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2025-06-01 00:22:19
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in the Senate.The bill, which was introduced by the Trump administration, was blocked after Democratic Senators voted against it.Democrats have said the bill offers too much to corporations and not enough protection against the funds being used for stock buybacks and executive pay. Republicans urge that the bill be passed quickly, so the federal government begin sending Americans checks of up to ,200 to help stimulate the economy.As the Senate bill failed, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi introduced her own stimulus bill in the House of Representatives — a move that could lengthen the amount of time it could take for the government to provide aid to economically strapped Americans. 688

  濮阳东方医院男科线上医生   

in the form of scholarship vouchers.Cathedral High School announced Sunday it fired a teacher who is in a same-sex marriage after the Archdiocese of Indianapolis threatened to revoke the school's official Catholic status and its financial support.According to the Indiana Department of Education, Cathedral received ,136,258.73 last school year in public money through the Indiana Choice Scholarship Program. How the Program WorksThe Indiana Choice Scholarship Program provides state money to offset tuition costs at schools across Indiana. To qualify, students must live in Indiana and be ages 5-22. There are then eight different options, or "tracks" a student can qualified for, depending on various measurements. For example, there is a sibling track, meaning a student's brother or sister received a scholarship the previous year.A family's income level is also a factor when determining who gets the scholarship money. But the specific school is responsible for determining eligibility. The amount the student receives to attend the school is based on a state-created funding formula, but it could be as much as the school's tuition and fees.The money technically goes to each student's family, but it's tied to a specific school. If the student stops going to that school, they can't use the scholarship money at a different school. The schools participating in the program may not discriminate against a student based on race, color or national origin.Cathedral, Brebeuf Jesuit and RoncalliA few days before Cathedral's announcement, Brebeuf Jesuit Preparatory School was faced with the same option — fire its teacher in a same-sex marriage or lose its Catholic classification. Brebeuf Jesuit chose the latter."We really just tried to look at it in terms of our community," Brebeuf Jesuit principal Greg VanSlambrook said. "Our decision trying to do the right thing by our teacher and by our community."After the school's decision, it can no longer use the name "Catholic," and will no longer be identified or recognized as a Catholic institution.Both Cathedral and Brebeuf Jesuit are in the Indiana Choice Scholarship Program, meaning they get money from the state to accept the lower-income students.Over the last three school years, Cathedral has received ,457,077.31 in scholarship vouchers from the state, according to data provided by the Indiana Department of Education. Over that same timeframe, Brebeuf Jesuit has received ,137,056.03 in scholarship vouchers.Last year, Roncalli High School placed its guidance counselor on administrative leave after it was discovered she was in a same-sex marriage.Backlash from State LawmakersThere is no mechanism in place to stop Cathedral from receiving public money. Two Democratic Indianapolis state lawmakers, one in each chamber, tried during the last session. Rep. Dan Forestal and Sen. J.D. Ford have pushed to include language in state law that would prevent voucher money from going to schools that discriminate against a staff member based on their sexuality, gender identity, race and many other factors.In Ford's bill, schools in the program would have to annually submit copies of teachers' contracts or other documentation, to prove they're not discriminating. His bill died without getting a hearing. Ford said he was told it was a busy session and the bill didn't meet the priorities of the Committee on Education and Career Development."People are talking about it," Ford said. "My constituents are talking about it, which means I have to talk about it."Both lawmakers have a personal stake in what's happened with these Indianapolis schools. Forestal is a Roncalli alumnus and Ford is the first openly LGBTQ state lawmaker."I think I have a duty to speak up on behalf of the folks this is happening to," Ford said.He also introduced an amendment into the state budget, to essentially do the same as the bill would've. But the amendment was defeated. Ford also said schools that don't receive public money can do what they want, but things change when state funding gets involved."If you are going to do that, that's fine, I'm still going to have an issue with it," Ford said. "It just wouldn't be in my purview as a state legislator. If you want to go ahead and raise the funds and that's what you want to do. … But because of the fact that they are receiving public, taxpayer dollars that come directly from the state budget, that's where I have an issue with that."Ford said he will continue to push the issue in the 2020 legislative session, potentially introducing a similar bill.This story was originally published by Matt McKInney on 4621

  濮阳东方医院男科线上医生   

— one of two step siblings who have been missing since September — is coming forward to share a statement she gave to police about what JJ Lori Vallow-Daybell told her just days before JJ went missing.The woman, who was granted anonymity for this story, shared her statement with the public to give insight into what she learned about 337

  

With warmer weather and shorter winters, the ski industry is suffering.“We’re long passed the time when you can drive a Prius and say, ‘I’m doing what I can on climate,’” said Auden Schendler, senior vice president of sustainability with Aspen Skiing Company, one of the oldest ski resorts in the country.Schendler says with the planet warming due to greenhouse gas emissions, America has lost a month of winter since 1940, if you count winter as a day with frost. He predicts those numbers will get even worse, if the world doesn’t get a better grip on climate change."50% reduction in the season in certain locations by 2050 and 90% by end of century,” Schendler said. “If you loss the last half of March, because its suddenly super hot and people are playing golf, you’re going to go out of business.”While these environmental challenges are impacting ski town economies across the country, scientists say warming weather is also hurting people who never even hit the slopes.“Scientifically, changes have been happening really quickly and we’ve been able to see them intensify over the years, too,” said Twila Moon, deputy lead scientist with the National Snow and Ice Data Center.Her team’s research shows climate change has a trickle-down effect on some of our most important industries.“It does influence agriculture,” Moon said. “It influences water run off which impacts our drinking water. So, drought and flood patterns are different.”Also, it means a different way of operating for ski resorts.“We used to be able to have more snow more reliably and now it’s more volatile,” said Jim MacInnes, CEO of Crystal Mountain Resort in Michigan.MacInnes has had to adjust to changing climate during his 35 years in the ski industry. Today’s warmer weather causes his team to spend more money and more energy on making snow at times of winter when it used to still fall from the ski.The dry-up has caused his Crystal Mountain to adjust operations and become more of a four-seasons resort.“We do a lot of things in the spring, summer and fall that have helped to mitigate the winter climate change problem,” he said.A former electric engineer, MacInnes is looking for ways to fix this worldwide problem.“Just know that there are a lot of solutions shifting more of our energy use to electricity, clean electricity,” he said.Back in the Rocky Mountains, Schendler supports scientific solutions but believes real changes on the ground level will only come through pressuring high-ranking government officials.“This is a global systems problem, and we need systems solution,” he said. “Which means American government needs to lead.” 2639

  

-- arguing that the data is too easily falsified and the indicators used irrelevant to what makes a school worthy. Then again, Forbes publishes their own college ranking list every year, too.Forbes isn't the only one against the rankings. In a 2012 opinion piece for CNN, former George Washington University President Stephen Joel Trachtenberg dismissed the rankings, saying they don't "begin to express the quality, comprehensiveness and special character of the more than 4,000 colleges and universities in the country."The rankings create a national obsession, pushing the false belief that if a student doesn't get into a select school, which is typically accompanied by a high price tag, then "life will never be worth living," Trachtenberg writes. He also discusses the ways in which schools can falsify their data, which Forbes also points out.And they're not wrong.In May, seven years after Trachtenberg wrote his piece, it was revealed that the University of Oklahoma gave "inflated" data on its alumni giving rates for twenty years, in an effort to improve their ranking. Alumni giving, an indicator used by U.S. News to detemine a school's rank, is weighted at 5%.Even before Oklahoma, Claremont McKenna College in California 1238

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