11 minutes

The Current
Feed icon

Night to Shine is a prom-style event celebrating individuals with special needs, organized by the Tim Tebow Foundation and powered by local students, families, and church members, which provides a night of celebration and equality for those who attend. The Current is an inclusive nonprofit, non-partisan news organization providing in-depth watchdog journalism for Savannah and Coastal Georgia’s communities.

Feed icon
The Current
Attribution+

Night to Shine is a prom-style event celebrating individuals with special needs, organized by the Tim Tebow Foundation and powered by local students, families, and church members, which provides a night of celebration and equality for those who attend. The Current is an inclusive nonprofit, non-partisan news organization providing in-depth watchdog journalism for Savannah and Coastal Georgia’s communities.

Lawmakers said they need more time to reform current state law, as litigation against county treasurers builds.

Feed icon
Capitol News Illinois
CC BY-ND🅭🅯⊜

Lawmakers said they need more time to reform current state law, as litigation against county treasurers builds.

17 minutes

NC Newsline
Feed icon

The DCCC added Jamie Ager to its "Red to Blue” program, which targets U.S. House seats the group believes could flip from Republican to Democratic with more resources, training and fundraising support.

Feed icon
NC Newsline
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

The DCCC added Jamie Ager to its "Red to Blue” program, which targets U.S. House seats the group believes could flip from Republican to Democratic with more resources, training and fundraising support.

El exjefe de Red Bull aclara su papel en la polémica de 2025.

Feed icon
Mundiario
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

El exjefe de Red Bull aclara su papel en la polémica de 2025.

17 minutes

New Jersey Monitor
Feed icon

As Gov. Mikie Sherrill prepares for a budget address expected to focus on reducing spending, she warned Thursday that state reserves won't last without cuts.

Feed icon
New Jersey Monitor
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

As Gov. Mikie Sherrill prepares for a budget address expected to focus on reducing spending, she warned Thursday that state reserves won't last without cuts.

Alaska foster youth could see their ties to siblings legally protected through the adoption process, under legislation proposed last year in the Alaska House of Representatives. House Bill 157 would maintain the legal relationship between siblings through the process of adoption, and also encourage adoptive families to support sibling relationships. It is sponsored by Rep. […]

Feed icon
Alaska Beacon
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Alaska foster youth could see their ties to siblings legally protected through the adoption process, under legislation proposed last year in the Alaska House of Representatives. House Bill 157 would maintain the legal relationship between siblings through the process of adoption, and also encourage adoptive families to support sibling relationships. It is sponsored by Rep. […]

Para muchas comunidades del oeste, estos caminos y puentes privados no son un detalle menor: en numerosos casos son la única conexión con rutas públicas, escuelas y servicios de emergencia. La entrada Más de 3,500 caminos y puentes dañados por Helene aún esperan ser reparados se publicó primero en Enlace Latino NC. Más de 3,500 caminos y puentes dañados por Helene aún esperan ser reparados was first posted on febrero 26, 2026 at 5:00 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

Feed icon
Enlace Latino NC
CC BY-ND🅭🅯⊜

Para muchas comunidades del oeste, estos caminos y puentes privados no son un detalle menor: en numerosos casos son la única conexión con rutas públicas, escuelas y servicios de emergencia. La entrada Más de 3,500 caminos y puentes dañados por Helene aún esperan ser reparados se publicó primero en Enlace Latino NC. Más de 3,500 caminos y puentes dañados por Helene aún esperan ser reparados was first posted on febrero 26, 2026 at 5:00 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

An incident with Adobe AI software is raising question about whether the California Department of Education can effectively patrol a new technology.

Feed icon
LAist
Attribution+

An incident with Adobe AI software is raising question about whether the California Department of Education can effectively patrol a new technology.

Sign up for Chalkbeat Philadelphia’s free newsletter to keep up with the city’s public school system. The Philadelphia school district no longer plans to close Russell Conwell Middle School and Motivation High School, Superintendent Tony Watlington announced Thursday. The decision to spare the two schools from proposed closures comes after nearly a month of intense community pushback against the district’s sweeping facilities plan. Watlington has said the plan would help the district provide more resources and opportunities to all students, and would also include investments in schools that remain open. The changes also follow concerns of some prominent city officials who have so far opposed the plan. The district has also altered the plan to switch the schools some students would relocate to. But 18 schools — most of which have mounted strong protests against the closure plan — would still close beginning in 2027. Watlington presented the updated plan to the Board of Education Thursday afternoon. The board will ultimately decide whether that plan goes through, but it’s unclear when members will vote on it. Watlington said at a press briefing before the board meeting that the changes represent the district’s commitment to listening to community feedback. “Our community, quite frankly, made some suggestions that had merit,” Watlington said. “The fact that we can’t make all the changes that people across this great city recommended should never mean that we can’t make some of the changes.” In addition, under the revised plan, Lankenau Environmental Science High School would merge into Walter B. Saul High School as a career and technical education program. That’s a shift from the initial proposal to merge Lankenau into Roxborough High School as an honors program as officials initially proposed. However, the Lankenau building would still close. Meanwhile, students from Paul Robeson High School would relocate to Motivation, rather than Sayre High School. That means rather than joining a neighborhood high school, current Robeson students would remain at a small, criteria-based school. Lastly, Lewis Elkin Elementary School would no longer add grades to become a K-8 school. Instead, it would remain a K-4 school and students would attend Conwell after graduating. Conwell would have an honors program that students could apply for through the district’s school selection process. In total, more than 4,500 Philadelphia students would still have their schools closed in the coming years. The plan has the same price tag of $2.8 billion, which the district says would require extra philanthropic and public funding on top of district funds. Philadelphia City Council seeks leverage over school closures Members of Philadelphia’s City Council don’t have any direct say over the closure plan. But that hasn’t stopped them from speaking out about it. Last week, council members grilled school leaders over the plan. President Kenyatta Johnson said members would not “rubber stamp” the plan, and some members indicated they could withhold funding from the district in the city budget process to back up their views. Several prominent members rallied in particular support of Conwell Middle School in Kensington. City Council Education Committee Chair Isaiah Thomas previously said he would “never support” a plan that included closing Conwell, a school he attended. Councilmember Quetcy Lozada, whose district includes Kensington, said Conwell “should not be on that list.” When asked about political influence over the plan, Watlington said his team listened to all Philadelphians and “took all that feedback together.” Watlington said his team heard from Conwell alumni and accounted for feedback that the district should invest more in Kensington, which the district categorizes as socially vulnerable. But he denied that the district played favorites. “We landed on these recommended changes not reflecting any one voice or sector more than the others,” he added. Fewer students would switch to neighborhood high schools When he announced the school closure plan last month, Watlington said one of its major goals was to reinvest in neighborhood high schools. The initial proposal would have closed five criteria-based magnet high schools or citywide admissions high schools with low enrollment. Students at four of those schools would instead attend neighborhood high schools. But at crowded community meetings, many high school families said they chose small schools for a reason. Some said they would leave the district entirely rather than send their children to larger neighborhood high schools. Many neighborhood high schools have been in a tough position in Philadelphia, juggling hundreds of students with few resources. Some have a reputation for chaos and violence. School leaders said funneling more students into those schools would enable them to create more opportunities. But now, they seem to be walking back that strategy. Only one closing school — Parkway Northwest — would still merge into a neighborhood high school. It would become an honors program at Martin Luther King High School, even though many families have said they would not want to send their children there. “All children in all of our schools are important, and we think they all deserve the very best,” Watlington said. “We also won’t hide from the fact that we heard some feedback from individuals who said that they prefer the smaller, boutique high school experience.” Rebecca Redelmeier is a reporter at Chalkbeat Philadelphia. She writes about public schools, early childhood education, and issues that affect students, families, and educators across Philadelphia. Contact Rebecca at rredelmeier@chalkbeat.org.

Feed icon
Chalkbeat
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Sign up for Chalkbeat Philadelphia’s free newsletter to keep up with the city’s public school system. The Philadelphia school district no longer plans to close Russell Conwell Middle School and Motivation High School, Superintendent Tony Watlington announced Thursday. The decision to spare the two schools from proposed closures comes after nearly a month of intense community pushback against the district’s sweeping facilities plan. Watlington has said the plan would help the district provide more resources and opportunities to all students, and would also include investments in schools that remain open. The changes also follow concerns of some prominent city officials who have so far opposed the plan. The district has also altered the plan to switch the schools some students would relocate to. But 18 schools — most of which have mounted strong protests against the closure plan — would still close beginning in 2027. Watlington presented the updated plan to the Board of Education Thursday afternoon. The board will ultimately decide whether that plan goes through, but it’s unclear when members will vote on it. Watlington said at a press briefing before the board meeting that the changes represent the district’s commitment to listening to community feedback. “Our community, quite frankly, made some suggestions that had merit,” Watlington said. “The fact that we can’t make all the changes that people across this great city recommended should never mean that we can’t make some of the changes.” In addition, under the revised plan, Lankenau Environmental Science High School would merge into Walter B. Saul High School as a career and technical education program. That’s a shift from the initial proposal to merge Lankenau into Roxborough High School as an honors program as officials initially proposed. However, the Lankenau building would still close. Meanwhile, students from Paul Robeson High School would relocate to Motivation, rather than Sayre High School. That means rather than joining a neighborhood high school, current Robeson students would remain at a small, criteria-based school. Lastly, Lewis Elkin Elementary School would no longer add grades to become a K-8 school. Instead, it would remain a K-4 school and students would attend Conwell after graduating. Conwell would have an honors program that students could apply for through the district’s school selection process. In total, more than 4,500 Philadelphia students would still have their schools closed in the coming years. The plan has the same price tag of $2.8 billion, which the district says would require extra philanthropic and public funding on top of district funds. Philadelphia City Council seeks leverage over school closures Members of Philadelphia’s City Council don’t have any direct say over the closure plan. But that hasn’t stopped them from speaking out about it. Last week, council members grilled school leaders over the plan. President Kenyatta Johnson said members would not “rubber stamp” the plan, and some members indicated they could withhold funding from the district in the city budget process to back up their views. Several prominent members rallied in particular support of Conwell Middle School in Kensington. City Council Education Committee Chair Isaiah Thomas previously said he would “never support” a plan that included closing Conwell, a school he attended. Councilmember Quetcy Lozada, whose district includes Kensington, said Conwell “should not be on that list.” When asked about political influence over the plan, Watlington said his team listened to all Philadelphians and “took all that feedback together.” Watlington said his team heard from Conwell alumni and accounted for feedback that the district should invest more in Kensington, which the district categorizes as socially vulnerable. But he denied that the district played favorites. “We landed on these recommended changes not reflecting any one voice or sector more than the others,” he added. Fewer students would switch to neighborhood high schools When he announced the school closure plan last month, Watlington said one of its major goals was to reinvest in neighborhood high schools. The initial proposal would have closed five criteria-based magnet high schools or citywide admissions high schools with low enrollment. Students at four of those schools would instead attend neighborhood high schools. But at crowded community meetings, many high school families said they chose small schools for a reason. Some said they would leave the district entirely rather than send their children to larger neighborhood high schools. Many neighborhood high schools have been in a tough position in Philadelphia, juggling hundreds of students with few resources. Some have a reputation for chaos and violence. School leaders said funneling more students into those schools would enable them to create more opportunities. But now, they seem to be walking back that strategy. Only one closing school — Parkway Northwest — would still merge into a neighborhood high school. It would become an honors program at Martin Luther King High School, even though many families have said they would not want to send their children there. “All children in all of our schools are important, and we think they all deserve the very best,” Watlington said. “We also won’t hide from the fact that we heard some feedback from individuals who said that they prefer the smaller, boutique high school experience.” Rebecca Redelmeier is a reporter at Chalkbeat Philadelphia. She writes about public schools, early childhood education, and issues that affect students, families, and educators across Philadelphia. Contact Rebecca at rredelmeier@chalkbeat.org.

Поправка також посилює покарання для демонстрантів, які перешкоджають повітряному руху, блокуючи злітно-посадкові смуги

Feed icon
Радіо Свобода
Attribution+

Поправка також посилює покарання для демонстрантів, які перешкоджають повітряному руху, блокуючи злітно-посадкові смуги

Gov. Ned Lamont refused to rule out vetoing portions of an emergency bill, wary over the inclusion of provisions that provide new earmarks.

Feed icon
CT Mirror
CC BY-ND🅭🅯⊜

Gov. Ned Lamont refused to rule out vetoing portions of an emergency bill, wary over the inclusion of provisions that provide new earmarks.

20 minutes

Outras Palavras
Feed icon

Documentos revelam instrução formal da Casa Branca para proteger as big techs norte-americanas. No caso brasileiro, é mais grave: despacho soma-se à investigação contra o PIX e a tentativa de governar os dados nacionais. Ações ajudam a compreender por que a regulação não sai do papel The post Como Trump sabota a soberania digital brasileira appeared first on Outras Palavras.

Feed icon
Outras Palavras
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

Documentos revelam instrução formal da Casa Branca para proteger as big techs norte-americanas. No caso brasileiro, é mais grave: despacho soma-se à investigação contra o PIX e a tentativa de governar os dados nacionais. Ações ajudam a compreender por que a regulação não sai do papel The post Como Trump sabota a soberania digital brasileira appeared first on Outras Palavras.

أعلنت المنظمة الدولية للهجرة عن نزوح 2690 شخصاً من منطقة مستريحة بولاية شمال دارفور خلال يومي الإثنين والثلاثاء، في أعقاب هجوم مسلح أدى إلى تدهور الأوضاع الأمنية والإنسانية في المنطقة. وأوضحت المنظمة

Feed icon
الرئيسية
CC BY🅭🅯

أعلنت المنظمة الدولية للهجرة عن نزوح 2690 شخصاً من منطقة مستريحة بولاية شمال دارفور خلال يومي الإثنين والثلاثاء، في أعقاب هجوم مسلح أدى إلى تدهور الأوضاع الأمنية والإنسانية في المنطقة. وأوضحت المنظمة

Les pays de l'Union européenne (UE) pourront utiliser des fonds européens pour permettre à des femmes d'interrompre volontairement leur grossesse partout en Europe, a indiqué jeudi 26 février la Commission à Bruxelles, en réponse à une pétition réclamant des financements pour des avortements « sûrs ».

Feed icon
Radio France Internationale
Attribution+

Les pays de l'Union européenne (UE) pourront utiliser des fonds européens pour permettre à des femmes d'interrompre volontairement leur grossesse partout en Europe, a indiqué jeudi 26 février la Commission à Bruxelles, en réponse à une pétition réclamant des financements pour des avortements « sûrs ».

22 minutes

Iowa Capital Dispatch
Feed icon

The University of Northern Iowa won, for now, a big one. No, it was not a three-point shot at the buzzer by the women’s basketball team or a two-point conversion on a trick play to secure a victory by the football team. This is bigger than all of those by far. UNI just received a […]

Feed icon
Iowa Capital Dispatch
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

The University of Northern Iowa won, for now, a big one. No, it was not a three-point shot at the buzzer by the women’s basketball team or a two-point conversion on a trick play to secure a victory by the football team. This is bigger than all of those by far. UNI just received a […]

23 minutes

Mundiario
Feed icon

Why the "Customer Is Always Right" doesn't work when the Blockchain is the one in charge.

Feed icon
Mundiario
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

Why the "Customer Is Always Right" doesn't work when the Blockchain is the one in charge.

23 minutes

Arkansas Advocate
Feed icon

A federal judge ended a 43-year desegregation case Thursday when he ruled a central Arkansas school district was now providing equitable facilities to its students after years of court supervision.  In a seven-page ruling, U.S. District Judge D.P. Marshall Jr. said the Pulaski County Special School District had eliminated the inequalities identified in 2020 between […]

Feed icon
Arkansas Advocate
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

A federal judge ended a 43-year desegregation case Thursday when he ruled a central Arkansas school district was now providing equitable facilities to its students after years of court supervision.  In a seven-page ruling, U.S. District Judge D.P. Marshall Jr. said the Pulaski County Special School District had eliminated the inequalities identified in 2020 between […]

Os moradores da zona leste de São Paulo, contam com programação cultural gratuita no próximo sábado (28), no CEU São Mateus. A agenda reúne arte, música e protagonismo periférico em shows e apresentações de dança e performances corporais. Abrindo a programação, às 14h, ocorre o show de rap “Rod – O Legado das Ruas”, que […] O post Rapper Rod e Grupo Luna animam São Mateus no próximo sábado (28) apareceu primeiro em Agência Mural.

Feed icon
Agência Mural
Attribution+

Os moradores da zona leste de São Paulo, contam com programação cultural gratuita no próximo sábado (28), no CEU São Mateus. A agenda reúne arte, música e protagonismo periférico em shows e apresentações de dança e performances corporais. Abrindo a programação, às 14h, ocorre o show de rap “Rod – O Legado das Ruas”, que […] O post Rapper Rod e Grupo Luna animam São Mateus no próximo sábado (28) apareceu primeiro em Agência Mural.

The Telfair Museum in Savannah is facing financial struggles due to staff turnover and declining donations, but the board is optimistic about the future with new investments and a search for a new leader. The Current is an inclusive nonprofit, non-partisan news organization providing in-depth watchdog journalism for Savannah and Coastal Georgia’s communities.

Feed icon
The Current
Attribution+

The Telfair Museum in Savannah is facing financial struggles due to staff turnover and declining donations, but the board is optimistic about the future with new investments and a search for a new leader. The Current is an inclusive nonprofit, non-partisan news organization providing in-depth watchdog journalism for Savannah and Coastal Georgia’s communities.

The Columbia student arrested by ICE agents inside her dorm was released hours later following an intervention from President Donald Trump, who was apparently acting at the behest of Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who met with him at the White House earlier in the afternoon. Ellie Aghayeva, an Azerbaijani undergraduate student of neuroscience and political science, […] The post Mamdani-Trump Meeting Leads to Release of Columbia Student Detained by ICE appeared first on THE CITY - NYC News.

Feed icon
The City
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

The Columbia student arrested by ICE agents inside her dorm was released hours later following an intervention from President Donald Trump, who was apparently acting at the behest of Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who met with him at the White House earlier in the afternoon. Ellie Aghayeva, an Azerbaijani undergraduate student of neuroscience and political science, […] The post Mamdani-Trump Meeting Leads to Release of Columbia Student Detained by ICE appeared first on THE CITY - NYC News.