Following a yearslong effort for prescription drug affordability, the measure now awaits consideration in the Senate.

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

Following a yearslong effort for prescription drug affordability, the measure now awaits consideration in the Senate.

Sign up for Chalkbeat Newark’s free newsletter to get the latest news about the city’s public school system delivered to your inbox.Newark Public Schools lost students for the first time in six years, a stark difference from the year-over-year growth that has set it apart from trends in districts across the country over the past five school years. In the 2025-26 school year, the district enrolled 43,216 students, down 764 from the 2024-25 school year when the district enrolled 43,980, according to fall enrollment data from the state released Thursday. That’s a turn for a district that had surged by almost 20% since 2019, driven largely by a rise in Hispanic student enrollment and multilingual learners. This year, the district’s largest student demographic drivers, powered by an influx of immigrant families and multilingual learners, are beginning to slow.The district is also edging closer to national trends where enrollment has dropped by nearly 1.3 million students since the COVID-19 pandemic, partly due to declining birth rates and shifts in migration. The steepest drop this year hit the district’s multilingual learner population. Newark enrolled 11,879 multilingual learners in the 2025-26 school year, down 744 from the previous year when that population surpassed 12,000 for the first time. At the same time, Hispanic student enrollment grew by 460 this school year, according to fall enrollment data. It’s unclear from the state’s data if the decline in multilingual learners is a result of those students leaving the district or transitioning out of English learner programs and back into general education.More than 720 fewer white students attended Newark’s public schools in 2025-26 than in the fall of the year prior, as did 488 fewer Black students. The number of Asian American students remained around the same from the prior year.Additionally, early grade levels and transition grades showed the sharpest enrollment declines this year. Compared to last school year, first grade lost 221 students and kindergarten fell by 154. Also compared to last year, seventh grade fell by 197 students and ninth grade by 140 students, major grade level transition years.During January’s board retreat meeting, Superintendent Roger León said the district’s enrollment decline was close to 818 students, but he didn’t say what subgroups contributed to that decline. He cautioned that the fall enrollment numbers were a snapshot from October and do not take into account students who arrive later in the school year. “I can’t tell you who they are, because there were kids who came and left in the process just by October,” León said. “That shows and proves that we have a high mobility rate.”Newark’s enrollment surge in previous years set it apart from neighboring New York City, which lost some 100,000 students since before the pandemic and Philadelphia schools, which are down nearly 10,000 students since the 2019-20 school year. But whether this year’s dip is a one-year anomaly or the start of a longer trend will depend heavily on whether the city continues to attract and retain immigrant families who drove much of the district’s recent growth. At the January retreat, León said of the multilingual students who left the district, a “large number” of those students left the state and a “significant number of them” left the country. Jessie Gomez is a reporter for Chalkbeat Newark, covering public education in the city. Contact Jessie at jgomez@chalkbeat.org.

Feed icon
Chalkbeat
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Sign up for Chalkbeat Newark’s free newsletter to get the latest news about the city’s public school system delivered to your inbox.Newark Public Schools lost students for the first time in six years, a stark difference from the year-over-year growth that has set it apart from trends in districts across the country over the past five school years. In the 2025-26 school year, the district enrolled 43,216 students, down 764 from the 2024-25 school year when the district enrolled 43,980, according to fall enrollment data from the state released Thursday. That’s a turn for a district that had surged by almost 20% since 2019, driven largely by a rise in Hispanic student enrollment and multilingual learners. This year, the district’s largest student demographic drivers, powered by an influx of immigrant families and multilingual learners, are beginning to slow.The district is also edging closer to national trends where enrollment has dropped by nearly 1.3 million students since the COVID-19 pandemic, partly due to declining birth rates and shifts in migration. The steepest drop this year hit the district’s multilingual learner population. Newark enrolled 11,879 multilingual learners in the 2025-26 school year, down 744 from the previous year when that population surpassed 12,000 for the first time. At the same time, Hispanic student enrollment grew by 460 this school year, according to fall enrollment data. It’s unclear from the state’s data if the decline in multilingual learners is a result of those students leaving the district or transitioning out of English learner programs and back into general education.More than 720 fewer white students attended Newark’s public schools in 2025-26 than in the fall of the year prior, as did 488 fewer Black students. The number of Asian American students remained around the same from the prior year.Additionally, early grade levels and transition grades showed the sharpest enrollment declines this year. Compared to last school year, first grade lost 221 students and kindergarten fell by 154. Also compared to last year, seventh grade fell by 197 students and ninth grade by 140 students, major grade level transition years.During January’s board retreat meeting, Superintendent Roger León said the district’s enrollment decline was close to 818 students, but he didn’t say what subgroups contributed to that decline. He cautioned that the fall enrollment numbers were a snapshot from October and do not take into account students who arrive later in the school year. “I can’t tell you who they are, because there were kids who came and left in the process just by October,” León said. “That shows and proves that we have a high mobility rate.”Newark’s enrollment surge in previous years set it apart from neighboring New York City, which lost some 100,000 students since before the pandemic and Philadelphia schools, which are down nearly 10,000 students since the 2019-20 school year. But whether this year’s dip is a one-year anomaly or the start of a longer trend will depend heavily on whether the city continues to attract and retain immigrant families who drove much of the district’s recent growth. At the January retreat, León said of the multilingual students who left the district, a “large number” of those students left the state and a “significant number of them” left the country. Jessie Gomez is a reporter for Chalkbeat Newark, covering public education in the city. Contact Jessie at jgomez@chalkbeat.org.

(The Center Square) - The Seattle police official in charge of security for the six World Cup games in June and July said he is confident that a joint local-federal law enforcement team will be ready to respond to a terrorist attack or other unexpected event. “And so if we do have an unfortunate incident or an actual terrorist attack or something like that, we’re going to have people who can make decisions on behalf of their agency,” said Seattle Police Captain Daniel Nelson on a Thursday webinar. Nelson wouldn’t disclose the number of federal agents that will be in Seattle, but said a special mass casualty unit will be at the games and that specialty agents who can shoot down armed drones if necessary. Nelson said the World Cup in Seattle has been labeled a Level Two threat by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, meaning it is a high-risk event. The Super Bowl in San Francisco in January had been labeled an even higher Level One event, he noted. He said Seattle needs federal agents to help with the event because the police department doesn't have adequate resources by itself to deal with potential threats. Nelson, who has been coordinating the police department’s security efforts for the World Cup for the last three years, didn’t address Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson’s decision not to turn on security cameras near Lumen Field unless there was a “credible threat.” Wilson previously announced on March 19 that 26 surveillance cameras near Lumen Field would be installed as planned, but wouldn’t be turned on unless there was a “credible threat” to public safety. The Chairman of the Seattle City Council Public Safety Committee, Bob Kettle, a former naval intelligence officer, has warned that waiting for a threat before acting doesn't work. Citing incidents like the 9/11 attacks and the 1996 Atlanta Olympic bombing, he has contended that terror events often arrive without advance notice. A Seattle Police Department spokesman, Sergeant Patrick Michaud, said in a statement after the Thursday web event that there has been no change to the policy of keeping the cameras off. “The new cameras in the Stadium District will not be turned on unless we are given permission by the mayor,” he said. He referred additional questions to the mayor’s office. Wilson's office did not respond to requests for comment. Wilson stated in March she had concerns that the cameras would help federal immigration agents arrest undocumented immigrants, and was putting the surveillance systems on hold until an independent audit. Nelson said during Thursday’s city of Seattle-sponsored webinar that he had been informed by federal officials that ICE plans no enforcement while the FIFA games are being played between June 15 and July 6. But Nelson said there are no guarantees. “It’s very uncertain times, and we can’t control the other Washington, but I mean the best I could do is ask the question, and that’s the answer I got,” he said. Wilson has marked her first six months in office with repeated announcements that Seattle is a welcoming city to immigrants and that ICE agents are not welcome. She said that city officials and police won’t cooperate with federal immigrant agents in arresting undocumented persons. Thursday's web event was no exception, with officials of the city office of Immigrant and Refugee Affairs appearing on the webcast. They assured viewers that city officials and police would not work with ICE. But Nelson said that if there were ICE raids, the police department could not interfere with federal actions. He said the only things police could do were to observe and document the raids. Nelson also addressed the issue of World Cup protests, saying the city expected frequent events during the games, particularly on June 26, when Egypt plays Iran. The games coincide with Pride weekend in Seattle. Iran outlaws homosexuality, which can be subject to the death penalty, and it is often prosecuted in Egypt under morality laws, though it is not explicitly against the law. Nelson said the police department expected a pro-gay rights rally in addition to protests in favor of and against Iran. Nelson said the police department will work with protesters to ensure they can peacefully assemble and exercise their First Amendment rights while making sure the games are not disrupted. He said specific protest areas will be designated.

Feed icon
The Center Square
Attribution+

(The Center Square) - The Seattle police official in charge of security for the six World Cup games in June and July said he is confident that a joint local-federal law enforcement team will be ready to respond to a terrorist attack or other unexpected event. “And so if we do have an unfortunate incident or an actual terrorist attack or something like that, we’re going to have people who can make decisions on behalf of their agency,” said Seattle Police Captain Daniel Nelson on a Thursday webinar. Nelson wouldn’t disclose the number of federal agents that will be in Seattle, but said a special mass casualty unit will be at the games and that specialty agents who can shoot down armed drones if necessary. Nelson said the World Cup in Seattle has been labeled a Level Two threat by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, meaning it is a high-risk event. The Super Bowl in San Francisco in January had been labeled an even higher Level One event, he noted. He said Seattle needs federal agents to help with the event because the police department doesn't have adequate resources by itself to deal with potential threats. Nelson, who has been coordinating the police department’s security efforts for the World Cup for the last three years, didn’t address Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson’s decision not to turn on security cameras near Lumen Field unless there was a “credible threat.” Wilson previously announced on March 19 that 26 surveillance cameras near Lumen Field would be installed as planned, but wouldn’t be turned on unless there was a “credible threat” to public safety. The Chairman of the Seattle City Council Public Safety Committee, Bob Kettle, a former naval intelligence officer, has warned that waiting for a threat before acting doesn't work. Citing incidents like the 9/11 attacks and the 1996 Atlanta Olympic bombing, he has contended that terror events often arrive without advance notice. A Seattle Police Department spokesman, Sergeant Patrick Michaud, said in a statement after the Thursday web event that there has been no change to the policy of keeping the cameras off. “The new cameras in the Stadium District will not be turned on unless we are given permission by the mayor,” he said. He referred additional questions to the mayor’s office. Wilson's office did not respond to requests for comment. Wilson stated in March she had concerns that the cameras would help federal immigration agents arrest undocumented immigrants, and was putting the surveillance systems on hold until an independent audit. Nelson said during Thursday’s city of Seattle-sponsored webinar that he had been informed by federal officials that ICE plans no enforcement while the FIFA games are being played between June 15 and July 6. But Nelson said there are no guarantees. “It’s very uncertain times, and we can’t control the other Washington, but I mean the best I could do is ask the question, and that’s the answer I got,” he said. Wilson has marked her first six months in office with repeated announcements that Seattle is a welcoming city to immigrants and that ICE agents are not welcome. She said that city officials and police won’t cooperate with federal immigrant agents in arresting undocumented persons. Thursday's web event was no exception, with officials of the city office of Immigrant and Refugee Affairs appearing on the webcast. They assured viewers that city officials and police would not work with ICE. But Nelson said that if there were ICE raids, the police department could not interfere with federal actions. He said the only things police could do were to observe and document the raids. Nelson also addressed the issue of World Cup protests, saying the city expected frequent events during the games, particularly on June 26, when Egypt plays Iran. The games coincide with Pride weekend in Seattle. Iran outlaws homosexuality, which can be subject to the death penalty, and it is often prosecuted in Egypt under morality laws, though it is not explicitly against the law. Nelson said the police department expected a pro-gay rights rally in addition to protests in favor of and against Iran. Nelson said the police department will work with protesters to ensure they can peacefully assemble and exercise their First Amendment rights while making sure the games are not disrupted. He said specific protest areas will be designated.

22 minutes

ARGIA
Feed icon

Lehengoan aipatu genuen Iranen slopaganda trebearen ondoan, sare sozialetan daramaten estrategia orokor baten kokatzen da kontua. Bereziki, Iranek munduan zehar dituen enbaxada eta kontsultatuetako sareetako kontuak memeekin arin-arin ari dira. Bereziki Estatu Batuetatik errazten badiete jokaldia. Halako kasu bat gertatu zen duela egun batzuk, Uno karta-jokoaren eskutik. Donald Trump-en izenean norbaitek meme-irudi azkarra egin zuela pentsatu zuen, Uno karta batzuk erakutsita... Baina ez zen izan hain jokaldi abila.

Feed icon
ARGIA
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

Lehengoan aipatu genuen Iranen slopaganda trebearen ondoan, sare sozialetan daramaten estrategia orokor baten kokatzen da kontua. Bereziki, Iranek munduan zehar dituen enbaxada eta kontsultatuetako sareetako kontuak memeekin arin-arin ari dira. Bereziki Estatu Batuetatik errazten badiete jokaldia. Halako kasu bat gertatu zen duela egun batzuk, Uno karta-jokoaren eskutik. Donald Trump-en izenean norbaitek meme-irudi azkarra egin zuela pentsatu zuen, Uno karta batzuk erakutsita... Baina ez zen izan hain jokaldi abila.

Urban Trailek badu berritasunik aurten: binaka eginen den hamar kilometroko ibilbidea gehitu baitute: lekukoa elkarri pasako diote norberak bortz kilometro kurrituz. Izen-emateak oraindanik zabalik dira.

Feed icon
ARGIA
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

Urban Trailek badu berritasunik aurten: binaka eginen den hamar kilometroko ibilbidea gehitu baitute: lekukoa elkarri pasako diote norberak bortz kilometro kurrituz. Izen-emateak oraindanik zabalik dira.

Aberatsak hormigoi joka
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

22 minutes

ARGIA
Feed icon

Feed icon
ARGIA
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

Bere lehenengo eleberria plazaratu du Gorka Bereziartua kazetariak. 'Garondoan' memoriaren inguruko eleberri bat da, bere burua kokatzen eta kontatzen saiatzen ari diren pertsonaien bitartez

Feed icon
ARGIA
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

Bere lehenengo eleberria plazaratu du Gorka Bereziartua kazetariak. 'Garondoan' memoriaren inguruko eleberri bat da, bere burua kokatzen eta kontatzen saiatzen ari diren pertsonaien bitartez

GUKAk Bilboko kaleetan zehar ibilbide eta ekintza sinbolikoa egin zuen, “erdalduntze makina” aurrean euskaraz bizitzeko eskubidea aldarrikatzeko. Ibilbidea Ronda kalean abiatu zuten euskararentzako arnasgune batetik , Bira kulturgunetik.

Feed icon
ARGIA
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

GUKAk Bilboko kaleetan zehar ibilbide eta ekintza sinbolikoa egin zuen, “erdalduntze makina” aurrean euskaraz bizitzeko eskubidea aldarrikatzeko. Ibilbidea Ronda kalean abiatu zuten euskararentzako arnasgune batetik , Bira kulturgunetik.

Euskararen Loraila egitasmoaren baitako hirugarren hitzordua egin zuten asteartean Zestoako Alonderon. Azken urteotan indarra hartzen ari diren gorroto diskurtsoak eta horiek gizartean duten eragina izan zituzten hizpide Gorrotokrazia izeneko solasaldian. Hain zuzen ere, hiru esparru landu zituzten: euskararen aurkako diskurtsoak, islamofobia eta feminismoaren kontrako diskurtsoak.

Feed icon
ARGIA
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

Euskararen Loraila egitasmoaren baitako hirugarren hitzordua egin zuten asteartean Zestoako Alonderon. Azken urteotan indarra hartzen ari diren gorroto diskurtsoak eta horiek gizartean duten eragina izan zituzten hizpide Gorrotokrazia izeneko solasaldian. Hain zuzen ere, hiru esparru landu zituzten: euskararen aurkako diskurtsoak, islamofobia eta feminismoaren kontrako diskurtsoak.

Maiatzaren 19tik 29ra, Ipar Euskal Herriko 35 eskoletako 3.500 bat haur hamar egunez pantailak uzteko desafioa egiten ari dira. Parte hartze mailan errekorra da, gero eta argiago delako pantailen presentzia handiak eragin txarra duela haurrengan, bai burmuinaren garapenari begira, bai arreta galtzeari dagokionez.

Feed icon
ARGIA
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

Maiatzaren 19tik 29ra, Ipar Euskal Herriko 35 eskoletako 3.500 bat haur hamar egunez pantailak uzteko desafioa egiten ari dira. Parte hartze mailan errekorra da, gero eta argiago delako pantailen presentzia handiak eragin txarra duela haurrengan, bai burmuinaren garapenari begira, bai arreta galtzeari dagokionez.

In the face of the nation’s highest gas prices, California lawmakers approved a bill to ease restrictions on E85 conversion kits — devices that let conventional gasoline cars run on a cheaper, mostly ethanol fuel blend. Assembly Bill 2046, dubbed the “Access to Affordable Gas Act” by its author, Assemblymember Rhodesia Ransom, a Stockton Democrat, […]

Feed icon
CalMatters
Attribution+

In the face of the nation’s highest gas prices, California lawmakers approved a bill to ease restrictions on E85 conversion kits — devices that let conventional gasoline cars run on a cheaper, mostly ethanol fuel blend. Assembly Bill 2046, dubbed the “Access to Affordable Gas Act” by its author, Assemblymember Rhodesia Ransom, a Stockton Democrat, […]

A Câmara Legislativa do Distrito Federal (CLDF) realizou, nesta quinta-feira (21), o 2º Seminário de Tarifa Zero no DF para avaliar os impactos do primeiro ano do programa “Vai de Graça”, que garante transporte gratuito aos domingos, feriados e datas específicas no sistema de ônibus e metrô da capital. O encontro reuniu pesquisadores, gestores públicos, […] Fonte

Feed icon
Brasil de Fato
CC BY-ND🅭🅯⊜

A Câmara Legislativa do Distrito Federal (CLDF) realizou, nesta quinta-feira (21), o 2º Seminário de Tarifa Zero no DF para avaliar os impactos do primeiro ano do programa “Vai de Graça”, que garante transporte gratuito aos domingos, feriados e datas específicas no sistema de ônibus e metrô da capital. O encontro reuniu pesquisadores, gestores públicos, […] Fonte

Just in time for Memorial Day, lawmakers side with the tourist hotspot in its war with ferry operators. Mackinaw City and St. Ignace oppose the move.

Feed icon
Bridge Michigan
CC BY-ND🅭🅯⊜

Just in time for Memorial Day, lawmakers side with the tourist hotspot in its war with ferry operators. Mackinaw City and St. Ignace oppose the move.

A Moscow lawyer named Igor Popovsky has been detained on fraud charges, according to the Russian security services-linked Telegram channels Baza and 112 and the Federal Investigative Committee, which has not identified the detainee by name.

Feed icon
Meduza
CC BY🅭🅯

A Moscow lawyer named Igor Popovsky has been detained on fraud charges, according to the Russian security services-linked Telegram channels Baza and 112 and the Federal Investigative Committee, which has not identified the detainee by name.

39 minutes

Radio France Internationale
Feed icon

Le festival de Cannes se poursuit, dans le sud de la France. Les derniers films des différentes sélections se dévoilent peu à peu. Ce mercredi 20 mai sur la Croisette, le festival revisitait des périodes historiques marquantes, mais portées par des récits intimes.

Feed icon
Radio France Internationale
Attribution+

Le festival de Cannes se poursuit, dans le sud de la France. Les derniers films des différentes sélections se dévoilent peu à peu. Ce mercredi 20 mai sur la Croisette, le festival revisitait des périodes historiques marquantes, mais portées par des récits intimes.

41 minutes

Inside Climate News
Feed icon

Members of a congressional subcommittee this week questioned utility leaders and state officials about their knowledge of preexisting problems with the sewage line that collapsed on Jan. 19 near the Potomac River.  According to the University of Maryland’s School of Public Health, the incident was “one of the largest sewage spills in U.S. history.” More […]

Feed icon
Inside Climate News
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Members of a congressional subcommittee this week questioned utility leaders and state officials about their knowledge of preexisting problems with the sewage line that collapsed on Jan. 19 near the Potomac River.  According to the University of Maryland’s School of Public Health, the incident was “one of the largest sewage spills in U.S. history.” More […]

En un tiempo marcado por la polarización, las crisis sociales y la búsqueda de nuevos relatos colectivos, el arte comprometido vuelve a ocupar un lugar central como herramienta de reflexión, denuncia y transformación.

Feed icon
Mundiario
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

En un tiempo marcado por la polarización, las crisis sociales y la búsqueda de nuevos relatos colectivos, el arte comprometido vuelve a ocupar un lugar central como herramienta de reflexión, denuncia y transformación.

The Ecuadorian National Police arrested three Thai nationals on May 19, 2026, at the José Joaquín de Olmedo International Airport in Guayaquil on suspicion of wildlife trafficking. They seized 12 marine iguanas (Amblyrhynchus cristatus), endemic to the Galápagos. The reptiles were found stuffed in handbags with their legs tightly bound. One was dead and those […]

Feed icon
Mongabay
CC BY-ND🅭🅯⊜

The Ecuadorian National Police arrested three Thai nationals on May 19, 2026, at the José Joaquín de Olmedo International Airport in Guayaquil on suspicion of wildlife trafficking. They seized 12 marine iguanas (Amblyrhynchus cristatus), endemic to the Galápagos. The reptiles were found stuffed in handbags with their legs tightly bound. One was dead and those […]

A Cook County judge has rejected a petition for the appointment of a special prosecutor to investigate alleged abuses during Operation Midway Blitz.

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

A Cook County judge has rejected a petition for the appointment of a special prosecutor to investigate alleged abuses during Operation Midway Blitz.

A Russian strike on Dnipro wounded at least 14 people, Dnipropetrovsk region administration head Oleksandr Hanzha said.

Feed icon
Meduza
CC BY🅭🅯

A Russian strike on Dnipro wounded at least 14 people, Dnipropetrovsk region administration head Oleksandr Hanzha said.