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The Trump administration is proposing to restructure its US Forest Service program that trains low-income, rural students how to respond to national emergencies.The National Federation of Federal Employees, the union that represents Forest Service employees, says the move will cut more than 1,000 jobs.The Job Corps Civilian Conservation Centers will be moved from the US Department of Agriculture to the US Department of Labor, and, in the process, nine of the 25 programs' centers will be closed down in states like Wisconsin, Kentucky, Virginia and Oregon."This action creates an opportunity to serve a greater number of students at higher performing centers at a lower cost to taxpayers by modernizing and reforming part of the Job Corps program," the Labor Department said, announcing the restructuring on Friday.The remaining 16 centers will "continue under new contract operator or partnership," the agency said.In a note to staff on Friday, Forest Service Chief Victoria Christiansen addressed what she said will be a "very difficult transition" and acknowledged that they will seek a "reduction in force."Christiansen said the transition is anticipated to be completed by the end of 2019.CNN has reached out to the Labor Department.The National Federation of Federal Employees said it expects 1,065 jobs to be eliminated by September. The Labor Department release does not, however, say how many federal jobs will be affected."This is a politically motivated attack that oddly enough, offends both Democrats and Republicans in Congress and in communities across the country," the union's president, Randy Erwin, said in a 1644
The Univision network said six of its staffers, including veteran anchorman Jorge Ramos, were briefly detained at the presidential palace in Caracas, Venezuela, on Monday.Ramos and the crew members were released a little less than three hours after the episode began.Daniel Coronell, Univision's president of news, tweeted that "Jorge Ramos and his team have been released and are on route to their hotel."In Caracas, the Venezuelan National Union of the Press Workers also confirmed that "the Univision team has been freed."The network said Ramos was in Caracas to interview embattled Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro. Univision spokesman Jose Zamora said Maduro objected to Ramos' questions."Very shortly into the interview, Maduro didn't like the line of questioning, and they stopped the interview," Zamora said.He said government aides confiscated the network's equipment.Univision's news executives were able to find out what happened, he said, because "Jorge managed to call us." But "in the middle of the call, they took his phone away."Univision is the leading Spanish-language television network in the United States, with millions of loyal viewers.The network immediately contacted the US State Department. Kimberly Breier, the Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs, tweeted out, "We insist on their immediate release; the world is watching."Univision also went public with the news about its crew."Attention: A @Univision team, headed by @jorgeramosnews, is being arbitrarily detained at the Miraflores Palace in Caracas," the network tweeted out on Monday evening.Groups like Human Rights Watch called for the release of the journalists.Venezuelan government officials did not immediately respond to CNN's requests for comment.The Venezuelan government had set up multiple interviews with American journalists amid the country's deepening crisis. In one of the other interviews on Monday, Maduro told ABC's Tom Llamas that the US government — which is backing opposition leader Juan Guaido — is "trying to fabricate a crisis to justify political escalation and a military intervention in Venezuela to bring a war to South America."ABC published excerpts from the interview on Monday evening.The Univision interview was also set to take place on Monday. Zamora said it was originally scheduled for 2:30 p.m., but kept being postponed. The taping finally started at 7 p.m., but ended within minutes.According to Coronell, the material is now in the hands of government officials.The episode unfolded on the same day that US Vice President Mike Pence met with Guaido in Bogota, Colombia. 2634

Travis Air Force Base in California said a false alarm led to a lockdown on the base Wednesday.According to a Facebook post from the base, there were reports of gunfire on the base late Wednesday morning. The release says the base "immediately responded to ensure the safety of all its personnel, dependents and retirees."The reports were later determined to be unfounded.The false alarm came amid a two-day exercise by the 60th Air Mobility Wing to "train their ability to respond to emergency incidents."Earlier on Tuesday, 538
The Trump administration pressured the Department of Homeland Security to release immigrants detained at the southern border into so-called sanctuary cities in part to retaliate against Democrats who oppose President Donald Trump's plans for a border wall, a source familiar with the discussions told CNN on Thursday.Trump personally pushed Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen to follow through on the plan, the source said. Nielsen resisted and the DHS legal team eventually produced an analysis that killed the plan, which was first reported by 568
Thirteen children of firefighters who died at the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001, and six whose fathers died of 9/11-related illnesses, graduated from the city's fire department during an emotional ceremony.They were part of a group of 301 probationary firefighters to graduate Tuesday after 18 weeks of intensive training at the New York City Fire Department academy."Many of their fathers were killed on September 11, several others died of World Trade Center illnesses, and others lost their lives in the course of their duty, bravely working to save and protect others," said Fire Commissioner Daniel Nigro, who presided over the ceremony."Today, these 21 legacies are no longer children dreaming of their careers their fathers loved, and of serving in the world's greatest fire department -- today, they have fully achieved their dreams."Firefighter Carl Asaro was one of the 343 FDNY members killed after the terror attacks on 9/11.His children, Rebecca and Marc Asaro, graduated on Tuesday."Every day that I came to the academy, I was grateful to be there and to follow in the footsteps of my father, brothers, uncle, and all those who came before. This is exactly where I want to be," said Rebecca Asaro.They have two siblings already on the job, Firefighters Matthew and Carl Asaro, Jr.Robert Tilearcio Jr. took the test the same month his father, Robert Tilearcio, died from 9/11-related cancer, he told 1436
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