Lawmakers rejected a pretrial monitoring program Monday that had been requested by South Dakota’s top judicial official, in part over legislators’ concerns about the perceived political persuasion of the foundation that pledged to pay for it. House Bill 1015 came to the House of Representatives at the request of Steven Jensen, chief justice of the […]

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South Dakota Searchlight
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Lawmakers rejected a pretrial monitoring program Monday that had been requested by South Dakota’s top judicial official, in part over legislators’ concerns about the perceived political persuasion of the foundation that pledged to pay for it. House Bill 1015 came to the House of Representatives at the request of Steven Jensen, chief justice of the […]

28 minutes

Nebraska Examiner
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A bill to eliminate self-funded state agency comes after it explained why it hasn’t followed part of a state law since 2021.

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Nebraska Examiner
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A bill to eliminate self-funded state agency comes after it explained why it hasn’t followed part of a state law since 2021.

اعتراضات ضدحکومتی در میدان ونک، تهران - ۱۸ دی ۱۴۰۴

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صدای آمریکا
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اعتراضات ضدحکومتی در میدان ونک، تهران - ۱۸ دی ۱۴۰۴

مردم با حمله به یک اتوبوس در مشهد به عده‌ای می‌گویند «بیا بیرون!» که به نظر می‌رسد خطاب به نیروهای سرکوبگر باشد

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صدای آمریکا
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مردم با حمله به یک اتوبوس در مشهد به عده‌ای می‌گویند «بیا بیرون!» که به نظر می‌رسد خطاب به نیروهای سرکوبگر باشد

African lions are increasingly targeted for trade in their bones, skin, teeth and claws, according to a newly published study. Without urgent action, the authors warn, poaching may pose an existential threat to Panthera leo, which once numbered in the hundreds of thousands across Africa. Today, about 25,000 are relegated to just 6% of their […]

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Mongabay
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African lions are increasingly targeted for trade in their bones, skin, teeth and claws, according to a newly published study. Without urgent action, the authors warn, poaching may pose an existential threat to Panthera leo, which once numbered in the hundreds of thousands across Africa. Today, about 25,000 are relegated to just 6% of their […]

La tecnología choca con el reglamento del tenis masculino.

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Mundiario
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La tecnología choca con el reglamento del tenis masculino.

Durante años, habitantes de Tlaxcala, principalmente mujeres de la parroquia de Tepetitla, reunidas en la Coordinadora por un Atoyac con Vida, denunciaron cómo la contaminación del río estaba enfermando a las comunidades cercanas a su cauce. Rechazadas por sus vecinos y desdeñadas por las autoridades, al final lograron, con el acompañamiento del Centro Fray Julián Garcés, que la CNDH les diera la razón La entrada Cómo un grupo de mujeres visibilizó la devastación del río Atoyac aparece primero en LADO B.

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Lado B
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Durante años, habitantes de Tlaxcala, principalmente mujeres de la parroquia de Tepetitla, reunidas en la Coordinadora por un Atoyac con Vida, denunciaron cómo la contaminación del río estaba enfermando a las comunidades cercanas a su cauce. Rechazadas por sus vecinos y desdeñadas por las autoridades, al final lograron, con el acompañamiento del Centro Fray Julián Garcés, que la CNDH les diera la razón La entrada Cómo un grupo de mujeres visibilizó la devastación del río Atoyac aparece primero en LADO B.

During a call between Gov. Tim Walz and President Donald Trump Monday morning, Trump said he will look into reducing the number of federal agents in Minnesota and talk to Homeland Security about independent Minnesota investigations into the fatal shootings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti, according to a statement from Walz’s office. The call […]

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Louisiana Illuminator
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During a call between Gov. Tim Walz and President Donald Trump Monday morning, Trump said he will look into reducing the number of federal agents in Minnesota and talk to Homeland Security about independent Minnesota investigations into the fatal shootings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti, according to a statement from Walz’s office. The call […]

41 minutes

CommonWealth Beacon
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The legislation’s aims are laudable. But several of its proposed restrictions on data collection and use are likely to hurt small businesses — which employ nearly 45 percent of the state’s workers and are critical to our economy.

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CommonWealth Beacon
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The legislation’s aims are laudable. But several of its proposed restrictions on data collection and use are likely to hurt small businesses — which employ nearly 45 percent of the state’s workers and are critical to our economy.

42 minutes

Fort Worth Report
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Watts was remembered by family and colleagues as a caring mentor, loving father and dedicated researcher.

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Fort Worth Report
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Watts was remembered by family and colleagues as a caring mentor, loving father and dedicated researcher.

Sign up for Chalkbeat Colorado’s free daily newsletter to get the latest reporting from us, plus curated news from other Colorado outlets, delivered to your inbox. A southern Colorado school district could soon drop the law firm whose controversial lead lawyer helped launch what backers have called Colorado’s “first public Christian school.” The Pueblo 70 school board will vote Tuesday on whether to issue a request for proposals for attorney services — a first step that could lead the district to replace attorney Brad Miller and his Colorado Springs-based firm, Miller Farmer Carlson Law. At a board meeting earlier this month, two of four Pueblo 70 school board members raised concerns about Miller’s involvement in the district’s legal affairs. Board member Mark Emery suggested that Miller has an agenda shaped by religious and political leanings that’s created turmoil for the district. “Let’s start with a clean slate, free of perception of impropriety and the shadow of conflict of interest,” said Emery, who broached the idea of shopping for new law firms on Jan. 13. Board member Michelle Erickson, who like Emery was elected in November, agreed with his proposal, suggesting a switch to a well-qualified local firm could save the district money. Two board members, President Ann Bennett and Vice President A.J. Wilson, pushed back. Bennett, who was also elected in November, said, “In my limited interaction with him, he’s been very knowledgeable, very thorough, very careful to not offer opinions to just offer options and I’ve appreciated that.” Wilson, who was elected in 2021, said Miller had done a good job for the district, citing a time when Miller’s recommendation about a bond issue helped save a significant amount of money. Miller said by email Monday that he didn’t attend the Jan. 13 board meeting and was “not aware of any comments by board members regarding our role as legal counsel.” The Pueblo 70 school board normally has five members, but one member, Anne Ochs, resigned abruptly in December after a district parent confronted her about misleading statements Ochs made related to the creation of the public Christian school, Riverstone Academy. A fifth board member will be appointed in February, after the vote on whether to seek proposals from law firms but before any decision on whether to replace Miller’s firm. Miller pushed to start Riverstone Academy, emails show Miller and his firm have long represented a number of conservative-leaning Colorado school districts and charter schools, including several currently involved in high-profile legal fights over library book bans and rules for transgender athletes. Last summer, Miller sought to launch Riverstone Academy in order to spark a lawsuit on the question of public funding for religious schools, according to emails obtained by Chalkbeat. Colorado’s constitution bars public religious schools. In a June 4 email, Miller told the Pueblo 70 school board that a conservative law firm called Alliance Defending Freedom had approached him after the U.S. Supreme Court deadlocked on a similar case out of Oklahoma. “ADF asked me if I could find a way for a parallel case to be initiated out of Colorado,” he said. Miller went on to explain that Education reEnvisioned Board of Cooperative Educational Services, or ER BOCES, which he also represents, would create the school. The Pueblo 70 school board would then grant the BOCES “the right to operate such a school within the district’s boundaries for purposes of creating this test case,” he said in the email. Riverstone was started quietly with key start-up documents omitting any reference to religion. While the school is currently receiving public funding, state officials have said that the money could be clawed back if they determine the school is ineligible after an audit. Ochs, who was board president when Miller sent the June 4 email, responded within minutes. Soon a vote on locating Riverstone in District 70 was added to the board’s agenda. In late June, when Ochs voted to approve Riverstone’s location in Pueblo County, she didn’t mention she’d recently accepted a job with the BOCES. Hannah McDowell, the district parent who confronted Ochs in December, suggested that Miller also had a conflict of interest stemming from his work for both Education reEnvisioned BOCES and the Pueblo 70 district. “I think that Mr. Miller representing and being paid by everyone involved while working to advocate for a third party is a problem,” she said. “I ask the new board to look closely into Mr. Miller,” she said. “Seriously, just Google him.” In a video of Miller posted in November by the Teacher Freedom Summit, an event put on by the anti-union group Teacher Freedom Alliance, he described himself as a “board whisperer.” He said he tries “to help boards to facilitate in this nasty public sphere that they have to work in. Because they have to do everything transparently. They can’t really connive and be secretive and plan things.” Board members disagree on Miller’s reputation At the Jan. 13 meeting, Emery and Bennett offered contrasting views about how MIller is perceived by community members Emery, who advocated for using a local attorney, described Miller as bringing “baggage” and creating distraction in the district. “He is well-known throughout the state as causing issues in so many school districts,” Emery said. “We must be talking to different people, Mark, because the feedback I’ve gotten regarding Mr. Miller has all been, not all, but mostly been very positive,” said Bennett. “What I’m hearing is that he commands a high level of respect.” By the end, both had agreed that putting out a request for proposals made sense. “It doesn’t hurt anything to do an RFP,” said Emery, “If Mr. Miller is the best candidate, well, then he remains.” Ann Schimke is a senior reporter at Chalkbeat covering early childhood issues and early literacy. Contact Ann at aschimke@chalkbeat.org.

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Chalkbeat
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Sign up for Chalkbeat Colorado’s free daily newsletter to get the latest reporting from us, plus curated news from other Colorado outlets, delivered to your inbox. A southern Colorado school district could soon drop the law firm whose controversial lead lawyer helped launch what backers have called Colorado’s “first public Christian school.” The Pueblo 70 school board will vote Tuesday on whether to issue a request for proposals for attorney services — a first step that could lead the district to replace attorney Brad Miller and his Colorado Springs-based firm, Miller Farmer Carlson Law. At a board meeting earlier this month, two of four Pueblo 70 school board members raised concerns about Miller’s involvement in the district’s legal affairs. Board member Mark Emery suggested that Miller has an agenda shaped by religious and political leanings that’s created turmoil for the district. “Let’s start with a clean slate, free of perception of impropriety and the shadow of conflict of interest,” said Emery, who broached the idea of shopping for new law firms on Jan. 13. Board member Michelle Erickson, who like Emery was elected in November, agreed with his proposal, suggesting a switch to a well-qualified local firm could save the district money. Two board members, President Ann Bennett and Vice President A.J. Wilson, pushed back. Bennett, who was also elected in November, said, “In my limited interaction with him, he’s been very knowledgeable, very thorough, very careful to not offer opinions to just offer options and I’ve appreciated that.” Wilson, who was elected in 2021, said Miller had done a good job for the district, citing a time when Miller’s recommendation about a bond issue helped save a significant amount of money. Miller said by email Monday that he didn’t attend the Jan. 13 board meeting and was “not aware of any comments by board members regarding our role as legal counsel.” The Pueblo 70 school board normally has five members, but one member, Anne Ochs, resigned abruptly in December after a district parent confronted her about misleading statements Ochs made related to the creation of the public Christian school, Riverstone Academy. A fifth board member will be appointed in February, after the vote on whether to seek proposals from law firms but before any decision on whether to replace Miller’s firm. Miller pushed to start Riverstone Academy, emails show Miller and his firm have long represented a number of conservative-leaning Colorado school districts and charter schools, including several currently involved in high-profile legal fights over library book bans and rules for transgender athletes. Last summer, Miller sought to launch Riverstone Academy in order to spark a lawsuit on the question of public funding for religious schools, according to emails obtained by Chalkbeat. Colorado’s constitution bars public religious schools. In a June 4 email, Miller told the Pueblo 70 school board that a conservative law firm called Alliance Defending Freedom had approached him after the U.S. Supreme Court deadlocked on a similar case out of Oklahoma. “ADF asked me if I could find a way for a parallel case to be initiated out of Colorado,” he said. Miller went on to explain that Education reEnvisioned Board of Cooperative Educational Services, or ER BOCES, which he also represents, would create the school. The Pueblo 70 school board would then grant the BOCES “the right to operate such a school within the district’s boundaries for purposes of creating this test case,” he said in the email. Riverstone was started quietly with key start-up documents omitting any reference to religion. While the school is currently receiving public funding, state officials have said that the money could be clawed back if they determine the school is ineligible after an audit. Ochs, who was board president when Miller sent the June 4 email, responded within minutes. Soon a vote on locating Riverstone in District 70 was added to the board’s agenda. In late June, when Ochs voted to approve Riverstone’s location in Pueblo County, she didn’t mention she’d recently accepted a job with the BOCES. Hannah McDowell, the district parent who confronted Ochs in December, suggested that Miller also had a conflict of interest stemming from his work for both Education reEnvisioned BOCES and the Pueblo 70 district. “I think that Mr. Miller representing and being paid by everyone involved while working to advocate for a third party is a problem,” she said. “I ask the new board to look closely into Mr. Miller,” she said. “Seriously, just Google him.” In a video of Miller posted in November by the Teacher Freedom Summit, an event put on by the anti-union group Teacher Freedom Alliance, he described himself as a “board whisperer.” He said he tries “to help boards to facilitate in this nasty public sphere that they have to work in. Because they have to do everything transparently. They can’t really connive and be secretive and plan things.” Board members disagree on Miller’s reputation At the Jan. 13 meeting, Emery and Bennett offered contrasting views about how MIller is perceived by community members Emery, who advocated for using a local attorney, described Miller as bringing “baggage” and creating distraction in the district. “He is well-known throughout the state as causing issues in so many school districts,” Emery said. “We must be talking to different people, Mark, because the feedback I’ve gotten regarding Mr. Miller has all been, not all, but mostly been very positive,” said Bennett. “What I’m hearing is that he commands a high level of respect.” By the end, both had agreed that putting out a request for proposals made sense. “It doesn’t hurt anything to do an RFP,” said Emery, “If Mr. Miller is the best candidate, well, then he remains.” Ann Schimke is a senior reporter at Chalkbeat covering early childhood issues and early literacy. Contact Ann at aschimke@chalkbeat.org.

More than half of California's Democratic legislative caucus called for a government shutdown and introduced bills to hold federal agents accountable

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CalMatters
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More than half of California's Democratic legislative caucus called for a government shutdown and introduced bills to hold federal agents accountable

48 minutes

Montana Free Press
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The calls for an investigation come after federal Department of Homeland Security agents killed Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old Veterans Affairs ICU nurse, in the streets of Minneapolis on Jan. 24. The post Montanans turn out en masse to protest ICE, Trump’s immigration policies appeared first on Montana Free Press.

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Montana Free Press
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The calls for an investigation come after federal Department of Homeland Security agents killed Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old Veterans Affairs ICU nurse, in the streets of Minneapolis on Jan. 24. The post Montanans turn out en masse to protest ICE, Trump’s immigration policies appeared first on Montana Free Press.

Mateu Alemany se mueve en Alemania en busca de futbolistas que se ajusten al plan de trabajo del técnico argentino.

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Mundiario
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Mateu Alemany se mueve en Alemania en busca de futbolistas que se ajusten al plan de trabajo del técnico argentino.

El Ejecutivo pone sobre la mesa incentivos fiscales para las empresas y fija una subida del SMI del 3,1% en 2026, haya o no acuerdo.

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Mundiario
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El Ejecutivo pone sobre la mesa incentivos fiscales para las empresas y fija una subida del SMI del 3,1% en 2026, haya o no acuerdo.

52 minutes

Times of San Diego
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In a little less than a year, an air purifier program to protect the health of South Bay residents has distributed more than 10,000 devices to mitigate the effects of hydrogen sulfide odors.

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Times of San Diego
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In a little less than a year, an air purifier program to protect the health of South Bay residents has distributed more than 10,000 devices to mitigate the effects of hydrogen sulfide odors.

NEW ORLEANS — After months of stepped-up immigration enforcement operations across the country, which have recently resulted in two fatal shootings at the hands of immigration agents deployed to Minneapolis, U.S. Rep. Troy Carter on Tuesday called for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to be abolished “as we know it.” “We have to reimagine ICE,” […]

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Louisiana Illuminator
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NEW ORLEANS — After months of stepped-up immigration enforcement operations across the country, which have recently resulted in two fatal shootings at the hands of immigration agents deployed to Minneapolis, U.S. Rep. Troy Carter on Tuesday called for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to be abolished “as we know it.” “We have to reimagine ICE,” […]

53 minutes

Brasil de Fato
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Criado no início dos anos 2000, em um contexto de reorganização das lutas populares no país, o Brasil de Fato nasce da urgência de romper com as narrativas hegemônicas e ampliar o acesso a leituras críticas da realidade.  Brasil de Fato: Comunicar para disputar o mundo apareceu primeiro no Brasil de Fato.

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Brasil de Fato
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Criado no início dos anos 2000, em um contexto de reorganização das lutas populares no país, o Brasil de Fato nasce da urgência de romper com as narrativas hegemônicas e ampliar o acesso a leituras críticas da realidade.  Brasil de Fato: Comunicar para disputar o mundo apareceu primeiro no Brasil de Fato.

The Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights claims people held at Adelanto lack “basic necessities” and medical care

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LAist
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The Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights claims people held at Adelanto lack “basic necessities” and medical care

Democratic legislators took to the floor of the Arizona House of Representatives on Monday to express outrage and sorrow, and to decry the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s violence and disregard for the U.S. Constitution following Saturday’s killing of Alex Pretti in Minneapolis.  For nearly an hour, 22 Democratic state representatives took turns demanding accountability […]

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Arizona Mirror
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Democratic legislators took to the floor of the Arizona House of Representatives on Monday to express outrage and sorrow, and to decry the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s violence and disregard for the U.S. Constitution following Saturday’s killing of Alex Pretti in Minneapolis.  For nearly an hour, 22 Democratic state representatives took turns demanding accountability […]