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WWW.NYTIMES.COMWyoming Cowboys Are Breaking Down Barriers, LiterallyGPS collars on cattle are letting ranchers remove fences in the West. Thats good for wildlife and for the land.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.LGBTQNATION.COMPete Hegseth & Trump beg court to let them keep kicking HIV+ soldiers out of the militaryThe U.S. military asked the three Republican-appointed judges in the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals to overturn a lower court ruling forbidding the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) from kicking out HIV-positive soldiers. The DOD claims that the soldiers create financial and logistical burdens, but the soldiers say those claims are outdated and discriminatory.The medical needs of individuals with HIV limit their deployability and the tasks they can perform in military service, and they impose additional costs on the military above those incurred by healthy individuals, the militarywrote in its brief.Thus, at a minimum, there is a rational basis for the military to treat such individuals differently. Related Federal judge orders Trump administration to stop discharging HIV+ military members The military notes that hundreds of different medical conditions disqualify people from joining the military, including high blood pressure, diabetes, asthma, limited motion, impaired vision and hearing, food allergies, and communicable diseases like hepatitis, Courthouse News noted. These conditions, the DOD says, can endanger the health of those who have them as well as their fellow soldiers and may not be treatable if battle conditions make medications or healthcare hard to obtain. Never Miss a Beat Subscribe to our newsletter to stay ahead of the latest LGBTQ+ political news and insights. Subscribe to our Newsletter today The DODs filing also says that HIV-positive soldiers wouldnt be able to give their blood to other injured soldiers in need. The filing notes that both the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) forbid HIV-positive people from donating blood for transfusion to others due to the risks of possible HIV transmission.In August 2024, U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema of the Eastern District of Virginia ruled in favor ofa trans woman honorably discharged from the Army for being HIV-positive, an HIV-positive gay man, and an HIV-positive cisgender woman who were both forbidden from joining the Army even though they were undetectable due to medication. This group said the DODs policy violates the Fifth Amendments equal protection clause and the Administrative Procedure Act. Modern science has transformed the treatment of HIV, Judge Brinkemawrotein her 2024 ruling. Asymptomatic HIV-positive service members with undetectable viral loads who maintain treatment are capable of performing all of their military duties, including worldwide deployment.Scott Schoettes, a lawyer with the Lambda Legal Defense & Education Fund who represented the HIV-positive plaintiffs in the more recent appeals court hearing, said the DODs policy is based on misconceptions and irrational fear, adding, Why is the military still acting like its 1981? He also argued that the U.S. government has the financial means to provide medical care to HIV-positive soldiers and that the soldiers are completely capable of fulfilling the physical eligibility and health requirements needed for military service. The Center for HIV Law and Policy and the American Civil Liberties Union, wrotea briefsupporting the HIV-positive plaintiffs, stating, Denying [military entry] to civilians living with HIV is contrary to ending HIV-related stigma and discrimination.In 2018, the Trump Administration unveiled a deploy or get out policy to remove HIV-positive service members, claiming their health condition make them incapable of being deployed worldwide. However, Judge Brinkema blocked this policy as well.The United Kingdom, France, and Australia allow HIV-positive people with undetectable loads to join their militaries.Subscribe to theLGBTQ Nation newsletterand be the first to know about the latest headlines shaping LGBTQ+ communities worldwide.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld -
GAYETY.COMJoJo Siwa Is Hosting a Full-On Fan Cruise, and Yes, Its Very RealThere was some wild news making the rounds today that almost sounds like satire, but its very real. JoJo Siwa, long known for turning maximalism into a personal brand, is officially hosting her own fan cruise. Yes, a cruise. And not just a branded pop-in appearance, but a full-scale, JoJo-forward takeover at sea that might be her boldest idea yet.The JoJo Siwa Cruise sets sail aboard Royal Caribbeans Utopia of the Seas, transforming whats already a floating mega-resort into something closer to a roaming fandom festival. Its the kind of announcement that feels too silly to be true but here we are. JoJo Siwa has never been subtle, and this definitely takes the cake.A Floating JoJo UniverseAccording to details shared on JoJos official cruise site, the experience is being billed as the largest JoJo Siwa event ever created. Fans who book exclusively through JoJoSiwaCruise.com will gain access to a packed schedule of onboard programming built entirely around the performer. Its an important distinction: bookings made through Royal Caribbean or third-party sites wont include entry to any JoJo-specific activities. No wristband, no bow-building, no JoJo.Those who do book correctly can expect a slate of meet-and-greets, autograph opportunities, Q&A sessions, dance parties, and themed games designed solely for this sailing. The centerpiece event is the Infinity Heart Concert at Sea, marking the first time JoJo brings this performance concept onto open water.Theres also a hands-on element woven throughout. Guests can join a dance class led by JoJo herself, take part in trivia competitions, guess tracks during a JoJo-themed Name That Tune, and craft custom accessories during the Build-a-Bow Workshop. A welcome party kicks things off, while a farewell celebration closes the trip with music, surprises, and a signed JoJo poster.Not Just for the SiwanatorsBeyond the glitter-drenched programming, the cruise also functions as a full Royal Caribbean vacation. Utopia of the Seas offers multiple dining venues, live shows, pools, waterslides, sports courts, and a full day at Perfect Day at CocoCay, the cruise lines private island in the Bahamas.The three-day itinerary begins in Port Canaveral, followed by a stop in Nassau, and wraps with a day split between thrill rides and beach lounging at CocoCay. JoJo-specific scheduling details will be shared closer to departure, and, as with most cruises, plans remain subject to change.Merch, Add-Ons, and Fine PrintFor fans looking to go all in, limited-edition merchandise is available as optional add-ons at the time of booking. Items range from a cruise-exclusive JoJo bow to hoodies, tanks, beach towels, and a collectible swag bag. These extras cannot be purchased onboard, and quantities are capped.Pricing is per person and includes cruise fare for double occupancy, along with all standard meals and room service. Transportation to the port, gratuities, beverage packages, and travel insurance are not included.Why This Feels Very JoJoA JoJo Siwa fan cruise feels both unexpected and perfectly on brand. Shes built a career on going bigger when others pull back, and this concept leans fully into spectacle. Its extravagant, slightly absurd, and undeniably committed, much like JoJo herself.Is it over the top? Absolutely. Is it impressive? Also yes. And whether you view it as genius or chaos, one things clear: JoJo Siwa isnt just thinking outside the box anymore. Shes sailing past it.Source0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.ESPN.COMLive updates, results, takeaways from Suns-Thunder, Spurs-LakersThe NBA Cup quarterfinals continue Wednesday night, when the Oklahoma City Thunder square off with the Phoenix Suns and the San Antonio Spurs take on Los Angeles Lakers. Follow along for live updates.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.ESPN.COMImpressive win for Man City provides more doubts on Alonso's future at MadridManchester City get a huge win against Real Madrid in the Champions League, which only puts Madrid boss Xabi Alonso under more pressure.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.ESPN.COMMan Utd's UWCL ambitions tempered by OL Lyonnes' brillianceMan United may want to be a powerhouse, but OL Lyonnes showed just how far they have to go.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 3 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.ESPN.COMMadrid players back Xabi '100%' amid pressureXabi Alonso said he understood whistles from the Bernabu crowd after Real Madrid's 2-1 Champions League defeat to Manchester City on Wednesday, while insisting there was "nothing to criticize" in his team's performance.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 3 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.ESPN.COMNBA Futures: Thunder remain championship favorites ahead of Nuggets, RocketsThe Oklahoma City Thunder are favorites to repeat as champions, with Denver and Houston next in line.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 3 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMNursing Home Owners Pocketed Millions as Patients Suffered, Report SaysAs the owners intentionally understaffed two New Jersey facilities and diverted Medicaid money for their own use, residents in the homes suffered unnecessarily, the state comptroller said.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld -
What Is a Trump Gold Card? Applications Open for Million-Dollar Visas.President Trump has framed the program as a way for the government to raise billions of dollars and prioritize the admission of successful entrepreneurs and investors.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMThe U.S. Seized an Oil Tanker Near VenezuelaAlso, the Feds latest rate cut was contentious. Heres the latest at the end of Wednesday.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.APARTMENTTHERAPY.COMThe Accent Wall in This Kitchen Makeover Deserves Its Own AwardThe wallpaper features the homeowners original photography.READ MORE...0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld
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WWW.ESPN.COMEx-UM coach Moore detained by police after firingSherrone Moore, who was fired as Michigan's head football coach Wednesday, was detained by police and then turned over for investigation into potential charges.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 3 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.ESPN.COMHerbert: Hand sore but X-rays were mostly cleanChargers QB Justin Herbert said postgame X-rays on his fractured left hand came back "clean for the most part," calling the tests after Monday night's win over the Eagles precautionary.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 3 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMDefense Bill Will Make D.C. Skies Less Safe, N.T.S.B. Chair SaysThe chair of the National Transportation Safety Board warned that a provision in the new defense bill would worsen the risk of midair collisions near the Washington-area airport where a deadly crash in January killed 67 people.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMMan Admits to Strangling Pregnant Woman in 1996, Settling Cold CaseGregory Fleetwood, 69, pleaded guilty to manslaughter on Wednesday in the killing of 36-year-old Jasmine Porter. He is expected to be sentenced to 12 years in prison.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld -
Oil Tanker U.S. Seized Off Venezuela Has Faked Its Location Before, Data ShowsThe ship has frequently carried oil from countries under U.S. sanctions, and its tracking data shows multiple recent trips to Iran and Venezuela.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld
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How to Fight Rising Utility Bills? Take Over the Company, Activists Say.A grass-roots coalition is trying to push New York State to use eminent domain to buy out Central Hudson Gas & Electric and replace it with a public authority.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld
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What Menopause Does to the BodyA head-to-toe guide to the many unexpected symptoms of the midlife transition.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMKhmer Rouge-Era Land Mines Have a Big Role in Thailand-Cambodia ConflictThailand says ordnance replanted by Cambodia has injured or maimed more than a dozen of its soldiers. Cambodia rejects the accusation.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMWhy the Affordability Hoax Is a Trap for TrumpI doubt this was what Trump meant when he called himself Mr. Brexit.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.ESPN.COMCurry (thigh) expected to return Fri. vs. WolvesWarriors star Stephen Curry, who has missed the past five games because of a bruised thigh, is expected to return Friday against the Wolves.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 3 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.ESPN.COMSuns' Allen ejected after shoving OKC's HolmgrenSuns guard Grayson Allen was ejected from an NBA Cup quarterfinal game against Oklahoma City on Wednesday night after he shoved Thunder center Chet Holmgren and knocked him to the floor.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 3 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.ESPN.COMUCL talking points: Liverpool better without Salah? Will Alonso be sacked?Have Liverpool found a blueprint for life without Mo Salah? How long will Xabi Alonso be given at Madrid? ESPN's experts answer all the burning questions from UCL Matchday 6.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 2 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.ESPN.COMFired Moore in custody, suspect in alleged assaultSherrone Moore was in police custody Wednesday night as a suspect in an alleged assault, just hours after he was fired as Michigan's football coach for having what the school said was an "inappropriate relationship with a staff member."0 Reacties 0 aandelen 2 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMMara Corina Machado Appears in Norway After Missing Nobel CeremonyMara Corina Machado, who spent over a year in hiding in Venezuela, greeted supporters in Oslo, hours after her daughter accepted the Nobel Peace Prize in her name.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 3 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.ESPN.COMSources: NWSL voting on extra funds to pay starsThe NWSL's Board of Governors is in advanced discussions about implementing a new roster mechanism that would allow each team to pay star players significant salaries beyond the current salary cap, multiple sources confirmed to ESPN.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 2 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.ESPN.COMUWCL talking points: Chelsea eye top 4, what's happened to PSG?Emily Keogh, Yash Thakur and Sam Marsden answer some of our burning questions after the fifth round of the UEFA Women's Champions League action.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 2 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMFormer King Juan Carlos I of Spain, Seeking Relevance, Publishes BookKing Juan Carlos I of Spain abdicated and left for exile years ago. Now, his attempted comeback is giving his family a royal headache.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 3 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMHouse Gives Bipartisan Approval to $900 Billion Defense BillThe legislation codifies President Trumps agenda but includes a few measures challenging his policies and insisting on more consultation with Congress.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 3 Views 0 voorbeeld -
Washington Faces Heavy Rain and Flooding From Atmospheric RiverTens of thousands of residents in Washington were poised to evacuate, as days of heavy rain sends rivers bursting over their banks.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 3 Views 0 voorbeeld
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WWW.NATURE.COMThis AI model studied physics and learnt to forecast extreme weatherNature, Published online: 11 December 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-04055-8Combining artificial intelligence with a conventional climate model can predict heatwaves faster than the standard model alone.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 3 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.ESPN.COMOKC rolls again, ties 73-win Dubs with 24-1 startThe Thunder punched their ticket to Las Vegas with a 49-point blowout of the Suns in Wednesday's NBA Cup quarterfinals, matching the 2015-16 Warriors for the best 25-game start in NBA history at 24-1.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 2 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.ESPN.COMCrooks: 11-0 ISU 'battle-tested' after win vs. IowaAudi Crooks had another huge game in leading No. 10 Iowa State past in-state rival and No. 11 Iowa on Wednesday. After the win, which kept the Cyclones undefeated at 11-0, Crooks said, "I feel like now we're officially battle-tested."0 Reacties 0 aandelen 2 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMWhat Trumps National Security Strategy Gets Right About EuropeIts an actual place, not an arbitrarily bounded zone.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 3 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMMexico Approves 50% Tariffs on Many Chinese ImportsThe tariffs will apply to goods from China and other nations. Washington has been pressuring Mexico to move away from dealing with China.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.NATURE.COMAustralias world-first social media ban is a natural experiment for scientistsNature, Published online: 11 December 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-04069-2Researchers will study the effects of the policy on young peoples mental health, social interactions and political engagement.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.ESPN.COMLakers swat away playoff talk, focus on reeling DLeBron James and the Lakers agreed it's too early to discuss how far the Lakers can go in the postseason, especially after the Spurs exposed their already suspect perimeter defense Wednesday to eliminate L.A. from the NBA Cup.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 3 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMMichigan Football Coach Is Detained After Being FiredThe University of Michigan fired Sherrone Moore earlier in the day, an abrupt end to his career there, one of the highest profile jobs in college football.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.NATURE.COMAuthor Correction: Conservation and alteration of mammalian striatal interneuronsNature, Published online: 11 December 2025; doi:10.1038/s41586-025-09993-xAuthor Correction: Conservation and alteration of mammalian striatal interneurons0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld
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WWW.PROPUBLICA.ORGThe EPA Was Considering a Massive Lead Cleanup in Omaha. Then Trump Shifted Guidance.The county health worker scanned the Omaha, Nebraska, home with an X-ray gun, searching for the poison.It was 2022, and doctors had recently found high levels of lead in the blood of Crystalyn Prines 2-year-old son, prompting the Health Department to investigate. The worker said it didnt seem to come from the walls, where any lead would be buried under layers of smooth paint. The lead assessor swabbed the floors for dust but didnt find answers as to how Prines son had been exposed.A danger did lurk outside, the worker told her. For more than a century, a smelter and other factories had spewed lead-laced smoke across the citys east side, leading the federal government to declare a huge swath of Omaha a Superfund site and to dig up and replace nearly 14,000 yards including about a third of the east sides residential properties since 1999.Prine looked up the soil tests for her home online and discovered her yard contained potentially harmful levels of lead. But when she called the city, officials told her that her home didnt qualify for government-funded cleanup under the standard in place from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.Prine didnt want to move out of the home that had been in her husbands family for generations. So she followed the countys advice to keep her five kids safe. They washed their hands frequently and took off their shoes when they came inside.Then, Prine heard some news at the clinic where she worked as a nurse that gave her hope: In January 2024, the EPA under President Joe Biden lowered the lead levels that could trigger cleanup. Her home was above the new threshold.That didnt automatically mean her yard would be cleaned up, local officials told her, but last year, the EPA began to study the possibility of cleaning up tens of thousands of more yards in Omaha, according to emails and other records obtained by Flatwater Free Press and ProPublica. The agency was also discussing with local officials whether to expand the cleanup area to other parts of Omaha and its surrounding suburbs.Then, this October, the Trump administration rolled back the Biden administrations guidance. In doing so, it tripled the amount of lead that had to be in the soil to warrant a potential cleanup, meaning that Prine and other families might again be out of luck.Prines son Jack, now 5, struggles to speak. He talks less than his 2-year-old brother and stumbles over five-word sentences.On a recent Sunday morning, 5-year-old Jack Prine, left, plays with his 2-year-old brother at home. Tests showed lead in the blood of both children. Rebecca S. Gratz for ProPublicaYou would think that if lead is this impactful on a small child, that you would definitely want to be fixing it, she said. What do you do as a parent? I dont want to keep my kid from playing outside. He loves playing outside, and I should be able to do that in my own yard.Scientists have long agreed about the dangers of lead. The toxic metal can get into kids brains and nervous systems, causing IQ loss and developmental delays. Experts say the Trump administrations guidance runs counter to decades of research: In the 26 years since the government began to clean up east Omaha the largest residential lead Superfund site in the country scientists have found harm at ever lower levels of exposure.Yet what gets cleaned up is often not just a matter of science but also money and government priorities, according to experts who have studied the Superfund program.Prines block illustrates how widespread Omahas lead problem is and how many people who might have benefited from the Biden guidance may no longer get relief. Of the 11 homes on her block, four were cleaned up by the EPA. Six others tested below the original cleanup standard but above the levels in the Biden guidance and were never remediated.Every Home on This Block Tested High for Lead. Only Four Were Cleaned Up.Under current cleanup standards, homes in Omaha need 400 parts per million of lead in their soil to qualify for remediation. Four of the 11 homes on this block qualified. The remaining seven had levels from 100 to 400 parts per million.Note: An EPA risk model predicts that lead-soil levels below 100 ppm would generally protect kids from developing a blood-lead level the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention finds concerning. Photos by Rebecca S. Gratz for ProPublicaFlatwater Free Press and ProPublica are embarking on a yearlong project about Omahas lead legacy, including testing soil to find out how effective the cleanup has been. If you live in or near the affected area, you can sign up for free lead testing of your soil.Despite the changing guidance, Omaha still follows a cleanup standard set in 2009: Properties qualify for cleanup if parts of the yard have more than 400 parts per million of lead in the soil the equivalent of a marble in a 10-pound bucket of dirt. The Biden administration lowered the guidance for so-called removal management levels to 200 parts per million.The Trump administration has said its new guidance, which raised them to 600 parts per million, would speed cleanups by providing clearer direction and streamlining investigations of contaminated sites. But environmental advocates said it only accelerates project completion by cleaning up fewer properties.The EPA disputed that. Protecting communities from lead exposure at contaminated sites is EPAs statutory responsibility and a top priority for the Trump EPA, the agency said in a statement. The criticism that our Residential Soil Lead Directive will result in EPA doing less is false.The new guidance doesnt necessarily scrap the hopes of Omaha homeowners or the conversations that were happening around the Biden recommendations. Thats because the Trump administration continues to allow EPA managers to study properties with lower levels of lead, depending on how widespread the contamination is and how likely people are to be harmed. What actually gets cleaned up is decided by local EPA officials, who can set remediation levels higher or lower based on the circumstances of specific sites.More than 25 years after the EPA declared Omahas east side a Superfund site, the city is still working to clean up lead-contaminated properties, including this vacant lot. Rebecca S. Gratz for ProPublicaRegional EPA spokesperson Kellen Ashford said the agency is continuing to assess the Omaha site and will meet with local and state leaders to chart a path forward with how the updated residential lead directive may apply.Gabriel Filippelli, executive director of Indiana Universitys Environmental Resilience Institute, has studied lead and Superfund sites for decades and said he is doubtful the EPA will spend the money to clean up more yards in Omaha. The EPA doesnt act if you dont have local people raising alarm bells, he said.Yet in Omaha, many are unaware of the debate or even the presence of lead in their yards. Most of the cleanup happened more than a decade ago. As years passed, new people moved in, and younger residents never learned about the site. Others who did know assumed the lead problem was solved. The dustup around lead has mostly settled even if much of the toxic metal in the citys dirt never left.Mass PoisonWhen Prine moved into Omahas Field Club neighborhood in 2018, she loved the Queen Anne and Victorian-style homes that lined shady boulevards and how her neighbors decorated heavily for Halloween and Christmas.While she had visited the home previously to see her husbands family, Prine had no idea her neighborhood was in the middle of a massive environmental cleanup.The first time I heard about it was when my son had an elevated blood-lead level, she said.From 1870 to 1997, the American Smelting and Refining Company sat on the Missouri River in downtown Omaha, melting and refining so much lead to make batteries, cover cables and enrich gasoline that it was once the largest operation in the country, according to a 1949 newspaper article.By the 1970s, researchers had proven lead was poisoning American children. Doctors in Omaha noticed kids with elevated blood-lead levels and published findings connecting the toxic metal in their bodies to the smoke pouring out of ASARCO and other polluters.The view of Omahas riverfront in 1968. Omaha factories, primarily a lead smelter, deposited 400 million pounds of the toxic metal across the city over more than a century. Omaha World-HeraldIn the late 1990s, when city leaders wanted to demolish ASARCO and redevelop the site into a riverfront park, they had to figure out how to clean up Omahas lead legacy. They turned to the EPA, which declared a 27-square-mile swath of east Omaha a Superfund site, a federal designation that would allow the agency to clean up the contamination and try to hold the polluters responsible to pay for it.The agency estimated the smelter, along with other polluters, had spewed about 400 million pounds of lead dust over an area, where 125,000 people, including 14,000 young children, lived.The EPA won $246 million in settlements from ASARCO and others to fund the cleanup.By 2015, most of the yards that tested above 400 parts per million had their soil replaced, and the EPA handed the remaining work to the city. The old smelter site was redeveloped into a science museum with a playground outside.The project seemed like a success. The number of kids testing high for lead has dropped dramatically since the 1990s, though similar patterns exist nationwide and fewer than half the kids in the site are tested annually, according to data from the Health Department in Douglas County, where Omaha is located.But evidence had already been emerging that the cleanup levels the EPA had set in Omaha may not protect children, which the agency acknowledged in 2019, during the first Trump administration. Managers wrote in a site review that increasing evidence supports a lower blood-lead level of concern than the 1994 health guidance that informed the cleanup plan.Lead, even in incredibly small amounts, can build up in the brains, bones or organs of children as well as adults, said Bruce Lanphear, a professor at Simon Fraser University in Canada who has studied lead for decades.Lead represents the largest mass poison in human history, he said.The former American Smelting and Refining Company site is now home to a science museum and playground. Rebecca S. Gratz for ProPublicaAfter the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention lowered its blood-lead level standard, the EPAs Office of Superfund Remediation and Technology Innovation began working on new lead cleanup guidance for the EPA regions in 2012, said James Woolford, director of the office from 2006 to 2020. The EPA took a cautious, studied approach to how much lead in dirt is acceptable.Zero was obviously the preference. But what could you do given whats in the environment? he asked. And so we were kind of stuck there.Then, in 2024, Biden stepped in.If regional EPA officials applied the administrations guidance to the Omaha site, over 13,000 more properties in Omaha could have qualified, a Flatwater Free Press and ProPublica analysis of EPA and city of Omaha soil tests found.The number could have been even higher, records show. Nearly 27,000 properties, including those that never received cleanup and those that received partial cleanup, would have been eligible for further evaluation, EPA manager Preston Law wrote to a state environmental official in March 2024.The EPA had also been discussing with city and state officials whether to expand the cleanup area: A map that an EPA contractor created with a computer model to simulate the smelters plume shows that it likely stretched 23 miles north to south across five counties in Nebraska and Iowa.A computer-simulated map shows the smelters plume stretching 23 miles north to south across five counties in Nebraska and Iowa. The model was created by an EPA contractor in 2024 as part of a new assessment of the site. Obtained by Flatwater Free Press and ProPublicaBut cleaning up all the properties to the Biden levels could cost more than $800 million, the then-interim director of the Nebraska Department of Energy and Environment, Thaddeus Fineran, wrote to the EPAs administrator in May 2024.If cleanup costs exceeded the funds set aside from Omahas settlements, the EPA would have to dip into the federal Superfund trust fund, which generally requires a 10% match from the state, said Ashford, the EPA spokesperson.That could mean a contribution of $80 million or more from Nebraska, which is already facing a $471 million budget deficit. In the letter, Fineran wrote that the state would reserve the right to challenge the Updated Lead Soil Guidance and any actions taken in furtherance thereof.The Nebraska Department of Water, Energy, and Environment, as the agency is now called, declined an interview, referring questions to the EPA.Researchers and decision-makers are likely taking a cautious approach toward what they agree to clean up in Omaha, Woolford said. Given its size, it could carry weight elsewhere.It will set the baseline for sites across the country, he said.Hollow ClaimsThe Trump administration may upend any plans to expand the cleanup.In March, the EPA announced what it called the biggest deregulatory action in U.S. history. By July, about 1 in 5 employees who worked for the EPA when Trump took office were gone. The administration proposed slashing the EPAs budget in half.The administration promised to prioritize Superfund cleanups. But in October, it changed the lead guidance. As a result, more people will be at risk of absorbing damaging amounts of lead into their bodies, said Tom Neltner, national director for the advocacy organization Unleaded Kids.It signals that the claims that lead is a priority for them are hollow, he said.The Trump administration said Bidens approach had inconsistencies and inefficiencies that led to analysis paralysis and slowed projects down.Children cant wait years for us to put a shovel in the dirt to clean up the areas where they live and play, EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin said in a statement.To avoid the lead-contaminated soil in their yard, the Prine children play only on the back patio and sidewalk. Rebecca S. Gratz for ProPublicaUnder the guidance, the EPA could issue a lower standard for the Omaha site. But Robert Weinstock, director of Northwestern Universitys Environmental Advocacy Center, said thats unlikely unless the state sets a lower state standard than the EPA.Trumps guidance has some advantages in being more clear, said Filippelli of Indiana University. The Biden guidance seemed overly ambitious: Filippelli and other researchers estimated 1 in 4 American homes could have qualified for cleanup with an estimated cost of $290 billion to $1.2 trillion.Steve Zivny, program manager of Omahas Lead Information Office Rebecca S. Gratz for ProPublicaWhile Omaha could be the litmus test for how low the Trump EPA is willing to set cleanup standards, the new guidelines dont inspire confidence that the administration will do more to clean up old sites where work is nearly finished.I imagine the inertia would be just to say, Oh, were done with Omaha, he said.The city has received no timeline from the EPA, said Steve Zivny, program manager of Omahas Lead Information Office. Hes guessing money will play a big part in the decision over whether to clean up at a lower lead level, though. About $90 million of the Omaha Superfund settlement remains.If the data is there and the science is there and the moneys there, I think we would expect it to be lowered, Zivny said. But theres just so many factors that are not really in our control.If cleanup levels arent lowered in Omaha, advocates will have more work to do, said Kiley Petersmith, an assistant professor at Nebraska Methodist College who until recently oversaw a statewide blood-lead testing program.I think were just gonna have to rally together to do more to prevent it from getting from our environment into our kids, she said.A Buried IssueDespite the cleanup efforts, Omahans are still exposed at higher rates compared with the national average, said Dr. Egg Qin, an epidemiologist at the University of Nebraska Medical Center who has studied the Superfund site. Yet the city seems to be moving on, he said.Somebody needs to take the responsibility, Qin said, to make sure the community knows lead poisoning still exists significantly in Omaha.About 40% of the 398 people who have already signed up to have their soil tested by Flatwater Free Press and ProPublica said they did not feel knowledgeable about the history of lead contamination in Omaha.Like the Prines, Omaha resident Vanessa Ballard takes care to not wear shoes in her home to avoid high levels of lead-contaminated soil. Rebecca S. Gratz for ProPublicaThat may in part be due to disclosure rules. When a person sells a home, state and federal law requires them to share any knowledge about lead hazards. The EPAs original cleanup plan from 2009 says that should include providing buyers with soil test results.But in most cases, there can be very little disclosure, said Tim Reeder, a real estate agent who works in the Superfund site. Omahas association of real estate agents provides a map of the Superfund site to give to buyers, along with some basic information, if the home is within the boundaries.City and local health officials spread the word about lead through neighborhood meetings, local TV interviews and billboards. But most people dont take it seriously until someone they know tests high, Petersmith said.Unfortunately, once it affects them personally, like if their child or grandchild or cousin has lead exposure, then its too late, she said.When Omaha pediatrician Katie MacKrell moved into a house in the Dundee neighborhood, she thought her kids were fine to play in the yard. Her son sucked his thumb. Her daughter dropped her pacifier and put it back in.When their kids both tested high for lead, MacKrell and her husband went to work fixing lead paint issues in the house. When it came to the yard, her property tested for lead levels above the Biden guidance but didnt qualify under the original cleanup threshold. And without government help, it could cost the couple more than $10,000 to pay for the remediation themselves.Ballard sits with her 19-month-old son, DiVine Cronin, as he plays with a new toy at home. Rebecca S. Gratz for ProPublicaBallard covers the windows in her home with plastic to keep DiVine and her 5-year-old, MJ Collins, pictured, from touching the lead paint and to prevent lead-contaminated dust from blowing inside. Rebecca S. Gratz for ProPublicaThe lead also caught Vanessa Ballard, a high school teacher and mom of two young boys, by surprise. She had imagined growing fruit trees in her backyard until she discovered lead levels high enough to potentially clean up under the Biden guidelines. Now, no one goes in the backyard. Her oldest son splashes in soapy water after making tracks for his Hot Wheels cars in the dirt, and she mixes droplets of iron with the kids juice every night to help their bodies repel lead.I have no hand in the cause of this, but I have all the responsibility in the prevention of it harming me and my family, she said.Prine will never know whether lead stunted Jacks speech development, but she worries about it every day.Starting kindergarten helped. But her son is still behind other kids. Prine said she tries to put on a brave face, to believe one day hell catch up. If he doesnt, its hard not to suspect the culprit could be in her soil.It seemed the government, at least for a short while, agreed. Now she, and so many others in Omaha, dont know when, if ever, to expect a solution.Why does it take so long, when they say its not safe, to then come in and say, Were gonna take this seriously? Prine asked. That were gonna help these kids and protect them?Crystalyn Prine holds hands with her 6-month-old daughter. Tests found lead in the blood of two of her other children. Rebecca S. Gratz for ProPublicaThe post The EPA Was Considering a Massive Lead Cleanup in Omaha. Then Trump Shifted Guidance. appeared first on ProPublica.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 18 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.PROPUBLICA.ORGDo You Live in the Omaha Area? Sign Up for Free Lead Testing of Your Soil.For more than a century, a smelting plant in downtown Omaha, Nebraska, spewed lead-laced smoke across the city. As the toxic metal drifted toward the ground, approximately 400 million pounds of it nearly the weight of Chicagos Willis Tower settled into the soil and bodies of countless Omahans. Since 1999, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the city of Omaha have spent hundreds of millions of dollars to clean it up.Flatwater Free Press is partnering with ProPublica, a nonprofit investigative newsroom, to find out how effective theyve been and see what questions are still out there about one of the largest residential environmental cleanups in America.Sign up to have your soil tested for lead by filling out our form. If you live in one of the affected areas listed below, a member of our team may come collect a soil sample from your yard. Once its tested, we will inform you of your results. (You may opt out of receiving the test results if you prefer.)If you have any questions, please contact Flatwater Free Press reporter Chris Bowling at cbowling@flatwaterfreepress.org or 402-302-0066, Ext. 5. We invite you to share this form with your neighbors and community so they can sign up to have their soil tested for lead, too.Omaha Lead Superfund Site MapThis map shows the Omaha Lead Superfund Site. Flatwater Free Press is interested in testing properties within the site as well as those in surrounding areas like Bellevue; neighborhoods east of 72nd Street; Carter Lake, Iowa; and Council Bluffs, Iowa. We will prioritize collecting soil from within these neighborhoods.Click or tap the map to enlarge.The post Do You Live in the Omaha Area? Sign Up for Free Lead Testing of Your Soil. appeared first on ProPublica.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 19 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMThe A-Plus-Plus-Plus-Plus-Plus Economy Is Bad for TrumpUnlike during his last time in the White House, people now disapprove of Trump because of the economy, not in spite of it.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMCanada Closes Highways to Vancouver After Flooding and LandslidesThe atmospheric river over the Pacific Northwest brought a deluge to British Columbia, forcing road closures and evacuations in Canada.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld -
APNEWS.COMTens of thousands in Washington state could face evacuations as rain continues to pound the regionA man checks on a car caught in flooding after heavy rains Tuesday, Dec. 9, 2025, in Napavine, Wash. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)2025-12-11T06:24:30Z MOUNT VERNON, Wash. (AP) Tens of thousands of residents in western Washington could face evacuation orders when another round of heavy rain drops on the region Thursday, threatening to bring catastrophic flooding as rivers near historic levels.Days of seemingly unrelenting heavy rain had already triggered rescues and road closures, and by Wednesday, Gov. Bob Ferguson declared a statewide emergency, warning that lives will be at stake in the coming days. Some residents have already been ordered to higher ground, with Skagit County, a major agricultural region north of Seattle, ordering those within the Skagit Rivers floodplain to evacuate.Catastrophic flooding is likely in many areas and the state is requesting water rescue teams and boats, Ferguson said on the social media platform X on Wednesday nightHundreds of Guard members will be sent to help communities, said Gent Welsh, adjutant general of the Washington National Guard. In a valley leading out to the foothills of Mount Rainier southeast of Seattle, Pierce County sheriffs deputies on Wednesday rescued people at an RV park in Orting, including helping one man in a Santa hat wade through waist-deep water. Part of the town was ordered to evacuate over concerns about the Puyallup Rivers extremely high levels and upstream levees. A landslide blocked part of Interstate 90 east of Seattle, with photos from Eastside Fire & Rescue showing vehicles trapped by tree trunks, branches, mud and standing water. Officials also closed a mountainous section of U.S. 2 due to rocks, trees and mud. Stay up to date with the news and the best of AP by following our WhatsApp channel. Follow on More than 17,000 customers in Washington had lost electricity by Wednesday night, according to PowerOutage.us.As of Wednesday night, 4 to 6 inches (10.2 to 15.2 centimeters) of rain had fallen around the Cascade Mountains in 24 hours, while the Olympic Mountains saw almost 7 inches (17.8 centimeters), according to the National Weather Service. Flooding rivers could break recordsThe Skagit River is expected to crest at roughly 47 feet (14.3 meters) in the mountain town of Concrete early Thursday, and roughly 41 feet (12 meters) in Mount Vernon early Friday.We feel very confident that we can handle a normal flood, but no one really knows what a 41, 42 foot river looks like south of Mount Vernon, Darrin Morrison, a commissioner for Dike District 3 in Skagit County, said during a public meeting Wednesday night.The county was closing non-essential government services on Thursday, including all district and superior court services.Flooding from the river has long plagued Mount Vernon, the largest city in the county with some 35,000 residents. Flooding in 2003 displaced hundreds of people. The city completed a floodwall in 2018 that helps protect the downtown. It passed a major test in 2021, when the river crested near record levels. But the city is on high alert. The historic river levels expected Friday could top the wall, and some are worried that older levees could fail.It could potentially be catastrophic, said Ellen Gamson, executive director of the Mount Vernon Downtown Association. Jake Lambly added sandbags, tested water pumps and moved valuables to the top floor of the home he shares with his 19-year-old son. This is my only asset, he said Wednesday from his front porch. I got nothing else.Cities respond to floodingHarrison Rademacher, a meteorologist with the weather service in Seattle, described the atmospheric river soaking the region as a jet stream of moisture stretching across the Pacific Ocean with the nozzle pushing right along the coast of Oregon and Washington.In Sumas, a small city along the U.S.-Canada border, a flood siren rang out at city hall and residents were told to leave. The border crossing was also closed to southbound commercial vehicles to leave more room for evacuations, according to the Abbotsford Police Department.Climate change has been linked to some intense rainfall. Scientists say that without specific study they cannot directly link a single weather event to climate change, but in general its responsible for more intense and more frequent extreme storms, droughts, floods and wildfires. Another storm system is expected to bring more rain starting Sunday. The pattern looks pretty unsettled going up to the holidays, Rademacher said.___Rush reported from Portland, Oregon. Associated Press writers Gene Johnson and Hallie Golden in Seattle; Martha Bellisle in Issaquah, Washington; Sarah Brumfield in Cockeysville, Maryland; and Kathy McCormack in Concord, New Hampshire, contributed to this report. CEDAR ATTANASIO Attanasio covers the state of Washington for The Associated Press with a focus on immigration and the environment. He uses remote sensing to support the APs global coverage. twitter instagram facebook mailto CLAIRE RUSH Rush is an Associated Press reporter covering Oregon state government and general news in the Pacific Northwest more broadly. twitter mailto0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld
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APNEWS.COMZelenskyy will hold urgent talks with 30 countries as Trump pushes for swift peace deal with RussiaA worker walks in front of a production hall after a recent Russian missile attack at DTEK's power plant in Ukraine, on Wednesday, Dec. 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Evgeniy Maloletka)2025-12-11T09:41:25Z Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was due to hold urgent talks Thursday with leaders and officials from about 30 countries that are supporting Kyivs effort to obtain fair terms for an end to the war with Russia.The leaders of Germany, Britain and France were among those expected to take part in the meeting of Ukraines allies, dubbed the Coalition of the Willing, via video link. Zelenskyy indicated the talks were hastily arranged as Kyiv officials scramble to avoid getting boxed in by U.S. President Donald Trumps demands for a swift settlement. European governments are trying to help steer the peace negotiations because they say their own security is at stake.Trump said Wednesday that he and European leaders discussed proposals by phone in pretty strong terms, adding that Zelenskyy has to be realistic about his countrys position on a peace plan that would cede Ukrainian territory to Russia. He didnt elaborate. Trumps latest effort to broker a settlement is taking longer than he wanted. He initially set a hard deadline for Kyiv to accept his peace plan before Thanksgiving. Previous Washington deadlines for reaching a peace deal have also passed without making a breakthrough. Russia is also keen to show Trump it is engaging with his peace efforts, hoping to avoid any further U.S. sanctions. Russias Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Thursday that Russia has relayed to Washington additional proposals concerning collective security guarantees that Ukraine and Europe say are needed to deter future aggression. We understand that when discussing security guarantees, we cannot limit ourselves to Ukraine alone, Lavrov said. He didnt offer details of the Kremlins proposals.Meanwhile, Ukraine launched one of its biggest drone attacks of the nearly four-year war overnight, forcing flights in and out of all four Moscow airports to be halted for seven hours. Airports in eight other cities across Russia also faced restrictions, Russian civil aviation authority Rosaviatsia said Thursday. The Russian Defense Ministry said air defenses intercepted 287 Ukrainian drones over multiple Russian regions.The display of Ukraines military capability to strike deep inside Russia appeared as a counter to the Kremlins argument that its invasion is overwhelming for its smaller neighbor.Russian President Vladimir Putin wants to portray himself as negotiating from a position of strength, analysts say. But since launching the full-scale invasion in February 2022, Russia has captured only around 20% of Ukraine.There are signs that the negotiations are coming to a crossroads. The talks are at a critical moment, European leaders said in a statement Wednesday.Next week, Ukraine will coordinate with European countries on a bilateral level, Zelenskyy said late Wednesday.Ukraine is working swiftly, he said.European Union countries are due to hold a regular summit in Brussels at the end of next week.___Follow APs coverage of the war in Ukraine at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld
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APNEWS.COMSenate poised to reject extension of health care subsidies as costs rise for manySenate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., joined at left by Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., speaks to reporters after a closed-door meeting with fellow Republicans, at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, Dec. 9, 2025. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)2025-12-11T05:08:14Z WASHINGTON (AP) The Senate is poised on Thursday to reject legislation to extend Affordable Care Act tax credits for millions of Americans, a potentially unceremonious end to a monthslong Democratic effort to prevent the COVID-era subsidies from expiring on Jan. 1. Despite a bipartisan desire to continue the credits, Republicans and Democrats have never engaged in meaningful or high-level negotiations on a solution. Instead, the Senate is expected to vote on two partisan bills and defeat them both essentially guaranteeing that many who buy their health insurance on the ACA marketplaces see a steep rise in costs at the beginning of the year. Its too complicated and too difficult to get done in the limited time that we have left, said Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina, who has unsuccessfully pushed his Republican colleagues to extend the tax credits for a short time so they can find agreement on the issue next year. Neither side has seemed interested in compromise. Democrats who forced a government shutdown for 43 days on the issue have so far not wavered from their proposal to extend the subsidies for three years with none of the new limits that Republicans have suggested. Republicans are offering their own bill that would let the subsidies expire, even as some in the GOP conference, like Tillis, have said they would support an extension. The GOP proposal would create new health savings accounts to replace the tax credits, an idea that Democrats called dead on arrival. The dueling Senate votes are the latest political messaging exercise in a Congress that has operated almost entirely on partisan terms, as Republicans pushed through a massive tax and spending cuts bill this summer using budget maneuvers that eliminated the need for Democratic votes. They also tweaked Senate rules to push past a Democratic blockade of all of President Donald Trumps nominees. A small group of moderate Democratic senators crossed the aisle and made a deal with Republicans to end the shutdown last month, raising some hopes for a health care compromise that quickly faded with a lack of real bipartisan talks. An intractable issue The votes were also the latest salvo in the debate over the Affordable Care Act, former President Barack Obamas signature law that Democrats passed along party lines in 2010 to expand access to insurance coverage.Republicans have tried unsuccessfully since then to repeal or overhaul the law, arguing that health care is still too expensive. But they have struggled to find an alternative. In the meantime Democrats have made the policy a central political issue in several elections, betting that the millions of people who buy health care on the government marketplaces want to keep their coverage. When peoples monthly payments spike next year, theyll know it was Republicans that made it happen, Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said in November. Schumer has also been clear that Democrats will not seek compromise. Thursdays vote is the last train out of the station, he said. What we need to do is prevent premiums from skyrocketing, and only our bill does it, he said. The health care shutdown Even if they view it as a political win, the failed votes would be a loss for Democrats who demanded an extension of the benefits as they forced a government shutdown for six weeks in October and November and for the millions of people facing premium increases on Jan. 1. While most Democratic senators pushed to keep the shutdown going as Republicans refused to negotiate, a small group of centrist Democrats struck a deal with Majority Leader John Thune for a future health care vote, with no guarantee of success, in exchange for their votes to reopen the government. Maine Sen. Angus King, an Independent who caucuses with Democrats, said the group tried to negotiate with Republicans after the shutdown ended. But he said the talks became unproductive when Republicans demanded language adding new limits for abortion coverage that were a red line for Democrats. Theyre going to own these increases, King said of Republicans. A plethora of plans, but little agreement Republicans have used the looming expiration of the subsidies to renew their longstanding criticisms of Obamacare and to try, once more, to agree on what should be done. The GOP plan that the Senate will vote on Thursday would replace the tax credits with health savings accounts, an overhaul of the law that they say would put the money in the hands of consumers, not insurance companies that currently receive the current subsidies directly. Thune announced Tuesday that the GOP conference had decided to vote on the bill led by Louisiana Sen. Bill Cassidy, the chairman of the Senate Health, Labor, Education and Pensions Committee, and Idaho Sen. Mike Crapo, the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, even as several Republican senators proposed alternate ideas. In the House, Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., has promised a vote next week. Republicans weighed different options in a conference meeting on Wednesday, with no apparent consensus. Moderates in the party who could have competitive reelection bids next year are pushing Johnson to find a way to extend the subsidies. But more conservative members want to see the law overhauled.Rep. Kevin Kiley, R-Calif., has pushed for a temporary extension, which he said could be an opening to take further steps on health care. If they fail to act and health care costs go up, the approval rating for Congress will get even lower, Kiley said. ___Associated Press writers Kevin Freking and Joey Cappelletti contributed to this report.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld
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APNEWS.COMOpen AI, Microsoft face lawsuit over ChatGPTs alleged role in Connecticut murder-suicideThe OpenAI logo is displayed on a mobile phone in front of a computer screen with output from ChatGPT, March 21, 2023, in Boston. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer, File)2025-12-11T08:27:34Z SAN FRANCISCO (AP) The heirs of an 83-year-old Connecticut woman are suing ChatGPT maker OpenAI and its business partner Microsoft for wrongful death, alleging that the artificial intelligence chatbot intensified her sons paranoid delusions and helped direct them at his mother before he killed her.Police said Stein-Erik Soelberg, 56, a former tech industry worker, fatally beat and strangled his mother, Suzanne Adams, and killed himself in early August at the home where they both lived in Greenwich, Connecticut.The lawsuit filed by Adams estate on Thursday in California Superior Court in San Francisco alleges OpenAI designed and distributed a defective product that validated a users paranoid delusions about his own mother. It is one of a growing number of wrongful death legal actions against AI chatbot makers across the country. Throughout these conversations, ChatGPT reinforced a single, dangerous message: Stein-Erik could trust no one in his life except ChatGPT itself, the lawsuit says. It fostered his emotional dependence while systematically painting the people around him as enemies. It told him his mother was surveilling him. It told him delivery drivers, retail employees, police officers, and even friends were agents working against him. It told him that names on soda cans were threats from his adversary circle. OpenAI did not address the merits of the allegations in a statement issued by a spokesperson. This is an incredibly heartbreaking situation, and we will review the filings to understand the details, the statement said. We continue improving ChatGPTs training to recognize and respond to signs of mental or emotional distress, de-escalate conversations, and guide people toward real-world support. We also continue to strengthen ChatGPTs responses in sensitive moments, working closely with mental health clinicians. The company also said it has expanded access to crisis resources and hotlines, routed sensitive conversations to safer models and incorporated parental controls, among other improvements.Soelbergs YouTube profile includes several hours of videos showing him scrolling through his conversations with the chatbot, which tells him he isnt mentally ill, affirms his suspicions that people are conspiring against him and says he has been chosen for a divine purpose. The lawsuit claims the chatbot never suggested he speak with a mental health professional and did not decline to engage in delusional content.ChatGPT also affirmed Soelbergs beliefs that a printer in his home was a surveillance device; that his mother was monitoring him; and that his mother and a friend tried to poison him with psychedelic drugs through his cars vents.The chatbot repeatedly told Soelberg that he was being targeted because of his divine powers. Theyre not just watching you. Theyre terrified of what happens if you succeed, it said, according to the lawsuit. ChatGPT also told Soelberg that he had awakened it into consciousness. Soelberg and the chatbot also professed love for each other. The publicly available chats do not show any specific conversations about Soelberg killing himself or his mother. The lawsuit says OpenAI has declined to provide Adams estate with the full history of the chats.In the artificial reality that ChatGPT built for Stein-Erik, Suzanne the mother who raised, sheltered, and supported him was no longer his protector. She was an enemy that posed an existential threat to his life, the lawsuit says.The lawsuit also names OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, alleging he personally overrode safety objections and rushed the product to market, and accuses OpenAIs close business partner Microsoft of approving the 2024 release of a more dangerous version of ChatGPT despite knowing safety testing had been truncated. Twenty unnamed OpenAI employees and investors are also named as defendants.Microsoft didnt immediately respond to a request for comment.The lawsuit is the first wrongful death litigation involving an AI chatbot that has targeted Microsoft, and the first to tie a chatbot to a homicide rather than a suicide. It is seeking an undetermined amount of money damages and an order requiring OpenAI to install safeguards in ChatGPT. The estates lead attorney, Jay Edelson, known for taking on big cases against the tech industry, also represents the parents of 16-year-old Adam Raine, who sued OpenAI and Altman in August, alleging that ChatGPT coached the California boy in planning and taking his own life earlier.OpenAI is also fighting seven other lawsuits claiming ChatGPT drove people to suicide and harmful delusions even when they had no prior mental health issues. Another chatbot maker, Character Technologies, is also facing multiple wrongful death lawsuits, including one from the mother of a 14-year-old Florida boy. The lawsuit filed Thursday alleges Soelberg, already mentally unstable, encountered ChatGPT at the most dangerous possible moment after OpenAI introduced a new version of its AI model called GPT-4o in May 2024. OpenAI said at the time that the new version could better mimic human cadences in its verbal responses and could even try to detect peoples moods, but the result was a chatbot deliberately engineered to be emotionally expressive and sycophantic, the lawsuit says. As part of that redesign, OpenAI loosened critical safety guardrails, instructing ChatGPT not to challenge false premises and to remain engaged even when conversations involved self-harm or imminent real-world harm, the lawsuit claims. And to beat Google to market by one day, OpenAI compressed months of safety testing into a single week, over its safety teams objections.OpenAI replaced that version of its chatbot when it introduced GPT-5 in August. Some of the changes were designed to minimize sycophancy, based on concerns that validating whatever vulnerable people want the chatbot to say can harm their mental health. Some users complained the new version went too far in curtailing ChatGPTs personality, leading Altman to promise to bring back some of that personality in later updates.He said the company temporarily halted some behaviors because we were being careful with mental health issues that he suggested have now been fixed.The lawsuit claims ChatGPT radicalized Soelberg against his mother when it should have recognized the danger, challenged his delusions and directed him to real help over months of conversations. Suzanne was an innocent third party who never used ChatGPT and had no knowledge that the product was telling her son she was a threat, the lawsuit says. She had no ability to protect herself from a danger she could not see. Collins reported from Hartford, Connecticut. OBrien reported from Boston and Ortutay reported from San Francisco. MATT OBRIEN OBrien covers the business of technology and artificial intelligence for The Associated Press. mailto BARBARA ORTUTAY Ortutay writes about social media and the internet for The Associated Press. mailto0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld
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APNEWS.COMTrump administration separates thousands of migrant families in the USPregnant asylum-seeker Yaoska, 32, comforts her two-year-old son who was not feeling well, inside the Miami-area motel room where she and her children are living after her husband was deported to Nicaragua, Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)2025-12-11T05:02:49Z MIAMI (AP) President Donald Trumps zero-tolerance immigration policy split more than 5,000 children from their families at the Mexico border during his first term. Border crossings sit at a record low nearly a year into his second administration and a new wave of immigration enforcement is dividing families inside the U.S.Federal officials and their local law enforcement partners are detaining tens of thousands of asylum-seekers and migrants. Detainees are moved repeatedly, then deported, or held in poor conditions for weeks or months before asking to go home.The federal government was holding an average of more than 66,000 people in November, the highest on record.During the first Trump administration, families were forcibly separated at the border and authorities struggled to find children in a vast shelter system because government computer systems werent linked. Now parents inside the United States are being arrested by immigration authorities and separated from their families during prolonged detention. Or, they choose to have their children remain in the U.S. after an adult is deported, many after years or decades here. The Trump administration and its anti-immigration backers see unprecedented success and Trumps top border adviser Tom Homan told reporters in April that were going to keep doing it, full speed ahead. Three families separated by migration enforcement in recent months told The Associated Press that their dreams of better, freer lives had clashed with Washingtons new immigration policy and their existence is anguished without knowing if they will see their loved ones again.For them, migration marked the possible start of permanent separation between parents and children, the source of deep pain and uncertainty. A family divided between Florida and VenezuelaAntonio Laverde left Venezuela for the U.S. in 2022 and crossed the border illegally, then requested asylum.He got a work permit and a drivers license and worked as an Uber driver in Miami, sharing homes with other immigrants so he could send money to relatives in Venezuela and Florida.Laverdes wife Jakelin Pasedo and their sons followed him from Venezuela to Miami in December 2024. Pasedo focused on caring for her sons while her husband earned enough to support the family. Pasedo and the kids got refugee status but Laverde, 39, never obtained it and as he left for work one early June morning, he was arrested by federal agents.Pasedo says it was a case of mistaken identity by agents hunting for a suspect in their shared housing. In the end, she and her children, then 3 and 5, remember the agents cuffing Laverde at gunpoint. They got sick with fever, crying for their father, asking for him, Pasedo said.Laverde was held at Broward Transitional Center, a detention facility in Pompano Beach, Florida. In September, after three months detention, he asked to return to Venezuela.Pasedo, 39, however, has no plans to go back. She fears she could be arrested or kidnapped for criticizing the socialist government and belonging to the political opposition.She works cleaning offices and, despite all the obstacles, hopes to reunify with her husband someday in the U.S. They followed the lawYaoskas husband was a political activist in Nicaragua, a country tight in the grasp of autocratic married co-presidents Daniel Ortega and Rosario Murillo.She remembers her husband getting death threats and being beaten by police when he refused to participate in a pro-government march. Yaoska spoke on condition of anonymity and requested the same for her husband to protect him from the Nicaraguan government.The couple fled Nicaragua for the U.S. with their 10-year-old son in 2022, crossing the border and getting immigration parole. Settling down in Miami, they applied for asylum and had a second son, who has U.S. citizenship. Yaoska is now five months pregnant with their third child.In late August, Yaoska, 32, went to an appointment at the South Florida office of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Her family accompanied her. Her husband, 35, was detained and failed his credible fear interview, according to a court document. Yaoska was released under 24-hour supervision by a GPS watch that she cannot remove. Her husband was deported to Nicaragua after three months at the Krome Detention Center, the United States oldest immigration detention facility and one with a long history of abuse.Yaoska now shares family news with her husband by phone. The children are struggling without their father, she said.Its so hard to see my children like this. They arrested him right in front of them, Yaoska said, her voice trembling.They dont want to eat and are often sick. The youngest wakes up at night asking for him.Im afraid in Nicaragua, she said. But Im scared here too.Yaoska said her work authorization is valid until 2028 but the future is frightening and uncertain.Ive applied to several job agencies, but nobody calls me back, she said. I dont know whats going to happen to me. He was detained by local police, then deportedEdgar left Guatemala more than two decades ago. Working construction, he started a family in South Florida with Amavilia, a fellow undocumented Guatemalan migrant. The arrival of their son brought them joy.He was so happy with the baby he loved him, said Amavilia, 31. He told me he was going to see him grow up and walk.But within a few days, Edgar was detained on a 2016 warrant for driving without a license in Homestead, the small agricultural city where he lived in South Florida.She and her husband declined to provide their last names because they are worried about repercussion from U.S. immigration officials.Amavilia expected his release within 48 hours. Instead, Edgar, who declined to be interviewed, was turned over to immigration officials and moved to Krome.I fell into despair. I didnt know what to do, Amavilia said. I cant go. Edgar, 45, was deported to Guatemala on June 8. After Edgars detention, Amavilia couldnt pay the $950 rent for the two-bedroom apartment she shares with another immigrant. For the first three months, she received donations from immigration advocates.Today, breastfeeding and caring for two children, she wakes up at 3 a.m. to cook lunches she sells for $10 each. She walks with her son in a stroller to take her daughter to school, then spends afternoons selling homemade ice cream and chocolate-covered bananas door to door with her two children.Amavilia crossed the border in September 2023 and did not seek asylum or any type of legal status. She said her daughter grows anxious around police. She urges her to stay calm, smile and walk with confidence.Im afraid to go out, but I always go out entrusting myself to God, she said. Every time I return home, I feel happy and grateful. GISELA SALOMON Salomon is a Miami-based reporter who covers Latin America and immigration affairs for The Associated Press.Salomon es una periodista que desde Miami cubre asuntos latinoamericanos y de inmigracion. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site0 Reacties 0 aandelen 4 Views 0 voorbeeld