s Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund, which is financed by the state’s cap-and-trade program. The program is more than a decade old and has generated more than $33 billion that have been re-invested into climate-related projects, like affordable housing and sustainable communities. Companies that include oil refineries and food processing facilities are part of the program, Buckley told The Center Square on Friday. They are some of the companies that are considered what Newsom called “the biggest polluters” in the state. “We refer to them as just the state’s biggest emitters, and literally, on paper, they are the ones that emit the most greenhouse gas emissions in the state,” Buckley said. More than $453.5 million went to grants that pay for transportation projects close to schools, workplaces and other common destinations, the governor’s office said. An additional $185.6 million will go to rebuilding infrastructure in Los Angeles after the damage of this year's wildfires. “The funding puts billions of dollars to work reducing greenhouse gas emissions, strengthening the economy, and improving public health and the environment -- especially in disadvantaged communities,” said Kalin Kipling-Mojaddedi, communications lead for the Governor’s Office of Land Use and Climate Innovation. “California is using California Climate Investment funds to protect health, stability, and opportunity across the state," Kipling-Mojaddedi wrote The Center Square in an email Friday. Officials with the California Environmental Protection Agency, the California State Transportation Agency, the California Transportation Commission, the California Department of Transportation and the California Housing Finance Agency were not available or declined to answer questions on Friday.

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The Center Square
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(The Center Square) - Republican legislators pushed back Friday against California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s announcement that almost $865 million acquired from some of the state’s biggest emitters will pay for affordable housing and clean transportation projects, among other efforts funded by the state’s cap-and-trade program. “We saw that in 2022, wildfires erased nearly 20 years of emission progress,” Assemblymember Tom Lackey, R-Palmdale and a member of the Assembly Transportation Committee, told The Center Square. “I’m a bit frustrated by that, and unfortunately, the administration still has no comprehensive wildfire prevention strategy. I think it’s a little bit disingenuous to brag about climate leadership while doing so little to stop the biggest source of our pollution and devastation - the wildfires.” State Sen. Meghan Dahle, R-Redding, and a member of the Senate Transportation Committee, added that while she sees good housing projects being developed by the state’s cap-and-trade program, especially in rural communities, she also sees cap-and-trade increasing living expenses for most Californians. “I am also very mindful that the cap-and-trade program is a tax on energy that drives up the cost of fuel for California drivers, who pay the highest pump prices in the nation to drive to work,” Dahle told The Center Square. “I recognize the good work being done, but we can’t tax our way out of the cost-of-living crisis in California.” Six Democratic legislators, including the chairs of the transportation committees in the Assembly and Senate, were not available to speak to The Center Square on Friday. Five Republican legislators who are members of each chamber's transportation or housing committee were also not available to comment. According to a press release sent out by Newsom’s office, the projects that will get portions of the cap-and-trade money include an expansion of public transit. Other projects include building affordable housing and rebuilding infrastructure damaged in this year’s wildfires, among other efforts. Projects also include buying 30 new zero-emission public transit vehicles, construction of 150 bus shelters, and the creation of 45 miles of bikeways and 20 miles of walkways, the governor’s office said. The cap-and-trade program requires big emitters to buy “allowances” for the greenhouse gases they emit, the governor’s office said, generating billions of dollars in funding over the years that go into projects that reduce greenhouse gas emissions. In all, 39 affordable housing projects in 21 communities across the state will get some of this money and major sustainable transportation upgrades, the governor’s office said. According to a report from the Center for Climate and Energy Solutions, California’s cap-and-trade program is one of the largest cap-and-trade projects in the world. The program is a big part of the state meeting its greenhouse gas emission goals. Five billion dollars has been generated since the Golden State launched the cap-and-trade program in 2012. A database from the International Carbon Action Partnership identifies agriculture, forestry fuel use, mining and extractives, transport, buildings and power as the economic sectors or industries that are included in the program. Lindsay Buckley, the communications director for the California Air Resources Board, said the money comes from the state’s Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund, which is financed by the state’s cap-and-trade program. The program is more than a decade old and has generated more than $33 billion that have been re-invested into climate-related projects, like affordable housing and sustainable communities. Companies that include oil refineries and food processing facilities are part of the program, Buckley told The Center Square on Friday. They are some of the companies that are considered what Newsom called “the biggest polluters” in the state. “We refer to them as just the state’s biggest emitters, and literally, on paper, they are the ones that emit the most greenhouse gas emissions in the state,” Buckley said. More than $453.5 million went to grants that pay for transportation projects close to schools, workplaces and other common destinations, the governor’s office said. An additional $185.6 million will go to rebuilding infrastructure in Los Angeles after the damage of this year's wildfires. “The funding puts billions of dollars to work reducing greenhouse gas emissions, strengthening the economy, and improving public health and the environment -- especially in disadvantaged communities,” said Kalin Kipling-Mojaddedi, communications lead for the Governor’s Office of Land Use and Climate Innovation. “California is using California Climate Investment funds to protect health, stability, and opportunity across the state," Kipling-Mojaddedi wrote The Center Square in an email Friday. Officials with the California Environmental Protection Agency, the California State Transportation Agency, the California Transportation Commission, the California Department of Transportation and the California Housing Finance Agency were not available or declined to answer questions on Friday.

Oregon’s longest-serving state representative broke state ethics laws when he tried to secure a $66,000 raise for his work as an executive director at the Columbia Development Authority of Boardman, the state’s government ethics watchdog found Friday. Seven members of the Oregon Government Ethics Commission on Friday unanimously found that Rep. Greg Smith, R-Heppner, a […]

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Oregon Capital Chronicle
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Oregon’s longest-serving state representative broke state ethics laws when he tried to secure a $66,000 raise for his work as an executive director at the Columbia Development Authority of Boardman, the state’s government ethics watchdog found Friday. Seven members of the Oregon Government Ethics Commission on Friday unanimously found that Rep. Greg Smith, R-Heppner, a […]

Universidad de Chile confirmó su primer futbolista “cortado” para 2026, temporada donde La U disputará la Copa Sudamericana. A través de un comunicado, el elenco azul ratificó que el defensa . El motivo, según explicaron desde La U, es el vencimiento del contrato del jugador y su no renovación. “Con Ignacio Tapia terminamos nuestro vínculo … Continua leyendo "La U confirma su primer "cortado" para 2026: Ignacio Tapia no continúa en los azules" The post La U confirma su primer "cortado" para 2026: Ignacio Tapia no continúa en los azules appeared first on BioBioChile.

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BioBioChile
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Universidad de Chile confirmó su primer futbolista “cortado” para 2026, temporada donde La U disputará la Copa Sudamericana. A través de un comunicado, el elenco azul ratificó que el defensa . El motivo, según explicaron desde La U, es el vencimiento del contrato del jugador y su no renovación. “Con Ignacio Tapia terminamos nuestro vínculo … Continua leyendo "La U confirma su primer "cortado" para 2026: Ignacio Tapia no continúa en los azules" The post La U confirma su primer "cortado" para 2026: Ignacio Tapia no continúa en los azules appeared first on BioBioChile.

1 hour

North Dakota Monitor
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North Dakota Ethics Commission member Murray Sagsveen has withdrawn his application for another term after a selection committee deadlocked over his reappointment.  Sagsveen withdrew in a Thursday letter to Gov. Kelly Armstrong, obtained by the North Dakota Monitor. However, Sagsveen says he’ll continue serving until his seat is filled. Armstrong, part of a three-person Ethics […]

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North Dakota Monitor
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North Dakota Ethics Commission member Murray Sagsveen has withdrawn his application for another term after a selection committee deadlocked over his reappointment.  Sagsveen withdrew in a Thursday letter to Gov. Kelly Armstrong, obtained by the North Dakota Monitor. However, Sagsveen says he’ll continue serving until his seat is filled. Armstrong, part of a three-person Ethics […]

1 hour

Montana Free Press
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Since asbestos fibers are typically a risk when airborne, flooding isn’t likely to result in immediate, acute health risks for local residents, state environmental experts said. However, the flooding could unearth vermiculite that previously wasn’t visible. The post How Libby-area flooding could affect historic Superfund site  appeared first on Montana Free Press.

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Montana Free Press
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Since asbestos fibers are typically a risk when airborne, flooding isn’t likely to result in immediate, acute health risks for local residents, state environmental experts said. However, the flooding could unearth vermiculite that previously wasn’t visible. The post How Libby-area flooding could affect historic Superfund site  appeared first on Montana Free Press.

“Despite our simple requests for information on how they’re going to keep this data secure, they’ve given us no clear answers,” Nevada Secretary of State Francisco Aguilar said in a statement Friday after the U.S. Department of Justice announced it was suing the state — the latest push in the Trump administration’s efforts to examine […]

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Nevada Current
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“Despite our simple requests for information on how they’re going to keep this data secure, they’ve given us no clear answers,” Nevada Secretary of State Francisco Aguilar said in a statement Friday after the U.S. Department of Justice announced it was suing the state — the latest push in the Trump administration’s efforts to examine […]

1 hour

South Dakota Searchlight
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WASHINGTON — U.S. House Republicans released a health care bill Friday evening they hope will help curb rising costs, though the measure doesn’t have the level of Democratic support needed to get through the Senate.  The 111-page bill will likely move to the House floor next week, where Speaker Mike Johnson will need nearly every one […]

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South Dakota Searchlight
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WASHINGTON — U.S. House Republicans released a health care bill Friday evening they hope will help curb rising costs, though the measure doesn’t have the level of Democratic support needed to get through the Senate.  The 111-page bill will likely move to the House floor next week, where Speaker Mike Johnson will need nearly every one […]

Un juez dispuso este viernes la detención preventiva por cinco meses del expresidente de Bolivia Luis Arce en una cárcel de La Paz, dentro de una investigación por presuntos malos manejos en un fondo para proyectos indígenas cuando era ministro de Economía en el Gobierno de Evo Morales (2006-2019). El juez anticorrupción Mario Helmer Laura … Continua leyendo "En prisión preventiva queda Luis Arce, expresidente de Bolivia, investigado en causa por corrupción" The post En prisión preventiva queda Luis Arce, expresidente de Bolivia, investigado en causa por corrupción appeared first on BioBioChile.

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BioBioChile
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Un juez dispuso este viernes la detención preventiva por cinco meses del expresidente de Bolivia Luis Arce en una cárcel de La Paz, dentro de una investigación por presuntos malos manejos en un fondo para proyectos indígenas cuando era ministro de Economía en el Gobierno de Evo Morales (2006-2019). El juez anticorrupción Mario Helmer Laura … Continua leyendo "En prisión preventiva queda Luis Arce, expresidente de Bolivia, investigado en causa por corrupción" The post En prisión preventiva queda Luis Arce, expresidente de Bolivia, investigado en causa por corrupción appeared first on BioBioChile.

La pandemia demostró que Chile puede actuar unido cuando existe propósito y liderazgo. Los últimos cuatro años son una oportunidad perdida, pero no definen lo que viene. The post Chile en la sala de espera: la decisión que no podemos seguir postergando appeared first on BioBioChile.

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BioBioChile
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La pandemia demostró que Chile puede actuar unido cuando existe propósito y liderazgo. Los últimos cuatro años son una oportunidad perdida, pero no definen lo que viene. The post Chile en la sala de espera: la decisión que no podemos seguir postergando appeared first on BioBioChile.

The star recognizes the department’s work during the January fires in Los Angeles.

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LAist
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The star recognizes the department’s work during the January fires in Los Angeles.

1 hour

Mundiario
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La batalla política contra los reaccionarios, determinará la fortaleza de España y de Europa.

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Mundiario
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La batalla política contra los reaccionarios, determinará la fortaleza de España y de Europa.

Environmental and Native organizations on Thursday sued the Trump administration to try to overturn last month’s approval of an expansive oil-exploration program on the North Slope. The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Anchorage, said the U.S. Bureau of Land Management violated federal laws when it gave the go-ahead to a ConocoPhillips plan for […]

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Washington State Standard
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Environmental and Native organizations on Thursday sued the Trump administration to try to overturn last month’s approval of an expansive oil-exploration program on the North Slope. The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Anchorage, said the U.S. Bureau of Land Management violated federal laws when it gave the go-ahead to a ConocoPhillips plan for […]

1 hour

Louisiana Illuminator
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WASHINGTON — U.S. House Republicans released a health care bill Friday evening they hope will help curb rising costs, though the measure doesn’t have the level of Democratic support needed to get through the Senate.  The 111-page bill will likely move to the House floor next week, where Speaker Mike Johnson will need nearly every one […]

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Louisiana Illuminator
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WASHINGTON — U.S. House Republicans released a health care bill Friday evening they hope will help curb rising costs, though the measure doesn’t have the level of Democratic support needed to get through the Senate.  The 111-page bill will likely move to the House floor next week, where Speaker Mike Johnson will need nearly every one […]

1 hour

Maryland Matters
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Building more roads is one way to move people, but it's not the best, or healthiest, writes Megan Weil Latshaw, who says a focus on getting people to destinations safely and conveniently -- not just quickly in a car -- is the better deal for everyone.

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Maryland Matters
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Building more roads is one way to move people, but it's not the best, or healthiest, writes Megan Weil Latshaw, who says a focus on getting people to destinations safely and conveniently -- not just quickly in a car -- is the better deal for everyone.

1 hour

Washington State Standard
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Nearly two dozen U.S. senators urged the U.S. Department of Agriculture, in a letter, to “prioritize” a vaccine strategy for the highly pathogenic avian influenza. The virus has impacted more than 184 million commercial and backyard poultry birds and more than 1,000 head of dairy cattle since February 2022. The letter comes as detections of […]

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Washington State Standard
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Nearly two dozen U.S. senators urged the U.S. Department of Agriculture, in a letter, to “prioritize” a vaccine strategy for the highly pathogenic avian influenza. The virus has impacted more than 184 million commercial and backyard poultry birds and more than 1,000 head of dairy cattle since February 2022. The letter comes as detections of […]