Friday, June 12th, 2026 | |
| Our QC Cime Watch: Tragedy in Muscatine with murder-suicide incident: Episode 69Watch crime reporters Linda Cook and Sharon Wren talk about crime and courts in our area with the latest episode of the Our Quad Cities Crime Watch Podcast. In this episode Linda and Sharon discuss: updates on: To view, click the video above or watch on-the-go on Spotify. The QC Crime Watch Podcast | Pod |
| Kennedy Center board seeks pause of ruling ordering removal of Trump's namePresident Trump's board at the Kennedy Center is mounting a last-minute effort to keep his name on the facade of the performing arts facility before a court-ordered deadline to remove it by Friday. |
| Ousted South Korean President Yoon given prison term for drone flights over PyongyangSouth Korea's ousted President Yoon Suk Yeol and his former defense minister were sentenced to 30 years in prison Friday in a case alleging Yoon ordered drone flights over Pyongyang in 2024 to heighten tensions with North Korea and justify declaring martial law at home. |
| Coffeemakers sold at Walmart, Amazon recalled after user burnsYou should stop using the product immediately. |
Thursday, June 11th, 2026 | |
| Olivia Rodrigo, pop princess of vengeful angst, tries her hand at love songsDitching the punchy pop punk of Guts to play with a soft '80s pop and New Wave-indebted sound, her new LP is about the life cycle of her first "real, big girl" relationship. The result is bittersweet. |
| President Trump is taking aim at forest and wildfire research just as the West is poised to burnPresident Trump is trying to downsize the U.S Forest Service and eliminate wildfire and smoke research as the American West is facing a potentially epic summer fire season. |
| Illinois State Police ask for help in 2018 death investigationThe Illinois State Police is asking the community for information regarding the 2018 death of Tyler Smith. |
| Pay It Forward: Galesburg instructor fights obstacles, motivates those with Parkinson'sJohn Peterson was presented with the WQAD and Ascentra Credit Union Pay It Forward award for his unwavering sacrifice and care for others in the community. |
| KENT WORLDWIDE dedicates World’s Best Cat Litter manufacturing plantKENT WORLDWIDE dedicated its new manufacturing plant in Muscatine to produce World’s Best Cat Litter. Muscatine city leaders joined KENT employees to unveil the 174,000-square-foot facility equipped with state-of-the-art manufacturing equipment to help with the growing demand for corn-based litter products. The project has been in the works for about five years. The plant will [...] |
| QC adoptive parents arrested: Biological mom speaks outA Clinton woman wonders what she can do after a couple who adopted her biological children are accused of abusing one of them. The adoptive parents from Davenport are charged with child endangerment, among other charges. Police say one of the children wound up severely malnourished after being locked alone in a room. Now Katarina [...] |
| The Heart of the Story: Not an everyday fish taleOur Quad Cities News is partnering with award-winning journalist Gary Metivier for The Heart of the Story. Each week, Gary showcases inspiring stories of everyday people doing cool stuff, enjoying their hobbies and living life to the fullest. Stories that feature the best of the human condition. He grew up fishing in creeks in Illinois, [...] |
| Supreme Court prohibits Alabama from using nitrogen gas for executionBecause of the ruling, Jeffrey Lee's execution will be delayed. He still faces the death penalty. |
| Davenport mayor delivers first State of the City addressDavenport Mayor Jason Gordon delivered his first State of the City address on Thursday. |
| Jo Daviess County revises disaster response plansEmergency managers in Jo Daviess County are revising disaster response plans. Managers are updating the county's hazard mitigation plan this year. The Jo Daviess County Emergency Management Agency oversees the county's readiness to respond to natural and manmade threats. The Jo Daviess County Hazard Mitigation Planning Committee is made up of representatives from the county's [...] |
| East Moline works to reduce lead in drinking waterEast Moline hosted an open house to go over the city's plan to keep lead from getting into drinking water. The City of East Moline is working to replace all lead and galvanized pipes while upgrading the water treatment process to reduce the risk of lead in drinking water. Residents could notice a change in [...] |
| One dead following officer-involved shooting in Ottumwa, investigation ongoingA man dies in officer-involved shooting in Ottumwa Iowa |
| Another chance for some severe weatherAfter some severe weather from yesterday, with heavy rain and thunderstorms we are watching another one for today. We already saw a lot of the heavy rain and storms from earlier this morning with severe thunderstorms and tornadoes and are looking to see more tonight. |
| LIVE BLOG: Severe weather continues into ThursdayThe First Alert Weather team is tracking unseasonable warmth, humidity and strong to severe thunderstorms Thursday. |
| Illinois launches statewide digital library resource programIllinois is launching a statewide digital library resource program. Illinois residents now have free access to trusted online resources, including e-books, journals, magazines, newspapers and research databases. Secretary of State and State Librarian Alexi Giannoulias says the program helps ensure residents have access to high-quality information regardless of where they live or financial resources. For [...] |
| Historic Walcott building gets new lifeA historic downtown building in Walcott is getting a new lease on life as a new café and event venue prepares to open its doors. |
| Crime Stoppers: Man wanted by Iowa Department of Corrections for parole violationRobert Carson, 41, is wanted by the Iowa Department of Corrections High Risk Unit for a parole violation for domestic abuse. |
| Crime Stoppers: Reward upped to $7K for arrest in fatal motorcycle crashCrime Stoppers says a $7,000 reward is being offered for the arrest of 41-year-old Alex Uthoff. |
| 1,000+ businesses commit to new Iowa anti-human trafficking coalitionA new group announced efforts to combat human trafficking in Iowa. |
| Davenport mayor delivers State of the City addressThe City of Davenport hosted its State of the City address at the Putnam Museum and Science Center. Gordon focused on a $9 million grant to help with flood mitigation efforts. He also talked about other grants improving the Eastern Ave. bridge and fire equipment. Additionally, Gordon’s speech focused on major projects and initiatives and [...] |
| Celebrate Celtic culture in the QCA at Celtic Night OutThe Scottish American Society of the Quad Cities is bring the sights and sounds of Celtic culture to the QCA! Mary Gloeckner-Bouljon and Henry Marquard joined Our Quad Cities News to talk about Celtic Night Out. For more information, click here. |
| John Deere bringing back 20 workers to Davenport WorksJohn Deere will be hiring 20 workers back to Davenport Works |
| ISBE zeroes in on improving math education in IllinoisThe Illinois State Board of Education formally adopted a plan Wednesday aimed at improving math instruction and boosting student math scores throughout the state. |
| Scott County road to close for utility workIt's an Our Quad Cities News traffic alert. According to a release from the Scott County Road Department, 230th Ave. may be closed to through traffic to allow utility crews to repair power lines from recent storms. The work is expected to run through June 19, depending on weather, field conditions and repair progress. Drivers [...] |
| Abandoned East Moline building collapsesAn abandoned building in the 1400 block of 9th Street in East Moline collapsed into the street. 14th Avenue is closed due to debris in the road. Crews are planning to bring in equipment to demolish what remains of the building on Friday --weather permitting. |
| John Deere hiring 30 workers in Dubuque, bringing back 20 employees in DavenportThe additions are expected to begin this month and are intended to support increased production needs at both facilities. |
| Nearsightedness: treatments to keep it from getting worseMyopia, or nearsightedness, is becoming much more common in children, and it can raise the risk of long-term eye problems as they grow. |
| Trump now says a peace deal will be announced 'soon,' cancels further strikesPresident Trump had previously been amping up his rhetoric against Iran. |
| Trump names Jay Clayton to serve as director of national intelligenceThe announcement follows Trump's decision to nominate an ally and political attack dog to serve as acting director. The pick sparked a backlash that doomed efforts to renew a key intelligence tool. |
| Bad Momz of Comedy playing Rhythm City CasinoBad Momz of Comedy is bringing mom/female comics to delight fans at Rhythm City Casino’s Rhythm Room on Friday, July 10. Tickets are on sale now; click here to purchase. The show is for ages 21+. Bad Momz of Comedy was founded by Chicago-based comic Orly K.G. in 2022 and features a small showcase of talent from its [...] |
| | Loneliness affects 1 in 6 people globally. New research reveals the childhood experiences that help adults thriveLoneliness affects 1 in 6 people globally. New research reveals the childhood experiences that help adults thriveKids have more ways to connect than ever. They can text, scroll, game, comment and chat all before they even leave the house. Yet for many young people, all that connection does not necessarily translate into feeling known, useful or part of something larger than themselves.The World Health Organization (WHO) calls loneliness a global health threat, and the numbers explain why. With 1 in 6 people affected worldwide, loneliness hits the hardest among teens and young adults ages 13 to 29, where between 17% and 21% report feeling lonely. Young people experiencing chronic loneliness are twice as likely to develop depression and 22% more likely to earn lower grades, according to the WHO. If screens are now built into childhood, what actually helps kids build confidence, purpose and belonging?New research from Harris Poll, commissioned by Scouting America, examined more than 3,000 U.S. adults, including those who earned the Eagle Scout rank, the program's highest designation, and compared them with adults who never participated. Conducted for three months beginning October 10, 2025, the survey of 3,178 adults asked for feedback on well-being, civic engagement, leadership and character development. The findings reveal meaningful differences in how those groups describe their relationships, outlook, civic involvement, connection and sense of purpose.The clearest difference may be loneliness. Just 11% of those who earned the Eagle Scout rank say they frequently feel lonely, compared with 23% of non-participants. Those who earned the rank are also more likely to report a strong sense of purpose, with 78% saying they feel one compared with 60% of those who were never in the program, and 95% describe themselves as happy versus 82% of adults who never took part.The data does not reduce childhood connection to a single activity. It shows how structured, real-world experiences can give young people repeated chances to be active participants rather than passive ones, working alongside others, taking responsibility, solving problems, serving a community and building confidence over time.That matters because belonging is not built in theory, it is built through repetition and lived experience. A young person shows up, learns a skill, helps with a project, gets trusted with responsibility and begins to see that their presence matters. From the outside these moments may look small, but over time, they can shape how a person sees themselves and how they relate to others.Those patterns extend into adult life. The research does not establish that the program causes these outcomes, but the consistency across measures is striking. Some 74% of those who earned the Eagle Scout rank say they have held leadership positions at work, compared with 31% of non-participants. Another 57% say they have spoken up for a cause they believe in or on behalf of others, versus 33% of those who never took part.The story inside the numbers is not that every child needs the same path. It is that young people need places where they are asked to show up, contribute and be counted on. They need adults who mentor them, peers to collaborate with them and real responsibilities that help them practice who they are becoming.In a childhood increasingly shaped by digital life, those experiences can be easy to underestimate. But the research shows the long-term value of giving kids something to do, somewhere to belong and a reason to see themselves as capable. For families worried about loneliness, confidence or lack of meaningful connection alongside their digital lives, the takeaway is practical: Look for structured experiences that allow young people to participate, contribute and lead. Connection is not just something kids feel. It is something they get to practice.MethodologyThe research was conducted online in the United States by The Harris Poll on behalf of Scouting America among 3,178 U.S. adults ages 18-plus, including 1,549 who were never members of Scouting America (“non-Scouts”) and members of Scouting America (“Scouts”), including 1,067 who achieved the rank of Eagle Scout (“Eagle Scouts”) and 562 who did not achieve the rank of Eagle Scout (“non-Eagle Scouts”). The survey was conducted initially from Oct. 10 through Nov. 17, 2025, and relaunched from Dec. 16, 2025, through Jan. 9, 2026.This story was produced by Scouting America and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| New local history mural to be done at Davenport’s MLK ParkFriends of MLK has chosen nationally recognized artist and muralist Cbabi Bayoc to create a new public next to the Martin Luther King Jr. Interpretive Center, 501 N. Brady St., in downtown Davenport. |
| | The premium room arbitrage: Why early booking beats last-minute discounting in peak seasonThe premium room arbitrage: Why early booking beats last-minute discounting in peak seasonLuxury hospitality occupies a distinct operational tier from budget accommodations in terms of the audience it courts and the experiences it offers. However, the fundamental strategies available to operators in both spaces are effectively identical. Either the aim is to book out the peak season well in advance to maximize profitability and guarantee high occupancy rates, or the expectation is that last-minute discounting will draw the largest crowds.For a long time, reactive, late-stage distribution was historically used as a dominant yield-maximization strategy, with high-end hotels and resorts focusing more on leisure travelers, prioritizing flexibility and a high perceived value proposition. Now, there’s evidence that prioritizing advanced bookings is a far better way to ensure peak season profitability.While traditional hospitality frameworks often relied on late-stage distribution to fill remaining inventory, modern revenue optimization has shifted toward early pace capture. Data from market intelligence platform Lighthouse indicates a widespread compression of the booking pipeline, with travel searches conducted within a 28-day window of arrival increasing by 9% globally.In an environment with shrinking lead times, luxury operators who rely on reactive, last-minute discounting run the risk of cannibalizing their brand equity. According to 2026 benchmark metrics from STR, baseline growth in the luxury and upper-upscale segments is projected to be driven primarily by preserving average daily rate (ADR) rather than maximizing absolute occupancy numbers.Properties that secure high-value advance bookings well ahead of the peak season protect their margins against short-term market volatility and avoid the downward pricing spirals that erode profitability. TravNow Last-Minute Deals Incentivize a Race to the BottomThe operational volatility associated with late-stage promotional discounting has been documented for over a decade, with a foundational Management Science paper picking apart this practice as early as 2010. The report’s authors point out that there’s a cycle of price degradation initiated by hospitality businesses that routinely offer steep discounts to customers who wait until the last moment to book.Strategic consumers accurately anticipate the discount and delay their purchases, leading to an equilibrium that reduces the hotel's overall revenue.Despite this trend being covered over a decade ago, it hasn’t gone away; rather, it has morphed into something different, as discussed in a 2026 piece published in the International Journal of Hospitality Management.Here, the authors point out that peak season disruption now stems from the habit of canceling an existing booking to rebook at a lower price offered closer to the arrival date. Only 0.94% of bookings in the study’s sample fall into this category, but the revenue leakage associated with it topped 1.24 million euros ($1.44 million) annually for a single hotel group.As observed by TravNow, a curated travel directory, the revenue loss and additional administrative overheads of last-minute discounting can be mitigated by early-booking strategies that reward customers who reserve premium rooms well in advance. That way, existing guests who’ve already booked a room won’t be tempted to cancel and rebook down the line. It also suggests that having firm yet fair cancellation policies is more appropriate for premium hospitality businesses seeking to enhance operational profitability.Early-Booking Guests are More ValuableThe second facet of the peak season profitability question regarding the importance of catalyzing early booking over last-minute discounting is the value of the customers that the former strategy attracts. As discussed in a Journal of Hospitality and Tourism Management paper, last-minute bookers exhibit significantly lower emotional involvement with the property and intense price sensitivity. Conversely, early bookers value product desirability over price.This psychological disconnect is particularly relevant to luxury hospitality businesses, since a seemingly simple strategic dichotomy can fundamentally reshape the composition of a property's core clientele. The primary advantage of prioritizing advanced commitments over spontaneous reservations is that luxury operators secure resilient, brand-aligned guest segments while still charging a premium to those who book closer to peak season, when demand is naturally higher.Peak Season Profits Follow Well-Established TrendsThe final point to consider when deciding whether an early-booking-oriented strategy of premium room pricing and promotion has the edge over last-minute deals comes from CoStar and STR’s benchmarking, with analysts indicating that travelers tend to book much earlier when the trip is scheduled for peak season. The obvious reason is that they know demand will spike around major holidays and events, so being proactive prevents them from missing out on the accommodation they actually want.Relying on a late-stage surge to rescue peak-season occupancy is a statistical trap. CoStar and STR benchmarking data continuously confirm that true revenue dominance, measured by the revenue generation index (RGI), favors yield over raw volume.Compressing the baseline ADR to spark an artificial occupancy spike in the final 14 days invites lower-tier, high-maintenance guests and causes massive revenue leakage as early premium bookers exploit flexible cancellation windows to cancel and rebook at the reduced promotional tariff.In short, the data demonstrates that profits are locked in more than 120 days out, not 72 hours before check-in. This statement applies acutely to premium hospitality brands, although it holds equal relevance to chains lower down the price spectrum that want to make the leap to the next level.This story was produced by TravNow and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| Fallen tree damages 2 East Moline homes during Wednesday stormsHigh winds during Wednesday's storms knocked a tree onto power lines in East Moline, tearing down electrical pipes and causing minor damage to homes. |
| Davenport and Scott County Humane Society reach new temporary animal control agreementDavenport reached a transitional agreement with the Scott County Humane Society as the city prepares to take its animal control services in-house. |
| Ebola testing has improved in DRC, but still isn't nearly enoughThe DRC has improved testing capacity for Ebola, with two facilities operating in or near the epicenter. But this still may not be enough to keep up with a rapidly expanding disease. |
| | The long-distance family: How American relatives stay close when they live thousands of miles apartThe long-distance family: How American relatives stay close when they live thousands of miles apartThere’s a version of family life that many people idealize, one that instantly evokes a feeling of nostalgia. Sunday dinners within driving distance, cousins who see each other more than just on holidays, and parents who drop by on a whim without needing to get on a plane.For a growing number of Americans, though, these close-knit connections just aren’t possible. The forces that allow families to move far apart from one another nowadays include remote work flexibility, cost-of-living increases, and educational or career opportunities.Geographic distance between relatives has become a defining feature of modern family life. Distance doesn’t have to equal disconnection, though. Spokeo has analyzed key data from leading sources including the Pew Research Center, the U.S. Census Bureau, the National Library of Medicine, and the American Psychological Association to show how families are navigating this new world.The scale of the shift: How family geography has changed since 1980The world is a remarkably different place than even just 40 years ago. Data from 2022 from the Pew Research Center found that 55% of U.S. adults say they live within an hour’s drive of at least some extended family members, but one in five say they don’t live near any at all. That 20% figure represents tens of millions of Americans having to navigate familial relationships across state lines or even greater distances.There’s a reason for this divide, and it’s happening more than ever before. From 2020 to 2024, an average of 12% of Americans moved annually, according to Census data, with many of those moves driven by the rise of remote work, paired with the search for housing affordability. Family connections don’t always follow people as they relocate.A 2020 study published in the Journal of Marriage and Family found that, while 74.8% of adults with at least one living parent or adult child had their nearest relative within 30 miles, only about one third had all parents and adult children that close. Having some family nearby and having your whole family nearby are two very different experiences.Education and income naturally play a significant role in these patterns. Over three in five adults with a high school education or less live near extended family, while just two in five adults with a postgraduate degree do. The higher a person’s income, the more likely they are to live farther from family. Upward mobility may create career opportunities, but it comes with a geographic cost.The rituals that actually workResearch on long-distance family maintenance consistently points to one key finding above all else: It’s how deliberately and regularly you connect that matters, not how close you are physically. Routines, such as family rituals with predictable timing and shared expectations, are what distinguishes close families from those that lack tight bonds.A 2021 review from the journal, New Media & Society, which examined social media, communication rituals, and long-distance family maintenance, found that families who use messaging and video calls aren’t just doing it to catch up. Rather, they are practicing something known as “assuring behavior.”Assuring behavior is small, repeated acts of checking in that signal an ongoing commitment to the relationship. Video calls in particular play a key role in preserving shared identity among extended family members across distances, as they can enable a sense of belonging and emotional connection through seeing other people. Here are four key tips that can bolster this effect.1. Host standing weekly video callsThe families that retain the strongest connections tend to be those who also schedule video calls in advance and hold them consistently. That means the same day and same time. The ritual aspect, as opposed to spontaneous coordination, matters as much as the content of the call.2. Set up group chats with agreed normsMost families already have a group chat. The difference between one that sustains connection and one that is full of ghosts, however, is a mutual understanding of what it’s for. Chats that function as a running thread including photos from daily life, quick updates, reaction to news, and more help keep families present. Chats only used for logistics or milestones can sometimes feel hollow.3. Create annual in-person reunionsGathering in person allows families to naturally share stories, create lasting traditions, and make new memories that can translate across generations. They also help family members remember to maintain connection throughout the year by turning events at the reunion into future talking points. Even just a single annual gathering for the holidays or a long weekend can help anchor a family’s sense of shared identity.4. Share experiences across distanceFinally, some families have found creative ways to create parallel experiences despite being in different places around the world. Whether that’s a shared TV show, photo challenges, or cooking the same recipe, having a shared object of attention can create common ground for chats.The tools families are relying onThe digital infrastructure of the world today can help families across distances stay together. Based on Pew Research Center data from 2025, nine out of 10 Americans use the Internet on a daily basis. The challenge, however, is to choose a combination of those tools that works for everyone, including members of different generations with differing levels of digital fluency.Video calling via FaceTime, Zoom, or Google Meet remain the backbone of long-distance family connection. The platform matters less than the consistency of calls, and a weekly cadence tend to perform the best.Group messaging apps like WhatsApp, iMessage, and Signal also serve slightly different use cases. Families that are multigenerational and spread internationally tend to find WhatsApp better, given its cross-platform accessibility. On the other hand, iMessage works seamlessly for families where everyone has an Apple device. Families who value privacy may prefer Signal.In addition to communication through video and messaging, shared platforms for other content are prominent today. Dedicated family photo sharing is a popular choice through apps like Tinybeans, Google Photos, or Amazon Photos. These apps provide a low-friction way to quickly share visual updates without needing to jump on a formal call. Similarly, shared calendars, such as on Google Calendar, can make coordination for calls, visits, reunions, or just staying up to date on people’s lives far easier.Finally, platforms designed around family storytelling can be a great way to make new memories. StoryWorth is a popular option that prompts family members with weekly questions and compiles all of the answers into a book. It serves a unique but important function. Narratives can be shared across generations, which is the kind of context and history that families who live close together get already.The correlation between long-distance family bonds and healthThe science on close relationships and health outcomes is surprisingly consistent. A meta-analysis of 148 studies on mortality risk published in PLOS Medicine found that strong social relationships increase the likelihood of survival by 50%. Conversely, social disconnection is at least as harmful to health as well-established risk factors including obesity and physical inactivity. Family relationships are among the most powerful of those social bonds.The Harvard Study of Adult Development, which has tracked participants and their families across generations for over 80 years, came to a similar conclusion. In a 2017 summary noted in The Harvard Gazette, aggregated data showed that relationship satisfaction at age 50 is a better predictor of physical health at age 80 than cholesterol levels. The number of close relationships mattered less than their overall quality.For long-distance families in particular, this research points to a few key predictors of bond strength over time:1. Frequency and consistency of contact: Regular, patterned contact, as opposed to occasional long conversations, can predict long-term relationship quality across distance.2. Intentionality of connection: Families that actively create shared experiences together, rather than waiting for connection to happen naturally, report stronger relationships. Distance removes the contact that physical proximity provides, so it needs to be replaced with something.3. Relational trust and reciprocity: Both parties must be equally invested in maintaining a relationship for it to have the strongest predictors of long-term quality.4. In-person anchoring: Even just a single annual gathering can significantly strengthen the bonds that digital connection maintains during the course of a year, further improving the long-term outlook of those relationships.In a busy world, maintaining long-distance familial relationships can feel challenging, but all of the necessary tools are at your fingertips.How to re-establish contact with a family member you've lost touch withPlenty of people have lost contact with loved ones over the years. Whatever the reason for the drift, it’s never too late to reconnect after a long gap. However, it will require a different approach than maintaining a relationship that’s gone a little quiet recently.Reconnecting is a process that will require time and effort, so it’s best to start small. Even an initial text or quick phone call can re-build a foundation. These modest and early gestures, on a continuous basis, show a greater interest in getting back in contact more than a single grand reconciliation that has no follow up.The Conflict Expert blog, run by an accredited Centre for Effective Dispute Resolution mediator, offers up some helpful tips for this first interaction:Offer to meet in-person at a neutral location like a nearby park, cafe, or mallFocus conversations on the present and avoid revisiting past tensions or fallouts too quicklySteer clear of toxic forms of communication such as playing the blame game for disconnectionBe positive about the meetup or reconnection and thank the other person for their timeFor estrangements that are rooted in deeper conflict such as abuse, resentment, or value divergence, a family therapist can provide structure for conversations. The American Psychological Association also offers support via a topic page designed for families, which can be an excellent starting point for understanding and rekindling familial relationships.Connection is a practice, not a placeThe families that stay close across thousands of miles aren’t doing something magical, but rather they’ve accepted that geographic distance requires deliberate effort to maintain relationships. Proximity provides connection naturally, and long-distance relationships require intentionality.Successful families have built structures across distances. Whether it’s a Sunday call that never moves, a group chat that always stays active, or an annual week together that everyone blocks off on the calendar, it’s about a focused effort to foster your familial relationships.More than half of Americans may be living within an hour of at least some extended family, but that still leaves millions trying to navigate family life across time zones and state lines. However, the digital tools of today have never been better and the research is unusually clear on what works. All that remains is finding the will to treat connection as something you build, rather than just let happen.This story was produced by Spokeo and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| Socioeconomic factors are becoming 'biologically embedded' in children's brainsA study of more than 2,300 9- to 10-year-olds found that socioeconomic factors explained most differences in the preteens' brain development. |
| Davenport Mayor Jason Gordon gives first State of the City speechIn his first State of the City address, Mayor Jason Gordon highlighted infrastructure projects, housing and other recent and upcoming changes for the city. |
| White House response to hantavirus and Ebola contrasts with COVID criticismsThe administration imposed mandatory quarantine orders on two passengers from the cruise ship hit by hantavirus and is blocking Americans who catch Ebola from returning home for treatment. |
| | Heat stroke vs. heat exhaustion: Emergency response guideHeat stroke vs. heat exhaustion: Emergency response guideUnderstanding the difference between heat stroke and heat exhaustion can mean the difference between life and death during extreme heat emergencies. When temperatures soar and humidity climbs, your body's cooling system faces intense pressure. While both conditions stem from heat exposure, they represent vastly different medical situations requiring distinct responses, Doctronic reports.Key TakeawaysHeat stroke involves body temperature above 103°F with altered mental state, while heat exhaustion presents with profuse sweating and weakness.Heat stroke is a life-threatening emergency requiring immediate 911 call, heat exhaustion can often be managed with cooling and hydration.Core body temperature and mental status are the two critical distinguishing factors between these heat illnesses.Recognition within the first 30 minutes improves outcomes for both conditions.What Are Heat Stroke and Heat ExhaustionHeat exhaustion serves as your body's warning system when cooling mechanisms become overwhelmed, but continue to function. Think of it as your internal thermostat working overtime, producing excessive sweat while struggling to maintain normal temperature. Your body recognizes the threat and attempts to compensate by increasing blood flow to the skin and rapid breathing.Heat stroke occurs when your body's temperature regulation completely fails, posing an immediate risk of organ damage. Unlike heat exhaustion, this represents total system breakdown. Your internal thermostat stops working entirely, leaving core temperature to climb dangerously high. Brain function becomes impaired, and without intervention, permanent damage or death can occur within hours.Both conditions result from prolonged exposure to high temperatures combined with dehydration, but heat stroke represents the most severe form of hyperthermia, requiring immediate medical intervention. The progression from normal temperature regulation to heat stroke can happen rapidly, especially in vulnerable populations. Understanding this spectrum helps you respond appropriately when someone shows signs of heat-related illness.When Heat Emergencies Strike: High-Risk ScenariosOutdoor labor during heat waves creates prime conditions for both heat exhaustion and heat stroke, especially in construction, landscaping, and agricultural work. Workers wearing protective equipment face additional risk as gear prevents natural cooling through evaporation. Even experienced outdoor professionals can develop heat illness when temperature and humidity levels exceed their body's adaptation capacity.Athletic activities in temperatures above 85°F with high humidity levels challenge even the fittest individuals. Football practices, marathon running, and intense training sessions push athletes beyond normal heat tolerance. The competitive drive to continue despite early warning signs often leads to dangerous escalation from heat exhaustion to heat stroke.Elderly individuals in homes without adequate air conditioning during extended heat periods are also particularly vulnerable. Age-related changes in circulation and medication effects can impair natural cooling responses. As with conditions affecting circulation that can cause non-cardiac chest pain, heat stress impacts multiple body systems simultaneously.Children left in vehicles present extreme emergency situations where temperatures can rise 20°F in just 10 minutes. Their smaller body mass and immature temperature regulation make them susceptible to rapid heat stroke development. Even brief exposures can prove fatal.How to Recognize Heat Stroke vs. Heat Exhaustion SymptomsHeat exhaustion presents with heavy sweating, weakness, nausea, and crucially, normal mental function. Victims remain alert and responsive, though they feel terrible. Their skin appears pale and feels cool despite the sweating. They may complain of headache, dizziness, or muscle cramps. Body temperature typically stays below 103-104°F.Heat stroke is characterized by a body temperature above 103°F, hot, dry skin, and confusion or unconsciousness. This altered mental state represents the key danger sign. Victims may seem disoriented, agitated, or completely unresponsive. Their skin feels hot to the touch and appears flushed red. Sweating often stops entirely as the body's cooling system fails.Pulse characteristics differ between conditions. Heat exhaustion produces a rapid and weak pulse as the cardiovascular system struggles with dehydration and heat stress. Heat stroke creates a rapid and strong pulse as the heart works frantically to circulate blood through overheated organs.Skin temperature assessment reveals cool and moist skin in exhaustion versus hot and dry skin in stroke. This simple touch test provides immediate diagnostic information. Just as recognizing early signs of serious conditions like stroke can save lives, identifying these skin changes guides proper treatment.Emergency Response Protocols for Heat IllnessHeat exhaustion response focuses on moving the person to a cool environment, removing excess clothing, and implementing gradual cooling measures. Start by relocating them to shade or air conditioning. Remove unnecessary clothing layers and apply cool, wet cloths to skin. Encourage small sips of cool water if they remain conscious and alert.Heat stroke requires immediate 911 activation followed by aggressive cooling with ice packs applied to the neck, armpits, and groin areas. These locations contain major blood vessels that rapidly distribute cooled blood throughout the body. Time becomes critical as brain damage can occur within 15-30 minutes of core temperature exceeding 106°F.Hydration protocols differ between conditions. Heat exhaustion patients who remain conscious can take small, frequent sips of cool water or sports drinks. However, never give oral fluids to suspected heat stroke victims due to altered consciousness and aspiration risk. Professional medical teams will provide intravenous fluids.Continuous monitoring of consciousness level determines if the condition escalates from exhaustion to stroke. Any change in mental status warrants immediate emergency services activation.Critical Treatment Differences Doctronic Heat exhaustion allows for gradual cooling over 30-60 minutes while maintaining patient comfort. You have time to implement cooling strategies and observe the response. Most people recover fully with proper treatment and can return to normal activities within 24-48 hours.Heat stroke demands aggressive cooling within 30 minutes to prevent permanent organ damage. Every minute of delay increases the risk of brain injury, kidney failure, or death. Even if the person seems to improve with cooling, emergency transport remains necessary for complete evaluation and monitoring.Heat exhaustion patients can often recover at home with proper cooling and hydration, assuming they respond appropriately to initial treatment. Monitor them closely for the next 24 hours and ensure they avoid heat exposure until fully recovered.Heat stroke always requires emergency medical transport regardless of apparent improvement. Hospital teams need to assess organ function, provide advanced cooling techniques, and monitor for complications. Heat stroke can cause unpredictable effects requiring professional management.Frequently Asked QuestionsCan heat exhaustion turn into heat stroke if untreated?Yes, heat exhaustion can progress to heat stroke within minutes to hours without proper treatment. The transition occurs when the body's cooling system completely fails. This is why immediate cooling and hydration are crucial for heat exhaustion, and why any change in mental status requires emergency activation.How accurate are infrared thermometers for diagnosing heat stroke vs. heat exhaustion?Infrared thermometers can provide useful temperature readings, but shouldn't be the sole diagnostic tool. Core body temperature measurement requires rectal thermometry for accuracy. Focus on overall symptoms, including mental status, skin condition, and sweating patterns rather than relying exclusively on forehead temperature readings.Should I give water to someone with suspected heat stroke?Never give oral fluids to suspected heat stroke victims due to altered mental status and choking risk. Their confusion or unconsciousness makes swallowing dangerous. Focus on external cooling measures while waiting for emergency services. Professional medical teams will provide appropriate intravenous hydration.When is it safe to return to activities after heat exhaustion?Wait at least 24-48 hours after complete symptom resolution before returning to heat exposure or strenuous activity. Your body needs time to restore fluid balance and repair heat-stressed systems. Gradually increase activity levels over several days, ensuring adequate hydration and monitoring for symptom recurrence.Can AI symptom checkers help distinguish between heat stroke and heat exhaustion?AI tools can provide valuable guidance for symptom assessment, but heat emergencies require immediate action and medical attention based on key signs like mental status and body temperature. Use AI consultations as supplementary information while prioritizing direct emergency response for suspected heat stroke cases.The Bottom LineRecognizing heat stroke vs. heat exhaustion saves lives through appropriate emergency response. Heat exhaustion responds well to cooling and hydration measures, allowing many people to recover at home with proper care. Heat stroke represents a true medical emergency requiring immediate 911 activation and aggressive cooling to prevent permanent organ damage or death. The key distinguishing factors remain core body temperature above 103°F and altered mental status in heat stroke, versus normal consciousness with profuse sweating in heat exhaustion. Understanding these differences empowers you to take correct action when minutes matter.This story was produced by Doctronic and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| | DIY or don't? How to know when to call a professional for home renovationsDIY or don't? How to know when to call a professional for home renovationsWith real estate and financing costs remaining sky high, it makes sense that many homeowners are choosing to stay put and invest dollars into upgrades and remodeling projects. In fact, 91% of homeowners surveyed by Houzz said they expected to renovate in 2026, and improvement spending is anticipated to reach $518 billion by the end of this year, per the Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies.Plenty of these folks will try to tackle the work themselves. Angi's recent poll of 750 homeowners found that 71% attempted DIY projects to save money, with nearly 3 in 4 respondents expressing confidence in their ability to manage a home improvement endeavor. However, 70% of homeowners admitted to experiencing problems with their DIY projects, with 1 in 4 needing to hire a professional to fix or complete them.Before attempting to fly solo on a home improvement job, TheZebra.com recommends carefully considering the hidden financial and insurance risks that can lead to serious DIY regret.The new renovation economyTruth is, continued high mortgage rates and rising home sale prices have discouraged Americans from selling their properties, leaving them trapped in aging housing stock. This has helped fuel a renovation boom in recent years.“When you are sitting on a 3% mortgage, and the house you’d move into requires a 7% rate, that monthly payment difference can be pretty jarring,” explains Taylor Kovar, a certified financial professional. “So instead of moving, a lot of people are staying put and putting money into what they already have. And after a few years of not going anywhere, people start noticing everything they wish was different about their home: the kitchen feels dated, the bathroom needs work, and the backyard is just sitting there. That pent-up frustration often eventually turns into a project list.”HGTV, online videos, and the desire to avoid contractor fees have further fueled the recent remodeling wave.“Even if reality TV shows aren’t as popular as they were a decade ago, that desire to renovate has simply migrated online. Now, anyone can open YouTube and find a tutorial on tiling or drywalling—meaning the barrier to entry for DIY is lower than ever,” says Beth Swanson, insurance analyst with The Zebra.The hidden costs (and insurance risks) of DIY projectsBut cutting corners on experienced labor often ends up costing you more in the long run, the experts agree.“Many who choose to do renovations themselves often neglect to consider the hidden costs. You can correctly calculate the expense of construction materials, but forget the costs of tools, construction waste removal, and fees for construction permits,” cautions Ben Mizes, president of Clever Real Estate.There’s also the risk of a DIY project taking much longer to complete than it would if you had hired a pro, as well as the high cost of paying an expert to fix any DIY mistakes you end up making.Additionally, many ambitious homeowners get blindsided by unexpected insurance headaches. Case in point: Imagine you knock down a wall to expand your bedroom but find hidden rot from a leaky toilet upstairs.“Standard insurance policies cover sudden and accidental events like a burst pipe, but they don’t cover damage that happens over time. In this scenario, your insurance company will view the damage from that leaky toilet as maintenance-related and deny your insurance claim,” adds Swanson. “Or, let’s say you spend $30,000 to build a new outdoor kitchen but forget to tell your insurance agent or adjust your coverage. If a tree falls on that outdoor kitchen, you risk paying out of pocket.”Luxury outdoor features, like a new outdoor kitchen, also increase your liability risk. If you host a backyard barbecue but a guest is seriously injured by your new grill and files a lawsuit, your existing coverage may not fully protect you; without expanding your liability coverage limit ahead of time or purchasing an umbrella insurance policy, you could be financially vulnerable.“Other insurance problems can happen when, for example, you complete unpermitted electrical, plumbing, structural, or roof work that causes a loss and the insurer questions whether the work was legal or professionally done,” notes Dennis Shirshikov, a professor of finance and economics at City University of New York/Queens College.When to call a pro: Projects that require a licensed contractorIt’s best to hire an experienced contractor when the project impacts safety, home structure, utilities, major home systems, roofing, or permits, and could result in major property damage or code violations.“Electrical panel work, major plumbing, load-bearing wall changes, gas lines, roof replacement, foundation work, and HVAC installation should be handled by licensed contractors,” advises Shirshikov.Where it tends to get riskier is when a homeowner overestimates their skill level on a more complex job.“Homeowners insurance generally assumes that work is being done to code. If a DIY repair causes damage and the insurer learns that the work wasn’t done properly or with necessary permits, that coverage may not respond the way you expect,” Kovar says.Swanson’s rule of thumb? If a renovation mistake has the potential to burn down or flood your house, don’t DIY it.“Saving a few hundred bucks on a DIY electrical job, for example, isn’t worth risking your family’s safety or voiding your insurance policy,” she continues.Taylor points out that licensed contractors typically create a valuable paper record that insurance companies and future buyers can reference.“But when that record doesn’t exist, it can create real complications when you go to sell or when you file an insurance claim,” he says.The rise of “hybrid renovations” and safe DIYsOften, the best strategy is to pursue a “hybrid renovation.” This means tackling low-risk cosmetic projects yourself — like painting, swapping out cabinet hardware, adding landscaping elements, and completing minor cosmetic updates — while entrusting the structural, mechanical, or permitted work to a professional. In addition to saving on labor, you’ll also get the satisfaction of doing part of the work yourself.“A hybrid renovation is the sweet spot of modern remodeling, and it can be slightly more fun as a homeowner. Contractors charge a premium for basic labor because their time is valuable. But you can do the messy prep work, like ripping up old carpeting, before your professional installs new hardwood floors. Leave the heavy lifting, structural changes, and precision-framing to the pros,” suggests Swanson. “This strategy can save serious dollars and still allow you to feel a genuine sense of ownership over your space.”With the hybrid approach, you still get the documentation and workmanship quality where it really matters, but you’ll trim labor costs on the lower-stakes stuff.“In many cases, that split can potentially save somewhere in the range of 20% to 40% compared to hiring everything out,” says Kovar. TheZebra.com The prerenovation checklist: Questions to ask before you demoPrior to picking up that sledgehammer or power tool, ask yourself some key questions, which can help determine whether or not you should enlist an expert for the project:Do I need permits for this project?Will my carrier cover damage caused during renovation?Do I have the right tools and experience, or am I relying entirely on a video tutorial?What will the repair cost be if my DIY project goes wrong?Do I need homeowners association approval first (if you live in an HOA community)?Could this renovation impact resale value if done incorrectly?Can hiring a professional save me time and money in the long run?“If you end up hiring a contractor, ask them questions, too,” Swanson recommends. “Inquire if they are licensed, bonded, and insured, and ask to see the proof of that. If they drop a beam through your ceiling, their general liability coverage should protect you, not your homeowners policy.”Lastly, always contact your insurance agent before construction starts.“If a remodeling project is massive enough that you have to move out for a few months, your standard policy might actually pause coverage because the home is unoccupied. You may need a specialized builder’s risk policy or a construction endorsement to protect your home while it is in renovation,” says Swanson.The bottom lineUpgrading instead of moving makes a lot of financial sense right now. But safeguarding your real estate investment is paramount. So if you plan to make home improvements soon, stick to cosmetic DIYs that safely increase your home’s value, and hire professionals for the more complex jobs. This protects your home, your family’s safety, and your insurance policy.This story was produced by TheZebra.com and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| Off Point Pub of Davenport set to close later this monthBrenda Milam, owner of Off Point Pub in Davenport, announced she is closing her bar on June 29. Events are still scheduled until the final farewell. |
| Deere hiring, calling back staff at Davenport, Dubuque WorksIncreased demand is leading John Deere Dubuque Works and Davenport Works to call back employees and hire others. Deere announced that it plans to hire 30 employees at its Dubuque Works facility after employee callbacks were completed. Davenport Works is calling back 20 employees to the facility. The hiring in Dubuque and callbacks in Davenport [...] |
| | 7 hidden tax inefficiencies for households earning $200K and above7 hidden tax inefficiencies for households earning $200K and aboveYou've heard it before: "With more money comes more problems." This can be particularly true when it comes to people who find themselves earning higher wages. As the amount of money you earn increases, so will the complexity of your taxes.However, when your household income surpasses the $200,000 benchmark, you'll deal with more than just moving into a higher tax bracket. You'll start to experience what is referred to as "tax drag," which is essentially the steady decline of your wealth due to inefficient planning techniques. These aren’t exactly mistakes, and these are certainly not tax code violations. They're just common ways people miss opportunities to save on their taxes.Fortunately, most of these issues can be fixed. Below, Domain Money shares seven of the most common inefficiencies experienced by higher-wage-earning households, along with some possible solutions:#1: RSUs being treated as a stock, instead of a cash bonusOne of the most misunderstood types of assets held within a portfolio is restricted stock units. This isn’t due to a lack of care from the person holding those restricted stock units (RSUs), but because RSUs bring an added layer of complexity for retail investors. If you believe in your company and have seen positive performance each year, it’s easy to see why you would want to hold those RSUs — you may also have the idea of saving on taxes if you can hit long-term capital gains.However, holding onto your RSUs creates two major problems. First, you create a significant weighting of your portfolio toward a single stock, a stock that in many cases generates your income. That means not only your portfolio but also potentially your income or even your career are all pinned to the same company.Second, if you do nothing proactively with your vested RSUs, you will miss the opportunity to take those gains and place them into a more tax-efficient and diversified investment vehicle. To create a more intentional plan for your RSUs, treat vested RSU shares as a cash bonus.Many high-wage earners successfully utilize automated strategies to sell off vested shares and invest the proceeds into low-cost index funds or direct indexing as part of their overall investment strategy, instead of letting the value build up as equity over time.#2: Abandoning Roth IRA contributionsIn 2026, you need an income of $153,000 or below for single filers or $242,000 for married filers to make the full, tax-advantaged contributions to a Roth IRA.Often, once people’s incomes exceed those limits, they give up entirely on continuing to contribute to Roth accounts, but there’s still another way to keep funding a Roth account.The backdoor Roth strategy enables high earners to make nondeductible contributions to a traditional IRA and subsequently convert that money into a Roth IRA. Regardless of income level, this redirects your money into a tax-free growth environment. Roth accounts carry no required minimum distributions (RMDs), experience tax-free growth, and can be passed down to beneficiaries free of taxation, making them extremely impactful account types.In addition to the basic backdoor Roth strategy, for those with access to a 401(k) plan that offers high contribution limits, megabackdoor Roth strategies can increase after-tax contributions up to an additional $47,500, depending upon the plan rules.#3: Overlooking asset locationWhile many investors spend considerable amounts of time deciding what to own in terms of investments, far fewer focus on where to own it.Strategically allocating investments across taxable accounts and tax-deferred accounts can significantly minimize annual tax drag without having to change any holdings.High-dividend-producing stocks and bonds generate ordinary income and therefore should be placed in tax-advantaged accounts. Tax-efficient investments such as low-turnover exchange-traded funds (ETFs) or municipal bonds produce little in terms of ordinary income and therefore are some of the easiest equities to keep in taxable accounts.A properly managed asset allocation program isn’t an exciting part of your life; however, if improperly managed, you might wind up with an unnecessary tax liability each April.#4: Accepting SALT caps without utilizing alternative strategiesSince 2017, State and Local Tax (SALT) caps have created frustration for households residing in high-tax states, including New York, California, and New Jersey. While recent legislation has raised the SALT cap from $10,000 to $40,400, this relief doesn’t reach those on the higher end of high earnings, as the SALT cap phases out once your modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) reaches $505,000.For example, for those earning over $606,000, the SALT deduction will revert to the original $10,000 limit.There are several legitimate strategies available to avoid limitations on SALT caps — particularly for business owners and/or individuals who receive income from pass-through entities. Business owners and individuals receiving pass-through entity income may elect to utilize pass-through entity (PTE) elections, whereby they can deduct state taxes at the business level, thus avoiding SALT caps on their personal returns.These PTE election options will continue to grow in relevance throughout 2026, particularly for higher earners who will soon exceed newly established upper limits.#5: Not using ‘bunching’ to create alternating years of itemized deductionsBy deliberately creating "bunched" years where you concentrate multiple years' worth of charitable contributions into a single tax year using a donor-advised fund (DAF), high-income households can shift from standard deduction territory into itemized deduction territory on alternate years — without changing their overall charitable donations.#6: Underutilizing HSAs triple-tax benefitsAmong the most underused tax-efficient investment options available to many Americans are health savings accounts (HSAs). HSAs are a tax-efficient vehicle that provides a triple tax benefit — contributions are deductible; the funds grow tax-free; and withdrawals made for qualified medical expenses are fully exempt from taxation. You do need to have a high-deductible health insurance plan that offers an HSA, but if you do, the rewards are impressive. No other account type provides all three tax-advantaged benefits. Furthermore, after age 65, HSA funds can be withdrawn for any reason (albeit subject to taxation as if coming from a traditional IRA).An overlooked feature of HSAs relates to reimbursement of medical expenses. Unlike virtually all other forms of tax-preferred investing accounts — such as 401(k) and IRAs — there is no deadline for reimbursing yourself for qualified medical expenses incurred prior to opening an HSA account. Thus, if you incur medical expenses during the year but do not need the cash immediately, you can pay for those expenses out-of-pocket now and store relevant receipts until you want to withdraw your HSA funds and use those receipts for reimbursement. Any withdrawal utilized for reimbursement will be tax free regardless of how much the HSA account has grown in value since the date of withdrawal.Although HSAs are limited to individuals with high deductible coverage — and thus require absorbing greater out-of-pocket healthcare costs in order to take advantage of this strategy for extended periods of time — those willing to assume the risk can benefit greatly from this strategy. For 2026, the maximum contribution limits are $4,400 for individuals and $8,750 for families; plus an additional $1,000 catch-up contribution permitted for individuals aged 55 or older.#7: Putting too much emphasis on retirement accountsThis final issue may be somewhat less obvious but is becoming increasingly important for high-wage earners seeking financial independence or establishing an optional work period prior to traditional retirement ages.Although many people diligently maximize every tax-advantaged account available to them (i.e., 401(k) and IRAs) — without regard to liquidity considerations — they are ultimately limiting their ability to achieve their desired levels of flexibility in their 40s or 50s. Traditional retirement accounts are designed for distributions beginning at age 59 1/2 or later. Prior to reaching that milestone, withdrawing from these accounts usually results in both penalties and taxes that negate much of the benefits associated with these accounts, although there are strategies to start withdrawals earlier.Rather than relying solely on restrictive retirement accounts, implementing an appropriately balanced plan may involve strategically investing excess amounts in taxable brokerage accounts in conjunction with traditional retirement vehicles. In essence, developing a liquid bridge that supports optionality prior to age 60 while minimizing penalty risks.Although primarily a cash flow alignment issue versus a tax issue, there are real tax ramifications associated with failing to balance your investment portfolios accordingly.The Bottom LineTax laws evolve. Household incomes fluctuate. Company-owned equity vests according to its own timing.Ultimately, executing all the pieces of an advantaged tax strategy simultaneously while managing a demanding job, along with everything else that life entails, is no easy task.Households that ultimately succeed in maximizing their earnings while minimizing their taxes are not always those simply earning the most. They are those whose financial planning objectives have been clearly defined — and who have someone helping them implement those objectives.This story was produced by Domain Money and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| Niabi Zoo hosting Pride NightNiabi Zoo is celebrating inclusion, community and conservation during Pride Night on Thursday, June 18, as part of its Zoo Nights summer event series. Pride Night will be co-hosted with Quad Cities Pride Alliance and allows guests to explore the zoo during extended evening hours while enjoying family-friendly entertainment, community activities and animal experiences. Visitors [...] |
| | Renter nation: America’s fastest-growing rental marketsRenter nation: America’s fastest-growing rental marketsAmerica’s renter story isn’t simply about 20-somethings delaying homeownership. Renter-occupied units are exploding in unlikely places, and they’re increasingly occupied by a group you might not expect.MoveBuddha compared renter-occupied units across the U.S. from 2019 to 2024 to identify where new units were added fastest.Here’s the key: Occupied rental units aren’t springing up in cities that are adding population with the same percentage growth. They’re exploding in locales that stand a chance of getting swept up into high regional growth and in spots that already have economies built on transient jobs. Further, these newly occupied rental units aren’t just getting leased by new grads or visiting professors; they’re often occupied by retirees.Key TakeawaysThe top renter-growth markets tell three stories: military churn in #1 Lexington Park, Maryland (+33.46%), tourism demand in #2 Atlantic City, New Jersey (+31.32%), and new construction in Austin, Texas (+29.15%).The South dominates the fastest-growing renter markets with 28 of the top 50. Texas (10) and Florida (4) have the most markets in the top 50.19 of the top 50 cities are college towns. Even when enrollment hasn’t increased at the same rate, these brainy locations saw renter occupancy rise, on average, 18%.The rise of retired renters: Renters aged 65 and older increased 14.12% from 2019 to 2024 across the 889 areas analyzed, the fastest growth of any age group. moveBuddha The Same Rental Boom, 3 Different StoriesThe top three markets show why renter growth is not the same as a building boom: Lexington Park points to military churn, Atlantic City to tourism demand, and Austin to new supply.To see why, first dispel the idea that “new rental units” is about cities that are building new housing.Adding rental units is about the raw count of rental units occupied in a city. That includes new homes getting built and quickly occupied by renters. But it could also be that previously owner-occupied homes are converted to rentals, or that many more people move in, creating more renter households. And if an unsold property made you an “accidental” landlord? That’s also an “added rental unit” in this dataset.Understanding that is key to seeing that in #1 Lexington Park (+31%), the rental surge doesn’t mean a building boom is underway.Home to Naval Air Station Patuxent, Lexington is used to high residential turnover, hosting 20,000 military and civilian employees working in dozens of organizations. The shift in occupied rental units now suggests that even more people are moving in, in response to rising demand in the defense-oriented market.In #2 Atlantic City, the renter-occupied units spike of 31% likely speaks to another reality: increased demand for rental housing around the tourism, convention, and casino economy. A building boom is unlikely, given the city approved just seven new housing units in 2024.But in #3 Austin, a flurry of new construction might be the best explanation for the 29% increase: The city’s robust development has helped stabilize housing prices and increased supply, even amidst waves of in-migration interest. The metro added 93,206 renter-occupied units from 2019 to 2024, the largest numeric increase among the top 25 fastest-growing renter markets. moveBuddha The South Claims the Most Fast-Growing Rental MarketsDominance of the South, 28 of the top 50 cities, points not to casinos or military bases, but to a larger Sun Belt narrative that’s sweeping multiple “types” of locations into the rental boom, from major job hubs in Texas like Austin and San Antonio/New Braunfels to smaller markets like Sherman, college-centered areas like Statesboro, Georgia, and fast-growing Florida metros like Lakeland. moveBuddha These Southern markets have attracted new movers and are likely increasing renter-occupied units through new construction or the filling of previous vacancies.The common thread is migration, and it helps explain why the list includes a mix of cities without a common economic base connecting them.Southern markets are among those with the highest numeric growth in occupied-renter units: moveBuddha Dallas added the most renter-occupied units among the top 50 fastest-growing renter markets, while Austin stands out for ranking near the top by both percentage growth and raw unit growth.Other Southern markets show how renter growth is spreading beyond the biggest metros.For example:San Antonio, Texas, has added 50,909 renter-occupied units, and with New Braunfels included, the metro has added 254,751 new residents (about 1 new renter-occupied property per 5 new residents).Lakeland, Florida, added 12,285 renter-occupied households alongside 127,842 new residents (about 1 new unit per 10.1 new residents).Sherman, Texas, increased occupied rental units by 2,655 and added 14,940 residents (about 1 unit for every 5.6 newcomers).Florida and Texas show how broad the pattern is: Rental growth here has spread from urban cores to college, retirement, logistics, and service hubs. The common thread? Just that they’re part of a region that’s been gaining people. And those people need to live somewhere, pulling rental growth southward, leaving the Northeast and Midwest behind.So while renter growth is often treated as an affordability issue, from 2019 to 2024, its growth is centered around areas already considered “affordable” vis-à-vis U.S. averages (Lakeland’s current $312,001 average home price is still 15.26% less than the U.S. average of $368,198).In recent years, renter-occupied growth has been more about migration than affordability alone.The College-Town Rental Boom Is Bigger Than StudentsMany university-centered areas are adding rental households at a pace that cannot be explained by student enrollment alone.Nineteen of the top 50 fastest-growing renter markets are university-dominated places, from classically collegiate Madison, Wisconsin; College Station, Texas; or Auburn, Alabama, to more diversified economic hubs like Raleigh, North Carolina, or Fort Collins, Colorado. Ten rank in the top 25: #3 Austin, Texas, #4 Tuscaloosa, Alabama, #5 Statesboro, Georgia, #8 Cookeville, Tennessee, #12 La Crosse, Wisconsin, #13 Flagstaff, Arizona, #14 Bowling Green, Kentucky, #15 Gainesville, Florida, #18 Bozeman, Montana, and #19 St. George, Utah.Universities are rental-normal. From frat house mansion rows to student apartments, these locations are dominated by the rotating course offerings of the academic calendar. That’s meant that they, historically, have rental-centered markets. But they’re increasing even more their renter-occupied units than what, say, their popularity for move-ins or enrollment would explain.The pattern is clearest in places where renter growth and current move-in interest are both high.Bowling Green has the highest in-to-out move ratio among these college-centered markets, with 3.25 searches for moves in for every move out, plus a 19.79% increase in renter-occupied units from 2019 to 2024. However, Western Kentucky University student enrollment is falling.Cookeville, home to Tennessee Tech University, added 371 students from 2019 to 2024. But the city added 3,630 renter-occupied units. The micropolitan area added 8,600 new residents in that time frame, 1 for every 2.37 newcomers. It also earns 2.38 move-in searches for every move-out search.Bozeman, with a 2.16 in-to-out move ratio and a 17.35% increase in renter-occupied units, keeps drawing in new moves and students too. moveBuddha Eleven of the 19 college towns see a high number of searches for moves in versus out. Seven of them are getting more requests for move-outs than move-ins, likely reflecting the difference between a five-year renter-growth window and a newer 2025 to 2026 search snapshot.Ownership consolidation may be at play. As housing is bought up in college towns, for student rentals or to be leased out for weekend visitors catching a football game, would-be buyers can find that the limited supply forces them to rent.The Renter Boom Is Older Than You ThinkIt’s not always young grads landing in the rental markets of cities where they can’t afford to buy.Renters aged 65 and older increased 14.12% from 2019 to 2024, the fastest growth of any age group across the 889 metro and micro areas analyzed. Renters aged 15–25 also rose, up 7.39%, reinforcing the college-town pattern. moveBuddha Together, the data show renter growth is being driven by both ends of the age spectrum: young and older movers.If renting is a migratory story above an economic one, the fact that units are occupied by retirees is a story of the continued flow of seniors out of snowy climes, seeking shovel-free lifestyles without homeownership responsibilities.America’s Renter Boom Is Moving South, Into College Towns, and OlderRecent Apartment List research frames renting as increasingly intentional. So it’s no surprise America’s rental market is growing, but not everywhere equally. Instead, niche economic hotspots, college towns, and all types of cities in the South (and a few in the Mountain West) are adding occupied rental units, though not always above and beyond the numbers of in-movers they’re seeing. Many are betting the current inflow will keep paying off.And whereas America’s big coastal hubs used to be places where renting was the default option, over the past few years, that math has added up differently. Today, renter-occupied home growth is showing up where home values are nationally known as “affordable.”Increasingly, renting is a map of population mobility itself, showing an America (and an older population) that’s spreading into smaller, cheaper metros, Sun Belt cities, and university towns.MethodologyTo identify where renter-occupied housing grew fastest, moveBuddha analyzed renter-occupied housing units across 889 U.S. metro and micro areas from 2019 to 2024, using U.S. Census ACS data. The final analysis looks only at areas with at least 10,000 units for each period to avoid skew from very small markets.For each metro or micro area, researchers looked at:Renter-occupied units in 2019Renter-occupied units in 2024Numeric change from 2019 to 2024Percentage change from 2019 to 2024Areas were ranked by percentage growth in renter-occupied units to highlight places where rental occupancy increased fastest from 2019 to 2024.Additional context was included:moveBuddha moving-cost-calculator search data; as a measure of moves in divided by out, the move-in-to-out ratio. Data ranges from April 1, 2025, through March 27, 2026. 34 of the 251 areas in the closer analysis did not have sufficient data.Age-group renter growth, calculated across the same 889 metro and micro areas by comparing renter counts by age group from 2019 to 2024.Regional and state-level patterns, based on the number of metro and micro areas appearing among the top 50 fastest-growing renter-occupied markets.This story was produced by moveBuddha and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| Ceremony marks Joint Munitions Command's move under Army Sustainment CommandThe colors of Joint Munitions Command will remain enclosed in glass following a casing of colors ceremony on Wednesday, June 10. |
| Ariana Grande's new song debuts at No. 1, keeping a streak aliveAriana Grande is about to release her eighth album, Petal. With "Hate That I Made You Love Me," she continues an impressive and unusual streak on the charts. |
| | Need to generate some extra income? Your home may hold the keysNeed to generate some extra income? Your home may hold the keysMost people think of their home as the place where their money is spent on rent or mortgage payments, maintenance and repairs, insurance, property taxes, etc. Fewer think of it as an income generator. But for a growing number of Americans, their home has become an important source of additional cash flow.You don’t need to buy a rental property, hire a property manager, or become a full-time landlord to generate income from real estate. In many cases, the opportunity is already sitting inside the home you live in, and it might be a spare bedroom, a driveway, or a patch of yard you never thought twice about.The strategy has a name: house hacking. It’s been around for decades, went viral during the Covid pandemic, and has since evolved into something more practical and accessible than its social media reputation suggests.Below, RentRedi reveals how house hacking can help you generate extra income from your home.Key TakeawaysHouse hacking allows homeowners to generate income by renting out parts of their home, such as bedrooms or driveways.The strategy gained popularity during the pandemic due to low mortgage rates and rising rents, making housing more affordable for many.House hacking remains relevant as home prices continue to rise, offering a way to reduce monthly mortgage costs and build equity.Creative options for house hacking include renting storage spaces, parking spots, or even unique properties for events.Modern technology simplifies management tasks, enhancing profitability and making house hacking a viable option even for those new to real estate.How house hacking became a household wordThe basic idea of house hacking — buying a property, living in part of it, and renting out the rest to offset your costs — isn’t new. Smaller, independent landlords have long known that a duplex or an accessory dwelling unit (ADU) can make owning a home far more affordable.In 2013, Brandon Turner, a prominent real estate investing influencer, wrote a blog post for BiggerPockets that outlined how to “hack” your home and get paid to live in it. The premise had mass appeal, because it offered a viable solution to the unaffordable housing crisis.The strategy found a devoted following in real estate investing communities throughout the 2010s, but the pandemic era took it to new heights. Historically low mortgage rates along with fast appreciation and rising rents made covering a mortgage payment with rental income genuinely achievable for many buyers. And thanks to content creators with large followings who promoted house hacking, the idea reached people who had never thought about real estate investing before.When interest rates climbed sharply starting in 2022, however, the math changed, and the conditions that made the pandemic-era version of house hacking so compelling narrowed considerably, turning the fast, outsized returns that social media had promoted into an outcome that was harder to replicate. The house hacking trend has since shifted to a more stable, long-term strategy for improving finances and building wealth.Why house hacking still makes senseHouse hacking has stayed relevant because of shifts in the housing market. Home prices rose about 45% between 2020 and mid-2025. During that same period, monthly mortgage costs on the median-priced U.S. home more than doubled, rising from roughly $1,200 to over $2,500. For many, the appeal of house hacking today is simpler than building a portfolio: A few hundred (or even thousand) extra dollars a month makes a meaningful dent in a mortgage. Over time, that income can help you pay down the loan and build equity faster. That opens up more real options to build on that momentum, such as renovating, selling, or buying something else.House hacking is especially appealing to those trying to enter the homebuying market for the first time. In fact, a 2023 Zillow survey found that 55% of Millennial and 51% of Gen Z homebuyers rated the ability to rent out part of their home as very or extremely important in their purchase decisions, up eight percentage points from previous years and compared to 39% of all homebuyers.Real estate investor Malika McCalla started house hacking just out of college, when she bought her first home for $155,000 and rented a room to another student while completing her graduate studies. The rental income helped her pay the mortgage, build equity, renovate the property and sell it for a profit. She then used that equity to invest in multifamily properties and scale to five rental units. “This is one of the best ways to get started in real estate,” she says, “if you are patient and consistent, results will follow.”Creative ways to rent out propertyTraditional approaches to house hacking involve renting out a bedroom, converted garage, finished basement, or ADU in your single family home, or purchasing a small multi-unit property (a duplex, triplex, or fourplex) and living in one unit while renting out the others. These are the most efficient ways to build cash flow quickly, but they aren’t always feasible or desirable options.If you don’t have the capital to purchase a property, or you simply don’t feel comfortable sharing living spaces with strangers, there are plenty of other ways to rent out property. Think creatively about what you already have that others might need. Even smaller spaces can generate impressive returns.Renting out parking spots, garages, or driveways offers steady, low-maintenance income. In big cities like New York, parking spaces average around $400 per month according to Spacer. Rates in smaller cities generally run between $150 and $300.Storage space rentals are another overlooked opportunity. If you have an unused attic, basement, or shed, you can rent it out for storage. Industry data from SpareFoot shows that, as of May 2026, the average monthly rent for a 10x20 ft. self-storage unit in the U.S. is $130. Prices vary widely by size and location, of course, and private rentals are typically priced somewhat lower than commercial units. So, for example, if you were to charge $100/month for each space, five spaces could bring in $500 monthly with minimal investment and management.Larger or more distinctive properties with expansive yards, gardens, pools, or unique architecture can be in high demand for filming locations, photoshoots, and events. Event venues typically earn $50–$275 per hour in 2026, while the average rate for a filming venue is $5,000 per day. Even home gyms and pools have found audiences among people who want access to equipment without a gym membership.Lady Landlords founder Becky Nova, who credits house hacking with launching her investing career, puts it plainly: “It is a fantastic way to tip your toe into being a landlord and is an amazing way to leverage finances to really pick up an asset that generates cash flow, even if you don’t have a lot of capital on hand.”Practical steps for getting startedIf you’re considering house hacking, here are a few things worth thinking through before you start:Check local regulations: Zoning laws, HOA rules, and short-term rental regulations vary widely. Make sure the type of rental you’re considering is permitted in your area before listing anything.Get the numbers right: Calculate what you’d realistically earn, factor in any costs (repairs, service fees, taxes), and make sure the income justifies the effort and any upfront investment.Start simple: You don’t need to convert a basement or build an ADU to start. Renting a bedroom or a parking space is a low-friction way to test the model and build confidence before scaling.Use the right tools: Property management software makes it easier to run things professionally from the start, which protects both you and your tenants and sets better habits for when you grow. Technology makes it more manageable (and more profitable)One reason people hesitate to rent out property is the management side: finding tenants, collecting rent, handling repairs. The reality is that property management apps have made most of those tasks much simpler, and the data shows the right tools also make rentals more profitable.RentRedi’s internal data found that tenants who went through a formal screening process paid rent 17 days faster and on time about 90% of the time. Landlords whose tenants use autopay see on-time payment rates of 99%, compared to 88% for those who don’t — a gap that holds even for tenants with weaker credit histories. That kind of consistency is the difference between rental income that reliably contributes to cash flow and income you’re constantly chasing.Beyond payments, modern apps handle lease signing, maintenance requests, income and expense tracking, and tenant communication from one place, and from your mobile phone. That’s a significant part of what makes house hacking a realistic option for people who aren’t looking to make landlording a second career. This story was produced by RentRedi and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| Davenport Schools cancel today's Summer Meals Program due to weatherAn email from Davenport Community School District says the Summer Meals Program scheduled for today, June 11, is canceled due to weather. |
| | Kansas Democratic women’s club evaluates U.S. Senate candidate who put ‘fetal personhood’ into lawSen. Patrick Schmidt talks to the Capital Area Democratic Women club about abortion policy and political rivals on his campaign for the U.S. Senate Democratic nomination. (Photo by Baya Burgess/Kansas Reflector)TOPEKA — Democrats questioned U.S. Senate candidate Patrick Schmidt’s position on abortion Wednesday at a Capital Area Democratic Women meeting in Topeka. Schmidt, a Democratic state senator from Topeka and the meeting’s guest speaker, defended an amendment he made last year to legislation establishing “fetal personhood” by allowing child support orders for pregnancy-related costs from the date of conception. He said he was trying to sabotage the bill. “If you watched the YouTube video from that day in session last year, the Republicans start scurrying about because they realize exactly what I’m doing, and they don’t want it to pass,” he said. Fetal personhood can establish human rights and protections to unborn fetuses and embryos, which could challenge future pro-choice legislation. Schmidt’s amendment allows all pregnant parents to claim an unborn child on their tax return. The bill advanced on a 30-9 party-line vote, with all present Republicans in favor of the amended bill. Vic Miller, a former state House representative and minority leader who lost the state Senate seat to Schmidt in the 2024 Democratic primary, pointed out Republicans voted for the amendment but Democrats did not. “We weren’t able to get it stopped, but there was nothing that passed on that bill as a result of my actions that changed the outcome for women’s health care in Kansas,” Schmidt said. Stacey Cooper, a Democrat from Topeka, disapproved of Schmidt leaving his state Senate seat before serving a full term. “You came and talked to me on my porch and we sat for like 30 minutes,” she said. “I specifically asked if you were going to run and stay in Kansas if you won, or if you were going to then turn around and run for U.S., and you said you wouldn’t do that.” Schmidt said his greatest concern is with the Iran War and election security under the Trump administration. “As bad as you think it is with this war, it is worse,” he said. “And what you’re seeing right now, where this administration is trying to claim voter fraud in California, they don’t give a damn about voter fraud in California. They are trying to lay the predicate to mess with this election and every election moving forward.” Schmidt is one of 11 Democratic candidates running for the nomination to challenge Republican U.S. Sen. Roger Marshall. Schmidt criticized one of his primary opponents, Adam Hamilton, for his handling of sexual abuse 20 years ago at a camp run by the church Hamilton leads. Schmidt made accusations about Hamilton at a May 27 news conference, some of which could not be verified in court documents. “It will drag down every Democrat running in Kansas. That’s my concern,” he said Wednesday after slamming thick binders of court documents on a table. Schmidt also criticized Senate President Ty Masterson, a Republican campaigning for governor with President Donald Trump’s endorsement. “Ty Masterson has a quarter-million-dollar-a-year no-show job at Wichita State University,” he said. “The United States Navy pays me $20,000 a year to be a reservist, and I have to freaking fly to Washington, D.C., for three days a month, at least. It’s not worth the $20,000.” “You get reimbursed, though,” said Claudia Elkins, who said she is also a retired Navy reservist. “I almost break even,” Schmidt said in response. “It’s a pleasure to serve.” Courtesy of Kansas Reflector |
| John Deere hiring 20 workers back to DavenportJohn Deere will be hiring 20 workers back to Davenport Works |
| | The only states where you can find the last drive-in movie theaters in the USMichael Williamson // The Washington Post via Getty Images States with the most drive-in movie theaters Drive-in theaters evoke nostalgia, a step back to the 1950s. The first opened in New Jersey in 1933, when opening night drew people from at least 20 states to watch movies outdoors from their cars. Drive-ins reached their peak in popularity in the mid-1950s, with more than 4,000 operating across the country. But by the late 1970s, exploding property values, television, and large indoor theaters all lured movie fans away from the drive-in experience. "The decline of the drive-in was directly related to the movement away from Main Street America and towards the mall society, where convenience, times, weather and the idea of 'all-inclusive' became the popular way to enjoy a night out, pushing away the classic night out at the drive-in," John Stefanopoulos, the manager of the Hudson Valley Four Brothers Drive-In, told Fox Business. During the coronavirus pandemic, however, drive-ins saw a resurgence as pop-up outdoor theaters appeared to replace indoor ones that were closed, allowing moviegoers to stay outside. They even had a significant impact on the box office when most other theaters were shut down, with some experts speculating that the drive-in would be back for good. But the problems bedeviling drive-ins persisted, especially as the virus waned and traditional theaters reopened. Stacker examined County Business Patterns 2022 data from the Census Bureau, the most recent data available, to determine which states have the most drive-in movie theaters. Rankings were determined by the number of drive-ins per 1 million residents. In 2022, there were 177 drive-in theaters operating in 25 states. States with the highest number of drive-ins per capita are largely located in the Eastern and Midwestern United States. For the count, film festivals or other types of movie theaters were not included. Stacker Drive-in theaters becoming harder to find The pandemic gave drive-in movie theaters a spurt of new popularity as people were eager to be entertained but wanted to stay outside. But the difficulties drive-ins face are hard to overcome, from the need for often expensive land to having to buy pricey high-resolution projectors to show first-run movies. Alexander Tamargo // Getty Images for HBO #25. Florida - 0.2 drive-ins per 1 million people - 5 drive-ins total Drive-in theaters have long been popular in Florida, with the first opening in Miami in 1938. The Silver Moon in Lakeland has been in operation since opening in 1948, except for a few months in 1950 because of tornado damage. There are plenty of other spots where you can still pull up in front of a big screen: Ocala Drive-in in Ocala, the Ruskin Family Drive-in Theater in Ruskin, Joy-Lan Drive-in Dade City, and Nite Owl Drive-in in Miami. ullstein bild via Getty Images #24. New Jersey - 0.3 drive-ins per 1 million people - 3 drive-ins total The first drive-in movie theater in the U.S. opened in Camden on the Pennsauken border in 1933. It promised that "motorists and their guests will see and hear talking pictures while they smoke, talk, or partake of refreshments without annoying others in the audience," Tyler Hoffman, a professor at Rutgers University told the South Jersey Times. Today one place you can watch movies in the open air is the Delsea Drive-in Theatre in Vineland—rain or shine! Paras Griffin // Getty Images #23. Georgia - 0.4 drive-ins per 1 million people - 4 drive-ins total The Starlight Drive-in Theatre on the outskirts of Atlanta has been in operation since 1949. The theater encourages you to make sure your car battery is strong enough to power the radio through the show, but if it fails, jump starts are available. Other spots for a movie under the stars: the Swan Drive-in Theater in Blue Ridge, whose name comes from the swans in England, the Tiger Drive-In Theater in Tiger—which had closed but reopened exactly 50 years after its first showing—and the Jesup Drive-in in Jesup, which opened in 1948. Michael Williamson // The Washington Post via Getty Images #22. Virginia - 0.5 drive-ins per 1 million people - 4 drive-ins total The Family Drive-in Theatre in Stephens City advertises itself as the only drive-in theater in the Washington D.C. metro area. Also in Virginia are Goochland Drive-in in Sandy Hook (open only since 2009 but with a retro vibe), the Starlite Drive-in in Christiansburg, and the Park Place Drive-In in Marion. Carlos Avila Gonzalez // The San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images #21. California - 0.5 drive-ins per 1 million people - 18 drive-ins total The home of Hollywood, California fittingly has among the most drive-in theaters in the country. The Rubidoux Drive-in in Riverside once had a petting zoo and miniature railroad. Those are gone but it still has its art deco-styled original screen. In northern California, the West Wind Drive-ins have three locations: Concord, Sacramento, and San Jose. Carol M. Highsmith/Buyenlarge // Getty Images #20. Missouri - 0.5 drive-ins per 1 million people - 3 drive-ins total The aptly named Sunset Drive-In Theater in Aurora opened in 1951 and kept its original wooden screen until it burned down in 1979. The sound system was upgraded after it was struck by lightning in 2001. An old drive-in theater in Blomeyer was revitalized in 2020 during the coronavirus pandemic and is now the Rock 'N' Roll Drive-In. Andrew Burton // Getty Images #19. Michigan - 0.5 drive-ins per 1 million people - 5 drive-ins total A nod to the cherry harvest of northern Michigan, the Cherry Bowl Drive-in Theatre in Honor opened in 1954 and also features a playground, volleyball net, and a 1950s-style mini-golf course. The Ford-Wyoming Drive-In in Dearborn was once the country's largest drive-in-theater with nine screens and parking for 3,000 cars but has since reduced the number of screens to five, viewable by up to 2,500 cars. HUM Images // Universal Images Group via Getty Images #18. Washington - 0.5 drive-ins per 1 million people - 4 drive-ins total The Skyline Drive-In Theater in Shelton featured "Lady and The Tramp" and "Billy Budd" on its opening night in 1964. The Rodeo Drive-in Theater in Bremerton was originally the "Rodeo Motor Movies," built in 1949 as part of the United Drive-Ins chain and claims it is the largest outdoor theater complex north of California. MARLIN LEVISON // Star Tribune via Getty Images #17. Minnesota - 0.5 drive-ins per 1 million people - 3 drive-ins total The Long Drive-In Theater in Long Prairie is one of the few drive-in theaters that allows you to stay overnight. Because the movies run late and some people have driven long distances, tents and RVs are permitted with reservations. Other drive-ins in Minnesota: the Starlite Drive-In in Litchfield, Verne Drive-In Theater in Luverne, and Sky-Vu Drive-In Theatre in Warren. xradiophotog // Shutterstock #16. Texas - 0.6 drive-ins per 1 million people - 17 drive-ins total Drive-in theaters in Texas date to 1934 when only the third in the country opened in Galveston. At its peak, the state had more drive-ins than any other. On the one hand, there is the Big Sky Drive-In Theatre, its name celebrating the big sky of the West Texas Permian Basin between Midland and Odessa. On the other, there is The Blue Starlite Mini Urban Drive-In in Austin, which accommodates only 15 to 40 cars per night. Canva #15. Colorado - 0.7 drive-ins per 1 million people - 4 drive-ins total The only original drive-in still open in the greater Denver area, the 88 Drive-In Theatre in Commerce dates to 1972. The Holiday Twin Drive-In in Fort Collins shows both classic and modern movies, and although pets are allowed, the theater notes: "Barking is disruptive." HUM Images // Universal Images Group via Getty Images #14. Oklahoma - 0.7 drive-ins per 1 million people - 3 drive-ins total At the Winchester Drive-In Theatre in Oklahoma City, moviegoers are greeted by a vintage neon cowboy. The landmark has been in operation since 1968. The Admiral Twin Drive-In is just off Route 66 in Tulsa and was used for Francis Ford Coppola's famous drive-in movie scene in "The Outsiders." George Frey // Getty Images #13. Utah - 0.9 drive-ins per 1 million people - 3 drive-ins total The Erda Dive-In in Tooele opened around the late 1940s or early 1950s (accounts conflict, according to its website). Whatever the year, it operated seasonally, from May to October depending on the weather. The screen had to be rebuilt in 1991 after it was destroyed by a tornado. lev radin // Shutterstock #12. New York - 0.9 drive-ins per 1 million people - 18 drive-ins total The state's first drive-in movie theater was on Long Island when the Sunrise Drive-In opened in 1938 in Valley Stream with a showing of "Start Cheering." It was demolished but the Finger Lakes Drive-In in Auburn retains its vintage charm now as New York's oldest open-air theater. It dates from 1947. HUM Images // Universal Images Group via Getty Images #11. Wisconsin - 1.0 drive-ins per 1 million people - 6 drive-ins total The Skyway Drive-In Theatre opened in 1950 and is now the longest continuously running drive-in found in Wisconsin. It remains a one-screen theater, the snack bar has not changed much, and it continues to show cartoon advertisements created decades ago before the movies. Another historic theater, Highway 18 Outdoor Theatre, 2 miles west of Jefferson, first opened in 1953 and then reopened in 2000. HUM Images // Universal Images Group via Getty Images #10. Kansas - 1.0 drive-ins per 1 million people - 3 drive-ins total The Boulevard Drive-In says it was the first drive-in theater anywhere to install digital sound and 4K resolution digital projection. The original screen was made completely out of wood but a strong wind tore out about a third of it in 1971, which led to a replacement metal screen. The Kanopolis Drive-In in Kanopolis is located along the Prairie Trail Scenic Byway. Canva #9. Tennessee - 1.1 drive-ins per 1 million people - 8 drive-ins total The Stardust Drive-In Theatre in Watertown holds Retro Wednesdays. Coming up this summer are showings of "Steel Magnolias" from 1989, "E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial" from 1982, and "Back to the Future" from 1985. The Parkway Drive-In in Maryville shows movies rain or shine but will keep its gates closed in the event of a tornado warning by the National Weather Service. HUM Images // Universal Images Group via Getty Images #8. Kentucky - 1.3 drive-ins per 1 million people - 6 drive-ins total The Knox Drive-In is located in Barbourville City Park. The local city council wanted to offer something different from neighboring cities, according to its website. The Sauerbeck Family Drive-In in La Grange notes that "unfortunately for those looking to catch a free show," it positioned its screens to minimize any view from the road. AProvchy // Shutterstock #7. Ohio - 1.4 drive-ins per 1 million people - 17 drive-ins total At the Field of Dreams Drive-In Theater in Liberty Center, free games such as putt-putt golf, corn hole, and sand volleyball are available before the movies begin. It opened in 2007 after the owners planted grass instead of crops on their property and added a second screen in 2010. The Toledo Blade once warned that the theater can be surrounded by so much corn by midsummer that you might miss its narrow entrance. Canva #6. Indiana - 1.5 drive-ins per 1 million people - 10 drive-ins total The Georgetown Drive-In Movie Theater, established in 1951, opened for its 72nd season in May 2023. The Starlite Drive-In opened in 1955 and has had only five owners since then. And the Tibbs Drive-In, family owned and operated since 1967, is the last drive-in theater in Indianapolis. HUM Images // Universal Images Group via Getty Images #5. Pennsylvania - 1.5 drive-ins per 1 million people - 20 drive-ins total The Mahoning Drive-In Theater, established in 1949 in Lehighton, offers a retro 35 mm film program, in which movies are shown reel-to-reel via the original 1940s Simplex projectors. "At the Drive-In" is a documentary about the theater. Becky's Drive-In was begun by William D. Beck, known as Becky. He started out showing movies outside at Uncle Charlie's Lunch in the 1930s. Karen Desjardin // Getty Images #4. Idaho - 1.5 drive-ins per 1 million people - 3 drive-ins total In the history of the Parma Motor-Vu, Karen Dobbs Cornwell writes that the Dobbs family bought the Parma, New Plymouth, and Wilder drive-in theaters in 1944. Her father, Bill Dobbs, drove to Wilder each night while she and her mother, Gladys Dobbs, spent each night at the Parma. Gabe Souza // Portland Press Herald via Getty Images #3. Maine - 2.2 drive-ins per 1 million people - 3 drive-ins total The Narrow Gauge Drive-In in Farmington opened the 2023 season with screenings of "The Super Mario Bros. Movie." The drive-in mixes movies with live music shows. The Skowhegan Drive-In, which opened in 1954, saw a surge in attendance during the pandemic, followed by a subsequent drop-off. But it has opened for the 2023 seasons. Gabe Shakour // Shutterstock #2. New Hampshire - 2.9 drive-ins per 1 million people - 4 drive-ins total The Milford Drive-In Theater was built in Milford in 1958, with several contractors from the area contributing labor and materials in the hopes of sharing in the profits, according to the theater's history. A group of local people owned the drive-in, which opened with a single 84-foot wooden frame screen. Also popular: Weirs Drive-In Theater at Weirs Beach, whose motto is "Let the popcorn fly." Canva #1. Vermont - 4.6 drive-ins per 1 million people - 3 drive-ins total The Fairlee Drive-In Theater in Fairlee also has a motel. The theater came first in 1950 and six motel rooms were added a decade later in 1960. Bethel Drive-In in Bethel opened in 1954 and operates on weekends from early June to Labor Day. Sunset Drive-In in Colchester was established in 1948 and has four screens. Data reporting by Elena Cox. Story editing by Jeff Inglis. Copy editing by Tim Bruns. Photo selection by Elizabeth Ciano. |
| | Paid vs. unpaid interns: What small businesses need to knowPaid vs. unpaid interns: What small businesses need to knowInternship wage laws are stricter than many people realize. For solopreneurs and small business owners, interns can meaningfully support their businesses during busy seasons. Although an unpaid internship helps students or early-career workers gain experience, it comes with trade-offs.The main issue when discussing the classification of internships is whether the internship primarily benefits the intern or the business. If an intern is doing work that directly supports daily operations, that suggests the intern may need to be paid. Misclassifying internships can lead to wage disputes and unpaid-work claims, causing major problems down the road.Legal requirements for unpaid internships are specific; this doesn’t mean that internships always need to be paid, but small businesses should be extra careful when posting a role or assigning work to ensure boundaries aren’t blurred. Rocket Lawyer explains what small businesses should keep in mind when classifying interns as paid or unpaid.The Difference Between Work ClassificationOne of the most important questions to ask when discussing internship classifications is whether the experience gained will be truly educational.In general, unpaid internships are more likely to comply with labor rules when:There is hands-on training similar to an educational program.The experience benefits the intern more than the employer.The intern is closely supervised.The role does not replace a paid employee.There is no promise of future employment.Problems often arise when interns take on regular business tasks without structured learning. This can mean that an intern manages customer emails, handles sales support, leads meetings, or consistently performs work that your business depends on; regulators may view that role as compensable work.Why Small Businesses Need to Be Especially CarefulLarger companies tend to have HR teams and structured internship programs, whereas solopreneurs and freelancers may rely on informal arrangements. These agreements, however informal, are not low risk.Sometimes, a simple misunderstanding about responsibilities or compensation can later lead to a wage dispute. In some cases, unpaid interns may later claim they should have received minimum wage or overtime.There are also operational considerations. If you are spending time training and supervising someone, you should ask whether a paid part-time role may ultimately create clearer expectations for everyone involved.Questions to Ask Before Bringing on an InternBefore you make any decisions, ask yourself a few key questions about the structure of the internship and the type of work involved.Is this internship primarily educational or primarily helping my business? Would the intern still benefit if they were not handling productive work?Will the intern perform tasks similar to paid employees? Could this role be viewed as replacing regular staff or paid contractors?Do I have a structured learning plan or supervision process? How will I document training, mentorship, or educational outcomes?Am I confident this internship complies with wage laws? Should I ask a legal professional to review the role before making an offer?What to Do NextA little planning up front can help you avoid confusion and reduce legal risk later.Write a clear internship description outlining learning goals, supervision, and expected responsibilities.Review federal and state internship wage laws before deciding whether the role should be paid.Consider whether a paid internship or temporary contractor arrangement may be a better fit for your business needs.Keep records of schedules, training activities, and communications with interns.Draft internship agreements and create role descriptions to clarify expectations.When the structure is clear from the start, an internship program can support both your business and early-career talent. The right setup will help you create meaningful opportunities while also protecting your business.This story was produced by Rocket Lawyer and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| YWCA Quad Cities hosting Summer Block JamKick off summer this weekend at the YWCA Quad Cities’ Summer Block Jam! The free, family-friendly event will be held on Sunday, June 14 from 1 – 4 p.m. and celebrates connection, community and the start of summer. Guests of all ages can enjoy an afternoon filled with food, entertainment and interactive activities as 17th [...] |
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| | Are GLP-1s good or bad for your blood pressure?Are GLP-1s good or bad for your blood pressure? Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists are a class of medications that were initially approved to treat Type 2 diabetes. But since their discovery, the use of GLP-1s has expanded.GLP-1s are now FDA-approved to treat many conditions, including obesity, obstructive sleep apnea, and metabolic-associated steatohepatitis. Some of these medications can also help with cardiovascular and renal health.There’s a growing number of FDA-approved GLP-1 medications, including:Semaglutide (Wegovy, Ozempic, and Rybelsus)Dulaglutide (Trulicity)Liraglutide (Victoza and Saxenda)Exenatide (Byetta and Bydureon)Tirzepatide (Mounjaro and Zepbound)Orforglipron (Foundayo)Some of these medications are given as injections, and others are taken by mouth.With so many new medications and ongoing research, it can be difficult to keep track of all the possible uses of GLP-1s.If you’re prescribed a GLP-1, you may want to know whether it’s safe to take if you have other conditions, like high blood pressure. So, GoodRx, a platform for medication savings, looked at how GLP-1s affect blood pressure and overall heart health.Key takeaways:GLP-1 medications have been shown to have benefits on cardiovascular health. But they’re not FDA-approved to treat hypertension (high blood pressure).GLP-1s are safe to take if you have high blood pressure.GLP-1s may lower blood pressure by facilitating weight loss and by acting on the kidneys and blood vessels.How do GLP-1s work?GLP-1 medications mimic glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1), a hormone made in the gut. These medications bind to the same receptors in the body, which allows them to produce similar effects. They act on GLP-1 receptors to increase insulin production, slow gastric emptying, and help curb appetite. That’s why these medications are so useful in treating Type 2 diabetes and obesity.GLP-1 medications also work on GLP-1 receptors in other parts of the body. For instance, in the kidneys, these receptors help regulate how much sodium is reabsorbed or excreted in the urine. These receptors also play a role in the immune system and help support blood vessel health. GLP-1 medications can interact with these receptors, which can lead to positive kidney and heart health effects.Are GLP-1s good for your blood pressure?Yes, there’s evidence that GLP-1 medications can have a positive effect on blood pressure.Weight loss can help lower blood pressure. So, by facilitating weight loss, GLP-1s can indirectly lower blood pressure. But weight loss alone doesn’t account for all of the cardiovascular benefits of GLP-1s.There are other ways that GLP-1 medications can impact blood pressure:Reduced sodium intake: People taking GLP-1s may end up eating less salty foods because they eat less overall. Lower blood pressure is one benefit of a low-sodium diet.Direct action on the kidneys: GLP-1 medications signal to the kidneys to release more sodium into the urine. As sodium leaves the body, blood pressure can go down.Relaxing blood vessels: GLP-1s can also activate receptors on cells inside blood vessels, causing them to vasodilate (relax). And this effect has been shown to improve blood flow.Are GLP-1s approved to treat high blood pressure?GLP-1s aren’t FDA-approved for treating high blood pressure. That means that your healthcare team won’t prescribe these medications specifically to treat high blood pressure.But some GLP-1 medications are FDA-approved to reduce the risk of major cardiovascular events, such as heart attack and stroke, in certain people with Type 2 diabetes or obesity. These approvals are based on studies showing that GLP-1s can improve several factors that affect heart health, including blood sugar, weight, and blood pressure.This means you might still be prescribed a GLP-1 to support your heart health. And, as your overall health improves, your blood pressure may come down, too. So, although GLP-1s aren’t used specifically to treat high blood pressure, they can still have a positive effect on it.Can you take GLP-1s if you have high blood pressure?Yes, GLP-1s are safe to take if you have high blood pressure. In fact, these medications may help lower blood pressure through their overall effect on weight and metabolism.But GLP-1 medications aren’t safe for everyone. You may not be able to take a GLP-1 medication if you have:A personal or family history of medullary thyroid cancerMultiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2 (MEN 2)A history of anaphylaxis (serious allergic reaction) to GLP-1 medicationsA history of pancreatitis or gastric paresisYou shouldn’t take GLP-1s if you’re pregnant or nursing.How do GLP-1s affect your heart rate?GLP-1s can cause an increased heart rate in some people. The change is usually small, only about two to four beats per minute. But some GLP-1 medications may have a greater effect on heart rate than others.Researchers are still studying why this happens. One possibility is that GLP-1s activate the sympathetic nervous system, which can raise the heart rate. Another is that they act directly on the heart’s natural pacemaker, called the sinoatrial node.Even though GLP-1 medications may increase heart rate slightly, there’s no evidence that they increase the risk of arrhythmias (irregular heart rhythms).Frequently asked questionsWhat causes high blood pressure?For most people, a combination of factors leads to high blood pressure. Your age, genetics, and overall health all play a role in your blood pressure. Your diet and activity level can also increase the risk of developing high blood pressure.Can you take GLP-1s with blood pressure medication?Yes, you can take glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist medications (GLP-1s) and blood pressure medications at the same time. There are no known interactions between these two types of medications.If your blood pressure improves over time while you’re taking a GLP-1 medication, your healthcare team may need to lower your blood pressure medication.Can you take GLP-1s if you have heart failure?Yes, many people with heart failure can take GLP-1 medications. In fact, GLP-1s can be helpful for people with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). Your healthcare team can help you determine whether GLP-1s are safe for you.The bottom lineGlucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist medications (GLP-1s) aren't FDA-approved to treat high blood pressure. But they can still help improve blood pressure through their effects on weight, blood sugar, and heart health. Most people with high blood pressure can safely take GLP-1 medications. If you’re considering a GLP-1, your healthcare team can help you understand how it fits into your overall health plan and what benefits you can expect.This story was produced by GoodRx and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| | How AI can help write an email campaignHow AI can help write an email campaignEmail marketing brings in an average return of $36 for every dollar spent, making it one of the best ways to connect with your audience. But crafting successful campaigns takes time. Strategy, copywriting, editing, and testing all need careful planning. That’s why marketing teams are turning to artificial intelligence (AI) for help, using it to personalize customer experiences and automate repetitive tasks.AI isn’t meant to replace email marketers, but rather facilitate content creation so you can focus on strategy and results. This guide from Emma explains how AI can help you write email campaigns, from drafting your first subject line to refining your message until it’s perfect.Key takeawaysReady to get the most out of AI for your email campaigns? Here are the top things to keep in mind as you dive in:AI helps you beat writer’s block and simplify drafting.You can use AI to craft tailored messages and save valuable time.While AI can assist with content creation, your human oversight is essential.Clear prompts and careful human review are key to getting amazing, authentic results.Embrace AI to free up your schedule, not to take over, making your campaigns better and brighter.AI’s role in email campaign writingBefore diving into the “how,” let’s clarify what AI can and can’t do for your email campaigns. Knowing these boundaries helps you create a realistic plan and apply AI thoughtfully. When choosing your email marketing platform, awareness of AI capabilities becomes even more important.What AI can do for email copywriting Emma AI email marketing tools can significantly reduce email creation time by handling several key tasks:Create content from scratch: You provide a brief description of your goals, and AI creates complete email drafts in seconds.Rewrite and refine existing content: AI can improve clarity, adjust messaging, or shift tone from formal to conversational.Modify length for different formats: It can expand brief announcements into detailed newsletters or condense long content into quick updates.Fix grammar and spelling automatically: AI can catch mistakes that human eyes often miss, even after multiple reviews.Overcome writer’s block: It can generate multiple approaches to the same message when you’re stuck.Maintain brand consistency: AI can learn your preferred style and apply it across campaigns.What AI can’t replaceStrategic thinking and final decision-making still rely on human expertise, not AI:Campaign decisions: AI can’t determine which products to feature or the best time to launch.Audience insight: AI lacks deep insight and emotional intuition in customer relationships.Context and nuance: While it can personalize your message using data, it can’t fully grasp human context.Final judgment: Choosing the right subject line requires alignment with brand voice and goals.Creative direction: Groundbreaking ideas come from human imagination, not algorithms.Quality control: AI outputs need human review to ensure accuracy and appropriateness.Human-AI collaboration: The best results come from guiding AI and refining its output.Write your first draft with AIThe hardest part of writing any email campaign is getting started. AI email campaign tools help you move from a blank page to a working draft in minutes instead of hours.Create effective AI promptsWhen crafting your prompts, start with your core message and clearly tell the AI what you want the email to accomplish. Include key details like your target audience, the offer or information you’re sharing, and any specific points that must be covered to guide the AI effectively:Specify tone: Explicitly state if you want the email to sound professional, friendly, urgent, or educational.Define length: Mention your preferred word count, as whether you need 50 or 250 words significantly impacts the AI’s generation.Provide context: More details yield better results. For instance, rather than “Write about our spring sale,” you might say “Write a 150-word email for existing customers announcing our spring sale, highlighting 25% off home goods. Use a friendly, enthusiastic tone and include a clear call to action to shop now.” This level of specificity can yield drafts that require minimal revision.Draft email subject linesWhen drafting email subject lines, use AI to generate multiple options with a single prompt. Ask the AI for 5-10 variations, then review them to identify the strongest performers and test different approaches like questions, statements, or benefit-driven headlines:Vary the tone: Rewrite subject lines in different tones to discover what resonates best, recognizing that a casual subject line might not suit a formal context and vice versa.Prioritize opens: Remember that making your email copy effective begins with compelling subject lines designed to encourage opens.A/B test: Consider A/B testing AI-generated subject lines against your traditional methods.Combine approaches: You might find that AI-generated styles outperform your usual approach, or that a combination of AI suggestions and your own intuition yields the best outcomes.Write the email body contentTo write the email body, enter your key message and let the AI generate a complete draft. Create multiple versions to compare different approaches, such as more direct messaging versus narrative-driven content:Expand for detail: Expand bullet points into full paragraphs when you require more extensive detail.Condense for clarity: Convert dense paragraphs into scannable lists when clarity is prioritized over elaborate prose.Segment audiences: Generate variations for different audience segments without needing to start from scratch each time.Apply your expertise: Your expertise is crucial to transform these drafts into compelling and effective emails. Remember to treat AI-generated output as a draft rather than a final product.Use AI to improve clarityOnce you have a draft, AI can help you refine your message so it resonates with your audience. Effective email campaigns rely on clear, focused communication that readers can quickly grasp and act on. For robust email campaign optimization, here’s how AI helps with clarity:Adjust tone and voice: Shift formality levels with simple instructions. A draft written for executives can be rewritten for frontline staff in seconds. Test different tones like professional, personal, empathetic, or enthusiastic to see which connects best with your audience.Modify length and complexity: Shorten content for mobile readers who scan. Many readers access emails on their phones, making concise, scannable content essential. Expand messages when comprehensive information is needed, or simplify complex topics by requesting lower reading levels.Fix grammar and spelling: Automated error detection catches typos, punctuation mistakes, and grammatical issues before you send. This feature reduces manual proofreading time and ensures a professional product that reflects well on your brand.Personalize content at scalePersonalized emails typically deliver higher transaction rates, but creating unique content for different segments used to be prohibitively time-consuming. AI makes the process more efficient.Writing for different audience segmentsAdapt your core message for different audiences without rewriting it from scratch. For example, a message to new subscribers might focus on onboarding, while the same promotion for loyal customers could highlight exclusive benefits and early access:Maintain consistency: Create segment-specific variations that address each group’s unique needs and interests while keeping the overall message consistent.Use illustrative examples: A nonprofit, for example, might send a donation appeal to first-time donors emphasizing its mission. Meanwhile, long-term supporters would receive a version showcasing specific programs their past contributions have funded.Scale personalization: AI is instrumental in scaling personalization efforts without increasing your workload.Boost efficiency: With AI, you can generate dozens of segment variations in the same amount of time it would take to manually write just a few.Adapting content for different campaign typesWelcome emails need a different approach than newsletters. Event invitations require a different language from product launches. AI can shift style and structure to match campaign type while keeping your brand voice intact.Segmented campaigns can generate substantial revenue increases. Tailored and personalized emails often lead to stronger engagement and higher click-through rates. These improvements compound when you can efficiently create personalized content at scale.Different campaign types also benefit from different content structures. Welcome emails work best when navigation and next steps are clear. Newsletters need compelling headlines and scannable sections.Product announcements should lead with benefits before features. AI can adapt your content to match these structural needs while maintaining your core message.Overcome AI email marketing challenges Emma Every marketer faces similar hurdles when adopting AI for email writing. Here’s how to navigate the most common challenges.1. Add authenticity to AI-generated contentAI is a helpful starting point, but authenticity comes from human input. Always refine outputs to reflect your brand and customer relationships:Review and edit: Always check AI-generated content before sending.Add specificity: Include details unique to your customers, products, and brand story.Use AI as a foundation: Let AI handle structure and initial drafts.Prioritize human connection: Layer in personality and genuine tone to make the content engaging.Focus on experience: Be sure to prioritize authentic customer experiences, even when AI does the heavy lifting.2. Avoid generic or repetitive languageWithout variation, AI can produce repetitive or formulaic content. Actively guide it to keep messaging fresh and engaging:Vary prompts: Use different prompts, even for similar topics.Set boundaries: Tell AI which phrases or styles to avoid.Iterate outputs: Rewrite multiple times with new instructions to improve originality.Blend content: Combine AI-generated text with your own writing.Use diverse inputs: Varying inputs leads to more natural, less repetitive outputs.3. Know when to use AI vs. write from scratchAI isn’t necessary for every task. Knowing when to rely on it and when not to helps maintain quality and efficiency:Routine campaigns: Use AI for newsletters, product updates, and standard announcements.High-stakes emails: Start with human input for launches, crisis communications, and personal messages.Brainstorming support: Use AI to generate ideas and first drafts.Final decisions: Keep judgment and approvals human-led.Balanced approach: Start with AI for efficiency, and finish with human expertise for impact.4. Manage the learning curveAdopting AI tools takes time and practice. A gradual approach helps you build confidence without disrupting your workflow:Start small: Begin with one campaign type, such as a weekly newsletter.Practice prompting: Experiment with different prompts to learn what produces the best results.Save what works: Build a library of effective prompts.Expand gradually: Increase AI usage as your confidence grows.Prioritize skill development: Take a measured approach to integrate AI smoothly into your process.Best practices for your AI email campaignFollowing these best practices will help you get the most value from AI while maintaining the quality your audience expects.Start with clear objectivesDefine success before you begin writing. Know what you want your email to accomplish and what matters to your audience. Decide how you’ll track whether your AI-assisted approach is working.Clear objectives guide every decision you make, from prompt creation to final edits. An email designed to drive immediate purchases needs a different language than one designed to educate subscribers about a complex topic.Provide specific promptsMore detail produces better output. Include context about your audience, your brand, and your goals. Specify what you want and what you don’t want. Vague prompts generate vague content. Detailed prompts generate focused, relevant drafts that need less revision.Prompts are like creative briefs. The more information you provide up front, the closer the first draft will be to your vision. Include details like word count, tone, key points to cover, calls to action, and any phrases or approaches to avoid.Review and edit before sendingAI can make mistakes, so human oversight is nonnegotiable. Check for accuracy and brand alignment. Verify that the tone matches your intentions, adding personal touches that make the email distinctly yours. Ensure all links work correctly and dates are accurate.Human involvement is essential to ensure quality and contextual appropriateness. Never send AI content without a thorough review.Test and measureCompare AI-assisted campaigns to your baseline performance, and track which prompts generate the best results. Refine your approach based on data, not assumptions. What works for one audience might not work for another.Document what works. When a particular prompting strategy produces excellent results, save it for future campaigns. Over time, you’ll build a library of proven approaches that consistently deliver strong performance.Balance efficiency with authenticityUse AI to save time on drafting without eliminating human judgment. Let AI handle structure and initial language, while humans add the soul that makes emails connect emotionally with readers.Rather than producing more emails faster, the goal is to create better emails in less time. A streamlined process lets you focus more on strategy, testing, and building relationships with your audience.When to use AI for different campaign typesNot all campaigns benefit equally from AI assistance. Here’s when AI can help most and when to proceed with caution.Ideal use cases for AI-assisted writingAI usually delivers strong results for these common campaign types:Weekly newsletters: Their consistent format and recurring topics make them ideal for AI assistance.Product or event announcements: Straightforward information benefits from AI’s ability to structure content clearly.Welcome series: Onboarding sequences often follow predictable patterns that AI handles well.Seasonal campaigns: Holiday promotions and seasonal messaging can be generated quickly with appropriate prompts.When to apply extra cautionThese situations require more human oversight and involvement:Crisis or sensitive communications: Tone matters enormously, and AI can miss emotional nuance.High-stakes launches: Major product releases or strategic announcements need human strategic input throughout.Personal or emotional appeals: Fundraising for causes or addressing difficult topics requires an authentic human voice.The future of AI in email campaign writingAI capabilities continue to evolve, but the fundamental principle remains the same. AI enhances human creativity rather than replacing it.This technology is evolving rapidly in marketing, with smarter personalization and deeper data integration on the horizon:Advanced personalization: AI will learn individual customer preferences and history more precisely.Brand voice refinement: AI will improve consistency by learning nuanced communication styles.Analytics integration: AI will help determine not just what to write, but when to send and to whom.Data-driven insights: AI will handle complex analysis to inform smarter marketing decisions.Scalable personalization: AI will enable hyper-personalized campaigns at a previously impossible scale.Evolving team roles: Marketing teams will increasingly rely on AI for efficiency and strategic support.Building skills for the AI eraEffective collaboration with AI can help you succeed as an email marketer. Develop your prompting skills, and know what AI does well and where it falls short.Stay curious about new capabilities as they emerge. Your strategic thinking, audience insight, and creative judgment remain irreplaceable. AI gives you more time to apply those skills where they matter most. With the right approach, you can effectively use AI for email campaigns while maintaining an authentic voice that your audience trusts.This story was produced by Emma and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| Jackson County plans session about data-centers ordinanceThe Jackson County Zoning Commission will hold a joint work session with the Jackson County Board of Supervisors to discuss the draft High-Density Computing Facilities Ordinance, also commonly referred to as data centers/data processing facilities, according to a news release. The session will be held at 7 p.m. Monday, June 15, in the Community Room, [...] |
| Ollie's "Good Stuff Cheap" bargain outlet to open June 18 in DavenportOllie's is bringing the "Good Stuff Cheap" to Davenport on Wednesday, June 18. |
| Live updates: Severe weather impacting much of eastern Iowa, 60 mph winds expectedTwo rounds of storms are expected Thursday in the Quad-Cities. Follow along to live updates here. |
| Moline 250 Celebration offers picnic, music, funThe City of Moline, along with Moline Centre and the Rock Island Arsenal, are celebrating America's 250th birthday at the free Moline 250 Celebration on Thursday, July 2, at Bass Street Landing, 1601 River Drive. The event features live music, line dancing, a community picnic, patriotic programming, vendors and fireworks over the Mississippi River. The [...] |
| | How to lose the company you built: Lessons from the Lululemon board battleHow to lose the company you built: Lessons from the Lululemon board battle Founders can spend decades building a company and still discover, much later, that the terms governing control were settled long before any boardroom fight began. And Chip Wilson has become a vivid example of that tension. He founded Lululemon in 1998 and built it into one of the most recognized athletic apparel brands on earth, yet recently, he had to fight a months-long proxy battle just to earn two seats on the board of the company he created.The settlement granted Wilson two board seats in exchange for his agreement to refrain from public criticism of the company for approximately 18 months.For business formation and governance specialists, disputes like this bring attention back to the early documents founders often sign with growth on their minds, because those papers often define authority before investors and directors reshape the balance of power.The Lululemon case gives founders a rare public look at how those early decisions follow a company even after the founder's name becomes part of its identity.Many founders assume ownership automatically translates into control, but those are two very different things. The documents created during business formation often determine who ultimately holds decision-making authority years later. By the time a dispute arises, the outcome is frequently shaped more by governance structures than by ownership percentages.In this article, InCorp examines what the Lululemon board battle reveals about the gap between ownership and control and what that means for founders.Ownership Does Not Equal ControlWilson's fight with Lululemon was never really about whether he cared about the company. Few founders remain as publicly invested in a business after stepping away from leadership, and few still hold a stake as large as his. Yet ownership and authority are not the same thing, which is exactly why the dispute became so public in the first place.Wilson holds roughly 8.7% of the company's outstanding shares, making him its largest individual shareholder, and to most people, that sounds like a lot of power. Yet that stake alone did not give him enough voting power to reshape the board or redirect the brand without a fight.Lululemon's board called his views on diversity and inclusion "outdated" and pushed shareholders to vote against his nominees, and because Wilson did not control enough votes to override them, he had no path to force changes on his own.Shares give a founder a financial stake and a voice at annual meetings, but boards hold the authority to hire executives and set a company's direction. And because board seats are decided by votes, those votes are often governed by rules most founders never think to negotiate.One of the most common misconceptions is that founders focus heavily on equity ownership while paying less attention to governance rights. Voting structures, board appointment rights, and shareholder agreements can have just as much impact on future control as the percentage of ownership itself.The Decisions That Outlive the FounderA new company is usually surrounded by paperwork before it has much else going on, and most of those documents get signed with far more attention on building the business than on future control. But those early documents are doing something founders often do not fully understand until much later.Bylaws establish the ground rules for how a company handles director elections, while shareholder agreements set the terms for what happens when a partner wants out and who gets the first opportunity to buy their stake.Board nomination rights extend that influence further, giving specific people a guaranteed seat at the decision-making table regardless of how ownership changes over time. Columbia Law School has noted that shareholder agreements are often used to contract over the composition of the board of directors, giving certain investors rights that go beyond ownership alone.Each of these documents was drafted at a moment when everyone was working toward the same goal, and each one governs the company when interests no longer align. Wilson's recent fight suggests he did not have an automatic path back to Lululemon's board, since he had to run a proxy campaign and reach a settlement to secure representation.By the time the conflict arrived, the rules were already set, and a public fight became his only realistic way to regain influence.Formation documents are often signed during periods of optimism when everyone assumes interests will remain aligned. The reality is that businesses evolve, ownership changes, and priorities shift. Strong governance planning helps ensure those future transitions don't become costly conflicts.Why Tech Founders Often Keep More Control Than Retail FoundersNot every founder ends up where Wilson did, and the reason is not always tied to how successful the business became. Mark Zuckerberg holds roughly 13% of Meta's economic ownership, far less than most people would associate with control. But the shares he holds are not ordinary shares.They carry 10 votes each, while the shares sold to most public investors carry one. Those voting rights give him roughly 61% of Meta's voting power, making it nearly impossible for outside shareholders to remove him against his will.Alphabet follows a similar model, with its founder-held shares carrying 10 votes per share while ordinary public shares carry one. Snap went further at its initial public offering, selling public shares that carried no voting rights at all. Those companies built founder control directly into their share structures before public investors arrived.However, Wilson's position at Lululemon was different. His 8.7% stake carried standard voting rights, the same as any other shareholder, leaving him without the built-in voting power to reshape the board on his own. And once the dispute reached the public stage, the voting structure had already defined the fight.Most Founder Disputes Never Make HeadlinesMost companies never face a proxy fight, and most founders never end up fighting publicly with their own board. But nearly every business eventually reaches a moment of internal conflict, and when it does, the outcome depends almost entirely on what was written down years earlier.Cofounding partnerships break apart more often than business publications typically cover, and working out who keeps what and at what price gets complicated fast without a written agreement to anchor the process.Outside investors who came in early often develop very different ideas about a company's direction once growth slows or priorities diverge. And families that inherit a business together rarely agree on who should run it or how profits should be distributed.Most governance disputes never attract public attention, but they happen every day in privately held companies. Whether it's a disagreement between partners, a family-owned business navigating succession, or investors and founders pursuing different priorities, the underlying challenge is usually the same: expectations weren't clearly documented at the outset.Even a minority partner who finds an outside buyer for their stake creates a different kind of problem entirely when their founding documents give the remaining owners no say over who ends up holding that equity.Bloomberg Law has noted that disputes like these tend to escalate when founding documents fail to specify ownership percentages or how disagreements should be resolved.Lululemon made headlines because it is a public company, but the same pressure shows up wherever ownership and control begin to separate. And most founders give these documents very little thought after the day they sign them, leaving many disputes far more complicated once a disagreement forces everyone back to the fine print."The best time to address questions about control is before they become problems. Founders should periodically review their governance documents as the business grows, raises capital, adds partners, or expands into new markets. Decisions made early in a company's lifecycle often carry consequences far beyond the formation stage.The Future of Corporate ControlEvery founder signs their formation documents on a day when everything feels possible, and the partnership feels solid. Those same documents govern the company on the day when none of that is true anymore.Founders pour enormous energy into building their products and hiring the people who will help them grow, and the early paperwork is seldom the priority. But the operating agreement or corporate bylaws a founder signs decides what happens when a cofounder wants out, and the shareholder agreement decides whether an outside investor gets a say over decisions the founder never intended to share. And those answers are already locked in, years before anyone thinks to ask.By the time a conflict arrives, most founders have long since forgotten the pages they signed at the very beginning, and formation is the rare moment when founders still have the most say over what those terms will eventually decide.Disclaimer: This content is intended for general educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or accounting advice. Every effort is made to keep the information current and accurate; however, laws, regulations, and guidance can change, and no representation or warranty is given that the content is complete, up to date, or suitable for any particular situation. You should not rely on this material as a substitute for advice from a qualified professional who can consider your specific facts and objectives before you make decisions or take action.This story was produced by InCorp and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| | How TV shows like 'Off Campus' are shaping conversations about dating after traumaHow TV shows like ‘Off Campus’ are shaping conversations about dating after traumaTelevision gets credit for a lot of things it probably shouldn't and is criticized for a lot of things it actually does well. Relationship dramas have spent decades creating tension, often shaping what viewers expect love to look like before they bring those expectations into their own relationships.But "Off Campus" takes a more careful route by focusing on how trust is built inside a relationship.The new show, "Off Campus,” adapted from Elle Kennedy's bestselling novel series, opens with a familiar college setup between music student Hannah Wells and hockey captain Garrett Graham. The fake-dating premise is where it starts, but Hannah is a survivor, and "Off Campus" builds its central romance around the slow, difficult work of learning to feel safe with another person.BetterHelp, the world's largest online mental health platform, has shared how the portrayals of love that audiences absorb from entertainment may shape the expectations they carry into their own lives.And "Off Campus" fits directly into that concern. Giving younger audiences a romance that recognizes those patterns and sits with the harder parts of intimacy long enough to show why it has struck a nerve.Key takeaways"Off Campus" reflects a larger shift in romance storytelling, where emotional safety, consent, and communication are becoming just as central as chemistry.The show’s focus is not only on trauma itself, but on what comes after it: rebuilding trust, learning vulnerability, and feeling safe in connection again.Relationship dramas can help viewers name difficult emotions, but they should not be treated as mental health guidance or a substitute for professional support.No single story can represent every survivor’s healing process, which is why trauma-focused romance needs nuance, care, and room for different reactions.Content warning: Please be advised that the article below might mention trauma-related topics that include suicide, which could be triggering to the reader. If you or someone you know is struggling or in crisis, help is available. Text or call the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline at 988 or chat at 988lifeline.org. Support is available 24/7.The Rise of Emotionally Aware Relationship Storytelling on TVThe romance genre has always had a massive audience, but the version gaining more attention now feels less interested in chaos for its own sake. Modern relationship dramas are giving more space to consent and emotional vulnerability, with shows like "Off Campus" treating both as part of what makes attraction believable.Boundaries and open communication have become part of the suspense, especially for viewers who are tired of watching conflict get mistaken for chemistry."Off Campus" showrunner Louisa Levy was direct about the show’s priorities when she spoke to Refinery29. “The story is not about the trauma,” Levy said. “It’s about the survival after the trauma.” And streaming has pushed that conversation beyond the episode itself, giving fandom communities on TikTok and Reddit room to break these relationships down as they watch.Even younger viewers are analyzing these dynamics and debating them online, using those conversations to develop a sharper sense of what a healthy connection actually requires from both people.Why Audiences Connect With Stories About Trust and VulnerabilityFictional relationships often feel familiar even when the details of a viewer's life look nothing like what is unfolding on screen. The connection comes from emotional experiences that many people recognize in different ways, including the hesitation that comes with opening up or the uncertainty that follows broken trust.Stories like "Off Campus" give those moments space to unfold slowly, allowing viewers to sit with the discomfort of emotional connection and the effort it takes to communicate personal needs clearly.Psychologists describe this as a response to the emotional truth of a story, where people connect to the feeling behind an experience rather than the exact events themselves. Each viewer brings their own history into that connection, which is why the same relationship can land differently from one person to the next, even when the scene itself never changes.TV Can Spark Conversations, But It Isn’t Mental Health GuidanceA character working through fear of intimacy on screen and a person doing that same work in real life are operating on entirely different timelines, with entirely different tools. Television is built for storytelling first, and even shows that handle emotional subjects with care are still working within the rules of drama, not clinical practice.Paul Weigle, M.D., associate medical director at Natchaug Hospital, told Hartford Healthcare that while some shows raise awareness around difficult mental health conditions, they are often overshadowed by portrayals that reinforce stigma rather than reduce it.He pointed to "13 Reasons Why" as one case that drew concern, noting research that found the suicide rate among teenagers ages 10 to 17 rose nearly 30% within a month of its release.A story can help someone put language to what they are feeling, but support in real life still depends on trusted people and trained professionals when those feelings become difficult to manage alone.Consent, Boundaries, and Communication in Modern Dating ConversationsHonesty about personal boundaries and mutual respect have become part of what many people now expect from a healthy relationship, and the language around both has moved well beyond private conversations.Social worker Karen Salerno, LISW-S, told Cleveland Clinic that “healthy boundaries don’t assert control over someone else” but instead make personal needs clear enough for both people to feel respected.Television does not always get that balance right, especially when drama rewards pressure or confusion. But relationship-focused shows that handle it with care give audiences a shared reference for what open communication can look like in practice.Fandom platforms have carried that conversation further, with viewers using fictional relationships to examine real standards around consent and boundaries while recognizing that no two people will define safety in the same way.Social Media and the Rise of Shared Emotional ConversationsThe appeal of social media goes well beyond a shared reaction to a scene or a character. Platforms like TikTok and Reddit have turned television viewing into something collective, giving audiences a place to process what they watched alongside strangers who felt it the same way.Drea Letamendi, Ph.D., a clinical psychologist who advises entertainment media companies, told the American Psychological Association that “our relationship with media is bigger than the story itself.” Fandom communities have made that clear by using TV relationships as a starting point to examine trust and what real support between two people can look like.But online connections have limits, especially when one-sided digital bonds begin standing in for the harder work of building relationships offline.Support-Seeking and Emotional ReflectionGetting help is harder than most people admit. And many people spend a long time convincing themselves they are managing just fine before they ever ask someone to stay and listen without an agenda.Emotionally honest television can make that first admission feel less strange, giving audiences space to recognize what they have been carrying before they know how to talk about it. Research cited by Temple News found that people willing to be vulnerable tend to develop a deeper sense of belonging and that openness can build trust rather than weaken it.Strong support often starts with someone safe enough to hear the truth, whether that person is a trusted friend, a partner, or a mental health professional when the emotions involved need more care than a personal conversation can provide.Why Nuance Matters in Conversations About Trauma and DatingTrauma does not move along a predictable line, and no television relationship can substitute for the private work of processing it. Jenna Hennessy, Ph.D., a licensed clinical psychologist at Columbia University, noted in Verywell Mind that “healing is not a linear process,” and survivor experiences vary too widely for any single narrative to account for all of them.Shows like "Off Campus" handle their characters’ histories with more care than most, but they still represent one path through one particular set of circumstances. A survivor watching any relationship drama may find parts of it close to their own experience and other parts far from anything they recognize, and both reactions deserve to be taken seriously.A better reading of any show is to see it as one version of one person’s experience, not a standard that every survivor is supposed to recognize or follow.The Future of Relationship Storytelling on TelevisionPeople have developed real expectations about how emotional depth shows up on screen, and television writers are learning that romance has to carry more than chemistry now. Shows that make room for vulnerability and honest communication have set a new standard for relationship writing, one that treats emotional growth as part of the relationship rather than a side plot.Kathy Hirsh-Pasek, Ph.D., a developmental psychologist at Temple University, told the APA that television will continue to explore relationships and anxiety and that the better work will come from getting those subjects closer to real human experience.Entertainment has always given people a way to escape the pressure of real life, and relationship dramas like "Off Campus" continue that tradition while bringing viewers into more emotionally honest territory. Research shows that media shapes how people understand love and connection, even when those portrayals are heightened for entertainment.So while television opens the door to reflection, it cannot walk someone through getting the help they need. Rather, real change begins when a person takes what the show stirred up and brings it to someone who can stay with them through it, whether that is a trusted person in their life or a professional trained to help them make sense of what they are carrying.This story was produced by BetterHelp and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| John Deere calling back 50 workers between Davenport and DubuqueWith this latest hiring, more than 400 employees in Iowa and Illinois have either returned to work or been hired since January. |
| Miss Iowa Scholarship Program competitions return to Davenport this weekThe Miss Iowa Scholarship Program will be held June 11–13 in Davenport, featuring statewide contestants competing for scholarships and the chance to advance to Miss America and Miss America’s Teen. |
| | How Playing A Quick Puzzle Can Improve Your Workday(NAPSI)—You probably know the feeling: you’ve been staring at your screen for hours, your inbox keeps growing, and your next meeting starts in five minutes. Sometimes, the best way to reset is to take a quick moment to focus on something completely different. Where to Find It Daily puzzle games have become a popular way to take those quick mental breaks, and platforms like LinkedIn are leaning into that trend. LinkedIn’s newest game, Wend, blends word finding with logic-based problem solving. “Wend is a word-finding game where players connect letters in a grid to uncover hidden words, using every letter exactly once,” says Helen Smith, Group Product Manager at LinkedIn. “While it may seem like a traditional word game, it adds a logic twist, as players also have to figure out how the entire board fits together.” In addition to Wend, the LinkedIn games lineup includes word-based puzzles like Pinpoint and Crossclimb, alongside logic challenges like Queens, Tango, Mini Sudoku, Zip, and Patches, each offering a different way to exercise your brain throughout the day. 1. Why your brain needs a recharge Stepping away from a task for even a minute or two can sometimes be exactly what’s needed to return with fresh eyes. Unlike checking email again or scrolling through your phone, a quick puzzle gives your attention something entirely different to focus on. The result is a short reset with a clear beginning and end, making it easy to fit between meetings, projects, and other responsibilities. “That’s part of the appeal of LinkedIn’s games, which can often be completed in just a few minutes,” says Thomas Snyder, LinkedIn’s Principal Puzzlemaster and 3-time World Sudoku Champion. “It’s a quick mental break that feels especially satisfying when everything clicks into place.” 2. The social side of puzzle games While LinkedIn games are played individually, they can create a great opportunity for connection with others. Players often share scores with colleagues, discuss strategies, send puzzles to friends, or spark friendly competition through posts and messages. After you play a game, you’ll see how you stack up against other players you know on a leaderboard. “For people working across teams, offices, and time zones, games can provide an easy reason to reconnect,” says Lakshman Somasundaram, Senior Director of Product at LinkedIn. “A shared puzzle score, a little friendly rivalry, or a quick discussion about strategy can turn into a meaningful conversation that can open the door to new professional opportunities.” And sometimes, according to Somasundaram, that conversation can start with something as simple as, “Did you play today’s puzzle?” 3. A win before the workday starts There’s something satisfying about solving a challenge before your day fully gets underway. Completing a puzzle may not clear your inbox or finish your project plan, but it can provide a small sense of accomplishment early in the day. For many players, solving a puzzle becomes part of a daily routine—a quick challenge that helps them ease into work mode before tackling larger tasks. Learn More In a workday filled with constant notifications and multitasking, a quick puzzle may be one of the simplest ways to pause, refresh, and reconnect. To try Wend and LinkedIn’s other games, visit linkedin.com/games. Word Count: 514 |
| | Why banks pull back from lower-credit borrowersWhy banks pull back from lower-credit borrowersMany households don’t think twice about their monthly subscription costs. Streaming services alone can total more than $100, but that doesn’t surprise anyone. Ask the same household to pay an annual credit card fee, and the reaction flips, even though it could be less than their subscriptions combined.A new study from the Digital Banking Report, sponsored by Credit One Bank and authored by industry strategist Jim Marous, found this very contradiction at the heart of consumers’ conundrum. If they’re willing to pay recurring fees for convenience, why does the same logic break down when the fee buys them access to a financial system?The data points to an unassuming answer. The pullback from lower-score borrowers isn’t about regulation, and it isn’t about profitability. It comes down to choice.The Bank Retreat Is RealLenders are walking away from a large slice of the population. A little over half (56%) of institutions reported a decrease in their willingness to lend to borrowers with credit scores below 670 over the last three years. Only 11% of banks increased lending. Specifically, 48% moderately decreased their willingness to lend, and another 8% cut it sharply.The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s 2025 Consumer Credit Card Market Report also shows this downward trend: The share of large-bank organizations lending to lower-score borrowers fell from almost a quarter (23.3%) in early 2022 to 16.4% in early 2025.On the other hand, the Financial Health Network’s Pulse 2025 research found that only 3 in 10 (31%) of households qualify as financially healthy. That means that more than two-thirds of the population sit in a vulnerable financial state.Supply is contracting at a time when more people need the product.‘We Can't’ Turns Out To Mean ‘We Choose Not To’The financial industry cites regulation as the reason for its retreat, yet the survey doesn’t support that explanation.When asked which factors held them back from lending to borrowers with lower scores, nearly 9 in 10 (87%) said expected credit losses. The second biggest reason was costs related to acquiring and servicing accounts, coming in at a little over half (57%). Regulation constraints were only mentioned by a third of institutions (32%).Additionally, nearly half of respondents see borrowers with credit scores below 670 as moderately higher risk; that perception increases steeply when scores fall below 600. Only about 1 in 5 (18%) institutions said they see borrowers with 670 credit scores as comparable to prime consumers.That changes the debate. The barrier is a decision the lender makes about how much risk it wants to pursue, not regulations.The Fee That Nobody ExplainsOver two-thirds (69%) of institutions said fees are essential or very important for sustainably serving higher-risk consumers. So fees are seen as the mechanism that makes lending to this group work. The problem, however, is that the industry has never bothered to explain why.The report states that the industry failed to clearly explain and promote why these tools exist. The annual fee, in particular, it states, carries a stigma that does not match how consumers spend their money elsewhere. Many don’t realize that an annual fee actually costs less per month, because it’s rarely ever framed that way.The report states that in a responsible approach, the institution should offer tools to support the consumer’s progress, with the product’s cost decreasing as the consumer’s profile improves.The Piece That's Still MissingThe data closes on a gap. When asked which strategies they actively use to improve outcomes for nonprime consumers, 8 in 10 (82%) institutions cited transparent pricing and disclosures, and nearly two-thirds (65%) cited credit education or financial literacy tools. Those are the easy, low-cost moves.The harder, more structural tools lag badly. Only a third (32%) use alternative underwriting data, another third (32%) use digital tools to encourage responsible usage, and just 1 in 5 (22%) offer gradual credit line increases tied to performance. Education and disclosure are foundations, but the survey suggests the industry has largely stopped there rather than building products that actively help people climb.The tools to close the gap exist, but mostly sit unused. Whether modest fees are the gateway the report calls them or a gateway that conveniently happens to be the sponsor's product, the report's sharpest point is the simplest one: nobody has bothered to explain what the fee actually buys.MethodologyThe central findings come from a survey the Digital Banking Report fielded in April 2026. Respondents spanned global, regional, and community banks, plus credit unions and fintech firms, sorted by asset size and portfolio size. The breakdown: 31% credit unions, 30% community banks, 18% global banks, 14% regional banks, and 7% fintech firms. Half reported assets between $1 billion and $10 billion.The report pairs that survey with outside data. CFPB figures on card originations, Federal Reserve household numbers, the Financial Health Network's Pulse research, and EverFi's work on financial confidence all show up as corroboration. One thing to keep in mind while reading the percentages: several questions let respondents pick up to three answers, so those totals run past 100%.This story was produced by Credit One Bank and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| | Getting married this summer? Here's what it could do to your financesGetting married this summer? Here's what it could do to your financesPaying the bills, cooking for one, and managing your personal finances as a single adult can be challenging and liberating. When you live alone, you’re in charge of your own destiny—and if you get into financial difficulty, your own debt relief, too.When you get married, you combine your personal finances with another person’s. At its best, marriage can be a financial safety net that helps you navigate everyday life and long-term money moves.Marriage can, with the help of a supportive life partner, make it easier to manage money and build wealth. Survey data from the University of Chicago shows that married people tend to be happier than unmarried people. Also, people in the top 20% of incomes tend to be happier than lower-income people. Marriage appears to have some big financial benefits. A Pew Research Center study in 2024 found that married people are less likely to be low-income than unmarried people.So, is marriage actually good for your financial health?There’s nothing wrong with staying single, and there’s no need to get married solely for financial reasons. But along with the joy of building a life with someone you love, marriage can bring some worthwhile benefits to your bank account, credit score, and more.Freedom Debt Relief explores a few reasons marriage can be good for your financial health.Key Takeaways:Surveys show that married people tend to be happier and are likely to have a higher income than unmarried people.Marriage to the right person could improve your financial health.Working together as a couple can bring health and wealth.Marriage and TaxesAfter you get married, the way you file your taxes is likely to be different than when you filed as a single person. As a married couple, you may choose to file jointly, instead of filing separate tax returns. This can provide a few helpful tax advantages for married couples.Is there a marriage penalty?Mostly, no. A “marriage penalty” happens when the two of you pay more in income tax as a married couple than you would have if you filed individually. That kind of penalty in taxes was reduced for most people after the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act was passed. That new tax law widened the tax brackets, making the income limits for “married filing jointly” twice as high as for single filers. So just because you’re married, that doesn’t mean you’ll be in a higher tax bracket.There are still a few other types of marriage tax penalties. But according to the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center, these are more likely to affect couples with incomes over $693,750 and couples with children (filing jointly) where both spouses earn about the same amount of income. That’s because married couples filing jointly can’t deduct as much of their income as two separate parents could. An unmarried couple with kids could have one partner file as “head of household,” which gets a higher standard deduction than a single filer would.Is there a marriage bonus?If one of you earns all or most of the income, you often receive a marriage bonus. That’s because the lower-earning spouse’s income can help put the higher-earning spouse into a lower tax bracket than they’d be in otherwise.Having 2 Incomes Provides Double BenefitsPerhaps the simplest financial advantage of being married is that many married households get the benefit of having two incomes. You get two people helping each other take care of the everyday expenses of life.Two incomes can provide double financial benefits to your marriage. First, you may be able to afford a better home by doubling your budget for rent or a mortgage payment. Second, you can double down on decreasing debt and reaching other financial goals.You might even discover that working together as a married couple can help you get energized and focused on reaching your biggest financial goals. What if you want to boost your credit score, move to a new city, take a dream vacation, and more? As a married couple working as a team, with two times (or more) the income that you used to have as a single person, all of these goals are hopefully within reach.Marriage Can Get You Talking About Money and MoreAccording to previous survey data from the Pew Research Center, married couples tend to have a more positive view of their relationship than couples who just live together. There may be something about being married that makes people a little more connected and hopeful about the future. This more optimistic outlook can jump-start a pattern of open communication about money. Planning together for a debt payoff strategy or starting an emergency fund can help you stick to your financial goals.Hopefully, you’ll find that it’s exciting, inspiring, and healing to open up about your finances with your partner. You’re building a new life together and sharing your resources. Combining your bank accounts and credit histories builds trust and communication. Together, you can decide how to manage your finances in a way that helps you both get more of what you want out of life.Here are a few questions to spark a conversation about money as a couple:Should you try to live off one income and save the other?What should you do about paying off any remaining student loans?Do either of you have credit card debt, and how soon can you pay it off? Who’s responsible for what?What if you want to open a new credit card—should you add the other spouse as an authorized user?Would it make sense to use one income for paying off debts or dealing with big bills like a mortgage, and the other for normal living expenses like food and entertainment?How much money should each person be able to devote to shared expenses, and how much should each person spend on their own hobbies, clothes, cars, and personal interests?What are some big dreams and life goals that you want to save for together, like vacations, new cars, buying a home, and retirement? Health Insurance CoverageBeing married could make it easier to handle the costs of health insurance and out-of-pocket medical bills. Marriage could inspire you to take better care of your health and the health of your spouse. If your spouse has better health insurance through their job than your current insurance, find out if you can get added to their plan. You might find that paying for a shared family health insurance plan’s premium is cheaper than paying for two separate premiums as single people.Managing your money as a married couple can also make it easier to save extra cash in a health savings account (HSA). If you qualify for an HSA through your health insurance plan, you can use this account to save for medical expenses with pre-tax dollars. A wide range of qualified medical expenses and out-of-pocket costs, like hospital bills, contact lenses, or cavity fillings, can be paid for with your HSA debit card. Ask your employer if this is a covered benefit.Retirement Benefits in a MarriageWhat’s better than one retirement nest egg? Two retirement nest eggs. You and your spouse can work together to max out your retirement benefits. You might look at the details of each person’s employer-sponsored retirement plan and figure out which one is the best. For example, make sure each spouse takes advantage of any employer match in a 401(k).In addition to employer-sponsored retirement plans, look for ways to contribute to an individual retirement account (traditional or Roth) and get tax advantages. Being a married couple with two incomes may mean you can put more money to work and build wealth for your shared future together.So, Is Marriage Good for Your Financial Health?Even though there are many financial advantages to marriage, most everyone gets hitched for reasons beyond the retirement savings and the tax breaks. Getting married is about love, commitment, and trust. It’s about all the everyday moments and the sometimes mundane work of running a home and building a life. Marriage can be hard, but most long-time married people will also tell you that with the right person, marriage is worth the effort.As you build loving memories, hopefully you’ll also build healthy financial habits and grow your wealth as you grow together.This story was produced by Freedom Debt Relief and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| | In prisons and jails, a lack of sleep may harm health and safetyAn outdoor recreation and gathering space at the Women’s Eastern Reception, Diagnostic and Correctional Center in Vandalia, Mo. Sleep disruption is common in U.S. prisons and jails, according to a new report from the Prison and Jail Innovation Lab at the University of Texas at Austin. (Photo by Amanda Watford/Stateline)For many incarcerated people, getting a full night’s sleep is almost impossible. Bright lights, loud noise, overnight head counts, early morning meals and other routine features of prison and jail operations can make restorative sleep nearly impossible, according to a new report from researchers at the Prison and Jail Innovation Lab at the University of Texas at Austin. The report’s authors argue that chronic sleep disruption is a widespread but often overlooked feature of incarceration that may affect physical and mental health, increase tensions inside facilities and create challenges that persist long after release. Chronic sleep deprivation has been linked to increased risks of cardiovascular disease, weakened immune function, depression, anxiety and cognitive impairment. But a lack of sleep isn’t just a question of the health and comfort of people who are incarcerated; sleep loss also may contribute to interpersonal conflict and behavioral problems, increasing the risks for prison staff. “People who are chronically exhausted are more likely to struggle emotionally, physically and behaviorally,” Michele Deitch, director of the Prison and Jail Innovation Lab and co-author of the report, said in a news release. “If corrections leaders want safer and more stable facilities, finding ways to improve sleep conditions must become part of the conversation.” Many of the conditions that interfere with sleep are avoidable, according to the researchers, and could be addressed through changes in policy and operations that local or state corrections systems may want to consider. Extreme heat in prisons brings more legal challenges, pressure on states Among the recommendations in the report are reducing unnecessary nighttime disruptions, redesigning overnight count procedures to avoid waking people, improving mattresses and bedding, reducing noise and excessive lighting, maintaining more stable temperatures and increasing opportunities for daytime activity that support healthier sleep cycles. The report also suggests providing eye masks and ear plugs, improving meal timing and keeping people more active during the day to help regulate sleep patterns. “Sleep is a basic biological necessity, not a luxury,” Alycia Welch, associate director of the Prison and Jail Innovation Lab and lead author of the report, said in a news release. “Yet in prisons and jails across the country, people are routinely subjected to conditions that make restorative sleep nearly impossible.” The report draws on scientific research, reports from correctional oversight bodies, and accounts from currently and formerly incarcerated people and corrections officials to examine how institutional routines shape sleep in custody. The report’s authors found that sleep is often interrupted by a combination of environmental conditions and operational practices. Thin mattresses, constant lighting, uncomfortable temperatures and persistent noise can make it difficult to fall or stay asleep. Routine activities such as medication distribution and early wake-up schedules can further fragment rest. In some facilities, incarcerated people reported receiving medication as early as 2:30 a.m. and breakfast around 4 a.m., according to the report. The researchers also found that limited access to exercise, programming, social interaction and outdoor time can disrupt healthy sleep-wake cycles. Stress and anxiety, researchers say, can further prevent restorative sleep even when opportunities to rest exist. Prison abuse, deaths and escapes prompt calls for more oversight Certain groups of people, including older adults, women and people with physical or mental health conditions, may be especially vulnerable and affected in different ways. Formerly incarcerated people interviewed for the report also described ongoing sleep problems and difficulties reestablishing healthy sleep patterns after returning to their communities. The authors argue that because many sleep-disrupting conditions stem from operational choices, they could be adjusted without compromising safety and security — a point they say may be of interest to state and local corrections agencies considering facility changes or cost-saving measures that could also reduce instability and tension, and promote healthier incarcerated populations. Stateline reporter Amanda Watford can be reached at awatford@stateline.org. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE Courtesy of Stateline |
| Japan reactor restart sparks fresh fears over nuclear waste storageThe reboot highlights a dire problem for the country's nuclear program. Japan is running out of space to store spent nuclear fuel and lacks plans for radioactive waste disposal. |
| | 74% of employees say financial stress has impacted their mental health. What can employers do to help?74% of employees say financial stress has impacted their mental health. What can employers do to help?According to research for Spring Health’s 2026 Workplace Mental Health Annual Report, 74% of employees say financial stress has impacted their mental health.This isn't a fringe issue. And it's not just about compensation.Employee financial stress can create productivity and presenteeism for organizations while leading to employee burnout, sleep issues, and more for employees. And it can affect a wide swath of the employee population, no matter how much they’re paid.This is an organizational performance risk worth every organization’s attention.What is employee financial stress?Employee financial stress is the ongoing cognitive and emotional strain caused by debt, caregiving costs, housing and inflation pressures, income insecurity, and unpredictable expenses. Spring Health's research found that 59% of employees say their financial stress has increased over the past five years.From a clinical perspective, stress intensifies when people feel a lack of control. When employees believe their financial situation is uncontrollable, stress shifts from temporary to chronic. That chronic stress alters sleep, increases anxiety, impacts decision-making, and amplifies relational strain.How financial stress shows up at workFinancial stress rarely stays at home. It follows employees into meetings, inboxes, and decision cycles.Presenteeism: Employees may be physically present but mentally preoccupied. Ongoing worry about bills, debt, or caregiving costs consumes cognitive bandwidth. Over time, this “always-on” background stress leads to slower decision-making, reduced creativity, diminished focus, and sustained performance drag, even if attendance remains steady.Sleep disruption: Financial worry is a common driver of sleep issues, which was the top mental health challenge identified by employees in Spring Health’s survey. When someone experiences difficulty falling asleep or staying asleep, mood regulation declines, focus narrows, and stress tolerance drops. The longer poor sleep persists, the more other symptoms escalate.Burnout acceleration: Chronic financial stress doesn’t just coexist with burnout. It compounds it. Employees already managing heavy workloads or caregiving responsibilities are more likely to feel emotionally drained when financial uncertainty is layered on top. What begins as worry can quickly become exhaustion.Productivity erosion: Over time, the combined impact of cognitive strain, poor sleep, and emotional depletion shows up in missed deadlines, reduced engagement or increased isolation, and a higher risk of leaves of absence. Financial stress becomes not just a personal burden, but a workforce stability issue.Populations that are vulnerable to financial stressInterestingly, household income seems to play very little role when examining the impact of financial stress. Coincidentally, within Spring Health’s research among U.S. employees, the same percentage responded saying they experienced financial stress with household incomes under $50,000 as did those whose household incomes were at least $150,000.Within Spring Health’s research, the following employee segments were among the highest reporting that financial stress was affecting their mental health:86% of respondents in the technology industry79% of respondents in the finance industry82% of all employees under the age of 4586% of respondents in India83% of respondents in MexicoWhy traditional EAP models fall shortTraditional EAPs often offer generic financial articles, provide short-term counseling without specialization, lack tailored provider matching, and require employees to self-navigate complex systems.Here's the clinical reality: If someone struggling with financial stress is matched to a provider who doesn't specialize in economic anxiety, debt-related shame, relationship strain tied to finances, or caregiving financial pressure, they're less likely to engage. Wrong-fit care drives drop-off.What helps? A precision-based approach to financial stress1. Early identification through quick assessmentMental health stigma is real. That’s why leading employers offer brief, clinically validated assessments that identify financial stress as a driver of anxiety or depression early. This prevents escalation into employee burnout, leave of absence, and crisis intervention.2. Personalized provider matchingThis is critical. Employees facing financial stress need providers who specialize in financial anxiety, stress tied to debt or economic instability, relationship strain connected to money, caregiver-related financial overwhelm, and high-acuity conditions that financial stress may exacerbate.Provider matching matters. If a female employee struggling with financial stress and food insecurity is sent to a provider whose background or specialty is unrelated (such as substance use in a different population), engagement drops. Precision matching increases trust, follow-through, and symptom improvement.Among employees who said financial stress was impacting their mental health, 58% said in Spring Health’s survey that they had met with a mental health professional, such as a therapist or counselor, in the past year.3. Integrated financial guidance and mental healthcareFinancial stress is both practical and emotional. Support should include:Budgeting or financial navigation resourcesWork-life financial servicesTherapy with clinicians trained in financial stress dynamicsCoaching for habit and resilience buildingRetirement-planning coaching and resources4. Reducing friction with a single front doorFinancial stress already creates cognitive overload. If accessing help requires multiple phone calls, searching portals, and explaining your situation repeatedly, engagement drops.Leading employers provide one clear starting point, route employees to appropriate care quickly, and coordinate paperwork and administrative burden. This restores a sense of control.What leading employers are doing differentlyThey track financial stress as a workforce risk signal. They move beyond generic EAPs. They invest in precision mental healthcare with measurement-based outcomes. They choose AI-native mental health solutions that match employees to providers who specialize in their needs.They treat financial stress as an upstream risk, not a downstream crisis.And the proof is in the data. In Spring Health’s survey, employees who said they lacked access to adequate mental health support from their employer were 52% more likely to say they experienced financial stress.Employees can't control inflation, market shifts, debt obligations, or caregiving costs. But employers can control whether:Financial support is easy to accessProvider matching is thoughtful and specializedEmployees feel guided or left to navigate aloneEmployee financial stress may be unavoidable. But unmanaged financial stress doesn't have to be.This story was produced by Spring Health and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| | What happens when a town governs from the future?What happens when a town governs from the future?When Mikiko was first asked to envision herself in the year 2060, she was skeptical. The instructions were clear: Imagine you could time travel 40 years into the future of Yahaba Town and live there at your present age. Then, provide ideas for policies that should be implemented now that would represent the interests of that generation. As a 40-something-year-old woman who’d lived in the charming Japanese town for a decade, Mikiko didn’t see anything wrong with the way things were currently, and she couldn’t imagine she’d have any issue with it 40 years down the line, either.A young woman about two decades her junior changed her mind. The woman expressed dissatisfaction with the way things were and a desire for a better tomorrow, which reminded Mikiko of her own decision to leave home at a young age. Mikiko wanted Yahaba Town to be different—a place where young people wanted to stay and build. After some discussion, she reconsidered her vision for the town’s future. Maybe things needed to change, after all.Gathered in a small room at Yahaba Town Hall, Mikiko, the young woman, and a handful of other local citizens of disparate ages had agreed to engage in these imaginative discussions as a part of a budding new movement called Future Design. As members of the inaugural Future Design workshop, participants like Mikiko were later interviewed about their experience in a study published by researchers Yoshinori Nakagawa and Tatsuyoshi Saijo (interviewee last names were omitted).While Mikiko and her groupmates mentally stepped into the future, a separate intergenerational bunch inside the town hall had been tasked with discussing and designing their own set of policies—but as their current-day selves. After months of ongoing conversation, the two groups of Yahaba Town locals came together in a debate—future versus present—to share their ideas on topics like climate change, infrastructure, and healthcare investment.This is the crux of the Future Design framework, which Atmos explores in this article. Proposed by Japanese economist Saijo, the methodology uses these roleplay exercises to address our disregard for the well-being of forthcoming generations. Indigenous “seventh-generation” traditions have long championed thinking in this way, formally considering those who will inherit the world up to seven generations from the present in their major decision-making discussions. Inspired by this method, Saijo designed his own experiment where the future and present would negotiate with one another, finding that those in the imaginary future group consistently invested in the future at higher rates.In a politically chaotic and short-sighted world, considering the priorities of future people could offer a more holistic path forward for governance at the local, federal, and international levels.World leaders should embrace this framework the most, says Future Design Consortium founder and neuroscientist Dr. Tsuyoshi Okamoto. In reality, however, such an unconventional idea might struggle to gain traction in a group known to change slowly.“That’s why I’ve focused on engaging young people—those who are likely to become the leaders of tomorrow,” Okamoto said. “By experiencing Future Design early on, they can begin to develop habits of thinking and acting for a better future society.”Okamoto is an associate professor at Kyushu University, where a Future Design-based course is now part of the required curriculum for approximately 2,700 first-year undergraduate students. It’s believed to be the largest implementation of Future Design education in the world.During class, students are asked to vividly imagine what daily life would be like in the future and to describe it using present-tense, definitive language. In Japan, the intense effects of climate change are already being felt through extreme heat and flooding, leading young people to envision a dystopian future, Okamoto explained. Through the Future Design process, they’re encouraged to imagine the future freely without preconceived notions, and therefore develop a genuine desire not to let this dystopian future happen.“At that point, they begin to see the issue as personal, and start to seriously consider what actions are truly necessary. I believe that the more people who carry that mindset—and can turn it into action—the more our society will begin to change for the better.”Okamoto has gone so far as to test brain activity on those engaging with Future Design-style thinking. His preliminary observations suggest a trend: Future Design participants tend to make more sustainable decisions, which is reflected in corresponding changes to their brainwave patterns. The Future Design methodology doesn’t require any major conscious psychological shifts in the participant; rather, participants experience a shift naturally by fully embracing the act of roleplaying.Young people tend to be more enthusiastic and open to this, although both Okamoto and Saijo acknowledge a gap in imaginative capacity between them and older generations. A lack of life experience can prevent younger generations from being able to see how dramatically things could change in just a few decades; whereas older people can activate the same part of the brain used to think about their storied pasts to envision a more expansive future.Both perspectives are necessary for change, which is why intergenerational dialogue is a key tenet of the Future Design methodology.Five thousand miles away in the Bay Area, California, climate activists Jayden Wan, 17, and Clint Wilkins, 79, have fully embraced this form of collaboration.Wan and Wilkins have been working together for the past two years on Future Design workshops, materials, and training. As a duo that is feeling their way to solutions, they’ve gained traction in their charge to spread the Future Design framework and help people connect with the generations that are alive today, while taking into account the generations that are on their way.“We are combining our strengths and forgoing our weaknesses for the sake of a better future. That’s something that I can get on board with, and that I also want my peers to get on board with,” said Wan.There are three main generational buckets Wan and Wilkins categorize people in: youth, midlifers, and elders. As Wilkins explained, each generation has an essential role to play: “We elders are the conveners, the midlifers can actually get things done, and the youth are kind of justice-seekers in training.”Last year, with the help of climate organization Elders Action Network, the two were able to gather 56 people of various ages and disciplines—ranging from local elected officials to high school students—for an official Future Design retreat. They discussed a real California ballot measure that was up for a vote: Prop 4, which proposed authorizing a $10 billion bond for climate spending in the state. Participants followed the present versus future role play framework, splitting into intergenerational groups and negotiating how much money should be invested into mitigating future climate change events.The most common feedback from the retreat was in praise of the intergenerational structure: Participants felt as though it was a safe environment for everyone to share their thoughts and perspectives, regardless of age. This sort of solidarity across generations is precisely what Wan and Wilkins believe will cultivate empathy for unseen future generations as well as encourage government officials to recognize that safeguarding the future is popular among all ages.“The idea we’re trying to manifest is that if we bring together the youth, the elders, and the folks in between, and get them all in a room, advocating for the same policies, it can really make a difference when it comes to how decision-makers perceive their own policies,” Wan said.Back in Yahaba Town, where the first-ever Future Design workshops were held, these strategies have paid off. The mayor officially declared it a Future Design Town in 2018, and subsequently formed a Future Division, where members design the present from the perspective of the future. Currently, over 80% of the town’s policies are made by citizens who’ve become Future Designers. Now, when Mikiko walks through the charming streets, she tends to look a bit closer at what the town might need for its future to flourish.Redesigning and transforming governance in a way that considers our future kin might seem like an uphill battle. After all, empathy for those rendered invisible—whether it’s marginalized peoples, nonhuman entities, or future generations—seems to be constantly sacrificed for self-satisfaction. Still, love for the next generations remains the number one motivator for support of climate action, whether those actions are implemented by policymakers or not.There’s no denying that the stakes are high. Perhaps with a new political design, the future could be seen more clearly—enough to give its beings a fair shot to continue to protect the Earth, pass the torch forward, and look back to tell their ancestors, “Thank you.”This story was produced by Atmos and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| Pay It Forward | Providing support for Parkinson's diseaseStep inside the Knox County YMCA, and people may pass by a group called "Rock Steady," an organization geared towards patients with Parkinson's. |
| East Moline residents recover following strong storm systemAcross our viewing area, residents were hit by multiple rounds of strong winds and severe rain. |
| Rock Island-Milan promotes Washington dean to assistant principalShe has been the dean at Washington Junior High School for the past year. |
| Davenport City Council approves new agreement with Humane Society of Scott CountyThe one-year contract will have the humane society providing the city's animal protection and shelter services. |
| | Geiss bills would regulate human milk banks, expand access to donor milkSen Erika Geiss (D-Taylor). Jun 10, 2026 | Photo by Kyle Davidson/Michigan AdvanceCarrying forward more than a decade of work beginning with her time in the Michigan House of Representatives, state Sen. Erika Geiss presented and took questions from colleagues on a series of policies setting standards for human milk banks. Milk banks store pasteurized breast milk donated by nursing mothers to assist moms and babies in need. “The infants who rely on donor human milk are some of our most vulnerable residents,” Geiss, a Democrat from Taylor, told members of the Senate Housing and Human Services Committee on Wednesday. “Some of these residents are infants in NICU – neonatal intensive care unit – who may have premature birth-related issues, such as immature digestive systems, an immature gut barrier, immune vulnerability, necrotizing enterocolitis, the inability to breastfeed directly, or moms whose milk was yet to come in, just to name a few.” Additionally, there are a variety of reasons why mothers may not be able to supply their own breast milk, Geiss noted. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX. Geiss’ Senate Bills 724, 725 and 726 would establish operational guidelines for hospital and human milk banks, allow Medicaid reimbursement for families prescribed breast milk for infants up to two years of age and set legal penalties for hospitals and milk banks that knowingly provide adulterated or raw human milk. Isha Johnson, program director for the Black Mothers Breast Feeding Association, offered support for Geiss’s legislation, noting that access to donor milk is a critical resource in their organization’s mission to reduce racial disparities around breastfeeding resources for women in the Detroit area. “Families shouldn’t have to navigate these challenges alone,” Johnson said. “Safe, accessible donor milk can provide a really wonderful bridge to just, difficult circumstances, and just helps parents meet the need of their feeding goals and ensuring that our babies receive the nutrition that they need.” Sam Champagne and Erin McGreal-Miller of Henry Ford Health testify in support of legislation creating standards for human milk banks in Michigan. Jun 10, 2026 | Photo by Kyle Davidson/Michigan Advance Erin McGreal-Miller, the manager of the milk bank at Henry Ford Jackson Hospital, explained that for low birth-weight infants, breast milk is not just the best option for their nutrition, it can be lifesaving. “Human milk is a critical preventive strategy for necrotizing enterocolitis, also known as NEC, an intestinal disease of primarily preterm infants that, when not deadly, significantly increases risk of neurodevelopmental disability, recurrent infections and recurrent hospitalizations,” McGreal-Miller said, noting that pasteurized donor milk is the next best option to protect against NEC when their mother’s milk is not available. When asked how the hospital is compensated for donor milk provided in inpatient and outpatient settings, McGreal-Miller said most of the milk they supply to hospitals is paid out-of-pocket and charged as part of a room fee. For outpatients receiving milk, they either pay themselves, or the hospital donates the milk, she explained. While the hospital’s ability to provide outpatients with donor milk is limited on their supply, McGreal-Miller said Geiss’ legislation would allow the milk bank to expand its operations by providing another avenue for assistance in paying for milk. The committee adjourned without voting on the bills. Courtesy of Michigan Advance |
| Greetings from a Seoul museum, where Buddhist masterpieces offer calm away from city bustleThe National Museum of Korea is home to the Room of Quiet Contemplation, which features two of South Korea's most treasured artworks: gilt-bronze bodhisattva statues from the 6th and 7th centuries. |
| | 6 reasons to choose new construction over existing properties(BPT) - The housing market changes by the day, creating both challenges and new opportunities for buyers navigating today's uncertainty. Amid this fluctuating landscape, newly constructed homes are rapidly gaining traction as a smarter alternative to resale properties. With competitive pricing, modern features and minimal surprises, these homes are reshaping perceptions of what is affordable and attainable.Here's why an increasing number of buyers — from first-timers to luxury seekers — are prioritizing new builds over previously owned options.1. Builder incentives are closing the price gapThe generalized notion that new construction costs significantly more than resale homes doesn't consider all factors. Today's housing market offers a range of value-driven opportunities that help make new construction more attainable, from reduced mortgage rates to lower closing costs. Builders like Century Communities are streamlining the homebuying process, making new homes a smart investment with modern features, energy efficiency and fewer unforeseen expenses, all while delivering lasting value for years to come."These financial advantages often lower closing costs and reduce monthly payments, making new construction competitive with, or even more affordable than, resale homes once you factor in the mortgage and any immediate repair costs older homes typically require," said Jim Francescon, an executive at Century Communities. "As a rule of thumb, resale homeowners should expect to set aside 1% to 4% of their home's value annually for repairs and maintenance — on a $400,000 home, that's up to $16,000 per year. With a new build, builder warranties and modern systems can significantly reduce these costs, offering buyers considerable savings in the early years of ownership."According to the National Association of Home Builders, 64% of builders offered sales incentives and 37% cut prices in 2025. Other financial benefits builders may offer include lower closing costs and reduced interest rates, making homeownership more affordable.2. Skip the bidding wars and costly surprisesResale homes often come with competition and unexpected expenses. Multiple-offer situations can drive prices above asking, while inspection reports frequently reveal costly issues: aging roofs, outdated HVAC systems, problematic plumbing or electrical work that doesn't meet current code.New construction eliminates these headaches. Everything is new, built to current standards and comes with warranties, meaning you won't face a potential $15,000 HVAC replacement or $20,000 roof repair in your first year of homeownership.3. Energy efficiency that impacts your monthly budgetToday's building codes mandate energy efficiency standards that didn't exist even a decade ago. The result? New homes feature better insulation, energy-efficient appliances and advanced window technology that significantly reduce monthly utility costs.For example, new homes from Century Communities include features like ENERGY STAR®-certified appliances, Low-E windows, WaterSense®-certified fixtures and tankless water heaters that aren't just environmentally friendly, they translate to real savings every month. Over years of homeownership, the difference between heating and cooling a new home versus an older one can amount to thousands of dollars.4. Modern layouts designed for how people actually live Resale homes often reflect outdated design trends, closed-off rooms, limited storage, smaller closets and floor plans that don't accommodate today's work-from-home reality or open-concept living preferences.New construction from homebuilders like Century Communities offers layouts tailored to contemporary lifestyles, with flexible spaces, home office options and — depending on the stage of construction — the ability to customize finishes, colors and fixtures before you move in. No need to live with someone else's choices or spend additional money renovating.5. Warranty protection and peace of mindNew homes typically come with builder warranties covering structural elements and major systems, protection rarely available with resale properties. This coverage reduces the stress and financial risk of unexpected failures during your first years of homeownership.6. The market advantageWhile personal preferences vary, the current market conditions make new construction particularly appealing. The combination of builder incentives, modern efficiency standards and move-in-ready quality is creating value that's hard to match in the resale market.For buyers weighing their options, new construction deserves serious consideration — not just as the premium choice, but as the practical one. To learn more about the advantages of buying a new build and to explore a range of high-quality homes at various prices, visit CenturyCommunities.com. |
| Geneseo faces three options with out of service wind turbineThe city faces three options: replacing the generator, decommissioning the turbine or repowering with a new turbine that would potentially produce more energy. |
| Davenport approves solar farm ordinance; land purchase for future animal shelterUnder the rules approved by the city council Wednesday night, solar will be limited to just industrial and agricultural zoned land, with further location limitations as well. |
| 5 things to know about the $10 billion-dollar data center campus proposal near ClintonA proposed data center campus near Clinton is drawing sharp debate. Here are five key things to know about the project, the concerns and what's next. |
| More severe storms ThursdaySevere weather is possible this morning across the Quad Cities area from storms moving out of Nebraska and western Iowa. More widespread severe weather is likely this afternoon. After a few more warm days, cooler weather settles in late weekend into early next week. Here's your full 7-day forecast. |
| A look at Wednesday's strong to severe stormsSeveral tornado and severe thunderstorm warnings were issued Wednesday afternoon and evening for the Quad Cities area. We had many reports of strong, damaging winds and very heavy rain. Here's your full 7-day forecast. |
| | 5 things to know about pesticides, cancer and a pending Supreme Court rulingPhoto by Getty Imags. This analysis was originally published by Investigate Midwest. The U.S. Supreme Court is expected to rule next month on whether lawsuits can be brought against pesticide and herbicide makers over claims their products have caused cancer. The court heard arguments in the case in April, and the justices appeared split. With a ruling weeks away, here are five things to know about the topic of pesticide use and cancer. 1. Geographic correlation between heavy pesticide use and high cancer rates Numerous studies and an analysis of federal data have shown a potential correlation between pesticide use and cancer. Out of the 500 U.S. counties with the highest pesticide use per square mile (largely concentrated in corn, soybean and fruit-producing states like Iowa, Illinois, Missouri, California and Florida), 60% have cancer rates higher than the national average of 460 cases per 100,000 people. A 2024 study in Frontiers in Cancer Control and Society suggests the impact of pesticide use on cancer incidence may rival that of smoking. 2. Thousands of lawsuits have been won against agrichemical companies State courts have also found that correlation credible, as Bayer, the maker of the herbicide Roundup, has lost thousands of cases and agreed to pay more than $12 billion in settlements, including individual jury verdicts such as an initial $2 billion award in California and a recent $1.25 million verdict in Missouri. According to the company, more than 65,000 lawsuits have been filed by farmers, gardeners and other users alleging the chemical caused their cancer. 3. Companies push for ‘liability shields’ In response to these lawsuits, agrichemical companies have aggressively lobbied for state-level bans on this type of litigation. Often referred to as “liability shield” laws, they would essentially say that because the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has not warned of a link to cancer, state-level claims would be void. Georgia and North Dakota are the only two states that have passed these liability shield laws. 4. The Trump administration has largely sided with pesticide makers The push for stricter pesticide regulation has created unusual alliances between left-leaning environmentalists and conservative health advocates under the “Make America Healthy Again” (MAHA) banner. After an initial Health and Human Services report linked pesticide overuse to childhood health issues, the agency’s final report last year walked back all regulatory calls and instead pivoted to promote public confidence in current EPA standards. President Trump also signed an executive order this year declaring glyphosate critical to national security, and his administration actively sided with Bayer during oral arguments before the Supreme Court. In April, MAHA activists celebrated a win after the House voted to remove a pesticide industry-backed provision from its farm bill. The debate is expected to continue as the Senate drafts its own version of the farm bill. 5. Supreme Court hears arguments on national ‘liability shield’ ban In April, the U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments in Monsanto v. Durnell, in which Monsanto (owned by Bayer) argued that because the EPA has ruled glyphosate is unlikely to be carcinogenic, federal law preempts states from requiring cancer warning labels or awarding damages through state juries. A decision is expected in July. PARSELY = { autotrack: false, onload: function() { PARSELY.beacon.trackPageView({ url: "https://investigatemidwest.org/2026/06/03/five-things-to-know-about-pesticides-cancer-and-a-pending-supreme-court-ruling/", urlref: window.location.href }); } } Courtesy of Minnesota Reformer |
| | Report says NJ food stamp spending benefits families, stores, economyA study from Montclair State University qualifies how New Jersey's investment in sustaining minimum food stamp benefit pays off for families, local stores, and the economy. (Photo by New Jersey Monitor)New Jersey’s investment in food stamp benefits has paid off in multiple ways, reducing families’ stress, boosting revenue at grocery stores, and generating economic activity that surpasses taxpayer investment, according to a report released this week. Researchers at Montclair State University sought to measure the impact of the state’s commitment of nearly $60 million from March 2023 through May 2025 to sustain a minimum food stamp benefit of $95 a week after the federal government reduced its contribution to the program, formally known as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program or SNAP. What they found is nearly 40,000 households a month benefitted from the extra state spending, many located in New Jersey’s more rural counties. Many of the recipients were single, female, spoke English, and worked outside the home, according to the report. The study was commissioned by the state Department of Human Services, which oversees the food stamp program. Overall, this investment prompted some $33 million in direct spending and generated an estimated $93 million in economic activity over the two-year period, the Montclair university’s Center for Research and Evaluation on Education and Human Services found. Of those receiving the $95 monthly minimum food benefit , 8 in 10 said it was “very” or “extremely” important to their survival. Thousands of NJ residents face food stamp cuts under new federal rules Human Services Commissioner Stephen Cha, who has warned of the impact other planned federal funding cuts could have on New Jersey’s food stamp system, called it a lifeline for families. In all, nearly 400,000 households receive food stamps here, with the average monthly benefit of $194. “This report reinforces what we already know: SNAP helps people in need by improving access to nutritious food and easing financial strain. It also supports local economies by driving broader economic activity in communities,” Cha said in a statement. Gov. Mikie Sherrill has called for the state to commit an extra $71 million in the coming fiscal year to cover the loss of federal support for administering the program, money that pays for county social service offices to enroll people in the program. Her budget proposal, which lawmakers must finalize by July 1, also includes $30.2 million to sustain the $95 minimum benefit. “As food prices continue to rise, we’re glad to provide individuals and families with a monthly benefit that helps them stretch their dollars and meet their food needs throughout the month,” said Natasha Johnson, an assistant human services commissioner. The Biden administration dialed back federal support for the food stamp program in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, prompting officials in New Jersey and some other states to cover the gap starting in 2023. Under President Trump, food stamp benefits were held up last fall during a lengthy government shutdown. While the program has since restarted, future funding cuts and new rules requiring many beneficiaries to document that they are working, volunteering, or in school are expected to force some 47,000 residents out of the program, Cha has warned. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX. Courtesy of New Jersey Monitor |
| | Idaho farmers are hoping Congress can get updated farm bill across finish lineIdaho farmers are hoping Congress will pass an updated farm bill to update safety-net, conservation, financing and other programs. The bill was passed by the U.S. House and is under consideration in the U.S. Senate. (Kirsten Strough / USDA)Many of Idaho’s farmers and producers are dealing with skyrocketing costs to do business, but many of the nation’s support systems for them are outdated. “We have pressure from the cost of fertilizer, the increased cost of fuels, the effects of tariffs on equipment and parts that we need to buy for our operations, and at the same time, the prices that we receive … it hasn’t increased in line with the cost of production,” said Jamie Kress, an East Idaho dryland farmer and president of the National Association of Wheat Growers. Kress and other members of Idaho’s agricultural industry are advocating for Congress to approve an updated farm bill — a massive piece of federal legislation that addresses policies such as food assistance like the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, low-interest farm loans, crop insurance, research, conservation programs, and rural development. Idaho adds requirements for animal entry in response to U.S. New World screwworm cases The 2026 bill re-authorizes or increases funding for some of these programs, such as assistance for farmers like crop loss programs and financial assistance for purchasing agricultural lands and incentives for conservation programs. The U.S. House of Representatives passed a 2026 farm bill, which would update the policies and extend them for five years. Idaho’s Republican U.S. Reps. Mike Simpson and Russ Fulcher voted in favor of the updated bill, which passed in a 224-200 vote at the end of April. It’s now under consideration in the U.S. Senate. “I regularly hear from farmers, ranchers, and producers in Idaho, and their main concern over the years has been when Congress will reauthorize the Farm Bill,” Simpson said in an emailed statement. “Thanks to a Republican White House, Senate, and House, we have officially delivered on our promise to provide certainty to those who feed our nation. While this legislation supports and invests in our rural communities, it also strengthens our national security by protecting our domestic food supply.” The last major update to the bill was in 2018, and had typically been updated every five years. In recent years, Congress has approved short-term extensions. “The biggest challenge of operating in an outdated farm bill is just uncertainty in agriculture,” Kress said. “A lot of our decisions are very forward-looking. There’s very little that we do in an impulsive manner, or just thinking about tomorrow … so that not knowing what parameters we’ll be operating under long-term is really difficult.” SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX. What changes are Idaho farmers hoping to see in the updated bill? The 976-page bill approved by the House touches many different agricultural programs, as well as others, such as rural broadband access and telemedicine access. Braden Jensen, governmental affairs director at the Idaho Farm Bureau Federation, said the organization appreciates the broad spectrum of provisions in the bill because they cover Idaho’s broad spectrum of agricultural products. “We recognize that Idaho agriculture is very diverse, growing everything from potatoes, sugar beets, wheat, our hay, our dairy products, cattle, specialty crops, we have a little bit of everything,” Jensen said. “So because of that diversity, really all these different titles in the farm bill matter to our producers.” Jensen said the new bill added specialty crops, such as hops, seed crops and potatoes, to risk management programs. Additionally the bill increases borrowing limits on special agricultural loans to reflect increasing costs to expand or start new operations, he said. Kress, the wheat grower, also highlighted the funding of a program to create and expand export markets outside the U.S., and another that allows groups to share the costs of overseas marketing and promotional activities. Idaho’s cattle industry driving record-high cash in 2025, other farmers struggling under inflation In 2025, Idaho agriculture exports generated about $3 billion in receipts, the Idaho Capital Sun previously reported. Most of Idaho’s exports go to Canada and Mexico. Idaho wheat growers export roughly half the state’s annual wheat production, Kress said. The Gem State typically ranks in the top 5 in the nation for wheat production. “The trade title (of the farm bill) is very important to our industry,” Kress said. She also highlighted that the bill not only important to the industry, but also consumers of American food products. “This framework gives us what we need to continue to compete at a very high level,” Kress said, “but then that also ensures then that the American people always have a steady supply of food on our shores.” Some program changes, such as to SNAP, already approved in ‘Big Beautiful’ law last summer Some of the items that are typically included in the farm bill were addressed last summer in the major tax-and-spending package dubbed the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act.” SNAP, also known as food stamps, is one of the largest portions of the spending bill. More than 123,000 Idahoans receive food assistance through SNAP, according to the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare. The budget package reduced the federal share of costs to administer SNAP, which will raise the costs for states, and extended work requirements under the program to more groups of people who were previously exempt. The farm bill maintains these cuts to SNAP, which drew opposition from many Democrats, the States Newsroom reported. Fulcher, one of Idaho’s congressmen, wrote in the Idaho Capital Sun’s 2026 primary election candidate questionnaire that the farm bill’s delay had to do with disagreements about SNAP. “The reason for the lack of support has been because about 85% of the +/- $1.5 trillion in spending has been ear-marked for the SNAP (food-stamps) program,” Fulcher said. “SNAP exploded in spending during COVID, and many of us believe that needs to be drawn back to pre-COVID spending levels. That said, critical farm programs, although the minority of spending in the bill – are very important to our AG industry and they need to be supported.” The “big beautiful” law also funded some safety net programs for farmers and producers such as an expansion of crop insurance and disaster assistance, as well as some other program updates. Controversial pesticide legal immunity rejected in Idaho, also removed from farm bill Before the farm bill passed the U.S. House, it had provisions that would look familiar to Idaho state lawmakers. The bill included language that would’ve largely shielded pesticide manufacturers from allegations that chemicals in their pesticides cause cancer. In 2024 and 2025, Bayer, the company that produces the herbicide Roundup, funded a major push in the Idaho Legislature to support legislation that looked very similar to the provisions included in the farm bill. The group Modern Ag Alliance, founded by Bayer, reported more than $600,000 in lobbying expenses in 2025, according to data from the Idaho Secretary of State’s office. The Idaho Senate narrowly rejected the bill in 2024, Idaho Reports reported. In 2024, a similar bill was introduced but failed to advance out of the committee. Members of the U.S. House voted to remove the pesticide provisions shortly before approving the overall bill in late April. The amendment to strip the language came in response to opposition from Democrats as well as Republicans aligned with the “Make America Health Again,” or MAHA, movement led by U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., CNBC reported. Idaho congressmen Simpson and Fulcher voted against the amendment to strip the liability language. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE Courtesy of Idaho Capital Sun |
| 100 years later, Grant Wood's 'Corn Room' mural harvests new attentionConservators have restored Grant Wood's century-old 'Corn Room' mural, bringing new life to one of Sioux City's most significant works of art. The mural now anchors a new exhibition that explores Wood's legacy and the changing story of rural America. |
| | Tennessee health department warns parents their children will be reported to immigration officialsThe Tennessee Department of Health has informed parents of critically ill immigrant children it will report immigration status beginning in July. Local public health departments like the Metro Nashville Public Health Department, pictured here, administer the Children's Special Services program . (Photo: John Partipilo/Tennessee Lookout)Pediatricians and public health care providers on Wednesday said they feared life-threatening consequences for children with critical illnesses who rely on a specialized public health care program as Tennessee moves forward with a directive to verify and report their immigration status. Letters sent by the Tennessee Department of Health warn parents that children without legal status who opt to continue to receive care through the Children’s Special Services program after June 30 will be reported to the Tennessee Department of Safety’s Centralized Immigration Enforcement Division, which shares data with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE. The program, accessed through local public health departments, serves as a last-resort public health insurance program for low-income kids with disabilities, kids on ventilators and kids with life-threatening illnesses, such as cancer, spina bifida, congestive heart disease and terminal illnesses. For decades, the program has served children in Tennessee regardless of immigration status. Tennessee to report disabled immigrant kids getting public healthcare to ICE, advocates say “This letter is to inform you that based on our records, due to the current immigration status of your child…if the Children’s Special Services program keeps paying for healthcare after June 30, 2026, the Tennessee Department of Health will share your child’s information to the Tennessee Department of Safety, as required by new law,” reads a template of the letter obtained by the Tennessee Lookout. The letter is signed by John Dunn, interim commissioner of the health department. The letters will reach at least 90 families in Nashville who rely on the program for healthcare, wheelchairs, in-school support and medications for their child. More families could be affected in the weeks ahead as their files are reviewed, according to Dr. Sanmi Areola, director of the Metro Nashville Public Health Department. Areola said he and his staff are “concerned and worried” about the impact of the state directive on the vulnerable children they serve. “There is no way to look at this positively on the health of participants, and obviously broadly on the health of our residents,” Dr. Areola said Wednesday. “These are some of the kids with the highest health needs, and if they don’t have access to care or if they don’t have access to medications, conceptually no good outcome will come from that.” Statewide, 4,640 children participated in the program in the 2024 fiscal year at a cost of $2.9 million, according to a state annual report. The Tennessee Department of Health has not publicly disclosed how many of these children may be impacted by new immigration verification requirements. The state health department has not responded to multiple requests from the Lookout for further details. In its letter to parents — and in a separate letter sent to healthcare providers — Dunn cited a 2026 state law that requires immigration verification of those seeking public benefits in Tennessee. 2026.06.02_CSS Letter to Patient Parents The legislation, signed into law by Gov. Bill Lee May 22, requires applicants for public benefits to provide proof of citizenship or legal immigration status only if they are at least 18 years old. The law also includes language requiring local health departments to “report individuals and all identifying information about such individuals who are not lawfully present” who receive public benefits to the state’s Centralized Immigration Enforcement Bureau. Failure to report comes with criminal penalties for public employees under the new law. Katie Richards, president and CEO of the faith-based primary healthcare provider, Siloam Health, said the directive forces parents to make an agonizing choice: keeping their children on the program risks making families an immigration enforcement target. Forgoing care to avoid a child’s information being shared with immigration enforcement officials could put their children’s lives at risk. “You are putting parents in a position where they’re having to deal with unimaginable decisions,” Richards said. “They face the risk of deportation, or risk their children’s lifesaving care.” Siloam Health, a nonprofit provider of primary healthcare that primarily serves immigrant families, refers between 20 and 50 children each year to the program, Richards said. The children Siloam have referred to the program have included those who require feeding tubes, oxygen, cancer treatments, complex seizure management and wheelchairs due to severe neuromuscular disease, she said. “For some of these children, loss of life is not a hyperbolic outcome in this scenario,” she said. Quotation You are putting parents in a position where they’re having to deal with unimaginable decisions. They face the risk of deportation, or risk their children’s lifesaving care. – Katie Richards, Siloam Health Care Dr. Jill Obremsky, a pediatrician who formerly served as medical director for rural public health clinics at the state health department, said the impact of the Children’s Special Services program goes beyond life-saving medication therapies, hospital and doctor care. “Over my 30 years of practicing in different arenas, the coordinated care like Children’s Special Services provides has really changed the trajectory of kids’ lives, allowing them to grow into adults that contribute to a community,” she said. “This has been a big shock and surprise,” she said. Staff at the Nashville public health department have been working frantically to find alternatives for families who might be impacted with little advance notice from the state about the new immigration-check directive, said Dr. Morgan McDonald, a pediatrician and internist who serves on the Nashville Board of Health. The options are limited, however. The Children’s Special Services program is a last-resort option for low-income families without Medicaid or private insurance coverage for their children’s healthcare needs. “I was on the phone with a provider over the last couple days and they were looking for home ventilators for some of these families,” said McDonald, formerly a deputy commissioner at the state health department. “There has not been much of a runway but people have been scrambling to do what they can for these kids.” McDonald also questioned the health department’s interpretation of new state law as applying to children. “I don’t think anyone wants this,” she said. “I don’t think this was the intent of the legislature. I mean, the (legislation) clearly says it applies to ‘over 18,’” she said. Efforts Wednesday to reach the Republican authors of the legislation about their intent were unsuccessful. The legislation’s sponors — Rep. Dennis Powers of Jacksboro and Sen. Ed Jackson of Jackson — did not respond to inquiries Wednesday. A spokesperson for Gov. Bill Lee did not respond to questions. McDonald noted the program, which relies on a combination of state dollars and funding from the federal government’s Maternal and Child Health block grant, is also subject to federal rules that do not require children’s immigration status to be verified. “Tennesseans don’t want this outcome,” she said. “The state health department doesn’t want this outcome. The legislature, who thought they had exempted kids from this legislation, didn’t want this outcome. These are children, many with significant medical problems, who rely on a program that’s been really the emblem of the Volunteer State for a hundred years and this can be fixed. It needs to be fixed immediately.” Tennessee Department of Health letter to healthcare providers 2026.06.02_CSS Letter to Providers SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE Courtesy of Tennessee Lookout |
| | Alabama Attorney General threatens legal action against six abortion pill providersMifepristone is one of two drugs that can be used before 10 weeks to terminate a pregnancy and to treat miscarriages. The Alabama Attorney General's Office on Tuesday threatened legal action against six companies that distribute the medication to consumers in the state that has a near-total abortion ban. (Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images) Key points The Alabama Attorney General’s Office on Tuesday threatened legal action against six companies it said were advertising or distributing medication to induce abortions, citing Alabama law that makes performing or attempting to perform an abortion a felony. The office cited a study from a conservative think tank on abortion pill complications that has drawn criticism over its methodology. A reproductive rights advocate said the letter was “an enormous commercial” for the companies. The letters were signed by Deputy Attorney General Katherine Robertson, who is competing in next week’s Republican runoff for attorney general and who has been criticized by her opponent, former Alabama Supreme Court Justice Jay Mitchell, for accepting contributions from a man who has criticized Alabama’s near-total abortion ban. The Alabama Attorney General’s Office on Tuesday threatened legal action against six companies that it said were advertising or distributing abortion-inducing medication to Alabamians. “Alabama’s law is clear, abortion is illegal in this state. These companies are not only breaking the law, they are deceiving Alabama consumers about the very real dangers of these drugs. That stops now,” Attorney General Steve Marshall said in a statement. “Anyone who tries to exploit Alabamians for profit while flouting our laws will be prosecuted to the fullest extent permitted by law.” In doing so, the office effectively advertised where Alabamians seeking an abortion can get medication, said Robin Marty, executive director of the West Alabama Women’s Center, which provided abortion care before Roe v. Wade was overturned in 2022. “As a person who is heavily involved in reproductive access for all people, I am surprised that he does not realize that what he has done has essentially provided an enormous commercial for these companies,” Marty said. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX. Alabama’s near-total ban on abortion, passed in 2019, went into effect in 2022 after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down federal abortion protections in the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization ruling, with exceptions for when the mother’s life is in danger. A performed or attempted abortion is a Class C felony under the ban, punishable by up to 10 years in prison, but the person seeking the abortion is not civilly or criminally liable. Marty said the Attorney General’s Office’s press release told Alabamians where they could get medication for an abortion, which is something she cannot do as a provider. “That has now improved the ability for people to find out where they can access abortion in a way that we were never able to actually let people know before, which is ironic, since we had been told that telling people where these companies were was in fact a criminal conspiracy,” she said. The cease-and-desist letters were sent to Plan C, Southern Woven, ybycmeds, Abortion Pills in Private, Red State Access and Cambridge Reproductive Health Consultants. The letters demand the companies stop all advertising, sale and delivery of abortion-inducing drugs to Alabama consumers. Failure to do so, according to the statement, will result in an investigation and potential legal action. Messages seeking comment from the companies were sent Tuesday afternoon. According to the Federal Drug and Food Administration (FDA), the combination of drugs is safe to use up to 70 days of gestation. A 2015 study published by Dr. Michael Creinin, an OB-GYN at the University of California Davis Health who has researched the safety of mifepristone since studies first began in 1992, found that severe outcomes from mifepristone use requiring blood transfusion and hospitalization occurred in less than 1% of cases. Rhetoric versus reality: Facts about the abortion pill The letters from the Attorney General’s Office cite a 2025 analysis by the Ethics and Public Policy Center, a D.C.-based think tank that applies “the riches of the Jewish and Christian traditions to contemporary questions of law, culture, and politics,” found that 10.9% of women that took the medication experienced sepsis, infection or hemorrhaging within 45 days of taking it. The center partners with the Alliance Defending Freedom, a conservative organization that brought the Dobbs case. Experts dispute that the center defines a serious adverse event the same way the FDA does, as a condition requiring hospitalization; threatens the life of a patient or causes disability and permanent damage or death. Creinin also criticized the methodology used by the center, saying in some cases it double-counted issues experienced by one patient. The letters are signed by Deputy Attorney General Katherine Robertson, who is in the Republican runoff for Attorney General. Through the campaign, Robertson’s opponent Jay Mitchell, a former Alabama Supreme Court Justice, has criticized Robertson for accepting a $150,000 donation from Hugh Culverhouse Jr., a philanthropist who donated $250,000 to Planned Parenthood Southeast in 2019. Messages seeking comment from the Robertson and Mitchell campaigns were left Wednesday afternoon. According to reporting from Alabama Daily News, the University of Alabama’s law school was once named for Culverhouse but the school parted ways after Culverhouse was critical of the state’s abortion ban. In a 2019 Wall Street Journal ad, Culverhouse called for a boycott of the state because of the “unconstitutional and barbaric law.” The Attorney General’s Office on Wednesday joined 13 other states in a letter to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) calling for tighter controls on mifepristone. Marshall said in a statement that as medical waste from the medication is discarded, it contaminates drinking water. “There is a booming black-market for drug-inducing abortions operating completely outside of lawful medical oversight, and it has created a serious public health crisis. This is not just for those obtaining and using these illegal and dangerous drugs,” Marshall said. Multiple states have considered legislation to create environmental restrictions around the drug or bills requiring providers to instruct patients to collect fetal tissue in medical waste kits and return it to the provider rather than flush it. The EPA may also conduct a review that could be used to restrict access in the future. In 1996, the FDA Center for Drug Evaluation and Research issued a finding of no significant impact on the water supply from mifepristone. Marty said that while the press release helped patients in a way that providers legally cannot, the state is focused on the wrong things when it comes to women’s health. Alabama infant mortality rate improves, but remains higher than national average “They’re not doing anything to improve health care access for the people who are not getting abortions. There have been no moves to improve maternal health care in this state. There has been no moves to improve access or provide more support for contraception in this state,” she said. “At this point it seems that they are far more interested in making sure that nobody is able to access a safe abortion than they are making sure that our hospitals are not letting Black women die in childbirth.” According to state data for 2020-2021, the maternal mortality rate for white mothers was 28.2 deaths per 100,000 live births. The maternal mortality rate for Black mothers was 77 deaths per 100,000 live births. Only 30% of Alabama’s rural hospitals have labor and delivery units, leaving many expectant parents to drive long distances for care. Providence Hospital in Mobile announced on May 14 that it is closing its labor and delivery unit this summer. Key points box was written by Editor Brian Lyman. Courtesy of Alabama Reflector |
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