2 minutes

Indiana Landmarks will host a panel discussion about the south side’s Black neighborhoods. The post Learn about Black history on the south side June 10 appeared first on Mirror Indy.

Indiana Landmarks will host a panel discussion about the south side’s Black neighborhoods. The post Learn about Black history on the south side June 10 appeared first on Mirror Indy.
3 minutes
Dozens of children who were separated under the first Trump administration have been re-separated, despite a judge's order to reunite them. Some parents have been locked in immigration detention facilities for months, others deported. The post Trump administration has separated dozens of children from their parents for a second time, AP finds appeared first on El Paso Matters.
3 minutes
Dozens of children who were separated under the first Trump administration have been re-separated, despite a judge's order to reunite them. Some parents have been locked in immigration detention facilities for months, others deported. The post Trump administration has separated dozens of children from their parents for a second time, AP finds appeared first on El Paso Matters.
3 minutes

Diru bilketa kanpaina abiatu du egitasmoaren oinarrian den herritar taldeak eta 120.000 euro behar dituzte aitzina egin ahal izateko. Kolektiboki aitzinatzen segitzeko, kooperatiba modura egituratu ziren iaz, Lekukoa izeneko kooperatiba sortuta.

Diru bilketa kanpaina abiatu du egitasmoaren oinarrian den herritar taldeak eta 120.000 euro behar dituzte aitzina egin ahal izateko. Kolektiboki aitzinatzen segitzeko, kooperatiba modura egituratu ziren iaz, Lekukoa izeneko kooperatiba sortuta.
3 minutes
Automated license plate readers and public surveillance cameras are coming to Imperial Beach La ciudad de Imperial Beach instalará pronto cuatro lectores automatizados de placas (ALPR, por sus siglas en inglés) y dos cámaras adicionales de “seguridad pública” con la esperanza de mejorar la seguridad.El 3 de junio, los concejales de Imperial Beach votaron a […]
3 minutes
Automated license plate readers and public surveillance cameras are coming to Imperial Beach La ciudad de Imperial Beach instalará pronto cuatro lectores automatizados de placas (ALPR, por sus siglas en inglés) y dos cámaras adicionales de “seguridad pública” con la esperanza de mejorar la seguridad.El 3 de junio, los concejales de Imperial Beach votaron a […]
11 minutes
Malgré l'annonce d'un nouveau cessez-le-feu entre Israël et le Liban, les affrontements entre l'armée israélienne et le mouvement libanais Hezbollah se poursuivent ce 4 juin. Au moins quatre personnes ont été tuées ce jeudi dans le sud du Liban dans des bombardements israéliens. Le président libanais a précisé que l'accord n'avait pas encore été définitivement approuvé, mais qu'il pourrait être rapidement mis en place une fois validé.
11 minutes
Malgré l'annonce d'un nouveau cessez-le-feu entre Israël et le Liban, les affrontements entre l'armée israélienne et le mouvement libanais Hezbollah se poursuivent ce 4 juin. Au moins quatre personnes ont été tuées ce jeudi dans le sud du Liban dans des bombardements israéliens. Le président libanais a précisé que l'accord n'avait pas encore été définitivement approuvé, mais qu'il pourrait être rapidement mis en place une fois validé.
11 minutes
Նախագահական նստավայրի առջև բողոքի ակցիա է՝ արցախցի Արթուր Օսիպյանին ազատ արձակելու պահանջով։ Ակցիան նախաձեռնել են այստեղ արդեն 4 օր նստացույց անող քաղաքացիները։ Նրանք նամակ էին հղել երկրի նախագահին, որ դիմի գլխավոր դատախազին, որպեսզի ազատ արձակի Օսիպյանին։ Այսօր նստացույց անող Գեղամ Օհանյանը հայտարարեց՝ պատասխան չունեն, և բոլոր մասնակիցները կարմիր քարտ ցույց տվեցին նախագահին: Արդեն 17 օր է կալանավորված երիտասարդը հրաժարվում է սննդից, նա պահանջում է, որ վարչապետը ներողություն խնդրի՝ իրեն...
Նախագահական նստավայրի առջև բողոքի ակցիա է՝ արցախցի Արթուր Օսիպյանին ազատ արձակելու պահանջով։ Ակցիան նախաձեռնել են այստեղ արդեն 4 օր նստացույց անող քաղաքացիները։ Նրանք նամակ էին հղել երկրի նախագահին, որ դիմի գլխավոր դատախազին, որպեսզի ազատ արձակի Օսիպյանին։ Այսօր նստացույց անող Գեղամ Օհանյանը հայտարարեց՝ պատասխան չունեն, և բոլոր մասնակիցները կարմիր քարտ ցույց տվեցին նախագահին: Արդեն 17 օր է կալանավորված երիտասարդը հրաժարվում է սննդից, նա պահանջում է, որ վարչապետը ներողություն խնդրի՝ իրեն...
11 minutes

This is a developing story. St. Petersburg-based Democratic House Rep. Lindsay Cross stunned political observers on Thursday when she announced she will not run for re-election. In a statement Cross said she had worked hard over the past four years to live up to the promises she made to the voters in HD 60, which […]

This is a developing story. St. Petersburg-based Democratic House Rep. Lindsay Cross stunned political observers on Thursday when she announced she will not run for re-election. In a statement Cross said she had worked hard over the past four years to live up to the promises she made to the voters in HD 60, which […]
12 minutes
პოლიციამ შუა ხნის კაცი დააკავა თბილისში, დიღმის მასივში არასრულწლოვანი გოგოს მიმართ გარყვნილი ქმედების ბრალდებით.
პოლიციამ შუა ხნის კაცი დააკავა თბილისში, დიღმის მასივში არასრულწლოვანი გოგოს მიმართ გარყვნილი ქმედების ბრალდებით.
13 minutes
Пожар на территории завода «Эластик» подтверждают данные сервиса NASA FIRMS.
Пожар на территории завода «Эластик» подтверждают данные сервиса NASA FIRMS.
16 minutes
An Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer's badge and weapon are seen as ICE conducts a vehicle checkpoint in Washington, D.C. in August, 2025. (Photo by Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)]]>
16 minutes
An Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer's badge and weapon are seen as ICE conducts a vehicle checkpoint in Washington, D.C. in August, 2025. (Photo by Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)]]>
17 minutes
Criminal defendants’ right to waive jury trials will be more complicated in Louisiana after lawmakers passed new legislation at the request of Attorney General Liz Murrill.
Criminal defendants’ right to waive jury trials will be more complicated in Louisiana after lawmakers passed new legislation at the request of Attorney General Liz Murrill.
18 minutes
When the Louisiana Legislature wraps up its session each year, the rest of the state tends to move on. Lawmakers pack up their offices, reporters file their final wrap-ups, and the public turns its attention elsewhere. For most people, that's the natural rhythm of things. The session is the show, and when the curtain falls, the work is done. It isn't. And the families I work with across Louisiana understand that better than anyone. Public health policy doesn't keep legislative hours. The decisions that shape whether a Louisiana child grows up protected from preventable disease are not made only in the spring, in the weeks the Legislature happens to be meeting. They are made in agency rulemaking that continues all year. They are made in the quiet stretches between sessions, long after the headlines have moved on. And they are made, one family at a time, in exam rooms across this state every single day. That last setting is the one I think about most. I recently spoke with a Louisiana pediatrician, a frontline physician who cares for our youngest and most vulnerable patients, about what's changed in her exam rooms. Her observations have stayed with me. Most medical decisions, she explained, come down to weighing risk against benefit. That's true of nearly everything in medicine. But the hardest part isn't the math. It's that too many parents don't realize the weight of a decision until they've reached a point where they can't go back and change it. She described a clinical reality that should give all of us pause. An unimmunized infant who spikes a fever isn't treated the same way as a protected one. Before vaccines, she reminded me, nearly every infant under six months old who came in with a fever faced an invasive workup, including a spinal tap, to rule out the kind of serious infection that vaccines made rare. We had largely left that era behind. We are now, she said, being forced to consider it again. This is what advocacy is actually about. Not slogans. Not partisanship. It's about making sure the parents making these decisions have trustworthy information, and that the people they trust most are the ones giving it to them. Here's something worth sitting with. Recent polling from Cygnal found that Americans trust their own doctors far more than they trust their elected officials when it comes to their health. That's not a knock on anyone who serves in the Legislature. It's a signal about where good public health information should come from. When policy makes it harder for physicians to have honest, open conversations with families, or when it crowds those conversations out with noise and fear, it undermines the very relationship people rely on most. The physician I spoke with told me the hardest cases aren't the parents who disagree with her. They're the ones who feel they can't open the door to a conversation at all, who assume their concerns won't be welcome. Her message to them was simple. We want to hear it. That openness is exactly what we lose when public health becomes a once-a-year political fight instead of an everyday commitment. So what happens once the session is over and the headlines fade? If you care about protecting Louisiana's children, the answer is that we keep going. We stay engaged with the rulemaking process, where some of the most consequential decisions are made with the least public attention. We keep the lines open with the legislators who listened, and we introduce ourselves to the ones who will be there next session. We support the pediatricians, nurses, and family doctors who carry this work into their exam rooms every day. And we make sure that when lawmakers reconvene, the case for protecting families has already been made all year long, steadily and in good faith, rather than left to a few short weeks each spring. The families I represent didn't get involved because they enjoy politics. They got involved because they understand what's at stake when we get this wrong, and because they refuse to wait until it's too late to change a decision. Sessions begin and end. Our work doesn't. For the sake of every Louisiana family making the most important decisions of their lives, it can't.
When the Louisiana Legislature wraps up its session each year, the rest of the state tends to move on. Lawmakers pack up their offices, reporters file their final wrap-ups, and the public turns its attention elsewhere. For most people, that's the natural rhythm of things. The session is the show, and when the curtain falls, the work is done. It isn't. And the families I work with across Louisiana understand that better than anyone. Public health policy doesn't keep legislative hours. The decisions that shape whether a Louisiana child grows up protected from preventable disease are not made only in the spring, in the weeks the Legislature happens to be meeting. They are made in agency rulemaking that continues all year. They are made in the quiet stretches between sessions, long after the headlines have moved on. And they are made, one family at a time, in exam rooms across this state every single day. That last setting is the one I think about most. I recently spoke with a Louisiana pediatrician, a frontline physician who cares for our youngest and most vulnerable patients, about what's changed in her exam rooms. Her observations have stayed with me. Most medical decisions, she explained, come down to weighing risk against benefit. That's true of nearly everything in medicine. But the hardest part isn't the math. It's that too many parents don't realize the weight of a decision until they've reached a point where they can't go back and change it. She described a clinical reality that should give all of us pause. An unimmunized infant who spikes a fever isn't treated the same way as a protected one. Before vaccines, she reminded me, nearly every infant under six months old who came in with a fever faced an invasive workup, including a spinal tap, to rule out the kind of serious infection that vaccines made rare. We had largely left that era behind. We are now, she said, being forced to consider it again. This is what advocacy is actually about. Not slogans. Not partisanship. It's about making sure the parents making these decisions have trustworthy information, and that the people they trust most are the ones giving it to them. Here's something worth sitting with. Recent polling from Cygnal found that Americans trust their own doctors far more than they trust their elected officials when it comes to their health. That's not a knock on anyone who serves in the Legislature. It's a signal about where good public health information should come from. When policy makes it harder for physicians to have honest, open conversations with families, or when it crowds those conversations out with noise and fear, it undermines the very relationship people rely on most. The physician I spoke with told me the hardest cases aren't the parents who disagree with her. They're the ones who feel they can't open the door to a conversation at all, who assume their concerns won't be welcome. Her message to them was simple. We want to hear it. That openness is exactly what we lose when public health becomes a once-a-year political fight instead of an everyday commitment. So what happens once the session is over and the headlines fade? If you care about protecting Louisiana's children, the answer is that we keep going. We stay engaged with the rulemaking process, where some of the most consequential decisions are made with the least public attention. We keep the lines open with the legislators who listened, and we introduce ourselves to the ones who will be there next session. We support the pediatricians, nurses, and family doctors who carry this work into their exam rooms every day. And we make sure that when lawmakers reconvene, the case for protecting families has already been made all year long, steadily and in good faith, rather than left to a few short weeks each spring. The families I represent didn't get involved because they enjoy politics. They got involved because they understand what's at stake when we get this wrong, and because they refuse to wait until it's too late to change a decision. Sessions begin and end. Our work doesn't. For the sake of every Louisiana family making the most important decisions of their lives, it can't.
18 minutes
(The Center Square) - Spokane Public Schools adopted a standalone immigration policy on Wednesday that requires federal agents to obtain the superintendent’s permission to access the district’s property. The SPS Board of Directors unanimously adopted the proposal, which the officials said largely mirrored existing language “buried” in a broader law enforcement policy. It follows the state Attorney General's Office’s model policy, which directs public schools to adopt measures to limit immigration enforcement. While immigration advocates and an SPS teacher applauded Policy 4300 during their public testimony, they also suggested that it didn’t go far enough. The board called the measure a “solid step forward,” but U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement disagreed, in a statement emailed to The Center Square. “ICE is not going to schools to arrest children — we are protecting children. Criminals are no longer able to hide in America’s schools to avoid arrest,” the agency responded to a request for comment in a statement mirroring that of former Assistant Homeland Security Secretary Tricia McLaughlin last year. The ICE statement provided to The Center Square said that if a dangerous criminal immigrant illegally in the country flees into a nearby school, or if a sex offender is an employee, there could be an arrest. “The Trump Administration will not tie the hands of our brave law enforcement and instead trusts them to use common sense … there may be a situation where an arrest is made to protect public safety. But this has not happened,” the agency wrote in an email, listing immigrants arrested across Washington state. According to Policy 4300, SPS will not grant access to “nonpublic” areas of district property, equipment or databases to immigration authorities without the superintendent's permission. If ICE shows up, SPS must direct them to the school principal, who would then request to see a court order or judicial warrant. The new policy requires a court order or warrant to list the purpose of enforcement, the specific search location, the name of the person agents are seeking, the current date and include a judge’s signature. The superintendent would then determine whether SPS should allow access before notifying parents. “We vetted our policy through legal counsel multiple times. I mean, it has been a year in the making, right, because of the iterations, and to make sure that what we're saying we can actually do,” SPS Deputy Superintendent Heather Bybee said Wednesday, “and that becomes an interesting line in these times.” The Spokane City Council has a similar policy that prohibits federal agents from accessing “nonpublic” events without a court order or warrant and has also adopted “immigration enforcement free zones.” Democrats proposed a state law earlier this year that would have directed higher education institutions and health care facilities to designate certain areas of their properties as "nonpublic" to limit immigration enforcement; it passed the Senate, with every Republican in opposition, before stalling in the House. Critics argued that the state proposal was based on virtue signaling and would create confusion for public schools, universities and health care providers. They said in public hearings earlier this year that the state doesn't have the authority to regulate how the federal government enforces federal law. SPS teacher Scott Ward testified Wednesday, calling on the board to adopt “bold and firm policies that keep federal agents from disrupting learning and lives of our immigrant students.” He cited an incident from last year when a Spokane student was detained, though that occurred at an ICE facility, not SPS. “These policies are a solid step forward. They're not perfect, they're not the end result, but they're, I think, the right direction for our district,” SPS board member Michael Wiser said Wednesday.
(The Center Square) - Spokane Public Schools adopted a standalone immigration policy on Wednesday that requires federal agents to obtain the superintendent’s permission to access the district’s property. The SPS Board of Directors unanimously adopted the proposal, which the officials said largely mirrored existing language “buried” in a broader law enforcement policy. It follows the state Attorney General's Office’s model policy, which directs public schools to adopt measures to limit immigration enforcement. While immigration advocates and an SPS teacher applauded Policy 4300 during their public testimony, they also suggested that it didn’t go far enough. The board called the measure a “solid step forward,” but U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement disagreed, in a statement emailed to The Center Square. “ICE is not going to schools to arrest children — we are protecting children. Criminals are no longer able to hide in America’s schools to avoid arrest,” the agency responded to a request for comment in a statement mirroring that of former Assistant Homeland Security Secretary Tricia McLaughlin last year. The ICE statement provided to The Center Square said that if a dangerous criminal immigrant illegally in the country flees into a nearby school, or if a sex offender is an employee, there could be an arrest. “The Trump Administration will not tie the hands of our brave law enforcement and instead trusts them to use common sense … there may be a situation where an arrest is made to protect public safety. But this has not happened,” the agency wrote in an email, listing immigrants arrested across Washington state. According to Policy 4300, SPS will not grant access to “nonpublic” areas of district property, equipment or databases to immigration authorities without the superintendent's permission. If ICE shows up, SPS must direct them to the school principal, who would then request to see a court order or judicial warrant. The new policy requires a court order or warrant to list the purpose of enforcement, the specific search location, the name of the person agents are seeking, the current date and include a judge’s signature. The superintendent would then determine whether SPS should allow access before notifying parents. “We vetted our policy through legal counsel multiple times. I mean, it has been a year in the making, right, because of the iterations, and to make sure that what we're saying we can actually do,” SPS Deputy Superintendent Heather Bybee said Wednesday, “and that becomes an interesting line in these times.” The Spokane City Council has a similar policy that prohibits federal agents from accessing “nonpublic” events without a court order or warrant and has also adopted “immigration enforcement free zones.” Democrats proposed a state law earlier this year that would have directed higher education institutions and health care facilities to designate certain areas of their properties as "nonpublic" to limit immigration enforcement; it passed the Senate, with every Republican in opposition, before stalling in the House. Critics argued that the state proposal was based on virtue signaling and would create confusion for public schools, universities and health care providers. They said in public hearings earlier this year that the state doesn't have the authority to regulate how the federal government enforces federal law. SPS teacher Scott Ward testified Wednesday, calling on the board to adopt “bold and firm policies that keep federal agents from disrupting learning and lives of our immigrant students.” He cited an incident from last year when a Spokane student was detained, though that occurred at an ICE facility, not SPS. “These policies are a solid step forward. They're not perfect, they're not the end result, but they're, I think, the right direction for our district,” SPS board member Michael Wiser said Wednesday.
18 minutes

El acuerdo amplía el uso de drones, cámaras e inteligencia artificial, mientras que residentes cuestionan los riesgos para la privacidad y las comunidades inmigrantes. La entrada Más drones, cámaras e inteligencia artificial: Durham amplía tecnología policial con contrato de $16 millones se publicó primero en Enlace Latino NC. Más drones, cámaras e inteligencia artificial: Durham amplía tecnología policial con contrato de $16 millones was first posted on junio 4, 2026 at 12:00 pm.©2024 "Enlace Latino NC". Use of this feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this article in your feed reader, then the site is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact me at paola@enlacelatinonc.org

El acuerdo amplía el uso de drones, cámaras e inteligencia artificial, mientras que residentes cuestionan los riesgos para la privacidad y las comunidades inmigrantes. La entrada Más drones, cámaras e inteligencia artificial: Durham amplía tecnología policial con contrato de $16 millones se publicó primero en Enlace Latino NC. Más drones, cámaras e inteligencia artificial: Durham amplía tecnología policial con contrato de $16 millones was first posted on junio 4, 2026 at 12:00 pm.©2024 "Enlace Latino NC". Use of this feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this article in your feed reader, then the site is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact me at paola@enlacelatinonc.org
18 minutes
Those who helped families cope with child care, financial instability and mental health are being replaced with uniformed service members.
18 minutes
Those who helped families cope with child care, financial instability and mental health are being replaced with uniformed service members.
18 minutes

Events in the Adirondacks this week include the Boreal Birding Festival, Whiteface Uphill Bike Race, a kids fishing derby and much more

Events in the Adirondacks this week include the Boreal Birding Festival, Whiteface Uphill Bike Race, a kids fishing derby and much more
18 minutes
Omaha 100 is partnering with Bootup Studios, a Miami-based startup, to offer 100 businesses free one-year access to Bootup’s AI tools. Applications close at noon June 12 for the first cohort of the two-year partnership. The post Applications open for a free year of AI entrepreneurship tools from Omaha 100 and Bootup Studios appeared first on Silicon Prairie News.
18 minutes
Omaha 100 is partnering with Bootup Studios, a Miami-based startup, to offer 100 businesses free one-year access to Bootup’s AI tools. Applications close at noon June 12 for the first cohort of the two-year partnership. The post Applications open for a free year of AI entrepreneurship tools from Omaha 100 and Bootup Studios appeared first on Silicon Prairie News.
18 minutes

El acuerdo amplía el uso de drones, cámaras e inteligencia artificial, mientras que residentes cuestionan los riesgos para la privacidad y las comunidades inmigrantes. La entrada Más drones, cámaras e inteligencia artificial: Durham amplía tecnología policial con contrato de $16 millones se publicó primero en Enlace Latino NC. Más drones, cámaras e inteligencia artificial: Durham amplía tecnología policial con contrato de $16 millones was first posted on junio 4, 2026 at 12:00 pm.©2024 "Enlace Latino NC". Use of this feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this article in your feed reader, then the site is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact me at paola@enlacelatinonc.org

El acuerdo amplía el uso de drones, cámaras e inteligencia artificial, mientras que residentes cuestionan los riesgos para la privacidad y las comunidades inmigrantes. La entrada Más drones, cámaras e inteligencia artificial: Durham amplía tecnología policial con contrato de $16 millones se publicó primero en Enlace Latino NC. Más drones, cámaras e inteligencia artificial: Durham amplía tecnología policial con contrato de $16 millones was first posted on junio 4, 2026 at 12:00 pm.©2024 "Enlace Latino NC". Use of this feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this article in your feed reader, then the site is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact me at paola@enlacelatinonc.org
19 minutes

More than 37.6% of Montana’s registered voters participated in Tuesday’s primary election, down from 39.4% in the 2022 primaries, according to the Montana Secretary of State’s office. Unofficial results show that 297,884 Montanans cast ballots during the 2026 primary, just up from the 293,049 votes cast in 2022. But the drop in voter turnout comes […]

More than 37.6% of Montana’s registered voters participated in Tuesday’s primary election, down from 39.4% in the 2022 primaries, according to the Montana Secretary of State’s office. Unofficial results show that 297,884 Montanans cast ballots during the 2026 primary, just up from the 293,049 votes cast in 2022. But the drop in voter turnout comes […]
20 minutes

Missouri Attorney General Catherine Hanaway announced Thursday that Kansas City-based CBD American Shaman – the largest distributor of kratom products in Missouri – has agreed to immediately suspend all in-state sales of kratom and 7-OH. Hanaway sued American Shaman in March, taking particular aim at 7-OH, the company’s more potent products that the attorney general […]

Missouri Attorney General Catherine Hanaway announced Thursday that Kansas City-based CBD American Shaman – the largest distributor of kratom products in Missouri – has agreed to immediately suspend all in-state sales of kratom and 7-OH. Hanaway sued American Shaman in March, taking particular aim at 7-OH, the company’s more potent products that the attorney general […]