“Elektrodistribuimi” zbuloi vjedhjen e energjisë elektrike nga një trafostacion. Pas një inspektimi, u përcaktua se energjia elektrike ishte përdorur për gërmimin e bitcoin-ëve në një ndërtesë biznesi, përkatësisht një ish-mulli në Butel, Shkup, transmeton Portalb.mk. Ata thonë se për shkak të dyshimit për vjedhje të supozuar të energjisë elektrike, ekipi për zbulimin e përdorimit të […]

Feed icon
Portalb
CC BY🅭🅯

“Elektrodistribuimi” zbuloi vjedhjen e energjisë elektrike nga një trafostacion. Pas një inspektimi, u përcaktua se energjia elektrike ishte përdorur për gërmimin e bitcoin-ëve në një ndërtesë biznesi, përkatësisht një ish-mulli në Butel, Shkup, transmeton Portalb.mk. Ata thonë se për shkak të dyshimit për vjedhje të supozuar të energjisë elektrike, ekipi për zbulimin e përdorimit të […]

Flash info : attaque surprise d’un checkpoint des FACA à Dembia, 2 militaires portés disparus       Rédigé le . Par : la rédaction de Corbeaunews-Centrafrique (CNC).  Les miliciens d’autodéfense Azandé ont frappé dur ce mardi 3 janvier 2026 dans la matinée une position des éléments de forces armées centrafricaines dans la localité de Dembia, située […] Cet article Flash info : attaque surprise d’un checkpoint des FACA à Dembia, 2 militaires portés disparus   est apparu en premier sur Corbeau News Centrafrique ou si b il LPP et actualités en République centrafricaine.

Feed icon
Corbeau News Centrafrique
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

Flash info : attaque surprise d’un checkpoint des FACA à Dembia, 2 militaires portés disparus       Rédigé le . Par : la rédaction de Corbeaunews-Centrafrique (CNC).  Les miliciens d’autodéfense Azandé ont frappé dur ce mardi 3 janvier 2026 dans la matinée une position des éléments de forces armées centrafricaines dans la localité de Dembia, située […] Cet article Flash info : attaque surprise d’un checkpoint des FACA à Dembia, 2 militaires portés disparus   est apparu en premier sur Corbeau News Centrafrique ou si b il LPP et actualités en République centrafricaine.

Gov. Bill Lee gave is final State of the State speech and released his proposed Fiscal Year 2027 budget, focusing on doubling his school voucher program and investing in public safety, conservation, and nuclear energy, while Democrats criticized his focus on political projects rather than cost-of-living concerns. The post Lee’s Final Budget Proposal Would Double School Vouchers, Increase Funding for Law Enforcement appeared first on Nashville Banner.

Feed icon
Nashville Banner
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Gov. Bill Lee gave is final State of the State speech and released his proposed Fiscal Year 2027 budget, focusing on doubling his school voucher program and investing in public safety, conservation, and nuclear energy, while Democrats criticized his focus on political projects rather than cost-of-living concerns. The post Lee’s Final Budget Proposal Would Double School Vouchers, Increase Funding for Law Enforcement appeared first on Nashville Banner.

Hai mươi năm để hãng xe BYD chinh phục thế giới, qua mặt tập đoàn ô tô điện của Mỹ Tesla. Trung Quốc trong năm 2025 đã xuýt soán ngôi Nhật Bản trở thành nhà sản xuất xe hơi số một toàn cầu. Đâu là bí quyết đưa BYD để vươn ra thế giới ? Một lần nữa, Trung Quốc lại đe dọa đến sự sống còn của những gì từng làm nên tên tuổi của ngành công nghiệp Âu, Mỹ !

Feed icon
Radio France Internationale
Attribution+

Hai mươi năm để hãng xe BYD chinh phục thế giới, qua mặt tập đoàn ô tô điện của Mỹ Tesla. Trung Quốc trong năm 2025 đã xuýt soán ngôi Nhật Bản trở thành nhà sản xuất xe hơi số một toàn cầu. Đâu là bí quyết đưa BYD để vươn ra thế giới ? Một lần nữa, Trung Quốc lại đe dọa đến sự sống còn của những gì từng làm nên tên tuổi của ngành công nghiệp Âu, Mỹ !

11 minutes

Pennsylvania Capital-Star
Feed icon

the question for many states and school districts isn’t whether to remove distracting devices from students each day, but for how long.

Feed icon
Pennsylvania Capital-Star
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

the question for many states and school districts isn’t whether to remove distracting devices from students each day, but for how long.

Metro Nashville Public Schools, in collaboration with Mercy Chefs and World Central Kitchen, set up three distribution sites last weekend to aid families impacted by the winter storm, providing hundreds of hot meals and clothes, while teachers and staff rallied to support students and families during the school closures. The post When Schools Closed After the Winter Storm, MNPS Teachers and Staff Supported Students appeared first on Nashville Banner.

Feed icon
Nashville Banner
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Metro Nashville Public Schools, in collaboration with Mercy Chefs and World Central Kitchen, set up three distribution sites last weekend to aid families impacted by the winter storm, providing hundreds of hot meals and clothes, while teachers and staff rallied to support students and families during the school closures. The post When Schools Closed After the Winter Storm, MNPS Teachers and Staff Supported Students appeared first on Nashville Banner.

12 minutes

Nashville Banner
Feed icon

Residents of Nashville have been left with yards full of debris from a winter storm and are struggling to find a place to dispose of it while waiting for the city to collect it. The post Tree Debris From Winter Storm Likely to Stick Around Nashville for a While appeared first on Nashville Banner.

Feed icon
Nashville Banner
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Residents of Nashville have been left with yards full of debris from a winter storm and are struggling to find a place to dispose of it while waiting for the city to collect it. The post Tree Debris From Winter Storm Likely to Stick Around Nashville for a While appeared first on Nashville Banner.

12 minutes

Connecticut Inside Investigator
Feed icon

A CT State Trooper is being sued after an Internal Affairs investigation found he used his position to stalk and harass a CT resident. The post CT State trooper used badge to “target” resident while off duty, but kept his job appeared first on Inside Investigator.

Feed icon
Connecticut Inside Investigator
CC BY-ND🅭🅯⊜

A CT State Trooper is being sued after an Internal Affairs investigation found he used his position to stalk and harass a CT resident. The post CT State trooper used badge to “target” resident while off duty, but kept his job appeared first on Inside Investigator.

Voters in Chambers and Lee counties will go to the polls Tuesday to choose a new state representative in the House District 38 special election.  Voters will choose between Republican candidate Kristin Nelson, chair of the Chambers Party Republican Party and Democratic candidate Hazel Floyd, a recent graduate of the University of Alabama. The seat […]

Feed icon
Alabama Reflector
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Voters in Chambers and Lee counties will go to the polls Tuesday to choose a new state representative in the House District 38 special election.  Voters will choose between Republican candidate Kristin Nelson, chair of the Chambers Party Republican Party and Democratic candidate Hazel Floyd, a recent graduate of the University of Alabama. The seat […]

伊朗与美国的核谈判将在2月4日于土耳其伊斯坦布尔恢复。此次会谈旨在避免冲突并缓解双方紧张局势,同时一些地区大国也应邀参加。受邀参加外长级会谈的国家包括巴基斯坦、沙特阿拉伯、卡塔尔、埃及、阿曼和阿拉伯联合酋长国。会议的具体形式尚未确定,但“主要会议”定于2月4日举行,旨在开启对话,防止事态进一步升级。

Feed icon
法国国际广播电台
Attribution+

伊朗与美国的核谈判将在2月4日于土耳其伊斯坦布尔恢复。此次会谈旨在避免冲突并缓解双方紧张局势,同时一些地区大国也应邀参加。受邀参加外长级会谈的国家包括巴基斯坦、沙特阿拉伯、卡塔尔、埃及、阿曼和阿拉伯联合酋长国。会议的具体形式尚未确定,但“主要会议”定于2月4日举行,旨在开启对话,防止事态进一步升级。

13 minutes

Nashville Banner
Feed icon

The Metro Council will consider a resolution to recognize employees of Metro departments and Nashville Electric Service for their work during the winter storm, as well as a pre-budget public hearing, a resolution criticizing The Boring Company, and bills related to the East Bank development at its first February meeting. The post Your Guide to Nashville’s Metro Council Meeting: Feb. 3, 2026 appeared first on Nashville Banner.

Feed icon
Nashville Banner
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

The Metro Council will consider a resolution to recognize employees of Metro departments and Nashville Electric Service for their work during the winter storm, as well as a pre-budget public hearing, a resolution criticizing The Boring Company, and bills related to the East Bank development at its first February meeting. The post Your Guide to Nashville’s Metro Council Meeting: Feb. 3, 2026 appeared first on Nashville Banner.

14 minutes

Indiana Capital Chronicle
Feed icon

More than 60 witnesses testified during the four-and-a-half-hour meeting, with about a dozen in support and four dozen in opposition.

Feed icon
Indiana Capital Chronicle
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

More than 60 witnesses testified during the four-and-a-half-hour meeting, with about a dozen in support and four dozen in opposition.

Trong một cuộc họp nội các được phát trực tiếp trên truyền hình hôm thứ Năm 29/01/2026, tổng thống Mỹ Donald Trump phấn khởi tuyên bố : « Không một quốc gia nào khác trong lịch sử có thể tự hào đạt được một con số như thế : 18 ngàn tỷ đô la đang được đầu tư. Hàng nghìn doanh nghiệp, nhà xưởng và thiết bị đang được xây dựng trên khắp cả nước. Và các cơ sở này sẽ sớm mở cửa ». Tuy nhiên, theo báo Les Echos, khi xem xét kỹ các thỏa thuận được công bố cho đến nay, đó lại là một câu chuyện khác.

Feed icon
Radio France Internationale
Attribution+

Trong một cuộc họp nội các được phát trực tiếp trên truyền hình hôm thứ Năm 29/01/2026, tổng thống Mỹ Donald Trump phấn khởi tuyên bố : « Không một quốc gia nào khác trong lịch sử có thể tự hào đạt được một con số như thế : 18 ngàn tỷ đô la đang được đầu tư. Hàng nghìn doanh nghiệp, nhà xưởng và thiết bị đang được xây dựng trên khắp cả nước. Và các cơ sở này sẽ sớm mở cửa ». Tuy nhiên, theo báo Les Echos, khi xem xét kỹ các thỏa thuận được công bố cho đến nay, đó lại là một câu chuyện khác.

14 minutes

BOOM Live
Feed icon

BOOM found that the footage is not real and was generated with the help of artificial intelligence.

Feed icon
BOOM Live
CC BY-ND🅭🅯⊜

BOOM found that the footage is not real and was generated with the help of artificial intelligence.

Votebeat is a nonprofit news organization reporting on voting access and election administration across the U.S. Sign up for our free weekly newsletter to get the latest. A new analysis from Issue One finds that half of all counties in 11 Western states have lost their chief election official since the 2020 election, underscoring a deepening workforce crisis driven largely by stress, threats, and burnout — not electoral defeat or term limits. “This isn’t just normal turnover,” the report’s authors wrote in the report, released in advance to Votebeat. “Veteran officials are opting to head for the exits,” taking with them institutional knowledge that can be difficult and costly for local governments to replace. The study by Issue One, a nonprofit group that works on election and democracy issues, examined post-2020 trends in local election administration in Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming, and found widespread turnover among top local election officials. The findings build on earlier research showing elevated departures after the 2020 election but suggest the trend has not eased even after the 2024 presidential race. In 2025 alone, 53 chief local election officials in Western states left their jobs, nearly matching the 55 who departed in the year after the 2020 election. Election officials have long described their work as demanding and under-resourced, but scrutiny of the profession intensified after false claims of widespread voter fraud gained traction following President Donald Trump’s loss in 2020. Since then, election administrators across the country have reported burnout and serious job-related health consequences, along with harassment, intimidation, and threats — pressures that the report links directly to the pace of resignations. The issue has become more pressing in recent weeks, as the Trump administration has ramped up attacks on local administrators. While lack of funding, increased local legislation, and scrutiny have continued, Issue One Policy Director Michael McNulty said the administration’s willingness to issue search warrants and file lawsuits means “we are in a different world now.” The pressure has been especially intense in places where elections are most contested or draw outsize media attention. The report found that 80% of counties where the 2020 presidential election was decided by five percentage points or less experienced turnover, compared with just 40% of counties where margins exceeded 50 percentage points. Large, populous counties also saw higher rates of departures than smaller rural jurisdictions. In California’s Shasta County, Clerk and Registrar of Voters Cathy Darling Allen retired in 2024 after nearly two decades in the role, citing heart failure and the need to reduce stress. Her successor resigned less than a year later for similar health-related reasons, underscoring how quickly the pressure can take a toll. In Nevada, longtime Clark County Registrar Joe Gloria said threats escalated to the point that police were checking on his home hourly — and that his family was also targeted. “That’s when it did feel a bit different,” Gloria told the Las Vegas Review-Journal, explaining why he ultimately left after nearly 10 years running elections in the state’s most populous county. Why election officials keep quitting Taken together, the data and anecdotes point to a workforce under long-building strain, particularly in places where elections are most closely watched. The report suggests that the very conditions that have made election administration increasingly demanding in recent years — high turnout, national attention, legal challenges, and persistent scrutiny — are also the ones driving experienced officials away, leaving many jurisdictions heading toward the 2026 midterms with less institutional memory and thinner leadership benches than they had just a few years ago. Michael Beckel, research director at Issue One, said that while localities and universities are investing in durable training programs and peer mentorship for new election administrators, much of what it takes to run an election well comes from experience. “So many times, if there are small mistakes that happen in election administration, it’s human error,” he said. The concern is not simply that new officials lack commitment or skill, but that they are being asked to take on increasingly complex jobs in a politically hostile environment. The report found that many departures occurred mid-term and that turnover remained high even after the 2024 presidential election, suggesting that the pressures driving officials out have not eased. “We are not out of the woods yet,” said Beckel. While new officials are coming in “with their eyes wide open” to the new pressures, it will still take a significant increase in support to lower turnover rates ahead of the 2028 presidential election. Stabilizing an exhausted workforce The report argues that the turnover trend is not inevitable — but reversing it will require political leaders to reduce pressures on election officials rather than add to them. Among its recommendations, Issue One calls for stronger protections against threats, harassment, and doxxing of election workers, noting that election infrastructure is already designated as critical infrastructure under federal law. While dozens of states have criminalized intimidation of election officials, the report says enforcement and broader political condemnation of threats remain uneven. The report also calls for increased funding and staffing support for local election offices, which often absorb new legal and security demands without additional resources. Limiting unfunded mandates, curbing last-minute changes to election law, and investing in recruitment and retention programs — including fellowships that bring new workers into election offices — could help stabilize a workforce strained by burnout, the authors say. Without sustained investment, they warn, jurisdictions will enter future elections with fewer experienced leaders and little margin for error. “Counties can’t do this alone,” said Beckel. “It really takes people working in partnership and across the aisle to stop re-ligitating the past and to stop treating conspiracy theories as truth.” Jessica Huseman is Votebeat’s editorial director and is based in Dallas. Contact Jessica at jhuseman@votebeat.org.

Feed icon
Votebeat
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Votebeat is a nonprofit news organization reporting on voting access and election administration across the U.S. Sign up for our free weekly newsletter to get the latest. A new analysis from Issue One finds that half of all counties in 11 Western states have lost their chief election official since the 2020 election, underscoring a deepening workforce crisis driven largely by stress, threats, and burnout — not electoral defeat or term limits. “This isn’t just normal turnover,” the report’s authors wrote in the report, released in advance to Votebeat. “Veteran officials are opting to head for the exits,” taking with them institutional knowledge that can be difficult and costly for local governments to replace. The study by Issue One, a nonprofit group that works on election and democracy issues, examined post-2020 trends in local election administration in Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming, and found widespread turnover among top local election officials. The findings build on earlier research showing elevated departures after the 2020 election but suggest the trend has not eased even after the 2024 presidential race. In 2025 alone, 53 chief local election officials in Western states left their jobs, nearly matching the 55 who departed in the year after the 2020 election. Election officials have long described their work as demanding and under-resourced, but scrutiny of the profession intensified after false claims of widespread voter fraud gained traction following President Donald Trump’s loss in 2020. Since then, election administrators across the country have reported burnout and serious job-related health consequences, along with harassment, intimidation, and threats — pressures that the report links directly to the pace of resignations. The issue has become more pressing in recent weeks, as the Trump administration has ramped up attacks on local administrators. While lack of funding, increased local legislation, and scrutiny have continued, Issue One Policy Director Michael McNulty said the administration’s willingness to issue search warrants and file lawsuits means “we are in a different world now.” The pressure has been especially intense in places where elections are most contested or draw outsize media attention. The report found that 80% of counties where the 2020 presidential election was decided by five percentage points or less experienced turnover, compared with just 40% of counties where margins exceeded 50 percentage points. Large, populous counties also saw higher rates of departures than smaller rural jurisdictions. In California’s Shasta County, Clerk and Registrar of Voters Cathy Darling Allen retired in 2024 after nearly two decades in the role, citing heart failure and the need to reduce stress. Her successor resigned less than a year later for similar health-related reasons, underscoring how quickly the pressure can take a toll. In Nevada, longtime Clark County Registrar Joe Gloria said threats escalated to the point that police were checking on his home hourly — and that his family was also targeted. “That’s when it did feel a bit different,” Gloria told the Las Vegas Review-Journal, explaining why he ultimately left after nearly 10 years running elections in the state’s most populous county. Why election officials keep quitting Taken together, the data and anecdotes point to a workforce under long-building strain, particularly in places where elections are most closely watched. The report suggests that the very conditions that have made election administration increasingly demanding in recent years — high turnout, national attention, legal challenges, and persistent scrutiny — are also the ones driving experienced officials away, leaving many jurisdictions heading toward the 2026 midterms with less institutional memory and thinner leadership benches than they had just a few years ago. Michael Beckel, research director at Issue One, said that while localities and universities are investing in durable training programs and peer mentorship for new election administrators, much of what it takes to run an election well comes from experience. “So many times, if there are small mistakes that happen in election administration, it’s human error,” he said. The concern is not simply that new officials lack commitment or skill, but that they are being asked to take on increasingly complex jobs in a politically hostile environment. The report found that many departures occurred mid-term and that turnover remained high even after the 2024 presidential election, suggesting that the pressures driving officials out have not eased. “We are not out of the woods yet,” said Beckel. While new officials are coming in “with their eyes wide open” to the new pressures, it will still take a significant increase in support to lower turnover rates ahead of the 2028 presidential election. Stabilizing an exhausted workforce The report argues that the turnover trend is not inevitable — but reversing it will require political leaders to reduce pressures on election officials rather than add to them. Among its recommendations, Issue One calls for stronger protections against threats, harassment, and doxxing of election workers, noting that election infrastructure is already designated as critical infrastructure under federal law. While dozens of states have criminalized intimidation of election officials, the report says enforcement and broader political condemnation of threats remain uneven. The report also calls for increased funding and staffing support for local election offices, which often absorb new legal and security demands without additional resources. Limiting unfunded mandates, curbing last-minute changes to election law, and investing in recruitment and retention programs — including fellowships that bring new workers into election offices — could help stabilize a workforce strained by burnout, the authors say. Without sustained investment, they warn, jurisdictions will enter future elections with fewer experienced leaders and little margin for error. “Counties can’t do this alone,” said Beckel. “It really takes people working in partnership and across the aisle to stop re-ligitating the past and to stop treating conspiracy theories as truth.” Jessica Huseman is Votebeat’s editorial director and is based in Dallas. Contact Jessica at jhuseman@votebeat.org.

Wisconsin is suing to block federal immigration officials from accessing Medicaid records. The dispute has sparked concerns over privacy and avoided health care. Can immigration officials access your Medicaid data? What it means for Wisconsin patients 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.

Feed icon
Wisconsin Watch
CC BY-ND🅭🅯⊜

Wisconsin is suing to block federal immigration officials from accessing Medicaid records. The dispute has sparked concerns over privacy and avoided health care. Can immigration officials access your Medicaid data? What it means for Wisconsin patients 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.

Jaja Chen experienced the challenge of being Asian in Waco when she moved here. She set out to help make it a more welcoming community. The post Waco Voices: Connecting through Boba tea, therapy and Asian culture appeared first on The Waco Bridge.

Feed icon
The Waco Bridge
Attribution+

Jaja Chen experienced the challenge of being Asian in Waco when she moved here. She set out to help make it a more welcoming community. The post Waco Voices: Connecting through Boba tea, therapy and Asian culture appeared first on The Waco Bridge.

Today’s round of questions, my smart-aleck replies and the real answers: Question: As we all know, early January was unseasonably warm, with temperatures at one point in the mid-50s — in the morning! Then in the last two weeks we’ve had two winter storms, temperatures in the single digits at night and windchills near 20 […] The post Answer Man: How are bears faring in this extreme weather? Why has Beaver Lake been nearly drained? appeared first on Asheville Watchdog.

Feed icon
Asheville Watchdog
Attribution+

Today’s round of questions, my smart-aleck replies and the real answers: Question: As we all know, early January was unseasonably warm, with temperatures at one point in the mid-50s — in the morning! Then in the last two weeks we’ve had two winter storms, temperatures in the single digits at night and windchills near 20 […] The post Answer Man: How are bears faring in this extreme weather? Why has Beaver Lake been nearly drained? appeared first on Asheville Watchdog.

Oklahoma’s lawsuit accusing natural gas marketers of price manipulation during Winter Storm Uri could reach trial later this year, as discovery disputes continue in Osage County. The case unfolds amid billions in long-term ratepayer costs, additional lawsuits against natural gas sellers and a separate legal challenge to utility fuel audits by three GOP state lawmakers. The post Oklahoma’s Winter Storm Uri Lawsuits Coming Out Of Cold Storage  appeared first on Oklahoma Watch.

Feed icon
OklahomaWatch.org
Attribution+

Oklahoma’s lawsuit accusing natural gas marketers of price manipulation during Winter Storm Uri could reach trial later this year, as discovery disputes continue in Osage County. The case unfolds amid billions in long-term ratepayer costs, additional lawsuits against natural gas sellers and a separate legal challenge to utility fuel audits by three GOP state lawmakers. The post Oklahoma’s Winter Storm Uri Lawsuits Coming Out Of Cold Storage  appeared first on Oklahoma Watch.

31 urteko gizona atxilo eraman dute goizaldean, bikotekideari eraso egitea leporatuta.

Feed icon
Berria
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

31 urteko gizona atxilo eraman dute goizaldean, bikotekideari eraso egitea leporatuta.