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PBM math: Big chains are paid $23.55 to fill a blood pressure prescription. Small drugstores get $1.51
CUTHBERT, Ga. — While customers at Adams Family Pharmacy picked up their prescriptions on a hot summer day, some stopped in for coffee, ice cream, homemade cake, or cookies.
It wasn’t a bake sale, but the sweets bring extra revenue as pharmacist and co-owner Nikki Bryant works to achieve profitability at her business on the town square.
...Read more
Computer programs monitor students' every word in the name of safety
Whether it’s a research project on the Civil War or a science experiment on volcano eruptions, students in the Colonial School District near Wilmington, Delaware, can look up just about anything on their school-provided laptops.
But in one instance, an elementary school student searched “how to die.”
In that case, Meghan Feby, an ...Read more
Vietnamese voters in California's Orange County trace clout to a homespun election tradition
LOS ANGELES — When the first generation of Vietnamese refugees began arriving in Orange County decades ago, many of them harbored a longing to participate in the political process.
"Coming from living under communist rule, being civically engaged and getting to vote meant so much to them — that's why they had a strong interest," said Mary ...Read more
Campaign rhetoric around US-Mexico border is extreme. Living there is a lot more nuanced
SAN DIEGO -- For any American who has paid even the slightest attention in the run-up to November’s general election, the rhetoric around the U.S.-Mexico border has been almost impossible to avoid.
Former President Donald Trump has vowed to “seal the border and stop the migrant invasion,” has previously referred to migrants as “animals�...Read more
Ruling revives lawsuit to allow state funding for special education to go to religious schools
A 9th Circuit Court of Appeals panel revived a lawsuit this week filed by Orthodox Jewish families that sued California education officials over the state’s policy of refusing to fund special education programs at religious schools.
Two religious schools and three Orthodox Jewish parents whose children have autism filed the lawsuit against ...Read more
Will we know the next president on election night? It's more likely than you might think
WASHINGTON — With polls showing a dead heat between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris entering Election Day, and local election officials cautioning it might take days to complete ballot counts, a conventional wisdom has taken hold: Americans are not likely to know their next president on Nov. 5.
Yet, the biggest surprise of all on election ...Read more
Minneapolis unveils a new vision for George Floyd Square
MINNEAPOLIS — It has been 4 1/2 years since the south Minneapolis area around the site of George Floyd’s police killing organically evolved into a place of protest and reflection. And it’s remained largely unchanged since 2020.
After two years of community workshops and a nine-month engagement process this year, the city has released a �...Read more
Karen Read owes more than $5 million in legal fees, Vanity Fair says
BOSTON — Karen Read owes more than $5 million in legal fees, a debt that will continue to climb with her anticipated retrial in late January, but the defendant says she’s “not backing down now,” in a new interview.
Vanity Fair highlighted the amount Read owes her defense team in deferred fees in an article released on Tuesday. The ...Read more
Colorado Secretary of State 'improperly' posted partial election equipment passwords to website
DENVER — The Colorado Secretary of State’s office posted a spreadsheet to its website that “improperly included” the partial passwords to some parts of the state’s voting systems, the department announced Tuesday.
The Colorado Republican Party first announced the incident in a news release earlier in the day, including an affidavit ...Read more
Trump campaign announces lawsuit against Pa.'s Bucks County over long lines and early cut-offs for voters casting mail ballots
PHILADELPHIA — Former President Donald Trump’s campaign is planning to file a lawsuit against Bucks County over long lines and early cut-offs at county election offices for voters requesting and casting mail ballots, Republican National Committee Chair Michael Whatley announced Tuesday night.
“I’m proud tonight to tell you that the ...Read more
News briefs
Biden’s AI national security memo calls for heavy lift
WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden’s directive to all U.S. national security agencies to embed artificial intelligence technologies in their systems sets ambitious targets amid a volatile political environment.
That’s the first-blush assessment from technology experts after Biden on ...Read more
Appeals court hears drugmaker's challenge to abortion restrictions
A federal appeals panel expressed skepticism Tuesday during oral arguments in a case challenging West Virginia’s abortion laws, arguing they effectively limited access to a commonly used medication abortion drug.
Medication abortions refer to a two-step regimen in which a patient takes mifepristone, which ends a pregnancy, followed by a ...Read more
Alabama man who threatened Fulton County DA, sheriff sentenced to 21 months behind bars
ATLANTA — A federal judge sentenced an insurance salesman to 21 months in prison on Tuesday for making threatening phone calls to Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis and Sheriff Patrick Labat, saying he wanted to deter others from acting similarly against public officials doing their jobs.
U.S. District Court Judge J.P. Boulee called ...Read more
Activists are challenging the eligibility of hundreds of voters in Philly's suburbs. Experts say the effort is legally baseless
PHILADELPHIA — In what appears to be an organized effort, right-leaning activists have challenged the mail ballot applications of hundreds of voters in suburban Philadelphia in recent days, claiming their targets no longer live at the addresses where they are registered to vote.
But voting rights advocates broadly dismiss the effort as ...Read more
South American crew used signal jammers, blowtorches and disguises on California crime tour, feds say
They arrived in construction vests and surgical masks, armed with signal jammers, sledgehammers and blowtorches. The bank heist crew, made up of mainly Chilean nationals, hit multiple banks across California, according to federal prosecutors, and made off with $2.5 million.
In Fresno, the crew hit a Wells Fargo in May and used tools to get ...Read more
A week to go: A third-party U.S. House candidate gets a boost, early Alaska voting on track to break record and Dunleavy rallies for Trump
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — With a week to go until Election Day, here's a roundup of voting-related news.
A Political Action Committee called Vote Alaska Before Party is boosting a third-party candidate in Alaska's congressional race, following advice from national Democratic operatives who see the strategy as favorable to Democratic incumbent Rep. ...Read more
US Supreme Court quashes Kennedy's bid to get name off Michigan ballot
LANSING, Mich. — The U.S. Supreme Court rejected on Tuesday a final effort from former presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to get his name removed from the ballot in Michigan, as nearly 2 million people have already voted in the state.
For weeks, Kennedy, who dropped his campaign and endorsed Republican Donald Trump on Aug. 23, has ...Read more
Cuba's Communist Party fires another senior official close to leader Díaz-Canel
Cuba’s Communist Party sacked Vice Prime Minister Jorge Luis Perdomo Di-Lella, a close ally of Cuban leader Miguel Díaz-Canel, amid an anti-corruption campaign targeting private businesses.
According to a brief note published in the party’s newspaper Granma, Perdomo Di-Lella, appointed in 2021, was demoted because he made “mistakes in ...Read more
Federal Transit Administration sets minimum safety rules for track workers
Federal transit regulators announced new safety rules for track workers Tuesday, marking the first time the Federal Transit Administration has instituted minimum safety rules for the nation’s transit agencies.
“This is FTA’s first safety regulation establishing minimum safety standards that transit agencies would be required to adopt,” ...Read more
While voters split on most issues, polling finds clear majorities disapprove of Joe Biden
Americans are divided on many issues, as demonstrated by the current state of the 2024 election polling. The presidential race? Locked up tight. Control of Congress? Too close to predict. The most important issue facing our nation? Pollsters get lots of differing responses.
But standing out as the one of the few things that unites a majority of...Read more
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