Friday, February 20th, 2026 | |
| Eric Dane, 'Grey's Anatomy' star and ALS awareness advocate, dies at 53Eric Dane, the celebrated actor best known for his roles on "Grey's Anatomy" and "Euphoria" and who later in life became an advocate for ALS awareness, died Thursday. He was 53. |
Thursday, February 19th, 2026 | |
| Annual Martini Shake Off saddles up to prevent lost potential in QCA youthThe Quad Cities community came together to boot, scoot and boogie for a good cause. |
| Vision to Learn provides free glasses to 65 Walcott Elementary studentsSixty-five Walcott Elementary School students got some new glasses from the nonprofit “Vision to Learn.” |
| Davenport engineer outlines flood protection measures at resiliency meetingThe Flood Resiliency Alliance held its first meeting of the year Wednesday afternoon at Riverdale City Hall, bringing together leaders and community members to prepare for and respond to flooding in the Quad Cities. |
| Only youth group home in the Quad Cities opens in MarchThe YWCA Alan's House can serve up to 10 kids at a time while they wait for permanent placement. |
| Quad City Storm eye sellout crowd as playoff race tightensThe Storm's game on Feb. 28 is on pace to be the first sold-out hockey game at Vibrant Arena since the early 2000s. It comes as the team is looking to the playoffs. |
| Overflow in QCA animal shelters continues to be a problemSince July of 2025, three cities in Iowa have ended their animal service agreements with various branches on the Humane Society. King's Harvest Pet Rescue in Davenport is seeing an influx of animals because of these terminated contracts. "Very often we get calls from people saying if you can't take these 20 dogs we have, [...] |
| Venezuela approves amnesty that may release of hundreds detained for political reasonsVenezuela's acting president has signed into law an amnesty bill that could lead to the release of politicians, activists, lawyers and many others. The approval marks a stark turn for the nation. |
| Davenport continues flood mitigation plans, starting with wastewater treatment plantDavenport is getting money from the federal government for flood mitigation near the city's wastewater plant. The project builds on a flood resiliency strategy the city hopes to complete in the next few years. "The wastewater plant serves Bettendorf, Davenport, Panorama Park and Riverdale," said Brian Schadt, Davenport city engineer. "It's one of our most [...] |
| EveryChild launches fundraising campaign for renovations of new facilityEveryChild is dedicated to child abuse prevention, education and treatment services. Officials said they serve nearly 8,000 children and families every year. |
| EveryChild launches fundraising campaign for renovations of new facilityThe organization is dedicated to child abuse prevention, education and treatment services. Officials said they serve nearly 8,000 children and families every year. |
| In a historic vote, Tennessee Volkswagen workers get their first union contractTwo years ago, the successful union drive at this plant was expected to spark victories throughout the South. But now, as members vote to make their contract official, momentum has fizzled. |
| See UnityPoint Health - Trinity's new technology to treat A-fibUnityPoint Health - Trinity introduced a new technology in April of 2024, treating patients with atrial fibrillations (A-fib), a common type of heart disorder. Since UnityPoint Health - Trinity introduced the new Pulsed Field Ablation (PFA) technology, they have completed over 850 procedures. "Much easier, shorter duration, more effective and perhaps more successful than the [...] |
| | Trump required hospitals to post their prices for patients. Mostly it’s the industry using the data.A vacant hallway at Vaughan Regional Medical Center in Selma, Alabama, on Tuesday, Sep. 3, 2024 in Selma, Alabama. (Will McLelland for Alabama Reflector)This article first appeared on KFF Health News. Republicans think patients should be shopping for better health care prices. The party has long pushed to give patients money and let consumers do the work of reducing costs. After some GOP lawmakers closed out 2025 advocating to fund health savings accounts, President Donald Trump introduced his Great Healthcare Plan, which calls for, among other policies, requiring providers and insurers to post their prices “in their place of business.” The idea echoes a policy implemented during his first term, when Trump suggested that requiring hospitals to post their charges online could ease one of the most common gripes about the health care system — the lack of upfront prices. To anyone who’s gotten a bill three months after treatment only to find mysterious charges, the idea seemed intuitive. “You’re able to go online and compare all of the hospitals and the doctors and the prices,” Trump said in 2019 at an event unveiling the price transparency policy. But amid low compliance and other struggles in implementing the policy since it took effect in 2021, the available price data is sparse and often confusing. And instead of patients shopping for medical services, it’s mostly health systems and insurers using the little data there is, turning it into fodder for negotiations that determine what medical professionals and facilities get paid for what services. “We use the transparency data,” said Eric Hoag, an executive at Blue Cross Blue Shield of Minnesota, noting that the insurer wants to make sure providers aren’t being paid substantially different rates. It’s “to make sure that we are competitive, or, you know, more than competitive against other health plans.” Not all hospitals have fallen in line with the price transparency rules, and many were slow to do so. A study conducted in the policy’s first 10 months found only about a third of facilities had complied with the regulations. The federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services notified 27 hospitals from June 2022 to May 2025 that they would be fined for lack of compliance with the rules. The struggles to make health care prices available have prompted more federal action since Trump’s first effort. President Joe Biden took his own thwack at the dilemma, by requiring increased data standardization and toughening compliance criteria. And in early 2025, working to fulfill his promises to lower health costs, Trump tried again, signing a new executive order urging his administration to fine hospitals and doctors for failing to post their prices. CMS followed up with a regulation intended to up the fines and increase the level of detail required within the pricing data. So far, “there’s no evidence that patients use this information,” said Zack Cooper, a health economist at Yale University. In 2021, Cooper co-authored a paper based on data from a large commercial insurer. The researchers found that, on average, patients who need an MRI pass six lower-priced imaging providers on the way from their homes to an appointment for a scan. That’s because they follow their physician’s advice about where to receive care, the study showed. Executives and researchers interviewed by KFF Health News also didn’t think opening the data would change prices in a big way. Research shows that transparency policies can have mixed effects on prices, with one 2024 study of a New York initiative finding a marginal increase in billed charges. The policy results thus far seem to put a damper on long-held hopes, particularly from the GOP, that providing more price transparency would incentivize patients to find the best deal on their imaging or knee replacements. These aspirations have been unfulfilled for a few reasons, researchers and industry insiders say. Some patients simply don’t compare services. But unlike with apples — a Honeycrisp and a Red Delicious are easy to line up side by side — medical services are hard to compare. For one thing, it’s not as simple as one price for one medical stay. Two babies might be delivered by the same obstetrician, for example, but the mothers could be charged very different amounts. One patient might be given medications to speed up contractions; another might not. Or one might need an emergency cesarean section — one of many cases in medicine in which obtaining the service simply isn’t a choice. And the data often is presented in a way that’s not useful for patients, sometimes buried in spreadsheets and requiring a deep knowledge of billing codes. In computing these costs, hospitals make “detailed assumptions about how to apply complex contracting terms and assess historic data to create a reasonable value for an expected allowed amount,” the American Hospital Association told the Trump administration in July 2025 amid efforts to boost transparency. Costs vary because hospitals’ contracts with insurers vary, said Jamie Cleverley, president of Cleverley and Associates, which works with health care providers to help them understand the financial impacts of changing contract terms. The cost for a patient with one health plan may be very different than the cost for the next patient with another plan. The fact that hospital prices might be confusing for patients is a consequence of the lack of standardization in contracts and presentation, Cleverley said. “They’re not being nefarious.” “Until we kind of align as an industry, there’s going to continue to be this variation in terms of how people look at the data and the utility of it,” he said. Instead of aiding shoppers, the federally mandated data has become the foundation for negotiations — or sometimes lawsuits — over the proper level of compensation. The top use for the pricing data for health care providers and payers, such as insurers, is “to use that in their contract negotiations,” said Marcus Dorstel, an executive at price transparency startup Turquoise Health. Turquoise Health assembles price data by grouping codes for services together using machine learning, a type of artificial intelligence. It is just one example in a cottage industry of startups offering insights into prices. And, online, the startups’ advertisements hawking their wares often focus on hospitals and their periodic jousts with insurers. Turquoise has payers and providers as clients, Dorstel said. “I think nine times out of 10 you will hear them say that the price transparency data is a vital piece of the contract negotiation now,” he said. Of course, prices aren’t the only variable that negotiations hinge on. Hoag said Blue Cross Blue Shield of Minnesota also considers quality of care, rates of unnecessary treatments, and other factors. And sometimes negotiators feel as if they have to keep up with their peers — claiming a need for more revenue to match competitors’ salaries, for example. Hoag said doctors and other providers often look at the data from comparable health systems and say, “‘I need to be paid more.’” KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF—an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about KFF. Subscribe to KFF Health News’ free Morning Briefing. Courtesy of Alaska Beacon |
| Man arrested on sex abuse, child sexual abuse material chargesA Milan man is facing several charges related to sexual abuse. |
| NASA chief blasts Boeing, space agency for failed Starliner astronaut missionNASA's Jared Isaacman slammed Boeing for failures with its Starliner spacecraft, which was deemed unsafe to return its crew of two astronauts from the International Space Station |
| YWCA Quad Cities celebrates opening of Alan's House group home in Rock IslandAlan’s House will serve youth ages 10–17 who have been removed from their families. |
| Augustana student experiences a very special Olympics in MilanBeing just a train ride away from Milan, Dipti Sharma jumped at the chance to see the Olympics with her own eyes. |
| YWCA Quad Cities opens new group home for abused youth in Rock IslandYWCA Quad Cities opens the Alan House, a new youth group home in Rock Island serving children ages 10-17 who have been removed from their families due to abuse or neglect. |
| Sherrard High School aims to collect 45 units of blood to save more than 130 livesTo honor his legacy, the Sherrard All School Senate organized the Memorial Blood Drive to carry on Luxmore’s service and selflessness. |
| The Heart of the Story: Guess whooo's looking for snowy owls?Our 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. They normally live in the Arctic, but snowy [...] |
| 16-year-old charged with threat of terrorism after social media threat, police sayA 16-year-old has been charged with threat of terrorism after a social media threat Thursday, Maquoketa Police said. |
| Neil Anderson steps down from Illinois Senate GOP leadership after filing abortion billIllinois State Sen. Neil Anderson stepped down from Senate GOP leadership days after filing a bill redefining personhood at fertilization. |
| 16-year-old charged with threats of terrorism following alleged threat involving Maquoketa schoolsDue to the suspect's age, Maquoketa police officials said their name won't be released. |
| 16-year-old charged with threats of terrorism following alleged threat involving Maquoketa schoolsDue to the suspect's age, Maquoketa police officials said their name won't be released. |
| Milan man arrested on charges relating to child sex abuse materialsIllinois State Police served a search warrant on his home and his workplace on Wednesday. |
| Teen charged for threat involving Maquoketa Community School DistrictA teen, 16, has been charged with threat of terrorism, a Class D felony, following a social media threat involving the Maquoketa Community School District. According to a release, on February 19 11:37 a.m., the Maquoketa Police Department received information from the FBI National Threat Operations Center about the threat. Law enforcement notified school officials. [...] |
| ‘They saved my life’: Geneseo teens rescue neighbor from fireTwo Geneseo teenagers were honored Feb. 10 at a city council meeting for helping save their neighbor from a house fire on a freezing January night. |
| Rock Island mystery: Where is Chief Black Hawk Statue and why won’t city let anyone see it?Where is the Chief Black Hawk Statue and why won’t the city let anyone see it? |
| Black History Month: Program is Well Suited for the QCAA Quad-City program strives to be an asset to our community by mentoring and creating opportunities for young minds. Our Quad Cities News' Danielle Davis introduces us to the work of Well Suited as we honor Black History. For more information, click here. |
| Quad City Storm preview their final stretch of the seasonTeam President Brian Rothenberger joined The Current to preview the team's upcoming matchups and the difference a rowdy crowd makes on the ice. |
| Woman, 3 kids taken to the hospital after crash on I-80 in Scott CountyThe Iowa State Patrol said a woman suffered a seizure and crossed over into the wrong lanes of I-80 before crashing her car. No other vehicles were hit. |
| Help Habitat for Humanity Quad Cities at Mai Tais for MortgagesHabitat for Humanity Quad Cities builds strength, stability and self-reliance by revitalizing and restoring hope in our community, and you can help through a fun night out! Tom Fisher-King spoke with Our Quad Cities News about Mai Tais for Mortgages. For more information, click here. |
| Vision to Learn brings free vision screenings, glasses to Davenport studentsThe giveaway was partially funded by a grant from the United Way Quad Cities. |
| Deputies investigating after doors to building kicked down, items stolenCrime Stoppers said suspects kicked into two doors to a building in mid-December in the 4000 block of 14th Street. |
| Crime Stoppers: Man wanted by Silvis police for sexual assault, abuse chargesPedro Ruiz-Urbina, 40, is wanted by the Silvis Police Department for criminal sexual assault, predatory criminal sexual assault of a child and aggravated criminal sexual abuse. |
| U.S. figure skater Alysa Liu said she didn't care if she medaled. She won goldLiu is the first American woman to win an individual figure skating gold medal since Sarah Hughes in 2002. |
| Quad Cities Bicycle Club to share RAGBRAI tips with new, veteran ridersWhether you've ridden RAGBRAI every year or want to join for the first time, you're invited to learn more at "RAGBRAI for Rookies" on Saturday, Feb. 21 in Davenport. |
| Orion School Board hires new head football coachMatthew McClean has coached in the Davenport school district for seven years, primarily working as an assistant football coach at Davenport North. |
| What's ahead with the Bettendorf Parks and Recreation Department?Warmer weather will soon be here to stay, and there will be plenty to do in the spring and summer here in the QCA. Meredith Fabrizius dropped by Our Quad Cities News with details on the Bettendorf Parks and Recreation Department's spring and summer recreation programs. For more information, click here. |
| British filmmaker to show doc on rebuilding reefs at QC Environmental Film SeriesThe last entry in this year’s film series (to screen at 3 p.m. in Allaert Auditorium on the St. Ambrose University campus), “Reef Builders” spotlights the inspiring stories of the people behind the Sheba Hope Grows program -- part of one of the world’s largest coral reef restoration programs led by Mars Sustainable Solutions (MSS) -- and the vital role of ocean communities in the move to help restore our planet’s coral reefs. |
| Parts of Milan under boil orderA boil order is in effect for residents and businesses in the 100 through 500 block of W 1st Ave and W 3rd Ave in Milan, due to a water main break. Residents are advised to boil before using for cooking or drinking. Click here to learn what to do during a boil order. |
| Quad Cities International Airport to receive new restaurants as part of terminal improvementsThe new airport options will include restaurants before and after the security checkpoint, as well as a concourse bar. |
| Smash Pizza, Sunny's Coffee and local beers coming to Quad Cities International AirportThe airport's board has selected Sky Dine of Sioux Falls, South Dakota, to manage the new concessions. |
| U.S. DOT finds ‘corrosion’ in initial findings of Washington County pipeline explosionA preliminary investigation of the natural gas pipeline that exploded Saturday found external corrosion on the failed pipe. |
| I-80 westbound shoulder blocked due to crashThe shoulder of westbound I-80 in Davenport is blocked Thursday afternoon. |
| | How education, pay and purpose has renewed interest in trade jobs(BPT) - Growing up, Ryan Shaver — executive director of the North Carolina Masonry Contractors Association (NCMCA) — hadn't planned on pursuing a career in the trades. But everything changed in 1989 when he enrolled in a high school masonry class."From that moment, I knew I wanted to be out there building things with my hands, and I'm proud to say, I've never looked back," said Shaver.What started as a random elective changed the course of Shaver's life. Now, he's using his years of experience in concrete masonry to give back, acting as an educator, mentor and advocate for the masonry trade."I want to see this industry grow in ways we have never seen," Shaver said. "Masonry has always been about building things that last. If we get people excited and organized, the impact will last, too."After spending decades working across every side of the concrete masonry industry, Shaver wanted to do more to nurture the next generation of masonry. With the support of the Concrete Masonry Checkoff, he established the Junior Blocklayer program, which offers youth, regardless of their skill set, fun hands-on challenges and competitions that expose them to the joy and pride of masonry.Students aren't the only ones who benefit from the program. Junior Blocklayer gives the industry a practical way to create awareness while strengthening the next generation of the masonry and design industry. Shaver built the program around his core belief that engagement in a trade starts with experience."Once you get a few blocks in someone's hands, that's when buy-in really starts," Shaver said.An American trade renaissance Ryan's story isn't unusual; his experience reflects a larger career shift in the U.S. More and more students are shying away from traditional four-year degrees in favor of learning a trade like concrete masonry, electric and plumbing, among others.According to a 2023 study by the National Center for Education Statistics, U.S. undergraduate enrollment declined by approximately 15% between 2010 and 2021, falling from about 18.1 million to 15.4 million students. On the other hand, fall enrollment at trade schools grew at an estimated compound annual rate of 3.2% from 2019 to 2024 and is expected to grow even faster from 2024 to 2030 at a projected rate of 6.6%.But why are younger generations joining the trades? Perhaps one of the most compelling reasons is that young people are rethinking what makes a good job.Debt-laden, desk-bound jobs without a clear impact or purpose are less appealing to younger generations. A recent Deloitte report found that roughly nine in 10 Gen Zers (89%) and millennials (92%) consider a sense of purpose to be important to their job satisfaction and well-being. Similarly, another Deloitte study found that 44% of Gen Z report rejecting employers whose values did not align with their own, signaling that meaning and contribution influence job choice.By contrast, trade jobs like concrete masonry offer hands-on, purposeful and financially secure vocations that communities rely on every day.With a registered apprenticeship, workers can expect to be paid from the day they start and can expect their wages to increase as their skills advance. As far as earning potential goes, these young tradespeople in construction and extraction jobs can expect to earn a median annual wage of $58,360, exceeding the median wage across all U.S. occupations, including white-collar roles.How the industry is paving the way for the next generation To capitalize on the renewed interest in the trades, industry leaders need to create a tangible connection — not just for students but for professionals as well. The success of Shaver's Junior Blocklayer program is a clear example of how the industry needs to shift and meet young people where they're at."We have to teach adults how to work with students," he said, "not the other way around."That's why the program's events encourage direct interaction between participants and instructors, emphasizing simple actions like walking table to table, asking questions and building relationships that can turn curiosity in masonry into a long-term career.Shaver's Junior Blocklayer program isn't the only way industry groups like CMC have been expanding awareness of the masonry trade and supporting educational opportunities for potential tradespeople. In fact, after years of limited exposure in collegiate settings, CMC has been instrumental in bridging the gap between the classroom and real-world craftsmanship.CMC's programming has introduced or reestablished partnerships with more than a dozen leading colleges and universities to restore concrete masonry's presence in the classroom through research, scholarships and hands-on learning.Want a closer look at why masonry is resonating with today's workforce? Explore the Top 10 Reasons to Join the Masonry Team — from paid training and career growth to the pride of building work that lasts. |
| Quad Cities Bicycle Club to share RAGBRAI tips with new, veteran ridersWhether you've ridden RAGBRAI every year or want to join for the first time, you're invited to learn more at "RAGBRAI for Rookies" on Saturday, Feb. 21 in Davenport. |
| Milan man arrested for dissemination of child sexual abuse materialsA Milan man was arrested for dissemination of child sexual abuse materials. According to a release from the Illinois State Police (ISP), on February 18, ISP special agents executed a search warrant at the home of Dennis Carey, 56, and his place of employment as a result of an ongoing investigation. Division of Criminal Investigation [...] |
| Muscatine Municipal Golf Course names new head golf proThe Muscatine Municipal Golf Course has named Michael Hainline as its new head golf professional. Hainline, who is a member of the Professional Golfers' Association of America (PGA), started on Feb. 17 and is ready to work with golfers and new players while expanding programs that serve residents of all ages and skill levels. He [...] |
| Internal memo details cosmetic changes and facility repairs to Kennedy CenterTrump announced his plans to close the Kennedy Center entirely for two years "for Construction, Revitalization, and Complete Rebuilding." The announcement came after many prominent artists canceled existing scheduled appearances. |
| Illinois Extension offering mental health resources for farmers and their familiesAmid tariffs, climate change, and economic uncertainty, Illinois farmers and their families can find mental health support from the state’s land-grant institution. |
| | States where people tip the most (and least)States where people tip the most (and least)Tipping in America historically has been more about gratitude for good service than giving a set amount. Nowadays, with more tipping options popping up everywhere from coffee shops to self-checkout kiosks, the pressure to give has become a reflection of local economics, labor laws, and cultural norms. Americans across the country are beginning to rethink how much, when, and whether to tip at all.This phenomenon is not occurring evenly across the country. Spokeo put together data from leading sources, including LendingTree, OysterLink, Toast, and more, to demonstrate the wide variation in tipping behavior across states. Much like a people search can reveal how location shapes someone’s background, this data shows how geography influences generosity. From minimum wage laws to tourism economies, learn what’s driving the trends behind where Americans tip the most and the least on average.The national picture and the top and bottom statesOn a national level, tipping remains deeply ingrained in American culture, especially in everyday settings like restaurants and bars. In data gathered from Toast’s Restaurant Trends report, from the first quarter of 2025, it’s clear to see a trend: Spokeo States with the lowest tipping averages still hover around 17%, showing how tipping culture clearly has not gone away. That said, the heat map shows just how widely tipping varies across the country. According to data from restaurant and hospitality job platform OysterLink, the following five states have the highest average tip rates, all above 20%:Delaware — 21.5%West Virginia — 20.5%New Hampshire — 20.4%Indiana — 20.4%Kentucky — 20.3%One of the main characteristics of all these states is a large service-sector workforce. Conversely, the five worst tipping states are:California — 17.3%Washington — 17.8%Nevada — 18.1%Florida — 18.2%Texas — 18.7%Lower wages compared to the cost of living, tighter household budgets, and different expectations all play a role in keeping tipping averages below the national norm in these states.Why states differ: 3 key driversWhile a 4.2% differential between the highest-tipping state and the lowest-tipping state on an average basis may not seem like a lot, it amounts to $17.30 versus $21.50 on a $100 tab. This can easily add up over time for those who rely on tips to supplement their income. There are three primary factors at play.Minimum wage laws and tip creditsOne of the strongest predictors of tipping behavior is how states regulate wages for tipped workers. In much of the country, employers can pay tipped employees a subminimum wage, sometimes as low as $2.13 per hour, assuming tips will make up the difference. This system, known as a tip credit, creates a strong social expectation that customers tip generously because it increases the worker's primary income.Based on Economic Policy Institute data on minimum wages across the country and minimum tipped credit wages, all five of the highest-tipping states have a tip credit structure in place, reducing the minimum wage to $2.13 to $3.36, depending on the state. Conversely, Texas is the only one of the five lowest-tipping states to have this structure, while the lowest-tipped wage for the remaining four is $10.98 in Florida.Economic conditions and cost of livingHousehold economics also inevitably play a role in shaping tipping habits. In higher-cost states, diners are accustomed to higher prices overall. This naturally increases tip amounts even when percentages stay constant. One study of the effect of minimum wage on tipping by Cornell social psychologist Michael Lynn found that tipping behavior correlates with income levels, urban density, and discretionary spending. This can affect tipping in the fringe states that don’t make the top or bottom five.Regional culture and tourist populationsFinally, culture matters too. Tipping norms in the Northeast and West Coast tend to be more rigid, while in parts of the South and Midwest, tipping is more discretionary. Given that it can feel like an obligation in some regions, the tip amount may naturally be lower as the consumer anticipates needing to tip again soon.Tourism also plays a major role. States like Nevada and Florida often benefit from visitor-driven tipping norms where tourists, often international, tend to tip on the higher end or follow posted suggestions as they aren’t accustomed to the area. The OysterLink data also shows that hospitality-heavy regions routinely outperform national averages.Consumer sentiment: The tipping fatigue factorIn recent years, a new force has entered the equation: tipping fatigue. Data from the Pew Research Center, based on a survey of nearly 12,000 U.S. adults, found that 7 in 10 adults felt that more places now request tips than five years ago. This trend has even been dubbed “tipflation.” In total, 40% of those polled further noted they opposed businesses’ suggested tip amounts, whereas only 23% were in favor of them.Similarly, in a survey of around 1,000 U.S. adults, Yahoo Finance reported that roughly 77% of respondents felt overwhelmed and believed tipping had become ridiculous in the country. Full-service restaurants still seemingly command relatively strong gratuities, but data is beginning to show that people are tipping less or becoming increasingly confused about what the proper tip amount is based on the situation or location.What this means for workersFor service workers, state-level differences in average tip amounts can mean thousands of dollars in annual income variation. In states with lower tipping averages and lower tipped minimum wages, workers are more vulnerable to income instability. Complementary data to the Economic Policy Institute’s minimum wage data outlined how a reliance on tips disproportionately affects women and workers of color while also contributing to higher poverty rates in tipped occupations. Until structural changes become widespread via political policy, it’s likely that where you work will often matter as much as how well you serve.Tipping culture in AmericaTipping in America isn’t going away, but it is certainly evolving. State-by-state differences reveal how labor laws, cost of living, tourism, and consumer sentiment are all colliding at the table, bar, and checkout screen. For diners, understanding regional norms can help inform awkward tip prompts. For workers and policymakers, the data underscores how deeply tipping behavior is tied to economic policy. As tipping fatigue grows and wage debates continue, one thing remains clear: where you choose to live will play a major role in how generosity appears on a receipt.This story was produced by Spokeo and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| R&B stars consider two ways to serve an audienceTwo albums released the same day — Jill Scott's return from a long absence, and Brent Faiyaz's play for a mid-career pivot — offer opposing visions of artistic advancement in the genre. |
| New federal rule could lower disability compensation for millions of veterans: VFWA federal rule change could lower disability compensation for millions of veterans, says the Veterans of Foreign Wars. |
| | The impact of leadership on employee engagement and how surveys close the gapThe impact of leadership on employee engagement and how surveys close the gapImproving engagement is a priority for many organizations. You introduce new initiatives, invest in better communication, and offer more perks, all in the hope of creating a more connected and motivated workplace. But even with those efforts, something can still feel off. Engagement doesn’t always respond the way you expect.So what if the most important factor isn’t what you’re doing, but how your leadership team is showing up?The truth is: Employee engagement isn’t rooted in surface-level perks. It grows through trust, meaningful feedback, and consistent support from leaders in the moments that matter most. Understanding that connection is the first step toward creating real impact. WorkTango examines how leadership can affect engagement among employees and how surveys can help.How leadership affects employee engagementEmployee engagement is built (or broken) by leadership.Your employees are paying attention. They see how leaders communicate, how they handle feedback, and whether or not they follow through. These behaviors directly shape how connected employees are to their work and your culture.That’s why engagement isn’t just an HR initiative. It’s an organization-wide initiative that relies heavily on leaders.It’s no surprise that employee engagement and leadership development are now ranked among the top three priorities for businesses in 2025, according to Society for Human Resource Management research. And it’s also why organizations that treat leadership development and engagement as separate priorities often struggle to move the needle on either.To support engagement, leaders need clarity on what effective leadership looks like and how their behavior shapes the employee experience.Leadership styles and how they influence employee engagementLeaders don’t all show up the same way, but that’s not necessarily a bad thing. WorkTango developed five core leadership archetypes that show up across organizations. Each has a distinct way of building engagement and supporting team success.Strategists focus on long-term goals. They help employees understand how their work connects to the bigger picture and bring clarity through strong planning and decision-making.Collaborators build trust and inclusion. They focus on relationships, make space for different perspectives, and create a sense of safety and belonging across their teams.Influencers motivate people around a shared vision. They bring energy, visibility, and clear direction, helping employees feel connected to the work and inspired to move it forward.Executors keep teams focused and accountable. They’re action-oriented, reliable, and help employees stay clear on what needs to happen and when.Communicators help employees feel informed. They promote transparency, active listening, and effective communication so teams feel seen, heard, and in the loop.Leaders don’t need to fit one style. What matters is recognizing their strengths and building the behaviors that fit the evolving needs of their teams.5 high-performance leadership behaviors that drive employee engagementRegardless of their approach, what sets high-performing leaders apart is how they consistently model behaviors that strengthen trust, clarity, and connection.Research shows that the behaviors that matter most for leadership and engagement fall into five key areas:Strong management and mentoring skills.Ability to clearly articulate a vision.Self-management and emotional balance.Collaboration and teamwork.Minimizing bureaucracy and removing barriers.When leaders consistently demonstrate these behaviors, they create the foundation for engagement. But sustaining the momentum takes more than consistency. It takes awareness.You need to know how employees are experiencing that leadership in real time. That’s where surveys come in.The important role employee surveys play in leadership and employee engagementTo build high-performing leaders and more engaged teams, organizations need a clear process for listening at scale. Employee surveys create that foundation.Employee surveys help leaders listen with structure and intentionSurveys offer a reliable way for leaders to understand how their teams are doing. Instead of relying on informal conversations or scattered input, surveys create a consistent process for collecting and responding to feedback. This helps leaders track patterns, focus their efforts, and build trust through regular check-ins.Employee surveys help leaders growEmployee surveys give insight into how leadership is experienced across the organization. They surface patterns around communication, recognition, and support, making it easier to understand where your leaders are building trust and where they may need support.While surveys create important awareness, what happens after the survey determines whether engagement actually improves.Why leaders need to take action on survey results to drive employee engagementOnce you’ve collected employee feedback, your next move matters. What leaders do with survey results is what really drives engagement and culture.3 ways leaders respond after an employee survey and why it mattersThere are a few common ways leaders typically respond after collecting feedback. Only one of them actually moves engagement forward.Here are three common responses.No action: Feedback is collected but not acknowledged. Employees are left wondering if their input mattered at all. Trust erodes, participation drops, and disengagement sets in.Some action: Results are shared, and there may be an initial response. But next steps are unclear, inconsistent, or not meaningfully connected to employee concerns. Employees may feel heard but not valued. Engagement stalls.Right action: Feedback is shared transparently. Priorities are identified and co-created with teams. Updates are communicated regularly. In this approach, employees see real follow-through, and engagement deepens as trust grows. WorkTango To encourage the right type of action from leaders, organizations need to equip them with the tools and support to take the right next steps.How leaders can drive action using survey resultsCollecting feedback is only the start. Engagement only improves if leaders take visible, consistent action based on what employees share.Here’s what high-performing leaders do to drive employee engagement through action and how you can support it.1. Thank employees for their feedback.Acknowledging employee feedback is one of the fastest ways leaders can build trust. When leaders show they are open and grateful for feedback, it creates space for honest conversations and reinforces that employee voices matter.How you can make it easier for leaders: Invest in employee survey tools that automate thank-you communications immediately after surveys close, helping leaders set a positive tone without extra manual work.2. Share survey insights transparently.Strong leaders communicate major survey themes and results clearly with their teams, even when the feedback is difficult. Being open about the results builds credibility, shows that feedback is taken seriously, and sets the foundation for meaningful change.How you can make it easier for leaders: Provide simple dashboards and communication templates that help leaders share insights quickly and clearly with their teams. An even more effective approach is giving them real-time access to survey data so they can explore trends and take action directly.3. Collaborate with employees on next steps.While some leaders make decisions in isolation, the most effective ones involve employees in shaping action plans. This collaboration leads to stronger ownership, better solutions, and deeper engagement across teams.How you can make it easier for leaders: Offer built-in action planning tools that guide leaders through setting shared priorities and co-creating solutions with their teams.4. Define clear priorities and timelines.Setting specific goals, assigning accountability, and creating clear timelines help keep engagement efforts focused. When leaders provide clarity on what’s happening and when, good intentions turn into visible, measurable progress.How you can make it easier for leaders: Support leaders with frameworks, reminders, and planning tools that organize commitments and track progress over time.5. Keep progress visible over time.Sustaining employee engagement requires ongoing communication. Strong leaders continue to share updates as priorities evolve, showing employees that feedback is not only heard but acted on consistently.How you can make it easier for leaders: Use tools that provide progress-tracking dashboards and action planning tools to help leaders keep engagement efforts visible, build accountability, and reinforce trust for the long term.How the right support turns feedback into real progressA strong employee survey strategy is only the beginning. Real engagement happens when leadership teams are empowered to listen, act, and follow through consistently.This story was produced by WorkTango and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| 100 acres burned during field fireAbout 100 acres burned during a field fire in Bureau County Wednesday afternoon. |
| Democrats offer muted praise of Pritzker’s speech, Republicans dismiss ‘campaign’ rhetoricReaction to Gov. JB Pritzker’s combined State of the State and fiscal year 2027 budget address fell largely along partisan lines as Democrats offered muted praise while Republicans dismissed his affordability message as campaign-style rhetoric. |
| | How national nitrogen oxide reduction rules are changing home heatingHow national nitrogen oxide reduction rules are changing home heatingNearly half of all U.S. households rely on gas or propane furnaces to stay warm. But for those homes, the rules of home heating are about to change. By late 2028, a new federal mandate from the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) will require all nonweatherized gas furnaces to hit a 95% annual fuel utilization efficiency (AFUE) rating. The numbers tell a clear story.The DOE expects this shift to save consumers roughly $24.8 billion in utility costs over the next 30 years. That sounds like a win, but it comes with a catch. For many, the transition means immediate “sticker shock” from higher upfront equipment costs and the technical headache of secondary structural retrofits. This report from Vectra Mechanical breaks down how these new regulations are forcing a high-stakes evolution in home heating nationwide. Vectra Mechanical What You Need to Know About the New StandardFrom a regulatory perspective, this update addresses a core utilization inefficiency in domestic home heating. According to the Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), many older gas furnaces operate at approximately 70% to 80% efficiency, meaning a significant share of the fuel energy is lost through exhaust rather than converted into usable thermal energy.This energy loss translates directly into higher operating expenses and increased environmental impact. Gas-powered furnaces emit carbon dioxide (CO2) and nitrogen oxides (NOx), which are primary contributors to greenhouse gas levels and local air quality degradation.Units that meet the 95% AFUE standard utilize condensing technology to recover latent heat from exhaust gases before they are discharged. As a result, a higher percentage of fuel is converted into usable heat, significantly reducing waste.According to the Department of Energy (DOE) projections mentioned above, this transition is expected to avoid the release of 332 million metric tons of carbon emissions over the next 30 years.In terms of direct fuel-to-heat conversion, the efficiency delta is significant:80% AFUE: 80 cents becomes heat, and 20 cents is wasted.95% AFUE: 95 cents is converted into heat, and only 5 cents turns into exhaust.Who It ImpactsThe federal mandate effectively prohibits the production of 80% AFUE furnaces after 2028. This establishes a market contraction for the noncondensing segment of the industry, which currently represents approximately 55% of the natural gas furnace market.The American Gas Association and other industry groups challenged this ruling in court; however, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit upheld the 95% efficiency standard in late 2025. As of early 2026, the case is under petition for Supreme Court review, though the compliance deadline remains in effect.HVAC ContractorsPast 2028, HVAC contractors won’t be allowed to sell and install noncondensing furnaces. In fact, in states like California and Colorado, due to the adoption of ultra-low NOx regulations, changes are underway.In Colorado, under House Bill 23-1161, the new emission standards took effect on Jan. 1, 2026. The first to feel the impact were local businesses.One issue is the cost of 95% AFUE furnaces. Low-NOx models can be 40% to 80% more expensive than older models, and this cost will be reflected in the installation bill the customer receives.HomeownersThe new standards do not mandate the immediate replacement of currently operational home heating systems. If an older furnace is functioning efficiently, there is no regulatory pressure to upgrade.However, should a system require replacement after the 2028 deadline, the high-efficiency model will be the primary option. Beyond the equipment cost, the “tipping point” for many households is the secondary structural retrofit. Condensing furnaces produce liquid condensate and cooler exhaust, requiring specialized drainage and venting configurations that differ from traditional atmospheric chimneys. These structural requirements can further increase the total cost of system acquisition.Will Home Heating Change?The new standards aren’t only for gas furnaces; water heaters and commercial rooftop units are also impacted by the changes.The 95% AFUE mandate effectively restricts the market to units with advanced condensing technology. This transition supports long-term emission reduction targets and regional air quality standards, though it requires a strategic evaluation of asset lifecycles. The numbers tell a clear story.Homeowners facing replacement decisions may opt for high-efficiency gas models or prioritize full-scale electrification. While some may consider electric heat pumps, the national average cost for a whole-home heat pump installation in 2026 often exceeds $15,000 before incentives.Transitioning from gas to electric remains a capital-intensive infrastructure update that may require significant electrical panel modifications and higher upfront capital expenditure. Ultimately, the household decision often centers on a choice between upgrading to a 95% efficient gas furnace or committing to a complete home heating system overhaul.Change Is InevitableAccording to the DOE, the average operational lifespan of a gas furnace is 15 to 20 years. This means that a significant portion of the current 80% AFUE inventory will reach its technical end-of-life shortly after the 2028 mandate takes effect. Homeowners who prioritize proactive upgrades benefit from a longer amortization period, spreading the higher cost of a 95% AFUE unit over two decades of energy savings.Conversely, maintaining aging units beyond the 15-year mark increases the risk of emergency replacement during a period of restricted market supply. For the modern household, the transition is less about a forced upgrade and more about optimizing long-term operating expenses.Ultimately, the move toward higher efficiency standards ensures that future home heating investments are anchored in both regulatory compliance and peak thermal performance.This story was produced by Vectra Mechanical and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| Sky Dine bringing new dining, beverage options to Quad Cities International AirportQuad Cities International Airport’s Board of Commissioners unanimously selected Sky Dine of Sioux Falls, South Dakota, as the new concessionaire for food and beverage services at the airport. Sky Dine, a family-owned company with decades of experience in traveler-focused hospitality, will introduce new concepts and improved service as part of the airport’s ongoing terminal improvements. [...] |
| Northern Illinois native, Team USA playing for women’s ice hockey goldNorthern Illinois native Tessa Janecke and Team USA are playing Canada for gold on Thursday. |
| | Best affordable luxury SUVs of 2026Best affordable luxury SUVs of 2026Finding an affordable luxury SUV that mixes practicality with high-end amenities and expressive design doesn’t have to be a budget-busting exercise. Using Edmunds’ rankings and a $50,000 budget — including mandatory destination charges — here are 10 of the best affordable luxury SUVs on the market today. The top pick, the BMW X1, edges out its rivals, but only by a smidge. You really can’t go wrong with any of these right-priced luxurious crossovers and SUVs, which are listed out below from first to last based on their Edmunds Rating.2026 BMW X1The BMW X1, the smallest SUV in BMW’s lineup, serves as a good performance gateway thanks to the base xDrive28i model’s strong 241-horsepower turbocharged four-cylinder engine. But the entry-level BMW isn’t just about zip and zest. It’s spacious inside and loaded with tech, like the automaker’s relatively intuitive iDrive software that is displayed via a crisp and bright curved display. Watch your spending carefully, however, as the X1’s price can climb quickly with option packages.Starting price: $43,9752026 Mercedes-Benz GLBNo affordable luxury crossover on this list does as much as the Mercedes-Benz GLB. This lineup of small SUVs offers seating for up to seven passengers thanks to its optional pint-size third-row bench. Even if you don’t need all those seats, the GLB has a big cargo area for its relatively petite footprint. You’ll also find good tech and a particularly sophisticated suite of safety and convenience features in the available Driver Assistance package.Starting price: $46,9502026 Mercedes-Benz GLAIf you only associate Mercedes-Benz with its high-end offerings, the relatively affordable GLA would like to introduce itself. The entry to the Mercedes range rides and handles well with a sporty personality, and it offers much of the styling personality of the brand’s more expensive cars. It’s not particularly spacious inside, however, so consider other options — like the related GLB described above — if you need more room.Starting price: $42,8502026 Volvo XC40The Volvo XC40 is small on price but big on personality and in-car tech. At the forefront is Volvo’s Pilot Assist feature, which modulates speed and assists steering — a real boon on long road trips or grueling commutes alike. Inside, its vertical screen runs Google Built-In software with native Google Maps and access to the tech giant’s app store. Add in the XC40’s stellar crash test ratings and it’s a small luxury SUV worth coveting.Starting price: $41,1952026 BMW X2Think of the BMW X2 as the X1’s daring and adventurous sibling. The two share a lot of DNA, including their punchy turbocharged engines and sleek curved touchscreens loaded with impressive software. However, the X2’s roofline dives more aggressively downward aft of the passenger compartment. True, if you pick the X2 over the X1, you’ll pay more for less — less cargo space, that is — but that is the price to pay for vanity.Starting price: $45,4752025 Audi Q3Audi’s smallest and least costly SUV has a premium look outside matched by high-end materials inside that would impress at a much higher price tag. Its sprightly turbocharged engine is no fuel-economy champ, but it furnishes decent acceleration and rarely makes itself heard in the hushed cabin. While it’s not the most fun or spacious small luxury SUV, the Q3 nonetheless boasts a lot of standard equipment. A redesigned Q3 is on the way for 2026 and will carry a higher base price.Starting price: $41,0952026 Acura ADXNew in 2025, the ADX expanded Acura’s SUV lineup, adding a smaller offering at a much more affordable price point. It makes great use of its petite footprint with a spacious and modern interior with good outward visibility. Also, it features controls and software that are easy enough to sort through. With just 190 horsepower sent to the wheels through a continuously variable automatic transmission (CVT), however, the ADX delivers leisurely acceleration, and it’s rather loud inside.Starting price: $36,4502026 Lexus UXThanks to its hybrid powertrain, the Lexus UX is a genuine fuel-sipper wrapped up in an eye-catching package. More power for the 2025 model year brought quicker acceleration with no adverse impact on fuel economy. Talk about a win-win. However, the UX rates lower than some other small luxury crossovers and SUVs simply because of how small its interior is. If you need a practical and affordable luxury SUV, consider others on this list first.Starting price: $38,2502026 Acura RDXThe Acura RDX does a lot of things right. Its sprightly handling and willing turbocharged engine make it one of the most fun affordable luxury SUVs. Its cabin has an attractive design, and Acura has done a great job of splicing in high-end materials. However, the RDX’s infotainment software is largely controlled via a frustrating touchpad. Some tech solutions simply don’t work well, and a console-mounted touchpad is definitely near the top of that list.Starting price: $46,4502026 Lexus NXJust how much one may like the Lexus NX really depends on its configuration. This compact luxury SUV comes in a dizzying array of trim levels and powertrains, not all of which behave the same. To stay south of $50,000, you’ll have to stick with the 275-horsepower NX 350 or the 240-hp NX 350h hybrid. The latter actually costs a bit less while furnishing good get-up-and-go as well as terrific estimated fuel economy. If there’s a downside to the NX, it’s this model’s rear seat space. Other small luxury SUVs have much more room in the back.Starting price: $45,470This story was produced by Edmunds and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| | You can’t secure what you can’t categorize: A taxonomy for AI agentsYou can’t secure what you can’t categorize: A taxonomy for AI agentsLast quarter, the VP of engineering at a large gaming company explained to Oso how they’d built an AI site reliability engineering agent to help resolve incidents and fix production issues. For weeks, it worked beautifully—triaging alerts, identifying root causes, even suggesting fixes their team would have taken hours to develop.Then one day, it launched a denial-of-service attack on their internal monitoring system.The agent had permissions to query their monitoring APIs. It was supposed to use them to gather context for incident response. But when it decided those APIs might hold the answer to a particularly thorny issue, it started hammering them with requests until the system fell over.They shut the agent down, obviously. But unplugging the agent is a blunt instrument—it means losing all the goodness they were getting before.An agent is a system. To secure any system, you need the right mental model to reason about it. The industry doesn’t have that mental model for agents yet, and that’s a problem.Without a shared mental model of what an agent is, people can’t decompose it. And if it can’t be decomposed, security can’t be designed around it. The disasters make headlines. More commonly, though, concerns about agent security are leading to agents so locked down they can barely do anything.Nondeterminism is both the promise and the peril of agents. An AI agent behaves in nondeterministic ways because it is given the agency to determine how it executes tasks. You can’t remove that autonomy without gutting the agent—but you can mitigate the risks. The most fundamental control is permissions.Consider Wade Foster’s sharp post on the “AI Automation Spectrum” and prior work by Anthropic, Tines, and Simon Willison. If you can categorize what kind of system you’re building, you can reason about what could go wrong and how to prevent it. Many organizations want to move from left to right on a spectrum of autonomy, but most are stuck because they can’t reason about what agents might do. Taxonomy can be a diagnostic tool. Know what’s nondeterministic, and you’ll know where the risk is and what controls to apply.Agent TaxonomyImagine you’re a retailer. When you get customer feedback, you want to ask happy customers to leave reviews and fix issues for unhappy ones, but you want to automate this. You could build a straightforward automated workflow, or you could move from left to right on this spectrum of autonomy. Oso Automated WorkflowAutomate this as a set of deterministic steps. Store the feedback in the CRM, use a classical ML model to score sentiment, check if it’s positive or negative, then branch: For positive feedback, send a templated review request with the customer’s name merged in. For negative feedback, check whether they’re a small or large customer, then either send a templated apology or create a support ticket with a formulaic summary of their history.Definition: Deterministic steps or nodes, automated in code or with a workflow automation tool.What’s deterministic: EverythingWhat’s nondeterministic: NothingSecurity assumptions you can safely make: You know exactly what this system will do.LLM WorkflowAs you move right on the spectrum, replace one or more steps with an LLM—usually content generation. Now instead of a template apology, an LLM writes a customized response based on the specific feedback. Or it generates a more nuanced summary of customer history for the support team.Definition: An automated workflow with an LLM used to execute one or more steps.What’s deterministic: The steps taken and the control flow between them.What’s non-deterministic: Actions taken inside a step (e.g., content generation).Security assumptions you can safely make: “I know what it will do, but not what it will say.”Agentic WorkflowNow you’re entering agentic territory. An LLM not only produces content but also reasons about control flow. For negative feedback, hand the rest of the process to an agent with access to tools: It can read customer history, send emails, or write to the support queue. The agent decides which tools to use and in what order—maybe it checks history first, or maybe it sends an immediate apology. You’ve bounded its options, but you haven’t prescribed the path.Wade’s framework defines agentic workflows differently: An LLM is used in multiple steps, but each step remains self-contained and the flow between them is deterministic. That’s reasonable for demonstrating the value ladder of AI automation. But for security, you need a brighter line. The question is: Does the LLM manage any of the control flow? If it does, you need to reason about all possible paths it might take, not just the content it might generate. That’s a fundamentally different security posture.Definition: An automated workflow where part but not all of the control flow is managed by an LLM.What’s deterministic: Some control flow.What’s non-deterministic: Step content, some control flow.Security assumptions you can safely make: You know the boundaries of possible paths, but not which path it will take.AgentAn agent does the whole thing. It gets the raw customer feedback and decides everything: Is it positive or negative? What’s the customer’s history? Should the agent apologize, escalate, ask for a review, or something else entirely? It reasons about what tools to use, uses them, and solves the task end-to-end.Something is a full agent only if it has this end-to-end agency. Any situation where you explicitly lay out the steps doesn’t qualify—including workflow automation tools, even when they lean heavily on LLMs. This level of nondeterministic behavior requires a different security posture to respond to all the things an agent could do.Definition: A task executed end-to-end by an LLM.What’s deterministic: NothingWhat’s non-deterministic: EverythingSecurity assumptions you can safely make: It will only use tools it can access, but how and whether it will use them is unknown.Summary Oso Note on agentic systems: The industry uses “agentic systems” as an umbrella term for agentic workflows, agents, and multi-agent systems. From a security perspective, treat every agentic system as equivalent to a full agent, except to the extent that you can point at deterministic controls that bound that agency.Implications for Securing AgentsYou can frame the security implications of agents in different ways, and each one means something different for how you would solve it.Some say, “Just solve prompt injection, and there won’t be any problems.” Others point to model quality, which is out of your hands (unless you work at a frontier AI lab). Still others frame it as a data loss problem, but data loss has never been solved, even outside AI.The risk vectors are everywhere—see the OWASP Agentic Top 10 for a taste. No single framing will capture everything that could go wrong.Nondeterminism is a feature, not a bug—though it comes with security implications. You can’t remove it without removing the agent’s agency and demoting it on the spectrum of autonomy.So don’t fight nondeterminism. Bound it instead. Play on its home court where it makes sense—e.g., applying agentic oversight to content generation and reasoning. For the really dangerous areas (tool access, data exposure), constrain behaviors with deterministic controls.What’s the OG deterministic control for governing who can do what? Permissions.Permissions for AgentsPermissions are part of the basic infrastructure of any real application. But the state of permissions is not healthy.Overpermissioning is the status quo. Analysis of Oso permissions data confirms this. What could you—or an agent with your permissions—do that would be bad?One reason people freak out about agents: They intuitively connect these dots. They know people are overpermissioned, they know agents behave nondeterministically, and they can foresee future disasters. “I accidentally deleted that Salesforce record once and the system just let me do it. What’s going to happen if I ask an agent to update Salesforce for me?”If organizations replicate the overpermissioned state of humans in automated systems, what’s the danger?Automated workflow: Low risk because the code does what it’s programmed to do.LLM workflow: Content risk because it might say something wrong or inappropriate.Agentic workflow: Action risk because it might take unexpected paths.Agent: Maximum action risk because it might do anything it has access to.An agent should only ever have the permissions for the task at hand. That would mitigate most of the risk. But scoping permissions to match nondeterministic behavior is hard: The agent needs to read customer history and send emails to customers, but you can’t predict exactly which customers or what it will say. How can you be certain it won’t leak information?This taxonomy shows you what you’re building. It doesn’t show you how to make it safe.That gaming company faced a choice between useful and dangerous. The entire industry faces that choice right now. People can build powerful agents or they can build safe agents, but not yet both.This is supposed to be the decade of agents. But that only happens if people can trust them. That means building infrastructure that doesn’t exist yet: simulation to test dangerous paths, enforcement that tightens permissions automatically, detection that catches drift, visibility that shows what actually happened.The taxonomy maps the problem. Now someone needs to build the solution. That’s the work that matters—not because it’s technically interesting, but because it’s what unlocks everything else agents could be.This story was produced by Oso and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| Baby chicks link certain sounds with shapes, just like humans doA surprising new study shows that baby chickens react the same way that humans do when tested for something called the "bouba-kiki effect," which has been linked to the emergence of language. |
| Enjoy Alasdair Fraser and Natalie Haas in Bishop HillCrossroads Cultural Connections is hosting internationally acclaimed duo Alasdair Fraser and Natalie Haas on Tuesday, February 24th at Bishop Hill Creative Commons, 107 E Bergland St,. An optional community potluck dinner starts the evening at 6 p.m. (bring a dish to share if you’d like to join), followed by the concert at 7 p.m. This is [...] |
| | 10 unforgettable adventures to have around the world in 202610 unforgettable adventures to have around the world in 2026With more travelers turning to adventure experiences in 2026 than ever before, an epic tour is worth planning for. From hiking Peru’s Inca Trail to rolling through the fields of the Netherlands during tulip season and island-hopping bridges in Japan to cycling the French countryside alongside cycling pros during the actual Tour de France—EF Adventures recommends 10 experiences that separate a good year from an unforgettable one. Tours in these destinations come with a focus on wellness, community, and lifelong learning. Courtesy of EF Adventures 1. Hike to the Matterhorn’s basecampThat perfect pyramid mountain on Toblerone bars? That’s the Matterhorn. On hiking tours in the Alps across Switzerland, Italy and France, you’ll climb to Hörnlihutt at 10,700 feet—the actual basecamp where mountaineers prepare for summit attempts. Standing there with the Matterhorn’s north face looming 4,000 feet above is completely different from admiring it from the town of Zermatt. You’re at the threshold of something massive, in the exact spot where serious climbers stand before they commit to one of the Alps’ most legendary ascents. And the panoramic views of the mountains around you aren’t so bad either. Courtesy of EF Adventures 2. Trek the final section of the Inca Trail to Machu PicchuIn Peru, hike the Sacred Valley and Machu Picchu. You don’t just see Machu Picchu—you walk the final 6.3 miles of the Inca Trail on stone pathways the Incas built without wheels or iron tools. When you arrive at Inti Punku (the Sun Gate), Machu Picchu reveals itself below, framed by peaks and often wrapped in mist. That view is yours to remember for the rest of your life. You earned it. You didn’t take a bus or train. You walked the route the way the Incas designed it to be walked. Courtesy of EF Adventures 3. Bike through Keukenhof Gardens during tulip seasonKeukenhof blooms for only eight weeks each spring—7 million tulips, daffodils, and hyacinths creating what might be the world’s most extravagant flower show. And while on a bike ride in Belgium and the Netherlands, touring through the towns of Ghent and Gouda, you get a front row seat. After taking your time to wander the gardens, you’ll hop on a bike and cycle through the fields that supply these special bulbs worldwide, where the landscape transforms into horizontal rainbows—vivid reds, golden yellows, deep purples stretching to windmills on the horizon. Courtesy of EF Adventures 4. Reach Neuschwanstein Castle’s hidden viewpointsNeuschwanstein inspired Disney’s Sleeping Beauty castle, but most visitors only see this famous fortress from the tour bus stops below. On this hike in Germany and Austria through Bavaria, Tyrol and Salzburg, you’ll hike a few miles to less-crowded viewpoints tucked into the forested hills where Ludwig II’s white limestone palace sits dramatically against alpine peaks. King Ludwig built this castle to fulfill a medieval fantasy, and from these hiking-only vantage points, you understand why millions have been captivated by this fairytale castle. Courtesy of EF Adventures 5. Walk Portugal’s Wine Route in the Douro ValleyThe Douro Valley in Portugal produces port wine on hillsides so steep that all the work—harvest, pruning, crushing—still happens by hand. When hiking through Sintra and the Douro Valley, the Rota do Vinho trail takes you down through working vineyards, where you’ll taste port and table wines in the actual cellars where they’re made, not a visitor center. This valley is UNESCO-protected not just because it’s beautiful, but because the landscape represents an unbroken winemaking tradition that’s shaped the region’s entire identity. Courtesy of EF Adventures 6. E-Bike across suspension bridges on the Shimanami KaidoThe Shimanami Kaido connects six islands via suspension bridges soaring hundreds of feet above the Seto Inland Sea—impressive engineering that happens to be Japan’s most celebrated bike route. On this multiadventure tour in the Japanese Alps and Shikoku, you’ll pedal across spans that seem to float above turquoise water. One moment you’re riding through a traditional fishing village, the next you’re suspended above open water with islands spreading in every direction. It’s genuinely spectacular and truly unforgettable. Courtesy of EF Adventures 7. Stand-up paddleboard on Lake BledLake Bled is Slovenia’s postcard—a glacial lake with a church on a tiny island and a medieval castle on the cliff above. Most visitors photograph it from shore. When on an adventure trip in Slovenia and Croatia in Istria and the Julian Alps, you’ll paddleboard across reflective water so clear you can see 40 feet down. From your board, you’re close enough to the island church to appreciate the details, and you can hop in the water whenever you want. The water stays cool year-round from mountain snowmelt, making it refreshingly crisp even in summer. Courtesy of EF Adventures 8. Walk into Santiago de Compostela with celebrating pilgrimsWhile hiking in Spain and Portugal, the final stretch of the famous Camino de Santiago trail leads you into Santiago de Compostela — and the experience is nothing short of moving. You don’t need to walk the entire Camino to appreciate what pilgrims experience when they arrive in Praza do Obradoiro. You’ll see people who’ve been walking for weeks crying, laughing, embracing strangers who made the same journey. Some carry shells tied to their packs, others lean on walking sticks worn smooth from hundreds of miles. The accomplishment transcends the physical distance. Something shifts when you complete even a portion of a walk that millions have made before you. Courtesy of EF Adventures 9. Stay in an 18th-Century Château in ProvenceThe Château de Mazan once hosted French nobility and belonged to the Marquis de Sade’s family. Now restored as a stunning hotel, this is just part of our adventure experience while biking in Provence, France, at the base of Mt. Ventoux. The combination works beautifully: historic grandeur (restored gardens, aristocratic dining rooms) meets modern comfort (pool, spa, refined Provençal cuisine). Returning to an 18th-century palace after riding through lavender fields and vineyards all day feels appropriately indulgent. Courtesy of EF Adventures 10. Watch pro cyclists cross the Tour de France finish lineThree weeks of racing. 2,000 miles. And it all comes down to one sprint beneath the Arc de Triomphe. On this bike tour, the Tour de France is the bucket list moment you will remember forever. You’ll stand on the Champs-Élysées as the world’s best riders complete what many consider sport’s hardest test. The energy is electric and chaotic—team cars everywhere, champagne spraying, national anthems, riders collapsing into their teams’ arms. This isn’t something you watch on TV. You’re in it.There is an adventure for you!There are a thousand ways to spend your time and money in 2026. But if you’re reading this, chances are you’re someone who wants more from travel than just checking boxes. These 10 adventure experiences are just the start. They’re the ones that actually stick with you—the hikes that leave you awe-struck, the bike trip filled with moments that remind you what wonder feels like, kayaking or doing yoga in the places that shift something inside you.Here’s to making your 2026 count.This story was produced by EF Adventures and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| Dr. Amy Novak named CEO of ACCU Board of DirectorsThe Association of Catholic Colleges and Universities (ACCU) has announced that Amy C. Novak, EdD, will serve as Chair of the ACCU Board of Directors. Dr. Novak is currently president and CEO of St. Ambrose University and Mount Mercy University. Dr. Novak’s appointment comes at a critical time for Catholic higher education, as institutions nationwide [...] |
| American Jordan Stolz speedskates to a third Olympic medal -- silver this timeU.S. speedskater Jordan Stolz had a lot of hype accompanying him in these Winter Olympic Games. He's now got two gold medals, one silver, with one event to go. |
| Bad Bunny and J. Cole rule the pop chartsThese days, the Super Bowl halftime show is a massive driver of the streaming, airplay and sales that fuel the Billboard charts. This week, Bad Bunny benefits from that influence. |
| | Expansion of HSA and FSA rules under One Big Beautiful Bill: What you should knowExpansion of HSA and FSA rules under One Big Beautiful Bill: What you should knowStarting in 2026, more people will qualify for HSAs, and more expenses will be covered. Some FSA limits will increase for the first time in nearly 40 years.Key takeaways:The One Big Beautiful Bill Act expands health savings account (HSA) eligibility and what counts as a qualified medical expense. In 2026, more Affordable Care Act marketplace plans will be HSA-eligible, and direct primary care fees may qualify as medical expenses.Dependent care flexible spending accounts are getting their first permanent increase in 40 years. Starting in 2026, the annual limit rises to $7,500 per household.The biggest updates to tax-advantaged accounts will roll out in 2026.If you’re looking to reduce your out-of-pocket healthcare costs, you might consider using a health savings account (HSA) or a flexible spending account (FSA) if you’re eligible. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), a federal law signed by President Donald Trump on July 4, 2025, brings some of the biggest updates these accounts have seen in decades.GoodRx, a platform for medication savings, shares which changes are set to take place and how they could help you save more on healthcare.How does the One Big Beautiful Bill affect HSAs?An HSA is a tax-advantaged account available to those with a qualified high-deductible health plan (HDHP). You can use the money in the account to pay for qualified medical expenses, such as prescription medications, copays, and dental care.HSAs were created by Congress in 2003 and became effective in 2004. With the OBBBA, HSAs are getting some of their biggest updates since they were introduced. Here’s what’s changing:1. Expanded HSA eligibilityBeginning in 2026, more Affordable Care Act (ACA) marketplace plans will qualify as HSA-eligible. This includes bronze and catastrophic plans that have not met the definition of a high-deductible health plan. This change could increase the number of HSA-eligible individuals on the marketplace to 10 million, according to The White House.Bronze plans usually offer the lowest monthly premium on the marketplace. They come with higher deductibles, which means you pay more out of pocket before your insurance starts cost-sharing for your healthcare.Catastrophic plans are low-cost, worst-case-scenario insurance with high deductibles meant to protect people from exorbitant medical debt. They are available to people under age 30 or to adults of any age who qualify for an exemption due to financial hardship.2. Direct primary care (DPC) memberships treated as qualified expensesDPC is a model in which you pay a healthcare professional a flat monthly fee for routine primary care services instead of going through insurance for every visit. According to a Hint Health survey, DPC memberships grew 241% from 2017 to 2021.Starting January 1, 2026, people can use their HSAs to pay for DPC membership fees. But the membership must meet the new federal requirements. Previously, DPC was considered similar to health insurance. It generally did not qualify as an HSA-eligible expense.To qualify as an HSA-eligible expense, the membership must meet the following requirements:Charge a fixed monthly fee: Individual DPC memberships should not exceed $150 per month. Family memberships are capped at $300 per month.Cover routine primary care services: This includes checkups, preventive care, follow-ups, and basic office procedures.Cannot function like insurance: The membership cannot include major medical services. Specialty care, emergency care, hospital services, and other benefits that go beyond primary care are not included.3. High-deductible health plans (HDHPs) can cover telehealth before the deductibleWith telehealth, you can visit a healthcare professional by video or phone instead of going into an office. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Congress temporarily allowed telehealth to be offered before the deductible without causing someone to lose HSA eligibility. OBBBA makes this flexibility permanent, starting with plans that began on or after January 1, 2025.Under OBBBA, HDHPs can cover telehealth and other remote services before you meet your deductible. Doing so will not affect your ability to contribute to an HSA. Telehealth must still meet federal medical standards.How does the One Big Beautiful Bill affect FSAs?A flexible spending account (FSA) lets employees set aside pretax money to pay for certain out-of-pocket healthcare expenses. Health FSAs can help you pay for medical, dental, and vision costs. Dependent care FSAs (DCFSAs) work differently. They help cover certain childcare or dependent care expenses, such as preschool, summer day camp, or care for an adult dependent who cannot attend to themselves. OBBBA affects the dependent care FSA rules, not health FSAs.DCFSA rules have stayed mostly the same since they were introduced in 1986, when the contribution limit was set at $5,000 per household ($2,500 for married couples filing separately). This limit briefly increased in 2021 under the American Rescue Plan Act, but only for that plan year.Beginning in 2026, the OBBBA permanently raises the dependent care FSA contribution limit to $7,500 per household and $3,750 for married couples filing separately.Here’s an overview of how the limits have changed: GoodRx Which parts of your HSA and FSA won’t change in 2026?There were various proposals circulating in recent years to change tax-advantaged accounts. But most of those ideas did not make it into OBBA. The final law included only certain HSA and dependent care FSA updates and left many other rules unchanged. Here’s what’s staying the same for HSAs and FSAs: GoodRx The IRS increased the 2026 HSA and health FSA contribution limits. HSA limits increased from $4,300 in 2025 to $4,400 in 2026 for self-only coverage and from $8,550 in 2025 to $8,750 in 2026 for family coverage. The health FSA limit also increased from $3,300 to $3,400 in 2026. These annual adjustments will continue since both HSAs and FSAs remain indexed for inflation. The bottom lineThe One Big Beautiful Bill Act includes some of the biggest updates to HSAs and dependent care FSAs in decades. Starting in 2026, more people will qualify for HSAs, direct primary care memberships will count as a qualified expense, and dependent care FSAs (DCFSAs) will see a permanent contribution increase to $7,500 per household. And beginning with plans on or after January 1, 2025, HDHPs can cover telehealth and other remote services before you meet your deductible without affecting HSA eligibility.If you’re eligible for an HSA or a DCFSA, weigh the benefits to see whether these accounts make sense for your needs and budget.This story was produced by GoodRx and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| | Parents say Roblox 'parental controls' aren’t enough: What new data revealsParents say Roblox ‘parental controls’ aren’t enough: What new data revealsParental controls are often promoted as a safety net for families, but growing evidence suggests they may not adequately protect children on major gaming platforms. New research from A Case for Women, a women-led U.S. legal advocacy organization, highlights growing parental concerns about the effectiveness of these tools.Key Findings:Only 61% of parents or guardians believe Roblox’s parental controls are sufficient to prevent their child from being contacted by a potential predator.29% of parents or guardians have discovered content or interactions on Roblox that they thought parental controls should have blocked.47% of parents or guardians have not enabled Account Restrictions, despite this being one of the most comprehensive safety features.66% of parents or guardians say real-time suspicion chat alerts would most improve their confidence in the platform.36% of parents or guardians either do not use Roblox’s parental controls or are not aware of these controls.23% of mothers never review or adjust their child’s Roblox parental controls.22% of Millennial parents or guardians have not learned about Roblox’s parental controls.In recent years, Roblox has rolled out additional safety changes aimed at younger users, including stricter default communication settings and expanded tools for parents. Roblox has also announced age-estimation and verification efforts tied to certain communication features. Even with these updates, many parents still report uncertainty about whether safeguards consistently reduce real-world risk, especially around chat, user interactions, and exposure to inappropriate content. A Case for Women This new study captures that tension clearly. While many parents say they use parental controls, a substantial portion still feel uneasy about what their children may encounter on the platform. The findings suggest that parental controls, as currently understood and applied, do not always translate into confidence, particularly when protections depend on awareness, correct configuration, and ongoing oversight.These findings reinforce the growing legal scrutiny surrounding Roblox and help explain why families are increasingly turning to Roblox lawsuits to hold the platform accountable. The organization argues that parental controls alone are not a substitute for stronger platform-level protections and clearer accountability when children are harmed online.At the same time, broader scrutiny around Roblox and child safety continues to intensify. In Louisiana, the state’s Attorney General has sued Roblox, accusing it of failing to enforce child safety protections and enabling exploitative content. (See CNN’s coverage: Louisiana sues Roblox over child protection.) Florida’s Attorney General has also recently issued criminal subpoenas against the platform, stating that it’s a breeding ground for child predators. A Case for Women Meanwhile, journalist Chris Hansen, known for his work exposing online predators, recently announced a new documentary in collaboration with law enforcement and advocacy groups investigating Roblox’s handling of child safety.Confidence in Controls Is Far From UniversalAccording to the survey, 61% of parents said they believe Roblox’s parental controls are sufficient to prevent their child from being contacted by a potential predator. At the same time, nearly four in ten parents remain unconvinced or unsure that those tools provide that level of protection.The split highlights a key tension. Parental controls are widely used, yet they do not inspire consistent confidence across households. For many families, turning on safeguards does not fully resolve safety concerns. A Case for Women Nearly One in Three Parents Say Controls Failed to Block ContentThe data also points to gaps between expectations and experience. Thirty percent of parents reported encountering content or interactions they believed parental controls should have blocked.For those families, the issue was not whether controls existed, but whether they worked as expected. The finding suggests that some parents view current safeguards as incomplete, particularly when it comes to filtering interactions or material they consider inappropriate.Stronger Safety Settings Often Go UnusedRoblox offers a restrictive safety option known as Account Restrictions. The setting is designed to narrow what kids can access and who they can interact with, but many parents either don’t know it exists or aren’t confident they’ve configured it correctly.. Despite its role as one of the platform’s strongest protections, the study found that 47% of parents have not enabled this setting.The figure points to a disconnect between the availability of safety tools and their actual use. Whether driven by a lack of awareness or uncertainty about how settings function, nearly half of parents are leaving the most comprehensive controls turned off. A Case for Women Parents Want Real-Time Warnings, Not Just SettingsWhen asked what would most improve confidence in platform safety, parents consistently pointed to proactive oversight. 66% said real-time alerts for suspicious chat activity would make them feel safer.The response suggests that static settings alone may not meet parental expectations. Many families appear to want immediate visibility into potential risks, rather than relying solely on controls configured in advance.Why These Findings MatterTaken together, the data paints a clear picture. A majority of parents trust parental controls, yet a sizable minority do not. Nearly one in three reports seeing content they expected to be blocked. Almost half have not enabled the strongest available safety settings. And two-thirds want tools that offer real-time insight into their child’s interactions.These patterns help explain why some families are questioning whether parental controls alone are sufficient. The organization argues that while such tools are often cited as evidence of safety, parents report that they do not consistently reduce risk in practice.More broadly, the findings reflect a shift in how families evaluate online safety. Parents appear less focused on whether controls exist and more concerned with whether those tools provide clarity, reliability, and meaningful protection as children spend more time in interactive digital environments.SummaryThe data points to a clear gap between how parental controls are presented and how they function in practice. Nearly half of parents surveyed (47%) have not enabled Roblox’s “Account Restrictions,” one of the platform’s most comprehensive safety settings, while nearly one in three report encountering content they believed should have been blocked. Together, these findings suggest that many families may be relying on safeguards that do not consistently provide the level of protection they expect.This disconnect helps explain why more parents are seeking clarity around their legal options when children are exposed to harm on gaming platforms like Roblox. The organization works with families to understand whether platform safeguards were sufficient, how failures may have occurred, and what accountability may look like when parental controls fall short.The broader takeaway is not that parental controls are irrelevant, but that they are often misunderstood, inconsistently applied, and limited in scope. As interactive online environments continue to evolve, parents are increasingly looking beyond settings alone, turning to trusted legal advocacy organizations for guidance, answers, and support when safety tools fail to prevent harm.If you’re a parent and believe your child may have experienced sexual abuse or predatory behavior through Roblox, A Case for Women offers a confidential intake questionnaire to help families understand whether they may have a claim and what next steps could look like.MethodologyThe findings are based on a survey conducted via Pollfish in December 2025. The survey included 1,000 U.S parents of children who actively use Roblox and asked respondents about their awareness and use of parental control features, as well as their perceptions of safety risks on the platform.Questions focused on areas including in-game communication, user interactions, content exposure, and overall confidence in the platform’s ability to protect children. Responses reflect parental sentiment rather than technical audits of the platform’s tools.This story was produced by A Case for Women and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| John Deere calls back 27 employees at Dubuque WorksThe total returning number of employees has climbed to approximately 275. |
| New training, new equipment: Blackhawk Fire expands what crews can do on sceneBlackhawk Fire Protection District has upgraded to EMT-level service, allowing firefighters to begin more medical treatment on scene and expand emergency response capabilities. |
| | FM buys IGT building in downtown Providence for $68.5MFM is buying the IGT building in downtown Providence for $68.5 million. (Photo by Christopher Shea/Rhode Island Current)Johnston-based insurance giant FM announced Thursday that it is buying the downtown Providence building that houses the state’s lottery contractor formerly known as IGT, Fidelity Investments Inc. and The Capital Grille The $68.5 million purchase of the 10-story glass and metal building overlooking the Providence Place Mall and the Rhode Island State House is part of FM’s expansion plan, Randy Hodge, chief operating officer, said in a press release. “FM has been proud to call Rhode Island home for nearly 200 years, and this expansion in the state’s capital is a natural choice for our next chapter of growth,” Hodge said in a statement. FM has also been growing its footprint in Massachusetts, signing a lease for office space in Boston’s South Station Tower in January 2025 and opening a 40,000-square-foot “state-of-the-art” training center in Norwood, Massachusetts, later this year. The commercial property insurer hinted at expansion in talks with state lawmakers during the 2025 legislative session as part of its successful request to rewrite a longstanding state law limiting insurance company investments on nontraditional, long-term assets. House Speaker K. Joseph Shekarchi later revealed that FM was contemplating abandoning its Johnston headquarters if the requested insurance investment rewrite was not signed into law. FM is one of the state’s top employers, with a 1,500-person workforce housed mostly at its 8-acre campus in Johnston. It’s unclear how the company’s expansion into the capital city will affect its local payroll and Johnston headquarters. “FM’s decision to invest in downtown Providence speaks to the strength of Rhode Island as a place to do business and thrive,” Gov. Dan McKee said in a statement. “My administration remains committed to strengthening our economy through innovation and good-paying jobs, and FM’s announcement aligns directly with those goals.” The insurer plans to occupy an unspecified portion of the 202,000-square-foot building at 10 Memorial Boulevard, while maintaining the same “multi-tenant profile,” the company said in a statement. That includes retaining the local headquarters for Brightstar Lottery, which rebranded from IGT in June 2025. IGT’s predecessor, GTECH, was the first tenant of the iconic glass building in 2006, just after inking a 20-year deal to run the Rhode Island Lottery sportsbook and lottery technology, and supply slot machines to its two casinos. A second, 20-year contract was signed with the state in 2021 alongside strict employment conditions. The building was previously owned by an affiliate of Tritower Financial Group, a Boston-based real estate and investment management firm which purchased the property for $51.5 million in 2012, according to city property records. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX Courtesy of Rhode Island Current |
| | Accessory-first dogs: The rise of the dog-walking wardrobeAccessory-first dogs: The rise of the dog-walking wardrobeFor decades, the daily dog walk was a utilitarian task. Owners typically headed out in mismatched activewear and discarded footwear, prioritizing function over form. That binary is shifting. A fundamental change in consumer behavior—defined by economists as "pet humanization"—has transitioned this chore into a significant economic driver. Today, the luxury and athleisure sectors are no longer catering solely to the owner; they are designing for the "unit."The shift is backed by significant capital. According to the 2024 Pet Accessories Market Report by Grand View Research, the global pet accessories market is projected to reach $9.97 billion by 2030. This 6.9% compound annual growth rate is primarily fueled by Millennial and Gen Z owners who view their pets as indispensable family members and extensions of their personal brand.In the modern retail landscape, discretionary spending on pet-specific textiles is no longer a niche luxury—it is a core market segment. In this article, Pink Papyrus examines what's driving the shift and how it's reshaping the pet accessories market.Dog Walking Is the New CatwalkThe transition from basic nylon leashes to coordinated, high-performance gear is a result of market premiumization. As 2023 survey data from the Pew Research Center revealed, 97% of U.S. pet owners consider their pets part of the family, with a record-high number of households prioritizing "pet-themed merchandise" and "coordinated accessory sets."For major fashion houses, this demographic shift represents a massive opportunity for brand extension. For instance, LVMH-owned brands and independent luxury labels like Moncler have integrated pet-specific apparel into their main collections, recognizing that the "access economy" is being replaced by a desire for permanent, high-quality asset accumulation—even for four-legged companions.Hardware Premiumization and Consumer BehaviorThe rise in specialized dog-walking gear is a primary indicator of market premiumization within the pet sector. Information from some industry leaders indicates a significant shift in purchase intent toward coordinated "hardware" sets—specifically integrated collar, harness, and leash systems.Rather than viewing these items as purely utilitarian, modern pet parents are selecting gear based on textile durability and aesthetic alignment with their own activewear. This "coordinated unit" approach is a departure from historical buying patterns, where accessories were replaced only upon mechanical failure.Industry sales data highlights that high-visibility colors and bespoke hardware—such as charms and high-performance clips—are now secondary value drivers, reflecting the owner's desire for a personalized, "mobile third space" during daily transit.Environmental Factors Driving Apparel ChoiceThe shift toward premium dog-walking apparel is not a uniform movement; rather, it is driven by specific utility requirements and environmental contexts. Market analysts categorize this behavior into three distinct scenarios that define the current "pet humanization" landscape.While convenience remains a factor in short-duration outdoor activity, the broader market trend reflects a move toward specialized equipment and apparel designed for durability and social signaling.High-Impact Durability and Textile IntegrityIn environments requiring high physical activity, such as public parks, owners are increasingly prioritizing textile durability and soil-release properties.The demand for high-performance apparel—including high-compression synthetics and ripstop joggers—parallels the growth of the pet hard goods market, which reached $29.87 billion in 2024. For these interactions, owners typically select gear with reinforced, high-tensile hardware and earth-toned palettes to mask environmental wear while ensuring mechanical safety.Urban Utility and Integrated Mobility SolutionsThe "urban stroll" has become a primary driver for integrated mobility technology. In dense metropolitan environments, the focus is on "technical comfort" and multitasking efficiency. This has led to the widespread adoption of waist-integrated bungee systems and hardware coated in TPU (thermoplastic polyurethane), which provides weatherproofing and high-visibility safety.Rather than traditional handheld leads, urban owners are opting for hands-free systems that offer better control and more ergonomic weight distribution. This aesthetic—pairing technical outerwear with performance-grade pet gear—reflects a move toward "functional synchronization," where the gear is evaluated by its ability to facilitate seamless transit through complex city landscapes.Socializing in Dog-Friendly SpacesAs more coffee shops and retail stores allow pets, the way owners dress for a walk has changed. In these social settings, pet accessories are often chosen to match the owner's personal style rather than just for utility.This trend has led to the rise of "coordinated sets," where the materials of a dog’s leash or collar—like leather or suede—are selected to complement the owner’s outfit. This creates a consistent look for those moving between an outdoor walk and an indoor social environment.The Future of the Pet Humanization EconomyAs the "pet humanization" trend continues to mature, the distinction between human athleisure and pet accessories is expected to blur further. Industry analysts suggest that the move toward high-quality, coordinated gear is part of a larger shift in how consumers view their daily routines—not just as chores, but as opportunities for personal expression and social engagement.This evolution reflects a broader change in the retail landscape, where the "access economy" is being replaced by a desire for durable, high-quality assets. For the modern pet owner, the daily walk has transitioned from a basic necessity into a primary driver for the luxury and technical apparel markets, signaling a permanent change in consumer discretionary spending.This story was produced by Pink Papyrus and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| U. of Iowa presents 'Beyond the Bump' at St. AmbroseThe University of Iowa Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine is hosting a Mini-Med School program, “Beyond the Bump,” on Tuesday, Feb. 24 at St. Ambrose University – Rogalski Center Ballroom, 518 W. Locust Street in Davenport. Check in, activity tables and a light meal will be available from 5:15–6 p.m. and [...] |
| The U.S. and Canada set to square off in Olympic women's ice hockey gold medal matchCanada was long the top dog of Olympic women's hockey. But with a win Thursday, the Americans could do more than earn a third gold medal — they could prove the sport's balance of power has shifted. |
| Bett STEAM Expo features dozens of exhibitsArea families can learn about STEAM with hands-on exhibits at the free Bett STEAM Expo on Saturday, March 7, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Bettendorf Middle School, 2030 Middle Road. The 2026 Visiting Science Scholar will be Alex Turner, a 2012 Bettendorf High School graduate and research scientist who will speak about his [...] |
| John Deere to recall 27 workers at Dubuque Works facilityJohn Deere will recall 27 employees to its Dubuque Works facility in March, bringing total callbacks there to 51 since January. |
| | Debt validation letter: How to validate a debtDebt validation letter: How to validate a debtHaving a debt collector contact you can be upsetting. A debt collector may try to scare you into making a payment right away. Don’t let them throw you off your game. You have rights.The best way to take control of the situation is to start by getting the facts straight. Before you discuss the debt or make any payment, confirm that the claim is legitimate and accurate.Validating the debt is a way for you to protect your rights. Freedom Debt Relief details how you can do it.Key Takeaways:When a debt collector contacts you, respond within 30 days or they may assume the debt is legitimate.How you respond can be the key to how much you end up having to pay.The best way to start is by asking the debt collector to legally validate the debt.What Is a Debt Validation Letter?A debt validation letter is a formal notice from a debt collector. By law, it is required to spell out certain details about the debt the collector claims you owe. Debt collectors are supposed to send you a debt validation letter (also called a debt validation notice) within five days of contacting you about a debt.When someone approaches you for payment of a debt, it is very important to get the details in writing before deciding what to do. Before you have had a chance to review a debt validation letter, do not say or do anything to agree that you owe the money. The debt validation letter can help you confirm that the debt is accurate and owed by you.Debt collectors make money by collecting as much as they can, as quickly as they can. So, they may attempt to bully you into making a payment quickly, before you’ve had a chance to get all the facts straight.This is where your rights under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) kick in. That’s a federal law that governs how debts are collected. A debt collector is required to provide details about your debt. They are also required to give you 30 days to dispute any of the information they send you.When you are contacted by a debt collector, don’t ignore them, and don’t agree to anything based on a phone conversation. The way to take control of the process is to request a debt validation letter. This will give you a clearer picture of the situation. What Is the Difference Between a Debt Verification Letter and a Debt Validation Letter?A debt verification letter is sent from the debtor (you) to the debt collector in response to the debt validation letter. In a debt verification letter, you can request to have the debt collector provide additional information to verify that the debt is valid. A debt verification letter asks the debt collector for basic details such as the amount owed, the original creditor, and the date the debt was incurred.A debt validation letter comes from the debt collector. It provides detailed information about the debt and why the debt collector has the right to collect money from you. This should include account numbers and documentation of the debt. It should show how fees and interest were calculated.You have the right to send a debt verification letter within 30 days of being contacted by a debt collector. Once the debt collector receives your verification request, they are required to pause collections activities until they respond. It’s important for you to send your debt verification letter within the first 30 days, because this protects your rights under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA). If the collector can't verify the debt, they must stop their collection efforts. That could save you from paying debts you don’t owe or falling victim to fraudulent claims.Why You Might Need a Debt Verification LetterImagine getting a call from a debt collector about a credit card balance you haven’t thought about in years. You may remember the account, but the amount they’re asking for seems way off. Or, a debt collector contacts you about a debt you already repaid, but insists you still owe it. Maybe it’s a debt that isn’t even yours—a case of mistaken identity or a mix-up with similar names.In these situations, a debt verification letter can help you start to solve the mystery and defend your rights. Sending a debt verification letter within 30 days of receiving a debt validation notice from a debt collector gives you the chance to press pause on the collection process. That can give you the time and information you need to figure out what's going on.A debt verification letter is a formal request for details about the debt in question. The law requires collectors to prove that the debt is real and that they have the right to collect it.Details debt collectors are required to provide include:Name of the creditorContact information for the creditorAccount number associated with the debtItemization of the amount owed. This should reflect the original amount plus any interest, fees, and payment historySending a debt verification letter has an additional benefit. The debt collector has to stop collection efforts until they’ve provided the information you've requested. This can buy you some time. That gives you a chance to check your records and research whether you have grounds for disputing the debt.Getting these details can protect you from scams, errors, or unfair collection practices. The information you receive can help you understand your options before taking action.It’s easy to feel overwhelmed or unsure when dealing with a debt collector. Sending a debt verification letter is a powerful first step in taking control of the situation.What Must a Debt Validation Letter Include?To be legitimate, the debt validation letter you receive must include the following:Name of the creditor. The company contacting you about the debt may be a third-party debt collector that you have never heard of. Getting the name of the creditor can help you figure out if you really owe the debt. It’s possible that the creditor may be different from the original lender if the debt has been sold to someone else, but you should be told where the debt came from.The amount owed. Check this figure against your own records if you have any. Interest charges and late penalties may have added to the amount you originally borrowed.Acknowledgement of your rights under the FDCPA. You should be notified that you have thirty days to respond by disputing the debt or by requesting additional information (by sending a debt verification letter).The debt collector’s first contact with you might include all of this information, which means you won’t need to request it. But even if you receive an accurate, complete debt validation notice from a debt collector, you can still send a debt verification letter to ask for additional details about the debt.How to Validate Debt: 3 StepsYour legal rights depend on your timely response. Here are three things you should do to validate your debt.Respond to the debt collector quicklyMake the debt verification request in writingSend the debt verification request with tracking1. Respond to the debt collector quicklyThe law gives you the right to receive information and time to think about your response. However, your rights depend on responding within 30 days.Responding is not the same thing as acknowledging or paying the debt. You can respond by sending a debt verification letter, which is a request for additional information. A debt verification letter buys you time while you get the information you need to figure out whether the claim is legitimate and whether you are legally obligated to pay.The key is to request debt verification within 30 days. If you fail to respond within that time, the creditor is entitled to assume that the debt is valid.2. Make the debt verification request in writingYour debt verification letter can request written documentation of any of the following items. This list may seem like a lot to deal with, but remember, these are just requests for information. It’s the debt collector’s job to provide answers to your requests. Simply copy anything from the list that you think might apply to your situation, and include those items in your request for debt verification.The name and address of the creditorThe account number of the loan or credit card on which the debt is owedThe amount owedThe name and address of the original creditor, if different from the current creditorThe account number at the original creditor on which the debt was incurredDocumentation of the transfer of the debt from the original creditor to the current oneA copy of the original agreement that created the debtIf you are not the original borrower, documentation of who was and why you should be expected to pay the debtA copy of the last billing statement sent by the original creditorIf the debt has been transferred to another creditor, the date of that transfer and the amount transferredAn itemized list of any interest, fees, and other charges added to the original amount owed. This list should show the date and amount of each addition, along with an explanation of how these were calculatedAn itemized list of payments to the account, including dates, amounts, and the resulting reduction in the amount owedDates for when the creditor claims the amount owed was due, and when it became delinquentA date for when the debt collector believes the statute of limitations for this debt will expire, and their basis for determining that dateInformation on the debt collector’s licensing in your state. This should include the name of the organization to which the license was issued, the license number, and the name, address, and phone number of the state agency that issued the licenseA request for an offer of an amount the creditor would accept to settle the debt, if they will accept less than the full amount owed in order to get payment sooner3. Send the debt verification request with trackingWhen you send your request for more information, keep a copy of your letter. If you send it by mail, request a confirmation of receipt.You may also want to send a copy of your letter by email. This will speed your response and may give you another way to confirm that the debt collector has received your request.What Happens After You Get a Debt Validation Letter?Once the debt collector validates the debt and answers the questions in your debt verification letter, you have to make a decision about what to do next.The three main choices you have are:Pay what you owe. If you think the debt is legitimate and can afford to pay it, you may want to pay the debt. This will save you from further collection activities for this debt, including a lawsuit and potential judgment against you. Paying the debt will also allow you to avoid the potential for further damage to your credit.Fight the claim. If you think the debt collector's claim is not legitimate, you may dispute it. If the debt is large, this may mean defending yourself in a lawsuit. You should consider getting legal advice before fighting a claim. If you can’t afford an attorney or don’t know how to find one, look for a Legal Aid society in your area that can help.Make a settlement offer. By the time a debt has been referred for collection, creditors are often willing to take less than the full amount owed. You can try making an offer yourself or work with a professional debt settlement company to do so.This story was produced by Freedom Debt Relief and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| Pay It Forward: Rock Island bus monitor turning wheels to feed students and homeless populationEvelyn Day is the founder of the 'Granny Grayson Outreach' nonprofit that serves essential items to the community for free. |
| Defense bill to protect jobs at ArsenalMillions of dollars of federal funding is coming to the Rock Island Arsenal to protect jobs and expand its drone program. |
| Amazon dethrones Walmart as the world's biggest company by salesIn a slow-motion race of two retail behemoths, Amazon's trump card was its lucrative cloud-computing business. |
| A Republican plan to overhaul voting is back. Here's what's new in the billA Republican voting overhaul is back on Capitol Hill — with an added photo identification provision and an altered name. Opponents say the legislation would disenfranchise millions of voters. |
| | These Finnish homes are being heated by a surprising source: BitcoinThese Finnish homes are being heated by a surprising source: BitcoinFor someone who cares about climate change, Matt Carlsson had what seemed like a dream job: teaching clients how to decarbonize buildings. But he was frustrated. He could give customers the tools to improve energy efficiency and phase out fossil fuels, but if they couldn’t easily turn his guidance into cost savings, they’d simply ignore him.“Most of these people are not going to take action,” he realized, “because there’s not going to be a business case.”Carlsson decided that he’d need to find a job where he could make the case for energy efficiency on economic terms. This led him somewhere surprising: Bitcoin.Mining Bitcoin generates a significant amount of heat. That’s because the “mining” in question refers to the energy-intensive computational process by which Bitcoin transactions are verified. In a typical transaction, a boxy computer attempts to solve what’s essentially a very complex math problem. If it can do this before any of the other “miners” working on the problem across the world, the miner is rewarded with Bitcoin of its own.This process takes a whole lot of power; overall, Bitcoin mining accounted for an estimated 0.5% of global electricity use in 2024. The more complex the task at hand, the more electricity is needed — and the more heat is created. Essentially, as long as it’s lucrative to mine Bitcoin, it’s going to spit out a lot of extra heat as a byproduct. The question becomes: Can that heat be put to beneficial use?That’s where Carlsson comes in. He’s now helping to heat the homes of 80,000 residents in Finland with waste heat from local cryptocurrency miners, as a part of a project run by his new employer, the Bitcoin mining company MARA Holdings, Grist reports.Water runs through MARA’s miners, which are stored in black metal units in the center of the towns, cooling them off before coming out at a scalding 122 to 172 degrees Fahrenheit (50 to 78 degrees Celsius). From there, the water is pumped underground through the cities’ existing district heating systems, drastically cutting down the need for traditional boilers. As a result, MARA’s two Bitcoin districts have avoided greenhouse gas emissions roughly equivalent to those produced by 700 U.S. homes since its first project came online in 2024.Carlsson thinks this model could be expanded to cities and buildings across the world — and he’s not the only one. Joint Bitcoin mining and heating operations are popping up across Finland, an ideal location because of its cool climate and existing district heating systems that companies can easily plug into. Terahash Energy’s “Genesis” project, for example, is sending waste heat from Bitcoin mining to be used in an industrial area in the Nordic nation, plus some nearby homes. The global Bitcoin mining infrastructure firm Hashlabs hosts six sites connecting miners to district heating systems elsewhere in Finland, with more in the works.“It’s a business, after all,” said Alen Makhmetov, co-founder of Hashlabs. “I just want to make our business much more sustainable, robust, and long-term,” he said. Though there’s a climate case to be made for the operation as well, Makhmetov means “sustainable” in an economic sense. That’s because Hashlabs is now insulated from a crash in the price of Bitcoin — if it loses crypto revenue, it’ll still get revenue for its heating services. The heating customers are insulated, too: Hashlabs has promised to continue producing heat, even if the value of Bitcoin makes its mining unprofitable.“It was really a no-brainer in terms of: Why not do this?” said Adam Swick, MARA’s chief strategy officer. That’s because MARA gets to pull in two revenue streams: The company earns Bitcoin by mining, of course, but it also earns a fee from the districts for supplying heat — all while receiving the water necessary to cool its miners for free. Each of MARA’s Bitcoin heating systems are sized so they provide the minimum heat needed year-round in the cities where they operate. (In the winter, the districts use a combination of electric and biomass boilers to provide extra heat.)Residents of the two locations where MARA operates, the region of Satakunta and the city Seinäjoki, might not realize that anything has changed, since they’re getting heat from the same pipes that they always have. “That’s kind of the goal, that nobody’s impacted,” Swick said. MARA assumed all equipment costs and is providing heat at a lower price compared to electric heating companies.Through MARA’s eyes, it’s better for the climate, too. District heating systems in Finland are mostly powered by burning biomass, such as wood chips. While biomass is considered renewable by some, including the European Union, it still emits carbon when burned. (In the two sites where MARA installed its Bitcoin miners, the districts were also burning peat.) By cutting down on the amount of biomass and peat the districts need to use, MARA calculates that it has mitigated almost 5,000 tons of greenhouse gas emissions over the 1.5 years that its districts have been operating. (To come up with this tally, the company references the latest official count of emissions caused by producing and consuming electricity in Finland to figure out how many emissions are caused by the miners, and then it compares that to the emissions stemming from traditional district heating in Finland.)But the scheme won’t make sense for every district heating system in the Nordic nation, because many of them are already highly efficient. Nearly half source their heat from co-generation plants, or power plants that are already burning fuel for the electricity grid. These systems “harvest that heat to be as efficient as possible,” said Eric Bosworth, founder of Thermal Energy Insights, where he advises on projects to transition heating systems from gas to low-carbon thermal energy networks. That weakens the case for heating with Bitcoin.And even where using waste heat from co-generation plants is not possible, reusing the heat from Bitcoin mining is by no means the ideal form of efficient heating — although it is undoubtedly better than letting it go to waste. Bitcoin miners use the same amount of energy as an electric-resistance water heater. Essentially, one unit of energy in produces one unit of heat out. That pales in comparison to the efficiency of electric heat pumps.But while converting to heat pumps would be far more efficient, that would require costly overhauls; each individual building would have to install a heat pump and the associated infrastructure. Most existing systems are not prepared to bear these costs — another version of the dilemma Carlsson found himself confronting before he joined MARA.When district heating systems become overly reliant on imported fossil fuel sources, however, waste heat from Bitcoin can offer a cost-effective solution that comes with a plausible climate case. Hashlabs got its first contract for a Bitcoin heating district after Russia invaded Ukraine, sending energy prices soaring. Some district heating plants that relied on natural gas had gone bankrupt and “needed to either shut down or innovate,” said Makhmetov. Bitcoin mining offered a cheaper solution — one that provided heat with far less need for fossil fuels.Of course, it’s easy to argue that the one thing better than efficiently using Bitcoin’s waste heat is not mining Bitcoin at all. Out of all forms of crypto, Bitcoin consumes the most electricity — more than a small country — because of the particularly energy-intensive way it verifies transactions, which is called proof of work.Given that most electricity grids today still run primarily on fossil fuels — unlike in Finland, which is powered by nearly 95% carbon-free sources, including nuclear and biomass — this could severely limit the climate case of welcoming Bitcoin mining to harness its waste heat.“It’s not a bad thing to be able to heat homes in an affordable way,” said Johanna Fornberg, a senior research specialist at the environmental advocacy nonprofit Greenpeace. “But does that actually provide justification for the industry? I would argue it does not.”“We want to avoid believing these claims that Bitcoin is providing a solution where there otherwise is not one,” she added. Greenpeace, along with other climate organizations, has advocated for Bitcoin to change its verification method, which would cut its energy use drastically.In a world where decarbonization efforts frequently involve tradeoffs, Carlsson is happy that, in this case at least, Bitcoin mining produces what looks to him like a win-win.“When I first started learning about Bitcoin, I was leery of it and trying to figure out if it was a scam,” he said. Seven years later, two tiny miners sit atop his desk. “Now, I feel like a missionary, part of a strange cult.”Still, if operations like MARA’s expand further, it could mean fossil power plants in Finland have to run more, increasing overall emissions, just to have enough energy to power Bitcoin mining, Bosworth said. “I think the more valid argument is that if a Bitcoin operation is already planned, then that heat should definitely be recovered and sent to a district where possible,” he said.A reduction in energy use stemming from the reuse of mining’s waste-heat “is more of a positive side-effect that largely has a negative climate impact,” said Fornberg, “not something that we want to incentivize and become increasingly reliant on in the long term.”This story was produced by Grist and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
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| HUD rule could push families with undocumented immigrants out of their homesA proposed rule could put nearly 80,000 people at risk of eviction, many of them U.S. citizen children. Undocumented immigrants don't get rental aid but can currently live with family members who do. |
| 1,000 Kenyans were recruited to fight for Russia in Ukraine, intelligence report saysA new Kenyan intelligence report said the Kenyans were recruited to fight for Russia in Ukraine after being misled with false promises of jobs in Russia before being sent to the front lines. |
| | What is the smallest bra size?What is the smallest bra size?You've measured yourself carefully, tried on countless bras, and still can't find one that fits right. The problem might not be you; you just may need a smaller bra size than you thought.Knowing about small bra sizes opens up properly fitting options that actually work with your body. In this article, shapewear company Honeylove provides the information needed to help you find the right fit.The Smallest Bra SizesThe smallest bra size commonly available is 28AA. Some specialty retailers produce 28AAA, though these are harder to find.A 28AA indicates a 28-inch band with less than one inch difference between your ribcage and bust measurements. AA and AAA cups are smaller than A cups. AAA represents the smallest available cup volume. Many people assume A is the starting point, but the alphabet continues backward for smaller volumes.Cup size is relative to band size. A 32AA contains more volume than a 28AA because the band is larger. When the band increases by one size, the cup volume of the same letter also increases slightly. This relationship between band and cup means your size changes if either measurement shifts.How Small Bra Sizes Are CalculatedBand size comes from measuring around your ribcage directly under your breasts. Pull the measuring tape snug but not tight. You should be able to breathe comfortably.Cup size is determined by the difference between your bust and band measurements. Measure around the fullest part of your chest, keeping the tape level across your back.A difference of less than 1 inch = AAA cupA difference of 1 inch = AA cupA difference of 2 inches = A cupA difference of 3 inches = B cupSister sizing can help you find an alternative size when your cup capacity is perfect, but the band needs slight adjusting. If you're looking for a bigger band size but want to keep the same cup volume, go up one band size and down one cup. If you're looking for a smaller band size with the same cup volume, go down a band size and up one cup size. For example, a 30A and 32AA are sister sizes with similar cup volumes but different band lengths.Proper measuring technique matters more than you might think. Measure while wearing an unpadded bra or no bra at all. Stand straight with your arms at your sides. Take measurements at the same time of day, as breast tissue can fluctuate with hormones, hydration, and temperature. To find your bra size instantly and accurately, use our bra size calculator.Common Misconceptions About Small Bra SizesMany people believe small breasts don't need support. In fact, all breast tissue benefits from proper support regardless of size. A well-fitted bra prevents tissue stretching over time, provides a smooth silhouette under clothing, and distributes weight evenly across your shoulders and back.Small cup sizes can wear the same variety of designs as any other size: lace details, seamless t-shirt styles, plunge necklines, balconettes, and more. The challenge lies in finding brands that manufacture these styles in smaller sizes, not in the styles themselves.Another misconception suggests one size fits all small busts. Your breast shape, root width, projection, and spacing vary independently of volume. Two people wearing 30AA might need completely different styles based on whether their breasts sit close together or wide apart, whether tissue is concentrated at the top or bottom, and how far the breast projects from the chest wall.Finding the Right Fit for Smaller BustsA properly fitted bra sits level across your back. The band shouldn't ride up toward your shoulder blades. Check this by looking in a mirror from the side. The band provides most of the bra's support, so it needs to be snug without digging in.Cups should lie smoothly against your breast tissue without gapping at the top or sides. The fabric conforms to your shape rather than standing away from it. Press gently on the cup; if it moves away from your body easily, you need a smaller cup or different style.The center gore, aka the piece of fabric between the cups, is meant to sit flat against your sternum. If it floats away from your chest, the cups are too small or the wrong shape for your breast spacing.Straps are designed to stay in place on your shoulders without digging grooves into your skin. Adjust them so they provide light support without bearing the weight of your breasts. If you need to tighten straps significantly to feel supported, your band is too loose.Gapping at the top of cups often means the cup is too large, too tall, or designed for more upper fullness than you have. Try a smaller cup size or a style with a lower cut like a balconette or demi cup. Sometimes gapping happens because the bra is designed for a different breast shape, even if the volume is correct.Best Bra Styles for Smaller Cup SizesSoft cup bras without underwire offer comfortable support through fabric structure and band tension alone. The lack of rigid materials means the bra conforms to your unique shape. Many people find soft cups more comfortable for all-day wear, especially in smaller sizes where underwire isn't necessary for support.Lightly lined bras feature thin padding that creates a smooth silhouette under clothing without adding volume. The light lining prevents visible texture while maintaining your natural shape. Look for seamless construction that disappears under fitted tops.Adjustable straps let you customize the fit to your torso length and shoulder width. Closer-set straps prevent slipping on narrower frames. Look for fully adjustable straps that can be shortened significantly.Bralettes provide relaxed support through stretchy fabrics and simple construction. Without molded cups or underwires, they work well for smaller volumes that don't require structured support. Many bralettes feature beautiful lace or mesh details.Keeping these considerations in mind the next time you go bra shopping can help you find the right support and comfort for your unique shape.This story was produced by Honeylove and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| Retirements, resignations, hirings, other Davenport School personnel news for Feb. 9See the personnel items from the Feb. 9 agenda of the Davenport Community School District. The board met at the Achievement Service Center, 2nd Floor, 1702 N. Main St., Davenport. |
| Refugees in the U.S. could be arrested under new immigration memoThe move is another Trump administration effort to limit legal pathways to migration or resettlement, after already curbing the number of admitted refugees and re-reviewing those admitted under the Biden administration. |
| Deere reports mixed Q1 results with revenue growth, lower profitsDeere and Company reported first quarter earnings with net income of $656 million, or $2.42 per share, for the quarter ending February 1. |
| Inside Iowa Politics: Feenstra faces critics at MAGA Nation Iowa eventU.S. Representative Randy Feenstra, a Republican from Hull, faced some party activists who have criticized him for not appearing with other candidates for governor at various events. |
| Weekend Rundown with WLLR | Feb. 19, 2026There are many family-friendly events going on this weekend, and we've brought in Dani Howe from WLLR to break it down. |
| Deere reports Q1 income of $656 million, net income projected to be nearly $5 billion for 2026Net sales were $8 million for the quarter, compared with $6.8 million in the same quarter of 2025. |
| | Seasonal search shifts in home services demand: What spikes when, and how to stay booked year-roundSeasonal search shifts in home services demand: What spikes when, and how to stay booked year-roundYour phone rings nonstop in July. By October, it barely buzzes.If you run a home services business, this pattern might be familiar. One month, HVAC jobs are at capacity. The next, the calendar is open. This reflects the reality of seasonal demand patterns in home services.When demand peaks, so does competition for clicks and conversions. When it drops, revenue often follows. Understanding these cycles involves aligning business strategies with homeowner search behavior.WebFX’s analysis breaks down seasonal search shifts in home services demand to help understand the market. This report details what spikes when, the importance of timing in home services, and how seasonality affects lead volume throughout the year.Seasonal search trends by service categoryNot every home service follows the same calendar. Some spike with the weather, while others surge based on immediate necessity. To identify when homeowners are searching, the top U.S. home service queries over the past year were analyzed using Ahrefs Keywords Explorer. Here is what the data shows for each category:1. HVAC services seasonality patterns WebFX HVAC demand swings sharply between cooling and heating seasons. This data shows how searches for top HVAC services rise and fall throughout the year, revealing when homeowners search for repairs, maintenance, or emergency help. WebFX Key insightsDual weather extremes shape demand: “AC repair” searches increase 266% in July, while “furnace repair” dominates January with a 137% increase, indicating that HVAC demand revolves around temperature fluctuations.“Heating system repair” shows the sharpest volatility: With a +594% variance between October highs and January lows, it is the most weather-sensitive term.Emergency searches remain high-converting: “Emergency AC repair” increases nearly 400% from winter to late fall, capturing urgent intent.“HVAC repair” and maintenance terms provide a steady baseline: Their moderate-to-high stability (53–91% range) provides a reliable year-round search engine optimization (SEO) foundation.Strategic considerationsPre-season demand: Cooling-related search volume typically begins to rise in March to April, while heating-focused queries generally increase by September to October.Volatility segmentation: High-volatility keywords (“AC repair”, “emergency AC repair”, “heating system repair”) often see short, weather-triggered bursts. Steady performers (“HVAC repair”, “HVAC maintenance cost”) provide long-term visibility.Weather-driven adjustments: Search activity often correlates with local temperature thresholds, such as 85°F for AC needs or below 45°F for furnace needs.Off-season maintenance: Maintenance-related searches in mild months (April/October) can help smooth revenue dips and fill technician schedules.2. Plumbing services seasonality patterns WebFX Plumbing searches often follow the weather, peaking during heavy summer usage and again in winter when pipes are susceptible to freezing. This data illustrates how searches for key plumbing services surge and dip throughout the year. WebFX Key insightsTwo weather-driven surges dominate plumbing search: “Plumber near me” peaks mid-summer (+36%), while “frozen pipe repair” increases 609% in January.Emergency queries drive high intent: “Emergency plumber” searches rise 191% from April to July, representing real-time service needs.Utility-based keywords show winter resilience: “Water heater repair” maintains steady demand through colder months (41% variance).Evergreen maintenance terms support consistency: “Leak detection” and “drain cleaning service” maintain the lowest volatility (less than or equal to 25%), providing steady organic traffic anchors.Strategic considerationsSeasonal extremes: Demand for “frozen pipe repair” and “water heater repair” typically peaks in November to January, while “emergency plumber” and “plumber near me” see higher volume between June to August.Evergreen content pillars: Topics such as “drain cleaning service” and “leak detection” maintain visibility during slow months.Urgency and automation: Emergency plumbing search volume often correlates with local temperatures falling below freezing or rising above 90°F.Shoulder month diversification: Pre-winter inspections or spring tune-ups can help smooth revenue dips during slower months.3. Electrical services seasonality patterns WebFX Electrical demand remains relatively steady year-round but sees increases during renovation seasons and winter power outages. Here’s how homeowner searches for common electrical services shift across the calendar: WebFX Key insightsMid-summer demand peaks for core services: “Electrician near me” sees its highest search activity in July (+26%), aligning with renovation and repair needs during hot-weather months.Emergency and circuit-related searches surge under pressure: “Emergency electrician” (+160%) and “circuit breaker repair” (+219%) experience sharp spikes, often indicating outage-driven intent.Panel and outlet queries remain steady: With low-to-moderate volatility (20–34%), “electrical panel upgrade” and “outlet not working” offer stable, year-round traffic potential.Inspection-related interest is consistent: “Electrical inspection cost” maintains nearly flat seasonality, making it a strong evergreen target.Strategic considerationsHigh-intent periods: “Emergency electrician” and “circuit breaker repair” demand is highest during late spring to early winter (May to December), capturing storm and overload season needs.SEO stability: Content regarding “electrical panel upgrade” and “outlet not working” maintains consistent organic visibility year-round.Inspection intent: Interest in “electrical inspection cost” is often highest during February to April, when homeowners prepare for renovations.Outage triggers: Emergency-related keywords are particularly valuable during peak storm or summer heatwave periods.4. Roofing services seasonality patterns WebFX Roofing demand rises with weather extremes, including storm damage in spring and fall, and maintenance before winter. This data shows how interest in key roofing services has fluctuated over the past year. WebFX Key insightsVolatility remains low to moderate overall: Roofing demand is less extreme than HVAC or plumbing, with most keywords fluctuating under 70% variance.Roofing searches cluster around maintenance and storm seasons: “Roof repair near me” peaks at +24% variance in September, while “emergency roof repair” and “storm damage roof repair” spike after seasonal storms.Repair and leak-related terms reveal urgency trends: “Roof leak repair” (+69%) and “emergency roof repair” (+70%) show consistent seasonal surges driven by heavy rain or storm activity.Replacement and inspection keywords show stable cycles: “Roof replacement cost” (+55%) and “roof inspection” (+28%) fluctuate modestly, reflecting planned projects or annual maintenance.Strategic considerationsStorm season planning: Demand for “emergency roof repair” and “roof leak repair” typically increases from November to January due to winter storm conditions.Evergreen content for steady leads: “Roof inspection” and “roof replacement cost” guides can ensure off-season lead flow.Retargeting for planned projects: Project planning is often highest during mild months for users who previously searched for “roof inspection” or “replacement cost.”Consistent performers: “Roof repair near me” and “roof inspection” maintain stable, low-volatility demand throughout the year.How seasonality shapes the home services marketWhen analyzing HVAC, plumbing, electrical, and roofing together, it is clear that home services seasonality trends vary by category. Each trade has its own rhythm, influenced by weather, urgency, and homeowner priorities. WebFX HVAC dominates the extremes Search demand for heating and cooling services shows the sharpest swings, with peak-to-valley variances regularly exceeding 250–600%. Heatwaves drive AC repair searches, while cold snaps trigger demand for furnace and heating repairs.Plumbing runs on weather pressure Plumbing peaks twice a year: once during heavy summer use and again when winter temperatures freeze pipes. Searches for “emergency plumber” and “frozen pipe repair” spike quickly with high conversion intent.Electrical demand stays steady Unlike HVAC and plumbing, electrical services are less affected by weather. Most searches fluctuate less than 30%, making electrical a stable category for long-term local visibility.Roofing remains predictable While storms drive emergency searches, overall roofing demand stays relatively stable. Peaks usually align with project planning in spring and late summer.Turning seasonal search data into a year-round planSeasonal demand patterns in home services do not have to result in slow months. Planning for these shifts before they occur is key to maintaining a steady schedule.Set a marketing calendar based on seasonal data: Map peak and valley months for each service and allocate resources before the peak begins.Balance short-term and long-term strategies: Focus immediate efforts on high-volatility, urgent keywords while building long-term visibility around consistent performers.Utilize real-time triggers: Align efforts with weather data, such as increasing focus on AC repair when temperatures exceed 85°F or pipe repair when they drop below 40°F.Localize for regional climates: Southern markets may see longer AC demand, while northern regions may require earlier winter repair campaigns.Maintain off-season revenue: Maintenance bundles and pre-season inspections can help fill calendars during slower periods.Seasonality is a predictable pattern. Understanding and planning for these shifts allows businesses to manage demand effectively throughout the year.Methodology:Data Source: Ahrefs Keywords ExplorerAnalysis Period: January 2023 – December 2024Data limitations and considerations:All search volumes are U.S. national averages (monthly).Values may be rounded for readability; CPC reflects Ahrefs’ current estimates.Seasonality insights show aggregate trends; local climate can shift peaks.This story was produced by WebFX and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| North Scott School District resignations, hirings and other personnel news for Feb. 9The following personnel items are from the Feb. 9 agenda of the North Scott School District. The School Board met at Administration Office. |
| Emergency preparedness test at QC Generating Station Feb. 24Emergency response personnel from Iowa and Illinois, Scott County, Clinton County, Rock Island County, Whiteside County and Constellation will take part in a one-day emergency preparedness exercise on Tuesday, February 24 in support of the Quad Cities Generating Station near Cordova. Click here for more information on the Radiological Emergency Preparedness Program. This scheduled biennial [...] |
| Viral body cam footage shows shirtless, alcohol-covered pledgesPolice body camera footage released following a viral YouTube video shows the scene officers encountered during a 2024 hazing incident at the University of Iowa’s Alpha Delta Phi fraternity. |
| | Home care has a new job: Well-beingHome care has a new job: Well-beingAmericans are spending more time at home. What was a necessity during the pandemic became a preference enabled by technology. With home at the center, how people spend their time and how they care for their environment is changing.New research from The Clorox Company suggests cleaning is becoming more frequent, more emotional, and more closely tied to how people view time and wellbeing. Engagement with cleaning is record high — in fact, many Americans report cleaning more now than they did even at the height of the COVID pandemic. Motivations have shifted, too: Cleaning is increasingly linked to self-care. Consumers find joy in the process and seek emotional rewards. In a volatile world, people turn to home care for stress relief, a sense of control and accomplishment.These are among the many findings in the Home Care Redefined report, a comprehensive look at how life at home is evolving and what that means for the future of related Consumer Packaged Goods categories. Drawing on proprietary insights and broader industry data, the research explores how people are spending time at home, what they value in their spaces, and how domestic routines are adapting to new functional and emotional needs.The takeaway: Cleaning is moving from the background of daily life to something more engaging and meaningful.Cleaning finds a new meaningAccording to the report, Americans continue to spend more time at home than they did before the pandemic, even as offices and social calendars have reopened. Homes are now workplaces, gathering spaces, gyms, entertainment venues and places of recovery — often all in the same day. That shift is reshaping home care.One notable change is the rise of what is described as “in-the-flow” cleaning. Cleaning time now averages 25 minutes daily — more than during the pandemic and a new high. Instead of setting aside large blocks of time for chores, many people are tackling small tasks throughout the day: wiping down surfaces between meetings, refreshing spaces before guests arrive or tidying up to reset between activities.This behavior reflects a deeper shift in motivation. Cleaning is no longer just about meeting expectations or maintaining standards. It is increasingly about how people want to feel in their homes.Consumers frequently describe cleaning as a source of accomplishment and calm. In an environment defined by constant demands on attention, it offers a rare sense of completion and control. The importance of emotional payoff, from reduced stress to improved mood, has for the first time in our tracking surpassed the functional result.For the industry, that shift opens the door to new types of innovation. Solutions that support flexible, intuitive, bite-sized, sensorially rich cleaning are better aligned with how people live today.Greater focus on health at homeAs time at home has grown more central to daily life, so has awareness of how the home environment affects our overall health.People increasingly view their homes as a foundation for holistic wellbeing, spending an additional 5.6 hours per week cleaning. That includes managing germs, allergens and air and water quality, but also creating spaces that feel calm, safe and restorative. A clean home is not just about hygiene; it’s about peace of mind. According to the Home Care Redefined report, up to 93% of respondents said they feel good about themselves when their home smells good.Confidence and reassurance are emerging as powerful drivers of behavior. Many people want to feel certain they are protecting their family’s health and making responsible choices, prompting greater interest in solutions that balance efficacy with ingredient transparency and align with personal values.Younger generations are helping accelerate this shift, with many Gen Z influencers creating content that “rebrands” common household tasks — like calling dishwashing “bath time” for their plates. Rather than reacting to messes, they are approaching cleaning as preventive care — part of a broader wellness mindset that includes nutrition, fitness and mental health. Cleaning routines are increasingly seen as one piece of a larger self-care system.For manufacturers, that evolution raises expectations. Performance remains essential, but so do trust, clarity, and emotional resonance. Products must deliver results while also supporting confidence and comfort in the home.Convenience is no longer just about speedConvenience has long shaped the home care category, but its meaning is changing. Speed still matters, but consumers are placing greater value on ease, flexibility, and even enjoyment. Convenience is also about simplicity, as evidenced by the three out of four consumers who prefer multi-purpose cleaners like wipes and sprays to specialized ones.Many are looking for products that simplify decisions, serve multiple purposes, and reduce friction in everyday tasks. That demand is fueling interest in multi-use solutions and services that bring products directly into the home, helping people reclaim time and mental energy.At the same time, a few long-standing frustrations persist. Laundry stands out as a category where satisfaction is relatively low and expectations are high. People want better results with less effort — and often feel the process is more demanding than it should be. Those gaps represent both a challenge and an opportunity for reinvention.Social media is also shaping perceptions of convenience. According to a survey from American Home Shield, 58% of respondents said they consumed social media about cleaning, housework, or chores. Cleaning routines, product hacks and dramatic “oddly satisfying” transformations have become a staple of online content, influencing how people approach tasks at home and raising expectations for results and ease.Why importance of home care is growingTaken together, these shifts suggest home care is becoming more central to how people manage their time, health and daily lives. What was once considered routine maintenance is increasingly seen as part of a broader effort to create homes that support wellbeing and productivity.That has implications beyond product performance. It points to a category that is more closely connected to culture, emotion and everyday experience than ever before.As homes continue to evolve, the meaning of home care will continue to evolve with them. The question is no longer just how people clean, but why — and what role those routines play in the way they live today.This story was produced by The Clorox Company and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |