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WEATHER ALERT

12 warnings in effect for 7 counties in the area

MICHAEL CASEY


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Governments gather in Canada in bid to boost biodiversity

Read full article: Governments gather in Canada in bid to boost biodiversity

Environmental leaders are gathering on Montreal to hammer out a framework they hope will help provide much-needed protection for the world's biodiversity.

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Prince William, like his father, prioritizes the environment

Read full article: Prince William, like his father, prioritizes the environment

Britain's Prince William appears to have taken the baton from his father and become a more vocal advocate about pollution and climate change.

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Ohio's Intel project triggers housing fears in tight market

Read full article: Ohio's Intel project triggers housing fears in tight market

Intel’s announcement of a $20 billion manufacturing operation bringing thousands of jobs to central Ohio has been greeted as an economic boon.

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Climate Migration: Filipino families to flee amid typhoons

Read full article: Climate Migration: Filipino families to flee amid typhoons

Nearly a decade after one of the country's deadliest disasters, families in the Philippines are still adjusting to their new reality.

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Rent stabilization measures win in US midterm election

Read full article: Rent stabilization measures win in US midterm election

Ballot measures to build more affordable housing and protect tenants from soaring rent increases were plentiful and fared well in last week’s midterm elections.

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Hippos, sharks up for protection at UN wildlife conference

Read full article: Hippos, sharks up for protection at UN wildlife conference

Hippos that are poached for their skin and teeth and sharks that are caught for their fins are up for protection at a United Nations wildlife conference.

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Turtles in demand as pets, leading to a spike in poaching

Read full article: Turtles in demand as pets, leading to a spike in poaching

Scores of turtle species are under threat from poaching.

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As housing prices surge, rent control is back on the ballot

Read full article: As housing prices surge, rent control is back on the ballot

Cities and counties across the country are pushing measures aimed at stabilizing or controlling rents at a time when housing prices are skyrocketing.

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Amid end to COVID help, homelessness surging in many cities

Read full article: Amid end to COVID help, homelessness surging in many cities

Homelessness is expected to be up when the federal government releases results from an annual count in coming months, the first full tally since the coronavirus pandemic began.

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School districts move to ease teacher stress, burnout

Read full article: School districts move to ease teacher stress, burnout

School districts around the country are starting to invest in programs aimed at addressing the mental health of teachers.

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Rents spike as big-pocketed investors buy mobile home parks

Read full article: Rents spike as big-pocketed investors buy mobile home parks

Investors are buying up mobile home parks across the country, leading to significant rent increases and complaints of neglect from residents.

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Housing market chills as mortgage rates, prices scare buyers

Read full article: Housing market chills as mortgage rates, prices scare buyers

Rising mortgage rates have combined with already high home prices to discourage would-be buyers.

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Inflation taking bite out of new infrastructure projects

Read full article: Inflation taking bite out of new infrastructure projects

Inflation is taking a toll on infrastructure projects across the U.S. Rising prices for materials such as asphalt, steel and iron pipes are driving up the costs to build roads, bridges, rail lines and water mains.

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Thousands of smartphones purchased by VA went unused

Read full article: Thousands of smartphones purchased by VA went unused

An inspector general’s report has found that most of the 10,000 smartphones purchased for a U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs program during the pandemic went unused.

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AP analysis finds growing number of poor, high-hazard dams

Read full article: AP analysis finds growing number of poor, high-hazard dams

An Associated Press analysis has found a growing number of hazardous dams in poor condition across the U.S. The AP tallied more than 2,200 dams in poor or unsatisfactory condition that are rated as high hazard, meaning their failure likely would kill someone.

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Battle heats up over remaining federal rental assistance

Read full article: Battle heats up over remaining federal rental assistance

A debate is playing out across the country as the Treasury Department begins reallocating some of the $46.5 billion in rental assistance from places slow to spend to others that are running out of funds.

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Chris Rock takes to comedy mic, still processing Oscars slap

Read full article: Chris Rock takes to comedy mic, still processing Oscars slap

Chris Rock received several standing ovations before he told one joke at his first comedy show since Will Smith slapped him in the face onstage at the Oscars.

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Affordable housing, long overlooked, getting federal boost

Read full article: Affordable housing, long overlooked, getting federal boost

States and localities are increasingly tapping federal funds to help finance efforts to build more affordable housing, repair dilapidated units or reduce their homeless numbers.

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Owner of Cog Railway proposes lodging on Mount Washington

Read full article: Owner of Cog Railway proposes lodging on Mount Washington

The owner of a railway that runs up Mount Washington is proposing accommodations and a restaurant near the summit of New Hampshire's highest peak.

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Biden relief plan: Major victory gets mixed one-year reviews

Read full article: Biden relief plan: Major victory gets mixed one-year reviews

It's been one year since President Joe Biden signed into law the American Rescue Plan.

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Black female WWII unit recognized with congressional honor

Read full article: Black female WWII unit recognized with congressional honor

The House has voted to award the only all-female, Black unit to serve in Europe during World War II with the Congressional Gold Medal.

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Treasury: Most COVID rental aid went to low-income residents

Read full article: Treasury: Most COVID rental aid went to low-income residents

The U.S. Treasury Department has concluded that more than 80% of the billions of dollars in federal rental assistance during the pandemic went to low-income tenants.

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Rents reach 'insane' levels across US with no end in sight

Read full article: Rents reach 'insane' levels across US with no end in sight

Rents have exploded across the country, causing many to fall behind on payments, dig deep into their savings or downsize to subpar units.

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Landlords finding ways to evict after getting rental aid

Read full article: Landlords finding ways to evict after getting rental aid

A growing number of landlords are taking federal rental assistance to cover months of back rent but still moving to evict tenants.

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Treasury: November saw highest disbursement of rental aid

Read full article: Treasury: November saw highest disbursement of rental aid

The Treasury Department says states and localities in November paid out the largest amount of rental assistance to cash-strapped tenants since the program began.

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US hospitals seeing different kind of COVID surge this time

Read full article: US hospitals seeing different kind of COVID surge this time

Hospitals across the U.S. are feeling the wrath of the omicron variant and getting thrown into disarray that is different from earlier COVID-19 surges.

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'Da Vinci Code' author settles lawsuit alleging secret life

Read full article: 'Da Vinci Code' author settles lawsuit alleging secret life

“The Da Vinci Code” author Dan Brown and his ex-wife have agreed to settle a lawsuit in which she alleged he led a secret life during their marriage that included several affairs.

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Evictions on the rise months after federal moratorium ends

Read full article: Evictions on the rise months after federal moratorium ends

Housing advocates say evictions are increasing around the country, several months after a federal moratorium was allowed to end.

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States, cities running out of rental assistance monies

Read full article: States, cities running out of rental assistance monies

The Treasury Department says several states and cities have exhausted their federal rental assistance in a sign that spending on a program aimed at averting evictions has picked up speed.

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Scant fraud reported among U.S. rental assistance programs

Read full article: Scant fraud reported among U.S. rental assistance programs

Unemployment agencies across the country were bombarded with fraudulent claims during the pandemic.

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Rep. Liz Cheney says Trump is at war 'with the rule of law'

Read full article: Rep. Liz Cheney says Trump is at war 'with the rule of law'

Republican Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming says former President Donald Trump is at war “with the rule of law and the Constitution” and that GOP lawmakers who sit by silently are aiding his efforts.

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Opponents of critical race theory seek to flip school boards

Read full article: Opponents of critical race theory seek to flip school boards

In school board races around the country, activists are running against critical race theory.

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In New Hampshire, vaccine fights and misinformation roil GOP

Read full article: In New Hampshire, vaccine fights and misinformation roil GOP

Republicans in New Hampshire are struggling to contain a party wing that's promoting conspiracy views about the COVID-19 vaccine and pushing back against federal vaccine mandates.

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Treasury to shift rental assistance to places with demand

Read full article: Treasury to shift rental assistance to places with demand

The Treasury Department has announced plans to start reallocating rental assistance money in a bid to get more cash into the hands of families facing eviction.

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More rental aid is reaching tenants to stave off eviction

Read full article: More rental aid is reaching tenants to stave off eviction

The Treasury Department says there's been good progress in the distribution of rental assistance to help avert evictions.

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Lawmakers attempt to revive nationwide eviction moratorium

Read full article: Lawmakers attempt to revive nationwide eviction moratorium

Progressive lawmakers have introduced a bill that would reimpose a nationwide eviction moratorium that lapsed last month.

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Anxious tenants await assistance as evictions resume

Read full article: Anxious tenants await assistance as evictions resume

States have begun to ramp up the amount of rental assistance reaching tenants but there are still millions of families facing eviction who haven't gotten help.

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Feds report most rental assistance has still not gone out

Read full article: Feds report most rental assistance has still not gone out

Only 11% of the tens of billions of dollars in federal rent assistance meant to help tenants around the country avoid eviction has been distributed.

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Landlords look for an exit amid federal eviction moratorium

Read full article: Landlords look for an exit amid federal eviction moratorium

Landlords are fuming over the decision by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to issue a new eviction moratorium lasting until Oct. 3.

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Rocker Manson accused of spitting, blowing snot on woman

Read full article: Rocker Manson accused of spitting, blowing snot on woman

Documents in the New Hampshire criminal case of rocker Marilyn Manson allege that he spit and blew snot at a videographer during a 2019 concert.

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Biden’s new evictions moratorium faces legality doubts

Read full article: Biden’s new evictions moratorium faces legality doubts

President Joe Biden may have averted a flood of evictions and solved a growing political problem when his administration reinstated a temporary ban on evictions because of the COVID-19 crisis.

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Biden's new evictions moratorium faces doubts on legality

Read full article: Biden's new evictions moratorium faces doubts on legality

President Joe Biden may have averted a flood of evictions and solved a growing political problem when his administration reinstated a temporary ban on evictions because of the COVID-19 crisis.

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EXPLAINER: Will new CDC moratorium keep tenants housed?

Read full article: EXPLAINER: Will new CDC moratorium keep tenants housed?

After a federal eviction moratorium was allowed to lapse this weekend, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a new moratorium Tuesday on evictions that would last until Oct. 3.

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Landlords, tenants fill courts as eviction moratorium ends

Read full article: Landlords, tenants fill courts as eviction moratorium ends

Tenants are turning up at housing courts hoping for last-minute reprieves from looming evictions after the federal eviction ban ended over the weekend.

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Evictions resume, tenants scramble for assistance

Read full article: Evictions resume, tenants scramble for assistance

Landlords and tenants are rushing back to court and advocates are bracing for a wave of evictions following the end of the federal moratorium over the weekend.

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Pandemic eviction crisis leads to greater tenant protections

Read full article: Pandemic eviction crisis leads to greater tenant protections

The threat of widespread evictions during the coronavirus pandemic has inspired reforms to a U.S. system that has in the past offered few protections for tenants.

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Tenants prepare for unknown as eviction moratorium ends

Read full article: Tenants prepare for unknown as eviction moratorium ends

Tenants who are months behind on rent now face the end to a federal eviction moratorium Saturday.

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Frustration as Biden, Congress allow eviction ban to expire

Read full article: Frustration as Biden, Congress allow eviction ban to expire

Millions of Americans face being forced from their homes with the midnight Saturday expiration of a moratorium on evictions during the pandemic.

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Families paying off rent, food, debts with child tax credit

Read full article: Families paying off rent, food, debts with child tax credit

Families are starting to spend the money from the expanded child tax credit.

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Evictions looming, Biden fails to get Congress to extend ban

Read full article: Evictions looming, Biden fails to get Congress to extend ban

A national eviction moratorium is set to expire after President Joe Biden and Congress failed to extend it.

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Biden to allow eviction moratorium to expire Saturday

Read full article: Biden to allow eviction moratorium to expire Saturday

The Biden administration will allow a nationwide ban on evictions to expire Saturday.

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Black female WWII unit hoping to get congressional honor

Read full article: Black female WWII unit hoping to get congressional honor

An Army battalion that made history as the only all-female, Black unit to serve in Europe during World War II is set to be honored by Congress.

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Bill aims to spend billions to fix nation's aging dams

Read full article: Bill aims to spend billions to fix nation's aging dams

Lawmakers in Congress have introduced a bill that would pump tens of billions of dollars into fixing and upgrading the country's dams.

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Race is on to get rental assistance out to avert evictions

Read full article: Race is on to get rental assistance out to avert evictions

With the federal eviction moratorium extended through July, the focus has turned to getting rental assistance out to millions of tenants.

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Rental assistance fell victim to politics, bureaucracy

Read full article: Rental assistance fell victim to politics, bureaucracy

A rental crisis spurred by the pandemic prompted many states to make bold promises to help renters, but most failed to deliver on them after Congress passed the sweeping CARES Act in March 2020.

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Calls for extension of eviction ban as new deadline looms

Read full article: Calls for extension of eviction ban as new deadline looms

With one week to go before the nationwide ban on evictions expires, the White House is acknowledging that the emergency pandemic protection will have to end at some point.

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Pence: I'll likely never see eye to eye with Trump on Jan. 6

Read full article: Pence: I'll likely never see eye to eye with Trump on Jan. 6

Former Vice President Mike Pence says he isn't sure he and former President Donald Trump will ever see “eye to eye” over what happened on Jan_ 6 but he will “always be proud of what we accomplished for the American people over the last four years.”.

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Auditors find no fraud in disputed New Hampshire election

Read full article: Auditors find no fraud in disputed New Hampshire election

Auditors have found no evidence of fraud or political bias in a controversial New Hampshire election that has drawn the interest of Donald Trump.

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Some proms are back, with masks, testing and distancing

Read full article: Some proms are back, with masks, testing and distancing

A year after the pandemic canceled most proms, school districts around the country are considering whether they can once again hold the formal dance for seniors.

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After court nixes eviction ban, race is on for federal help

Read full article: After court nixes eviction ban, race is on for federal help

A court ruling striking down a national eviction moratorium has placed additional pressure on the federal and state governments to deliver tens of billions of dollars in promised rental aid.

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Federal judge strikes down CDC eviction moratorium

Read full article: Federal judge strikes down CDC eviction moratorium

A federal judge has ruled that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention exceeded its authority when it imposed a federal eviction moratorium.

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One of country's largest sugar maples removed for safety

Read full article: One of country's largest sugar maples removed for safety

A sugar maple tree in New Hampshire that is considered one of the largest in the country has been cut down for safety reasons.

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States struggle to get rent relief to tenants amid pandemic

Read full article: States struggle to get rent relief to tenants amid pandemic

Andrew Cuomo announced last July that New York would spend $100 million in federal coronavirus relief to help cash-strapped tenants pay months of back rent and avert evictions. As much as $3.43 billion in federal aid was spent on rental assistance, according to National Low Income Housing Coalition. Last year, Pennsylvania, Louisiana, Mississippi and Kansas were among the states that struggled to distribute rental assistance. Pennsylvania had similar problems, spending $54 million on rental assistance and $10 million on mortgage assistance, out of nearly $175 million dedicated for the program. AdFacing the Republican-controlled Legislature's Nov. 30 deadline to spend the money, the state Housing Finance Authority returned the bulk of it.

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The eviction moratorium is expiring. What will Biden do?

Read full article: The eviction moratorium is expiring. What will Biden do?

President Joe Bidens administration is cutting things close on a nationwide eviction moratorium, which is set to expire in less than a week. Housing advocates are confident the ban, due to expire March 31, will be extended for several months and possibly even strengthened. Last week, Dunn said, a HUD official conducted a call with housing advocates to field opinions on a new, streamlined form that tenants can use in order to gain protection from eviction. “The question is: What is the extension going to look like?”Dunn and others would like to see the moratorium extended and improved. Biden’s $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package included more than $25 billion in emergency rental assistance, plus more to help tenants who were behind on their utilities, but no extension of the eviction moratorium.

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The eviction moratorium is expiring. What will Biden do?

Read full article: The eviction moratorium is expiring. What will Biden do?

Still, they argue the existing moratorium hasn’t been a blanket protection and say thousands of families have been evicted for other reasons beyond nonpayment of rent. Eric Dunn, director of litigation for the National Housing Law Project, noted signs that a decision has already quietly been made. “The question is: What is the extension going to look like?”Dunn and others would like to see the moratorium extended and improved. Biden’s $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package included more than $25 billion in emergency rental assistance, plus more to help tenants who were behind on their utilities, but no extension of the eviction moratorium. One of the biggest changes being advocated is for Biden to make the ban's protection's automatic and universal.

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Housing advocates call on Biden to extend eviction ban

Read full article: Housing advocates call on Biden to extend eviction ban

The protest was part of a national day of action calling on the incoming Biden administration to extend the eviction moratorium initiated in response to the Covid-19 pandemic. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer)BOSTON – Housing advocates around the country staked out courthouses and held rallies Wednesday, calling on the incoming Biden administration to extend and strengthen the current federal ban on evictions. Several dozen tenants, advocates and small landlords gathered outside a housing court in Boston, chanting “Housing is the Cure” and holding signs including “Eviction Free Zone" and ”Ban Utility Shutoffs." But with most of those expired, the federal ban is the only remaining protection preventing the more than 23 million renters from being evicted. “When he comes into office, the current federal eviction moratorium is set to expire 11 days later.

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Capitol assault a more sinister attack than first appeared

Read full article: Capitol assault a more sinister attack than first appeared

Trump supporters try to break through a police barrier, Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2021, at the Capitol in Washington. Minutes later, Pence was taken from the Senate chamber to a secret location and police announced the lockdown of the Capitol. Even before the mob reached sealed doors of the House chamber, Capitol Police pulled Pelosi away from the podium, she told “60 Minutes.”“I said, ‘No, I want to be here,’”she said. Back in the House chamber, a woman in the balcony was seen and heard screaming. When they breached the abandoned Senate chamber, they milled around, rummaged through papers, sat at desks and took videos and pictures.

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The unfolding of ‘home-grown fascism’ in Capitol assault

Read full article: The unfolding of ‘home-grown fascism’ in Capitol assault

Minutes later, Pence was taken from the Senate chamber to a secret location and police announced the lockdown of the Capitol. Even before the mob reached sealed doors of the House chamber, Capitol Police pulled Pelosi away from the podium, she told “60 Minutes.”“I said, ‘No, I want to be here,’”she said. Back in the House chamber, a woman in the balcony was seen and heard screaming. When they breached the abandoned Senate chamber, they milled around, rummaged through papers, sat at desks and took videos and pictures. These domestic terrorists were in the People’s House, desecrating the People’s House, destroying the People’s House.”___Associated Press writers Dustin Weaver in Washington and Michael Casey in Concord, New Hampshire, contributed to this report.

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Chaos, violence, mockery as pro-Trump mob occupies Congress

Read full article: Chaos, violence, mockery as pro-Trump mob occupies Congress

On Wednesday, hallowed spaces of American democracy, one after another, yielded to the occupation of Congress. There was a heavy police presence at the Capitol on Thursday morning, including officers from D.C., Maryland and Virginia and the D.C. National Guard. Trump told his morning crowd at the Ellipse that he would go with them to the Capitol, but he didn’t. Video footage also showed officers letting people calmly walk out the doors of the Capitol despite the rioting and vandalism. Shortly after being told to put on gas masks, most members were quickly escorted out of the chamber.

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Exposure feared after New Hampshire speaker dies of COVID-19

Read full article: Exposure feared after New Hampshire speaker dies of COVID-19

Dick Hinch, who was sworn in as leader of the state’s newly Republican-led, 400-member Legislature just last week, died Wednesday. He was 71 and had been starting his seventh two-year term in the state House. The swearing-in of the House and the 24-member state Senate was held outdoors Dec. 2 at the University of New Hampshire because of the coronavirus pandemic. Packard, who represents Londonderry and is serving his 15th term in the House, will remain the acting speaker until the full House membership meets Jan. 6. In an emotional speech when he was elected speaker Dec. 2, Hinch urged lawmakers to view each other as “friends and colleagues,” rather than members of opposing parties, particularly during a pandemic.

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AP sources: Biden to pick Katherine Tai as top trade envoy

Read full article: AP sources: Biden to pick Katherine Tai as top trade envoy

(AP Photo/Susan Walsh)WASHINGTON – President-elect Joe Biden is set to nominate Katherine Tai to be the top U.S. trade envoy, according to two people familiar with his plans. Biden's selection of Tai, who is Asian American, reflects his promise to choose a diverse Cabinet that reflects the makeup of the country. Fluent in Mandarin Chinese, Tai earlier oversaw China trade enforcement for the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, setting U.S. strategy in trade disputes with China. Biden’s trade representative will inherit a trade war with China, put on pause by an interim trade pact in January that left many of the hardest issues unresolved and U.S. taxes remaining on $360 billion in Chinese imports. As the top trade staffer at Ways and Means, Tai handled negotiations last year with the Trump administration over a revamped North American trade deal.

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US colleges mull new virus protocols for students’ return

Read full article: US colleges mull new virus protocols for students’ return

As coronavirus cases are surging around the U.S., some colleges and universities are rethinking some of their plans for next semester. By November, a total of 76 of the roughly 1,400 students on campus had tested positive, the school said. When students come back for the spring semester, St. Michael’s will begin testing them weekly. Schools that are bringing students back are adjusting testing protocols, introducing new screenings, and eliminating spring breaks to discourage students from traveling to help keep campuses open. In the spring semester, Colby College in Maine wants to add some rapid antigen tests to twice-weekly tests for students, faculty and staff.

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Heading home for the holiday? Get a virus test, colleges say

Read full article: Heading home for the holiday? Get a virus test, colleges say

University of Utah student Abigail Shull takes a rapid COVID-19 test at the University of Utah student testing site Wednesday, Nov. 18, 2020, in Salt Lake City. Now, many students are heading home for Thanksgiving, raising the risk of the virus spreading among family, friends and other travelers. Only about 100 colleges initially tested all students once or twice a week, regardless of symptoms, as part of their back-to-school plans. The few institutions that already regularly test students even without symptoms don’t have to change much. “We, of course, have health services and we have nurses, but they’re working like dogs and there’s not enough of them.”For students, testing availability can be a relief.

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Trump, Biden try to line up by Fauci as they court voters

Read full article: Trump, Biden try to line up by Fauci as they court voters

President Donald Trump and Democrat Joe Biden are both looking to harness the credibility of America’s best-known infectious disease expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci, as they make their case to American voters. The doctor is calling out the Trump campaign for taking one of his quotes and popping it into a campaign ad to suggest Fauci is in the president’s corner. Biden has treated Fauci’s opinion over the course of the pandemic as gospel, urging governors to “listen to Dr. Fauci” as they weigh loosening COVID-19 restrictions in their states. “The fact that both candidates are grasping at Dr. Fauci is revealing,” said Steven Webster, an Indiana University political scientist. He’s running a national ad, quoting Dr. Fauci out of context.”Trump's embrace of Fauci in the last lap of the campaign comes as the latest twist in an up-and-down relationship.

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Critics: Eviction ban may only delay wave of homelessness

Read full article: Critics: Eviction ban may only delay wave of homelessness

The measure would forbid landlords from evicting anyone for failure to pay rent, providing the renter meets criteria. The measure would forbid landlords from evicting anyone for failure to pay rent, providing the renter meets four criteria. The CDC order comes as many local and state eviction bans are set to expire. Matorin, a lead plaintiff in the case against the state moratorium, said he has had to dip into savings to make monthly mortgage payments. It is also unclear how the order would affect lawsuits like the one in Massachusetts challenging the state moratorium.

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Lives Lost: Woman who performanced Shakespeare on the street

Read full article: Lives Lost: Woman who performanced Shakespeare on the street

Her performance of Shakespeare was her holding onto her substance, that last vestige of a healthy self, DiGennaro said. A Georgia native, she attended Bennington College in Vermont, where a classmate remembers a vivacious woman who loved soul music and the theater. She was truly gifted, said Laura Spector, a friend from Bennington who would later reconnect with her in New Haven. It was about this time Holloway embraced Shakespeare, possibly inspired by her days at Yale. They would leave and go across the street, said Nick Yorgakaros, who owns a pizzeria on the street where Holloway would often perform.

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Wave of evictions expected as moratoriums end in many states

Read full article: Wave of evictions expected as moratoriums end in many states

The federal eviction moratorium that protects more than 12 million renters living in federally subsidized apartments or units with federally backed mortgages expired July 25. I cant believe this happened to me because I work hard, said Blunt, whose eviction is at the mercy of the federal moratorium. Experts credit the slower pace to the federal eviction moratorium as well as states and municipalities that used tens of millions of dollars in federal stimulus funding for rental assistance. It also helped that several states, including Massachusetts and Arizona, have extended their eviction moratorium into the fall. An eviction moratorium without rental assistance is still a recipe for disaster, said Graham Bowman, staff attorney with the Ohio Poverty Law Center.

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Rent's due, again: Monthly anxieties deepen as aid falls off

Read full article: Rent's due, again: Monthly anxieties deepen as aid falls off

Sakai Harrison poses for a portrait after leading his clients through a rigorous workout on Wednesday, July 29, 2020, in Atlanta. Harrison moved to New York to try to make it as a personal trainer and designer - but his gym shuttered early in the pandemic, and after weeks of struggling to both pay the rent and put food in his fridge, he knew what he had to do. He moved back to Georgia for greater stability. (AP Photo/Ron Harris)

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Rent's due, again: Monthly anxieties deepen as aid falls off

Read full article: Rent's due, again: Monthly anxieties deepen as aid falls off

In May, he left his Brooklyn apartment and its $1,595 monthly rent for Atlanta. This week, he met four of them at a park, where they did lunging squats, pull-ups, and a military-like crawl. But she counts that as luck: She didnt have to pay rent. To their surprise, he agreed to reduce the monthly $1,500 rent for their home on Chicago's West Side. - Anita Snow, Phoenix___Tinisha Dixon scraped money together to cover her $1,115 monthly rent for April and May.

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As beach towns open, businesses are short foreign workers

Read full article: As beach towns open, businesses are short foreign workers

You cant do that in a restaurant.In Myrtle Beach, businesses only got a fraction of the 3,000 J-1 and H-2B visas they were expecting, according to Stephen Greene, president & CEO of the Myrtle Beach Area Hospitality Association. About 150 of those are usually J-1 visa holders but none came this year. In Myrtle Beach, bars, theaters and larger venues are still shuttered and visitor numbers are down. Still, the visa ban adds another layer of uncertainty for businesses like the 145-bed Meadowmere, one of the largest hotels in Maine. These students arent taking any jobs away from locals, not a single one, Demetri said of the J-1 visa holders.

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Virus causes uncertainty for state lotteries

Read full article: Virus causes uncertainty for state lotteries

The coronavirus pandemic has been a rollercoaster for state lotteries across the country, with some getting a boost from the economic downturn and others scrambling to make up for revenue shortfalls. State lottery revenues do not make up a huge portion of a state budget. Currently, at least nine states allow online lottery sales, according to the North American Association of State & Provincial Lotteries. Minnesota's stay-at-home order led to lottery sales dropping in March but roared back in April and May. But not all state lotteries have benefited from pandemic.

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Tenants behind on rent in pandemic face harassment, eviction

Read full article: Tenants behind on rent in pandemic face harassment, eviction

The pandemic has shut housing courts and prompted authorities around the U.S. to initiate policies protecting renters from eviction. They should have been protected because the state's Supreme Court has effectively halted evictions due to the coronavirus pandemic. The pandemic has shut housing courts and prompted most states and federal authorities to initiate policies protecting renters from eviction. New Jersey lawmakers passed a $100 million rent relief bill, while in Pennsylvania, Gov. Tom Wolf signed legislation directing $175 million of the federal coronavirus rescue package to rent and mortgage relief.

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Lives Lost: Twins were gentle giants in small Vermont town

Read full article: Lives Lost: Twins were gentle giants in small Vermont town

In this Aug. 8, 2012, photo provided by Meghan Boyd Carrier, her father, Cleon Boyd, left, and his twin brother Leon Boyd perform during her wedding in Readsboro, Vt. Cleon died from the coronavirus on April 3, 2020. It also claimed his twin brother Leon, who died a week later at a hospital across the border in New Hampshire. With all the pandemic stuff going on and the way my dad died first from the virus, I think it has left a mark on people. The procession made its way past an elementary school, the Boyd Family Farm and the homes of relatives. Bill Adams had played fiddle with Cleon and Leon Boyd and dedicated a version of Amazing Grace to the men after they died.

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