3 minutes

The Jersey Vindicator
Feed icon

A federal judge has dismissed the Trump administration’s lawsuit challenging...

Feed icon
The Jersey Vindicator
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

A federal judge has dismissed the Trump administration’s lawsuit challenging...

The proposal follows an IndyStar/Mirror Indy investigation into ethical issues in the Hogsett administration. The post Indy Democrats call for modest ethics change after ‘Mr. Clean’ investigation appeared first on Mirror Indy.

Feed icon
Mirror Indy
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

The proposal follows an IndyStar/Mirror Indy investigation into ethical issues in the Hogsett administration. The post Indy Democrats call for modest ethics change after ‘Mr. Clean’ investigation appeared first on Mirror Indy.

The federal monitor charged with rooting out “fraud, corruption, illegal behavior, dishonesty, and unethical practices” in the Auto Workers union issued a report today accusing UAW President Shawn Fain of “retaliation” against Vice President Rich Boyer. Earlier reports by Monitor Neil Barofsky had made similar claims regarding Secretary-Treasurer Margaret Mock.

Feed icon
Labor Notes
Attribution+

The federal monitor charged with rooting out “fraud, corruption, illegal behavior, dishonesty, and unethical practices” in the Auto Workers union issued a report today accusing UAW President Shawn Fain of “retaliation” against Vice President Rich Boyer. Earlier reports by Monitor Neil Barofsky had made similar claims regarding Secretary-Treasurer Margaret Mock.

Fort Worth-Dallas’ current ozone status is relatively the same as this time last year, air quality planners say.

Feed icon
Fort Worth Report
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Fort Worth-Dallas’ current ozone status is relatively the same as this time last year, air quality planners say.

15 minutes

Rhode Island Current
Feed icon

Rhode Island T.F. Green International Airport’s 73 food and beverage workers walked off the job Thursday amid stalled contract negotiations with the Florida-based company that operates the restaurants and stands in the Warwick terminal. Concession workers organized under Unite Here! Local 26 began the one-day strike at 3 a.m., around the time the first shift […]

Feed icon
Rhode Island Current
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Rhode Island T.F. Green International Airport’s 73 food and beverage workers walked off the job Thursday amid stalled contract negotiations with the Florida-based company that operates the restaurants and stands in the Warwick terminal. Concession workers organized under Unite Here! Local 26 began the one-day strike at 3 a.m., around the time the first shift […]

16 minutes

Times of San Diego
Feed icon

Without parking meter revenue, the EVA neighborhood group is proposing cuts to its administrative and public relations contracts

Feed icon
Times of San Diego
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Without parking meter revenue, the EVA neighborhood group is proposing cuts to its administrative and public relations contracts

President Donald Trump has repeatedly blamed vandals for damaging the new blue lining of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool, which is now peeling, as well as for algae in the water. But the administration has not provided evidence to back up the president's claims. Experts say the pool’s ills have a variety of plausible explanations that do not involve intentional harm. The post Trump’s Unsupported Claims About Reflection Pool Vandalism appeared first on FactCheck.org.

Feed icon
FactCheck.org
Attribution+

President Donald Trump has repeatedly blamed vandals for damaging the new blue lining of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool, which is now peeling, as well as for algae in the water. But the administration has not provided evidence to back up the president's claims. Experts say the pool’s ills have a variety of plausible explanations that do not involve intentional harm. The post Trump’s Unsupported Claims About Reflection Pool Vandalism appeared first on FactCheck.org.

(The Center Square) – As taxpayers continue subsidizing higher education and student loan debt at $1.8 trillion, more American families are planning and saving for college, according to a new Sallie Mae report. The report, "How America Plans for College 2026," found 95% of high school students plan to pursue some form of education after graduation. Of those students, 62% plan to attend a two- or four-year college. Families are also placing greater emphasis on financial preparation. The average amount saved for higher education reached $42,307, an increase of $16,041 since 2020, according to the report. The cost of college has continued to increase over the decades. Tuition has increased by over 36% since 2010, while inflation-adjusted tuition has increased by 0.92%, according to the Education Data Initiative. With the nation's student loan debt portfolio nearing $1.8 trillion, higher education remains a cost to taxpayers. According to the HEA Group, a higher education policy and research organization, American taxpayers contribute more than $100 billion annually to subsidize students' higher education. Yet only about 38% of Americans hold a college degree or higher. Despite the cost, the Sallie Mae report notes that 90% of families with high school students said they view higher education as an investment in the student's future. Eighty-three percent said they are willing to stretch financially to provide the best opportunities for the student's future. Among families planning to attend college, 88% said they believe higher education will pay off. Ed Recker, a spokesperson and analyst for Sallie Mae, which is a major U.S. bank, told The Center Square that students have more opportunities to begin preparing for higher education while still in high school. There is a lot more intentionality on a state level when there is dual enrollment or early college; students and families are getting more opportunities, which breeds that curiosity in preparing for higher education, Recker said. DJ Summers, Common Sense Institute's director of communications and research operations, said education continues to provide economic benefits. “I think most people recognize that if you have a college education, your chances for future economic success are higher,” Summers told The Center Square. “Despite all the doom and gloom, it is still very enduring and very defensible that your lifetime earnings have a significant increase if you've got a good education.” Summers also said students benefit from developing foundational academic skills before entering higher education. “At the end of the day, the preparedness with which you enter higher education is usually founded on the same old set of principles, which is that good math comprehension, science comprehension, reading and writing skills,” he said. “Those are very durable.” Now, conversations about the financial return on higher education remain limited. The report notes that only 28% of families said they have discussed potential earnings compared with education costs, while 21% have discussed the average amount of student debt in the student's field of interest. Andrew Gillen, a research fellow at the Cato Institute's Center for Educational Freedom, said he extends sympathy on this matter because families can face the challenge of actually evaluating the true cost before the student applies. “Higher education is one of these weird products or services where you actually don't know the price until you apply,” Gillen told The Center Square. “Even if a family wanted to sit down and compare costs with expected earnings, the system almost doesn't allow it.” Gillen also noted that most student debt is accumulated through graduate programs. In a separate Sallie Mae report examining graduate education, one in three graduate students said they applied to schools they could not afford without financial aid, but 67% of graduate students in the survey stated that they were completely satisfied with their school choice. The report also found growing interest in education pathways outside a traditional bachelor's degree. Among families considering trade schools, certificate programs or apprenticeships, 40% cited strong demand for skilled trades or technical roles as a primary reason, while 39% said they preferred hands-on, practical learning. Aligning with a broader federal push to expand the trades in 2025, the Trump administration signed the Preparing Americans for High-Paying Skilled Trade Jobs of the Future executive order, which aims to create more apprenticeships to address workforce shortages. “There is a very intentional effort to help open those doors for students in things other than a bachelor's degree,” Recker told The Center Square.

Feed icon
The Center Square
Attribution+

(The Center Square) – As taxpayers continue subsidizing higher education and student loan debt at $1.8 trillion, more American families are planning and saving for college, according to a new Sallie Mae report. The report, "How America Plans for College 2026," found 95% of high school students plan to pursue some form of education after graduation. Of those students, 62% plan to attend a two- or four-year college. Families are also placing greater emphasis on financial preparation. The average amount saved for higher education reached $42,307, an increase of $16,041 since 2020, according to the report. The cost of college has continued to increase over the decades. Tuition has increased by over 36% since 2010, while inflation-adjusted tuition has increased by 0.92%, according to the Education Data Initiative. With the nation's student loan debt portfolio nearing $1.8 trillion, higher education remains a cost to taxpayers. According to the HEA Group, a higher education policy and research organization, American taxpayers contribute more than $100 billion annually to subsidize students' higher education. Yet only about 38% of Americans hold a college degree or higher. Despite the cost, the Sallie Mae report notes that 90% of families with high school students said they view higher education as an investment in the student's future. Eighty-three percent said they are willing to stretch financially to provide the best opportunities for the student's future. Among families planning to attend college, 88% said they believe higher education will pay off. Ed Recker, a spokesperson and analyst for Sallie Mae, which is a major U.S. bank, told The Center Square that students have more opportunities to begin preparing for higher education while still in high school. There is a lot more intentionality on a state level when there is dual enrollment or early college; students and families are getting more opportunities, which breeds that curiosity in preparing for higher education, Recker said. DJ Summers, Common Sense Institute's director of communications and research operations, said education continues to provide economic benefits. “I think most people recognize that if you have a college education, your chances for future economic success are higher,” Summers told The Center Square. “Despite all the doom and gloom, it is still very enduring and very defensible that your lifetime earnings have a significant increase if you've got a good education.” Summers also said students benefit from developing foundational academic skills before entering higher education. “At the end of the day, the preparedness with which you enter higher education is usually founded on the same old set of principles, which is that good math comprehension, science comprehension, reading and writing skills,” he said. “Those are very durable.” Now, conversations about the financial return on higher education remain limited. The report notes that only 28% of families said they have discussed potential earnings compared with education costs, while 21% have discussed the average amount of student debt in the student's field of interest. Andrew Gillen, a research fellow at the Cato Institute's Center for Educational Freedom, said he extends sympathy on this matter because families can face the challenge of actually evaluating the true cost before the student applies. “Higher education is one of these weird products or services where you actually don't know the price until you apply,” Gillen told The Center Square. “Even if a family wanted to sit down and compare costs with expected earnings, the system almost doesn't allow it.” Gillen also noted that most student debt is accumulated through graduate programs. In a separate Sallie Mae report examining graduate education, one in three graduate students said they applied to schools they could not afford without financial aid, but 67% of graduate students in the survey stated that they were completely satisfied with their school choice. The report also found growing interest in education pathways outside a traditional bachelor's degree. Among families considering trade schools, certificate programs or apprenticeships, 40% cited strong demand for skilled trades or technical roles as a primary reason, while 39% said they preferred hands-on, practical learning. Aligning with a broader federal push to expand the trades in 2025, the Trump administration signed the Preparing Americans for High-Paying Skilled Trade Jobs of the Future executive order, which aims to create more apprenticeships to address workforce shortages. “There is a very intentional effort to help open those doors for students in things other than a bachelor's degree,” Recker told The Center Square.

23 minutes

Florida Phoenix
Feed icon

Three weeks after the Florida Legislature placed a proposed constitutional amendment on the November ballot that would increase the state’s homestead property tax exemption, a political committee has launched a campaign opposing the measure. Stop Unfair Tax Shifts is chaired by former Leon County Commissioner Bryan Desloge. The committee has unveiled its website, VoteNoOnAmendment3.com, where […]

Feed icon
Florida Phoenix
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Three weeks after the Florida Legislature placed a proposed constitutional amendment on the November ballot that would increase the state’s homestead property tax exemption, a political committee has launched a campaign opposing the measure. Stop Unfair Tax Shifts is chaired by former Leon County Commissioner Bryan Desloge. The committee has unveiled its website, VoteNoOnAmendment3.com, where […]

This article first appeared on CommonWealth Beacon and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. Vineyard Wind 1. the country’s first commercial-scale offshore wind project located off the coast of Martha’s Vineyard, is finally up and running after years of starts and stops — just not at full capacity. Gov. Maura […]

Feed icon
Rhode Island Current
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

This article first appeared on CommonWealth Beacon and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. Vineyard Wind 1. the country’s first commercial-scale offshore wind project located off the coast of Martha’s Vineyard, is finally up and running after years of starts and stops — just not at full capacity. Gov. Maura […]

28 minutes

The Jersey Vindicator
Feed icon

Inspectors were denied access to the medical unit as the state investigates reports of unsafe conditions at the ICE detention center.

Feed icon
The Jersey Vindicator
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Inspectors were denied access to the medical unit as the state investigates reports of unsafe conditions at the ICE detention center.

Antonia Roybal-Mack is one of five candidates Deb Haaland is thinking of endorsing following Maggie Toulouse Oliver's withdrawal.

Feed icon
Source NM
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Antonia Roybal-Mack is one of five candidates Deb Haaland is thinking of endorsing following Maggie Toulouse Oliver's withdrawal.

32 minutes

Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service
Feed icon

The heart of Giannis Antetokounmpo’s story isn’t that Milwaukee had front-row seats to his growth. It’s that Milwaukee helped create the conditions for that growth. Now it’s time to let him go. But we’ll still be cheering for him. The post Opinion: Y’all, we must let Ugo (Giannis) go appeared first on Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service.

Feed icon
Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service
CC BY🅭🅯

The heart of Giannis Antetokounmpo’s story isn’t that Milwaukee had front-row seats to his growth. It’s that Milwaukee helped create the conditions for that growth. Now it’s time to let him go. But we’ll still be cheering for him. The post Opinion: Y’all, we must let Ugo (Giannis) go appeared first on Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service.

El director regional del FOSIS, Roberto Soto Alballay, destacó que este ciclo cuenta con un presupuesto superior a los 180 millones de pesos para financiar un acompañamiento personalizado de hasta 24 meses, el cual aborda áreas clave como salud, educación, empleabilidad y vivienda para potenciar la autonomía de los hogares. Este artículo Alianza entre FOSIS y DIDECO: Inician intervención integral de 24 meses para familias vulnerables de Antofagasta fue publicado originalmente en El Diario de Antofagasta.

Feed icon
El Diario de Antofagasta
CC BY-NC🅭🅯🄏

El director regional del FOSIS, Roberto Soto Alballay, destacó que este ciclo cuenta con un presupuesto superior a los 180 millones de pesos para financiar un acompañamiento personalizado de hasta 24 meses, el cual aborda áreas clave como salud, educación, empleabilidad y vivienda para potenciar la autonomía de los hogares. Este artículo Alianza entre FOSIS y DIDECO: Inician intervención integral de 24 meses para familias vulnerables de Antofagasta fue publicado originalmente en El Diario de Antofagasta.

Iran is at once a behemoth that threatens the Middle East and United States, and yet somehow also so weak that the US can and should dictate how it operates.

Feed icon
FAIR
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Iran is at once a behemoth that threatens the Middle East and United States, and yet somehow also so weak that the US can and should dictate how it operates.

Five buildings for the urban village are expected to begin construction in November, according to state filings.

Feed icon
Fort Worth Report
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Five buildings for the urban village are expected to begin construction in November, according to state filings.

36 minutes

Stateline News
Feed icon

A new lawsuit challenging a logging project in Oregon threatens to unravel the management plans governing hundreds of millions of acres of federal public land. At stake are thousands of leases and permits covering billions of dollars of economic activity — including mining, drilling, grazing, logging, ski resorts, wind and solar projects, outdoor recreation, hunting […]

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

A new lawsuit challenging a logging project in Oregon threatens to unravel the management plans governing hundreds of millions of acres of federal public land. At stake are thousands of leases and permits covering billions of dollars of economic activity — including mining, drilling, grazing, logging, ski resorts, wind and solar projects, outdoor recreation, hunting […]

Andrea Figueroa González y Omar García Tepale, recién egresada y estudiante del noveno semestre de Diseño Gráfico de la BUAP, respectivamente, fueron ganadores del concurso tipográfico FiftyFifty 2026 La entrada Estudiantes BUAP muestran su talento en exposición tipográfica itinerante aparece primero en LADO B.

Feed icon
Lado B
CC BY-NC-SA🅭🅯🄏🄎

Andrea Figueroa González y Omar García Tepale, recién egresada y estudiante del noveno semestre de Diseño Gráfico de la BUAP, respectivamente, fueron ganadores del concurso tipográfico FiftyFifty 2026 La entrada Estudiantes BUAP muestran su talento en exposición tipográfica itinerante aparece primero en LADO B.

36 minutes

Rhode Island Current
Feed icon

Gov. Dan McKee announced Rhode Island’s first drought watch since 2002 early Thursday afternoon. At the advice of the state’s Drought Steering Committee, McKee upgraded last month’s initial drought advisory to the second of four monitoring stages because of continuing low levels of precipitation, groundwater and stream flow. The committee will meet again in mid-July […]

Feed icon
Rhode Island Current
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Gov. Dan McKee announced Rhode Island’s first drought watch since 2002 early Thursday afternoon. At the advice of the state’s Drought Steering Committee, McKee upgraded last month’s initial drought advisory to the second of four monitoring stages because of continuing low levels of precipitation, groundwater and stream flow. The committee will meet again in mid-July […]

Yan Po Zhu was charged with bribing a city official to secure a lucrative contract for his hotel, despite it being deemed not suitable for a migrant shelter. The post The Adviser and the Businessman: How a NYC Hotel Owner Became Linked to a $6.8 Million Migrant Shelter Bribery Scheme appeared first on Documented.

Feed icon
Documented
Attribution+

Yan Po Zhu was charged with bribing a city official to secure a lucrative contract for his hotel, despite it being deemed not suitable for a migrant shelter. The post The Adviser and the Businessman: How a NYC Hotel Owner Became Linked to a $6.8 Million Migrant Shelter Bribery Scheme appeared first on Documented.