2 minutes

Rhode Island Current
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A bill that would permit restaurants and bars to stay open later during select matches of the 2026 FIFA World Cup scored its first “goooooal” with the Rhode Island General Assembly Tuesday, passing the House 60-8.  The Senate duplicate of Central Falls Democratic Rep. Joshua Giraldo’s bill, H8009A, now heads for a floor vote on […]

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Rhode Island Current
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A bill that would permit restaurants and bars to stay open later during select matches of the 2026 FIFA World Cup scored its first “goooooal” with the Rhode Island General Assembly Tuesday, passing the House 60-8.  The Senate duplicate of Central Falls Democratic Rep. Joshua Giraldo’s bill, H8009A, now heads for a floor vote on […]

Dois anos se passaram desde que as enchentes devastadoras invadiram lares, levaram vidas e mudaram o curso de centenas de vidas no Rio Grande do Sul. Setembro de 2023 trouxe os primeiros sinais do que viria a ser a maior catástrofe socioambiental da história do estado, em maio do ano seguinte. Em 2024, foram 185 […] Fonte

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Brasil de Fato
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Dois anos se passaram desde que as enchentes devastadoras invadiram lares, levaram vidas e mudaram o curso de centenas de vidas no Rio Grande do Sul. Setembro de 2023 trouxe os primeiros sinais do que viria a ser a maior catástrofe socioambiental da história do estado, em maio do ano seguinte. Em 2024, foram 185 […] Fonte

Áudios expõem plano envolvendo EUA e Israel para usar Honduras como base da direita e desestabilizar a região Fonte

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Brasil de Fato
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Áudios expõem plano envolvendo EUA e Israel para usar Honduras como base da direita e desestabilizar a região Fonte

အမျိုးသား ၁ ဦး၊ ရှမ်းအမျိုးသမီး ၂ ဦးနဲ့ လားဟူအမျိုးသမီး ၁ ဦးနဲ့ တရုတ်နိုင်ငံသား ၅၂ ဦးဖမ်းဆီးခဲ့ဟုဆို။

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တလပတဲ့ အာရွအသံ
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အမျိုးသား ၁ ဦး၊ ရှမ်းအမျိုးသမီး ၂ ဦးနဲ့ လားဟူအမျိုးသမီး ၁ ဦးနဲ့ တရုတ်နိုင်ငံသား ၅၂ ဦးဖမ်းဆီးခဲ့ဟုဆို။

Con un llamado a reconocer que el patrimonio se construye desde las memorias de cada persona, autoridades regionales lanzaron en el Museo Regional de Antofagasta el Día del Patrimonio Cultural 2026. La celebración, que cumple 27 años de tradición, contará con actividades gratuitas presenciales y virtuales en todo el país, invitando a entidades públicas y privadas a inscribir sus rutas, museos y archivos antes del 26 de mayo. Este artículo Antofagasta se prepara para la fiesta ciudadana: lanzan oficialmente el Día del Patrimonio 2026 fue publicado originalmente en El Diario de Antofagasta.

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El Diario de Antofagasta
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Con un llamado a reconocer que el patrimonio se construye desde las memorias de cada persona, autoridades regionales lanzaron en el Museo Regional de Antofagasta el Día del Patrimonio Cultural 2026. La celebración, que cumple 27 años de tradición, contará con actividades gratuitas presenciales y virtuales en todo el país, invitando a entidades públicas y privadas a inscribir sus rutas, museos y archivos antes del 26 de mayo. Este artículo Antofagasta se prepara para la fiesta ciudadana: lanzan oficialmente el Día del Patrimonio 2026 fue publicado originalmente en El Diario de Antofagasta.

နှစ်နိုင်ငံနယ်စပ်မှာ လက်နက်ကိုင်အဖွဲ့တွေ မရှိစေရေး ဆွေးနွေးခဲ့ဟုဆို။

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တလပတဲ့ အာရွအသံ
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နှစ်နိုင်ငံနယ်စပ်မှာ လက်နက်ကိုင်အဖွဲ့တွေ မရှိစေရေး ဆွေးနွေးခဲ့ဟုဆို။

Gov. Ron DeSantis and the groups suing him over Florida’s new congressional map can agree on one thing: The DeSantis-drawn districts violate parts of the state Constitution — but they sharply disagree about what that means. DeSantis says those portions of the Constitution are invalid. His challengers say otherwise.  “We believe the [Fair Districts Amendment] does […]

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Florida Phoenix
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Gov. Ron DeSantis and the groups suing him over Florida’s new congressional map can agree on one thing: The DeSantis-drawn districts violate parts of the state Constitution — but they sharply disagree about what that means. DeSantis says those portions of the Constitution are invalid. His challengers say otherwise.  “We believe the [Fair Districts Amendment] does […]

14 minutes

FAIR
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A society that values truth over lies finally drew the line at a media empire profiting and inciting hatred at the expense of murdered children.

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FAIR
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A society that values truth over lies finally drew the line at a media empire profiting and inciting hatred at the expense of murdered children.

15 minutes

Montana Free Press
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Montana State Sen. Jonathan Windy Boy has “unsuspended” his Democratic primary campaign for U.S. House representing Montana’s Eastern Congressional District, three weeks after suspending his bid amid sexual abuse allegations. The post Windy Boy restarts campaign for Montana’s eastern U.S. House seat appeared first on Montana Free Press.

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Montana Free Press
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Montana State Sen. Jonathan Windy Boy has “unsuspended” his Democratic primary campaign for U.S. House representing Montana’s Eastern Congressional District, three weeks after suspending his bid amid sexual abuse allegations. The post Windy Boy restarts campaign for Montana’s eastern U.S. House seat appeared first on Montana Free Press.

15 minutes

Fort Worth Report
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Plus, what you need to know about summer classes and other ways to make the most of the break.

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Fort Worth Report
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Plus, what you need to know about summer classes and other ways to make the most of the break.

16 minutes

Alabama Reflector
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The Alabama House of Representatives Wednesday passed a bill that would change the date of primary elections in four congressional districts should the federal courts allow the state to use an old map that would alter their boundaries.  HB 1, sponsored by Speaker Pro Tempore Chris Pringle, R-Mobile, would allow for a new special election […]

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Alabama Reflector
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The Alabama House of Representatives Wednesday passed a bill that would change the date of primary elections in four congressional districts should the federal courts allow the state to use an old map that would alter their boundaries.  HB 1, sponsored by Speaker Pro Tempore Chris Pringle, R-Mobile, would allow for a new special election […]

Native and non-Native community members came together for a special event on a national day of remembrance for missing and murdered Indigenous relatives.

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KAXE
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Native and non-Native community members came together for a special event on a national day of remembrance for missing and murdered Indigenous relatives.

Ato cobrou conclusão da USF Mudança de Vida e denunciou condições precárias de atendimento Fonte

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Brasil de Fato
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Ato cobrou conclusão da USF Mudança de Vida e denunciou condições precárias de atendimento Fonte

Mientras se prepara una evacuación bajo estrictas medidas de seguridad, las autoridades sanitarias mantienen el foco en la localización de más de veinte pasajeros que abandonaron el barco sin seguimiento, un factor clave para evitar cualquier expansión del virus.

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Mundiario
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Mientras se prepara una evacuación bajo estrictas medidas de seguridad, las autoridades sanitarias mantienen el foco en la localización de más de veinte pasajeros que abandonaron el barco sin seguimiento, un factor clave para evitar cualquier expansión del virus.

Ante el sistema frontal pronosticado para este miércoles —que trajo de vuelta la lluvia a Santiago acompañada de viento—, tanto...

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BioBioChile
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Ante el sistema frontal pronosticado para este miércoles —que trajo de vuelta la lluvia a Santiago acompañada de viento—, tanto...

Sign up for Chalkbeat Philadelphia’s free newsletter to keep up with the city’s public school system.The Philadelphia school district’s plan to close schools and modernize others has a $3 billion price tag. Right now, the district can’t pay for it. And its plan to raise that money might end up being wishful thinking.Last week, members of the Board of Education voted to approve the plan to close 17 schools, and modernize nearly 10 times that number. But they had serious questions about the district’s plan to fund it. Even Superintendent Tony Watlington, who pushed the board to approve the closures and upgrades, has acknowledged the funding hole. Watlington has said he wants to raise $2 billion from local, state, and federal government as well as philanthropic grants to pay for school upgrades over 10 years to ensure buildings are well equipped to receive more students. The remaining $1 billion would come from the district’s capital borrowing cycle.But major questions loom over how the district would ever raise that much money. The district already has a $300 million budget deficit. The Fund for the School District of Philadelphia, the district’s nonprofit fundraising partner, has raised $70 million since 2015 — or less than 3% of the plan’s total cost. The City Council has blasted the school closures and its relationship with the district has broken down. And Pennsylvania Senate Republicans, who control their chamber, have opposed sending significantly more money to the state’s largest district.“We’ve never raised money at this level,” said board member Crystal Cubbage, who voted against the plan, at the board’s meeting last week.All those difficulties could lead to the district to consider a watered-down version of the plan that leaves out many of the improvements Watlington wants. And they could pile further financial pressure on the district, which in addition to its fiscal problems has been losing students for years and is planning to cut hundreds of school-based jobs. Watlington has stressed that the aim of the facilities plan is to ensure all students have better access to academic opportunities and go to school in high quality buildings.Under his proposal, some buildings would get bathroom renovations and updated classrooms. Others would get electrical upgrades and new heating and cooling systems. In some buildings, the district has promised accessibility improvements, elevator replacements, new gyms, and fixed roofs. The plan’s high cost is a departure from school closures elsewhere that are often meant to save districts money. Watlington has said cost-cutting is not a major aim of the facilities plan, but rather the goal is to shuffle enrollment so that the district can spend money more efficiently.School leaders have said the facilities plan could still change even after the board’s vote to approve it. No schools are scheduled to be closed until the beginning of the 2027-28 school year.State, city officials could reject additional facilities fundingWhen Watlington initially presented the facilities plan earlier this year, he said there was an alternative version that would cost significantly less, take longer, and leave more students in low-quality school buildings.That plan would cost $1.85 billion over the course of 16 years, and the district could pay for it through its own borrowing. However, it would only reduce the number of school buildings rated unsatisfactory or poor from 85 to 45. And it’s unclear if the district’s list of schools to close and colocate would change under this cheaper version of the plan.That alternative plan also did not include additional investments that Watlington has recently pledged in certain areas where members of City Council have opposed the plan. It’s unclear if district officials have tweaked the alternative plan in recent months. District officials did not respond to Chalkbeat’s questions about it, and board members did not ask about it ahead of the April 30 vote to proceed with the facilities plan.But regardless of which plan district officials turn to, closing schools while asking for more funding is already deeply unpopular with some members of City Council. Last week, City Council Education Committee Chair Isaiah Thomas and several other elected officials interrupted the school board’s meeting and called for the resignation of those who voted for the closure plan. And many have questioned the district’s stated need for more funding while it plans to close schools.Without significant improvement in average academic performance, Councilmember Jeffery Young Jr. said during a city budget town hall in Southwest Philadelphia Tuesday, “why would we continue to put that money in the district?”The district has also historically been underfunded by the state. Though Gov. Josh Shapiro has approved budgets increasing funding for Philly schools each year since taking office, his budget proposal for next year still leaves the district underfunded by more than $3 billion, according to a formula adopted by a bipartisan state commission. The district will likely need the support of Republican lawmakers to get more state money.So far, the school closure plan has brought goodwill from at least one key Republican state lawmaker. After the closure vote, Sen. Kim Ward, a Republican and the president pro tempore of the state senate, posted on social media that she was glad Philly’s schools “recognize the need for reform” and that she was “optimistic” about working with officials to “ensure Philadelphia students are set up for success.”Rebecca Redelmeier is a reporter at Chalkbeat Philadelphia. She writes about public schools, early childhood education, and issues that affect students, families, and educators across Philadelphia. Contact Rebecca at rredelmeier@chalkbeat.org.

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Chalkbeat
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Sign up for Chalkbeat Philadelphia’s free newsletter to keep up with the city’s public school system.The Philadelphia school district’s plan to close schools and modernize others has a $3 billion price tag. Right now, the district can’t pay for it. And its plan to raise that money might end up being wishful thinking.Last week, members of the Board of Education voted to approve the plan to close 17 schools, and modernize nearly 10 times that number. But they had serious questions about the district’s plan to fund it. Even Superintendent Tony Watlington, who pushed the board to approve the closures and upgrades, has acknowledged the funding hole. Watlington has said he wants to raise $2 billion from local, state, and federal government as well as philanthropic grants to pay for school upgrades over 10 years to ensure buildings are well equipped to receive more students. The remaining $1 billion would come from the district’s capital borrowing cycle.But major questions loom over how the district would ever raise that much money. The district already has a $300 million budget deficit. The Fund for the School District of Philadelphia, the district’s nonprofit fundraising partner, has raised $70 million since 2015 — or less than 3% of the plan’s total cost. The City Council has blasted the school closures and its relationship with the district has broken down. And Pennsylvania Senate Republicans, who control their chamber, have opposed sending significantly more money to the state’s largest district.“We’ve never raised money at this level,” said board member Crystal Cubbage, who voted against the plan, at the board’s meeting last week.All those difficulties could lead to the district to consider a watered-down version of the plan that leaves out many of the improvements Watlington wants. And they could pile further financial pressure on the district, which in addition to its fiscal problems has been losing students for years and is planning to cut hundreds of school-based jobs. Watlington has stressed that the aim of the facilities plan is to ensure all students have better access to academic opportunities and go to school in high quality buildings.Under his proposal, some buildings would get bathroom renovations and updated classrooms. Others would get electrical upgrades and new heating and cooling systems. In some buildings, the district has promised accessibility improvements, elevator replacements, new gyms, and fixed roofs. The plan’s high cost is a departure from school closures elsewhere that are often meant to save districts money. Watlington has said cost-cutting is not a major aim of the facilities plan, but rather the goal is to shuffle enrollment so that the district can spend money more efficiently.School leaders have said the facilities plan could still change even after the board’s vote to approve it. No schools are scheduled to be closed until the beginning of the 2027-28 school year.State, city officials could reject additional facilities fundingWhen Watlington initially presented the facilities plan earlier this year, he said there was an alternative version that would cost significantly less, take longer, and leave more students in low-quality school buildings.That plan would cost $1.85 billion over the course of 16 years, and the district could pay for it through its own borrowing. However, it would only reduce the number of school buildings rated unsatisfactory or poor from 85 to 45. And it’s unclear if the district’s list of schools to close and colocate would change under this cheaper version of the plan.That alternative plan also did not include additional investments that Watlington has recently pledged in certain areas where members of City Council have opposed the plan. It’s unclear if district officials have tweaked the alternative plan in recent months. District officials did not respond to Chalkbeat’s questions about it, and board members did not ask about it ahead of the April 30 vote to proceed with the facilities plan.But regardless of which plan district officials turn to, closing schools while asking for more funding is already deeply unpopular with some members of City Council. Last week, City Council Education Committee Chair Isaiah Thomas and several other elected officials interrupted the school board’s meeting and called for the resignation of those who voted for the closure plan. And many have questioned the district’s stated need for more funding while it plans to close schools.Without significant improvement in average academic performance, Councilmember Jeffery Young Jr. said during a city budget town hall in Southwest Philadelphia Tuesday, “why would we continue to put that money in the district?”The district has also historically been underfunded by the state. Though Gov. Josh Shapiro has approved budgets increasing funding for Philly schools each year since taking office, his budget proposal for next year still leaves the district underfunded by more than $3 billion, according to a formula adopted by a bipartisan state commission. The district will likely need the support of Republican lawmakers to get more state money.So far, the school closure plan has brought goodwill from at least one key Republican state lawmaker. After the closure vote, Sen. Kim Ward, a Republican and the president pro tempore of the state senate, posted on social media that she was glad Philly’s schools “recognize the need for reform” and that she was “optimistic” about working with officials to “ensure Philadelphia students are set up for success.”Rebecca Redelmeier is a reporter at Chalkbeat Philadelphia. She writes about public schools, early childhood education, and issues that affect students, families, and educators across Philadelphia. Contact Rebecca at rredelmeier@chalkbeat.org.

O avanço das tensões institucionais entre o Congresso Nacional, o Poder Executivo e o Supremo Tribunal Federal motivou a divulgação de um novo manifesto público assinado por entidades da sociedade civil, juristas, movimentos democráticos e organizações populares. A iniciativa partiu do Comitê em Defesa da Democracia e do Estado Democrático de Direito e reúne organizações […] Fonte

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Brasil de Fato
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O avanço das tensões institucionais entre o Congresso Nacional, o Poder Executivo e o Supremo Tribunal Federal motivou a divulgação de um novo manifesto público assinado por entidades da sociedade civil, juristas, movimentos democráticos e organizações populares. A iniciativa partiu do Comitê em Defesa da Democracia e do Estado Democrático de Direito e reúne organizações […] Fonte

19 minutes

Fort Worth Report
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A Fort Worth-area campaign uses races and mom groups to collect diapers, addressing a steady need many families struggle to meet year-round.

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Fort Worth Report
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A Fort Worth-area campaign uses races and mom groups to collect diapers, addressing a steady need many families struggle to meet year-round.

Russia’s Foreign Ministry has circulated a note to all accredited diplomatic missions and representatives of international organizations, urging them to evacuate their diplomats from Kyiv, Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said.

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Meduza
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Russia’s Foreign Ministry has circulated a note to all accredited diplomatic missions and representatives of international organizations, urging them to evacuate their diplomats from Kyiv, Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said.

La Fiscalía Metropolitana Oriente confirmó la detención de cuatro personas por el robo con intimidación y con disparos contra un...

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BioBioChile
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La Fiscalía Metropolitana Oriente confirmó la detención de cuatro personas por el robo con intimidación y con disparos contra un...