Swedish electric vehicle battery manufacturer Northvolt is fighting for its survival as Canadian taxpayer money and pension fund investments hang in the balance.
New laws enacted by Michigan Democrats could result in a return to the unionization of home health care workers and a dues skim for unions from a program that funds caregivers.
Multi-Year Partnership to Outfit the Cadillac Wayne Taylor Racing Program with Sonic Tool Sets; Improves Productivity and Efficiency
Throughout his campaign, President-elect Donald Trump heaped scorn on the federal Department of Education, describing it as being infiltrated by radicals, zealots and Marxists.He has picked Linda McMahon, a former wrestling executive, to lead the department. But like many conservative politicians before him, Trump has called for dismantling the department altogether a cumbersome task that likely would require action from Congress.The agency’s main role is financial. Annually, it distributes billions in federal money to colleges and schools and manages the federal student loan portfolio. Closing the department would mean redistributing each of those duties to another agency. The Education Department also plays an important regulatory role in services for students, ranging from those with disabilities to low-income and homeless kids.Indeed, federal education money is central to Trump’s plans for colleges and schools. Trump has vowed to cut off federal money for schools and colleges that push “critical race theory, transgender insanity, and other inappropriate racial, sexual or political content” and to reward states and schools that end teacher tenure and enact universal school choice programs.Federal funding makes up a relatively small portion of public school budgets roughly 14%. Colleges and universities are more reliant on it, through research grants along with federal financial aid that helps students pay their tuition.Here is a look at some of the department’s key functions, and how Trump has said he might approach them.Student loans and financial aidThe Education Department manages approximately $1.5 trillion in student loan debt for over 40 million borrowers. It also oversees the Pell Grant, which provides aid to students below a certain income threshold, and administers the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA), which universities use to allocate financial aid.The Biden administration has made cancellation of student loans a signature effort of the department’s work. Since Bidens initial attempt to cancel student loans was overturned by the Supreme Court, the administration has forgiven over $175 billion for more than 4.8 million borrowers through a range of changes to programs it administers, such as Public Service Loan Forgiveness.The loan forgiveness efforts have faced Republican pushback, including litigation from several GOP-led states.Trump has criticized Biden’s efforts to cancel debt as illegal and unfair, calling it a total catastrophe that taunted young people. Trump’s plan for student debt is uncertain: He has not put out detailed plans.Civil rights enforcementThrough its Office for Civil Rights, the Education Department conducts investigations and issues guidance on how civil rights laws should be applied, such as for LGBTQ+ students and students of color. The office also oversees a large data collection project that tracks disparities in resources, course access and discipline for students of different racial and socioeconomic groups.Trump has suggested a different interpretation of the office’s civil rights role. In his campaign platform, he said he would pursue civil rights cases to stop schools from discriminating on the basis of race. He has described diversity and equity policies in education as explicit unlawful discrimination and said colleges that use them will pay fines and have their endowments taxed.Trump also has pledged to exclude transgender students from Title IX protections, which affect school policies on students use of pronouns, bathrooms and locker rooms. Originally passed in 1972, Title IX was first used as a womens rights law. This year, Bidens administration said the law forbids discrimination based on gender identity and sexual orientation, but Trump can undo that.College accreditationWhile the Education Department does not directly accredit colleges and universities, it oversees the system by reviewing all federally recognized accrediting agencies. Institutions of higher education must be accredited to gain access to federal money for student financial aid.Accreditation came under scrutiny from conservatives in 2022, when the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools questioned political interference at Florida public colleges and universities. Trump has said he would fire radical left accreditors and take applications for new accreditors that would uphold standards including defending the American tradition and removing Marxist diversity administrators.Although the education secretary has the authority to terminate its relationship with individual accrediting agencies, it is an arduous process that has rarely been pursued. Under President Barack Obama, the department took steps to cancel accreditors for a now-defunct for-profit college chain, but the Trump administration blocked the move. The group, the Accrediting Council for Independent Colleges and Schools, was terminated by the Biden administration in 2022.Money for schoolsMuch of the Education Department’s money for K-12 schools goes through large federal programs, such as Title I for low-income schools and the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act. Those programs support services for students with disabilities, lower class sizes with additional teaching positions, and pay for social workers and other non-teaching roles in schools.During his campaign, Trump called for shifting those functions to the states. He has not offered details on how the agency’s core functions of sending federal money to local districts and schools would be handled.The Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025, a sweeping proposal outlining a far-right vision for the country that overlaps in areas with Trump’s campaign, offers a blueprint. It suggests sending oversight of programs for kids with disabilities and low-income children first to the Department of Health and Human Services, before eventually phasing out the funding and converting it to no-strings-attached grants to states.___Associated Press education writer Collin Binkley contributed to this report.
The Birmingham Civil Rights Institute is honoring the life and legacy of one of its founding members.Earlier this month, Odessa Woolfolk, a lifelong advocate for civil rights and a champion of social justice, was named the recipient of the 2024 Fred L. Shuttlesworth Human Rights Award.A beacon of change in the community, Shuttlesworth devoted himself to challenging segregation, establishing the Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights, as well as joining Martin Luther King Jr. in the formation of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference.Recipients of the prestigious award are said to embody Shuttlesworths spirit of courage, determination, and unwavering commitment to justice, all of which shine through as major facets of Woolfolks character.Born in Birminghams Titusville community, Woolfolk graduated from Parker High School before attending Talladega College, where she earned a Bachelor of Arts in history and political science.She also obtained a Master of Arts in urban studies at Occidental College in California and was a national urban fellow at Yale University, according to the Alabama Academy of Honor.Following her studies, Woolfolk returned to Birmingham, where she began a career as an educator, taking a teaching job at the now-closed Ullman High School in the early 60s. While there, she played an instrumental role in shaping the minds of several foot soldiers in the Civil Rights Movement, many of whom marched with Shuttlesworth and King.Woolfolk then left the classroom behind to pursue a career in public policy, holding positions at the Urban Reinvestment Task Force in Washington, D.C., as well as the New York State Urban Development Corporation, YWCA, and Arbor Hill Community Center and Inter-Racial Council in New York.In the 1970s, Woolfolk was once again called home to Alabama when she was tasked with heading up the Birmingham Opportunity Industrialization Center and the Jefferson County Committee for Economic Opportunity as executive director and associate executive director, respectively.Her return to the Magic City also marked her return to the field of education. She held various positions at UAB, including lecturer, staff associate, assistant to the president for community relations and director of the Center for Urban Affairs for more than 20 years until her retirement in the early 90s.In 1992, Woolfolk played a key role in founding the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute, serving as both its first president and board chair.The Birmingham Civil Rights Institute signifies that Birmingham does not hide from its past, Woolfolk once wrote. It acknowledges that where once the city housed two people, Black and White, unknown to one another except through the painful thread of segregation, Birmingham now embraces its past, neither forgetting nor dwelling on it, but using it to foster understanding.The Institute recognizes the redemptive importance of memory, she continued. It is both a time capsule, and a modern day think-tank focused on seeking equitable solutions to common problems. In some ways the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute functions as a town square where the community gathers to discuss common concerns. It is a place where yesterdays struggles inspire a brighter tomorrow. It is a meeting ground for the makers of everyday history, and for those who write about the present.Woolfolk will receive the award at the Institutes 32nd-anniversary celebration Thursday between 4 and 7 p.m.Miss Woolfolk embodies truly the civic leadership, human rights advocacy, education and the power that it brings for us to connect, for us to advance forward, for us to all really be empowered in our own capabilities, BCRI Vice President Tiffani Saxton said. As we were thinking about reimagining the Institute and sitting down to evaluate the opportunity to honor someone, she just rose to the top as someone who embodies true opportunity to bring our community together–connect across generations She is one of our most esteemed citizens, and we don’t want to miss the opportunity to engage her in that way and to bring forward the opportunity to honor her. Mostly because she just truly deserves it.She’s standing up for human rights organizations and leadership organizations here in the city. It’s just the perfect person who connects both the past and the present and the future.
Thanksgiving dinner will cost less this year than last but will still be 19% higher than before the pandemic, according to the American Farm Bureau Federation’s annual Thanksgiving survey out Wednesday.The average cost of this year’s dinner for 10 people is $58.08, or about $5.80 per person, the survey found. That’s a 5% drop from 2023.The center piece of the Thanksgiving meal, the turkey, helped bring down the overall cost. The average price for a 16-pound turkey is $25.67, down 6% from last year.”The turkey is traditionally the main attraction on the Thanksgiving table and is typically the most expensive part of the meal,” said Bernt Nelson, an economist at the American Farm Bureau Federation (AFBF), said in a statement. “The American turkey flock is the smallest it’s been since 1985 because of avian influenza, but overall demand has also fallen, resulting in lower prices at the grocery store for families planning a holiday meal.”Related video below: Why Do We Eat Turkey on Thanksgiving? This History Behind This Very Special BirdThe American Farm Bureau’s Thanksgiving meal includes 12 common items used in a Thanksgiving meal, most of which decreased in price, reflecting price volatility in crops this year, the AFBF said.The price of whole milk dropped more than 14% from last year to $3.21 a gallon because of better weather for dairy farmers and cows. Frozen peas dropped 8.1% to $1.73 for a pound, and celery and carrots fell by 6.4%.But items like cubed stuffing and dinner rolls both increased by 8% because of higher labor costs, the AFBF said. Cranberries saw the highest increase, rising almost 12% year-over-year.A fresh bag of cranberries this year is $2.35 on average, the survey found, closer to historical prices after a large drop last year.”We are seeing modest improvements in the cost of a Thanksgiving dinner for a second year, but America’s families, including farm families, are still being hurt by high inflation,” said Zippy Duvall, president of the AFBF, in a statement.Americans are paying 22% more for groceries compared to when President Joe Biden took office in January 2021, according to October Consumer Price Index inflation data. Annual inflation rose 2.6% last month from 2.4% the month before.In exit polling, Americans said the economy and specifically grocery prices were a top reason for why they voted for President-elect Donald Trump. However, while price increases could slow further, prices themselves are not expected to fall.Farm Bureau volunteer shoppers checked prices in stores and online from November 1 through 7 in all 50 states and Puerto Rico and looked for the best deals. This was before most grocery store chains began featuring whole frozen turkeys at lower prices, the AFBF said. Americans could still find better prices, particularly on turkeys.The cost of the Thanksgiving dinner items varies based on location, the survey found. The dinner was cheapest in the South at $56.81, followed by the Northeast, the Midwest and then a sizable jump in the West at $67.81.
Some residents in Slidell say theyve been forced to choose between necessities and paying over four times what they used to for water. But they say the problems dont stop there.We didnt have any issues at all with our water until Magnolia took over from Resolve, said Anne Lincks, a North Forest resident for ten years.Magnolia Water acquired Resolve nearly two years ago, promising improvements. However, Lincks says instead of improvements, her water bill skyrocketed, riddled with fees and what she described as empty promises.We got a letter in the mail that said due to some infrastructure work, our bill for three months would go up to probably about $70, and then it would level back off, Lincks recalled. But she said the bills never returned to normal.After the three months, my bill was $103, with all these charges the bill didnt have before. Then it went to $110, then $127. Now my bill is $133 and some change, Lincks said, noting its now five times higher than before Magnolia Water took over.Residents also pointed fingers at high-speed home internet provider Vexus Fiber. They claim installation work caused repeated water pipe breaks, adding to their frustrations.One resident shared photos of exposed wires running through her driveway after workers struck a water pipe, flooding the area. The driveway cracked and was later covered with gravel.If you ask them about whats going on with the boil water notices, they just blame it on Texas, said Katie Cantrell, another North Forest resident. Cantrell added, They say the water company gave them incorrect maps.Cantrell, who has children, said her main concern is providing them with clean, affordable drinking water. However, a recent letter from Magnolia Water revealed that some water pipes in the area are made of unknown materials that may contain lead.I dont know if theyre going to try to hit us with another rate increase because maybe all of this has to be ripped out, Cantrell said.Local officials are aware of the issues but say their hands are tied. St. Tammany Parish Councilman Patrick Burke said the parish doesnt control private utility companies like Magnolia Water and Vexus Fiber.I expressed to my concerns and said we need to get our constituents in the same room with you and the Public Service Commissioner, Burke said, adding that Magnolia assured him they would work on arranging a meeting.Councilman Jeff Corbin emphasized the Public Service Commissions role in overseeing utility operations. Theyre the ones that allow people to go out and put underground utilities in place, Corbin said.Residents say they want answers and accountability. WDSU reached out to Magnolia Water multiple times but received no response.The station also visited the Vexus Fiber office in Slidell, only to find the doors locked during business hours. Calls to Louisiana Public Service Commissioner for District One, Eric Skrmetta, also went unanswered.For the North Forest community, the silence from these entities leaves them wondering what will give out nexttheir waterlines or their patience.
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