QCA.news - Quad Cities news and view from both sides of the river

Friday, March 13th, 2026

WVIK TSA workers miss a full paycheck, while travelers keep paying airport security fees WVIK

TSA workers miss a full paycheck, while travelers keep paying airport security fees

Many TSA workers received no money in their paychecks Friday as the partial DHS shutdown drags on. Fees paid by airline passengers keep piling up, even as airport security officers work without pay.

KWQC TV-6 Illinois primary voters can watch candidate interviews before Tuesday’s election KWQC TV-6

Illinois primary voters can watch candidate interviews before Tuesday’s election

Those interviews will air in a special Decision 2026 livestream at 2 p.m. on the station’s website and streaming platforms.

WQAD.com WQAD.com

$4.3M in federal funding awarded to SAL Family and Community Services

Congressman Eric Sorensen announced the grant will help expand access to infant and toddler care through the Early Head Start program.

KWQC TV-6  Jo Daviess sheriff to retire after 28 years in law enforcement KWQC TV-6

Jo Daviess sheriff to retire after 28 years in law enforcement

Jo Daviess County Sheriff Craig Ketelsen will retire Sunday after 28 years in law enforcement.

OurQuadCities.com 4 Your Money | Crisis Events OurQuadCities.com

4 Your Money | Crisis Events

Markets have been reacting to the recent conflict involving Iran. David Nelson, CEO of NelsonCorp Wealth Management, joins us to provide insight into how geopolitical crises typically affect the stock market.

WVIK How Italy became the darlings (and contenders, too) of the World Baseball Classic WVIK

How Italy became the darlings (and contenders, too) of the World Baseball Classic

With espresso shots, kisses on the cheek and Andrea Bocelli singalongs, Team Italy has charmed the baseball world. But their mission is more ambitious: Turn Italy into a bona fide baseball factory.

Quad-City Times Quad-City Times

High Wind Warning until FRI 3:00 PM CDT

High Winds Persisting Until 3 PM CDT with Potential for Power Outages

OurQuadCities.com Davenport man sentenced to federal prison for gun charges OurQuadCities.com

Davenport man sentenced to federal prison for gun charges

A Davenport man was sentenced to 90 months in federal prison for possessing a firearm as a felon. According to public court documents, Cedrick Willingham, 39, fled from officers in Bettendorf after an attempted traffic stop. During an August 2024 search of Willingham’s home, officers found a firearm, drum magazine and rounds of ammunition. Willingham [...]

KWQC TV-6  ‘Do what we can’: Senate committee passes bill regulating loud commercials on streaming KWQC TV-6

‘Do what we can’: Senate committee passes bill regulating loud commercials on streaming

A Senate bill regulating the volume of commercials on streaming services so they can’t be noticeably louder than entertainment content passed the Senate Energy and Public Utilities Committee on Thursday.

WVIK 'Scarpetta' is a captivating murder mystery — and a high-wire balancing act WVIK

'Scarpetta' is a captivating murder mystery — and a high-wire balancing act

Based on a series of novels by best-selling author Patricia Cornwell, Scarpetta follows two different mysteries from two different timelines. It's structurally complicated — but it all holds up.

Quad-City Times Silvis man sentenced to five years in federal prison for possessing a firearm as a felon Quad-City Times

Silvis man sentenced to five years in federal prison for possessing a firearm as a felon

A 45-year-old Silvis man has been sentenced to five years in federal prison after pleading guilty to a charge of being a felon in possession of a firearm.

WVIK 'Derry Girls' creator returns with a gleeful riff on the murder mystery WVIK

'Derry Girls' creator returns with a gleeful riff on the murder mystery

In the hilarious Netflix series How to Get to Heaven from Belfast, three women learn that a long estranged school friend has died in a suspicious manner — and take it upon themselves to investigate.

OurQuadCities.com Davenport man arrested; accused in sexual abuse of 13 year old OurQuadCities.com

Davenport man arrested; accused in sexual abuse of 13 year old

A Davenport man is being held in the Scott County Jail on a secured $200,000 bond after police say gave a 13-year-old girl marijuana before they engaged in sex acts. Criminal complaints filed in the case say Davenport Police received a report on February 3 about a juvenile female sending and receiving inappropriate images/videos. The [...]

North Scott Press North Scott Press

Americans' average debt keeps rising, but pace of growth has slowed, according to Intuit Credit Karma data

Americans' average debt keeps rising, but pace of growth has slowed, according to Intuit Credit Karma dataIn the fourth quarter of 2025, Americans’ average total overall debt increased to $58,712 from $55,879 in the fourth quarter of 2024, a 5% year-over-year gain, according to an analysis of 99.5 million Intuit Credit Karma members with a combined overall debt of more than $9.9 trillion.That’s almost the same as 2024’s year-over-year average debt gains (4.9%). However, in the last quarter of 2025, quarter-over-quarter average debt growth decelerated to just 0.53%. Data in the spring will reveal whether this is just a blip or a stronger signal of changing winds.For this report, overall debt is defined as any type of debt noted on a Credit Karma member’s credit report. This includes credit card, mortgage, student loan, medical loan, auto lease and auto loan debt. Intuit Credit Karma Gen Z continues to see the fastest-growing average debtGeneration Z still leads the way in debt growth among generations, with the highest YoY increase in average overall debt in Q4 2025 (15.29%). That’s almost double the debt growth of millennials (8.36%), which had the second-fastest growing debt average. Gen Z’s trajectory is even more eye-popping when their average debt in Q4 2023 ($19,441) is compared to that of Q4 2025 ($25,062): an increase of 28.91%.Gen Z led all generations in year-over-year growth of average debt (Q4 2024 vs. Q4 2025) across all debt categories, but had the most significant gains in:Education: 13.55%Mortgage: 7.12%Credit cards: 5.79%Gen Z debt growth saw its biggest quarter-over-quarter jump in the Q3 of 2025 — then in the last quarter had its lowest quarter-over-quarter gain (2.87%) in at least a couple years.Average student loan debt continued to rise, but the pace temperedStudent loan debt grew 7.59%, the most of all debt categories year over year (Q4 2025 versus Q4 2024), driven largely by Gen Z and millennials (13.55% and 9.06%, respectively) — though Baby Boomers still held the highest average student loan debt in Q4 2025 ($48,965).Notably, after a 3.39% quarter-over-quarter increase in Q1 2025, student loan debt overall slowed, with quarter-over-quarter increases the rest of the year averaging just 1.34%.Decline in average inquiries and a rise in average open collections signal financial stress for younger generationsPressures from debt growth and general economic uncertainty are likely causing Credit Karma members to pump the brakes when it comes to taking on more debt. In the last quarter of 2024, average inquiries across generations was 3.14. In the last quarter of 2025, the average dipped to 2.95.This hesitance to apply for news credit like cards and loans may be due to increased financial hardship, particularly among younger members. Gen Z and millennials saw the biggest year-over-year drops in average credit inquiries in Q4 — along with some of the bigger increases in average open collections: Intuit Credit Karma Gen Z’s YoY average debt growth was 15.29%, the highest of all generations.Still, Generation X continues to hold the highest average amount of debt — nearly three times that of Gen Z at $70,710 in the last quarter of 2025.Average debt by credit score band Intuit Credit Karma The highest credit score bands may have seen greater YoY growth in average debt because people with higher credit scores have greater access to credit on better terms. But in the last quarter of 2025 near prime members had the greatest increase in average debt year over year (8.08%).Average credit card debtIn the last quarter of 2025, approximately 94.3 million Credit Karma members with at least one credit card held a total of approximately $589 billion in credit card debt, an increase of about 9.7% year over year.Among generations, year-over-year gains in average credit card debt were most striking for the youngest generations (Gen Z at 5.79%, followed by millennials at 2.64%). In contrast, the oldest generations showed relatively flat or decreases in YoY average card debt.Average credit card debt by generation Intuit Credit Karma Gen X continued to have the highest average credit card debt ($10,354 in the last quarter of 2025).Average credit card debt by credit score band Intuit Credit Karma Average card debt grew the most year over year among members in the prime score band, while subprime members were the only group with a decrease.Near prime members continued to have the highest average card balances in Q4 2025.Average auto loan debtIn the last quarter of 2025, approximately 66.9 million Credit Karma members with at least one auto loan open held more than $1.17 trillion in loan debt. The average next payment was $673.The average auto loan balance among members in Q4 was $25,806 — a modest 1.63% increase year over year.Average auto loan debt by generation Intuit Credit Karma Average auto loan debt by credit score band Intuit Credit Karma Average mortgage debtFrom October through December 2025, approximately 36.7 million Credit Karma members with at least one mortgage held a total of more than $7.4 trillion in mortgage debt. The average next payment was $2,185.The average mortgage balance among members was up slightly year over year in Q4 at $272,382, a 3.57% increase from $262,997.Average mortgage debt by generation Intuit Credit Karma In a continuing trend from last year, millennials and Gen Z led the way in average mortgage debt gains year over year.Average mortgage debt by credit score bandAverage mortgage debt increased the most year over year among members in the lowest credit score band. Intuit Credit Karma Average student loan debtIn the last quarter of 2025, approximately 32.4 million Credit Karma members with at least one student loan open held a total of more than $801 billion across 84.5 million student loans.The average next payment was $123. The average student loan balance among members in the last quarter of 2025 was $34,072 — up 7.59% compared to the fourth quarter of 2024, when average student loan debt was $31,667. This marks the largest YoY increase in average debt across the debt categories, driven in large part by Gen Z (up 13.55% YoY).Average student loan debt by generation Intuit Credit Karma Average student loan debt by credit score band Intuit Credit Karma Average credit scores among those with debtThe average VantageScore 3.0 credit score for Credit Karma members with debt dropped year over year, from 676 in the last quarter of 2024 to 673 in the last quarter of 2025.While Baby Boomers and the Silent generation had minor dips year over year, the decline in average credit scores for the youngest generations was more significant — with Gen Z dropping eight points to 651, and millennials dropping four points to 665 in Q4 2025.Average VantageScore 3.0 score among those with debt by generation Intuit Credit Karma Accounts in collectionsFor this report, accounts in collections are any credit card, mortgage, student loan, medical loan, auto lease or auto loan accounts that have been sent to collections agencies, according to their credit reports. Creditors may have different standards for when they transfer debt to collections, but the typical cutoff is 120 to 150 days past due. For this report, Credit Karma is able to determine if an account is in collections but not how many days past due it is.Among Credit Karma members with accounts in collections, the average number of open accounts (among those with collections on their credit reports) in the last quarter of 2025 was 2.5 — a slight lift year over year from 2.4 in the fourth quarter of 2024.Keep in mind that this measure only looks at members who have open accounts in collections, not the Credit Karma member population as a whole. That means that it only captures people who are already potentially struggling with their finances.Average number of accounts in collections by generation Intuit Credit Karma Average number of accounts in collections by VantageScore 3.0 credit score band Intuit Credit Karma For this report, credit inquiries are applications for new credit, such as credit cards or loans.In Q4 2025 compared to Q4 2025, inquiries fell across all generations and scorebands (except for super prime, which had no change) — continuing a year-plus downward trend. This likely reflects a pullback on credit applications given signs of increasing stress, including rising debt and an uptick in collections along with persistent macroeconomic uncertainties (tariffs and interest rates, for example).Subprime and near prime members had the biggest decreases in inquiries among score bands in 2025. Intuit Credit Karma Intuit Credit Karma MethodologyThis report drew on insights from the aggregated reports of roughly 99.5 million Credit Karma users. All aggregate data analyzed was pulled on Jan. 5, 2026, and came from members’ TransUnion credit reports. Averages were based on information from the previous 90 days.This story was produced by Intuit Credit Karma and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

WQAD.com WQAD.com

Rock Island seeks public comment on railroad crossings improvements

The City of Rock Island is seeking public comment on improvement ideas as part of the Citywide Rail Corridor Safety Study.

Quad-City Times Quad-City Times

Safer Foundation celebrates 50 years of empowering second chances in the Quad-Cities

Since 1976, the organization has worked to eliminate barriers to successful reentry for individuals with arrest and conviction records.

WQAD.com WQAD.com

3 Things to Know | Quad Cities morning headlines for March 13, 2026

This weekend, spring is in bloom at the QCCA Expo Center in Rock Island, and residents in Davenport should stay away from Goose Creek after a sewer overflowed.

Quad-City Times Quad-City Times

High Wind Warning until FRI 3:00 PM CDT

High Winds Persist Until 3 PM CDT with Potential Power Outages

North Scott Press North Scott Press

The cost of raising a kid now tops $44,000 a year in one state

Cost of raising a child in each US state in 2025In 2025, the average annual cost of raising a child under five in the United States reached $27,743. These costs — which cover additional housing, food, transportation, healthcare, miscellaneous items and childcare for a working couple — rose 4.5% between 2024 and 2025, slightly outpacing the 2.82% inflation rate during the same timeframe. But costs vary by up to tens of thousands of dollars in either direction depending on the state a family calls home, and some states saw large swings in the cost of raising a child over just one year.With this in mind, SmartAsset ranked 50 states based on the estimated additional annual income needed by two working adults to support a child under five years old.The cost of raising a child in Massachusetts now tops $44,000 per year. Two working parents in the Bay State should aim to earn at least $124,842 between them to support themselves and a preschooler, versus $80,621 for just themselves. In just one year, the cost of raising a child increased 5.72% from $41,828 to $44,221.Vermont and New Jersey join the top 10 most expensive states to raise a child. Vermont ranked third most expensive for raising a child this year, up from 11th just a year prior. The estimated annual cost jumped from $30,542 to $38,272, the highest increase nationwide. Meanwhile, New Jersey jumped from 13th last year to fifth this year, with an increase from $30,184 to $35,069.The cost to raise a child remains below $20,000 per year in one state. Mississippi remains the most affordable state to raise a child, despite a 10% increase in costs year over year. The estimate now sits at $19,178 per year. Alabama ($20,550); Kentucky ($20,758); South Dakota ($21,174); and Georgia ($21,299) are also among the least expensive states for raising a child.This year, it became more affordable to raise a child in 10 states. Despite double-digit percentage increases in other states, parents saw lower costs in 20% of the U.S. Costs in Hawai‘i declined the most, dropping $8,116 year over year. Costs also dropped in Delaware (-$4,792); Iowa ($-3,667); Michigan (-$2,772); Nevada ($-2,480); New York (-$1,551); Georgia (-$1,407); North Carolina (-$570); Alabama (-$51); and Arizona (-$35). SmartAsset Cost of Raising a Child by StateStates are ranked based on the estimated cost of raising a young child for two working parents in 2025.MassachusettsAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $44,221Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $41,828One-year change: 5.72%ConnecticutAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $41,808Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $38,995One-year change: 7.21%VermontAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $38,272Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $30,542One-year change: 25.31%CaliforniaAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $35,651Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $33,441One-year change: 6.61%New JerseyAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $35,069Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $30,184One-year change: 16.18%WashingtonAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $35,027Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $30,671One-year change: 14.20%ColoradoAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $34,986Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $34,616One-year change: 1.07%Hawai‘iAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $33,363Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $41,479One-year change: -19.57%New YorkAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $33,280Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $34,831One-year change: -4.45%MinnesotaAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $33,197Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $31,789One-year change: 4.43%OregonAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $33,114Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $30,954One-year change: 6.98%AlaskaAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $32,947Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $29,538One-year change: 11.54%New HampshireAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $32,739Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $30,721One-year change: 6.57%Rhode IslandAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $32,614Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $31,187One-year change: 4.58%PennsylvaniaAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $31,741Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $27,859One-year change: 13.93%MarylandAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $31,283Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $27,802One-year change: 12.52%MontanaAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $28,954Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $23,514One-year change: 23.13%MaineAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $28,912Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $28,207One-year change: 2.50%VirginiaAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $28,330Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $27,293One-year change: 3.80%WisconsinAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $27,955Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $27,426One-year change: 1.93%IndianaAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $27,914Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $23,837One-year change: 17.10%OhioAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $27,706Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $25,454One-year change: 8.85%IllinoisAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $27,206Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $26,962One-year change: 0.91%NevadaAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $27,123Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $29,603One-year change: -8.38%UtahAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $26,957Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $23,667One-year change: 13.90%ArizonaAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $26,624Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $26,659One-year change: -0.13%MissouriAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $26,042Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $22,409One-year change: 16.21%NebraskaAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $25,709Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $25,369One-year change: 1.34%New MexicoAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $25,210Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $22,452One-year change: 12.28%OklahomaAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $25,210Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $21,567One-year change: 16.89%North DakotaAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $24,752Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $23,297One-year change: 6.25%DelawareAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $24,544Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $29,336One-year change: -16.33%IdahoAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $24,378Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $23,609One-year change: 3.26%FloridaAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $24,045Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $22,986One-year change: 4.61%North CarolinaAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $23,587Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $24,157One-year change: -2.36%MichiganAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $23,587Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $26,359One-year change: -10.52%South CarolinaAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $23,296Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $22,129One-year change: 5.27%WyomingAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $22,755Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $22,022One-year change: 3.33%TexasAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $22,672Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $22,194One-year change: 2.15%West VirginiaAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $22,422Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $21,807One-year change: 2.82%IowaAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $22,173Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $25,840One-year change: -14.19%ArkansasAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $21,840Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $19,212One-year change: 13.68%LouisianaAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $21,798Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $19,483One-year change: 11.88%KansasAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $21,757Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $21,480One-year change: 1.29%TennesseeAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $21,424Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $20,755One-year change: 3.22%GeorgiaAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $21,299Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $22,706One-year change: -6.20%South DakotaAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $21,174Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $20,143One-year change: 5.12%KentuckyAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $20,758Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $20,423One-year change: 1.64%AlabamaAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $20,550Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $20,601One-year change: -0.25%MississippiAnnual cost of raising one young child, 2025: $19,178Annual cost of raising one young child, 2024: $17,444One-year change: 9.94%Data and MethodologySmartAsset used MIT Living Wage Calculator data to compare the living costs of a household with two working adults and one child to that of a childless household with two working adults in 50 U.S. states. The data is as of February 2025 and compares to data from February 2024. Costs include additions for food, housing, childcare, healthcare, transportation and other necessities.This story was produced by SmartAsset and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

OurQuadCities.com OurQuadCities.com

Hammond-Henry's SPARK program helps healthcare professionals graduate without debt

Hammond-Henry Hospital has a new educational support initiative that helps future healthcare professionals graduate without student debt while securing guaranteed employment. SPARK (Supporting Professionals through Accountability, Resources, and Knowledge) offers qualified students full tuition assistance, paid clinical hours and a four-year employment commitment with the hospital upon graduation. The program was created to both strengthen [...]

North Scott Press North Scott Press

The hidden infrastructure behind every prescription drug in 2026

The hidden infrastructure behind every prescription drug in 2026A customer steps up to the counter at a neighborhood pharmacy. An insurance card is scanned. A pharmacist asks if there are any questions. A small paper bag with the medication inside slides across the counter.What most of us don’t see is the vast system that made that moment possible.Before a prescription drug reaches a shelf in your town, it has passed through research laboratories, clinical trial sites, regulatory review teams, highly controlled manufacturing facilities, and global supply chains. It has generated mountains of data and documentation. It has been inspected, tested, and tracked.The bottle may be small. The infrastructure behind it is not. Kivo, a document management platform that helps life sciences teams collaborate efficiently, looks at the typical journey of prescription medication.Most Drugs Fail in the LabThe journey typically begins years earlier in a research lab. Scientists screen thousands of chemical or biological compounds, looking for one that shows promise against a disease.Most never make it far.As a report from the Congressional Budget Office explains, drug development often takes more than a decade from early discovery through approval. And only a small fraction of experimental drugs that enter clinical testing ever reach patients.After laboratory and animal testing, companies must apply to begin human trials. Clinical trials unfold in phases:Phase I tests safety in a small group of volunteers.Phase II looks at effectiveness and side effects in patients.Phase III expands testing to hundreds or thousands of participants to confirm results and monitor safety.At each stage, researchers collect detailed data on dosing, side effects, interactions, and outcomes. Independent review boards oversee patient protections. Data monitoring committees evaluate safety signals.By the time a drug finishes late-stage trials, it has generated years of evidence about how it behaves in the human body.Even then, approval is not guaranteed.Navigating Government OversightIn the United States, every prescription drug must be reviewed by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration before it can be sold.The application process is intentionally exhaustive in order to help protect patients. Drugmakers submit detailed evidence showing that the medication is safe and effective for its intended use. But the review goes far beyond whether the drug works.Regulators also examine:How the drug is manufactured.Where ingredients come from.How quality is tested.How the product will be labeled.What warnings and usage instructions will appear.Applications can run to hundreds of thousands of pages, including clinical data, statistical analyses, manufacturing details, and quality control procedures.Across the Atlantic, the European Medicines Agency performs a similar role for the European Union, coordinating scientific evaluation across member states.Approval is not simply a yes-or-no decision about a molecule. It is a judgment about whether an entire development system meets strict safety and quality standards.Pharmaceutical ManufacturingIf approval is granted, manufacturing begins at scale. That’s where another layer of invisible infrastructure comes into play.Pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities operate under strict quality standards known as “good manufacturing practice,” or GMP. These standards govern everything from air filtration to employee training.Inside these facilities, conditions are tightly controlled:Rooms may be temperature- and humidity-regulated.Air is filtered to reduce contamination risks.Workers wear protective clothing to prevent particles from entering production areas.Equipment is calibrated and validated regularly.Every batch of medication is tested before release. Tablets are checked for correct dosage and uniformity. Liquids are analyzed for purity and stability. Packaging is verified for accuracy.If something falls outside approved specifications — even a slight variation in weight, a deviation in environmental conditions, or a documentation error — a batch can be rejected.The U.S. Food and Drug Administration conducts routine inspections of manufacturing facilities in the United States and abroad. Inspectors review records, examine equipment, and assess whether companies are following required procedures.The goal is consistency. A patient in one state should receive the same quality and dosage as a patient in another.The Global Journey to Your PharmacyMany prescription drugs do not come from a single location.Active pharmaceutical ingredients, often called APIs, may be manufactured in one country. Those ingredients might then be shipped elsewhere to be formulated into tablets, capsules, or injectable products. Packaging and labeling could occur at yet another facility.The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has noted that a significant share of active pharmaceutical ingredients used in U.S. medicines are manufactured overseas, reflecting the global nature of modern supply chains.This international coordination can improve efficiency and specialization. It can also introduce complexity.During the COVID-19 pandemic, disruptions to transportation and manufacturing contributed to shortages of certain medications and medical supplies. The experience highlighted how interconnected the system has become.Today, drugmakers and regulators rely on tracking systems that assign unique codes to products. These systems help verify authenticity and prevent counterfeit medications from entering the supply chain. In the United States, federal law requires many prescription drugs to carry serialization information to improve traceability.By the time a prescription reaches a local pharmacy, it may have crossed multiple borders, passed through distribution centers, and been scanned and verified at several checkpoints.A common misconception is that once a drug is approved, oversight stops.In reality, monitoring continues for as long as the drug remains on the market.Health care providers and patients can report side effects to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration through systems such as MedWatch. Manufacturers are required to track and report adverse events. Regulators review this information for emerging safety signals.If new risks are identified, agencies can require updated warnings, restrict usage, or in rare cases, withdraw a drug from the market.Manufacturing facilities also continue to face inspections. The FDA conducts both routine and “for cause” inspections to verify compliance with safety and quality standards.Recalls, when they occur, are another example of the system at work. Companies may voluntarily recall a product if testing reveals a quality issue, such as incorrect labeling or potential contamination. Regulators oversee the process to ensure affected products are removed from distribution.While recalls can be concerning, they also reflect the existence of surveillance systems designed to catch problems.In 2026, much of this infrastructure relies on digital systems.Manufacturers maintain electronic records of production steps, quality tests, and distribution data. Audit trails track who entered or modified information. Automated systems can flag deviations in real time.Regulators increasingly emphasize data integrity, ensuring that records are accurate, complete, and protected from unauthorized changes.Digital tracking also plays a role in fighting counterfeit drugs. Under U.S. law, prescription medications moving through the supply chain must be traceable at the package level. This makes it easier to verify authenticity and isolate products if a problem arises.For patients, these systems are largely invisible. But they support the reliability many people take for granted.When a pharmacist scans a barcode, that code connects to layers of information about origin, batch, and distribution history.The Ordinary Moment, RevisitedBack at the pharmacy counter, the exchange feels routine. A label with your name. Instructions for use. A pharmacist offering guidance.Behind that ordinary moment are:Years of scientific research.Large-scale clinical trials.Regulatory evaluation.Controlled manufacturing environments.International logistics networks.Ongoing safety monitoring.The infrastructure behind every prescription drug is rarely visible to the people who depend on it.It is designed that way. Patients experience the final step: a bottle in hand, ready to use.What they don’t see is the coordinated effort across laboratories, government agencies, factories, and supply chains that made that bottle possible.In 2026, as medicine grows more advanced and more global, that hidden system continues to operate quietly in the background: complex, data-driven, and constantly under review.The pill may be small. The system behind it spans the world.This story was produced by Kivo and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

OurQuadCities.com Illinois hunters harvest 627 bobcats OurQuadCities.com

Illinois hunters harvest 627 bobcats

The 2025-2026 Illinois bobcat season concluded Feb. 15 with 627 bobcats harvested by hunters and trappers, a news release says. A total of 405 (62%) bobcats were taken by hunting, while trapping accounted for 222 (34%) of the harvest. Twenty-seven (4%) were salvaged by permit holders from circumstances such as roadkill. The Illinois Department of [...]

OurQuadCities.com How many Friday the 13ths are in 2026? OurQuadCities.com

How many Friday the 13ths are in 2026?

It’s not even two-and-a-half months into 2026, and we’re already on our second Friday the 13th.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

How to plan a successful company retreat

How to plan a successful company retreatA well-crafted company retreat agenda means every moment—whether it’s a high-level strategy session, an informal idea session over lunch or a team building adventure—contributes to the bigger purpose of your retreat. Without one, you risk an expensive trip with little ROI. Too much structure and you’ll burn people out. Too little and you’ll miss the opportunity to create real impact.A good agenda strikes the perfect balance between productivity and space to breathe, while allowing for the connection teams crave. It keeps discussions focused, sparks creativity and ensures team members carry breakthroughs forward into daily life.This guide by Villa Punto De Vista breaks down everything you need to know to plan a successful retreat agenda.The Pitfalls of One-Size-Fits-All RetreatsAn immaculately planned retreat agenda can inspire confidence on paper, yet disappoint profoundly in practice. A primary culprit? The pervasive reliance on generic agenda templates. You’ve likely encountered them—boring icebreakers, a couple of lengthy strategy sessions, a mandatory team-building exercise and perhaps a fleeting wellness workshop.This “one-size-fits-all” approach is fundamentally flawed and virtually guaranteed to undermine your retreat’s success for several critical reasons:Absence of defined objectives: Generic agendas frequently bypass the crucial step of establishing clear, well-crafted objectives. Without shared, measurable goals, every activity risks becoming disconnected and purposeless, failing to build cohesive progress.Outdated activities: A common pitfall is the inclusion of traditional, often stale retreat activities. Without thoughtful consideration for their relevance to your specific objectives, these exercises become ineffective time fillers, missing vital opportunities for genuine engagement.Exclusion of employee insight: Imposing a generic agenda without involving the participating team members inevitably leads to disengagement. When employees aren’t integral to the planning process, activities feel dictated rather than designed for their benefit, fostering apathy instead of enthusiasm.Poor time allocation: Generic schedules often fail to allocate sufficient time for meaningful engagement or, conversely, over-extend less impactful sessions. Crucially, they rarely account for the spontaneity essential for sparking breakthroughs and fostering authentic interaction.Prioritizing ‘what’ over ‘why’: These templates typically focus only on what to include, not on why each element is necessary. This oversight can lead to neglecting activities that genuinely address your team’s unique challenges and developmental needs.Ultimately, every organization possesses distinct challenges, dynamics and aspirations. An agenda that might superficially suit one company is almost certainly ill-suited for another.Start With a Purpose: Why Are You Hosting a Company Retreat?Before diving into wine tastings, waterfall horseback rides, or sunset catamaran cruises, start with the why. A company retreat without a clear purpose is just an expensive trip. The best retreats have a defined goal that shapes the agenda, ensuring every session, activity, and conversation adds value to your company’s greater mission and goals.Is your retreat about:Strengthening team dynamics for a newly formed group?Celebrating milestones and rewarding a year of hard work?Developing leadership through structured, high-impact sessions?Giving a remote team much-needed in-person connection time?When everyone understands the reason they’re there, the retreat takes on a different energy. Discussions feel more focused, sessions have meaning, and the experience becomes more than just a getaway—it becomes a strategic investment in your team’s growth.Choose the Perfect LocationYour retreat location is actually a catalyst for your agenda. You could book a conference center in the city, gather your team in a windowless room and power through slide decks under fluorescent lights. Or, you could transport them to places that shift their perspective, where the very air inspires fresh thinking. The second option is usually more impactful.When choosing a location for your retreat, consider the following:Retreat objective: A wellness-focused retreat may call for a secluded, nature-driven setting, while a leadership summit might thrive in a high-end private resort with executive-level amenities.Meeting spaces: Look for venues with flexible indoor and outdoor areas that encourage both structured discussions and informal brainstorming.Environment: Natural light, expansive views and access to verdant outdoor breakout areas can enhance productivity and engagement.Balance: The best retreats balance deep work sessions with activities that foster connection—think sunset catamaran sails, rainforest hikes or private chef dinners.Accessibility: A breathtaking destination loses its charm if the journey is demanding. Factor in flights, transfers and overall ease of travel.Team-building opportunities: On-site experiences like cooking classes, surf lessons or guided mindfulness sessions can enhance the retreat’s impact.Logistics: On-site event coordinators, meal planning and tech-ready meeting rooms help ensure everything runs smoothly.Choosing the right retreat location isn’t just about aesthetics—it directly impacts engagement, creativity and the overall experience. A well-chosen setting reinforces your purpose and seamlessly shapes the energy of every session, making retreat planning easier.Balance Work and PlayA retreat should be a time for both work and play. You do not want to organize a retreat that is simply a marathon of presentations. On the other extreme, a retreat shouldn’t be an all-expenses-paid escape with no purpose either. Striking a balance between meaningful work and enjoyment is necessary.Here are a few approaches to integrating both elements effectively:Block scheduling with dedicated segments: This approach separates work-focused from play-focused blocks throughout a retreat. It could involve scheduling intensive work sessions for mornings when energy levels are typically high. As the afternoon rolls around, attendees can shift to more relaxed activities.Alternating work and play: If your goal is to keep energy levels up consistently, consider weaving shorter work and play sessions throughout the day. You can start the morning with a work-focused session, then move to a short play-focused activity. After energizing the team, continue with another work session before a more extended break. Repeat this pattern in the afternoon and evening sessions.Work-integrated play: Rather than strictly separating work and play, blend elements of both into single sessions. For example, teams might engage in a scavenger hunt where clues at each stop relate directly to real company goals or challenges.Sandwich structure: This method involves beginning and ending each day with strong play elements, while the middle hours are dedicated to core work objectives.No matter the approach you choose, communication is essential for success. Your best bet is to inform participants of your proposed approach beforehand. This way, they know what to expect and can be present in each segment.Allow for Flexibility and SpontaneityStructure is great for retreats, but there is nothing wrong with a bit of spontaneity. Sometimes, the magic happens organically. So, it’s good practice to allow for some flexibility.Have a plan, but be open to making adjustments if necessary. For instance, if a discussion is taking longer than anticipated and participants are generating great ideas, you may need to extend this session. Doing this may mean trimming a less critical activity scheduled for a later time.Communicate Retreat Details ClearlyWhen orchestrating a company retreat, transparent communication is paramount—it is always better to overcommunicate than to leave participants in the dark.Providing a clear understanding of the retreat agenda and its overarching objectives well in advance empowers attendees. When they know the goals, they can arrive prepared, mentally align with the retreat’s purpose and fully engage with the essence of each activity.This proactive sharing of information cultivates clarity and reduces uncertainty, allowing everyone to maximize their participation and benefit.Crafting a Comprehensive Retreat AgendaSeveral elements make up a successful retreat, from focused work and impactful sessions to team-building activities and essential downtime. When done right, these elements make for productive and rejuvenated experiences for participants. Outlined below are some critical elements to include in your retreat agenda.Strategic SessionsStrategic sessions present opportunities for critical decision-making. During these core blocks in the retreat, teams should review past performances, address challenges, brainstorm new ideas and initiatives and set future goals. Here are some ideas you can explore to make the most of strategic sessions:Interactive and creative workshops: These are excellent alternatives to conventional presentations and monologues. The idea is to get everyone involved and thinking, not just listening. Some examples include collaborative vision-building exercises and roundtable debates.Breakout groups: At the end of each session, break large teams into small groups where everyone can share their thoughts or tackle specific problems. Afterwards, everyone can regroup to share their ideas or key takeaways.Team Building ActivitiesTime away from office desks and bustling workspaces offers an invaluable opportunity for teams to forge deeper bonds and enhance collaboration. In serene environments with breathtaking vistas, participants are naturally drawn into engaging team-building experiences.Activities like collaborative games and challenges, such as charades or scavenger hunts, provide an excellent way for team members to connect, problem-solve and work together in a low-pressure setting. Similarly, outdoor adventures foster significant bonding—teams learn to communicate in new ways, share laughter and build a camaraderie that often proves unattainable within a traditional office environment.Professional DevelopmentIntegrating professional development into a retreat prioritizes the growth of individual employees, with direct and tangible benefits for the entire organization. Retreats offer an ideal setting to foster this growth through various engaging formats.For instance, inviting guest speakers or conducting specialized workshops allows employees to tap into the skills, insights and experiences of inspiring thought leaders. Additionally, dedicated skill-building sessions can train teams in crucial areas such as advanced communication, effective leadership or strategic thinking, directly enhancing their capabilities and collective impact.Social and Relaxation TimeThoughtfully scheduling curated social and relaxation sessions is crucial for allowing teams to bond organically, recharge and reflect. These pockets of time enable participants to explore the unique offerings of your retreat location or simply rejuvenate.For example, group dinners and social events, ranging from themed culinary adventures and unstructured meals to silent discos or outdoor movie nights, foster natural connection and shared experiences. Equally vital are wellness activities. Incorporating elements like yoga, meditation sessions or organized walks and hikes into the agenda helps strike a perfect balance between productivity and personal rejuvenation, ensuring attendees return refreshed and engaged.Time Blocking for Your Corporate Retreat AgendaA successful company retreat schedule balances structured sessions with opportunities for team bonding and free time. If you’re not sure where to begin, here’s a tried-and-true framework to follow that will help you schedule each day with ease:Morning (Focused Strategy and Innovation):8:00 a.m. – Breakfast and networking9:00 a.m. – Productive workshop led by a professional facilitator10:30 a.m. – Break and reflection time11:00 a.m. – Team meetings (different departments collaborate on challenges)Afternoon (Team Building and Physical Activities)12:30 p.m. – Lunch with roundtable discussions1:30 p.m. – Outdoor team bonding activities (ziplining, surfing or horseback riding)3:30 p.m. – Small group organized sessions on key topics5:00 p.m. – Free time (relaxation, beach walks or poolside networking)Evening (Celebration and Connection)7:00 p.m. – Group dinner and wine tastings8:30 p.m. – Retreat venue fireside chats and informal networking10:00 p.m. – Optional activities (spa treatments, night walks or game night)Pro tip: Not everyone wants to be scheduled the entire time—build in flexibility.You’ll want to shift this cadence based on your retreat goal, too, obviously. So, if this is an incentive trip full of celebration, skip the roundtable discussions and add more free time to laze and recharge at the pool. If the goal is to get a new team to work together a bit more seamlessly, skip the inter-department meetings and focus on departmental team building.4 Tips for Making the Most of Your Retreat AgendaThese tips help enhance the structure and flow of your agenda, ensuring a truly productive and memorable experience. Villa Punto De Vista 1. Prioritize Pacing and Time ManagementWhile a well-crafted agenda is essential, how you use the time ultimately determines the retreat’s value. Effective time management is key to optimizing participant energy and productivity:Set realistic time allocation: Focus not just on the clock, but on optimizing participants’ energy and productivity. Build in ample breathing room to allow conversations and activities to unfold naturally.Start and end on time: The schedule must start and end on time, demonstrating respect for participants’ valuable commitments.Have dedicated facilitators: Assign facilitators to manage the clock and keep activities on track, maintaining the retreat’s rhythm.2. Balance Structured Activities With BreaksIt’s tempting to minimize breaks, fearing lost time, yet these pauses are vital for recharging, informal networking and preventing burnout. Achieving the right balance between structured activities and periods of rest is paramount. Consider the following:Frequent short breaks: Slot in short 10-15 minute breaks after extended periods of structured activities. These breaks allow participants to stretch, refresh and mentally prepare for the next activity.Longer recharge breaks: Make provisions for more extended breaks of at least 30 minutes, providing ample time for genuine rest and reflection.Optional downtime: Participants should be allowed to choose whether to engage in optional activities, empowering them to manage their own energy levels.3. Avoid Agenda FatigueAn overly packed agenda that attempts to include every possible activity often leads to disengagement and burnout. The objective should always prioritize quality over quantity, favoring depth over a crammed schedule. The following can help keep your schedule engaging:Incorporate energizers: Get participants moving with fun, physical activities during breaks, reinvigorating their focus.Manage information overload: Provide extensive information as pre-reads or post-read materials, preventing burnout from absorbing large amounts during sessions.Vary activity types: To keep engagement levels high, switch between dynamic presentations, interactive group conversations, team challenges and hands-on workshops.4. Have Backup Plans for Weather or Unforeseen CircumstancesDespite meticulous planning, things may not always unfold as expected.Unexpected weather changes or unforeseen circumstances can arise, making alternative plans indispensable. If rain unexpectedly cancels an outdoor hike, for example, have activity alternatives ready, such as an indoor board game tournament or a creative group challenge.Similarly, prepare for technical alternatives by having spare batteries, chargers, adapters and projectors on hand to circumvent any potential tech difficulties and ensure seamless continuity.Why Private and Unique Venues Make for an Easier Agenda and Retreat Planning Than HotelsCorporate retreats aren’t just about getting people in a room—they’re about creating the right environment for big-picture thinking, meaningful conversations and authentic connection. And where you host the retreat plays a bigger role than you might think.Sure, you could book a hotel or conference center, shuffle between generic meeting rooms and hope for the best. Or, you could host your retreat in a private venue like a villa or resort—where the setting works with your agenda, not against it.Here’s why high-performing teams are skipping hotels and opting for unique retreats instead:Distraction-free focusHotels and conference centers mean shared spaces, unexpected noise and competing events. A private venue removes those variables. There are no distractions or interruptions. It’s just your team, fully present and engaged.Flexible meeting spaces that inspireWhy settle for fluorescent lighting and ballroom chairs when you could be strategizing on an oceanfront terrace or workshopping ideas in a breezy open-air lounge? Unique venues like private resorts offer adaptable spaces that make sessions feel less like meetings and more like conversations that matter.Seamless work-life flowThe best agendas balance productivity with space to recharge. At a private venue, there’s no need to carve out “wellness time” between rigid meeting slots because it happens naturally. Morning yoga, afternoon catamaran sails, sunset debriefs by the pool. No shuttling between venues. No rushed transitions. Just a retreat that flows.Personalized experience, no one-size-fits-all itinerariesAt a hotel, you’re on their schedule—set meal times that are less flexible when catering to an entire conference center, preset meeting room blocks and rigid service structures being shared with other groups on-site. At a private retreat, the schedule revolves around you. Want a brainstorming session over breakfast? Done. Need snacks at 3 p.m. instead of noon? No problem. Prefer lunch on the beach? That can happen.Everything is customized to fit the way your team works best.Stronger team connectionIn a hotel, teams scatter to their rooms or blend into the crowd. In a private venue, shared spaces foster organic conversations. These conversations are the kind that don’t happen in structured sessions but lead to real breakthroughs. The moments over a casual meal or a sunset toast? That’s where the magic happens.Best Team Building Activities for Corporate RetreatsSo, what activities do you fill your free time with? Here are the top options to consider:Ziplining: Go ziplining through an amazing landscape. This activity is a thrill and gets team members out of their comfort zones, building trust and support within the group.Whitewater rafting: Whether your team is rowing down Class II or Class IV rapids, this activity promotes teamwork, communication and a little healthy competition when multiple boats navigate the waters.Beach Olympics: Fun and challenging games like beach volleyball, tug-of-war and relay races encourage collaboration, strategy and team spirit.Private charters: Whether it’s a sailing trip, snorkeling adventure or sunset cruise, being on the water is an excellent way for team members to connect on a personal level outside the work environment.Corporate social responsibility: Engage in meaningful community service projects that align with your company’s values, from beach cleanups and tree planting to hands-on community development initiatives.Realizing Your Company Retreat’s PotentialA company retreat should be a truly impactful experience, one that leaves employees feeling valued, refreshed and inspired. Achieving this requires meticulous planning and flawless execution.By thoughtfully designing a well-crafted agenda, selecting the perfect location and integrating the right activities, you can curate a transformative retreat. Participants will enjoy their time away and return to the office with fresh insights and renewed energy, ready to influence their approach to work and contribute with greater purpose.This story was produced by Villa Punto De Vista and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

OurQuadCities.com Rain and snow on the way for Sunday OurQuadCities.com

Rain and snow on the way for Sunday

As the festivities for Saint Patrick's Day approaches today and Saturday, we are watching for some active weather coming for Sunday. During the day when temperatures are warm toward the mid to upper 50s, we are looking to see rainfall and showers through the day. The National Weather Service is issuing a marginal risk for [...]

KWQC TV-6  Van hit by train in Davenport KWQC TV-6

Van hit by train in Davenport

Details are limited.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

Gen Z is finally buying life insurance, but not for the reasons you might expect

Gen Z is finally buying life insurance, but not for the reasons you might expectWhy is Gen Z embracing life insurance now — and how does their buy-in impact the life insurance industry? Everly Life explains.Life insurance carriers are presented with a challenge and an opportunity to keep Gen Z engaged. While the narrative was once “life insurance as a family protection tool”, this cohort is leaning into life insurance as a tool that provides flexibility, living benefits, and financial resilience.Gen Z is delaying milestones, like marriage, parenthood, and home ownership — some of the traditional drivers of life insurance demand. When they do consider life insurance coverage, misconceptions about premium costs often discourage them from buying enough — or any — coverage.Despite these barriers, 42% of Gen Z adults aged 18-27 say they have life insurance, and 49% admit they need to obtain or increase coverage.This growth signals a generational shift: a group that was once uninformed about legacy financial products is becoming life insurance consumers. But many aren’t motivated to buy insurance to protect their loved ones. Instead, they're attracted to life insurance policies that they can benefit from now. As such, “living benefits”, or coverage that policyholders can access while they’re alive — like cash value and insurance riders — can easily resonate with Gen Z.The reasoning behind this shift reveals how younger consumers are redefining life insurance — and they might surprise you.Why Life Insurance Is Gaining Traction with Gen ZFinancial security concerns are shaping their decisions.Gen Z entered adulthood during COVID-19, inflation spikes, layoffs, and rising healthcare costs. These experiences have shaped their view of finances. In fact, a third of Gen Z are stressed about their finances, and of those, 52% say economic instability is a root cause. As a result, they make financial decisions with caution. Consequently, 70% of Gen Z agree that they are more careful with their finances than in the past.In comparison to other generations, Gen Z is more focused on meeting their day-to-day financial obligations rather than future financial security. Because they are concerned with managing immediate financial obligations, Gen Z can view life insurance as a means of protection against uncertainty, not just a family-planning tool.Living benefit coverage matters more than future protection.Living benefits — such as cash value — can provide access to funds during illness, income disruption, or emergencies. Since Gen Z is concerned about financial resilience, they may be increasingly attracted to policies that can provide financial support while they are living.Gen Z is spending more time with financial products that can help them manage debt and lifestyle choices. Because traditional life insurance doesn’t support these goals, it’s not always an attractive option for this younger audience. On the other hand, life insurance policies with living benefits may satisfy this demand through tangible financial support, like cash value options that allow policyholders to build wealth and access their funds when they need them.Digital-first innovations make life insurance more accessible.As digital natives, Gen Z expects financial services to be accessible online. Although slow to make the shift, some life insurance carriers offer digital-first solutions with simplified applications, faster approvals, and transparent pricing. By meeting younger generations where they are, life insurance is becoming more accessible, relevant, and appealing to this younger audience.Gen Z is choosing an education-first approach.Gen Z is considered the most educated, diverse generation in history. Many turn to online resources, social media, and financial influencers to learn about policy options, benefits, and costs. This contrasts with earlier generations, who typically rely on agents or family advice. In fact, 96% of Gen Z conduct online research to help them make decisions before purchasing a policy. Gen Z’s educational approach hints at their desire to be better equipped to buy life insurance than other generations may have been in the past.Gen Z Is Redefining Life InsuranceGen Z’s emphasis on financial wellness often leads them to prioritize experiences, health, and personal fulfillment. Life insurance can support Gen Z’s holistic financial approach. For example, cash value can complement their long-term goals, like retirement plans, and can also give them options to support short-term goals, like a car down payment.Forty-three percent of Gen Z are concerned about job security and maintaining a steady income. So, it’s unsurprising that they view life insurance as a safety net from economic uncertainty and a means to provide financial stability.Life insurance may finally have Gen Z’s buy-in, but maintaining that momentum requires the industry to rethink its traditional approach to coverage.This story was produced by Everly Life and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

Quad-City Times 256 without power in the Quad-Cities Friday morning; winds hit 59 mph in Davenport Quad-City Times

256 without power in the Quad-Cities Friday morning; winds hit 59 mph in Davenport

There is no estimated time of repair.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

How much you actually need to earn to be in the top 10% in every state

What it takes to reach the top 10% in every stateNew state-by-state data reveals what it takes to reach the top 10% — and how living costs and inequality reshape what “rich” really means.  BuchhaltungsButler, DataPulse Research In the United States, a household needs anywhere between $198,000 and $387,000 in annual income to be considered among the top 10% earners. Breaking into the richest 10% looks very different in West Virginia than in Massachusetts.To understand where America’s highest paychecks really are, the Germany-based tax platform BuchhaltungsButler and the Berlin-based data studio DataPulse Research ran the numbers. They compared gross (pre-tax) household income across states, showing where the cost of living can eat into earnings and noting where it’s hardest for middle-class households to climb the income ladder.While many studies focus on the wealthiest individuals who sit at the very top of the income ladder, this study focuses on the population that just meets the limit for being within the top 10% of the country. This threshold marks the point where households earn significantly more than the vast majority (90% of the population), yet still low enough to reflect real households, not just the ultra-wealthy few. Household income accounts for all income earned by people within the same household who are at least 15 years old, even if they are not related.In some states, $200,000 puts you in the top 10%. In others, it gets you about halfway there.As the map below shows, the threshold to be in the top 10% is generally higher in the North Atlantic and the Pacific regions than in the middle of the country. In five states — Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Jersey, New York, and Washington — households need over $325,000 to crack the top tier. Washington, D.C., though not a state, stands alone as an outlier: The threshold there is roughly $635,000, driven by high-paying and traditionally stable jobs in government-affiliated industries such as law and policy. BuchhaltungsButler, DataPulse Research Massachusetts leads the country on the high end: Households must earn a minimum of $386,800 to be considered in the richest 10% in the state. In West Virginia, $198,000 will make the cut. For those keeping score at home, this means households in Massachusetts that just crack the top tier have about double the income of their counterparts in West Virginia.Dollars stretch further in some statesEven among the rich, geography matters: In some states, the same income buys twice the lifestyle. As the chart below shows, the threshold to be rich generally goes up with living costs. States on the right side of the chart have higher prices than the U.S. average — housing, energy, and everyday goods cost more. States on the left have lower costs, meaning every dollar buys a bit more comfort. BuchhaltungsButler, DataPulse Research But not all high incomes are created equal. Some states, like Massachusetts or New Jersey, combine soaring prices with steep income thresholds, making them places where it’s expensive both to live and to be rich. Meanwhile, states such as Arkansas or Mississippi sit on the opposite end: Living costs are among the lowest in the country, while the threshold to be rich falls well below most other states.States like Vermont, Minnesota, and Delaware offer some of the best value for high earners: strong incomes paired with moderate living costs. They are among 16 states where the rich are earning at least $270,000 annually, yet prices are below the national average, making those dollars stretch further than in relatively expensive places like California, Hawai’i, or New York.In short, America’s map of income of the top 10% shows two kinds of privilege: earning a lot, and living where a lot goes further. That’s why the “best” state to be rich isn’t necessarily the one with the highest salaries, but the one where those salaries translate into real comfort.However, the cost of living only explains part of the story. In some states, the real divide isn’t about rent and grocery prices, but about how much more the top households earn compared to everyone else. The next section compares households within the same state that are subject to similar costs of goods, to reveal where the gap between the rich and the middle class is widest.The distance between the middle class and the top 10%In every state, making it to the top 10% means earning at least double what the middle class earns. But that divide is much wider in some states. In New York, Connecticut, and Massachusetts, for example, middle-income households would need to roughly triple their earnings to join the top 10%. The chart below compares the households with median incomes (50th percentile) to the households right at the cusp of the richest group. The resulting gap shows how far the top has pulled ahead of the middle. BuchhaltungsButler, DataPulse Research This gap is not new. It’s been gradually widening for decades, according to Pew Research Center, which noted in a report last year that middle-class incomes have not kept pace with upper-class incomes. Since 1970, upper-income households have increased 78% compared with only 60% for middle-income and 55% for low-income households. Across Europe, income gaps look narrower but follow the same trend. On average, the richest 10% of households earn about 107% more than the middle class, roughly double their income. In the U.S., by comparison, top earners make at least double — and sometimes triple — the median household income, reflecting greater income inequality. For more context, see the companion analysis on income inequality across Europe.The challenge of defining the ‘rich’ in the USDefining what it means to be “rich” in America is deceptively tricky because the numbers are so relative, both across the country and within individual states. This study shows that the definition depends heavily on where you live, what life there costs, and how it compares to other lower-income tiers in the state. For these reasons, a $200,000 household income may be considered solidly upper class in one state but closer to middle class in another.At the same time, it’s worth noting that households earning enough to enter the top 10% occupy a very different reality from the ultra-wealthy few whose fortunes stretch into the millions or even billions. The difference between making it to the top 10% and the top 0.1% is vast and growing every year, as the highest echelons keep advancing upwards faster and faster. The richer the richest of us become, the harder it is to agree on what being rich even means.MethodologyThis study analyzed total household incomes by state. Values reflect the gross income thresholds to be in the top 10% of (90th percentile) and the middle class (median, or 50th percentile) in each state. Household income accounts for all income earned by people within the same household who are at least 15 years old, even if they are not related.To measure inequality within states, researchers calculated the percent difference between the 50th and 90th percentile household incomes. The 50th percentile income, or the median, represents a typical “middle-class” household. This metric was chosen over an “average income” for the state because averages can be distorted by very high earners.The relationship between income and cost of living is based on state-level price parity data from the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA). The data is based on an index where the states‘ values are relative to the country-level benchmark of 100.Washington, D.C., was excluded from most of the analysis because its 90th-percentile household income for the city is substantially higher than that of any state and skews comparative scaling.Underlying data for this study came from IPUMS USA, using the American Community Survey (ACS) 1-year sample.This story originally appeared on BuchhaltungsButler, was produced in collaboration with DataPulse Research, and was reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

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High winds delay Bettendorf recycling pickup

A news release from the City of Bettendorf says Public Works crews will only pick up garbage and bulky waste on Friday, March 13. Residents who are scheduled to have their recycling picked up today should place their recycling carts out on Monday, March 16 to be picked up.

WVIK Giant robots battle it out in Detroit's Robowar WVIK

Giant robots battle it out in Detroit's Robowar

Fighting robots is a cultural fantasy going back at least to Richard Matheson's 1956 story "Steel." One Detroit impresario is now bringing the idea to the stage — and real audiences.

KWQC TV-6 KWQC TV-6

Power outages reported in Illinois, Iowa Quad Cities

Multiple customers were without power Friday morning.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

The science of dog food palatability: Why your pup loves certain foods

The science of dog food palatability: Why your pup loves certain foodsEver wonder why one dog inhales their bowl in seconds, while another sniffs at it and walks away? Dog food palatability, or what makes food delicious to your dog, isn’t simply about taste. It’s also about evolutionary biology, sensory perception, and nutritional chemistry working together.he closer a dog’s meal resembles real meat—which is in their DNA to consume as descendants of wolves—the more it aligns with how dogs evolved to eat. To understand what makes food truly appealing to pups, you have to start with how dogs actually experience a meal: through freshness, smell, texture preferences, moisture, and flavor.In this guide, Ollie dives into all of that, and examines how the pet food industry relies on masking agents and flavor enhancers for dogs in dry kibble to force palatability. Let’s look at the science behind what’s really happening in your dog’s nose and mouth at dinnertime.Dog Sense of Smell vs. Taste: The Nose KnowsDogs don’t perceive food in the same way that humans do. While we have about 10,000 taste buds in our mouths, dogs have closer to 20,000—meaning they’re experiencing taste on an entirely different level than we are. Despite that, their nose is their superpower when it comes to eating, and aromas are often more influential than flavor itself. Your pup has a highly developed olfactory system, which includes the vomeronasal Jacobson’s organ that allows them to taste aroma compounds the moment food enters their mouth.This explains why freshness matters. Despite the stereotype that dogs dig in the trash because they love foul odors, they are biologically wired to avoid smells associated with spoilage and decay, which signal potential microbial danger. Dogs also show a strong aversion to bitter compounds as an evolutionary safeguard against toxins. Together, these traits mean pups are most attracted to foods that smell like fresh, safe animal tissue rather than heavily oxidized or degraded ingredients.Dog Food Texture Preferences: Freshness for the WinDogs are biologically wired to prefer moist, fresh food over dry, crunchy kibble. Why? Because the moisture in fresh food is much more similar to the fresh meat their ancestors would have eaten in the wild. It’s more hydrating, easier to eat, and carries a much stronger, more enticing aroma than dry formats.Studies consistently show that dogs prefer moist diets over dry ones, particularly when protein and fat are present in forms similar to fresh meat. Hard or brittle textures require more effort and can reduce the amount of food they eat, especially in small dogs, seniors, or dogs with dental sensitivity. Moist foods also release aroma compounds more readily during chewing, which enhances sensory stimulation for your pup and makes the meal more enjoyable.Picky Eating and Taste PreferencesIf you’ve ever wondered, “Why is my dog a picky eater?” you’re certainly not alone. Despite the reputation that dogs will wolf down anything, they do in fact have preferences when it comes to what’s in their bowl. And just like humans, sometimes dogs get bored! This is actually an old survival instinct called the “novelty effect.” In the wild, seeking out new flavors helped ensure an animal received a complete and balanced variety of nutrients. If your dog is suddenly acting picky, they might just be experiencing olfactory fatigue from their dry food or looking for a new protein to mix things up.Aside from obvious sources of flavor like protein, macronutrients can also influence whether a dog is enjoying the taste of their food. Pups inherently show a distinct bias toward energy-dense nutrients—particularly fat and simple sugars—since these provide efficient calories for survival. Fiber, by contrast, tends to reduce dog food palatability when added at higher levels, despite the fact that it plays an important role in digestive health.Liver is another ingredient that can improve the taste of fresh dog food. Most dogs go crazy for liver because it is a natural palatability booster.The Truth Behind Dry Kibble and Flavor Enhancers for DogsDry kibble has a palatability challenge when it comes to dog food. During extrusion or baking, much of the natural aroma of its meat is lost. So to compensate, kibble manufacturers rely heavily on palatants, which are coatings applied after cooking to help stimulate your dog’s appetite.The most common palatants in pet food are hydrolyzed animal digests, which are created by breaking down animal tissues into amino acids and peptides. These compounds generate savory odors when sprayed onto kibble. Many palatants also use Maillard reaction products, which are formed when amino acids react with sugars to produce roasted, meat-like flavors. While these roasted, savory flavors occur naturally when cooking meat, in kibble, it is often created with artificial flavoring and added sugars to rebuild aroma after processing.Fresh dog food does not require this workaround. Because it is cooked gently and retains its natural fats and proteins, it inherently produces aroma compounds that are palatable to dogs.This story was produced by Ollie and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

Open the Door for Your Health

By Heidi Schwarzwald, M.D., Chief Medical Officer, Signify Health(NAPSI)—As a physician, I have spent my career learning that a person’s health is determined by so much more than what we see during a brief exam in a clinic. While traditional office visits are vital, they can often lack the one thing both patients and doctors crave most: time. This is why I am such a strong advocate for In-Home Health Evaluations (IHEs) offered by Signify Health.I recently saw the power of this approach when I learned about Carol and John, a couple who have been married for nearly 60 years. Like many older adults, their health needs became more complex as they aged. John was diagnosed with diabetes and Parkinsonism syndrome, which requires him to use a wheelchair. For them, the logistics of getting to a doctor’s office became a hurdle.A New Chapter in Preventive CareThrough their Medicare Advantage plan, Carol and John were able to schedule an IHE. Unlike a standard office-based health care appointment, the IHE brings an experienced physician, nurse practitioner, or physician assistant from Signify’s national clinician network directly to the member’s home at no additional cost to them.Carol told us, “I really like the fact that my husband and I see a Signify clinician together. She spent time with us talking about our general well-being, rather than focusing on just one specific issue.”That is the heart of what we do during an IHE. When we sit down at a health plan member’s kitchen table or living room couch, we aren’t just conducting health tests and checking vitals. We are listening. Our clinicians may spend up to an hour with a person—often more than a traditional office visit allows. This gives us the opportunity to uncover what we call “the full picture” of their health.IHEs are a valuable health service to ensure that people are getting the care, screening and follow-up support they need.Connecting the DotsDuring an IHE visit, we often identify things that might be missed in an office setting. We review all medications to prevent adverse interactions, conduct testing and screening for chronic conditions, and look for potential safety concerns in the home, like trip hazards or lighting issues that could lead to a fall.In fact, our clinicians can capture over 300 clinical and social data points about a member’s health. This information isn’t meant to replace a member’s regular doctor; rather, it’s meant to support them. After every visit, we share a summary with the member, their primary care provider and health plan, so they have a comprehensive understanding of needs and can further coordinate care.Supporting the Whole FamilyOne of the most rewarding aspects of the IHE is the support it can offer to caregivers. During Carol and John’s in-home health visit, our clinician noticed that Carol was feeling overwhelmed and anxious due to the demands of caregiving.Because our clinician was in her home, she was able to have an honest conversation about not only Carol’s physical health, but also her emotional and mental well-being. The clinician encouraged Carol to connect with her own primary care provider for additional support, a need that might have remained hidden.Since an IHE starts with a conversation between the member and clinician, there’s a greater opportunity to explore those more subtle and easily overlooked health challenges which may not come up organically during a traditional office visit with a primary care provider. For Carol and John, it also helped open important lines of communication between them. As Carol put it, “After 58 years, it’s good to hear each other tell someone else what their concerns are. It helps us understand what each one of us is going through.”Your Health, Your HomeThe feedback we receive from health plan members who complete an IHE with Signify Health across the country is overwhelming: 70% of people who complete an IHE say they would do it again, underscoring the value of in-home health visits.I believe that by meeting people where they are, we can help people stay exactly where they want to be—healthy, independent and at home.Are you or a loved one eligible for an IHE? I encourage you to take a moment to prioritize your health from the comfort of your own home. Check your eligibility for a no-cost In-Home Health Evaluation by visiting HelloSignify.com or calling 1-855-984-5121 today.Word Count: 717

North Scott Press North Scott Press

Your brain can be trained, much like your muscles; a neurologist explains how to boost your brain health

Your brain can be trained, much like your muscles; a neurologist explains how to boost your brain healthIf you have ever lifted a weight, you know the routine: challenge the muscle, give it rest, feed it and repeat. Over time, it grows stronger.Of course, muscles only grow when the challenge increases over time. Continually lifting the same weight the same way stops working.It might come as a surprise to learn that the brain responds to training in much the same way as our muscles, even though most of us never think about it that way. Clear thinking, focus, creativity and good judgment are built through challenge, when the brain is asked to stretch beyond routine rather than run on autopilot. That slight mental discomfort is often the sign that the brain is actually being trained, a lot like that good workout burn in your muscles.Think about walking the same loop through a local park every day. At first, your senses are alert. You notice the hills, the trees, the changing light. But after a few loops, your brain checks out. You start planning dinner, replaying emails or running through your to-do list. The walk still feels good, but your brain is no longer being challenged.Routine feels comfortable, but comfort and familiarity alone do not build new brain connections, University of Pittsburgh neurology professor Joanna Fong-Isariyawongse writes for The Conversation.Research in human brain activity shows that electroencephalograms, or EEGs, are remarkably dynamic. When someone learns a new skill, EEG rhythms often become more organized and coordinated. This reflects the brain’s attempt to strengthen pathways needed for that skill.Your brain trains in zones, tooFor decades, scientists believed that the brain’s ability to grow and reorganize, called neuroplasticity, was largely limited to childhood. Once the brain matured, its wiring was thought to be largely fixed.But that idea has been overturned. Decades of research show that adult brains can form new connections and reorganize existing networks, under the right conditions, throughout life.Some of the most influential work in this field comes from enriched environment studies in animals. Rats housed in stimulating environments filled with toys, running wheels and social interaction developed larger, more complex brains than rats kept in standard cages. Their brains adapted because they were regularly exposed to novelty and challenge.Human studies find similar results. Adults who take on genuinely new challenges, such as learning a language, dancing or practicing a musical instrument, show measurable increases in brain volume and connectivity on MRI scans.The takeaway is simple: Repetition keeps the brain running, but novelty pushes the brain to adapt, forcing it to pay attention, learn and problem-solve in new ways. Neuroplasticity thrives when the brain is nudged just beyond its comfort zone.The reality of neural fatigueJust like muscles, the brain has limits. It does not get stronger from endless strain. Real growth comes from the right balance of challenge and recovery.When the brain is pushed for too long without a break — whether that means long work hours, staying locked onto the same task or making nonstop decisions under pressure — performance starts to slip. Focus fades. Mistakes increase. To keep you going, the brain shifts how different regions work together, asking some areas to carry more of the load. But that extra effort can still make the whole network run less smoothly.Neural fatigue is more than feeling tired. Brain imaging studies show that during prolonged mental work, the networks responsible for attention and decision-making begin to slow down, while regions that promote rest and reward-seeking take over. This shift helps explain why mental exhaustion often comes with stronger cravings for quick rewards, like sugary snacks, comfort foods or mindless scrolling. The result is familiar: slower thinking, more mistakes, irritability and mental fog.This is where the muscle analogy becomes especially useful. You wouldn’t do squats for six hours straight, because your leg muscles would eventually give out. As they work, they build up byproducts that make each contraction a little less effective until you finally have to stop. Your brain behaves in a similar way.Likewise, in the brain, when the same cognitive circuits are overused, chemical signals build up, communication slows and learning stalls.But rest allows those strained circuits to reset and function more smoothly over time. And taking breaks from a taxing activity does not interrupt learning. In fact, breaks are critical for efficient learning.The crucial importance of restAmong all forms of rest, sleep is the most powerful.Sleep is the brain’s night shift. While you rest, the brain takes out the trash through a special cleanup system called the glymphatic system that clears away waste and harmful proteins. Sleep also restores glycogen, a critical fuel source for brain cells.And importantly, sleep is when essential repair work happens. Growth hormone surges during deep sleep, supporting tissue repair. Immune cells regroup and strengthen their activity.During REM sleep, the stage of sleep linked to dreaming, the brain replays patterns from the day to consolidate memories. This process is critical not only for cognitive skills like learning an instrument but also for physical skills like mastering a move in sports.On the other hand, chronic sleep deprivation impairs attention, disrupts decision-making and alters the hormones that regulate appetite and metabolism. This is why fatigue drives sugar cravings and late-night snacking.Sleep is not an optional wellness practice. It is a biological requirement for brain performance.Exercise feeds the brain, tooExercise strengthens the brain as well as the body.Physical activity increases levels of brain-derived neurotrophic factor, or BDNF, a protein that acts like fertilizer for neurons. It promotes the growth of new connections, increases blood flow, reduces inflammation and helps the brain remain adaptable across one’s lifespan.This is why exercise is one of the strongest lifestyle tools for protecting cognitive health.Train, recover, repeatThe most important lesson from this science is simple. Your brain is not passively wearing down with age. It is constantly remodeling itself in response to how you use it. Every new challenge and skill you try, every real break, every good night of sleep sends a signal that growth is still expected.You do not need expensive brain training programs or radical lifestyle changes. Small, consistent habits matter more. Try something unfamiliar. Vary your routines. Take breaks before exhaustion sets in. Move your body. Treat sleep as nonnegotiable.So the next time you lace up your shoes for a familiar walk, consider taking a different path. The scenery may change only slightly, but your brain will notice. That small detour is often all it takes to turn routine into training.The brain stays adaptable throughout life. Cognitive resilience is not fixed at birth or locked in early adulthood. It is something you can shape.If you want a sharper, more creative, more resilient brain, you do not need to wait for a breakthrough drug or a perfect moment. You can start now, with choices that tell your brain that growth is still the plan.This story was produced by The Conversation and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

OurQuadCities.com Smithfield Foods and its employees raise $118,848 for United Way OurQuadCities.com

Smithfield Foods and its employees raise $118,848 for United Way

Smithfield Foods and its employees have raised $118,848 for United Way of West Central Illinois, a news release says. Each year, Smithfield provides tens of thousands of dollars in nutritional food and monetary donations to regional nonprofits in the greater Monmouth, Illinois, community. This list includes: ReCharge Teen Center; Special Olympics; River Bend Food Bank; [...]

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Windy conditions no match for Davenport St. Patrick's Day participants

This year will be the 40th Annual St. Patrick's Day Grand Parade, the only one in the US that bridges two states.

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Suspected arson destroys Rock Island family's St. Patrick's Day parade float

The McGuire family says a man threw a Molotov cocktail at their trailer early Thursday morning. They got right to work on a new float for this weekend's event.

Quad-City Times Quad-City Times

Davenport felon sentences to federal prison for possessing firearms

A 27-year-old Davenport man has been sentenced to federal prison after admitting to a charge of being a felon in possession of a firearm.

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It's National Girl Scout Day

We're celebrating Girl Scouts and Troop 3866 explains the significance of Girl Scout cookie day.

WVIK Ottumwa International Film Festival returns for a 2nd year WVIK

Ottumwa International Film Festival returns for a 2nd year

The second annual Ottumwa International Film Festival returns to the Bridge View Center March 20-21 for a two-day celebration of cinema.

Quad-City Times Davenport street gang member sentenced to more than 14 years in federal prison Quad-City Times

Davenport street gang member sentenced to more than 14 years in federal prison

A Davenport street gang member was sentenced to more than 14 years in prison after pleading guilty to possessing ammunition as a felon in connection with a 2023 shooting incident.

Quad-City Times Quad-City Times

Davenport approves wholesale in commercial with special use permit

Davenport will allow wholesale in commercial districts as a special use. A commercial real estate broker hopes it will prime vacant big box stores in Davenport for redevelopment.

WVIK Why 'Sinners' should win best picture (but probably won't) — and more Oscar predictions WVIK

Why 'Sinners' should win best picture (but probably won't) — and more Oscar predictions

NPR critics share their hopes and predictions for the 2026 Academy Awards, which air on Sunday.

WVIK Countries are negotiating rules to mine the deep sea. The U.S. is pushing ahead alone WVIK

Countries are negotiating rules to mine the deep sea. The U.S. is pushing ahead alone

With growing interest in mining critical metals from the seafloor, countries are now negotiating international rules. The Trump administration is forging ahead on its own, speeding up environmental review for mining the fragile ecosystem.

Quad-City Times Augustana student has film selected for streaming by Roku Quad-City Times

Augustana student has film selected for streaming by Roku

Sawyer Carver, a 20-year-old filmmaker at Augustana, is working on films heading to Roku.

Quad-City Times Moline School District gets rare visit from the Illinois State Board of Education Quad-City Times

Moline School District gets rare visit from the Illinois State Board of Education

The Moline-Coal Valley School District was only two schools to be the host site for the Illinois State Board of Education in the whole state. Read what they had to say about their visit.

Quad-City Times Quad-City Times

High Wind Warning until FRI 3:00 PM CDT

High Winds Expected to Impact Travel and Cause Power Outages Until 3 PM CDT

WVIK Four confirmed dead after U.S. military aircraft goes down in Iraq WVIK

Four confirmed dead after U.S. military aircraft goes down in Iraq

The U.S. Central Command confirmed that at least four of six crew members on the KC-135 aircraft were dead, after the refueling plane went down in western Iraq on Thursday.

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4 confirmed dead after U.S. military aircraft goes down in Iraq

The U.S. Central Command confirmed that at least four of six crew members on the KC-135 aircraft were dead, after the refueling plane went down in western Iraq on Thursday.

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A Knight of the Grip

This is Roald Tweet on Rock Island.Had it not been for the Great Chicago Fire of 1871, Captain Kendrick W. Brown might have lived out his life running a…

WVIK It's Chalamet vs. ballet in this week's news quiz. Are your answers en pointe? WVIK

It's Chalamet vs. ballet in this week's news quiz. Are your answers en pointe?

Meanwhile, if you've been paying attention to medicine, basketball and the British Parliament, you'll get at least three questions right this week.

WVIK Cuba will release 51 people from prison in an unexpected move WVIK

Cuba will release 51 people from prison in an unexpected move

The announcement was made just hours before Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel is scheduled to speak early Friday "to address national and international issues."

Quad-City Times Quad-City Times

High Wind Warning from FRI 1:09 AM CDT until FRI 3:00 PM CDT

High Winds Persist Until 3 PM CDT in Illinois and Iowa

OurQuadCities.com What happens when all the pennies are gone? OurQuadCities.com

What happens when all the pennies are gone?

Months after the last of the United States' 1-cent coins were pressed, some states are beginning to offer their own 2 cents on the penny problem by setting rounding guidance for cash purchases.

WVIK A record number of political parties register for Haiti's first election in a decade WVIK

A record number of political parties register for Haiti's first election in a decade

A record 280 political parties had registered by Thursday's deadline to participate in Haiti's first general election in a decade, hopeful for a chance to help ease their country's multiple crises.

Thursday, March 12th, 2026

WVIK NYC's Mamdani condemns Tuberville's anti-Muslim posts as "bigotry" WVIK

NYC's Mamdani condemns Tuberville's anti-Muslim posts as "bigotry"

Speaking at a public iftar dinner, held to break the daily Ramadan fast, New York City Mayor Mamdani described Sen. Tuberville's anti-Muslim rhetoric as "bigotry" and "hatred."

North Scott Press North Scott Press

The Hidden Revenue Leak on Most Contractor Websites

(NewsUSA) - In today’s competitive construction and home services market, contractors are spending more than ever on digital visibility — from paid search campaigns to local SEO and review management. Yet a growing number are unknowingly losing revenue not because of poor marketing, but because of structural flaws in their own websites.Industry analysts at iLocal report a consistent pattern across contractor website audits: strong traffic, steady search visibility — and significant underperformance in lead capture. The culprit isn’t always obvious. In fact, it’s often hidden in plain sight.The Conversion DisconnectMost contractor websites were built to showcase work: photo galleries, service lists, certifications, and company history. While these elements build credibility, they don’t necessarily convert visitors into inquiries.The hidden revenue leak stems from what digital strategists call “conversion friction.” Common issues include:No clear primary call-to-action above the fold  Multiple competing buttons (“Call Now,” “Request a Quote,” “Contact Us”) creating confusion  Long, complicated estimate request forms  Slow mobile performance  Lack of clear service area messaging  When a homeowner lands on a contractor’s website — especially in urgent situations like roof damage or HVAC failure — they are looking for clarity and speed. If the path to contact is unclear or cumbersome, they simply move on to the next provider.The Mobile Reality Contractors Can’t IgnoreMore than half of home service searches now happen on mobile devices. Yet many contractor websites still prioritize desktop layouts with heavy images that slow load times and cluttered navigation that doesn’t translate well to smaller screens.Every additional second of load time increases abandonment rates. For contractors bidding on high-ticket projects, even a small drop in conversion rate can translate into tens of thousands of dollars in missed annual revenue.A contractor averaging $15,000 per project needs only a handful of lost inquiries per month to feel a measurable financial impact.The Follow-Up GapAnother overlooked revenue leak is what happens after a lead is submitted. Many contractor websites lack automated confirmations, internal routing systems, or CRM integrations. Inquiries sit in inboxes, get buried in spam folders, or go unanswered for days.Speed to response has become a competitive differentiator. Studies consistently show that businesses responding within minutes dramatically increase their chance of securing the job. Yet many contractors still operate with manual follow-up processes designed for a pre-digital era.The Shift Toward Revenue-Driven Website ArchitectureForward-thinking contractors are beginning to treat their websites not as digital brochures, but as revenue systems. This shift includes:Streamlined, mobile-first design  One dominant call-to-action per page  Shortened forms with fewer required fields  Click-to-call prominence  Automated lead notifications and tracking  Clear trust signals — reviews, warranties, licensing, and recent projects  Some firms are even implementing multi-channel capture strategies, allowing homeowners to connect via phone, form, SMS, or live chat depending on urgency.A Competitive Divide Is EmergingIn saturated local markets, the difference between a 4% and 8% website conversion rate can double inbound opportunity without increasing marketing spend. Contractors who optimize lead capture infrastructure often see immediate improvements — not from attracting more traffic, but from converting the traffic they already have.The hidden revenue leak on contractor websites isn’t always dramatic. It’s incremental. Silent. Ongoing.But in a market where margins, labor costs, and material pricing are under pressure, plugging that leak may be one of the highest-ROI decisions a contractor can make this year.To learn more, visit https://ilocal.net/

KWQC TV-6  Comcast to expand network to Quad Cities KWQC TV-6

Comcast to expand network to Quad Cities

Comcast announced plans to expand its network to the Quad Cities.

WQAD.com WQAD.com

Suspected arson destroys Rock Island family's St. Patrick's Day parade float

The McGuire family says a man threw a Molotov cocktail at their trailer early Thursday morning. They got right to work on a new float for this weekend's event.

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The Iowa Lakes Community College baseball team will return Friday

The Iowa Lakes Community College baseball team will return Friday. It will be their first game back since losing a teammate in a fatal bus crash last month.

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Rock Island seeking public comment on rail crossing study

The study hopes to improve safety and reduce delays at 29 crossings.

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Community leaders discuss the growing need to address housing stability in the Quad Cities

Project NOW leaders, the City of Moline and other community stakeholders provided a six-week update after opening an emergency winter shelter for those in need.

KWQC TV-6  New Illinois map celebrates 100 years of Route 66 KWQC TV-6

New Illinois map celebrates 100 years of Route 66

The Illinois Department of Transportation announced a new Illinois Route 66 map to celebrate the road’s 100th birthday.

WVIK China slams Trump's trade investigation, as it approves a 5-year economic plan WVIK

China slams Trump's trade investigation, as it approves a 5-year economic plan

China's Foreign Ministry criticized the Trump administration's trade investigation as a "pretext" for tariffs. Meanwhile, China is moving ahead with a five-year plan that may rankle trade partners.

OurQuadCities.com OurQuadCities.com

Silvis man sentenced to five years in federal prison on gun charge

A Silvis man was sentenced on Thursday to five years in federal prison for possessing a firearm as a felon. According to public court documents and evidence presented at sentencing, John Able Rubingh, Sr., 45, ran from police at a convenience store and dropped a loaded pistol. Rubingh then rushed at an officer and struggled [...]

KWQC TV-6 KWQC TV-6

Silvis man sentenced to 5 years in federal prison for firearm possession

A Silvis man has been sentenced to federal prison.

KWQC TV-6  Davenport man sentenced to 4.5 years in federal prison for firearm possession as a felon KWQC TV-6

Davenport man sentenced to 4.5 years in federal prison for firearm possession as a felon

A Davenport man has been sentenced to federal prison.

KWQC TV-6  QCCA Expo Center to host annual Flower and Garden Show KWQC TV-6

QCCA Expo Center to host annual Flower and Garden Show

The QCCA Expo Center is set to host the annual Flower and Garden Show.

KWQC TV-6  Project NOW emergency overnight shelter serves over 200 people in 6 weeks KWQC TV-6

Project NOW emergency overnight shelter serves over 200 people in 6 weeks

Project Now and city leaders provided an update on the organization’s emergency overnight winter shelter.

KWQC TV-6 ‘It’s a sign. It’s not a chief’: Native American against Black Hawk statue going up KWQC TV-6

‘It’s a sign. It’s not a chief’: Native American against Black Hawk statue going up

We continue to get viewer emails and phone calls about the future of the Black Hawk statue.

OurQuadCities.com OurQuadCities.com

Rock Island fire, still under investigation, may be arson case

Shortly after 4 a.m. Wednesday, crews responded to a mobile home fire on the 2900 block of 8th Street, according to Rock Island Police Chief Timothy J. McCloud. McCloud told Our Quad Cities News that little information is available, but the fire remains under investigation and "we are treating it as an arson at this [...]

KWQC TV-6  QC wildlife gets a second chance thanks to rehabilitators and a Facebook group KWQC TV-6

QC wildlife gets a second chance thanks to rehabilitators and a Facebook group

A local Facebook group is helping connect people who find injured or underweight wild animals with licensed rehabilitators who can provide care.

OurQuadCities.com OurQuadCities.com

Accumulating snow looking more and more likely Sunday night

It's been a wild weather ride recently in the Quad Cities - and that ride doesn't look to slow down anytime soon! After a very windy Friday, our focus shifts to accumulating snow Sunday night. And the wind picks back up again too. Parts of the Midwest will likely be under a Blizzard Warning Sunday [...]

OurQuadCities.com Former deputy files suit; accuses Scott County sheriff, attorney, of wrongful firing OurQuadCities.com

Former deputy files suit; accuses Scott County sheriff, attorney, of wrongful firing

A former Scott County sheriff's deputy has filed suit against the sheriff and the Scott County attorney, saying he was fired in retaliation for expressing concerns about the sheriff's department, according to a lawsuit filed in Scott County Court. Plaintiff Joshua Wall, of Bettendorf, filed suit Feb. 20 against defendants Scott County Sheriff Tim Lane [...]

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Inside Iowa Politics: the two ‘front runners’ to become next governor

Iowa's two expected front runners to become the next governor, Rob Sand and Randy Feenstra, filed their signature petitions this week.

Quad-City Times Man charged for allegedly sexually abusing, providing marijuana to 13-year-old girl Quad-City Times

Man charged for allegedly sexually abusing, providing marijuana to 13-year-old girl

A Davenport man has been arrested after he allegedly provided marijuana to and sexually abused a 13-year-old girl over a one- to two-week period, police said.

KWQC TV-6 KWQC TV-6

Sheriff corrects earlier account of school bus incident with updated timeline

The Whiteside County Sheriff’s Office has issued an clarification of the timeline of a bus incident saying the previous update had inconsistencies based on miscommunication.

KWQC TV-6  New childcare center will connect seniors and children in Rock Island KWQC TV-6

New childcare center will connect seniors and children in Rock Island

Friendship Manor is partnering with SAL Community Services to launch an intergenerational care program designed to bring seniors and children together through shared activities.

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Carrie Underwood to perform at 2026 John Deere Classic

Carrie Underwood will perform on July 4 at the 2026 John Deere Classic in Silvis. The golf tournament runs July 1–5, with Old Dominion set to perform July 5.

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Police officer thwarts a nearly $40K scam targeting elderly woman

Ofc. Dion Brooks has served as the department's Elderly Services Officer since the program was revived in July 2024.

OurQuadCities.com Take a look at Moline's emergency shelter halfway report OurQuadCities.com

Take a look at Moline's emergency shelter halfway report

It's been six weeks since the emergency overnight winter shelter in Moline opened, which marks the halfway point to its closing on April 15. Project NOW and other local partners have provided the staffing and resources to make for what they say is a 'successful' operation so far.Staff have documented the demographics of their guests, [...]

OurQuadCities.com The Heart of the Story: Gold medal mania OurQuadCities.com

The Heart of the Story: Gold medal mania

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. A Quad-City man hasn't let his disability get [...]

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Rockridge choir director named Illinois Outstanding Music Educator of the year

Curtis Fischer-Oelschlaeger was also named the Illinois junior high National Federation of State High School Associations’ Outstanding Music Educator of the year.

Quad-City Times Davenport police arrest, charge man for grooming and sexual exploitation Quad-City Times

Davenport police arrest, charge man for grooming and sexual exploitation

A Moline man was arrested after asking for nude photos from an undercover officer posing as a 14-year-old girl.

WVIK ISU basketball star Audi Crooks brings energy and inspiration on and off the court WVIK

ISU basketball star Audi Crooks brings energy and inspiration on and off the court

Iowa State's women's basketball star Audi Crooks is one of the leading scorers in the country. The spotlight on her has also brought criticism, but it has helped Crooks emerge as a role model for young players.

KWQC TV-6  Davenport Public Works warns of sanitary sewer overflow KWQC TV-6

Davenport Public Works warns of sanitary sewer overflow

Davenport Public Works said a sanitary sewer overflow happened Thursday.

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Tornado confirmed in western Illinois during Tuesday's storms as Prtizker tours Kankakee

The National Weather Service confirmed a brief tornado in Knox County while the governor surveyed damage in the eastern part of the state.

OurQuadCities.com OurQuadCities.com

HIGH WIND WARNING issued for Quad Cities

We're looking at strong winds coming in for Friday morning in the Quad Cities. Winds will gust up to about 55 mph and could cause some minor damage around the area. The warning is in effect from 4 a.m. until 3p.m. on Friday. Here's a look at the counties included in the warning: And other [...]

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Rockridge teacher earns Illinois statewide awards

Curtis Fischer-Oelschlaeger was named Illinois Outstand Music Educator of the Year and the Illinois winner of the NFHS Junior High Music Educator of the Year.

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Roads to be closed in Davenport and Rock Island for St. Patrick's Day parade

The parade and race routes will be closed from 8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday.

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Last Picture House joins rare group of U.S. cinemas screening 35mm films

The Davenport cinema is one of only two theatres in Iowa that can show 35mm films. They're kicking things off with showings of "2001: A Space Odyssey" March 17 & 18.

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Cheapest gas stations in every state Mar. 12, 2026

Elena Babanova // Shutterstock Cheapest gas stations in every state Mar. 12, 2026 Anyone who drives a car understands the sting of having to fill up their tank and pulling into the gas station, only to discover that gas prices have skyrocketed. Paying extra for gas means you have less to spend on other things, which, over time, can really put a crimp in your budget.Cheap Insurance explored some of the reasons behind major changes in gas prices, and compiled a list of the cheapest gas stations in every state using data from Gas Buddy.Gas prices fluctuate based on several factors, including the cost of the key ingredient, crude oil, as well as the available supply and demand for gasoline. If the price of oil rises, a major refinery goes offline, or more drivers are hitting the road, for example, then the cost will increase.In the first half of 2022, a unique confluence of events led to a surge in gas prices. The increased demand stemming from the COVID-19 pandemic, Russia's invasion of Ukraine, and a slowdown in oil production all contributed to a national all-time high of $4.93 per gallon on average in June 2022.Seasons also affect gas prices. Demand tends to drop in winter, but the cost also falls because gas stations switch to a different blend of gasoline that's optimal for lower temperatures—and has cheaper ingredients.Location also matters. The South and Midwest tend to have the lowest gas prices, while the West, including Hawai'i, has the highest. Californians, in particular, pay more for gas on average than any other state. That's because of its high state excise taxes; its isolation from the country's major pipelines, which causes supply issues; and its requirements that mandate a more environmentally friendly blend of gas that costs more to produce and adds to the price per gallon.No matter where you live, read on to see if you can get a deal on gas near you.Alabama#1. Country Express (1027 Douglas Ave, Brewton): $2.45#2. Circle K (5525 McFarland Blvd, Northport): $2.52#3. BP (12515 Boyd Rd, Elrod): $2.69Alaska#1. Alaska Fuel Services (809 Cushman St, Fairbanks): $3.39#2. Essential 1 ( 2858 E Palmer-Wasilla Hwy, Wasilla): $3.57#3. Gas 'n Go Fleet (5631 Glacier Hwy, Juneau): $3.64Arizona#1. Chevron (2 N Pipe Spring Rd, Fredonia): $2.89#2. Love's Travel Stop (2950 N Toltec Rd, Eloy): $2.99#2. 7-Eleven (10800 N Frontage Rd, Yuma): $2.99Arkansas#1. CITGO (6030 Heber Springs Rd W, Quitman): $2.41#2. E-Z Mart (723 N 13th St, Rogers): $2.46#3. Littlefield Express (3107 Wheeler Ave, Fort Smith): $2.49California#1. ARCO (475 N Mountain Ave, Upland): $3.99#2. Seeley Market (1805 W Evan Hewes Hwy, Seeley): $4.09#2. Valley Gasoline (2023 Monticello Rd, Napa): $4.09Colorado#1. Exxon (18561 US-40, Golden): $2.24#2. 7-Eleven (7725 Fountain Mesa Rd, Fountain): $2.49#3. King Soopers (6110 Firestone Blvd, Firestone): $2.69Connecticut#1. Exxon (682 Queen St, Southington): $2.95#1. Mobil (87 W Main St, Niantic): $2.95#3. CITGO (237 S Main St, Middletown): $2.99Delaware#1. Costco (900 Center Blvd S, Newark): $2.73#2. BJ's (2131 Kirkwood Hwy, Elsmere): $2.83#3. Liberty (5782 Forrest Ave, Hartly): $3.10Florida#1. Chevron (3008 US-98 W, Santa Rosa Beach): $2.47#2. Shell (14731 US-1, Juno Beach): $2.69#2. Shell (1554 Scenic Gulf Dr, Miramar Beach): $2.69Georgia#1. Lindale Food & Tobacco (3021 Maple Rd SE, Lindale): $2.49#1. Marathon (13869 Oglethorpe Hwy, Midway): $2.49#3. CITGO @ EZ Shop (2121 Shorter Ave, Rome): $2.54Hawaii#1. Sam's Club (1000 Kamehameha Hwy, Pearl City): $3.85#1. Sam's Club (1131 Kuala St, Pearl City): $3.85#3. Costco (94-1331 Ka Uka Blvd, Waipio): $3.89Idaho#1. Costco (2485 E Lincoln Rd, Idaho Falls): $2.85#1. Sam's Club (700 E 17th St, Idaho Falls): $2.85#3. Texaco (3480 E 17th St, Ammon): $2.94Illinois#1. Amoco (1702 W Evergreen Ave, Effingham): $2.49#2. Phillips 66 (1200 N Keller Dr, Effingham): $2.55#3. Flying J (1701 W Evergreen Ave, Effingham): $2.79Indiana#1. Marathon (6460 W Kilgore Ave, Muncie): $2.55#2. Marathon (6500 S IN-67 , Muncie): $2.57#3. Speedway (1900 S Tillotson Ave, Muncie): $2.59Iowa#1. Pit Stop (215 S Rerick Ave, Primghar): $2.39#2. Malvern FAST STOP Express (200 W Main St, Malvern): $2.64#3. Casey's (714 S Main St, Holstein): $2.79Kansas#1. Odin Store (890 NE 140 Rd, Claflin): $2.29#2. Jump Start (1000 Main St, Great Bend): $2.38#3. Co-op (9601-9777 S 135th St W, Clearwater): $2.45Kentucky#1. BP (2655 Evergreen Rd, Frankfort): $2.45#2. Pilot (249 W Cumberland Gap Pkwy , Corbin): $2.49#2. BP (405 Waller Ave, Lexington): $2.49Louisiana#1. Let's Stop & Shop (3912 Coliseum Blvd, Alexandria): $2.29#1. Chevron (4411 Coliseum Blvd, Alexandria): $2.29#3. Exxon (2217 Old US-90, Vinton): $2.49Maine#1. Fabian (416 Canaan Rd, Skowhegan): $3.04#2. Shell (56 Main St, Machias): $3.09#2. CITGO (689 Main St, Corinth): $3.09Maryland#1. Fuel King (717 Frederick St, Hagerstown): $2.69#2. Wawa (10304 Sharpsburg Pike, Hagerstown): $2.75#2. Wawa (10335 Supercenter Dr, Hagerstown): $2.75Massachusetts#1. Speedway (296 N Pearl St, Brockton): $2.62#2. Mobil (303 N Pearl St, Brockton): $2.65#3. Quik Stop (350 Main St, Hudson): $2.76Michigan#1. Speedway (481 S Church St, Coloma): $2.67#2. Marathon (5812 19 Mile Rd, Sterling Heights): $2.79#3. Sheetz (19001 East 9 Mile Rd, Eastpointe): $2.89Minnesota#1. Sinclair (830 1st St, Nashwauk): $2.37#1. Sinclair (210 N 1st St, Keewatin): $2.37#3. BP (498 MAIN ST E, Clarks Grove): $2.58Mississippi#1. Marathon (6478 US-11, Carriere): $2.19#2. Reed's Market (300 W Bankhead St, New Albany): $2.59#2. Valero (1615 14th St, Meridian): $2.59Missouri#1. QuikTrip (1001 SW Blue Pkwy, Lees Summit): $2.49#2. Empire Energy (320 W Pierce St, Lebanon): $2.54#3. Sam's Club (745 W El Camino Alto St, Springfield): $2.73Montana#1. Costco (2505 Catron St, Bozeman): $2.85#2. Mars Gas & Grocery (510 2nd St, Sweet Grass): $2.88#3. Maverik (211 E 1st Ave, Plentywood): $2.98Nebraska#1. Valero (2411 N 30th St, Omaha): $2.29#2. Cenex (709 N Brown, Minden): $2.42#3. Stage Coach Stop (320 M St, Gering): $2.67Nevada#1. 76 (932 Fir St, Carlin): $2.79#2. Sinclair (1750 Silver Eagle Dr, Elko): $2.89#3. Shell (1690 Great Basin Blvd, Ely): $3.10New Hampshire#1. Irving (73 Lafayette Rd, North Hampton): $2.68#2. CITGO (567 Lafayette Rd, Hampton): $2.79#3. Jones General Store (107 Depot Rd, East Kingston): $2.85New Jersey#1. Jersey Oil (1261 Teaneck Rd, Teaneck): $2.57#2. Wawa (41 Hampton House Rd, Newton): $2.73#3. Gas (381 Morris Ave, Elizabeth): $2.99New Mexico#1. Circle K (3440 Isleta Blvd SW, Albuquerque): $2.37#2. Phillips 66 (1201 N Chicago Ave, Portales): $2.39#3. Valero (305 N Guadalupe St, Santa Fe): $2.59New York#1. Sunoco (301 W Merrick Rd, Valley Stream): $2.65#2. 7-Eleven (5650 Sunrise Hwy , Sayville): $2.85#2. Gulf (239-15 Jamaica Ave, Bellerose): $2.85North Carolina#1. Circle K (1711 Eastwood Rd, Wilmington): $2.44#2. Wawa (1079 Western Blvd, Jacksonville): $2.49#3. 7-Eleven (1320 Benvenue Rd, Rocky Mount): $2.58North Dakota#1. Casey's (4405 45th St S, Fargo): $2.73#1. Casey's (2401 45th St S, Fargo): $2.73#1. Casey's (5680 23rd Ave S, Fargo): $2.73Ohio#1. Dhiman (151 12th St, Campbell): $2.45#2. Gateway Gas Mart (3216 South Ave, Youngstown): $2.56#2. Meijer (7240 W Central Ave, Sylvania): $2.56Oklahoma#1. Love's Country Stores (1001 W 3rd St, Elk City): $2.25#2. Popeye's Conv Store (1491 E Alameda St , Norman): $2.29#3. 81 Stop (501 N Choctaw Ave, El Reno): $2.39Oregon#1. TA (5945 US-30 BUS, Huntington): $3.43#2. Sinclair (151 Smith St N, Vale): $3.47#3. Love's Travel Stop (1041 NW Washington Ave, Ontario): $3.49Pennsylvania#1. Speedway (1134 West Chester Pike, Havertown): $2.79#2. CITGO (3158 Lincoln Hwy E, Paradise): $2.85#2. Turkey Hill (941 Gap Newport Pike, Gap): $2.85Rhode Island#1. Express Gas (1345 Wampanoag Tr, Riverside): $3.09#2. Shell (473 Reservoir Ave, Cranston): $3.19#2. Gulf (35 Plainfield St, Providence): $3.19South Carolina#1. Marathon (4100B SC-544, Myrtle Beach): $2.38#2. Exxon (2401 W Palmetto St, Florence): $2.45#3. Speedway (995 Osceola St, Myrtle Beach): $2.49South Dakota#1. Main Stop (411 Main St , Scotland): $2.79#1. Conoco (300 West 23rd St, Yankton): $2.79#3. Costco (3700 S Grange Ave, Sioux Falls): $2.82Tennessee#1. goodstop by Casey's (6432 Asheville Hwy, Knoxville): $2.37#2. goodstop by Casey's (2940 Tazewell Pike, Knoxville): $2.49#2. goodstop by Casey's (8541 Middlebrook Pike, Knoxville): $2.49Texas#1. Chevron (11688 Barker Cypress Rd, Cypress): $2.09#2. Valero (76065 SH-289 N , Pottsboro): $2.19#3. Valero (8402 Fairbanks N Houston Rd, Houston): $2.35Utah#1. Pilot Thomas Logistics (352 W Main St, Price): $2.87#2. Costco (1160 N 1000 W, Logan): $2.89#2. Sam's Club (1313 S University Ave, Provo): $2.89Vermont#1. CITGO (44 US-4, West Bridgewater): $2.99#2. CITGO (510 South St, Bennington): $3.13#3. 305 South (305 South St, Bennington): $3.15Virginia#1. Safeway (12821 Braemar Village Plaza, Bristow): $2.69#2. 7-Eleven (2444 Nimmo Parkway, Virginia Beach): $2.76#3. BP (2009 Buckley Hall Rd, Cobbs Creek): $2.79Washington#1. Costco (301 5th St, Clarkston): $3.49#2. Wheelers Smoke N Gas (7453 Sunnyside Mabton Hwy, Mabton): $3.55#3. Conoco (810 W 1st Ave, Toppenish): $3.58West Virginia#1. Marathon (716 Seneca Tr (US-219), Marlinton): $2.69#2. Amoco (1000 Hackers Creek Road, Jane Lew): $2.97#2. Walmart (2900 Pike St, Parkersburg): $2.97Wisconsin#1. Amoco (101 W STATE ST, Black Creek): $2.47#2. Amoco (907 W Greenfield Ave, Milwaukee): $2.49#3. HomeTown (2325 Racine St, Racine): $2.76Wyoming#1. Smith's (1425 S US-89, Jackson): $2.39#2. Loaf 'N Jug (714 S 4th St, Douglas): $2.59#3. Homax Oil (207 W Yellowstone Hwy, Douglas): $2.69This story was produced by CheapInsurance.com and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

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