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New EPA rules on 'forever' chemicals in tap water pose $1.8 billion challenge for Orange County
This month, when the Environmental Protection Agency announced the first-ever federal rules on how much of a half-dozen deadly PFAS chemicals to allow in your tap water, 40 public wells in Orange County, California, instantly became unsafe for human consumption, at least on paper.
The fact that those wells will continue to supply water to ...Read more
This 5-year-old from Gaza is learning to live with one leg and untold loss
DOHA, Qatar — In a quiet corner of the Qatari capital, Doha, between an Indian restaurant and a hair salon, lies a nondescript housing compound once meant to host World Cup visitors.
Instead it's become a temporary home for about 1,500 Palestinian medical evacuees from Gaza — a micro-sized Gaza-on-the-gulf and a living catalog of the ...Read more
Orlando Commissioner Hill's case part of 'epidemic' of elder abuse, experts say
A senior with memory loss and no family members to help gave control of her finances to a younger woman. In short order, the younger woman sold the elderly woman’s home and depleted her life savings while neglecting her medical care.
In broad strokes, this tale from Miami-Dade County resembles the elder abuse case now ensnarling suspended ...Read more
Pathfinders for Autism helps people with autism, families navigate diagnosis
BALTIMORE -- One of Rebecca Rienzi’s favorite stories to tell about Pathfinders for Autism – the Baltimore County nonprofit where she has been executive director since 2010 – happened at the National Aquarium in the Inner Harbor.
Every year, the organization rents out the aquarium to give people with autism and their families the chance ...Read more
Cash-strapped election offices have fewer resources after bans on private grants
In April, Wisconsin joined 27 other states that have banned or restricted local governments’ use of private donations to run cash-strapped election offices, buy voting equipment or hire poll workers for Election Day.
All of the state laws came in the past four years, pushed by conservative lawmakers and activists who claim that Democratic ...Read more
After Hamas killed his mother, an Israeli man chooses peace over vengeance
HAIFA, Israel — Carmel Neta was on the phone with his mother, Adrienne, when Hamas militants stormed her kibbutz on the morning of Oct. 7. He could hear panic in her voice and screams in the distance.
Neta, 39, did his best to calm her, urging her to take refuge in a safe room and then guiding her in a meditation. Two of his siblings were ...Read more
Unsheltered people are losing Medicaid in redetermination mix-ups
KALISPELL, Mont. — On a cold February morning at the Flathead Warming Center, Tashya Evans waited for help with her Medicaid application as others at the shelter got ready for the day in this northwestern Montana city.
Evans said she lost Medicaid coverage in September because she hadn’t received paperwork after moving from Great Falls, ...Read more
Michelin Guide awards its first hotel 'keys' in the US
Last year, when World’s 50 Best issued its first global ranking of hotels, only two properties in the U.S. made the cut: the Equinox and Aman New York hotels, both in Manhattan.
Now Michelin has arrived stateside, in its second-ever presentation of “keys” — a new system from the eponymous tire maker that’s doling out one, two or three...Read more
Commencement speakers launch boycott of USC satellite graduation ceremonies
When USC President Carol Folt called off the 65,000-attendee "main stage" commencement amid pro-Palestinian protests and anger over the cancellation of pro-Palestinian student Asna Tabassum's speaking slot, USC promised that more than two dozen satellite graduation ceremonies for individual colleges would continue as planned.
But on Sunday, two...Read more
With little conflict, race for Georgia's 3rd is about style over substance
The five candidates seeking a deep-red U.S. House seat in west Georgia reached more consensus than conflict as they met for the first time in a debate over the state’s most competitive congressional contest.
Each backed stricter immigration controls, abortion limits and more financial support for Israel amid its war against Hamas. Each ...Read more
Emerson board backs president after students call for resignation following pro-Palestinian encampment arrests
Emerson College’s Board of Trustees backed President Jay Bernhardt, despite calls to resign from the school’s student government association following the arrest of more than 100 individuals who had occupied a campus alleyway last week.
“At a time when freedom of speech and higher education itself are besieged by outside forces, the ...Read more
World War II-era ship docked in Alameda testing tool to combat global warming
The flight deck of a decommissioned World War II-era aircraft carrier docked at Alameda has recently begun launching something other than airplanes: microscopic droplets of salt water that scientists hope will help counteract the effects of climate change.
A team of atmospheric scientists from the University of Washington has teamed up with ...Read more
Japan's ruling party loses special election in blow to premier
Japan’s ruling party lost a special election Prime Minister Fumio Kishida had described in part as a judgment on himself, months ahead of a party leadership vote.
Public anger over a slush fund scandal helped the main opposition candidate Akiko Kamei defeat the Liberal Democratic Party’s Norimasa Nishikori by about 83,000 votes to 58,000 in...Read more
Red Sea diversions spew carbon emissions equal to 9 million cars
Ships seeking to avoid ongoing attacks by Houthi rebels in the Red Sea area are emitting millions of additional tons of carbon, making it tougher for companies using ocean freight to reduce pollution across their supply chains.
Instead of passing through Egypt’s Suez Canal, hundreds of vessels since mid-December are sailing around South ...Read more
Slain Chicago police Officer Luis Huesca mourned at visitation: 'An attack on the entire community'
CHICAGO — More than 200 police officers, relatives and members of the public stood in line Sunday outside Blake-Lamb Funeral Home in Oak Lawn waiting for Chicago police Officer Luis Huesca’s visitation services to begin.
Huesca, 30, was shot and fatally wounded driving home from work April 21 in Gage Park while in uniform. Late Friday night...Read more
Homeschool bills introduced in Alaska House and Senate with end of session near
Alaska House and Senate committees on Friday introduced bills intended to allow homeschool and correspondence programs to continue operating constitutionally.
Anchorage Superior Court Judge Adolf Zeman earlier in the month struck down as unconstitutional two statutes enacted in 2014 that allowed public funds to be spent at private and religious...Read more
Lawmakers sound off on college campus protests, arrests
Some campus protests are crossing the line, lawmakers say.
Protesters have a right to voice their opinions about the situation on the ground in Gaza, but not so vociferously their protests cross the line into antisemitism or law breaking, according to a pair of Bay State politicians asked about recent crackdowns on college campuses seen ...Read more
Minnesota state Sen. Nicole Mitchell off committee assignments while case under review
DFL state Sen. Nicole Mitchell, of Woodbury, who was arrested in an alleged burglary this month, will be relieved of her committee work and removed from DFL caucus meetings while her case is under review in the courts and the Senate, DFL Senate Majority Leader Erin Murphy said in a statement Sunday.
"This is a tragic situation, and there are ...Read more
A Minnesota senator faces a felony burglary charge. Here's what happened and what could happen next.
A somewhat uneventful 2024 legislative session was thrown into disarray last week when a Democratic-Farmer-Labor state senator was charged with felony burglary after allegedly breaking into her stepmother’s northern Minnesota home.
The arrest and charges against Sen. Nicole Mitchell, DFL-Woodbury, have been disruptive in the Senate, where her...Read more
Face shields, dry suits, showers: Lifeguards in South County, Calif., adapt to persistent sewage contamination
Coronado lifeguards use leak-proof dry suits for open water rescues. Imperial Beach lifeguards decontaminate in showers after leaving the ocean. And both have ditched jet skis for the protection offered by boats.
These aren't new equipment standards.
They are tools the two South County, California, departments have rolled out independently to ...Read more
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