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Small Business Funding

Harris, Trump on border security policies amid presidential election [Video]

THE COURSE WHERE TRUMP WAS GOLFING. TRUMP IS NOW BACK ON THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL OVER THE WEEKEND. VICE PRESIDENT HARRIS CHALLENGED TRUMP TO ANOTHER DEBATE. TRUMP SAYS ITS TOO LATE BECAUSE VOTING HAS ALREADY STARTED IN FAITH EGBUONU SPOKE WITH OUR POLITICAL EXPERT ON WHAT THIS COULD MEAN FOR BOTH CANDIDATES. MASSIVE RAIDS, MASSIVE DETENTION CAMPS. WHAT ARE THEY TALKING ABOUT? VICE PRESIDENT KAMALA HARRIS, THE DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL NOMINEE CRITICIZING FORMER PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMPS LATEST PLAN ON IMMIGRATION. YOU GOT TO GET RID OF THESE PEOPLE. GIVE ME A SHOT. YOU START WITH THE STONE COLD KILLERS, THE MURDERERS, THE DRUG DEALERS. YOU START, YOU GET THEM OUT, AND YOU TELL THEM IF THEY EVER COME BACK, BIG TROUBLE. TRUMP VOWING FOR A MASSIVE DEPORTATION IF REELECTED AT A NEW YORK RALLY ON WEDNESDAY. HIS PLAN INCLUDES, QUOTE, THE LARGEST DEPORTATION IN THE HISTORY OF OUR COUNTRY. NOW, DONALD TRUMP IS MAKING IMMIGRATION ONE OF THE CORNERSTONES OF HIS CAMPAIGN. HES SPEAKING OF THAT TOPIC MORE THAN ANYTHING, EVEN MORE THAN JOBS AND THE ECONOMY LATELY. HARRIS CHALLENGING HIS PLAN WITH A TWO PRONGED APPROACH TO ADDRESS ISSUES RAISED AT THE BORDER. CREATE AN EARNED PATHWAY TO CITIZENSHIP AND ENSURE OUR BORDER IS SECURE. WE CAN DO BOTH. DONALD TRUMP IS STILL ACCUSING HER OF BEING TOO SOFT ON IMMIGRATION, BUT SHES MOVED FROM THE LEFT TO THE CENTER, WILLING TO SUPPORT PARTIAL FUNDING FOR A BORDER WALL, AS WELL AS A PATHWAY TO CITIZENSHIP. KOAT POLITICAL EXPERT BRIAN SANDEROFF TELLING US, WHILE BORDER SECURITY IS A NATIONAL CONCERN, IT IS AT TOP OF MIND FOR NEW MEXICO VOTERS. WE ARE A BORDER STATE AND TIME WILL TELL HOW THE VOTERS FEEL ABOUT THEIR STANCES ON THE IMMIGRATION ISSUE. TRUMPS TAKING ON MORE OF A HARDLINE POSITION AND KAMALA HARRIS TAKING ON MORE OF A MODERATE POSITION. THEY WANT TO. KOAT ACTION SEVEN NEWS. AS OF APRIL, THE HOMELAND SECURITY DEPARTMEN

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Small Business Funding

Heres whats in the government funding agreement [Video]

House Speaker Mike Johnson unveiled a spending bill Sunday that will avert a government shutdown if it is passed by both the House and Senate before funding runs out on Sept. 30.Johnson said in a letter to lawmakers that he does not want a shutdown weeks before the election. But he also stressed that the legislation will be a very narrow, bare-bones CR (continuing resolution) including only the extensions that are absolutely necessary.The spending plan, known as a limited continuing resolution, has bipartisan support.The top Democrats in Congress, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, praised bipartisan negotiations that led to a funding agreement free of cuts and poison pills and signaled swift passage of the stopgap bill ahead of the deadline.Still, even with a possible deal, the federal government will start preparing for a potential shutdown of nonessential operations this week, which could affect millions of federal workers and military personnel, as well as impact important functions such as Head Start, border security and lending programs, among others.Congress rarely passes funding bills on time, but the U.S. legislative branch had to pass a series of continuing resolutions raising shutdown fears each time before finally approving measures in March to fully fund the government for the current fiscal year.Maintain government funding through December 20The bill will keep the government up and running for about three more months, through Dec. 20.The extension will avoid the potential for a government shutdown before the November election but sets up a showdown over a full spending package just before the Christmas holiday.Provide more money for the Secret ServiceThe bill includes an additional $231 million for the Secret Service to help the agency protect the 2024 presidential candidates.The boost in funding follows a second apparent assassination attempt against former President Donald Trump on Sept. 15 at his Florida golf club. The previous assassination attempt against Trump occurred in July during a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania.The incidents have sparked scrutiny of the Secret Service. Kimberly Cheatle, resigned as director of the agency a day after testifying before lawmakers about the July assassination attempt.The new funds for the Secret Service wont be made available until the secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees the agency, sends a requested report to the House committee tasked with investigating the first assassination attempt.The additional money will remain available until Sept. 30, 2025.Exclude a noncitizen voting measure and disaster fundingJohnson previously introduced a six-month GOP government funding plan that included a controversial measure targeting noncitizen voting, an effort pushed by Trump despite the fact that it is already illegal for noncitizens to vote in federal elections.The former president had called for a government shutdown if lawmakers could not get the voting measure, known as the SAVE Act, passed into law.The House failed to pass that spending bill on Wednesday, and the voting measure was not included in the bill released Sunday.Sundays stopgap measure also does not include an additional $10 billion for Federal Emergency Management Agency disaster relief funding which is running out of money after multiple catastrophic events this year that Johnson had included in the six-month version. But the legislation does allow the agency to speed up its use of the funds made available in the continuing resolution for necessary response and recovery activities. CNNs Lauren Fox and Haley Talbot contributed to this report.

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Small Business Funding

VIDEO REPORT: Eagles hand Saints first loss in thriller inside Superdome [Video]

NEW ORLEANS SAINTS COACH DENNIS ALLEN”Disappointing loss for us. I don’t think we played as well as we are capable of playing, yet you have to give those guys credit. They beat us today, and we had our opportunities. I don’t think we played, obviously, as well on offense as we had played the first two weeks. Give their defense credit. Defensively, we just gave up too many explosive plays. That was really the key to the game is the explosive plays that we gave up and really kind of our inability to move the ball offensively.”On the last explosive play by the Eagles:”We ran into each other. We kind of knew that (Dallas Goedert) was the guy they were going to try to throw the ball to. We had a double on him, and we just ran into each other, creating an explosive play. Yeah, it’s disappointing.”On facing quarterback Jalen Hurts:”I think it is extremely hard. He is a heck of an athlete, a really good football player. He makes it challenging on every single down, and I thought he executed well today.”On Erik McCoy’s injury early in the game:”It’s a big blow. I think he’s an important part of our offensive line and the way that we play up front. It was difficult to lose him, yet it is part of the game. We have to be able to step up and still play at an acceptable level when we lost guys like that.”On the adjustments that have to be made when losing a center:”It’s difficult, both from a mental standpoint and that guy making sure we’re getting onto the right people and doing the right things, not to mention the fact that he’s probably one of our better players on our offensive line. I think that was certainly a factor in the game, yet we have to be able to still perform.”On what he saw on the last explosive play with Goedert:”I think as the game went on I felt like they were trying to find ways to get him the ball, particularly after DeVonta Smith went out of the game. I thought that was the guy they were trying to get the ball to.”On the Eagles’ 65-yard touchdown run by Saquon Barkley:”I’m going to have to look at the tape to see exactly what happened on that. At the end of the day, the kid made a great run, and once he got into space, he’s a hard guy to catch, a hard guy to get down.”On his decision to go for it on fourth down at the start of the fourth quarter:”It was trying to win the game. I felt like we needed to be able to get a yard.”On why he didn’t challenge the play:”It’s technically a turnover, so you can’t challenge. New York looked at it, and it stayed.”On the offensive struggles after the first drive:”Listen, I think they did a good job. When you look at it, I think they did a better job up front than we did. I think that’s really where it started. Again, that’s a good football team that we played today. It’s a team that was in the Super Bowl two years ago, and they started the season 10-1 last year. It’s a good team; they beat us today. We have to regroup and get ready for Atlanta.”On if the run game struggled because of the battle at the line:”I think it starts up there (in the trenches). As you get back in and watch the tape, we’ll have a better feel for exactly what the issues were. I don’t think we were as good, from an assignment standpoint across the board today. I think we made too many mistakes, and when you play a good team and you make mistakes, they take advantage of it. I thought they did that today.”On if Taysom Hill was close to playing:”We ended up deciding to rule him out. I’m hopeful he will be able to go next week.”On if Derek Carr was injured in the game:”It looked like he took a shot on the last play, but I didn’t get any report from the trainers on him.”On if Demario Davis was injured in the game:”There at the end of the game, he had a little hamstring or groin tightness.”On how his team responded to the adversity it faced in the game today:”Well, I’d say not good enough, yet we gave ourselves some chances. They just executed better than we did. We have to get ready to make some corrections and get ready for Atlanta.”On if the run game struggles and the injury to McCoy was the reason for the failed fourth down attempt:”I think we have to get a yard. I don’t think that weighed into the decision one way or the other. Like I said, I think they just executed better than we did.”QUARTERBACK DEREK CARROn his injury status at the end of the game:”I just got the wind knocked out of me. I was fine. (I) Just needed a minute, but I’m good.”On offensive struggles:”I think they did a good job mixing up their fronts. They had a lot of dudes on the line of scrimmage, really set out to stop the run and they did a good job. You have to give credit to them. They made more plays than we did, we as an offense. I start with myself. I wasn’t perfect in all of my stuff, and you go back and you’ve got to correct it. You knew adversity would happen at some point. It’s not going to be that easy all the time. For us, it’s a great opportunity. You get hit in the mouth, and with that said, I thought we responded to a tough, gritty game. It wasn’t all just bombs and this kind of stuff. We had to grind it out a little bit, and still make plays at the end and all that kind of stuff. And at the very end, they made one more play than we did, and that’s just how this game goes sometimes. There’s no discouragement or anything like that. You’re pissed because you lost, you’re mad at that. You want to win all these games, but at the end of the day we played a really good football team and we knew what type of team they were. You turn the film on and we knew what we were going to get ourselves into. It was a grind, but they made more plays than we did.”On losing center Erik McCoy:”Yeah, it’s hard, especially for communication and things like that, but I thought Lucas (Patrick) did a fantastic job. He’s a veteran, super smart, he’s been in this system in different varieties. I thought he did a great job. Obviously, any time you lose anybody on a football team, you never can just replace them. They bring a certain role, they bring a certain piece of the puzzle, but it’s always next man up and I thought those guys battled. I thought they did a great job battling against one of the better fronts in our league.”On Eagles’ preparedness for Saints’ offense/studying film:”It could be. That’s throughout the season, there’d different ebbs and flows of that. Coaches switching things and changing things, all of that. Again, you’ve got to give credit to their players and to their coaches. They beat us today, and as players and coaches we take that personal. But we still believe and we know we’re a good football team. The belief is so strong in that room. Disappointed, because we want it real bad and we really believed we were going to pull that one out, but we didn’t. So for us it’s about staying positive, but making the corrections that we have to make and working on it during this week.”On attempted pass to Rashid Shaheed in the first half:”I thought it was close, but he’s made so many of those plays for me. I’m going to keep throwing to him whenever he gets an opportunity. I trust my receivers so much. It was close, but that’s football sometimes.”On the interception on the last drive:”At the very end someone just came free, and in that situation a sack is terrible. I was trying to just make a tight throw, hopefully that he would look for me as I was getting hit. I wish I had just tried to skip it, whatever, get to the next play, but in that situation with the clock and how many yards we needed to get, I just tried to make that play for our team and I didn’t. I tried to stand in there and make a throw, and they ended up making the play.”On what the team can learn about themselves from this game:”This is a great opportunity for us to come in tomorrow and see if we bring that same energy that we’ve been bringing, but bring it to some more corrections, bring it into some things. Everyone’s going to look at this tape and it’s going to hurt, man, because you’re going to see things like ‘What the heck did I do there? Why did I do that?’ And again I say it, but that’s football. The teams that continue over this long race continue to improve. It’s a race to see who can improve the most towards the end, and it’s a great opportunity for us to look at some different fronts we hadn’t seen this year, to see some different kind of games, different kind of routes, different kind of throws for me, coverage, all of that, for me to be better than I was the last time. My commitment to this team and this organization is to be hard on myself and push our guys in the same way. That we look at it just like we look at it after a win. You’re hard on each other, and you’ve got to be hard on each other especially after this loss so we can be better.”On not having as much success with the run game as in the first two weeks:”They did a good job. We had some good runs and we still were able to make some adjustments and have some really good runs, and I thought the pass game, too. There were some play actions I thought were good. I don’t want to overdo it. Coach (Jon) Gruden always told me ‘We didn’t lose, we just ran out of time.’ They beat us today, and we ran out of time on that one. I thought we were making good adjustments and started moving the ball well, so my confidence is high. Anytime you don’t start off hot it’s a grind a little bit, but I thought we handled it well.”On the Chris Olave touchdown pass:”Cover zero. They had the safety matched up on Chris, and for us, that’s a great matchup. Just throwing it to my spot, and he ran it down like he always does and made that play.”On the crowd volume:”It was electric. That was a playoff atmosphere, when we get to play in one of those, but it felt like that. That was amazing. We need them all year, because that’s such an advantage for us. The fans were fantastic. That was awesome. Hopefully (we will) make some corrections and give them more stuff to cheer about.”On emotional swing of touchdown to then being back down:”In this game, most of these games, mostly every time, it comes down to one possession. You score when there’s time on the clock, the other team always has a chance. For me, I’ve tried my best to try and stay even keeled. Obviously you’re excited, and then when they score you’ve got to stay still ready to go, make your next read, and make the next throw. It really is a microcosm of what a football season is like, you’ve got to stay like this. You’ve got to trust your process, keep working, and enjoy the process, too.”More on losing center Erik McCoy:”Again, anytime you lose anybody on a football team, you don’t just replace somebody. They bring a certain gift, they bring a certain talent and ability, leadership. But with that said, I thought Lucas (Patrick) did a great job. Again, I get work with him, too, during the week just in case something like this ever happens. You lose a guy like Erik and it hurts. He’s a captain, he’s a leader of our football team, so it hurts, but with football that stuff happens all the time. It’s next man up, and you’ve got to be able to pick right back up and the expectation doesn’t change. But I thought Lucas did a fantastic job of really listening to and communicating to the young guys, new coming in. Just watching him communicate. He’s a true pro, he’s a true leader, and I’m glad we have him.”SAFETY TYRANN MATHIEUOn the loss:”It’s frustrating. Hat’s off to those guys. They made the plays when it mattered the most. You can play great defense for 55 minutes, and for five minutes, it can kind of get away from you. We will learn from it. It’s still early. We’re still confident in what we can do. Hat’s off to those guys. They executed in those moments.”On the third down conversion to Eagles tight end Dallas Goedert on the game-winning drive:”It’s one of those situations where we are in man-to-man defense. It doesn’t matter if it’s third and 90 (yards) or third and three. We believe in us. Like I said, hat’s off to those guys. They executed. Clearly, they practice that particular play because we got that exact play maybe three or four times. I missed one tackle. Then, the next time we had three or four guys running into each other. Hat’s off to those guys. They executed in a critical moment.”On what it does for the team to experience this adversity:”Adversity is a builder of life. You cannot go through life and expect great things without hiccups, without setbacks, without adversity. It sucks. We poured our hearts out into the game. We sacrifice a lot to get to Sunday, and we want to be able to win. It’s not just for us, but it’s for everybody. It doesn’t always go your way, but the positive is that there are a lot of great teams (and) a lot of great people that wouldn’t be great without hard times. Yeah, we’ve got another game next week, a divisional game, so we can’t sulk in this too long.”On Jalen Hurts’ ability:”He’s an athlete. Year after year, a lot of guys come into this league at the quarterback position. A few of them are much more than quarterbacks; they are great athletes. Obviously, his team believes in him. He believes in himself. He has played in a lot of big football games. So, hat’s off to those guys. Like I said, they executed in the most critical moments of the game. It hurts. It sucks, but it is a part of it.”On defensive stops in the red zone:”We always want to take the ball away and try our best to limit teams to three (points) when they get to the red zone. It doesn’t always go our way, but outside of a couple of third downs, I thought that we played hard. I thought that we played fast. There’s a couple of moments in the game where we kind of broke down as a defense. We will learn from it. The coaches will learn from it. Us, as players, we’ll learn from it. We’ll be ready for Atlanta next week.”On Saquon Barkley’s 65-yard touchdown run:”We were in cover zero and we got beat. It’s like once he got past the first level, it was off to the races. Great play by him. They blocked it up pretty well. He kind of cut back to the left and there was nobody there. Great vision by him. Obviously, we want to make that play, we want to make that tackle. He made a great play. He made a great move.”On if the defense overran on the on the Barkley 65-yard run:”Nobody overran it. We were blitzing from the left. He got the ball and cut back to the left and nobody was there. He ran bubble slant to the field, so all those guys were in man-to-man so they were following their man. Once he rolled off the tackle, it’s just paint. All you see is end zone.”On the teams talking to each other on the field late in the game:”It’s an intense game and emotions get high. Obviously, it was a one point game for a while there. Defensively, obviously, we want to defend our home field. Me and Latt (Marshon Lattimore), we should never go to those guys’ sideline. So, we will learn from that. It happens to all of us, where emotions get the best of us. We didn’t really hear it much from those guys all game until they went up at the end. We will just be looking forward to playing again against those guys, hopefully.”

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Small Business Funding

Miami QB tops 15,000 yards passing for collegiate career [Video]

Big changes are coming to college football starting in 2025. The University of Tennessee will introduce *** 10% talent fee on football season tickets. With that revenue going directly to paying players. UTS. Athletic director, Danny White says this tighter link between resources and success is key to staying competitive ticket prices will also go up by 4.5% bringing the total increase to 14.5%. According to *** UT spokesperson who spoke to business insider, the talent fee will cover only 33% of player pay with the university funding. The rest ut says this decision is in preparation for the house versus NCAA case which could reshape athlete compensation by July 2025. So while fans may be paying *** bit more, they’ll be directly supporting the players on the field.

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Small Business Funding

2024 Arkansas ballot to include vote on stopping planned Pope County casino [Video]

2024 General Election Voter Guide | How To Register | Ballot Issue 1 (Lottery Scholarships | Ballot Issue 2 (Casino Licensing) | Ballot Issue 3 (Medical Marijuana)In November 2024, Arkansans could vote on Issue 2, which would repeal the Pope County casino license and require local elections. Follow this link to read the ballot issue in full.The issue’s placement on the ballot is being challenged in court.If it stays on the ballot and is approved by voters, Issue 2 would stop a planned casino in Pope County near Russellville.In order for another casino to ever open in Arkansas, Issue 2 would require voter approval in a future statewide election and then additional voter approval in the specific county where the casino would be located.Arguments in favorIn 2018, 54% of Arkansas voters approved an amendment that allowed four casinos to be built in the state.According to the Arkansas secretary of state’s office, back then, 60% of voters in Pope County voted against the casino measure.”Issue 2 is based upon a really, a very, very simple premise that local voters, the people within the communities that are potentially affected by casino projects, those are the people who should have the final say on whether the casino project goes forward or not, and it really is that simple,” Hans Stiritz, with Local Voters in Charge, said.The organization Local Voters in Charge is behind the ballot initiative.According to financial filings with the Arkansas Ethics Commission, the Choctaw Nation is behind Local Voters in Charge, with donations totaling more than $5.6 million to the organization trying to stop the fourth casino from opening in Arkansas.”There are folks that want to say that this is just about Pope County, but really, it is a much bigger issue than just Pope County,” Striritz said.Other groups in Arkansas oppose legalized gambling. The Arkansas Problem Gambling Council has seen a 22% increase in calls for help this year, according to KATV, the ABC affiliate in Little Rock.Arguments against”Ironically, a yes is a no vote, and a no is a yes vote,” Pope County Judge Ben Cross said. “Myself and six mayors in Pope County are all going to vote no to this because this is some of the greatest economic development in our generation for Pope County and for the surrounding communities of the River Valley. If you took the word casino out of the equation and said any other industry is going to come into your community and produce a thousand new jobs and invest over $300 million initially that’s just on the front end people would be standing in line for the ribbon cutting.”Cross says many opinions have changed since Pope County voters were against the measure in 2018.”The local voters spoke. 12 out of 13 justices of the peace on the Pope County Quorum Court have voted in favor of a casino resort in Pope County,” Cross said. “That means a new jail for Pope County. That means a new health department for Pope County. That means a new 911 system for Pope County.”According to the Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration, in fiscal year 2024, the three existing casinos in Hot Springs, Pine Bluff and West Memphis contributed $107 million in tax revenue to the state. Out of that amount, the local counties and cities where the casinos are located received nearly $30 million.”It is about another casino operator who didn’t get the license in Pope County, who now wants to make sure that nobody gets any of those dollars and that those dollars stay in Oklahoma,” said Natalie Ghidotti with Investing in Arkansas. The organization opposes Issue 2 and is largely funded by the Cherokee Nation, which received the coveted and heavily contested casino license.”Here’s the truth it sounds good. They’re saying it’s local control. It’s anything but local control, in our opinion, because you have the Choctaw Nation funding that entire campaign,” Ghidotti said.

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Small Business Funding

Medical College of Wisconsin launches new program to tackle doctor shortage in Milwaukee [Video]

The Medical College of Wisconsin is launching a scholarship program, giving full-ride scholarships to five medical students and training them to work in Milwaukee communities in need of doctors.The four-year “Health Equity Scholars Program” aims to funnel more health care providers into Milwaukee’s historically underserved neighborhoods, many of which are in the inner city.Twenty-five-year-old Dalicia Simpson is one of the medical students in the inaugural cohort.”I’ve worked so hard to get to this point,” Simpson said. “Every step that I’ve taken up to this point has been for this moment.”Simpson grew up in Milwaukee and attended Rufus King High School. She earned her undergraduate degree at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities campus, but always planned to come back to Milwaukee to be a doctor.Simpson said her lived experience led her to want to start her own health care practice in Milwaukee.”Being in an under-represented minority group, I got to see (the) different types of healthcare we got, versus communities that are the majority,” Simpson said.Of Milwaukee’s 33 zip codes, 12 are designated “health professional shortage areas,” according to the Medical College of Wisconsin. That means there is only one primary care doctor for every 3,000 to 3,500 people.”I knew that I wanted to come back to make a change to that,” Simpson said.”To seek out help, there’s so many barriers. There’s transportation barriers. There’s cultural barriers. There’s trust,” said Michael Levas, the Health Equity Scholars Program co-director.The students won’t just be working in the community, they’ll be living there too. Once construction is complete, Levas said the students can live in historic Bronzeville in the ThriveOn King building. The students also meet in the part-office space, part-residential ThriveOn King building for mental wellness workshops and other program-specific curriculum.”We’re going to train a portion, a cohort, of our students here to build those roots and build those connections,” Levas said. The Medical College of Wisconsin has philanthropic funding secured to bring in three new groups of students over the next three years, but by that time, Levas said, he is hoping to have secured a more permanent funding source for the program.