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Tag: Missouri

  • Missouri’s Republican Governor Orders Redraw Of US House Districts As Redistricting Fight Expands – KXL

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    JEFFERSON CITY, Mo (AP) — Missouri’s Republican governor is calling a special legislative session to redraw the state’s U.S. House districts.

    The announcement Friday by Gov. Mike Kehoe comes as President Donald Trump has been urging Republican-led states to reshape district lines to give the party a better shot at retaining control of Congress in next year’s elections.

    It came hours after Texas Gov. Greg Abbott signed into law a new U.S. House map that gives the GOP a chance at winning five additional seats.

    Democratic lawmakers in California have countered with a redistricting plan giving Democrats a chance at winning five more seats there.

    The California plan still needs voter approval.

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  • Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe considers special session to redraw congressional districts after Trump call

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    Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe is reportedly planning to call a special session to redraw the state’s congressional maps.

    On Friday, Kehoe told reporters that he wasn’t ready to make a formal announcement.

    “When we’re ready to make that announcement, we’ll get it out there,” Kehoe said during a stop at the Missouri Soybean Association headquarters, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported. “There are a lot of moving puzzle pieces. We’re still making sure what’s going to work is going to work.”

    TRUMP URGES TEXAS REPUBLICANS TO SWIFTLY PASS REDISTRICTING MAPS WHILE NEWSOM, CALIFORNIA DEMS COUNTER

    Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe waves to the crowd after being sworn in as the state’s 58th governor in Jefferson City. Kehoe is considering calling a special session to redraw the state’s congressional maps.  (Getty Images)

    The move comes as President Donald Trump continues to pressure GOP-led states to redraw their political boundary lines to favor Republican candidates in the midterm elections.

    Currently, Missouri has eight House seats, two of which are held by Democrats. Republicans want to change the partisan makeup of the Kansas City-focused 5th District, potentially giving the GOP one additional seat in the House to support Trump’s policies, the website reported.

    Similar efforts are underway in Texas and California.

    Last week, Trump alluded to the redrawing of Missouri’s congressional maps.

    TRUMP, ABBOTT VS. NEWSOM: MAD DASH TO REDO CONGRESSIONAL MAPS IN CALIFORNIA, TEXAS

    President Donald Trump speaks in the Oval Office

    President Donald Trump speaks as he signs executive orders in the Oval Office of the White House on Monday. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

    “The Great State of Missouri is now IN. I’m not surprised… We’re going to win the Midterms in Missouri again, bigger and better than ever before!” he wrote on Truth Social.

    Democrats have been issuing fundraising alerts connected to the redistricting battle, the website said.

    “This isn’t just about one district — it’s about whether Missouri voters get to choose their representatives, or whether politicians get to rig the rules to choose their voters. And with Trump’s political machine and a Republican supermajority pushing hard, the danger couldn’t be greater,” said Missouri Democratic Party Chairman Russ Carnahan, a former congressman.

    Ashley Aune, the state House minority leader, mocked Kehoe, calling him a tool of the president.

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    “The governor’s complete capitulation to the president’s will proves that Donald Trump — not Mike Kehoe — calls the shots in Missouri, while the man Missourians elected to lead our state is a mere puppet responding to his master’s commands,” she wrote.

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  • Missouri Exec Stole $1.5M to Fund Travel and Gambling Expenses

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    A man, who is based in Vernon County in Missouri, has pleaded guilty to several charges. His case stems from the embezzlement of $1.5 million, which the culprit used to fund his travel and gambling expenses.

    The news was shared by the US Attorney’s Office for the Western District of Missouri, with the man admitting to the charges. Identified as J. R. M. for his initials, and 55 years of age, the man told US District Judge Greg Kays on Wednesday that he had indeed committed wire fraud and filed a false tax return.

    Culprit Hid His Expenses by Entering False Business Expenses

    M. had access to corporate finance for three decades, from 1994 through 2023, during which time he syphoned off funds through unauthorized checks to his personal accounts.

    “Marquardt spent most of the money on personal expenses, including travel and gambling online and at casinos,” an official statement detailing the case read. He purposefully omitted these expenses and transactions from the QuickBooks ledger.

    He would then log false business records to try and hide the breadth of his transgressions. M. now faces up to 20 years in federal prison without parole for the wire fraud count alone, with another 3 years added for his false tax return count.  A sentencing hearing is still to be scheduled.

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    Jerome García

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  • College Football 2025 Season Win Totals — Four Best Bets

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    The college football season is already underway, with several bite-sized morsels served out this past weekend during the oddly labeled “Week 0,” If you’re wondering about the magnitude of the actual games, know this — the biggest story coming out of Week 0 was the father and brother of Kansas State quarterback Avery Johnson getting into a fight WITH EACH OTHER in the streets of Dublin, Ireland, after the Wildcats’ 24-21 loss to Iowa State:

    Week 1 should bring us some actual relevant football action as the top stories, headlined by the top ranked Texans Longhorns visiting defending national champion Ohio State in Columbus in the early window on Saturday afternoon. That is a game where we can truly say “These two teams may see each other again in January.” Should be fun!

    You know what else is fun? GAMBLING on college football! Sure, you can go week to week, game to game, but here is my annual article for the more conservative bunch out there, those who want to engage in the “long play” of betting on season win totals. With that in mind, here are my four favorite bets on Season win totals:

    BAYLOR OVER 7.5 wins
    Baylor was one of the hottest teams in the country down the stretch in 2024, finishing out the season with six straight wins.  You’ll have a pretty good idea if this ticket is going to cash before the first month of the season is over, as the Bears open at home against Auburn and then on the road in Dallas against playoff team SMU. Two weeks later, they play another 2024 playoff team in Arizona State. Sawyer Robertson is an experienced signal caller, which should help tremendously in navigating that mine field. Arizona State, Utah, and Kansas State are on the schedule, but all of those games are in Waco.

    NOTRE DAME UNDER 10.5 wins
    As a proud 1991 graduate of the small parochial school in northern Indiana, this one hurts to give out, but the fact is this — historically, Notre Dame has not followed up GREAT seasons, seasons with one or zero losses, with another great season. In the last 70 years, it’s happened twice, both under Lou Holtz, back in the late ’80s and early ’90s. As early season schedules go, Notre Dame’s is not murderer’s row, but it’s very treacherous, if you need 11 wins to cash an OVER ticket — at Miami, hosting Texas A&M, at Arkansas, with games against Boise State and USC on the schedule, as well. If the Irish make the playoffs this season, they’ll have earned it. 10-2 may get it done for a playoff berth, but it doesn’t for the OVER. Take the UNDER.

    TCU OVER 6.5 wins

    We’re just a couple seasons removed from TCU coming within one (massive, murderous, blowout) loss to Georgia from winning a national championship. It’s been very up and down for Sonny Dykes’ crew since then, but 6.5 wins just feels very low for a team with this many playmakers on the defensive side of the football. Finishing above .500 cashes you this ticket, granted the juice is so high on the OVER that you might get 7 wins as the number in some places.

    MISSOURI OVER 7.5 wins
    Eli Drinkwitz’s team has been one of the better ones in the country over the last two seasons, having won 23 games the last two years. The Tigers have done a nice job in the transfer portal, adding top level talent to a unit that was already pretty good. They need to find playmakers to replace Luther Burden and Theo Wease. Missouri gets lost in the SEC perception shuffle, because their brand isn’t that of Deep South programs like Georgia, Alabama and LSU, but the schedule is conducive to an eight or nine win season, with the swing games against teams like Texas A&M and South Carolina being at home.

    Listen to Sean Pendergast on SportsRadio 610 from 6 a.m. to 10 a.m. weekdays. Also, follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/SeanTPendergast, on Instagram at instagram.com/sean.pendergast, and like him on Facebook at facebook.com/SeanTPendergast.

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    Sean Pendergast

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  • Vegan firefighter hoses down burning tractor-trailer carrying 40,000 pounds of rib-eye steaks: ‘Total loss’

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    A probationary firefighter at a rural fire department in Missouri had a unique experience when responding to her first fire on Monday.

    The Doolittle Rural Fire Protection District, located in the very small town of Doolittle, said it has one vegan, and that happens to be Jenna Ulrich – a new firefighter whose father is also a firefighter.

    Ulrich was working on Monday morning when the department received a call reporting a tractor-trailer on fire on Interstate 174 eastbound.

    The catch? The truck was carrying 40,000 pounds of ribeye steaks.

    FIREFIGHTERS CUT OPEN PLAYGROUND SLIDE TO RESCUE 40-YEAR-OLD MAN STUCK INSIDE

    Missouri’s Doolittle Rural Fire Protection District joked about its one and only vegan firefighter extinguishing flames on a tractor-trailer carrying 40,000 pounds of ribeye steaks on Monday. (Doolittle Rural Fire Protection District / Facebook)

    Ulrich was stationed on the hose line during the ordeal and can be seen spraying water on the beefed-up inferno in the video posted online by the department. 

    Her dad, Glenn, was working alongside her.

    HOT DOGS SPILL ACROSS INTERSTATE AFTER TRACTOR TRAILER CRASH TO CLOG COMMUTE FOR STEAMED MOTORISTS

    “Nothing says ‘welcome to the fire service’ like sending the probie to put out 40,000 pounds of flaming ribeye!” the district joked on Facebook.

    rib-eye steaks

    Forty thousand pounds worth of ribeye steaks were burnt to a crisp on Monday after a tractor-trailer transporting the meat caught on fire on a Missouri interstate. (iStock)

    Despite a job well done on the firefighters’ behalf, the department said the steaks were “a total loss.”

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    This is not the first time the small department has been called to extinguish flaming trailers carrying food. 

    Tractor-trailer on fire with onions in cargo

    On June 8, firefighters with the Doolittle Rural Fire Protection District responded to a tractor-trailer “fully-loaded” with onions engulfed in flames. (Doolittle Rural Fire Protection District/Facebook)

    In June, a tractor-trailer “fully-loaded” with onions caught on fire, resulting in another total loss.

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  • Q&A: Can Trump hold a census in the middle of a decade and exclude immigrants in the US illegally?

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    President Donald Trump on Thursday instructed the Commerce Department to have the Census Bureau start work on a new census that would exclude immigrants who are in the United States illegally from the head count which determines political power and federal spending.

    The census will be based on “modern day facts and figures and, importantly, using the results and information gained from the Presidential Election of 2024,” the Republican president said on his social media platform.

    Experts said it was unclear what exactly Trump was calling for, whether it was changes to the 2030 census or a mid-decade census, and, if so, whether it would be used for a mid-decade apportionment, which is the process of divvying up congressional seats among the states based on the population count.

    Here’s some answers to questions Thursday’s post raises:

    Can Trump do this?

    It would be extremely difficult to conduct a mid-decade census, if not impossible, according to experts.

    Any changes in conducting a U.S. census would require alterations to the Census Act and approval from Congress, which has oversight responsibilities, and there likely would be a fierce fight.

    The federal law governing the census permits a mid-decade head count for things like distributing federal funding, but it can’t be used for apportionment or redistricting and must be done in a year ending in 5. Additionally, the 14th Amendment says that “the whole number of persons in each state” are to be counted for the numbers used for apportionment, and the Census Bureau has interpreted that to mean anybody residing in the United States regardless of legal status. Federal courts have repeatedly supported that interpretation, though the Supreme Court has blocked recent efforts to change that on procedural rather than legal grounds.

    “He cannot unilaterally order a new census. The census is governed by law, not to mention the Constitution,” said Terri Ann Lowenthal, a former congressional staffer who consults on census issues.

    Then there is the question of logistics. The once-a-decade census is the biggest non-military undertaking by the federal government, utilizing a temporary workforce of hundreds of thousands of census takers. It can take as much as 10 years of planning.

    “This isn’t something that you can do overnight,” said New York Law professor Jeffrey Wice, a census and redistricting expert. “To get all the pieces put together, it would be such a tremendous challenge, if not impossible.”

    Has this ever been done before?

    A mid-decade census has never been conducted before.

    In the 1970s, there was interest in developing data from the middle of the decade for more accurate and continuous information about American life, and a mid-decade census was considered. But the funding from Congress never came through, said Margo Anderson, a professor emerita at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee who has written extensively on the history of the census.

    Decades later, those wishes for continuous data would develop into the American Community Survey, the annual survey of American life based on responses from 3.5 million households.

    In his first term, President Donald Trump, a Republican, unsuccessfully tried to add a citizenship question to the 2020 census form and signed orders which would have excluded people in the U.S. illegally from the apportionment figures and mandate the collection of citizenship data through administrative records.

    The attempt was blocked by the Supreme Court, and both orders were rescinded when Democratic President Joe Biden arrived at the White House in January 2021, before the 2020 census figures were released by Census Bureau.

    Any attempt at a repeat would guarantee legal challenges.

    “The census isn’t just a head count. It is meant to reflect America as it is – not as some would prefer it to be — and determines how critical resources are allocated,” ACLU Voting Rights project director Sophia Lin Lakin said in a statement. “Nobody should be erased from it. We won’t hesitate to go back to court to protect representation for all communities.”

    What is a census used for?

    Besides being used to divvy up congressional seats among the states and redraw political districts, the numbers derived from the once-a-decade census are used to guide the distribution of $2.8 trillion in annual government spending.

    The federal funding is distributed to state and local governments, nonprofits, businesses and households, paying for health care, education, school lunch programs, child care, food assistance programs and highway construction, among other things.

    Why is Trump doing this?

    A Republican redistricting expert had written that using citizen voting-age population instead of the total population for the purpose of redrawing congressional and legislative districts could be advantageous to Republicans and non-Hispanic whites.

    Critics believe the writings of Republican redistricting expert Tom Hofeller inspired the first Trump administration’s attempt at restricting the apportionment count and guided legislation introduced this year by Republican lawmakers to add a citizenship question to the 2030 census questionnaire. Trump has been open about his intent to increase the number of Republican seats in Congress and maintain the GOP majority in next year’s midterm elections.

    Even though redistricting typically occurs once every 10 years following the census, Trump is pressuring Republicans in Texas to redistrict again, claiming they are “entitled” to five additional Republican seats. Trump’s team is also engaged in similar redistricting discussions in other GOP-controlled states, including Missouri and Indiana.

    Some critics see the effort as part of Trump’s wider effort to control the federal statistical system, which has been considered the world’s gold standard.

    Last Friday, Trump fired the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Erika McEntarfer, after standard revisions to the monthly jobs report showed that employers added 258,000 fewer jobs than previously reported in May and June. The revisions suggested that hiring has severely weakened under Trump, undermining his claims of an economic boom.

    “Trump is basically destroying the federal statistical system,” Anderson said. “He wants numbers that support his political accomplishments, such as he sees them.”

    ___

    Follow Mike Schneider on the social platform Bluesky: @mikeysid.bsky.social

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  • FACT FOCUS: No, taxpayers will not receive new stimulus checks this summer

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    Don’t splurge just yet.

    Rumors spread online Friday that the U.S. government will soon be issuing stimulus checks to taxpayers in certain income brackets.

    But Congress has not passed legislation to authorize such payments, and, according to the IRS, no new stimulus checks will be distributed in the coming weeks.

    Here’s a closer look at the facts.

    CLAIM: The Internal Revenue Service and the Treasury Department have approved $1,390 stimulus checks that will be distributed to low- and middle-income taxpayers by the end of the summer.

    THE FACTS: This is false. Taxpayers will not receive new stimulus checks of any amount this summer, an IRS official said. Stimulus checks, also known as economic impact payments, are authorized by Congress through legislation and distributed by the Treasury Department. Republican Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri last month introduced a bill that would send tax rebates to qualified taxpayers using revenue from tariffs instituted by President Donald Trump. Hawley’s bill has not passed the Senate or the House.

    The IRS announced early this year that it would distribute about $2.4 billion to taxpayers who failed to claim on their 2021 tax returns a Recovery Rebate Credit — a refundable credit for individuals who did not receive one or more COVID-19 stimulus checks. The maximum amount was $1,400 per individual.

    Those who hadn’t already filed their 2021 tax return would have needed to file it by April 15 to claim the credit. The IRS official said there is no new credit that taxpayers can claim.

    Past stimulus checks have been authorized through legislation passed by Congress. For example, payments during the coronavirus pandemic were made by possible by three bills: the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act; the COVID-related Tax Relief Act; and the American Rescue Plan Act.

    In 2008, stimulus checks were authorized in response to the Great Recession through the Economic Stimulus Act.

    The Treasury Department, which includes the Internal Revenue Service, distributed stimulus payments during the COVID-19 pandemic and the Great Recession. The Treasury’s Bureau of the Fiscal Service, formed in 2012, played a role as well during the former crisis.

    Hawley in July introduced the American Worker Rebate Act, which would share tariff revenue with qualified Americans through tax rebates. The proposed rebates would amount to at minimum $600 per individual, with additional payments for qualifying children. Rebates could increase if tariff revenue is higher than expected. Taxpayers with an adjusted annual gross income above a certain amount — $75,000 for those filing individually — would receive a reduced rebate.

    Hawley said Americans “deserve a tax rebate.”

    “Like President Trump proposed, my legislation would allow hard-working Americans to benefit from the wealth that Trump’s tariffs are returning to this country,” Hawley said in a press release.

    Neither the Senate nor the House had passed the American Worker Rebate Act as of Friday. It was read twice by the Senate on July 28, the day it was introduced, and referred to the Committee on Finance.

    ___

    Find AP Fact Checks here: https://apnews.com/APFactCheck.

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  • Delivery drones may soon take off in the US. Here’s why

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    Delivery drones are so fast they can zip a pint of ice cream to a customer’s driveway before it melts.

    Yet the long-promised technology has been slow to take off in the United States. More than six years after the Federal Aviation Administration approved commercial home deliveries with drones, the service mostly has been confined to a few suburbs and rural areas.

    That could soon change. The FAA proposed a new rule last week that would make it easier for companies to fly drones outside of an operator’s line of sight and therefore over longer distances. A handful of companies do that now, but they had to obtain waivers and certification as an air carrier to deliver packages.

    While the rule is intended to streamline the process, authorized retailers and drone companies that have tested fulfilling orders from the sky say they plan to make drone-based deliveries available to millions more U.S. households.

    Walmart’s multistate expansion

    Walmart and Wing, a drone company owned by Google parent Alphabet, currently provide deliveries from 18 Walmart stores in the Dallas area. By next summer, they expect to expand to 100 Walmart stores in Atlanta; Charlotte, North Carolina; Houston; and Orlando and Tampa, Florida.

    After launching its Prime Air delivery service in College Station, Texas, in late 2022, Amazon received FAA permission last year to operate autonomous drones that fly beyond a pilot’s line of sight. The e-commerce company has since expand its drone delivery program to suburban Phoenix and has plans to offer the service in Dallas, San Antonio, Texas, and Kansas City.

    The concept of drone delivery has been around for well over a decade. Drone maker Zipline, which works with Walmart in Arkansas and the Dallas-Fort Worth area, began making deliveries to hospitals in Rwanda in 2016. Israel-based Flytrex, one of the drone companies DoorDash works with to carry out orders, launched drone delivery to households in Iceland in 2017.

    But Wing CEO Adam Woodworth said drone delivery has been in “treading water mode” in the U.S. for years, with service providers afraid to scale up because the regulatory framework wasn’t in place.

    “You want to be at the right moment where there’s an overlap between the customer demand, the partner demand, the technical readiness and the regulatory readiness,” Woodworth said. “I think that we’re reaching that planetary alignment right now.”

    Flying ice cream and eggs

    DoorDash, which works with both Wing and Flytrex, tested drone drop-offs in rural Virginia and greater Dallas before announcing an expansion into Charlotte. Getting takeout food this way may sound futuristic, but it’s starting to feel normal in suburban Brisbane, Australia, where DoorDash has employed delivery drones for several years, said Harrison Shih, who leads the company’s drone program.

    “It comes so fast and it’s something flying into your neighborhood, but it really does seem like part of everyday life,” Shih said.

    Even though delivery drones are still considered novel, the cargo they carry can be pretty mundane. Walmart said the top items from the more than 150,000 drone deliveries the nation’s largest retailer has completed since 2021 include ice cream, eggs and Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups.

    Unlike traditional delivery, where one driver may have a truck full of packages, drones generally deliver one small order at a time. Wing’s drones can carry packages weighing up to 2.5 pounds. They can travel up to 12 miles round trip. One pilot can oversee up to 32 drones.

    Zipline has a drone that can carry up to 4 pounds and fly 120 miles round trip. Some drones, like Amazon’s, can carry heavier packages.

    Once an order is placed, it’s packaged for flight and attached to a drone at a launch site. The drone automatically finds a route that avoids obstacles. A pilot observes as the aircraft flies to its destinations and lowers its cargo to the ground with retractable cords.

    Risks and rewards of commercial drones

    Shakiba Enayati, an assistant professor of supply chain and analytics at the University of Missouri, St. Louis, researches ways that drones could speed the delivery of critical health supplies like donated organs and blood samples. The unmanned aircraft offer some advantages as a transport method, such as reduced emissions and improved access to goods for rural residents, Enayati said.

    But she also sees plenty of obstacles. Right now, it costs around $13.50 per delivery to carry a package by drone versus $2 for a traditional vehicle, Enayati said. Drones need well-trained employees to oversee them and can have a hard time in certain weather.

    Drones also can have mid-air collisions or tumble from the sky. But people have accepted the risk of road accidents because they know the advantages of driving, Enayati said. She thinks the same thing could happen with drones, especially as improved technology reduces the chance for errors.

    Woodworth added that U.S. airspace is tightly controlled, and companies need to demonstrate to the FAA that their drones are safe and reliable before they are cleared to fly. Even under the proposed new rules, the FAA would set detailed requirements for drone operators.

    “That’s why it takes so long to build a business in the space. But I think it leads to everybody fundamentally building higher quality things,” Woodworth said.

    Others worry that drones may potentially replace human delivery drivers. Shih thinks that’s unlikely. One of DoorDash’s most popular items is 24-packs of water, Shih said, which aren’t realistic for existing drones to ferry.

    “I believe that drone delivery can be fairly ubiquitous and can cover a lot of things. We just don’t think its probable today that it’ll carry a 40-pound bag of dog food to you,” Shih said.

    The view from the ground in Texas

    DoorDash said that in the areas where it offers drone deliveries, orders requiring the services of human delivery drivers also increase.

    That’s been the experience of John Kim, the owner of PurePoke restaurant in Frisco, Texas. Kim signed on to offer drone deliveries through DoorDash last year. He doesn’t know what percentage of his DoorDash customers are choosing the service instead of regular delivery, but his overall DoorDash orders are up 15% this year.

    Kim said he’s heard no complaints from drone delivery customers.

    “It’s very stable, maybe even better than some of the drivers that toss it in the back with all the other orders,” Kim said.

    For some, drones can simply be a nuisance. When the FAA asked for public comments on Amazon’s request to expand deliveries in College Station, numerous residents expressed concern that drones with cameras violated their privacy. Amazon says its drones use cameras and sensors to navigate and avoid obstacles but may record overhead videos of people while completing a delivery.

    Other residents complained about noise.

    “It sounds like a giant nagging mosquito,” one respondent wrote. Amazon has since released a quieter drone.

    But others love the service. Janet Toth of Frisco, Texas, said she saw drone deliveries in Korea years ago and wondered why the U.S. didn’t have them. So she was thrilled when DoorDash began providing drone delivery in her neighborhood.

    Toth now orders drone delivery a few times a month. Her 9-year-old daughter Julep said friends often come over to watch the drone.

    “I love to go outside, wave at the drone, say ‘Thank you’ and get the food,” Julep Toth said.

    ___

    AP Video Journalist Kendria LaFleur contributed from Frisco, Texas.

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  • April’s full moon is called the ‘Pink Moon’

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    April’s full moon is this weekend, and it’s called the “Pink Moon.” It is also going to be a micromoon.

    It will peak Saturday at 8:22 p.m. ET.


    What You Need To Know

    • Saturday’s full moon is also known as the ‘Pink Moon’
    • It’s the first full moon of the spring
    • The first full moon after March 21 sets the date of Easter


    The Pink Moon didn’t get its name from the its color. Rather, it got its name from a flower. Since it’s the first full moon of the spring, it usually coincides with the blooming of pink wildflowers, or phlox.

    (Pixabay)

    This year’s Pink Moon is also the Paschal full moon, which is the first full moon after the spring equinox. It marks the start of Passover and determines the date of Easter every year. Easter always falls on the first Sunday after the first full moon after March 21, or after the Paschal full moon.

    It’s also going to be a “micromoon,” so it will appear smaller than a regular full moon. It’s not because the moon is actually smaller, but because of the farther distance from the Earth, also known as apogee.

    It will reach its peak illumination at 8:22 p.m. ET on Saturday, April 12.

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

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    Meteorologist Reid Lybarger

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  • A snowy winter for some while others are searching for snow

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    There is no doubt about it, this winter has been cold at times. With that, has come quite a bit of snow for parts of the country that normally don’t see it.


    What You Need To Know

    • Some parts of the country are well above average with snowfall
    • The south has seen much more snow than normal
    • Parts of the Northeast and Midwest are below average


    The Gulf Coast has been the most recent place with accumulating snow. Although not unheard of, it is rare to see this type of event in any year. Places like Houston, New Orleans, Pensacola and southern Georgia all saw snow last week.

    Florida smashed its all-time previous snowfall record of 4 inches for the state. New Orleans also beat its record snowfall since 1895.

    People stop to take pictures at Jackson Square as snow falls in New Orleans, Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

    Take a look at some of the snow totals compared to the average for select southern cities. Most of these areas do not record a seasonal average snowfall, since snow is so rare. In fact, seeing snow all the way to the beaches of the Gulf of Mexico may be considered a once-in-a-lifetime event.

    Many Gulf coastal areas are exceeding their neighbors to the north in terms of seasonal snowfall. In some cases, it is almost double the amount of snow so far this season.

    The snow this season shown on this map shows there is a void in snow for Iowa and Nebraska. Some areas have seen less than 1 inch of snow in these areas. Every single state this season has seen at least some snow. That is pretty incredible!

    Source: NOHRSC

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

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    Meteorologist Alan Auglis

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  • A frigid storm drops rare snow as Florida readies plows in the Panhandle

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    NEW ORLEANS (AP) — A rare frigid storm charged through Texas and the northern Gulf Coast on Tuesday, blanketing New Orleans and Houston with snow that closed highways, grounded nearly all flights and canceled school for more than a million students more accustomed to hurricane dismissals than snow days.


    What You Need To Know

    • New Orleans shattered its all-time snowfall record with more than 9 inches in parts of the city
    • Florida also broke its all-time snowfall record, more than doubling the old record of 4 inches
    • The storm prompted the first ever blizzard warnings for several coastal counties near the Texas-Louisiana border



    The storm prompted the first ever blizzard warnings for several coastal counties near the Texas-Louisiana border, and snowplows were at the ready in the Florida Panhandle.

    In the Texas capital, two people died in the cold weather, according to a statement from the city of Austin. No details were provided, but the city said emergency crews had responded to more than a dozen “cold exposure” calls. Officials said one person died from hypothermia in Georgia.

    Snow covered the white-sand beaches of normally sunny vacation spots, including Gulf Shores, Alabama, and Pensacola Beach, Florida. The heavy snow, sleet and freezing rain hitting parts of the Deep South came as a blast of Arctic air plunged much of the Midwest and the eastern U.S. into a deep freeze.

    A powdery South made for some head-turning scenes — a snowball fight on a Gulf Shores beach, sledding in a laundry basket in Montgomery, Alabama, pool-tubing down a Houston hill.

    One of the country’s quirkiest cities, New Orleans, didn’t disappoint under the snowy spotlight. There was an attempt at urban skiing along Bourbon Street; a priest and nuns in a snowball fight outside a suburban church; snowboarding behind a golf cart; and sledding down the snow-covered Mississippi River levees on kayaks, cardboard boxes and inflatable alligators.


    High school teacher David Delio and his two daughters glided down the levee on a yoga mat and a boogie board.

    “This is a white-out in New Orleans, this is a snow-a-cane,” Delio said. “We’ve had tons of hurricane days but never a snow day.”

    The nuns at St. Catherine of Siena Catholic School near New Orleans encouraged their students last week to pray to saints, including Our Lady of the Snows — a devotional term for Mary, mother of Jesus — for the snow day they received Tuesday, said the Rev. Tim Hedrick. The priest said he invited the nuns to make snow angels, and they challenged him to a snowball fight that has since received tens of thousands of views on social media.

    “It’s a fun way to show that priests and sisters are humans, too, and they can have fun,” Hedrick said.

    It has been more than a decade since snow last fell on New Orleans. With more than 9 inches of snow in parts of the city Tuesday, New Orleans has far surpassed its record — 2.7 inches on Dec. 31, 1963 — according to the National Weather Service. There were unofficial reports of 10 inches of snow in New Orleans in 1895, NWS meteorologist Christopher Bannan said.

    For Houston, the winter blast marks the latest dramatic fluctuation in extreme weather. Hurricane Beryl devastated the city in July, killing dozens and knocking out power to large swaths of the city. Several months later, a winter storm has dumped the most snow in decades over the Houston area.


    Nearly 2,000 flights to, from or within the U.S. were canceled Tuesday, with about 10,000 others delayed, according to online tracker FlightAware.com. Both Houston airports suspended flight operations starting Tuesday. Nearly every flight was cancelled at New Orleans Louis Armstrong International Airport, but most airlines planned to resume operations Wednesday.

    Alvaro Perez was hunkering down at George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston on Tuesday after his flight to El Salvador was canceled. His new departure is scheduled for Thursday.

    “I’ll just ride it and stay here,” Perez said.

    Snow on the Gulf Coast

    Ahead of the storm, governors in Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and even Florida — the Sunshine State — declared states of emergency and many school systems canceled classes Tuesday. School closures were planned in some coastal communities in North and South Carolina.

    The NWS said up to 4 inches of snow fell in the Houston area. Texas transportation officials said more than 20 snowplows were in use across nearly 12,000 lane miles in the Houston area, which lacks its own city or county plows.

    Forecasters say snowfall could stretch from north Georgia, through Atlanta, and into southern portions unaccustomed to such weather.

    Parts of the Florida Panhandle were coated white Tuesday. Tallahassee, Florida’s capital, last saw snow in 2018 — just 0.1 of an inch, according to the weather service. Tallahassee’s highest snowfall on record was 2.8 inches in 1958.

    “Believe it or not, in the state of Florida we’re mobilizing snowplows,” said Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.


    Mobile, Alabama, hit 5.4 inches and counting Tuesday, topping the city’s one-day snowfall record of 5 inches, set Jan. 24, 1881, and nearing its all-time snowfall record of 6 inches in 1895, the weather service said.

    The blizzard warning in effect until midday Tuesday was the first issued by the office in Lake Charles, Louisiana, according to meteorologist Donald Jones.

    Louisiana transportation agency workers worked through the night to prepare bridges and roadways. Nonetheless, Louisiana State Police said they have already responded to more than 50 crashes Tuesday, and pleaded for people to stay home.

    Return of the Arctic blast

    This latest cold snap comes from a disruption in the polar vortex, the ring of cold air usually trapped at the North Pole.

    Frigid cold persisted across the eastern two-thirds of the country as the East Coast was blanketed in snow while people from the Northern Plains to the tip of Maine shivered in bitter cold. The NWS said normal temperatures would return slowly by the end of the week.

    A state of emergency was declared in at least a dozen New York counties with up to 2 feet of lake-effect snow and extreme cold expected around Lake Ontario and Lake Erie through Wednesday.

    Wind chills are expected to reach minus 30 to minus 50 across the Dakotas and into the Upper Midwest through Friday, the NWS warned. Subzero wind chills were forecast from the Central Plains eastward through Wednesday night.

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  • How some of Santa’s little reindeer relate to the weather

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    We all know that Santa travels the world on Christmas Eve on a sleigh pulled by eight… no, nine, reindeer! But are you aware of the weather tie-ins with Santa and his reindeer?


    What You Need To Know

    • Two reindeer are named after weather phenomena
    • Rudolph saved the day one Christmas Eve when fog covered most of the Earth
    • Santa uses forecasts from local meteorologists to plan his Christmas Eve flight

    (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

    We’ve all heard the tale of Rudolph, and we’ll cover that part of the story in a moment, but first, let’s start with two of Santa’s original reindeer.

    The original eight

    You know Dasher and Dancer, Prancer and Vixen, Comet and Cupid, and Donner and Blitzen, but did you know that two of the reindeer are named after weather phenomena?

    But which ones?

    If you guessed Donner and Blitzen, you are correct!

    Donner, also sometimes called Donder or Dunder, is named after thunder. The name comes from the Dutch word for thunder.

    Blitzen, also spelled Blixen and Blixem, is named after lightning. The name also comes from a Dutch word meaning lightning.

    Santa’s reindeer were never officially named until the 1823 release of the poem, “A Visit from St. Nicholas,” also known as “‘Twas the Night Before Christmas,” by Clement C. Moore.

    (AP Photo/Malin Moberg)

    Here’s an interesting reindeer fact.

    In the story “The Life and Adventures of Santa Claus” by L. Frank Baum, the author listed ten reindeer. Flossie and Glossie are Santa’s lead reindeer, while Racer and Pacer, Fearless and Peerless, Ready and Steady, and Feckless and Speckless are the rest of the team. 

    None of these names are weather-related terms.

    No offense to L. Frank Baum, but I’m glad we stuck with Clement C. Moore’s names for Santa’s reindeer.

    Rudolph leads the way

    I think we all know the story of Rudolph.

    This iconic reindeer showed up in 1939. Looked upon as a misfit (aren’t we all in some way), the other reindeer rejected Rudolph and made fun of him because of his red, glowing nose. Though that “little” abnormality came in handy “one foggy Christmas Eve.”

    In an unprecedented weather event, one never seen before or seen since, an “outbreak” of fog blanketed most of the planet, and it became impossible for Santa to make his flight on Christmas Eve around the world. 

    All was lost until Santa realized that Rudolph and his incredible nose could lead the way.

    This was Rudolph’s time to shine. (Pun intended.)

    (File Photo)

    And the rest is history. From that time on, Rudolph has been Santa’s lead reindeer.

    Santa’s Christmas Eve forecast

    Something you may not know is Santa Claus has a weather forecasting team at the North Pole.

    Some elves specialize in forecasting the weather around the world. These meteorologists give Santa an overview of the weather around the globe on Christmas Eve, but Santa depends on local National Weather Service and TV meteorologists to provide him forecasts for cities along his flight path.

    My daughter found out about this during a visit with Santa when she was about six years old.

    I had taken her and her younger brother to see Santa a few days before Christmas. As we were next in line, Santa saw us, stood up, walked over to me and asked, “Gary, what kind of weather am I looking at on Christmas Eve?”

    I gave him a quick forecast, he thanked me, walked back over to his chair and sat down as the next child climbed on his lap.

    The expression on my daughter’s face was priceless.

    “Santa knows you?” she asked as she looked up at me with a look of shock, confusion and pride. “Well, of course he does. Who do you think he gets his forecast from for this area? I’m a pilot, and he’s a pilot. I’m the perfect person to give him a ‘flight weather briefing.’”

    Talk about a priceless memory that I will always remember.

    (Gary Stephenson)

    In the Christmas Eve sky

    So on Christmas Eve night, if your skies are clear, look to the sky. You might see a red light moving across the sky. More than likely, it’s the beacon on an airplane, but it might, just might, be the glow of Rudolph’s red nose.

    And if the weather is not so clear, rest well knowing that Santa’s got a well-trained team of reindeer pulling the sleigh and an accurate forecast so he can safely complete his Christmas Eve journey around the Earth.

    I’ll finish my story with these final words.

    My wish for all of you is to have a safe and Merry Christmas. And to Santa and the reindeer, have a good flight!

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

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    Chief Meteorologist Gary Stephenson

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  • How weather controls what’s on your Thanksgiving table

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    Thanksgiving is right around the corner, and I’m already looking forward to the moist turkey, the apple pie, the wine and even the cranberry sauce!

    When you think about it, everything that we eat and drink on the holiday is affected by the weather.


    What You Need To Know

    • Weather affects many Thanksgiving Day favorites
    • Turkeys have a higher survival rate in warmer climates
    • Light winds and plenty of sunshine help grow the perfect grapes for wine
    • Farmers must watch apples throughout the entire season to get the best apple


    The centerpiece of your table, the turkey, heavily depends on the weather in which it is raised. The survival rate of turkeys is not as great in colder weather as it is in warmer weather.

    According to the National Environmental Education Foundation (NEEF), 55-60% of turkeys survive bitter cold and snow. Although that is much less than the 70-100% survival rate in warmer climates, it remains enough to feed us all on Thanksgiving while maintaining a healthy and safe population.

    Leading up to fall, the weather affects apples immensely. In the spring, it is important that the apple farmers monitor temperature, humidity and any precipitation, as the bugs and parasites that can ruin crops depend on those conditions.

    In the summer, if the temperature gets too hot and not enough rain falls, apple crops could be ruined. In the fall, cooler overnight temperatures help apples get their red color and help them ripen up. This, of course, allows for the perfect apple pie.

    A lot of sunshine helps create an better grape and, hence, wine flavor. Light winds help to keep fungus off of grapes and help them dry out. Frost and freeze is generally bad for grapes and wine production. However, ice wine can be created from the frozen fruit.

    Last, cranberries rely on temperature. In fact, they are typically grown in the southern part of our country as the temperature there stays warmer. Lots of sunshine helps keep the fruit sweet, and that means the best-tasting cranberry sauce.

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

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    Meteorologist Kaylee Wendt

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  • Former Prince George’s Co. board member got paid nearly $10K while working new job in Missouri – WTOP News

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    A former Prince George’s County, Maryland, school board member who kept his seat despite working a new job in Missouri, got paid thousands of dollars until he resigned last summer.

    A former Prince George’s County, Maryland, school board member who kept his seat despite working a new job in Missouri, got paid thousands of dollars until he resigned last summer, according to a report published by the school system’s integrity and compliance office on Monday.

    In a news release, the Office of Integrity and Compliance (OIC) said David Murray collected $9,792.32 even though he “abandoned his board member duties and responsibilities.”

    It accused the school board of failing to take action and hold Murray accountable for violating the Board of Education’s attendance policy, and said the board doesn’t have knowledge of or understand its own internal policies.

    The findings come over three months after Murray first announced his resignation from the Prince George’s County school board. Murray started a job as the chief academic officer for the Ferguson-Florissant School District near St. Louis, Missouri, in early January, but didn’t resign from his board seat in Maryland until July. His resignation came around the same time a complaint was filed with Maryland’s State Board of Education.

    “Every penny that doesn’t go to the students of Prince George’s County, and it could be looked at as being wasted, is a problem,” said Frank Turner II, the school system’s integrity and compliance officer. “We don’t want to see any money that could have been used for programs that the students of the county benefit from, either wasted or sent out to a person who benefited from receiving these funds, but he wasn’t actually earning the funds.”

    Murray was paid the nearly $10,000 during the time he remained on the board earlier this year, Turner said.

    WTOP has contacted Murray for comment.

    In a statement, PGCPS said: “There are no grounds to force him to pay the money back since he was never dealt with administratively by the FY24 Board of Education. His position is that he was an elected board member with the Board until his date of resignation in July 2024.”

    According to the report, the school board first learned that Murray started working in Missouri while remaining on the board through news reports on July 22. The next day, the board asked the integrity and compliance officer to launch an investigation. But, the report said, the office asked for information about how the board’s chair and vice chair had been enforcing the attendance policy in March. The board didn’t provide information about actions it had been taking to make sure members followed the attendance policy, the report said.

    “Time needs to be carved out to handle these types of potential policy violations, so they can enforce their own policies, for their own accountability for each other,” Turner said.

    As of July 8, according to the report, Murray missed more than eight consecutive meetings in the fourth quarter and over half the meetings in the previous year. Any board member who missed three or more regularly scheduled meetings is subject to “being charged with willful neglect of duty by the Board upon a Board voter,” the board policy said.

    As early as April, the board started notifying Murray of attendance violations, but didn’t take action on the issue during an executive session on April 25 because time ran out before the matter could be considered, the report said.

    The attendance violations were discussed on May 9, outside the 30-day period to take action on violations, which meant the “former Board Chair did not file a timely and actionable complaint with the State Board.”

    WTOP has contacted a school board spokesman, former board member Judy Mickens-Murray and board Chair Lolita Walker for comment. A spokeswoman for the school division declined to comment.

    Because Murray didn’t respond to interview requests, the office was unable to determine his residency status during the seven-month period earlier this year, the report said. Murray’s new employer in Missouri declined to respond to a series of questions that Turner’s office sent.

    This past summer, Murray told WTOP that he is a homeowner, taxpayer and has domicile in District 1, and that his secondary residence is out of state. He said he tried to fulfill all of his commitments through the end of the school year, but then “decided it would be in the best interest for me to retire from the Board of Education.”

    WTOP’s John Domen contributed to this report.

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Scott Gelman

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  • Engineering company creates adaptive Halloween costumes for kids

    Engineering company creates adaptive Halloween costumes for kids

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    IT’S NOW AT 26 MINUTES. A KANSAS CITY NONPROFIT IS DOING WHAT IT CAN TO MAKE SURE THAT EVERYONE HAS A COSTUME. KMBC NINE TERISA WHITE SHOWS US THE DESIGNS COMING TO LIFE FOR KIDS LIVING WITH MOBILITY ISSUES. CAN YOU IMAGINE A COMPANY THAT MAKES HALLOWEEN COSTUMES INCLUSIVE TO ALL? WELL, NOW YOU DON’T HAVE TO IMAGINE BECAUSE ONE FOUNDATION IS DOING EXACTLY THAT. IT’S HALLOWEEN SEASON AND ALL OF THE CREATIVE COSTUMES ARE COMING OUT OF THE WOODWORKS, BUT NONE AS CREATIVE AS THE ONES FROM A-Z FOUNDATION. THIS IS THE FOUNDATION’S FIRST YEAR PARTNERING WITH WALK IN AND ROLLIN. A LOCAL NONPROFIT WHICH AIMS TO BRING ADAPTIVE COSTUMES TO KIDS WITH DISABILITIES. WE PARTNER WITH DIFFERENT CHARITIES ACROSS KANSAS CITY EVERY SINGLE YEAR, AND SOMEBODY ACTUALLY BROUGHT THIS CHARITY TO OUR FOUNDATION AND THOUGHT IT WAS A GREAT IDEA. WE HAVE AN ENGINEERING TEAM AND THEY DESIGNED IT, AND THEN WE ACTUALLY HAVE A FABRICATION SITE HERE AS WELL. AND THEY CUT ALL THE PIECES OUT OF PLASTIC AND WE ASSEMBLED IT AND THEN PUT THE DETAIL, THE FINE DETAILS ON IT. THE FOUNDATION HAS THE RESOURCES TO MAKE ALL THE KIDS COSTUME DREAMS COME TRUE WITH A WATER JET CUTTER. THEY BUILT A BLUEY COSTUME, A SURPRISE FOR SARAH. RAMBO NESS NORTH NEWTON PAUL I KNOW, LOOK AT THAT. SOLOMON CHARACTER. IT FITS HER WHEELCHAIR AND IT’S HER FAVORITE SHOW. SARAH’S MOTHER, KATIE, SAYS SHE COULDN’T BE HAPPIER. JUST MIND BLOWING. I DIDN’T EVEN KNOW WHAT TO EXPECT, BUT DIDN’T EXPECT THIS. AND IT’S PRETTY AMAZING. THE COMPANY USUALLY MAKES CONVEYOR BELTS, BUT SAYS IF YOU HAVE THE RESOURCES, THEN WHY NOT MAKE A KID’S DREAMS COME TRUE? REPORTING IN KANSAS CITY, TERISA WHITE KMBC NINE NEWS. ASI SAYS THEY’RE HOPING TO PARTNER WITH

    Engineering company creates adaptive Halloween costumes for kids

    A Kansas City, Missouri, company is partnering with an area nonprofit to create adaptive Halloween costumes for children with disabilities.Automatic Systems, Inc. and the ASI Foundation, known for their engineering and fabrication capabilities, are using their resources to make inclusive costumes with nonprofit Walkin’ and Rollin’ Costumes.”We partner with different charities across Kansas City every single year,” said Erika Jump with ASI. “Somebody actually brought this charity to our foundation, and we thought it was a great idea.”This year, the group surprised Sarah, a young girl who uses a wheelchair, with a custom Bluey costume.The cartoon dog is her favorite character.Sarah’s mom, Katie Antoniotti, said the work was incredible.”Just mind-blowing,” Antoniotti said. “I didn’t even know what to expect. I didn’t expect this. It’s pretty amazing.”The foundation usually makes conveyor belts, but officials said if you have the resources, why not make a kid’s dream come true?ASI said they’re hoping to partner with Walkin’ and Rollin’ for this initiative every year.

    A Kansas City, Missouri, company is partnering with an area nonprofit to create adaptive Halloween costumes for children with disabilities.

    Automatic Systems, Inc. and the ASI Foundation, known for their engineering and fabrication capabilities, are using their resources to make inclusive costumes with nonprofit Walkin’ and Rollin’ Costumes.

    “We partner with different charities across Kansas City every single year,” said Erika Jump with ASI. “Somebody actually brought this charity to our foundation, and we thought it was a great idea.”

    This year, the group surprised Sarah, a young girl who uses a wheelchair, with a custom Bluey costume.

    The cartoon dog is her favorite character.

    Sarah’s mom, Katie Antoniotti, said the work was incredible.

    “Just mind-blowing,” Antoniotti said. “I didn’t even know what to expect. I didn’t expect this. It’s pretty amazing.”

    The foundation usually makes conveyor belts, but officials said if you have the resources, why not make a kid’s dream come true?

    ASI said they’re hoping to partner with Walkin’ and Rollin’ for this initiative every year.

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  • IXL Approved by Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education as a State-Approved Supplemental Literacy Solution for Grades K-5

    IXL Approved by Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education as a State-Approved Supplemental Literacy Solution for Grades K-5

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    JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. /PRNewswire/ —  IXL, the award-winning personalized learning platform used by 16 million students, has been named a High Quality Evidence-Based Instructional Material for Early Literacy by the   Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (DESE). Adding   IXL Language Arts to the list ensures that eligible local education agencies across the state can request reimbursement for purchasing the platform to enhance early literacy instruction. IXL is currently used by 20 percent of students in Missouri, accounting for more than 210,000 students. 

    Cover every concept with effective literacy instruction
    Literacy rates among the nation’s youngest learners remain below pre-pandemic levels, and limited instructional time and larger class sizes make it difficult for educators to boost achievement. To close knowledge gaps and support every student, IXL equips Missouri educators with its award-winning PK-5 ELA curriculum, which personalizes learning and is grounded in the Science of Reading methodology.

    IXL covers all the areas needed to teach language arts, containing more than 2,400 skills spanning reading comprehension, grammar, vocabulary and more. The platform’s curriculum for grades PK-2 is  designed according to research-based best practices for effective early literacy instruction and focuses on systematic, structured phonemic awareness and phonics instruction. It guides students from simple to complex skills, adapting to individual student needs and offering explicit instruction with real-time feedback. Schools can also leverage  IXL’s Learn to Read and  Reading Intervention skill plans that align perfectly to popular textbooks so educators can steadily and methodically narrow reading gaps.

    Build student confidence with embedded supports
    A wealth of instructional resources supports students and encourages them to self-remediate during independent or small-group practice. More than 2,800  video tutorials match one-to-one with each IXL skill, guiding learners through the building blocks of reading, writing and grammar. These videos make it easy to incorporate the Science of Reading’s methodology into instruction so children learn the relationships between written letters and spoken sounds. Additionally, students receive immediate corrective feedback after every missed question, enabling them to quickly understand their mistakes and progress.

    Get reliable data to meet reading goals
    Early elementary school years are crucial for building foundational skills that shape a child’s education. To support this development, teachers need insights to see exactly where learning gaps exist, targeted resources to close them and tools to help students tackle new challenges. Supported by years of validity research, the nationally-normed  IXL Diagnostic is a precise indicator of student achievement and a strong predictor of performance on standardized assessments. The adaptive assessment pinpoints each learner’s proficiency to the nearest tenth of a grade along the entire ELA spectrum, showing educators exactly what students know and what they can do to improve. It then generates personalized action plans that help students eliminate their trouble spots, and grow their reading and writing skills. Action plans link to specific language arts and reading skills, and give teachers a simple way to differentiate instruction and fill knowledge gaps.

    An award-winning platform backed by evidence
    Educators deserve the gold-standard of educational technology that is proven by research and data to enable the highest performance from every student. Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA)  Tier 1 and Tier 2 research shows undisputed favorable outcomes for schools implementing IXL. Additionally, studies across 70,000 schools in 49 states show that  IXL leads to higher test scores, with schools scoring as much as 17 percentile points higher on language arts on state assessments.

    Recognized for its quality and rigor, IXL holds the Digital Promise Research-Based Design Product Certification and has twice been honored by the SIIA CODiE Awards as the Best Solution for Foundational (K-8) English Language Arts.

    About IXL
    Currently used by 16 million students and in 96 of the top 100 U.S. school districts, IXL is an all-inclusive educational platform that provides a comprehensive PK-12 curriculum and instructional resources, actionable analytics and a state-of-the-art assessment suite. Available in 57 languages, IXL’s end-to-end teaching and learning solution supports personalized instruction in math, English language arts, science, social studies and Spanish. With more than 150 billion questions asked and answered around the world, IXL is helping schools and parents successfully boost student achievement. The IXL Learning  family of products also includes  Rosetta StoneDictionary.comThesaurus.comTPTSpanishDictionary.cominglés.comFrenchDictionary.comWyzantVocabulary.comABCyaEducation.com and  Carson Dellosa Education. To learn more about IXL, visit  www.ixl.comfacebook.com/IXL and  x.com/IXLLearning.

    eSchool News Staff
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    ESchool News Staff

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  • In Missouri, Halloween night signs were required at the homes of sex offenders. Until now

    In Missouri, Halloween night signs were required at the homes of sex offenders. Until now

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    ST. LOUIS (AP) — Many states have laws designed to keep children away from convicted sexual offenders on Halloween night, such as curfews for those on offender registries and requirements to keep their porch lights off.

    But a Missouri law mandating a sign at the offender’s home was a step too far, a judge ruled.

    A 2008 law required registered offenders in Missouri to post signs on Oct. 31 that read “No candy or treats at this residence.” U.S. District Judge John Ross ruled this month that the provision violated the First Amendment by forcing “compelled speech,” depriving those on the registry “of their freedom to speak in their own words or to not speak at all.”

    The ruling lets stand other provisions of the Missouri law that require people on the registry on Halloween to remain inside their home from 5 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. and to leave their outdoor lights off.

    The Missouri sign law is unique among states, but some cities and counties have tried similar laws that were either struck down in court or withdrawn as part of lawsuit settlements.

    Ross’ ruling on the Missouri sign law drew a mixed response. Some said extraordinary steps are necessary on a night when children flood the streets and often knock on the doors of strangers. Others said the sign law was unnecessarily cruel — and even counterproductive.

    “I feel like it’s a setback and another example of predators’ rights kind of trumping those of their victims,” said Tara Bishop, a 40-year-old mother of four from southwestern Missouri who operates a Facebook page called Child Predators Exposed with more than 10,000 followers.

    But an extensive examination of crime data published in 2009 in the Sexual Abuse journal found no increased risk of sexual abuse of children on Halloween. Experts say the vast majority of child sexual abuse crimes involve someone known by the victim or the child’s family, and not strangers.

    Janice Bellucci, the lawyer for the Missouri man who challenged the law, said that for those forced to place the sign, the damage is long-lasting.

    “It’s not just stigmatizing you that one day, it stigmatizes you for the rest of your life, as long as you live there,” said Bellucci, who is part of the California-based Alliance for Constitutional Sex Offense Laws.

    The lawsuit was filed on behalf of Thomas L. Sanderson of Hazelwood, Missouri, a St. Louis suburb. He was convicted of second-degree sodomy in 2006 after a 16-year-old family friend accused him of sexually touching her. Sanderson, who has maintained his innocence, was sentenced to two years in prison and required to register as a sexual offender for 25 years.

    The Missouri Halloween law was adopted two years later. It is unclear how many of the state’s approximately 26,000 convicted sexual offenders have been charged for violating the statute, or how stringent enforcement has been. The law doesn’t say where the sign must be placed. People on the registry are responsible for making their own signs.

    The lawsuit said Sanderson asked police if he was subject to the law because his conviction happened before its passage. He said he was told he was not, so he continued to host Halloween parties complete with animatronic figures, lights, a bonfire, music and candy, the lawsuit said.

    But the lawsuit said that on Halloween night 2022, police arrived at Sanderson’s home. No sign was posted, and he was arrested. He pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor for violating the Halloween statute and received probation. He sued last year.

    Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey’s office, in court filings, wrote that the state is duty-bound to protect children who can’t make adequate decisions on their own. Bailey’s office said an appeal is planned.

    “I want Missouri to be the safest state in the nation for children. That includes on Halloween,” Bailey, a Republican, said in a statement.

    Alison Feigh, director of Jacob Wetterling Resource Center at Zero Abuse Project, which focuses on helping institutions prevent, recognize and respond to child sexual abuse, said most assaults happen after offenders build relationships with victims and their families. Tactics like signs are not helpful in keeping children safe, she said in an email.

    “These public signs may give a false sense of security to families while not actually preventing child abuse,” Feigh said.

    Other Halloween sign laws also have faced setbacks.

    In Georgia, the Butts County Sheriff’s Office was sued in 2019, with people on registries alleging that authorities trespassed onto their properties to post signs that caused humiliation and anxiety. The signs read: “WARNING! NO TRICK-OR-TREATING AT THIS ADDRESS!! A COMMUNITY SAFETY MESSAGE FROM BUTTS COUNTY SHERIFF GARY LONG.”

    A federal appeals court panel in 2022 said the signage violated the First Amendment.

    In California, Simi Valley required Halloween signs in the yards of registered sexual offenders until reaching a 2013 settlement in a lawsuit filed by the Alliance for Constitutional Sex Offense Laws on behalf of five offenders.

    In January, the alliance filed suit after the sheriff’s office in Marion County, Arkansas, created and posted signs and placed them in the yards of those on the registry. The signs read: “Sorry! No Trick or Treat.” The sheriff’s office later agreed to stop posting or requiring the signs.

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  • Taylor Swift, Travis Kelce in attendance for Game 1 of ALCS

    Taylor Swift, Travis Kelce in attendance for Game 1 of ALCS

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    Thanks, welcome.

    Taylor Swift, Travis Kelce in attendance for Game 1 of Yankees-Guardians series

    Turns out, Taylor and Travis like to watch a little baseball, too.Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce and his girlfriend, Taylor Swift, are attending Game 1 of the American League Championship Series.Video above: Taylor Swift ‘shimmers’ in her signature red lip in arrival at Arrowhead StadiumThe New York Yankees, who defeated the Kansas City Royals in the American League Division Series, are hosting the Cleveland Guardians to begin the best-of-seven series. The famous couple sat together in a suite down the right-field line, in the second row above postseason bunting and a flag commemorating the Yankees’ 1932 World Series championship.Kelce, a Westlake, Ohio, native who went to high school in Cleveland Heights, sported a dark baseball cap with the words Midnight Rodeo on it. Swift also wore a hat on a 50-degree night in the Bronx.Kelce, who turned 35 on Oct. 5, grew up rooting for Kenny Lofton and Cleveland in the 1990s. Kelce threw a wild ceremonial first pitch before the Guardians’ season opener last year.Swift was also in attendance at last Monday night’s Chiefs game against the New Orleans Saints.It was the second major sporting event for Swift and Kelce in New York City over the past five-plus weeks. The couple also sat in a box to watch the men’s final at the U.S. Open tennis tournament on Sept. 8 in Queens.Kelce and the Chiefs, the two-time defending Super Bowl champions, had a bye this weekend after opening the season 5-0. Their next game is Sunday at San Francisco, a rematch of last season’s Super Bowl.

    Turns out, Taylor and Travis like to watch a little baseball, too.

    Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce and his girlfriend, Taylor Swift, are attending Game 1 of the American League Championship Series.

    Video above: Taylor Swift ‘shimmers’ in her signature red lip in arrival at Arrowhead Stadium

    The New York Yankees, who defeated the Kansas City Royals in the American League Division Series, are hosting the Cleveland Guardians to begin the best-of-seven series.

    The famous couple sat together in a suite down the right-field line, in the second row above postseason bunting and a flag commemorating the Yankees’ 1932 World Series championship.

    Kelce, a Westlake, Ohio, native who went to high school in Cleveland Heights, sported a dark baseball cap with the words Midnight Rodeo on it. Swift also wore a hat on a 50-degree night in the Bronx.

    Kelce, who turned 35 on Oct. 5, grew up rooting for Kenny Lofton and Cleveland in the 1990s. Kelce threw a wild ceremonial first pitch before the Guardians’ season opener last year.

    Swift was also in attendance at last Monday night’s Chiefs game against the New Orleans Saints.

    It was the second major sporting event for Swift and Kelce in New York City over the past five-plus weeks. The couple also sat in a box to watch the men’s final at the U.S. Open tennis tournament on Sept. 8 in Queens.

    Kelce and the Chiefs, the two-time defending Super Bowl champions, had a bye this weekend after opening the season 5-0. Their next game is Sunday at San Francisco, a rematch of last season’s Super Bowl.

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