9 minutes

Shoqata e Gazetarëve të Maqedonisë (SHGM) dhe Sindikata e Pavarur e Gazetarëve dhe Punonjësve të Medias (SPGPM) reaguan për ndërprerjen e shërbimit maqedonas të Radios Evropa e Lirë. Kjo shtojnë ata, është një tjetër goditje e rëndë për gazetarinë kritike, profesionale dhe publikisht përgjegjëse, jo vetëm në Maqedoni, por edhe më gjerësisht në rajon dhe […]

Shoqata e Gazetarëve të Maqedonisë (SHGM) dhe Sindikata e Pavarur e Gazetarëve dhe Punonjësve të Medias (SPGPM) reaguan për ndërprerjen e shërbimit maqedonas të Radios Evropa e Lirë. Kjo shtojnë ata, është një tjetër goditje e rëndë për gazetarinë kritike, profesionale dhe publikisht përgjegjëse, jo vetëm në Maqedoni, por edhe më gjerësisht në rajon dhe […]
11 minutes
The Tennessee Democratic Party has removed its treasurer over claims that she lives out of state. Gas prices have topped $4 per gallon in the U.S. for the first time since 2022, but prices in Tennessee remain below that mark. Metro councilmembers have questioned city finance officials over incorrect paychecks, Nashville International Airport will begin upgrades to the main terminal entrance areas, the Metro Human Relations Commission has launched a survey to improve language accessibility, and the HBCU Radio Preservation Project has returned digitized audio to Fisk University. The post Aptil 1: Tennessee Gas Prices; Metro Council Questions Payroll System; BNA Additions appeared first on Nashville Banner.
The Tennessee Democratic Party has removed its treasurer over claims that she lives out of state. Gas prices have topped $4 per gallon in the U.S. for the first time since 2022, but prices in Tennessee remain below that mark. Metro councilmembers have questioned city finance officials over incorrect paychecks, Nashville International Airport will begin upgrades to the main terminal entrance areas, the Metro Human Relations Commission has launched a survey to improve language accessibility, and the HBCU Radio Preservation Project has returned digitized audio to Fisk University. The post Aptil 1: Tennessee Gas Prices; Metro Council Questions Payroll System; BNA Additions appeared first on Nashville Banner.
11 minutes

Од Извршната власт не посочија конкретен рок кога наведениот предлог-закон повторно ќе биде доставен до Собранието за понатамошно постапување

Од Извршната власт не посочија конкретен рок кога наведениот предлог-закон повторно ќе биде доставен до Собранието за понатамошно постапување
11 minutes
Esta terça-feira, tiveram lugar os últimos jogos de play off para o Mundial de futebol masculino de 2026. Foram momentos intensos, que permitiram o apuramento da República Democrática do Congo, do Iraque e da Bósnia-Herzegovina, deixando de lado a Itália.
Esta terça-feira, tiveram lugar os últimos jogos de play off para o Mundial de futebol masculino de 2026. Foram momentos intensos, que permitiram o apuramento da República Democrática do Congo, do Iraque e da Bósnia-Herzegovina, deixando de lado a Itália.
12 minutes
At 26, Pujarini Pradhan – Puja for short – balances her phone against a steel container in her small kitchen in a village of East Midnapore district of West Bengal. Vegetables simmer on the stove, her two-year-old son calls out from the next room, and she adjusts her saree before looking straight into the camera. […] The post Finding her voice through social media appeared first on Village Square.
12 minutes
At 26, Pujarini Pradhan – Puja for short – balances her phone against a steel container in her small kitchen in a village of East Midnapore district of West Bengal. Vegetables simmer on the stove, her two-year-old son calls out from the next room, and she adjusts her saree before looking straight into the camera. […] The post Finding her voice through social media appeared first on Village Square.
13 minutes
Deir Cafe, a Middle Eastern coffeehouse in Antioch, offers a unique cultural experience with its late-night hours, vibrant atmosphere, and menu of traditional drinks. Its owner Yusuf Gumiza hopes to bring a Gazan perspective of cherishing life's small joys to Nashville. The post ‘We Are all the Same’: Deir Café Encourages Nashville to Slow Down and Truly Know Their Muslim Neighbors appeared first on Nashville Banner.
Deir Cafe, a Middle Eastern coffeehouse in Antioch, offers a unique cultural experience with its late-night hours, vibrant atmosphere, and menu of traditional drinks. Its owner Yusuf Gumiza hopes to bring a Gazan perspective of cherishing life's small joys to Nashville. The post ‘We Are all the Same’: Deir Café Encourages Nashville to Slow Down and Truly Know Their Muslim Neighbors appeared first on Nashville Banner.
14 minutes
The Tennessee House Education Committee has advanced legislation that would allow private religious postsecondary institutions to open public charter schools, potentially sparking a legal battle over whether charter schools are public schools. The post Bill Allowing Religious Charter Schools Clears House Education Committee appeared first on Nashville Banner.
The Tennessee House Education Committee has advanced legislation that would allow private religious postsecondary institutions to open public charter schools, potentially sparking a legal battle over whether charter schools are public schools. The post Bill Allowing Religious Charter Schools Clears House Education Committee appeared first on Nashville Banner.
15 minutes
What came to the floor of the Alabama House of Representatives Tuesday as an overtime tax deduction bill left as an overtime tax deduction bill with a grocery tax holiday attached. HB 527, sponsored by Rep. James Lomax, R-Huntsville, passed the chamber on a 100-0 vote. As filed, the bill allows individuals to deduct up […]
What came to the floor of the Alabama House of Representatives Tuesday as an overtime tax deduction bill left as an overtime tax deduction bill with a grocery tax holiday attached. HB 527, sponsored by Rep. James Lomax, R-Huntsville, passed the chamber on a 100-0 vote. As filed, the bill allows individuals to deduct up […]
15 minutes
Hôm nay, 01/04/2026, Tòa Án Tối Cao Hoa Kỳ bắt đầu xem xét đơn kháng cáo của chính quyền Trump đối với các phán quyết của các tòa án cấp dưới bác bỏ sắc lệnh của tổng thống về việc bãi bỏ quyền có quốc tịch do sinh ra tại Mỹ (quyền nơi sinh), được đưa ra ngày đầu nhậm chức nhiệm kỳ hai.
15 minutes
Hôm nay, 01/04/2026, Tòa Án Tối Cao Hoa Kỳ bắt đầu xem xét đơn kháng cáo của chính quyền Trump đối với các phán quyết của các tòa án cấp dưới bác bỏ sắc lệnh của tổng thống về việc bãi bỏ quyền có quốc tịch do sinh ra tại Mỹ (quyền nơi sinh), được đưa ra ngày đầu nhậm chức nhiệm kỳ hai.
15 minutes

In late 2025, now-New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani stunned the political world when he handily defeated establishment favorite and former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo. Mamdani won on promises of enacting bold, populist proposals like a rent freeze, free buses, universal child care and taxing millionaires. The campaign resonated with a diverse set of […]

In late 2025, now-New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani stunned the political world when he handily defeated establishment favorite and former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo. Mamdani won on promises of enacting bold, populist proposals like a rent freeze, free buses, universal child care and taxing millionaires. The campaign resonated with a diverse set of […]
15 minutes

In the first days after Pam Bondi was appointed attorney general last year, the Department of Justice began shutting down pending criminal cases at a record pace. The cases included an investigation into a Virginia nursing home with a recent record of patient abuse; probes of fraud involving several New Jersey labor unions, including one […]

In the first days after Pam Bondi was appointed attorney general last year, the Department of Justice began shutting down pending criminal cases at a record pace. The cases included an investigation into a Virginia nursing home with a recent record of patient abuse; probes of fraud involving several New Jersey labor unions, including one […]
16 minutes

Choosing a school for your child’s education is probably one of the most important decisions parents have to make. If you’re interested in keeping track of how our schools are doing in and around Indianapolis, there isn’t a single go-to source for information. Indy newsrooms have carved out different areas of expertise and they supplement […]

16 minutes
Choosing a school for your child’s education is probably one of the most important decisions parents have to make. If you’re interested in keeping track of how our schools are doing in and around Indianapolis, there isn’t a single go-to source for information. Indy newsrooms have carved out different areas of expertise and they supplement […]
16 minutes

The Reformer recently reported that overdose deaths from fentanyl continue to decline after hitting a high of 1,016 in the year that ended in June 2023. On one hand, the progress is a a relief after years of devastating increases. On the other, it is a sobering reminder: fentanyl continues to claim thousands of lives, and […]

The Reformer recently reported that overdose deaths from fentanyl continue to decline after hitting a high of 1,016 in the year that ended in June 2023. On one hand, the progress is a a relief after years of devastating increases. On the other, it is a sobering reminder: fentanyl continues to claim thousands of lives, and […]
16 minutes

A new study puts some numbers behind the arguments that Steuben County leaders have made in seeking to attract a new casino to Indiana’s farthest northeastern corner.

A new study puts some numbers behind the arguments that Steuben County leaders have made in seeking to attract a new casino to Indiana’s farthest northeastern corner.
16 minutes
Walk-in visits are often allowed and recommended before enrolling at a long-term care facility. Here’s what experts advise. Can you tour long-term care facilities without an appointment? is a post from Wisconsin Watch, a non-profit investigative news site covering Wisconsin since 2009. Please consider making a contribution to support our journalism.
Walk-in visits are often allowed and recommended before enrolling at a long-term care facility. Here’s what experts advise. Can you tour long-term care facilities without an appointment? is a post from Wisconsin Watch, a non-profit investigative news site covering Wisconsin since 2009. Please consider making a contribution to support our journalism.
16 minutes

Las principales Bolsas registran fuertes subidas mientras el crudo cae con fuerza, reflejando la expectativa de una rápida desescalada en Oriente Próximo tras el anuncio de Trump sobre la posible retirada de EE UU en pocas semanas.

Las principales Bolsas registran fuertes subidas mientras el crudo cae con fuerza, reflejando la expectativa de una rápida desescalada en Oriente Próximo tras el anuncio de Trump sobre la posible retirada de EE UU en pocas semanas.
16 minutes
Social workers could be rolled into the Kansas Tort Claims Act if Gov. Laura Kelly signs a bill passed by state lawmakers. The post Kansas bill gives foster care agencies more protections from lawsuits — the same level as law enforcement appeared first on The Beacon.
Social workers could be rolled into the Kansas Tort Claims Act if Gov. Laura Kelly signs a bill passed by state lawmakers. The post Kansas bill gives foster care agencies more protections from lawsuits — the same level as law enforcement appeared first on The Beacon.
16 minutes
Public health, explained: Sign up to receive Dr. Jay K. Varma’s reports in your inbox a day early.Hello and welcome to Healthbeat’s weekly report on stories shaping public health in the United States.I am Dr. Jay K. Varma, a physician, epidemiologist, and public health expert currently serving as chief medical officer at Fedcap, a national nonprofit focused on economic mobility and well-being for vulnerable communities. Views expressed here are my own.This week, I’m focused on what happens when we have no one leading public health in the United States. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has been effectively leaderless since President Donald Trump took office again, with vaccine policy mired in legal confusion and states fighting to keep funds they were promised. Leaderless at CDC, and no easy fix in sightThe CDC still has no permanent director, and news outlets are reporting that the administration is struggling to find a suitable candidate. The Trump administration’s only Senate-confirmed CDC director, Susan Monarez, lasted less than a month before she was fired by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. for refusing to support vaccine policy changes in August 2025. She was subsequently replaced with political operatives until, on February 18, 2026, the administration announced that health economist Jay Bhattacharya, who is already the Senate-confirmed director of the National Institutes of Health, would serve as acting CDC director. This unusual and, frankly, absurd situation is time-limited by law, but there are bureaucratic tricks that could allow the White House to extend this situation almost indefinitely. According to multiple reports, the White House has been considering at least three candidates — former Kentucky Gov. Ernie Fletcher, Mississippi state health officer Daniel Edney, and Johns Hopkins cardiologist Joseph Marine — but is struggling to settle on a nominee. Why? Politicians use a tactic known as triangulation when they need to make policy between competing and opposing factions. But are there any individuals in America with sufficient health qualifications who can triangulate between the groups most closely invested in the CDC director appointment?First there is Kennedy’s Make America Healthy Again base, which views the CDC as “corrupt” and wants the agency to withdraw most, if not all, routine childhood vaccine recommendations. Second, there is the Senate committee that has to approve the nominee and has disparate views on how much reform is actually needed at the CDC. And, finally, there is the health community — professional societies, leading academic voices, and patient advocates — which desperately wants a return to the cautious administrative and scientific processes that made the CDC the most well-respected public health agency in the world.The absence of steady, qualified leadership has torn the agency apart. The New York Times recently published an oral history of the CDC under the Trump administration drawn from interviews with 43 current and former employees. The remarkably poignant, sad story echoes everything I’ve heard from my former friends and colleagues: political appointees issuing orders without attributing the decision to any one leader or title, scientists told to communicate only verbally on sensitive topics to avoid any digital trail of deliberations, career staff taking phone calls outside out of fear that spyware on their computers is recording them. The CDC and its parent agency HHS have long been considered a great place for federal employees to work, having ranked in the top five best federal agencies for workforce since 2016, according to the Federal Viewpoint Survey. This year, the administration refused to conduct that study, and an outside group (the Partnership for Public Service) stepped in to replicate it. They found that HHS now scores 20.4 out of 100, among the lowest of any large federal agency. Fewer than 3% of HHS employees report that Kennedy’s political team generates high levels of motivation.On Wednesday, Bhattacharya held an all-hands meeting with CDC staff. Friends and colleagues of mine appreciated that he made statements that others in HHS have not, such as acknowledging the value of CDC employees, recognizing the challenges (a shooting!) they have had to endure, and pledging to address some workforce uncertainty, such as remote working agreements. They were not won over, however, by his inability to articulate what trust in public health and the CDC means and how he and this administration are working to strengthen it. What does a new CDC director actually need to do? If the administration nominates a candidate, I think there are three critical issues the nominee should be judged by.First, what is their vision for the nation’s public health agency, and how will they restore purpose and direction to an agency that has been defamed and degraded? A complex science and policy organization like the CDC cannot function without clear and steady leadership. Career scientists need to understand how to prioritize their time, who has authority over what decisions, and how much they can communicate with the public. Second, how will they bring order and scientific rigor back to vaccine policy? CDC vaccine policy has become an issue for the courts. In a lawsuit filed by the American Academy of Pediatrics, a federal judge in Boston temporarily blocked Kennedy’s January overhaul of the childhood vaccine schedule and stayed the appointments of 13 members of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, ruling that Kennedy likely violated the Administrative Procedure Act. The judge noted that only six of the ACIP’s 15 panelists appeared to have any meaningful experience in vaccines, despite a legal mandate that they do.In response to the ruling, the CDC canceled the ACIP meetings that had been scheduled for March. The former ACIP vice chair, Robert Malone, announced he is done with the committee entirely, citing, without any hint of self-reflection, "drama.” The United States now has no functioning vaccine advisory committee, and states, clinicians, and parents have no clarity about what the nationally recommended vaccine schedule is. The AAP lawsuit that produced the March 16 ruling could reach the Supreme Court before the year is out. A new CDC director needs to take a principled stand on returning to the evidence-based decision-making processes that have historically governed the CDC’s vaccine recommendations.Third, will the new CDC director commit to restoring funding to state and local health departments? This is where the damage from the past year is most direct and most immediate. State and local governments are directly responsible, under the Constitution, for protecting the health of the American people. The Trump administration has sought to terminate CDC grants to states run by Democratic governors, including California, Colorado, Illinois, and Minnesota. In Illinois alone, the cuts would eliminate more than $100 million supporting local health departments, HIV programs, and chronic disease surveillance. While a federal judge temporarily blocked the terminations, it is unclear what their long-term fate is and whether states are able to hire staff, purchase equipment, or do activities with these funds until the decision is resolved. A new CDC director must commit to restoring federal funding to all states, regardless of their partisan voting patterns.Anyone nominated to be CDC director must be asked, clearly and publicly, what they intend to do about each of those problems. The Senate confirmation process exists for exactly this purpose. As of March 27, the measles case count is at 1,654, over two-thirds of last year’s total in less than three months, and outbreaks around the country continue unabated. The resurgence of once eliminated diseases are the unfortunate but predictable consequence of a year without functioning CDC leadership.Until next week,JayDr. Jay K. Varma, who is recognized globally for his leadership in the prevention and control of infectious disease, writes about public health for Healthbeat. He has guided epidemic responses, developed policies, and implemented programs that have saved lives across Asia, Africa, and the United States. He is based in New York. Contact Jay at jvarma@healthbeat.org.
Public health, explained: Sign up to receive Dr. Jay K. Varma’s reports in your inbox a day early.Hello and welcome to Healthbeat’s weekly report on stories shaping public health in the United States.I am Dr. Jay K. Varma, a physician, epidemiologist, and public health expert currently serving as chief medical officer at Fedcap, a national nonprofit focused on economic mobility and well-being for vulnerable communities. Views expressed here are my own.This week, I’m focused on what happens when we have no one leading public health in the United States. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has been effectively leaderless since President Donald Trump took office again, with vaccine policy mired in legal confusion and states fighting to keep funds they were promised. Leaderless at CDC, and no easy fix in sightThe CDC still has no permanent director, and news outlets are reporting that the administration is struggling to find a suitable candidate. The Trump administration’s only Senate-confirmed CDC director, Susan Monarez, lasted less than a month before she was fired by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. for refusing to support vaccine policy changes in August 2025. She was subsequently replaced with political operatives until, on February 18, 2026, the administration announced that health economist Jay Bhattacharya, who is already the Senate-confirmed director of the National Institutes of Health, would serve as acting CDC director. This unusual and, frankly, absurd situation is time-limited by law, but there are bureaucratic tricks that could allow the White House to extend this situation almost indefinitely. According to multiple reports, the White House has been considering at least three candidates — former Kentucky Gov. Ernie Fletcher, Mississippi state health officer Daniel Edney, and Johns Hopkins cardiologist Joseph Marine — but is struggling to settle on a nominee. Why? Politicians use a tactic known as triangulation when they need to make policy between competing and opposing factions. But are there any individuals in America with sufficient health qualifications who can triangulate between the groups most closely invested in the CDC director appointment?First there is Kennedy’s Make America Healthy Again base, which views the CDC as “corrupt” and wants the agency to withdraw most, if not all, routine childhood vaccine recommendations. Second, there is the Senate committee that has to approve the nominee and has disparate views on how much reform is actually needed at the CDC. And, finally, there is the health community — professional societies, leading academic voices, and patient advocates — which desperately wants a return to the cautious administrative and scientific processes that made the CDC the most well-respected public health agency in the world.The absence of steady, qualified leadership has torn the agency apart. The New York Times recently published an oral history of the CDC under the Trump administration drawn from interviews with 43 current and former employees. The remarkably poignant, sad story echoes everything I’ve heard from my former friends and colleagues: political appointees issuing orders without attributing the decision to any one leader or title, scientists told to communicate only verbally on sensitive topics to avoid any digital trail of deliberations, career staff taking phone calls outside out of fear that spyware on their computers is recording them. The CDC and its parent agency HHS have long been considered a great place for federal employees to work, having ranked in the top five best federal agencies for workforce since 2016, according to the Federal Viewpoint Survey. This year, the administration refused to conduct that study, and an outside group (the Partnership for Public Service) stepped in to replicate it. They found that HHS now scores 20.4 out of 100, among the lowest of any large federal agency. Fewer than 3% of HHS employees report that Kennedy’s political team generates high levels of motivation.On Wednesday, Bhattacharya held an all-hands meeting with CDC staff. Friends and colleagues of mine appreciated that he made statements that others in HHS have not, such as acknowledging the value of CDC employees, recognizing the challenges (a shooting!) they have had to endure, and pledging to address some workforce uncertainty, such as remote working agreements. They were not won over, however, by his inability to articulate what trust in public health and the CDC means and how he and this administration are working to strengthen it. What does a new CDC director actually need to do? If the administration nominates a candidate, I think there are three critical issues the nominee should be judged by.First, what is their vision for the nation’s public health agency, and how will they restore purpose and direction to an agency that has been defamed and degraded? A complex science and policy organization like the CDC cannot function without clear and steady leadership. Career scientists need to understand how to prioritize their time, who has authority over what decisions, and how much they can communicate with the public. Second, how will they bring order and scientific rigor back to vaccine policy? CDC vaccine policy has become an issue for the courts. In a lawsuit filed by the American Academy of Pediatrics, a federal judge in Boston temporarily blocked Kennedy’s January overhaul of the childhood vaccine schedule and stayed the appointments of 13 members of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, ruling that Kennedy likely violated the Administrative Procedure Act. The judge noted that only six of the ACIP’s 15 panelists appeared to have any meaningful experience in vaccines, despite a legal mandate that they do.In response to the ruling, the CDC canceled the ACIP meetings that had been scheduled for March. The former ACIP vice chair, Robert Malone, announced he is done with the committee entirely, citing, without any hint of self-reflection, "drama.” The United States now has no functioning vaccine advisory committee, and states, clinicians, and parents have no clarity about what the nationally recommended vaccine schedule is. The AAP lawsuit that produced the March 16 ruling could reach the Supreme Court before the year is out. A new CDC director needs to take a principled stand on returning to the evidence-based decision-making processes that have historically governed the CDC’s vaccine recommendations.Third, will the new CDC director commit to restoring funding to state and local health departments? This is where the damage from the past year is most direct and most immediate. State and local governments are directly responsible, under the Constitution, for protecting the health of the American people. The Trump administration has sought to terminate CDC grants to states run by Democratic governors, including California, Colorado, Illinois, and Minnesota. In Illinois alone, the cuts would eliminate more than $100 million supporting local health departments, HIV programs, and chronic disease surveillance. While a federal judge temporarily blocked the terminations, it is unclear what their long-term fate is and whether states are able to hire staff, purchase equipment, or do activities with these funds until the decision is resolved. A new CDC director must commit to restoring federal funding to all states, regardless of their partisan voting patterns.Anyone nominated to be CDC director must be asked, clearly and publicly, what they intend to do about each of those problems. The Senate confirmation process exists for exactly this purpose. As of March 27, the measles case count is at 1,654, over two-thirds of last year’s total in less than three months, and outbreaks around the country continue unabated. The resurgence of once eliminated diseases are the unfortunate but predictable consequence of a year without functioning CDC leadership.Until next week,JayDr. Jay K. Varma, who is recognized globally for his leadership in the prevention and control of infectious disease, writes about public health for Healthbeat. He has guided epidemic responses, developed policies, and implemented programs that have saved lives across Asia, Africa, and the United States. He is based in New York. Contact Jay at jvarma@healthbeat.org.
16 minutes

Parents have to work to find information about schools The post Public Editor: Who covers education in Indy? appeared first on Mirror Indy.

Parents have to work to find information about schools The post Public Editor: Who covers education in Indy? appeared first on Mirror Indy.
16 minutes
An Edmond family was evicted after withholding rent from a national real estate investment company that failed for months to repair fire hazards, water damage and a missing carbon monoxide detector in their rental home. A professional inspection found the property barely habitable, yet it was relisted before repairs were completed. The post National Landlord Left Oklahoma Family in Barely Habitable Home, Then Evicted Them for Withholding Rent appeared first on Oklahoma Watch.
An Edmond family was evicted after withholding rent from a national real estate investment company that failed for months to repair fire hazards, water damage and a missing carbon monoxide detector in their rental home. A professional inspection found the property barely habitable, yet it was relisted before repairs were completed. The post National Landlord Left Oklahoma Family in Barely Habitable Home, Then Evicted Them for Withholding Rent appeared first on Oklahoma Watch.