County officials are unsure how much the audit cost, more than three weeks after it wrapped.

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Fort Worth Report
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County officials are unsure how much the audit cost, more than three weeks after it wrapped.

Elections officials said a “poorly designed” state government form led to an unexpected and inaccurate jump in the numbers.

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Fort Worth Report
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Elections officials said a “poorly designed” state government form led to an unexpected and inaccurate jump in the numbers.

Here is what Arlington residents should expect of traffic and parking in anticipation of the Grand Prix.

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Fort Worth Report
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Here is what Arlington residents should expect of traffic and parking in anticipation of the Grand Prix.

7 minutes

Fort Worth Report
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Over the past month, about 150 construction workers worked day and night to build the barriers and stands for the race.

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Fort Worth Report
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Over the past month, about 150 construction workers worked day and night to build the barriers and stands for the race.

O ministro do Tribunal Superior Eleitoral (TSE) Kássio Nunes Marques pediu nesta terça-feira (10) vista no julgamento sobre cassação do mandato do governador do Rio de Janeiro, Cláudio Castro (PL) e do presidente afastado da Assembleia Legislativa do Rio de Janeiro (Alerj), Rodrigo Bacellar (União Brasil). A presidente do TSE, Cármen Lúcia, remarcou o julgamento para […] Fonte

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Brasil de Fato
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O ministro do Tribunal Superior Eleitoral (TSE) Kássio Nunes Marques pediu nesta terça-feira (10) vista no julgamento sobre cassação do mandato do governador do Rio de Janeiro, Cláudio Castro (PL) e do presidente afastado da Assembleia Legislativa do Rio de Janeiro (Alerj), Rodrigo Bacellar (União Brasil). A presidente do TSE, Cármen Lúcia, remarcou o julgamento para […] Fonte

Lideranças do país persa reafirmam força do Irã e destacam que Israel e EUA começaram a guerra Fonte

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Brasil de Fato
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Lideranças do país persa reafirmam força do Irã e destacam que Israel e EUA começaram a guerra Fonte

Luís Eduardo Fernandes debate necessidade de modernização das Forças Armadas e o cerco dos EUA com bases militares em países vizinhos Fonte

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Brasil de Fato
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Luís Eduardo Fernandes debate necessidade de modernização das Forças Armadas e o cerco dos EUA com bases militares em países vizinhos Fonte

ཡོ་རོབ་རྒྱལ་ཁབ་ཁག་གི་གྲོས་ཚོཊ་འཐུས་མིས་རྒྱ་ནག་གཞུང་གིས་བོད་ནང་འཛིན་པའི་སྲིད་བྱུས་ལ་ངོ་རྒོལ་ཡོད་གསུངས་པ།

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ཨེ་ཤེ་ཡ་རང་དབང་རླུང་འཕྲིན་ཁང་
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ཡོ་རོབ་རྒྱལ་ཁབ་ཁག་གི་གྲོས་ཚོཊ་འཐུས་མིས་རྒྱ་ནག་གཞུང་གིས་བོད་ནང་འཛིན་པའི་སྲིད་བྱུས་ལ་ངོ་རྒོལ་ཡོད་གསུངས་པ།

The Arvin-Edison Water Storage District accepted $230 million to settle its lawsuit against Dow Chemical and Shell Oil for allegedly contaminating its groundwater with 1,2,3-trichloropropane (TCP) and jeopardizing its lucrative […]

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SJV Water
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The Arvin-Edison Water Storage District accepted $230 million to settle its lawsuit against Dow Chemical and Shell Oil for allegedly contaminating its groundwater with 1,2,3-trichloropropane (TCP) and jeopardizing its lucrative […]

38 minutes

Alabama Reflector
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The Alabama House of Representatives Tuesday passed a bill that further defines doxing and increases the penalties for some offenses.  HB 106, sponsored by Rep. Donna Givens, R-Loxley, makes doxing a crime if an individual electronically intentionally spreads “identifying information” about someone else, intending for the person to be harassed or harmed regardless of if […]

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Alabama Reflector
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The Alabama House of Representatives Tuesday passed a bill that further defines doxing and increases the penalties for some offenses.  HB 106, sponsored by Rep. Donna Givens, R-Loxley, makes doxing a crime if an individual electronically intentionally spreads “identifying information” about someone else, intending for the person to be harassed or harmed regardless of if […]

So much time has passed since the state Water Resources Control Board mandated two small Tulare County towns to consolidate their water systems, that a new, updated order was released […]

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So much time has passed since the state Water Resources Control Board mandated two small Tulare County towns to consolidate their water systems, that a new, updated order was released […]

44 minutes

Minnesota Reformer
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The percentage of Minnesotans without health insurance jumped from 3.8% in 2023 to 5.8% in 2025, according to a new survey by the Minnesota Department of Health. The figure translates to around 116,000 more Minnesotans living without health insurance, reversing a trend of improvement since 2017. The numbers come from the Minnesota Health Access Survey, […]

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Minnesota Reformer
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The percentage of Minnesotans without health insurance jumped from 3.8% in 2023 to 5.8% in 2025, according to a new survey by the Minnesota Department of Health. The figure translates to around 116,000 more Minnesotans living without health insurance, reversing a trend of improvement since 2017. The numbers come from the Minnesota Health Access Survey, […]

46 minutes

Georgia Recorder
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The Georgia House of Representatives approved a $38.5 billion state budget for next year on Tuesday with significant spending aimed at improving childhood literacy across the state. House Bill 974, which will fund state government beginning on July 1, passed with a 159-4 vote and now moves to the Senate. The House’s proposed budget includes […]

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Georgia Recorder
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The Georgia House of Representatives approved a $38.5 billion state budget for next year on Tuesday with significant spending aimed at improving childhood literacy across the state. House Bill 974, which will fund state government beginning on July 1, passed with a 159-4 vote and now moves to the Senate. The House’s proposed budget includes […]

Sarah E. Hill is participating in the inaugural National Conference on Women’s Health, which runs March 11-13.

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Sarah E. Hill is participating in the inaugural National Conference on Women’s Health, which runs March 11-13.

Her studio has been a staple in west Fort Worth since 1950. Here’s how she reflects on her legacy.

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Her studio has been a staple in west Fort Worth since 1950. Here’s how she reflects on her legacy.

(The Center Square) – It didn't take long Tuesday night for the runoff in Georgia's 14th U.S. House District election to be decided, as Republican Clay Fuller and Democrat Shawn Harris had early leads. Harris and Fuller will compete in an April 7 runoff to determine who will serve until the end of the year. Georgia law requires a runoff if no candidate receives more than 50% of the vote. Harris led the field of 17 candidates as results trickled in after the polls closed at 7 p.m. He thanked his supporters in a social media post, saying the race isn't over. "Momentum is real. The coalition is growing. Let’s finish what we started," Harris said. Harris ran against former Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene, who resigned from Congress in January 2024, and won 35% of the vote. Fuller, a former district attorney with the Lookout Mountain Judicial Circuit, led the 12 Republicans in the race and remained well ahead of his closest competitor, former state senator Colton Moore. President Donald Trump endorsed Fuller and appeared with him at a rally in Rome, Ga. Both have qualified to run for full, two-year terms that will begin in January 2027. Eleven of the Republican candidates in Tuesday night's contest qualified for the May 19 primary: Fuller, Moore, James Edward Tully Jr., Brian Stover, Nicky Lama, Eric Brad Cunningham, Reagan Christane Box, Star Black, Thomas Gray and Beau Brown. Harris is the only Democrat who qualified for the primary.

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The Center Square
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(The Center Square) – It didn't take long Tuesday night for the runoff in Georgia's 14th U.S. House District election to be decided, as Republican Clay Fuller and Democrat Shawn Harris had early leads. Harris and Fuller will compete in an April 7 runoff to determine who will serve until the end of the year. Georgia law requires a runoff if no candidate receives more than 50% of the vote. Harris led the field of 17 candidates as results trickled in after the polls closed at 7 p.m. He thanked his supporters in a social media post, saying the race isn't over. "Momentum is real. The coalition is growing. Let’s finish what we started," Harris said. Harris ran against former Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene, who resigned from Congress in January 2024, and won 35% of the vote. Fuller, a former district attorney with the Lookout Mountain Judicial Circuit, led the 12 Republicans in the race and remained well ahead of his closest competitor, former state senator Colton Moore. President Donald Trump endorsed Fuller and appeared with him at a rally in Rome, Ga. Both have qualified to run for full, two-year terms that will begin in January 2027. Eleven of the Republican candidates in Tuesday night's contest qualified for the May 19 primary: Fuller, Moore, James Edward Tully Jr., Brian Stover, Nicky Lama, Eric Brad Cunningham, Reagan Christane Box, Star Black, Thomas Gray and Beau Brown. Harris is the only Democrat who qualified for the primary.

50 minutes

Utah News Dispatch
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Utah is among eight states the federal government has selected to test the future of electric aircraft and other aviation technologies, the U.S. Department of Transportation announced on Monday. The state is poised to be part of a three-year pilot program on Electric Vertical Takeoff and Landing (eVTOL), meant to safely integrate highly automated aircraft […]

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Utah News Dispatch
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Utah is among eight states the federal government has selected to test the future of electric aircraft and other aviation technologies, the U.S. Department of Transportation announced on Monday. The state is poised to be part of a three-year pilot program on Electric Vertical Takeoff and Landing (eVTOL), meant to safely integrate highly automated aircraft […]

The county's litigation seeks a permanent injunction to prevent federal authorities from obstructing future inspections at Otay Mesa.

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The county's litigation seeks a permanent injunction to prevent federal authorities from obstructing future inspections at Otay Mesa.

Sign up for Chalkbeat Indiana’s free daily newsletter to keep up with Indianapolis Public Schools, Marion County’s township districts, and statewide education news.Indianapolis Public Schools board member Gayle Cosby announced her resignation from the board on Tuesday, just over a year into her term. In a statement at a board meeting, Cosby said she would end her service on the board on Friday due to ongoing health challenges. In her remarks, she criticized recent efforts to change Indianapolis Public Schools as it grapples with declining enrollment and a competitive charter school sector. Her departure leaves a vacancy on the seven-member board, which will lose a substantial amount of power under a new law that redistributes resources between district and charter schools. Beginning this year, a new nine-member board appointed by Mayor Joe Hogsett will assume critical financial powers typically reserved for the school board, including the ability to levy property taxes, request a referendum on the ballot, and issue bonds for debt. The appointed board is slated to gain control of IPS buildings and transportation for both district and charter schools in 2028. “We must be honest about the current moment,” said Cosby, who serves as board secretary and represents the District 2 portion of IPS that stretches from parts of the Near Eastside to the Far Eastside. “We are witnessing an unprecedented and coordinated assault on the very idea of ‘public’ in public education.” The board elected Allissa Impink as its new secretary in a split vote that also mirrored a divided vote over whether to postpone the vote for secretary. Board president Hope Duke Star and board members Allissa Impink, Nicole Carey, and Cosby — who all rejected a motion to postpone a vote for secretary until the vacant District 2 seat is filled — supported Impink for secretary. Board members Deandra Thompson, Ashley Thomas, and Angelia Moore voted to contest the agenda and later voted for Thompson for secretary. Cosby was elected to the board in 2024. She also served on the board from 2013 to 2016.Cosby kicked off her second term in office with a sharp critique of efforts to dissolve IPS, including a bill that would have replaced it entirely with charter schools. Over the past year, she has shown strong support for preserving traditional district schools, backing a proposal to maintain an elected board that serves as the sole charter school authorizer.Cosby was first elected to the board in 2012 with donations from groups that support charter schools and school choice, including Stand for Children Indiana and Indiana Democrats for Education Reform. But in her first term, she became a critic of the district’s reform plans, which included partnering with charter school operators through the district’s Innovation Network. She did not seek reelection at the end of her first term.Cosby ran again in 2024, this time with a $28,000 donation from the political action committee for the Indiana State Teachers Association. She defeated reform-backed candidate Hasaan Rashid, who raised about $12,000 more than her, with 54% of the vote. In her resignation remarks, Cosby criticized the move to hand control of IPS buildings over to the new appointed board, arguing that they are not “surplus commodities to be auctioned off.”“To see these assets stripped away under the guise of choice is a betrayal of the generations of families who built this district,” she said. “The privatization of public schools — the slow, calculated dismantling of a unified district into a fragmented market — is not a reform. It is a displacement of the public’s voice.” State law requires that the school board appoint someone who lives in IPS boundaries to fill Cosby’s seat and finish her term, which ends in 2028. Board policy requires the board to fill Cosby’s vacancy within 30 days. Three other seats are also up for election this year, and District 4 board member Impink — whose term ends in 2028 — has announced a run for Indiana Senate District 46. Amelia Pak-Harvey covers Indianapolis and Lawrence Township schools for Chalkbeat Indiana. Contact Amelia at apak-harvey@chalkbeat.org.

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Sign up for Chalkbeat Indiana’s free daily newsletter to keep up with Indianapolis Public Schools, Marion County’s township districts, and statewide education news.Indianapolis Public Schools board member Gayle Cosby announced her resignation from the board on Tuesday, just over a year into her term. In a statement at a board meeting, Cosby said she would end her service on the board on Friday due to ongoing health challenges. In her remarks, she criticized recent efforts to change Indianapolis Public Schools as it grapples with declining enrollment and a competitive charter school sector. Her departure leaves a vacancy on the seven-member board, which will lose a substantial amount of power under a new law that redistributes resources between district and charter schools. Beginning this year, a new nine-member board appointed by Mayor Joe Hogsett will assume critical financial powers typically reserved for the school board, including the ability to levy property taxes, request a referendum on the ballot, and issue bonds for debt. The appointed board is slated to gain control of IPS buildings and transportation for both district and charter schools in 2028. “We must be honest about the current moment,” said Cosby, who serves as board secretary and represents the District 2 portion of IPS that stretches from parts of the Near Eastside to the Far Eastside. “We are witnessing an unprecedented and coordinated assault on the very idea of ‘public’ in public education.” The board elected Allissa Impink as its new secretary in a split vote that also mirrored a divided vote over whether to postpone the vote for secretary. Board president Hope Duke Star and board members Allissa Impink, Nicole Carey, and Cosby — who all rejected a motion to postpone a vote for secretary until the vacant District 2 seat is filled — supported Impink for secretary. Board members Deandra Thompson, Ashley Thomas, and Angelia Moore voted to contest the agenda and later voted for Thompson for secretary. Cosby was elected to the board in 2024. She also served on the board from 2013 to 2016.Cosby kicked off her second term in office with a sharp critique of efforts to dissolve IPS, including a bill that would have replaced it entirely with charter schools. Over the past year, she has shown strong support for preserving traditional district schools, backing a proposal to maintain an elected board that serves as the sole charter school authorizer.Cosby was first elected to the board in 2012 with donations from groups that support charter schools and school choice, including Stand for Children Indiana and Indiana Democrats for Education Reform. But in her first term, she became a critic of the district’s reform plans, which included partnering with charter school operators through the district’s Innovation Network. She did not seek reelection at the end of her first term.Cosby ran again in 2024, this time with a $28,000 donation from the political action committee for the Indiana State Teachers Association. She defeated reform-backed candidate Hasaan Rashid, who raised about $12,000 more than her, with 54% of the vote. In her resignation remarks, Cosby criticized the move to hand control of IPS buildings over to the new appointed board, arguing that they are not “surplus commodities to be auctioned off.”“To see these assets stripped away under the guise of choice is a betrayal of the generations of families who built this district,” she said. “The privatization of public schools — the slow, calculated dismantling of a unified district into a fragmented market — is not a reform. It is a displacement of the public’s voice.” State law requires that the school board appoint someone who lives in IPS boundaries to fill Cosby’s seat and finish her term, which ends in 2028. Board policy requires the board to fill Cosby’s vacancy within 30 days. Three other seats are also up for election this year, and District 4 board member Impink — whose term ends in 2028 — has announced a run for Indiana Senate District 46. Amelia Pak-Harvey covers Indianapolis and Lawrence Township schools for Chalkbeat Indiana. Contact Amelia at apak-harvey@chalkbeat.org.

La etapa de Francisco Meneghini en La U terminó antes de lo esperado. La dirigencia de Azul Azul decidió en las últimas horas poner fin anticipado al contrato del técnico argentino. ‘Paqui’ había sido presentado en el CDA con la misión de liderar un nuevo proceso de dos temporadas al mando del elenco colegial. Sin … Continua leyendo "La cláusula que salvó a La U: así Azul Azul frenó una enorme indemnización para ’Paqui’ Meneghini" The post La cláusula que salvó a La U: así Azul Azul frenó una enorme indemnización para ’Paqui’ Meneghini appeared first on BioBioChile.

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La etapa de Francisco Meneghini en La U terminó antes de lo esperado. La dirigencia de Azul Azul decidió en las últimas horas poner fin anticipado al contrato del técnico argentino. ‘Paqui’ había sido presentado en el CDA con la misión de liderar un nuevo proceso de dos temporadas al mando del elenco colegial. Sin … Continua leyendo "La cláusula que salvó a La U: así Azul Azul frenó una enorme indemnización para ’Paqui’ Meneghini" The post La cláusula que salvó a La U: así Azul Azul frenó una enorme indemnización para ’Paqui’ Meneghini appeared first on BioBioChile.