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Biden revives hopes for this poverty-fighting tax break
By Gabriella Cruz-Martinez On March 18, ...
					Read More 		‘Poverty, By America’ shows how the rest of us benefit by keeping others poor
By Jennifer Ludden On March 17, ...
					Read More 		Both parties agreed to protect anti-poverty programs — time to support ‘Baby Bonds’
By Gary Cunningham On March 16, ...
					Read More 		Wages Are Rising for Low-Skill Workers, Driving Down Poverty and Inequality
By Elizabeth Nolan Brown On March ...
					Read More 		‘Devastating’: One in four EU children at risk of poverty, says NGO
By EuroNews On March 6, 2023 ...
					Read More 		Pandemic-era SNAP benefits end for millions of Americans as costs rise
By Nancy Chen, Kerry Breen On ...
					Read More 		Most Adults With Past-Due Medical Debt Owe Money to Hospitals
More than 15 percent of adults ...
					Read More 		Does Cost-Sharing for Screening Result in Missed Cancer Diagnoses?
By Sara Heath On March 29, ...
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	Conservative group sues to overturn rewrite of WA parental rights law
Jake Goldstein-Street/Washington State Standard October 27, 2025 / 11:25 am School board directors and parents are suing Washington state to block a Democrat-backed law overhauling rights for public school students and their parents. The policy has become a flashpoint in the national debate over gender inclusivity and diversity, equity, and inclusion in schools. A conservative political…
					Read More 		Abortion by mail is on the rise, even in states like Washington where it remains legal
Eilís O’Neill October 24, 2025 / 1:29 pm In Washington and 17 other states where abortion is still legal, telehealth orders for abortion medication have doubled since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022. Anna Fiastro, a researcher at the UW School of Medicine, studied the orders for abortion medication received by Aid Access, an organization…
					Read More 		Education Department layoffs illegally burden students with disabilities, advocates say
Oct 22, 2025 | 4:56 pm ET By Shauneen Miranda WASHINGTON — Proposed mass layoffs at the U.S. Department of Education have raised alarm among disability advocates and Democratic lawmakers over the potential impact on millions of students with disabilities. Advocates warn that the department cannot carry out its legally mandated functions for special education services and…
					Read More 		Immigration agencies accessed WA law enforcement license plate data, report finds
Gustavo Sagrero Álvarez October 22, 2025 / 2:37 pm A new report from the University of Washington’s Center for Human Rights found that federal immigration enforcement has been mining license plate data from local law enforcement in Washington state. This license plate information is gathered through cameras posted along roadways as part of an automated license plate reading…
					Read More 		Trump’s attempt to gut special education office has some conservative parents on edge
The president called the layoffs a part of cuts to “Democrat programs,” but children across the nation would be impacted. Sara Luterman October 17, 2025, 11:07 a.m. CT The Trump administration’s decision to lay off most employees within the U.S. Department of Education’s special education office was described by the president this week as part of cuts to “Democrat programs…
					Read More 		Ed Department Blocked From Laying Off Special Education Staff
by Michelle Diament | October 16, 2025 A federal judge temporarily halted a U.S. Department of Education plan to gut its special education office, but advocates say that the future of services for students with disabilities remains uncertain. Judge Susan Illston of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California blocked the so-called reductions in…
					Read More 		Trump’s visa fee sparks rare bipartisan interest in immigration legislation
Lawmakers have been trying to pass legislative fixes for the H-1B program for years. By Hailey Fuchs 10/14/2025 04:45 AM EDT President Donald Trump’s efforts to impose a massive new fee for employers seeking to hire foreign workers in high-skill fields have reenergized congressional Republicans’ efforts to pass legislation strengthening the controversial visa program. After years…
					Read More 		Memphis task force using TN ‘buffer law,’ preventing up-close recording of police activity
The new law went into effect on July 1 By: Adam Friedman October 14, 2025 Hunter Demster pulled out his phone at a gas station in Memphis to record over half a dozen men in bulletproof vests gathered around the flashing blue lights of a Tennessee Highway Patrol car. Then one of those officers stepped…
					Read More 		Tackles, projectiles and gunfire: Many fear ICE tactics are growing more violent
October 13, 2025 12:57 PM ET Meg Anderson There are countless videos on social media showing similar scenes. One, filmed by a photographer in Hyattsville, Md., shows a man pinned to the ground by two ICE officers. He pleads in Spanish and English for someone to help him. During the incident, one of the officers drops his…
					Read More 		Gov. Abbott threatens to withhold funding over rainbow crosswalks, other ‘political’ road markings
  By Lucio Vasquez | The Texas Newsroom Published October 9, 2025 at 12:31 PM CDT Gov. Greg Abbott has ordered the Texas Department of Transportation to make sure cities and counties remove rainbow crosswalks and other non-standard road markings that, according to the governor, promote “political ideologies.” “Texans expect their taxpayer dollars to be…
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