Saturday, June 27th, 2026 | |
| Check your quarters: Rare 'July 4th' coins entering circulationOnly 250,000 of these special quarters are being released into circulation. |
| Moline to host Party in the Park to celebrate summer and America’s 250th birthdayA Moline annual summertime tradition is returning again this year that also pays tribute to America’s 250th birthday. |
| Davenport captain promoted to assistant chief of policeA 27-year-veteran of the Davenport Police Department has been promoted. |
| Jo Daviess County Sheriff’s deputy injured after crashThe deputy was responding to an emergency call of a reported missing juvenile. |
| Henry County, Illinois first responders to participate in training, SaturdayCrews will be participating in an emergency response training today in Henry County. |
| Cooling centers to open up across QCA amid dangerously hot temperaturesThe QCA is gearing up for an active week of weather with dangerous heat and humidity expected to set in beginning Monday. |
| Rockford celebrates July 4 with Eats 'N' Beats celebrationAs part of the ongoing America 250 celebration, Rock Falls Tourism invites residents and visitors to continue honoring the nation's 250th anniversary with an evening of food, entertainment, and fireworks on Thursday, July 2, at the RB&W District Park in downtown Rock Falls, a news release says. The celebration will kick off Fourth of July [...] |
| Double heat dome headed to US: Here's when it'll start, where it'll be worstTwo heat domes are preparing to join forces, sending temperatures soaring around the U.S. next week. Here's where it'll hit hardest. |
| Uzbekistan makes its World Cup debut, a first for Central AsiaThe country is the first Central Asian nation to qualify for the World Cup, and Uzbek fans have reveled in showcasing their country and culture. The country's president calls the team a symbol of the "new Uzbekistan." |
| Nominations sought for annual Fiesta Parade grand marshalThe 73rd Annual Fiesta Parade will be held on Sept. 19, a news release. This community tradition is organized and implemented by the Sauk Valley Area Chamber of Commerce Hispanic Business Leaders Committee. Nominations are being accepted for the 2026 Fiesta Parade grand marshal. Individuals, groups, or organizations who have made a meaningful impact in [...] |
| Bettendorf Middle School student earns 1st place in national documentary competitionLast week at the National History Day National Contest, Bettendorf Middle School student Adrian Gillette brought home first place in the Junior Documentary category. His documentary, "Brought to You by the Letter R: Revolution, Reaction, and Reform in Sesame Street’s Mission to Desegregate Education," documents how the battle to desegregate America’s schools wasn’t fought just on the [...] |
| Tributes to Johnny Cash, Demon Hunters in Adler/RiverCenter lineupTributes to Johnny Cash and the popular Demon Hunters are part of the lineup at The Adler Theatre, Davenport, according to news releases. VenuWorks Presents has announced an evening of dinner and entertainment with "Walkin’ The Line: A Johnny Cash Tribute, Starring Scott Moreau, at the RiverCenter, Davenport. Filled with anecdotes, stories, and history pulled [...] |
| Davenport Civil Rights Exhibit will be at German-American Heritage CenterThe Davenport Civil Rights Traveling Exhibit, which was developed by the Putnam Museum, Davenport, will be featured on the fourth floor of the German American Heritage Center and Museum in July. Visitors can explore the powerful stories, struggles, and triumphs that shaped the fight for equality in the Quad Cities, specifically Davenport. Through photographs, documents, [...] |
| Resignations, hirings and other Moline School District personnel news from June 22See the personnel items from the June 22 agenda of the Moline-Coal Valley School District. The board met at the Moline Education Center. |
| Developer releases renderings of potential plans for the former Quad-City Times buildingRenderings show a brand new concept for the former newspaper building. |
| Memories of Muscatine: A camera from 1891This week for Memories of Muscatine: A camera once owned by Muscatine photographer Oscar Grossheim. |
| Bi-CAN hosts 2026 BioBlitz at Wapsi River Environmental Education CenterThe Bi-State Conservation Action Network (Bi-CAN) will host its semi-annual BioBlitz, a 24-hour community science event focused on documenting the biodiversity of the Quad Cities region. Participants will work alongside scientists, naturalists, educators, and conservation professionals to identify and record plants, animals, fungi, and other organisms found throughout the site. The event will feature expert-led [...] |
| Local government roundup: Clinton starts over on city admin search, Davenport approves Rockingham Road grantClinton restarts its city administrator search, Davenport approves a Rockingham Road grant program, and Muscatine considers demolition or stabilization of 17 buildings. |
| If a Lyme disease vaccine gets approved, how would it go over? We asked huntersDrugmakers are working on a potential new shot to prevent the tick-borne illness. How might it fare in the era of vaccine skepticism? |
| Amateurs now conduct most weddings. Here is some basic adviceA marrying couple are more likely than ever to ask a friend to officiate their wedding. Here's how to handle this high-stakes assignment. |
| Illinois State Senator Mike Halpin talks phone bans in schools, education fundingFrom phone bans in K-12 to a tight budget year, Illinois State Senator Mike Halpin speaks on the educational issues discussed during spring session. |
| Revitalization experts to visit Clinton for study of downtown areaDowntown development will be the focus when five downtown revitalization specialists from the Iowa Economic Development Authority's Downtown Resource Center visit Clinton, a news release says. The City of Clinton, Downtown Clinton, and Grow Clinton have teamed to coordinate this downtown assessment scheduled for July 7-9. The Assessment is an intense, on-site study of the [...] |
| Holiday drivers may get relief, but not cheap gasDES MOINES, Iowa -- The fuel for a Fourth of July getaway may feel a little less expensive than it did in May — but not by much. GasBuddy projects the national average price of gasoline will be about $3.75 per gallon on July 4, putting this Independence Day on track to be the second [...] |
| Writer's BlockThis is Roald Tweet on Rock Island.Like all humans who put words on paper, I suffer from bouts of Writer's Block. I think, how many Rock Island Lines can… |
| As Supreme Court expands Trump's immigration power, experts warn of steeper U.S. population declineThe U.S. population was already aging and tilting toward decline. After the Supreme Court confirmed Trump's power to deport hundreds of thousands of foreign migrants, population decline could accelerate. |
| Inside a secretive Ukrainian team launching deep drone strikes at RussiaUkraine's long-range drones are striking deep inside Russia, up to 1,200 miles away, hitting oil refineries and depots. NPR recently spent time with one of the Ukrainian strike teams launching drones at Russian targets. |
| Venezuelans in Colombia scramble to send aid as earthquakes death toll increasesAid efforts are intensifying after twin earthquakes killed nearly 1,000 in Venezuela, with international teams arriving but a slow government response hampering relief on the ground. |
| 4 ways to get creative with your leftovers (and save money on food)Don't let your leftovers go to waste. Cookbook authors share clever storage techniques — like an "Eat Me First" box in your fridge — and cooking tricks to help you make the most of your food scraps. |
Friday, June 26th, 2026 | |
| U.S. strikes Iran in response to a drone attack on a shipThe U.S. struck Iran on Friday in response to a drone attack a day earlier on a cargo ship in the Strait of Hormuz. It's the most significant test yet to an interim understanding reached a week ago by the two countries. |
| Resources available for displaced residents in MuscatineAfter a partial collapse on East Second Street destabilized nearby buildings, residents were told to evacuate last week. |
| Resources available for displaced Muscatine residentsAfter a partial collapse on East Second Street destabilized nearby buildings, residents were told to evacuate last week. |
| U of Iowa researchers find that moms often unbuckle to care for infants, young kids in the carMotor-vehicle crashes remain a frequent cause of pregnancy complications and maternal death in the U.S. A new study looked into seatbelt habits for new moms. |
| Monmouth rebuilding after tornado, as businesses race to repair damaged rooftopsNine days after severe storms tore through Monmouth, damaged businesses are drying out, roofs are being repaired and neighbors continue helping one another recover. |
| Pete Buttigieg and his kids subject to CPS, police investigation after false reportButtigieg, a potential 2028 Democratic presidential contender, shared his family's experience when police and Child Protective Services came to his home investigating an anonymous tip that was false. |
| Our QC Crime Watch: Adoptive parents accused of child endangerment: Episode 70Watch crime reporters Linda Cook and Sharon Wren talk about crime and courts in our area with the latest episode of the Our Quad Cities Crime Watch Podcast. In this episode Linda and Sharon discuss: updates on: To view, click the video above or watch on-the-go on Spotify. The QC Crime Watch Podcast | Pod |
| Jury convicts man in Moline double-homicideHe was charged in the deaths of Giovanni Flores, 17, and Zachary Meincke, 19, both of Moline. |
| | Idaho Behavioral Health Council asks lawmakers to prioritize rural communities with opioid fundingThe Idaho Behavioral Health Council made recommendations for use of funds obtained from a state settlement with opioid manufacturers. (Getty Images)A state advisory council will urge the Idaho Legislature to use its opioid settlement funds to target rural communities next year as it considers a number of project proposals. The Idaho Behavioral Health Council brings together Idaho’s three branches of government — legislative, judicial and executive — to provide recommendations to lawmakers about how to improve mental health and substance use issues statewide. On Friday, the group provided its recommended priorities for the state’s opioid settlement fund — which was created from a nationwide settlement with opioid manufacturers and may be used for certain, approved mitigation for opioids. Last year, the Legislature approved spending $6.8 million of opioid settlement funds, according to a memo from the Division of Financial Management. Idaho secures $24M more in settlement with opioid manufacturer Purdue Pharma “In Idaho, we have pockets of service,” said Sara Omundson, director of the state court system and co-chair of the council. “And so one of the things that I think should be a priority for how we spend these funds is that we focus on services that are available statewide and specifically services that are available in rural and frontier areas.” The majority of council members voted to recommend top prioritization of projects focused on prevention for high-risk populations, behavioral health support for first responders, and behavioral health workforce development. The council solicited public input for uses of funds, and received 46 specific proposals for projects, said Cheryl Foster, project manager for the council. However, the council may only provide high-level recommendations for prioritization of topics, rather than for specific projects, Omundson said Friday. Sara Omundson was appointed as the administrative director of Idaho courts in July 2016. (Photo courtesy of the Idaho Behavioral Health Council website) The specific projects within those categories may be recommended by the governor in his budget proposal next year or by state agencies in their budget requests. The Idaho Legislature will consider and decide how the funding will ultimately be awarded during the 2027 legislative session, which will begin in January. As the council considered their priority topics, members also voted to include in its recommendations that, within each category, lawmakers consider projects that would be available statewide or targeted to rural and frontier areas. Omundson noted that the state was also in the process of awarding federal Rural Health Transformation grant funding from the ‘Big Beautiful’ law passed last year. “It is a category that I think we really need to have our eye on, and we’re seeing this nationally with the big grant … I think it’s timely that we recommend that they really focus on ensuring that we support those services that are going to be available either statewide or within our rural and frontier areas,” she said. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX. First responder support and prevention topped council’s priorities Dave Jeppesen, former director of the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare, said typically when the Legislature has approved spending from the opioid settlement account, it does so as a one-time expenditure. This means that ongoing programs might not be the best fit for it, he said. “I’m just thinking about what’s the most efficient use of $2 million in the 12 months of fiscal year ‘28,” Jeppesen said. “ … I land somewhere around prevention, which feels like that’s an area that tends to get underfunded because treatment is so important.” Idaho District Judge Gene Petty, who leads Canyon County Mental Health Court, highlighted support for first responders as another goal because of their high risk of suicide. Petty said there’s a section in the settlement agreement that allows funds to support first responders who are affected by their interaction with people with opioid use disorder. Omundson said the criminal justice system is “also looking at workforce throughout the criminal justice system, and how that’s impacting first responders.” “That has a direct tie into whether or not people choose to go into that profession or stay in the profession based on just the level of stress and trauma that they experience while on the job,” she said. Jeppesen said first responders are a critical workforce for those supporting those with opioid addiction. All eight council members present voted to place prevention programs for high-risk individuals and behavioral health support for first responders as top priorities. Five voted for workforce development as the third priority, and three members voted for treatment. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE Courtesy of Idaho Capital Sun |
| Republicans target Iowa Libertarian candidates, urging them to drop out of congressional racesWith Republicans trying to hold onto a narrow majority in the U.S. House, Libertarian candidates have become a target for Republicans hoping to avoid another close election. |
| Bishop Hill Creative Commons earns Music in Action GrantBishop Hill Creative Commons, an independent music venue and artist cooperative owned and operated by the nonprofit organization Crossroads Cultural Connections, has been selected as a recipient of Live Music Society’s 2026 Music in Action Grant, according to a news release. Bishop Hill Creative Commons is one of 29 independent venues across 19 states, Washington, [...] |
| iHeartRadio layoffs cause QCA radio legends to be dropped off airFor decades, Quad-City listeners have started their mornings with the Leuck and Howe Morning Show on WLLR or heard the voice of Mark Manuel on The Big NEW 106.5 or 100.7 The Fox between the latest hits. After widespread layoffs by iHeartRadio, those routines will be no more. iHeartRadio let go of many radio personalities [...] |
| 5 million have dropped ACA insurance after Trump and the GOP let prices skyrocketThe number of people who signed up for a health plan and then didn't pay their premium fell much more sharply than it has in years past. Trump officials blame fraud. Health policy experts blame costs. |
| Cullen earns Leadership in Place Management designationJack Cullen, executive director of the Rock Island Downtown Alliance, has obtained the designation of Certified Leader in Place Management (LPM) from the International Downtown Association (IDA,) a news release says. Cullen joins a community of professionals who demonstrate the knowledge and skills to manage and lead a place management organization. “Having worked with Jack [...] |
| Sheriff: No injuries reported after plane makes emergency landing in Knox CountyThe sheriff's office said the aircraft, a Cessna 172N with three people on board, had experienced a possible engine failure while in flight. |
| Hello Muscatine County: KWQC celebrates the communities and historyKWQC is celebrating the people, places, and history that shaped Muscatine County. |
| Jordan Spieth returning to the John Deere ClassicTournament play officially kicks off Thursday. |
| Planet Funk Con, 5th Annual Stoneware Fest among weekend offerings in the Quad CitiesFind out what you and your family can get up to this weekend! |
| Heavy police presence in CamancheOur Quad Cities News crew is watching a heavy police presence at a Camanche chiropractic clinic for an investigation that continued for more than an hour Friday afternoon. As of 4 p.m., officers from the Clinton County Sheriff's Office, Camanche Police Department and Clinton Police Department are at Camanche Chiropractic Center,1601 S. Washington Blvd. Squad [...] |
| Davenport names new assistant chief of policeThe Davenport Police Department named a new assistant police chief Friday. |
| | Federal health agency cancels most of its teen pregnancy prevention grantsA teacher holds a student’s baby while his class completes coursework at a high school for young parents in Spokane, Wash. U.S. Health and Human Services sent termination letters to 53 of 67 grantees under the Office of Population Affairs’ Teen Pregnancy Prevention Program on Friday, June 26. (Photo by Camilla Forte/The Hechinger Report)A spokesperson for U.S. Health and Human Services confirmed to Stateline on Friday that the agency is canceling 53 out of 67 grants, worth about $68 million, under the Teen Pregnancy Prevention Program, affecting grantees in more than two dozen states. A list obtained by Stateline of canceled grants includes those awarded to universities, community organizations, city and state health departments and Planned Parenthood affiliates in states such as Arizona, Montana, Michigan, Texas and West Virginia. The grants were canceled two years before their expiration dates because the programs did not align with agency priorities, according to one of the grantees who received a termination notice. The program is part of the agency’s Office of Population Affairs and is a “national, evidence-based grant program that funds diverse organizations working to prevent teen pregnancy across the United States,” according to the HHS website. The agency provides funding to programs that develop and evaluate innovative approaches to prevent teen pregnancy as well as to prevent sexually transmitted infections among adolescents, and to promote positive behaviors. Family planning organizations sue Trump administration over Title X funding announcement Ayana Bradshaw, president and CEO of AccessMatters in Philadelphia, told Stateline her organization received the termination notice of its $1.2 million grant on Friday, and it was effective the same day. Bradshaw said the letter cited a misalignment with agency priorities, specifically that the program “normalizes or promotes sexual activity for minors.” AccessMatters’ Adolescent Health Initiative is entirely funded by the federal grant and provides free sexual and reproductive health programs to more than 1,100 teens between the ages of 13 and 19. The program provides information, education and referrals for healthcare as needed. “This is devastating for the youth that we serve,” Bradshaw said. “It also impacts us as an organization, our staff, and it impacts the partners that we had who supported us in implementing this program.” During the first administration of President Donald Trump in 2017, HHS took the same action, ending grants for more than 80 recipients two years before they were set to expire. Legal advocacy organization Democracy Forward sued the administration on behalf of several grantees and won a permanent injunction after courts ruled the action violated agency regulations. The Trump administration identified the teen pregnancy program as one to cut in its 2025 budget request, and it was included in the final 2026 appropriations bill. The language accompanying that bill said grants for sexual risk avoidance must use medically accurate information and teach youth about risky behaviors “without normalizing teen sexual activity.” Teen birth rates have fallen dramatically in the past 20 years, according to federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data — about 72% since 2007. Experts attribute that decline to fewer teens deciding to have sex earlier, sex education and better access to contraception, especially for girls. The agency also released two new grant programs this week, one of which is titled “Replicating Effective Teen Pregnancy Prevention Programs,” with $63.4 million available to be awarded. The other is “Rigorous Impact Evaluation of Programs to Prevent Teen Pregnancy and Achieve Optimal Health,” with $8.3 million available. Both opportunities tell applicants that they must pass an alignment review process to ensure they meet agency priorities. That language mimics Trump administration language in the 2027 Notice of Funding Opportunity for Title X grants, which a national family planning organization filed a lawsuit over last week, arguing that it violates Congress’ intentions and administrative procedure. Tara Mancini, director of public policy at reproductive health advocacy organization Power to Decide, said she expects the administration’s decision to cancel the grants to be challenged again in court. Stateline reporter Kelcie Moseley-Morris can be reached at kmoseley@stateline.org. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE Courtesy of Stateline |
| Downtown Muscatine residents and business owners displaced from demolition project seek answers from the cityAfter a roof partially collapsed, the city evacuated 20 buildings on a single block in downtown Muscatine, displacing 28 residents. The city said a final decision on whether to demolish or stabilize the compromised structures will be made in early July. |
| Disability care group sounds alarm over DOJ memo suggesting an end to in-home and community-based servicesThe Department of Justice’s Office of Legal Counsel released a memo in June advising states to cease funding for in-home and community-based services that allow Americans with disabilities to integrate within their communities. A Bettendorf-based nonprofit, Hand in Hand, said the move would upend thirty years of evidence-based care. |
| QC Airport sees 6% increase in passenger trafficThe previous high mark set in October 2019 totaled 65,572 monthly passengers. |
| Investigation underway after fatal workplace accident in eastern IowaJust before 7 a.m. on Friday, June 26, a 911 call reported that a worker had become pinned under a large piece of equipment at Riverstone Quarry near New Liberty. |
| New U of Iowa study looks into seatbelt use among new momsCar crashes are one of the leading causes of pregnancy complications and maternal deaths in the U.S. |
| | Senate farm bill draft focuses on farm economy, keeps ‘Big Beautiful’ SNAP cutsThe U.S. Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry released its 2026 Farm Bill draft.(Photo from USDA)Nearly two months after the U.S. House passed a farm bill proposal, the Senate Agriculture Committee has released an initial draft of the omnibus legislation that covers everything from crop insurance to nutrition assistance. The farm bill draft, dubbed the Agricultural Act of 2026 and put forward by Sen. John Boozman, R-Ark., expands crop insurance coverage, shifts funding in conservation programs and maintains changes to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program made in Republicans’ 2025 spending bill. While the draft is fairly similar to the farm bill proposal advanced by the House at the end of April, it does not include language that livestock industries have called for to stop the impact of state-specific laws on livestock production standards. The bill is also silent on the issue of pesticide labeling — another hot-button issue among farm, health and environmental groups — and on the year-round sale of a higher blend of ethanol. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX. Industry and political response to the draft language stressed the importance of Congress passing a farm bill, since the massive piece of legislation has not been reauthorized since 2018. Typically the bill is refreshed every five years, but lawmakers, unable to reach a compromise the past several years, have instead relied on federal spending bills to extend the essential provisions of the bill. Boozman, the chairman of the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry, said the text included bipartisan priorities to “strengthen the American farm economy, increase investments for rural communities and foster a more resilient agricultural sector.” “I’m proud to put forward this discussion draft that reflects the input and priorities of Republicans, Democrats, and most importantly, rural America,” Boozman said in a statement. “This bill is built for the people who feed America, and I look forward to continuing conversations with my colleagues about how we can best serve them and the communities they call home.” Criticism on the proposal largely centered on its SNAP language. SNAP continues to be pain point in farm bill discussions Disagreements across the aisle over SNAP have reached new heights in the farm bill debates this year as Democrats push for changes to the program that were enacted through the Republican-led budget reconciliation bill. The legislation, known as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act or Working Families Tax Cuts Act, initiated eligibility changes to the program and shifted part of the cost of benefits to the states. The Senate farm bill draft builds on the provisions of the 2025-passed tax and spending cut bill, despite urging from Democratic lawmakers and anti-hunger groups to use the farm bill to reverse provisions in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act that could lead millions to lose benefits. Senate Agriculture Committee Democrats said in a statement that the text introduced by Boozman did not address the “devastating cuts” to SNAP put into law through H.R. 1. “Senate Agriculture Committee Democrats have been clear that a Farm Bill must meet the needs of both farmers and families across America,” the statement said. The Senate farm bill draft builds on requirements for transparency in the SNAP program and would require agencies to report on all SNAP payment errors, regardless of dollar amount. Currently, errors are only reported if they are in excess of $58. This provision, which is also included in the House-passed farm bill, would provide a supplemental report on errors in the state. Only errors above the set threshold, $58, would be used to calculate a state’s payment error rate. This rate, under changes made in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, then determines the share of SNAP benefits that a state must pay. Recent data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture shows that just nine states had rates below the 6% cutoff, set by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, that keeps the program 100% federally funded. GOP cuts in federal food aid scramble passage of long-delayed farm bill According to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, shifting 5% to 15% of total benefit costs to the states will cost states an estimated $9 billion. Ty Jones Cox, vice president for food assistance at the center, urged Congress to delay the October 2027 implementation of the provision. “The farm bill proposal released today by Senate Agriculture Committee Chair John Boozman ignores the rapidly worsening hunger crisis in the wake of the 2025 Republican reconciliation law,” Jones Cox said in a statement. “This proposal — or any legislation with farm relief that ignores the urgent need to mitigate this harm — should be rejected.” Lawmakers and agricultural groups that commented in favor of the Senate’s draft language primarily spoke to the benefits the bill would provide to farmers, though some noted their support for the bill’s continuation of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act provisions. “I am encouraged to see Chairman Boozman release a Farm Bill draft that builds on many of the priorities Senate Republicans fought to secure in the Working Families Tax Cut Act,” Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, said in a statement. “I am proud the draft includes my proposals to crack down on foreign adversaries purchasing American farmland, increase transparency and accountability in SNAP, expand local meat processing options, and prohibit taxpayer dollars from funding research in countries of concern like China and Iran.” The Senate’s draft reauthorizes SNAP appropriations at the same level currently allocated through 2031, which is the same approach taken in the House’s version of the bill. The Senate farm bill draft also expanded eligible forms of produce and dairy allowed in federal nutrition programs. Both the House and Senate proposed bills included language to create a local food purchasing program with an authorization of $200 million through 2031. The language is similar to a pandemic-era program called Local Food Purchase Assistance, which has since ended. The proposed farm bills stipulate this program would support state agencies’ purchase of minimally processed food from producers within 400 miles of the distribution site. Conservation Boozman’s office said in a news release that the draft language “streamlines and strengthens” USDA conservation programs. Boozman said his bill also creates the “broadly popular” forest conservation program and the State Conservation Assistance Program to support state-led conservation efforts. Environmental groups, however, criticized the bill for not expanding popular conservation programs, the Environmental Quality Incentives Program, or EQIP, and the Conservation Reserve Program or CRP, both of which incentivize farmers to add conservation practices to their land. While the Senate bill extends the CRP program, it caps enrollment at 27 million acres — the same cap set in the House-passed bill. According to a Congressional Research Service report comparing the 2026 House-passed farm bill with current policy, language affecting conservation programs constitute the largest changes in the House version of the farm bill. The House farm bill would reduce the budget authority of the EQIP program by $1 billion over the next 10 years, using the money to instead fund the Forest Conservation Easement Program and increases to other conservation programs. Report shows Biden-era funding made ‘significant impact’ in conservation practice adoption in Iowa The Senate draft also significantly shrinks the EQIP budget authorization and the Conservation Stewardship Program in a move the Environmental Working Group said “runs counter” to the Trump administration’s Make America Healthy Again initiative. “Prioritizing regenerative agriculture practices like cover crops and encouraging farmers to develop whole farm conservation plans are important steps to improving farm resilience,” EWG’s legislative director Geoff Horsfield said in a statement. “Rather than cut money for these popular programs, Congress must provide more funding to meet the growing backlog of farmer demand for the most effective conservation practices.” Ryan Bronson, the director of government affairs for the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, said in a statement that the conservation title in the proposed bill was “robust” and “critical to maintain voluntary, incentive-based land stewardship that helps to sustain rural communities.” Farm safety net The farm bill stipulates the scope of crop insurance, federal loans, credit and reimbursement programs that are essential to most farming operations. Both the House version and drafted Senate version of the bill expand crop insurance to cover “losses due to a decline in the market price” of a commodity, where current policy covers only crop losses caused by “drought, flood, or other natural disasters.” National Farmers Union President Rob Larew said while the Senate draft includes “meaningful improvements,” it does not fully address the “scale of the crisis” farmers and ranchers are currently facing. “What we need is a true safety net that moves away from ad hoc assistance, keeps pace with rising production costs and delivers real stability in the marketplace,” Larew said in a statement. Farmers Union called for greater support of “core farm programs” and a disaster relief program that “doesn’t require farmers to wait on Congress to act.” The current farm bill proposals both include language that would authorize USDA to issue block grants to states following natural disasters to, as the summary for the Senate draft said, “provide quicker and more regionally suited assistance.” The Agricultural Act of 2026 changes crop insurance policies to be more specific for specialty crop farmers and establishes the Specialty Crop Advisory Committee. The House version also created this additional committee. National Potato Council CEO Kam Quarles thanked Boozman for the farm bill draft and its language for specialty crop farmers. “We are hopeful that meaningful discussions will be generated by today’s release and result in a broadly supported bill being reported to the Senate floor this summer,” Quarles said in a statement. “In particular, we thank the Chairman for recognizing the imperative of specialty crop economic relief and his common-sense framework for delivering vital resources to America’s family-owned potato farms.” The Senate draft language also increases farm loans to “better reflect today’s cost of doing business” according to a summary of the text, and expands certain credit and loan programs for beginning farmers and fishing industries. American Farm Bureau President Zippy Duvall said the bill was a “good first draft” and that the farmer group appreciated the bill’s improved access to credit, expanded specialty crop investments and fertilizer industry transparency. “We urge the Senate to quickly pass a bipartisan farm bill, and with the same sense of urgency, Congress must work together to address these additional priorities,” Duvall said in a news release. “It’s time to deliver solutions to America’s farmers and ranchers.” Hot button issues left out of the draft Duvall also called for the farm bill to include an economic assistance package for farmers following a “multiyear downturn,” legislation to “protect interstate commerce” and to allow the nationwide, year-round sale of E15 fuel. Previous farm bill drafts have included language on controversial issues like pesticide labeling policies and livestock housing regulations, but the Senate’s 2026 farm bill draft does not include either. Environmental and animal rights groups applauded the omission of language from the Save Our Bacon Act, which would stop state laws from dictating the production standards of agricultural products sold into the state. Supporters of the Save Our Bacon language, including Farm Bureau, say it protects interstate commerce from a “patchwork” of differing state laws, in particular California’s Proposition 12, which stipulated that meat sold in the state must be raised within certain animal confinement provisions. Language similar to the Save Our Bacon Act was included in the House-passed farm bill. US Supreme Court hands win to Monsanto in case related to claims Roundup causes cancer The environmental group Food & Water Watch commended the Senate bill for not including the anti-Prop 12 language, but the group said the Senate’s farm bill “fails to address the root causes” of the food and farm “crisis” in the country. “After years of skyrocketing food prices, family farm decimation and worsening climate impacts, Congress should use the Farm Bill to build a resilient food system – not double-down on the same corporate model that created these problems in the first place,” Food & Water Watch Food Policy Director Rebecca Wolf said in a statement. “We need a fair Farm Bill, not one that continues to prioritize agribusiness profits over farmers, workers, consumers and the planet.” Food & Water Watch was also appreciative that the draft bill did not include a provision to protect pesticide manufacturing companies from certain lawsuits related to pesticide labeling. The farm bill that advanced from the House Agriculture Committee included pesticide labeling language, but the provision was removed before the bill passed from the House. Similar language has cropped up in states across the country, including Iowa, where the bill stalled in 2025, and has been supported by Bayer, the maker of the popular herbicide Roundup and the subject of numerous lawsuits alleging the product caused certain types of cancer. A Thursday ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court, however, enforced the strength of federal pesticide labeling and overturned a $1.25 million Missouri court verdict in which a man alleged that Roundup caused his non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., said he plans to file an amendment to the farm bill that would strip the federal preemption clause used in the court’s ruling. The Senate farm bill draft did not include a provision for the year-round, nationwide sale of E15, a higher blend of ethanol fuel, that farm groups have been calling for with urgency. Farm groups, however, were encouraged by a letter sent Wednesday by President Donald Trump urging Congress to pass legislation that would permit the nationwide sale of the fuel. The Senate farm bill proposal also expands USDA Rural Development programs for things like rural broadband access, water treatment infrastructure and economic development. “America’s farmers, ranchers and producers have always answered the call to do more to feed the nation,” Boozman said on the Senate floor when introducing the bill. “Farm Bill 2.0 is built to support the backbone of our food system.” The Senate’s Agricultural Act of 2026 will be considered and most likely amended in the U.S. Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry before the bill can head to the full Senate. As of Friday, a committee markup on the bill had not been scheduled. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE Courtesy of Iowa Capital Dispatch |
| | DEQ proposes Big Hole River as ‘impaired’Fisherman are pictured on the Big Hole River near Wise River, Montana. (Jordan Hansen / Daily Montanan)The Montana Department of Environmental Quality has determined the Big Hole River is impaired, which follows significant legal pressure from advocacy organizations. The river has seen warm water, large algae blooms and dead trout, worrying both environmental groups and the guides who make their livelihood taking visitors fishing on one of Montana’s most renowned rivers. DEQ said in a statement it has determined that an overabundance of nutrients, called “eutrophication,” and poor oxygen levels are “impacting aquatic life and recreational uses in the Big Hole River.” The details of worsening conditions will be added to the state’s next Water Quality Integrated Report, which is a federally-mandated document, expected next year. That report will have a public comment process before it is submitted to the Environmental Protection Agency, which has to approve the impairment declaration. If the EPA approves the action, it would unlock additional federal funding for restoring the river, and would likely require additional action by state and federal agencies. If the EPA gives its approval, state and federal authorities will determine the limit for pollutants. Officials already have implemented 91 categories for pollutants in the Big Hole River watershed, DEQ said in a statement, and added they’ve spent $1.3 million on restoration projects to date. The work, so far, has been mostly focused on fixing erosion and adding vegetation. Work has been done in the area since the 1980s, DEQ added, saying it supported the work by local watershed groups. “Additionally, projects that reduce water temperature continue in the watershed,” a DEQ spokesperson said in a statement. “These efforts also reduce nutrients and help slow algae growth.” An algae bloom is pictured on the Big Hole River on Friday, Sept. 26, 2025. (Jordan Hansen / Daily Montanan) The Big Hole River watershed has been the source of a legal fight between DEQ and environmental legal groups, specifically Upper Missouri Waterkeeper and the Big Hole River Foundation. In a statement, Waterkeeper executive director Guy Alsentzer said they supported the move, but it had come too slowly. “This action is way overdue and certainly better late than never, but we are still concerned about the agency’s pattern and practice of all-too-familiar delay tactics based on politics, not science,” Alsentzer said. “Everyone, including DEQ, has known about the Big Hole’s declining water quality for nearly a decade. Time is not on our side and further delays before action is taken are unacceptable for Montanans, local businesses, and our wild trout. DEQ needs to get to work yesterday to address the root causes of algae growth—nutrient pollution. If the agency fails to do so, all water users will suffer.” Waterkeeper and the Big Hole River Foundation filed a petition earlier this year asking for the impairment designation. The group even challenged the lack of action in state court, which was eventually dismissed. The DEQ responded to concerns that it has responded to Big Hole River problems too slowly: “The Big Hole River is already an impaired water for other pollution listings such as sediment, temperature, flow, metals, and fish habitat. … DEQ has been working closely with Save Wild Trout to collect and review the necessary data. The final data package was provided to DEQ January of 2026. DEQ’s intended action will be shared with the public in July.” One of the complicating factors for both groups and state officials has been a switch from numerical to narrative standards. In 2025, Montana switched from using data and numbers to relying on a narrative which advocates say has made proving scientific problems emerging from the river much harder. “Narrative prohibitions against causing harm, without an implementing rulebook, remain vague, imprecise, and naturally lead to permit writers making subjective decisions without clear metrics,” a Waterkeeper FAQ webpage reads. “Likewise, narrative prohibitions often require harm to occur before action is triggered. Waiting for harm to occur before requiring better pollution treatment is both bad policy and bad economics.” DEQ has said it’s a helpful switch. “Narrative standards describe conditions to be avoided and allow DEQ to identify impairments and develop plans to improve water quality,” a DEQ release from 2025 states. “The new law provides regulatory predictability for permittees and ensures DEQ uses the best science available to protect water sources based on the agency’s understanding of local, site-specific conditions.” When asked for comment the Governor’s Office directed questions regarding allegations of slow walking the impairment designation to DEQ. Courtesy of Daily Montanan |
| Most Quad Cities people entering homelessness are experiencing it for the first time, new report saysA new Quad Cities report says 81% of single adults and 88% of families entering homelessness across the region are newly homeless or facing a short-term crisis. |
| New Illinois laws take effect July 1: What to knowJuly 1 kicks off the new fiscal year in Illinois, and 14 new laws take effect. As the new $56 billion budget is implemented, the one-cent motor fuel tax will be suspended for the rest of the year. The Illinois Department of Early Childhood launches. it brings preschool, childcare, home visiting and early intervention programs [...] |
| New principal, resignations, hirings and other personnel news from East Moline School DistrictThe following personnel items are from the June 22 agenda of the East Moline District 37 Board of Education. The School Board met at the Administration Building. |
| Jo Daviess County deputy crashes car while responding to emergency callThe sheriff's office said the deputy hit a deer that came into the road, causing the squad car to overturn. The deputy was treated for injuries. |
| Walcott man arrested on 11 counts of forgery, identity theftA Walcott man is in the Scott County Jail on a $75,000 cash-only bond after the Iowa Insurance Fraud Bureau said he wrote multiple life insurance policies on family members without their knowledge and collected commissions on the policies. Criminal complaints filed in the case say that between February 21, 2024 and January 24, 2025, [...] |
| Niabi Zoo welcomes new pair of fennec foxesAstrid and Comet were moved into the zoo's Biodiversity Hall, and Niabi officials hope the couple will start a new family when they're ready. |
| | Maryland health insurers want to raise premiums an average 13.7% for individual plans in 2027State insurance officials like Commissioner Marie Grant will evaluate proposals to raise individual ACA health care premiums by an average of 13.7% and make a decision later this year. (Photo by Danielle J. Brown/Maryland Matters)Marylanders who purchase individual healthcare plans on the state’s insurance marketplace may see another year of higher monthly costs as health insurers have requested an average rate increase of 13.7% across plans in 2027. The Maryland Insurance Administration announced Friday that, for the second year, healthcare carriers are proposing high premium rate increases following the expiration of a popular federal tax credit that helped keep some plans on the state insurance marketplace more affordable. “The significant rate increases filed with the Maryland Insurance Administration for the second year in a row reflect the loss of enhanced federal tax credits, which were not extended by Congress and the Trump Administration last year,” said Maryland Insurance Commissioner Marie Grant in a Friday statement. “Our team of actuaries will closely examine the assumptions behind the rate requests over the coming months to determine whether they are justified,” she said. The proposed rate increases for plans on the state’s ACA market vary by carrier and other factors. (Graph courtesy of the Maryland Insurance Administration.) The rate increase proposal affects individuals and households that purchase plans on the Maryland Health Benefit Exchange, which operates Maryland’s Affordable Care Act marketplace. Last year, healthcare carriers came to state insurance officials with a proposal to raise premiums an average of 17%, citing anticipated affordability challenges and enrollment decreases as the enhanced federal tax credits expired at the end of 2025. The Maryland Insurance Administration agreed to an average 13.4% premium rate increase for 2026 healthcare plans instead, which was still a hefty monthly cost increase for many Marylanders. This year, insurance companies are starting with a slightly lower proposal for premium rate increases that could affect around 282,000 Marylanders on individual ACA plans. The exact proposals vary depending on carrier, plans, household income and other factors. For example, a 40-year-old resident of the Baltimore metro region on a CareFirst gold plan could see their rate jump 14.7%, resulting in a $95 increase to their monthly premium of $649. On the other hand, if that 40-year-old chose a bronze plan with Kaiser their premiums could bump up 9.6%, with an additional $31 added to their monthly charge of $328. A family of four in the same region could see their household monthly cost increase between $100 and $300, depending on plan and insurance carrier. Insurance carriers are also proposing an average 13.1% premium rate increase next year for the small group markets used by small business owners. State insurance officials already approved midyear rate increases for CareFirst and United Healthcare’s small group plans. Thousands of Marylanders downgraded health plans on ACA marketplace amid rising premiums The Maryland General Assembly set aside state funding to offset the impact of the federal tax credit expiration for some families that had previously benefited from it from this year and into next year. For 2026, the state subsidy was able to replace 100% of the enhanced federal tax credits for those under 200% of the federal poverty level, but just 50% of the tax credits for those between 250% and 400% of the federal poverty level. “Without the proactive steps by Governor Wes Moore and the Maryland General Assembly to enact a state-based subsidy for 2026 and 2027, Marylanders would see significantly higher increases in premiums and out-of-pocket costs,” Grant said in the written statement Friday. But Maryland’s ongoing tight state budget may require those subsidies to be less generous in 2027, and it’s not clear if they will continue into 2028. The insurance administration is inviting Marylanders to provide public comments on the proposed rate increases offered by health insurance carriers. The administration is hosting a virtual public hearing on July 23, and a written public comment period for the public hearing will be open until July 17. Based on those public comments and future discussions with carriers, the Maryland Insurance Administration will either approve the proposed rates or approve alternative rates, potentially by September. Courtesy of Maryland Matters |
| Quad Cities International Airport reports best passenger month since 2019The Quad Cities International Airport saw a 6 percent traffic increase in May with over 65,000 passengers, marking its best month since 2019. |
| | NM smoke shop owner says food desert, not fraud, the reason for his high SNAP revenueAaron Sheridan, who owns the Smoke City convenience store in Albuquerque, said his shop serves as a vital grocery store in the International District, which is why his federal food assistance revenues are far higher than the statewide average. (Patrick Lohmann/Source NM)An Albuquerque business owner whose smoke shop legislative analysts recently flagged for suspiciously high federal food assistance revenues told Source NM that his shop’s high sales don’t signal fraud. Rather, they reflect the few grocery options in a struggling neighborhood.SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX. Last week, the New Mexico Legislative Finance Committee released the results of a long-awaited Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program evaluation, which concluded that the New Mexico Health Care Authority could do more to investigate and analyze potential fraud in a state where roughly one in five residents receive federal food aid. Among its findings, LFC analysts identified two stores — which they characterized as smoke shops — authorized by the United States Agriculture Department to accept SNAP that received more than $400,000 in SNAP revenue in 2025. That figure is approximately seven times more than the average revenues roughly 1,700 authorized retailers statewide generated that year. The LFC report did not identify the two shops or their locations, but the report included images of the buildings’ exteriors with their names partially redacted. The LFC, in a statement to Source NM this week, described the stores as “anomalies” but did not conclude they committed wrongdoing. New study finds New Mexico underestimates, fails to investigate federal food assistance fraud Interviews Source NM conducted this week determined the shops the LFC highlighted are Smoke City and M&L, which sit within half a mile of each other along Central Avenue in Albuquerque’s International District, an area known for high transient populations and the recent closures of a neighborhood Walmart and CVS. Both shops offer an array of tobacco and nicotine products, as well as a wide variety of pipes, but not cannabis. They also have multiple shelves dedicated to groceries and coolers full of drinks lining the walls. Both also have prominent advertisements pasted on the walls noting they accept SNAP and warning against SNAP fraud. The LFC’s findings prompted New Mexico Sen. Pat Woods (R-Broadview) to request that the USDA investigate the shops. He told Source NM on Wednesday that his June 17 letter — which urged the USDA to “investigate the high SNAP activity in these NM establishments” — was “hand-delivered” to the chief-of-staff for USDA Secretary Brooke Rollins. Owners of both shops told Source NM on Wednesday that USDA inspectors conducted surprise inspections within the last week. According to a USDA spokesperson, M&L has been “permanently disqualified” from receiving SNAP benefits in exchange for products following its recent inspection, though the business owner can appeal. The agency did not respond to Source NM’s requests for details about whether that shop was found to be fraudulently using SNAP or whether it violated other rules. The exterior of the M&L smoke shop, pictured June 24, 2026. The USDA “permanently disqualified” the shop following a recent inspection. (Patrick Lohmann/Source NM) M&L owner Marcus Hill told Source NM that it’s possible the USDA cut him off from SNAP because he was re-selling store-bought meat to SNAP recipients. “I don’t really know what the rules are,” he told Source NM in a brief phone interview, in which he also denied committing SNAP fraud. The USDA can cut off SNAP access to retailers that commit fraud, which includes providing cash in exchange for SNAP benefits. The USDA also prohibits retailers from accepting SNAP funds for non-SNAP items like tobacco and liquor, as well as for hot food, though members of Congress are seeking an exception for hot rotisserie chicken. Aaron Sheridan owns Smoke City, the other shop the LFC highlighted. He noted — and the USDA spokesperson confirmed — that he is still allowed to accept SNAP after the USDA’s surprise inspection Monday. He interprets that as vindication that he committed no wrongdoing. By the #s: More than half of NM groceries, convenience stores at ‘high risk’ due to SNAP cuts In an interview Wednesday at the shop, Sheridan provided a year’s worth of more than $230,000 in purchase orders to one of his three main food distributors and provided a tour of the shop, featuring roughly a dozen aisles full of chips, candy, canned beans, cookies and pasta, as well as freezers full of drinks and microwaveable meals. He also presented sales analytics showing he received a little more than $100,000 from food sales in May alone, with roughly half of that coming from customers using SNAP. Sheridan said he decided to expand his offerings at his 24-hour smoke shop after being shut down during the COVID-19 pandemic. He wanted to ensure his business remained “essential” in the event of another shutdown, so he added a single cooler with soft drinks after being allowed to reopen. He continued adding groceries to his aisles and received USDA authorization to accept SNAP in 2022, according to USDA data. Meanwhile, nearby large chain grocery stores closed. “So that obviously helped me, but it didn’t help the area, so that’s when I expanded even more, and I started to get more groceries,” he said. “I mean, these people need to eat, they need food, they need this, they need that. So, I’m glad that I was honestly here to provide that.” Woods told Source NM that he is glad the USDA investigated both shops and also to learn that no fraud was occurring at Smoke City. But he urged the Health Care Authority to implement the LFC’s recommendations to crack down on potential fraud throughout the SNAP ecosystem. A worker delivers groceries to the Smoke City shop in Albuquerque’s International District on June 24, 2026. (Patrick Lohmann/Source NM) One LFC recommendation affecting SNAP retailers concerns the SNAP data the USDA and state collect. The USDA only collects the dollar amount for SNAP purchases. As a result, the LFC said, retailers can easily ring up non-SNAP items or exchange SNAP funds for cash. The LFC recommended the HCA require product information data be collected through its electronic system. Marina Piña, a spokesperson for HCA, said the authority has “begun discussions” with its vendor about improving SNAP retailer compliance, including “the feasibility of collecting item-level purchase data.” But Sovereign Hager, the public benefits director for the New Mexico Center on Law and Poverty, said the focus on retailer or customer fraud is misplaced in a state with among the highest rates of nationwide food insecurity, and after the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” stripped SNAP benefits from thousands of New Mexicans. “It’s taking attention away from real problems that are causing children and families in New Mexico to not be able to put food on the table,” she said. Courtesy of Source New Mexico |
| She posted about ICE. Five months later, DHS agents told her to take her post downIn January, Paigelynne Gonyea posted about the immigration surge in Minneapolis. This week, she was visited by ICE officials who claimed one of her posts had doxxed a federal agent. |
| | Agricultural economist encourages careful optimism amid trade changes and federal assistanceAndrew Streff drives his combine while harvesting soybeans on Sept. 29, 2025, near Salem, South Dakota. (Photo by Joshua Haiar/South Dakota Searchlight)PIERRE — Resumption of trade with China and potential year-round availability of E15 biofuel could positively impact the farm economy, according to an agricultural economist who spoke Thursday at the Governor’s Ag Summit in South Dakota. But David Widmar, who focuses on agricultural trends and decision-making for farmers at Agricultural Economic Insights, said they have to balance their optimism with the tough times they’re still facing. Federal aid for farmers last year helped some of them survive tariff-related market disruptions, and President Donald Trump is pushing for an additional $11.1 billion. That could provide more relief, Widmar said, but “we can’t continue” on a federal funding “treadmill forever.” “These are a life raft, not a kayak,” he said. “Kayaks are toys that we can plan on using. Life rafts are things that we use to get to the shore. Make sure we don’t confuse those two things.” Trump wants $87.6 billion to pay for his war in Iran, aid to farmers and more Profits in the livestock sector have been strong, Widmar said, while soybean farmers have been struggling. China temporarily boycotted U.S. soybean purchases last year in response to President Donald Trump’s tariffs on Chinese products. Trade should be getting “back to normal” after productive diplomacy, Widmar said, but China primarily buys soybeans during the winter months, which is when farmers should expect to see change. On a longer-term basis, Widmar said the year-round sale of E15 — a gasoline blend containing 15% ethanol — could give farmers more momentum, but it’s “not quite ready for primetime.” The Trump administration sent a proposal to Congress earlier this week that asks lawmakers to include the year-round sale of E15, among other policy changes, in any supplemental spending bill it approves in the coming weeks and months. Current federal regulations restrict the sale of E15 from June 1 to Sept. 15 because of its effects on air quality. For broadcasters: Host script with David Widmar soundbite. Courtesy of South Dakota Searchlight |
| Lanes to close on John Deere Road, Moline, for patchingDrivers in Moline can expect delays due to lane closures on John Deere Road next week. A news release from the Illinois Department of Transportation said that starting on Monday, June 29, there will be lane closures on westbound John Deere Road (Illinois 5). The work zone is between Seventh and 16th Streets. Two lanes [...] |
| 4 Your Money | Supply ShockThere has been significant buzz surrounding the massive new IPOs hitting the market recently. David Nelson, CEO of NelsonCorp Wealth Management, shares how this surge of available shares may impact market performance. |
| Jibaro Restaurant, Muscatine, moving into Capone's Chicago Style Eatery buildingThere’s some good news for a Muscatine restaurant that was forced to evacuate its building, along with others in the city’s downtown, due to structural concerns. Jibaro Restaurant posted on its Facebook page that one business’s closing announcement is a boon to the restaurant. “Our friends at Capone’s Chicago Style Eatery (211 W. 2nd Street) [...] |
| | Kansas AG’s proposed restriction on mifepristone would impact more than abortion patientsKansas Attorney General Kris Kobach wants to restrict mifepristone, a medication commonly prescribed for abortions. But the drug also is used to treat other conditions, such as Cushing's syndrome and unresolved miscarriages. (Photo by Anna Spoerre/Missouri Independent)TOPEKA — Janice Powers treats her hormonal disorder with the abortion pill that Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach and attorneys general from other states want to regulate as a water contaminant. Mifepristone, a medication researchers have found to be safe and effective, is commonly prescribed as part of a two-pill regimen to terminate a first-trimester pregnancy. It also can treat other conditions. Powers, a 61-year-old from Andover who is a project manager at the CDC Foundation, takes it for Cushing’s syndrome, a disorder caused by high levels of the cortisol hormone. The pill blocks cortisol receptors to minimize the hormone’s effects. “I’m exercising more now. It makes a real difference in my outlook on life,” she said. “I don’t feel as depressed. I don’t feel as angry, which, it’s kind of crazy, has improved my marriage.” Mifepristone is used to treat Cushing’s syndrome and unresolved miscarriages. And, despite claims by Kobach and others, experts say at-home medication abortions are safe for the patient and the water supply. An endocrinologist, a type of physician specializing in hormonal disorders, prescribed Powers mifepristone in October. Since then, she said, she has successfully managed her diabetes, lost weight and has had more energy to garden her flowers. “This medication is literally saving my life,” she said. On June 17, Kobach and Republican attorneys general from 13 other states sent a letter to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency calling for the classification and regulation of mifepristone as a water contaminant. “If mifepristone reaches sufficient concentration,” the letter said, “pregnant women who unintentionally ingest the drug through the public water supply could be at greater risk of health complications than the general population.” Shannon Bartelt-Hunt, an expert on the presence of contaminants and pharmaceutical compounds in the environment and a University of Nebraska professor, said in an interview that the amount of pharmaceutical compounds in surface water, such as a lake or river, is trace. The amount that can be present in drinking water is even smaller, she said. She said in order for someone to consume 600 milligrams of mifepristone, a potential dose, one would have to drink 150,000 gallons of surface water containing one microgram of mifepristone per liter, which would be an unusually high concentration. “Drinking water, you might drink 10 times that to get the therapeutic dose,” she said. “Instead of 150,000 gallons, maybe you have to drink 1.5 million gallons of water, which just isn’t even anywhere in the realm of possibility.” Bartelt-Hunt said tiny amounts of compounds like the ones in mifepristone flush into water systems through human and animal waste, which potentially have negative effects to public health and the environment that scientists are still studying. But she said those compounds come from numerous pharmaceuticals. “They are not saying take away antibiotics,” she said, “or take away heart medication, or take away your cholesterol medication or take away any other medications that people need.” In the June letter, the attorneys general argued endocrine disruptors, natural or synthetic compounds that mimic or interact with hormones, cause reproductive harm to humans and wildlife, citing a 2022 published study. Bartelt-Hunt said while there is potential for harmful effects, the standard procedure would involve filtering out such compounds, not eliminating all or one of the pharmaceuticals altogether. “Typically, if something is regulated, then the solution is to install treatment to remove that material to below that regulatory limit,” she said. This kind of water treatment technology exists, she said, but is expensive and not mandated. Powers wants mifepristone to remain accessible. She said she asked her physician if there are alternative treatments for her specific condition. As far as her doctor was aware, there aren’t. “If I go off of it,” Powers said, “then those receptors will stop being blocked, and I’ll go right back to where I was before.” People with untreated Cushing’s syndrome can experience symptoms that include weight gain, high blood pressure, diabetes, muscle weakness and mood swings. Mifepristone and misoprostol, the medications that make up the two-pill abortion procedure, also can treat unresolved miscarriages, which occur when pregnancy tissues are not properly expelled after a sudden, early loss of pregnancy. Lauren Ralph, a reproductive sciences associate professor at the University of California San Francisco and an expert in public health and abortion, said incomplete miscarriages can lead to infection. “Twenty percent of pregnancies end in miscarriage,” she said. “We don’t know the exact amount, but some of those miscarriages won’t resolve on their own and need support from medications.” “We will always continue to need access to mifepristone and misoprostol, even in a place where abortion is regulated more heavily,” she added. While the letter state officials sent to the EPA said medication abortions are dangerous, Ralph’s research shows otherwise. In April 2021, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration allowed certified pharmacists to distribute the abortion regimen by mail and removed in-person visit requirements because of COVID-19. The U.S. Supreme Court upheld the FDA’s decisions in 2024 and again in May. Mifepristone has not been available in major pharmaceutical stores in Kansas since Kobach and other state officials urged companies not to sell it in 2023. Powers receives hers by mail. State officials’ June letter said the FDA’s decisions to remove in-person dispensing and check-up requirements has “eliminated many of the protections that minimized the health risks posed by mifepristone.” A 2024 published study Ralph authored found medication abortions by mail distribution and telehealth appointments to be as safe as in-person medication abortion procedures. “It’s important to have mifepristone and misoprostol available,” she said, “recognizing that it’s got a safety and effectiveness profile that’s been really well established over decades of research.” Courtesy of Kansas Reflector |
| Hyperbaric oxygen therapy explainedNearly 11 million people are living with chronic wounds and that number is expected to rise. |
| Sheriff: No injuries reported after small plane makes emergency landing in Knox County cornfieldThe sheriff's office said the aircraft, a Cessna 172N with three people on board, had experienced a possible engine failure while in flight. |
| | NM health officials report fox in McKinley County tests positive for rabiesU.S. Wildlife Services biologist Robert Fey takes tissue sample from an anesthetized raccoon to test for rabies. The New Mexico Department of Health announced on June 25, 2026, that a fox tested positive for rabies in McKinley County. (Anson Eaglin/USDA-APHIS)New Mexico health officials on Thursday reported a fox in McKinley County tested positive for rabies, the eighth case in New Mexico this year. A New Mexico Department of Health news release announcing the case urged residents to ensure their pets are vaccinated against the virus. Dr. Erin Phipps, NMDOH state public health veterinarian, said vaccinating pets not only protects them, but also helps stop the spread of rabies, which is still one of the deadliest known viruses with a fatality rate very close to 100%. “Our dogs and our cats can have unwitnessed encounters with wildlife,” she said. “This is a good reminder that dogs and cats, by law, must be vaccinated against rabies, and it’s important for their protection as well as ours.” Phipps said this is the first case of a rabid fox in McKinley County on record, with most rabid foxes being found further south. She also pointed out that most cases of rabies in New Mexico are found in bats. The risk is so high that even if a person just wakes up in a room where a bat is present, she said, if the bat can’t be captured and tested, the person should have a post-exposure rabies vaccine. “Bat teeth are so tiny you can be bit and not realize it,” she said, “and there have been confirmed cases of human rabies in the United States where somebody did not realize that they’d been bitten by a bat and later developed bat strain rabies.” She said any sort of physical contact with a bat — even through clothes — is considered an exposure. “Bat bites can be painless, and they can be very difficult, if not invisible, to find any marks,” she said. “So that’s one of the reasons we’re so cautious.” There were 13 cases of rabies last year, and 12 two years ago. For more information visit the NMDOH rabies information page. Support for this coverage comes from the W.K. Kellogg Foundation. Courtesy of Source New Mexico |
| Burlington parade celebrates America's 250th anniversaryBurlington will be celebrating America's 250th birthday with a patriotic evening of family fun at the Jefferson Street Farmers Market on Thursday, July 2, as Downtown Partners, Inc. hosts a Kids Bike & Wagon Parade in the heart of Downtown Burlington. Children are invited to decorate their bicycles, wagons, scooters, tricycles, and strollers in red, [...] |
| | Worker killed in accident at Riverstone Quarry Friday morningAn employee was killed in a workplace accident at Riverstone Quarry in New Liberty Friday morning. Emergency personnel were notified of the accident at approximately 6:56 a.m. Friday. Upon arrival, first responders located the individual pinned under a large piece of equipment that workers attempted to load onto a trailer. The initial investigation revealed the weight of the equipment suddenly shifted, causing it to come down on a worker that was undeneath. Emergency personnel determined the worked suffered traumatic injuries, and was pronounced dead at the scene. The name of the individual is being withheld pending notification of next of kin. The investigation is ongoing between the Scott County Sheriff's Office and the Mine Health & Safety Administration. The Scott County Sheriff's Office, Scott Emergency Communications Center, Scott County Medic EMS, New Liberty Fire and Scott County Medical Examiner's Office all assisted with the incident. |
| | Best value electric cars of 2026, according to EdmundsBest value electric cars of 2026, according to EdmundsElectric cars are typically more expensive to purchase than gas-powered vehicles, particularly without the federal EV tax credit that expired last year, but that doesn't mean certain models don't still offer a lot of value. Some, like the ones below, aren't much more expensive than their gas-powered counterparts while providing long driving ranges and robust lists of standard features. According to Edmunds' research, the Chevrolet Bolt EV remains the best value electric car.Of course, there are more good value electric vehicles to consider. The list below from Edmunds isn't necessarily about the cheapest EVs on the market. Instead, it's about the EVs that offer the best value across different segments. All of the stated prices include the factory destination fee, which everyone pays.Before getting to the list, let's talk about the federal EV tax incentive. For years, the federal government offered a $7,500 credit on new EV purchases, but as of Sept. 30, 2025, that credit has disappeared. Even without this incentive, the cost of ownership for EVs can be considerably lower than internal combustion engine models due to their lower cost of energy, so they still make a lot of sense for many buyers.Best value for an affordable electric car: Chevrolet Bolt EVThe Bolt EV hatchback is the king of value because it balances a usable range with a low asking price. All-new for the 2027 model year, it also includes a healthy list of standard features.The Bolt's closest rival is the Nissan Leaf, which starts below $30,000, but you get significantly less driving range for that price. The top Leaf model also provides less range and costs around $10,000 more.The Bolt's low starting price doesn't mean Chevy skimped on features. Every Bolt comes standard with a sizable 11.3-inch center touchscreen, a few advanced driver aids, and Apple CarPlay and Android Auto wireless smartphone connectivity. The electric Chevy provides an EPA-estimated range of 262 miles, which is up slightly from the previous generation, and it now uses the North American Charging Standard (NACS) charging plug, allowing it access to Tesla charging stations.Also consider: The base short-range Nissan Leaf S is the second-most affordable EV, and the Hyundai Kona Electric is another affordable electric SUV that has a starting price in the mid-$30,000s.Starting price: $28,995, including $1,395 destination feeBest value for a small electric sedan: Tesla Model 3The Model 3's recent price cuts have put the starting price just under $40,000. That undercuts any luxury rival and makes it more affordable than the Hyundai Ioniq 6 and most non-luxury electric SUVs.The base Model 3 RWD delivers an estimated range of 321 miles and gives owners access to Tesla's vast nationwide network of Supercharger fast-charging stations. The base model comes equipped with many features, including a large 15-inch center touchscreen, two wireless smartphone chargers, heated front and rear seats, front-row textile upholstery, and driver assistance features such as blind-spot warning and adaptive cruise control. The more full-featured Full Self-Driving package, which can drive autonomously in some situations but requires the driver to be ready to take over, is currently an additional $8,000, though Tesla will likely move to a subscription-only model for that in the near future.Also consider: The Hyundai Ioniq 6 is the only other compact electric sedan and an excellent alternative. The affordable SE Standard Range model costs about $700 more than the base Model 3.Starting price: $38,380, including $1,390 destination feeBest value for a luxury electric sedan: Lucid AirThe Lucid Air offers a Goldilocks-like combination of long range, good looks, excellent handling, and a base model that costs less than you might think. While it's far from a perfect vehicle, it rules the roost among luxury EV sedans now that Tesla has announced the demise of its long-serving Model S. Mercedes’ EQS is still a contender on the luxury front, but it lags in both range and acceleration.The Lucid Air Pure starts at just over $70,000, and for that, you get rear-wheel drive, an EPA-estimated range of 420 miles and Lucid's DreamDrive driver assistance suite. It's a very refined package overall that continues to impress.Starting price: $72,400, including $1,500 destination feeBest value for a compact electric SUV: Volkswagen ID.4The ID.4 Pro is now the ID.4's most affordable model, with the discontinuation of the Standard version. Its max estimated range of 291 miles is more than enough for most folks, too. That's even long enough to make electric road tripping relatively easy, especially when you consider that VW is including two years of Electrify America charging with Plug & Charge with every ID.4. Plug & Charge allows owners to plug in and the charger will recognize the vehicle and the method of payment.In typical VW fashion, the ID.4 Pro comes standard packed with features, including a large package of advanced driver aids, a 12.9-inch center touchscreen, wireless smartphone connectivity, heated front seats and a wireless smartphone charger.Also consider: The Hyundai Kona Electric and Kia Niro EV have cheaper starting prices, but they are smaller and don't offer all-wheel drive.Starting price: $46,570, including $1,475 destination feeBest value for a midsize electric SUV: Hyundai Ioniq 5Hyundai's Ioniq 5 made waves in the industry when it debuted, and not only for its cyberpunk-lite styling. It also offered an excellent mix of range, performance and standard features that has made it a perennial favorite with car shoppers, even after the demise of the EV tax credit. While the base model's 245-mile range isn't all that impressive on paper, it's more than enough for most people in day-to-day driving.The base model Ioniq 5 offers niceties such as a standard power driver's seat and a 12.3-inch touchscreen infotainment system with wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, as well as features like Hyundai's SmartSense driver assistance suite, which includes blind-spot warning, adaptive cruise control, front and rear parking sensors, and more.Also consider: The 2026 Honda Prologue is a massive hit with consumers despite its near-$50,000 price tag.Starting price: $36,600, including $1,600 destination feeBest value for a three-row electric SUV: Kia EV9The EV9 is Kia's flagship electric SUV. As we've come to expect from Kia, the EV9 offers plenty of value for the price. It costs significantly less than other three-row electric SUVs like the Rivian R1S and offers a similar amount of luxury and tech features in its higher trims.The EV9's low starting price is for the Light RWD base model that delivers a modest estimated range of 230 miles. But it comes standard with lots of features, including a 110-volt household-style power outlet, large driver and infotainment screens, synthetic leather upholstery, heated and ventilated front seats, a digital key and many advanced driver aids. If you need more range than the base model's 230 miles, opt for the 304-mile Light Long Range for only about $4,000 more.Also consider: Check out the base models of the Rivian R1S and the Tesla Model X, but keep in mind they cost more.Starting price: $56,545, including $1,645 destination feeBest value for a compact luxury electric SUV: Tesla Model YAs with the Model 3, the Model Y's price has dropped significantly. It now has a starting price in the $40,000 range for the base rear-wheel-drive variant. Not that long ago, the Model Y started at a whopping $67,000. The Model Y now starts at a price similar to many non-luxury rivals and is more affordable than any luxury rival.The Model Y's base model has an estimated range of 321 miles, which is still respectable even though much of the competition is edging closer to Tesla's range. The Model Y comes equipped with the same long list of features as the Model 3, including a 15-inch center touchscreen, heated front and rear seats, and two wireless smartphone chargers. The Model Y also has access to Tesla's Supercharger network, the largest fast-charging network in the nation.Also consider: The Polestar 2, Audi Q4 E-tron and Genesis GV60 are excellent alternatives, but they are priced higher to start.Starting price: $41,380, including $1,390 destination feeBest value for a midsize luxury electric SUV: Cadillac LyriqThe stylish and spacious Lyriq is Cadillac's first electric SUV. It's a large two-row SUV around the size of a Tesla Model X. The Lyriq is priced significantly lower than its similarly sized German luxury competitors and closer to smaller rivals like the Genesis GV60.The Lyriq has a generous estimated range of 326 miles with rear-wheel drive and up to 319 miles with all-wheel drive. The AWD model packs a lot of power and costs only a few thousand more. Standard features include a wide 33-inch screen, an infotainment system powered by Google, wireless smartphone charging, wireless smartphone connectivity and heated front seats. Super Cruise, a hands-free driving system that works on certain highways, also comes standard.Also consider: If you need three rows of luxury seating and have a larger budget, consider the Tesla Model X and Rivian R1S.Starting price: $60,995, including $1,795 destination feeBest value for an electric truck: Chevrolet Silverado EVThe F-150 Lightning was the most affordable electric truck on the market, but Ford isn't continuing it into the 2026 model year. That means the new reigning value champ in the electric pickup space (until the Slate Truck goes on sale) is the Chevy Silverado EV, which has a slightly higher starting price and a slightly less traditional body style than the outgoing Ford. Don't worry, it's still ready to do truck stuff.While the base WT (Work Truck) trim was initially sold to fleets, the 286-mile no-nonsense truck can now be had in the form of the Custom trim by anyone as long as you can find one. Whether you'd want to live with a Custom on a daily basis if you weren't being paid to (it doesn't come with carpet, for example) remains to be seen, so most consumers will consider the LT as the base model, despite its higher price tag.The Silverado EV is extremely configurable, and buyers are able to spec it up to 760 hp and increase the battery size to deliver an estimated 493 miles of range.Also consider: The Rivian R1T will set you back more, but it boasts a distinct design, a premium interior, and impressive on- and off-road performance.Starting price: $58,490, including $2,595 destination fee ($63,495 for LT)Other electric cars offering great value2026 Chevrolet Equinox EVThe Equinox EV's low starting price makes it one of the most affordable EVs in 2026 and a killer deal when you consider its standard range of 319 miles. The Equinox EV is larger than the Bolt, making it better for families. The base 1LT model comes standard with several advanced driver aids and large dual monitors, including a huge 17.7-inch center touchscreen.Starting price: $36,795, including $1,800 destination fee2026 Volvo EX30Volvo's subcompact EX30 is a wildly affordable luxury compact electric SUV. The little SUV provides a generous range of up to 261 miles and comes well equipped with many standard features, including a package of advanced driver aids and a 12.3-inch tablet-style center touchscreen with Google Built-In. The optional Twin Motor model sacrifices a few miles of range for a more powerful all-wheel-drive powertrain.Starting price: $40,345, including $1,395 destination feeFinal thoughtsRewind to about a year ago, and you probably wouldn't have seen a Tesla on this list. Since then, Tesla has significantly lowered its prices, making it essentially a value brand. Tesla EVs aren't known for solid build quality and they aren't as luxurious as other luxury brands, but they have the best public charging network, offer long driving range, and are loaded with standard features. As EVs become more affordable to build and competition increases, other automakers will lower prices to better compete with the EV sales leader.This story was produced by Edmunds and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| One dead in Scott County workplace incidentOne person is dead after an incident at Riverstone Quarry on New Liberty Road in Scott County. A news release from the Scott County Sheriff's Office said that on June 26 at about 6:56 a.m., a worker was pinned underneath a large piece of equipment that was being loaded onto a trailer. The initial investigation [...] |
| Clinton resumes search for new city administatorThe City of Clinton held a meet and greet session with city administrator finalists earlier this week, but the city council did not make any of the candidates employment offers. Scott Maddaison, mayor of Clinton, spoke with Our Quad Cities News via Zoom to explain the city’s next steps. “We went through the interview process, [...] |
| 3 escape injury after plane makes emergency landing in Knox Co. cornfieldThree people escaped injury Thursday afternoon after a Cessna 172N plane experienced engine failure and made an emergency landing in a cornfield. |
| U.S. pledges generous earthquake relief to VenezuelaSecretary of State Marco Rubio promised: "We have a whole-of-government response. It'll be big; it'll be fast; and it'll be effective." |
| | Death Notice: Norma ZurborgA funeral service for Norma Roberta Zurborg, 97, will be held at 11 a.m. Tuesday, June 30, at New Life Baptist Church, Davenport. Burial will follow in the Maysville Cemetery. Visitation will be Monday, June 29, from 5-7 p.m. at Weerts Funeral Home, Davenport. Mrs. Zurborg died Tuesday, June 23, 2026. Memorials may be made to New Life Baptist Church. Online condolences may be made at www.WeertsFH.com. A full obituary will appear in the July 1 edition of The NSP. |
| | What is the difference between credit unions and traditional financial institutions?What is the difference between credit unions and traditional financial institutions?When you're choosing where to keep your money, the options can feel overwhelming. Should you go with a traditional financial institution or a credit union?At first glance, they seem nearly identical. Both offer checking accounts, savings accounts, loans and credit cards. But there's one fundamental difference that impacts everything from the rates you pay to the service you receive, and it's worth understanding.According to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), large financial institutions charge 8-10 percentage points more on credit card interest than credit unions. Over time, that difference can add up to thousands of dollars in your pocket or theirs.So, the difference between credit unions and traditional financial institutions comes down to ownership and purpose. Traditional financial institutions are for-profit corporations owned by shareholders. Credit unions are not-for-profit cooperatives owned by their members, which means you. This single distinction shapes everything — the rates you'll pay on loans, the fees you'll encounter, the service you’ll experience and how financial institutions invest in your community.Understanding this difference empowers you to make a choice that aligns with your financial goals and values. This guide by Members 1st Federal Credit Union explains how ownership structure translates into real-world benefits for you.Key Takeaways at a GlanceBefore diving into the details, it helps to see the core differences between credit unions and traditional financial institutions side by side. Here's a quick comparison:Ownership structure: Traditional financial institutions are owned by shareholders. Members own credit unions, with each account holder having an equal ownership stake.Primary goal: Traditional financial institutions exist to maximize profit for shareholders. Credit unions exist to serve members and return profits through better rates and lower fees.Typical rates: Traditional financial institutions set rates based on profit targets. Credit unions often offer more favorable rates because they're not focused on generating external profits.Service model: Traditional financial institutions operate on a transaction model focused on efficiency. Credit unions emphasize member relationships and personalized support.Guiding philosophy: Traditional financial institutions are profit-driven. Credit unions follow a people-helping-people philosophy rooted in cooperative principles.These distinctions create very different experiences for account holders. The ownership model shapes every interaction you'll have with your financial institution.Understanding Ownership and PurposeThe most fundamental difference between credit unions and traditional financial institutions lies in their ownership structure and core purpose. This influences everything from the products they offer to how they treat you.The For-Profit Model at Traditional Financial InstitutionsTraditional financial institutions are for-profit corporations legally obligated to generate profit for shareholders. Their shareholders are typically investors with no direct connection to the communities the institution serves, and this profit motive drives all business decisions:Technology investment and specialized services: The ability to raise capital from investors allows large institutions to invest heavily in technology infrastructure. This enables them to develop sophisticated mobile apps, expand branch networks rapidly and offer specialized services that require significant up-front investment.Scalability and national presence: The for-profit structure also enables these institutions to scale quickly. They can acquire smaller institutions and build a nationwide presence. If you travel frequently or need branch access across multiple states, this extensive footprint might matter to you.The Not-For-Profit Credit Union ModelCredit unions operate on a fundamentally different model. They're not-for-profit financial cooperatives owned by their members. When you open an account at a credit union, you become a part-owner with voting rights on major decisions.The not-for-profit designation doesn't mean credit unions don't generate surplus revenue. It means any profit belongs to the members, not outside investors. Here's how this structure benefits you:Lower loan rates: Without the pressure to maximize shareholder profits, credit unions can offer more competitive interest rates on mortgages, auto loans, personal loans and credit cards.Higher savings rates: Credit unions typically pay higher returns on savings accounts and certificates because they return profits to members rather than distributing them to external shareholders.Reduced fees: Credit union advantages include lower or eliminated account fees. You'll often find no monthly maintenance fees, lower overdraft charges and fewer transaction fees.This cooperative structure reflects a people-helping-people philosophy. Credit unions exist to serve membersâ financial needs, not to generate returns for distant investors.Compare Your Financial BenefitsUnderstanding the ownership models is important, but what really matters is how these differences affect your wallet.Average Interest Rate DifferencesCredit unions consistently offer better rates on many types of loan products. These gaps are significant enough to save you hundreds or thousands of dollars over the life of a loan.Here's what the numbers show:New car loans: According to the National Credit Union Administration (NCUA), a 60-month credit union car loan carried an average interest rate of 5.44% in the last quarter of 2025. Traditional institutions charged 7.41%. That's nearly two full percentage points, which can translate to over $1,000 in savings on a $30,000 vehicle.Used car loans: Credit unions averaged 6.01% on 60-month used car loans, compared to 8.51% at traditional institutions.Credit cards: Credit unions typically offer lower annual percentage rates. The Federal Credit Union Act imposes a 15% limit on loans and credit cards. However, the NCUA is continuing is 18% interest rate limit on federal credit loans until September 2027.Mortgages: Credit unions typically maintain a consistent rate advantage that can potentially save you thousands of dollars over a 30-year mortgage.These rate differences stem directly from the ownership model. Traditional institutions charge higher loan rates to generate profits for shareholders. Credit unions price products to benefit members.Common Account FeesThe fees you pay for basic financial services can add up to hundreds of dollars per year. Research from the CFPB found that large institutions are nearly three times more likely to charge an annual credit card fee than credit unions or other smaller institutions.Common fees that are often lower or eliminated at credit unions include monthly maintenance fees, minimum balance requirements, overdraft charges, ATM fees and paper statement fees. Many credit unions often offer free checking with straightforward terms.Why the difference? Traditional institutions view fees as a source of revenue. Credit unions design fee structures to cover costs while keeping membership affordable. The philosophy differs fundamentally. Traditional institutions ask how fees can maximize revenue, while credit unions ask how to serve members while maintaining financial stability.Service and Community DifferencesBeyond rates and fees, the ownership model shapes how financial institutions approach customer service, technology investment and community engagement.Personalized Service and Member SupportOne of the most frequently cited advantages of credit unions is personalized service. Because credit unions operate on a membership model rather than a transaction model, they typically emphasize relationship building.At a credit union, you're a member-owner with a voice in how the institution operates. When you call with a question or visit a branch, you're likely to work with someone who takes time to understand your specific financial situation.Many credit unions offer dedicated financial counseling services to help members make informed decisions. This personalized guidance isn't treated as a premium service reserved for high-balance accounts. It's considered a core membership benefit, available to everyone regardless of account size.Technology and Digital FinanceOne common credit union disadvantage is the perception that they lag behind large institutions in technology. The largest national institutions do have massive technology budgets that allow them to develop cutting-edge features.However, the technology gap has narrowed significantly. Most credit unions now offer comprehensive digital financial tools that meet most users' needs. You'll typically find mobile apps with remote deposit capture, person-to-person payments, online bill pay, budgeting tools and real-time alerts. Credit unions also participate in shared branching and ATM networks.Traditional institutions maintain an advantage in highly specialized technological features. If you need advanced international wire transfers, multicurrency accounts or algorithmic trading platforms, a large institution might serve you better. But for everyday digital financial needs, most credit unions provide a complete experience.Local Community InvestmentCredit unions are deeply rooted in the communities they serve. They're required by their charters to serve specific geographic areas or membership groups. This creates natural alignment between the institution's success and the community's prosperity.Many credit unions support community development through local events, financial literacy programs in schools, affordable housing initiatives and partnerships with community organizations. Focusing on local community investment is central to the cooperative mission that defines credit unions. When credit unions support local economic development, the entire community benefits. Success is shared rather than extracted by distant shareholders.Do Credit Unions and Traditional Financial Institutions Offer the Same Services? Members 1st Federal Credit Union Yes — despite different ownership structures, credit unions and traditional financial institutions provide essentially identical product lineups for everyday financial needs:Checking and savings accounts: Both offer a full range of deposit accounts, including basic checking, interest-bearing checking, savings accounts, money market accounts and certificates.Mortgages and home equity loans: Both provide mortgage products including conventional mortgages, FHA loans, VA loans and home equity lines of credit.Auto and personal loans: Both offer auto loans for new and used vehicles, as well as personal loans for various purposes.Credit cards: Both offer rewards programs and cashback. The key difference is typically in rates and fees.Digital financial tools: Modern credit unions offer mobile apps, online banking, remote deposit capture and person-to-person payments. Who Can Join a Credit Union?One area where credit unions differ is membership eligibility. However, joining a credit union is often easier than people think. Most people qualify for membership in at least one credit union through:Geographic location: Many credit unions serve anyone who lives, works, worships or attends school in specific counties or regions.Employer affiliation: Some credit unions serve employees of specific companies or industries.Organizational membership: Joining certain associations or community groups can make you eligible.Family relationships: If a family member is already a member, you typically qualify, too. Credit union membership is remarkably inclusive. Some have expanded to serve entire states or large multicounty regions.How to Choose What's Right for YouWhich type of institution best serves your specific needs? The answer depends on what matters most to you.Advantages of Traditional Financial InstitutionsThere are legitimate advantages of traditional financial institutions for certain profiles. Consider a traditional institution for:Extensive nationwide branch access: If you travel or move frequently, a major national institution with thousands of branches might offer more convenience.Cutting-edge, specialized digital tools: If you need algorithmic trading platforms or sophisticated treasury management systems, large institutions invest more heavily in these specialized technologies. For most people, these features aren't necessary, but they represent genuine advantages for traditional institutions in specific use cases.Complex international financial services: If you regularly conduct international wire transfers or maintain multicurrency accounts, large multinational institutions typically offer more robust capabilities.The disadvantages of traditional institutions in these scenarios include higher loan rates, lower savings rates, more fees and less personalized service.Credit Union AdvantagesFor most people, the credit union model offers compelling benefits. Consider a credit union for:Maximizing returns and minimizing interest: The lower loan rates and higher savings rates at credit unions can put thousands of dollars back in your pocket.Eliminating or reducing common account fees: Credit unions typically offer more member-friendly fee structures with truly free checking and significantly lower fees.Personalized service and member relationships: The member-focused service model at credit unions feels fundamentally different. You're not just a customer. You're a member-owner.Investing in your local community: The cooperative structure means your money works for your neighbors, not for Wall Street investors. These advantages address the needs of most consumers. Unless you fall into specialized categories where traditional institutions excel, a credit union may serve you better.Choose the Right Financial Partner for YouYou now have a clear picture of how credit unions and traditional financial institutions differ. The distinction isn't just philosophical. It's practical, measurable and directly affects your financial well-being.Credit unions operate on a not-for-profit model designed to return value to members through lower loan rates, higher savings rates and reduced fees. They prioritize personalized service and community investment over shareholder profits. Traditional institutions offer extensive branch networks and cutting-edge technology, which may be essential if your needs require those specific advantages.The right choice depends on what matters most to you. If you value competitive rates, minimal fees and a relationship-focused approach, a credit union may be the better fit. If you need specialized services, such as international wire transfers or private wealth management, a larger institution might better serve you.Whether you choose a credit union or a traditional institution, you can move forward with confidence knowing you've selected a financial partner that aligns with your priorities.This story was produced by Members 1st Federal Credit Union and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| Worker dies after accident at quarry in Scott CountyA worker died Friday morning after heavy machinery fell on him at the Riverstone Quarry on New Liberty Road in Scott County, officials announced. |
| | Care New England CEO to step down in 2027 to become board chairCare New England President and CEO Michael Wagner speaks at a Rhode Island State House event in May 2024. (Photo by Alexander Castro/Rhode Island Current)Care New England President and CEO Dr. Michael Wagner announced Friday that he plans to leave his post at the top of Rhode Island’s second-largest health system once his successor is selected and onboarded. But Wagner is not entirely leaving the hospital system, which counts Butler Hospital, Kent Hospital, and Women & Infants Hospital among its holdings. Wagner said in a statement he plans to retire from his full-time C-suite role and chair the company’s board of directors. For now, the board’s current chair, Gary Furtado, will stay on in his role as well through the end of his term, which concludes at the end of this year. The leadership shuffle follows a rough patch for the system, which last month announced cuts to more than 30 leadership and nonclinical jobs against the backdrop of an estimated $20 million shortfall in its fiscal 2026 budget. “The role of Board Chair is fundamentally different from that of CEO,” Wagner said in a statement Friday. “My focus will be on our mission, governance, healthcare policy, and supporting the success of the next leader of this organization.” Wagner’s transition plan was unanimously approved Thursday at a meeting of Care New England’s board. A national search for Wagner’s replacement will be conducted by a committee chaired by the board’s Vice Chair Steve Manty. A company press release Friday said it’s aiming to name the next president and CEO in early 2027. Audited financial statements show Care New England reported $15.2 million in operating income in fiscal year 2024, but then recorded a $10.8 million operating loss in fiscal year 2025. Wagner served as chief physician executive for Tufts Medicine before he succeeded James Fanale to become Care New England’s CEO in December 2022. Care New England credited Wagner with overseeing the rollout of a unified Epic electronic medical record system across the network, a systemwide rebrand and, most recently, securing refinancing to support capital investment. In May, real estate financing company Greystone provided Care New England with a $215.5 million loan, insured by the Federal Housing Administration, to refinance debt and fund hospital projects. Wagner also presided over the network during the Butler Hospital strike of 2025, the longest hospital worker strike in state history, which lasted a little over three months. In addition to its hospitals, the healthcare network also includes Care New England Medical Group, VNA Home Health & Hospice, The Providence Center, and Integra Community Care Network. Across its properties, the system has 749 licensed beds and 102 infant bassinets. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX. Courtesy of Rhode Island Current |
| LISTEN: Sec. RFK Jr. tries to convince Iowa candidate to drop out of race - CloneThe Libertarian Party of Iowa Chair shared audio of a phone that she said shows U.S. Secretary of Health & Human Services Robert F. Kennedy, Junior, trying to convince a candidate for Congress to drop out of a race for Congress. |
| North Scott School District resignations, hirings and other personnel news for June 15The following personnel items are from the June 15 agenda of the North Scott School District. The school board met at Junior High. |
| Tapestry Farms hosting summer breakfast in the garden series highlighting area growersThe Quad City nonprofit assists area refugees accessing nutritious affordable food. The organization is inviting community members to tour area gardens, meet growers and partake in a light breakfast. The “Breakfast in the Garden” series is monthly through September. |
| | Solar has minimal impact on NC farmland, new study showsSolar panels and wind turbines. (Photo: Marga Buschbell-Steeger/Getty Images)A new study is refuting claims by critics that the solar industry is taking over productive farmland and interfering with agricultural production. “You travel across the state of North Carolina, and it’s occupying the best farmland in the state,” said N.C. House Agriculture Chairman Jimmy Dixon (R-Duplin) in a 2025 hearing on solar tax breaks. The industry says the data shows that’s not the case: Solar production occupies just 0.24% of prime farmland in North Carolina at the moment, according to a report released last week by the Solar Energy Industries Association. Other land uses, like suburban development and recreation, take up far more agricultural land, the study shows. Between 2014 and 2024, suburban development in North Carolina took away 3.6 times more prime farmland than utility-scale solar projects at 0.87%, according to the research. Golf courses used 0.28% of the state’s prime farmland. “This map helps provide important context by showing that solar and agriculture can thrive together,” SEIA president and CEO Tim Pawlenty said in a statement. “Solar development uses a very small amount of farmland compared to many other common land uses, while also delivering affordable energy, local tax revenue, and reliable income for farmers and landowners.” North Carolina ranks fifth nationally for total installed solar capacity, according to SEIA. About 10% of the state’s electricity derives from solar energy, enough to power more than 1 million homes. At a national level, golf courses use 2.6 times as much prime farmland as the solar industry, and suburban sprawl between 2014 and 2024 took up 5.9 times more than solar. Nationally, the analysis found that solar currently uses a mere 0.04% of total U.S. land area and 0.07% of U.S. farmland. There are no states where solar takes up more than 0.5% of prime farmland, according to the report. When solar developers decide where to put their projects, they look for land with proximity to the grid, SEIA senior vice president of policy Sean Gallagher told NC Newsline. “They need to be able to connect their project to the grid relatively easily and relatively inexpensively,” he said. “They’re looking for a piece of land that will accommodate the project, and that means land that’s the right size, that has community support, and that’s available.” California has the highest overlap between solar and prime farmland in the country at 0.43%. The state has proportionately less agricultural land and more solar projects for its size, and its urban areas could play a role in the numbers as well. “One of the only forms of generation that can be located close to population centers is solar, because it can be located on rooftops,” Gallagher said. NC solar sector at crossroads after federal funding cuts Nationally, the federal government has made moves away from clean energy sources like solar and wind. President Donald Trump’s “Big, Beautiful Bill” signed last July eliminated a 30% residential solar tax credit for systems installed after 2025, dramatically shortening the previous timeline, which would’ve provided the credit through 2032. In August, the Environmental Protection Agency abruptly ended the Solar for All program, which offered $156 million in North Carolina and $7 billion nationally towards solar projects in lower-income communities. Earlier this year, North Carolina Utilities Commissioner Chair Bill Brawley directed Duke Energy to stop its 2026 solar procurement progress. The order doesn’t cancel existing projects, but means the utility won’t add new ones this year, impacting future solar capacity. “It’s been a challenging year for the solar industry,” Gallagher said. Despite the headwinds, he said, solar remains an affordable option that can be added to the grid more quickly than any other source of energy. “In a state like North Carolina, where energy demand is surging,” Gallagher said, “solar plus storage is the fastest and most affordable way to meet that demand.” Courtesy of NC Newsline |
| | Feds: Plastic surgeon defrauded Medicare through false billings for cancer treatments(Stock photo by Greenleaf123/Getty Images)The federal government is suing a central Iowa physician and his plastic surgery center, alleging they used false information to inflate their Medicare billings for skin cancer treatments. The U.S. Department of Justice alleges Dr. Eugene J. Cherny and his Urbandale plastic surgery practice, Heartland Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, routinely and knowingly provided false information to a Medicare contractor about how much Cherny actually paid for “skin-substitute products” used to treat Medicare beneficiaries for skin cancer and other ailments. Relying on those allegedly false representations, the lawsuit states, the taxpayer-supported Medicare program then reimbursed Cherny $20,167,426 for those products between Jan. 1, 2021, and Dec. 31, 2022 — although the portion of that amount the government attributes to fraudulent billing is not stated. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX. The lawsuit alleges that Cherny was a “prolific user” of skin-substitute products, which are biologic or synthetic materials used to cover or treat persistent wounds. Cherny allegedly purchased the products directly from two manufacturers and one distributor whose sales representatives allegedly explained to him how he could benefit from a substantial profit by using the products on his Medicare Part B patients. “Cherny closely tracked the profits he made from using skin-substitute products and required his staff to maintain a logbook that tracked his return on investment,” the lawsuit alleges. “He refused to use a skin-substitute product on Medicare Part B patients unless it yielded a significant profit.” The lawsuit goes on to claim Cherny used those skin-substitute products to treat nearly all of his Medicare Part B patients who had a specific set of wounds tied to skin cancer. “On the other hand, he used those products to treat only a few of his private-insurance patients,” the government alleges. According to the lawsuit, the per-patient cost to Medicare for the first application of a skin substitute by Cherny was, on average $13,000, and the per-patient cost to Medicare for a complete course of treatment averaged $57,000. Lawsuit: Medicare billings topped $20 million Soon after he first began using skin-substitute products to treat Medicare patients, Cherny “became one of the most prolific billers” of such products in the United States, the lawsuit claims. In both 2020 and 2021, the lawsuit alleges, Cherny was the nation’s top-paid Medicare Part B provider of skin-substitute products. In 2021, Medicare allegedly reimbursed him $13,142,219 for the products, and in 2022, Medicare reimbursed him $7,025,207 for the products. Cherny, the government claims, “often provided false information, including invoices reflecting false prices that he never paid” for the products. The lawsuit states Cherny obtained the false invoices from a skin-substitute distributor, who had given him two invoices for each purchase – a “falsified invoice” showing the list price that Cherny never paid, and one showing the “substantially lower price that Cherny actually paid.” The list-price invoice was then used to bill Medicare, the lawsuit alleges. For example, the government states, Cherny provided Medicare with invoices for $400 per unit of one particular product, although he had actually paid $240 per unit. The government says that as a result of the fraud, it has suffered actual damages in an amount that will be determined at trial, adding that the federal False Claims Act allows the government to recover three times the amount lost to fraud while also imposing a civil penalty of up to $23,331 for each instance of false billing. The staff at Cherny’s office said Thursday he would be in surgery in all day and that no one else in the office could comment on the government’s allegations. State records show that Cherny’s license to practice medicine in Iowa is in good standing with the Iowa Board of Medicine and that he has no history of public disciplinary action. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE Courtesy of Iowa Capital Dispatch |
| 'That Animal Guy' makes appearance at Planet Funk Con/QC Fright ConBefore "That Animal Guy" arrives at Davenport's RiverCenter, he's stopping by the News 8 station to talk about the upcoming conventions. |
| World Cup fans are missing games after their resale tickets fall throughThe ordeal has left fans forced to either miss out on a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity or scramble to find new tickets, often costing more and for worse seats. |
| Investigation underway into workplace accident in Scott CountyRight now, News 8 is working to learn more about a worker who was reportedly injured on the job. |
| Traffic alert: 2 lanes on John Deere Road to be closedWestbound John Deere Road will be reduced by two lanes between 7th and 16th streets starting Monday for patching work, IDOT announced. |
| Clinton opening cooling centers during heat waveExtreme temperatures expected over the next several days are leading local officials to open cooling centers for residents. In Clinton, officials will activate their Extreme Temperature Plan starting on Sunday, June 28 at 3 p.m. It will stay in effect until conditions improve. The Clinton MTA is offering free rides during regular hours to the [...] |
| | Cutting costs to move forward: SoFi State of Small business 2026 surveyCutting costs to move forward: SoFi State of Small business 2026 surveyHow are America’s small businesses faring? In SoFi’s State of Small Business survey, 86% of small business owners report their business has grown or remained stable over the past 12 months, and 88% say they’re optimistic about success in 2026.At the same time, survey respondents are keenly aware of this year’s unusually strong economic headwinds. Two-thirds of them say high costs are the biggest external factors affecting their operations. By far the largest share (47% of all participants) identify inflation and the rising costs of goods, while another 20% point to high interest rates that limit access to capital.As a result, business owners know they need to do more with less. More than two out of five respondents (42%) say this year’s top priority is reducing costs to improve profit margins.Meanwhile, money isn’t the only resource in short supply. The challenge that business owners cite most often (26%) is “finding enough time in the day to get it all done.”Read on for a status report from the perspective of American small business owners, based on a SoFi survey of 515 owners conducted in April 2026, as they persevere and move ahead.Key PointsMore than 8 in 10 (86%) small business owners report their companies have grown or stayed stable, with an even larger percentage (88%) feeling optimistic about 2026.High costs remain the top external pressure, with 47% of owners pointing to inflation and rising prices on goods and 20% citing high interest rates.Reducing costs to improve profit margins tops the priority list for 42% of small business owners.Cash reserves are a concern, as 55% of owners report having only three months’ worth of funds or less on hand to weather disruptions.Compensation is the main issue in hiring and retaining staff, with 53% of owners citing competitive pay and strong benefits packages as their biggest hurdles.Business Owners Still Optimistic, As Most Companies Stay Put or GrowThe cliché about entrepreneurs and bootstraps endures for a reason. Small business owners embody persistence, even amid economic upheaval and inflationary policies. SoFi In general, 2025 was a decent year for survey respondents. Roughly 45% of participants say their businesses have been stable over the past year, while 41% report growth. Relatedly, about 70% of those business owners (vs. 64% overall) feel “very” or “extremely” optimistic about the year ahead.Real estate was the only sector in which a majority of firms (60%) grew in the past 12 months.Biggest Obstacles to Growth: Economic Uncertainty and Rising CostsRegardless of past performance, 37% of all respondents say economic uncertainty is the biggest obstacle to expanding their businesses. Significant minorities report concern about rising costs (22%) and unmanageable workloads (20%) as well.According to business owners, rising costs are the No. 1 constraint within certain industries: construction, real estate, and personal services (such as salons and cleaning companies).Higher costs are no surprise given the persistence of inflation, identified by almost half of survey respondents (47%) as the biggest external influence on their current business operations. It’s by far the top issue for companies in almost every sector. Almost three in five construction business owners (59%) identify inflation as their top consideration, as do half (50%) of manufacturers and 50% of personal services company owners. Only among real estate business owners is inflation surpassed by another cost problem: high interest rates and access to capital.For context, consumer price inflation was 2.7% in 2025, when survey data was collected. Analysis by the Dallas Fed estimates that the 2026 Iran war’s disruption of global oil markets could increase inflation in 2026 by 0.2 to 1.8 percentage points.Behind the Scenes, a Widespread Cash CrunchOptimism notwithstanding, most respondents’ cash reserves are lacking.The conventional wisdom is that, like individuals, businesses should set aside enough cash to pay their expenses for three to six months. Our survey found that only about one in four (24%) respondents have sufficient reserves for that. SoFi Instead, most (55%) report having enough cash on hand to last for three months or less. More than one-third (37%) have one to three months’ worth of cash, but nearly 1 in 5 (18%) have less than they’d need for 30 days.Of the ten industries represented in the survey, the companies most likely to meet the six-month standard are those in the finance/insurance sector. In that group:More than one-third (37%) have enough reserves to cover half a year.Almost half (46%) are debt-free.Most Have Debt Under ControlOne-third of business owners report their companies are debt-free; of that subset, more than one-third (34%) have a cash reserve covering more than six months’ worth of expenses.Almost half of the respondents (47%) describe their debt level as manageable. Only 16% of this group have enough cash to run for half a year or more without income, while 30% could hold out for three to six months.Most Owners Supplement Business Revenues With Personal FundsDespite decent debt management and having at least some money in the bank, most business owners are not strict about separating business funds from personal resources.More than three-quarters of owners (78%) report they sometimes use personal savings or credit cards to pay for business needs. About half of them (47%, representing 37% of all respondents) provide a few personal cash infusions per year, While 1 in 5 respondents overall (20%) use this approach every month.The Biggest Competitive Threat? Depends on the IndustryIn 2026, a host of competitive threats looms from all directions. SoFi Overall, respondents are evenly split on which one is most menacing:Changing consumer preferences: 25%Local competitors: 23%Big-box stores and national corporations: 22%E-commerce: 22%Other: 7%But responses diverge widely when sorted by industry. For example, retail store owners (42%) are most likely to identify e-commerce as their top threat, but no more than 29% of respondents in any other sector consider it their biggest risk. Similarly, changing consumer preferences are the biggest source of pressure for 60% of real estate business owners, while in other industries, no more than 40% of owners say this.Business Basics Remain at the ForefrontWhile strategizing about these and other big-picture issues, business owners also worry about the fundamentals of owning and running a business day to day.As identified by almost half of respondents (48%), the main structural challenges they face this year are:Finding enough time in the day to get everything done: 26%Setting prices high enough to cover costs without driving away customers: 22%In addition, more than one-quarter of survey respondents (26%) say that the problem of finding new customers keeps them up at night. Almost as many (24%) wrestle with how they’ll keep their products and services relevant as the world changes. For almost one in five (19%), economic anxiety — specifically, fears of a recession and its effect on their business — overshadows all other worries. SoFi Hiring Challenges Center on CompensationAs the saying goes, good help is hard to find. For almost 16% of business owners, hiring qualified people is their toughest challenge. The same share of respondents say that difficulty finding talent is the external factor that most affects their operations.The biggest hurdle in hiring and retaining employees is compensation, according to more than half of small business owners (53%). For almost one-third overall (31%), competitive pay is the biggest sticking point, while about one in five (22%) cite the need to provide robust benefits packages.The Road Ahead: How to Succeed in 2026With economic conditions as they are, many business owners are hunkering down. The largest share of respondents (42%) is focusing on reducing costs to squeeze more profit out of their existing operations. These cost-cutters outnumber the business owners who will seek growth via a bigger presence online and off (20%) or new products and services (19%).The TakeawayPerilous economic conditions have presented small business owners with many financial obstacles this year. It’s a tribute to their hard work and grit that almost all of them express optimism about their business prospects, even as they confirm the difficulties posed by inflation, still-high interest rates, and the rising costs of goods. Many are leaning toward cost-cutting as their best bet for boosting profits in 2026, a self-reliant approach that can give business owners more control during turbulent times.This story was produced by SoFi and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
| | How do built-in bras actually provide support?How do built-in bras actually provide support?Sometimes you don't want to wear a bra, but you don't want to skip support either. Or, maybe the top you're wearing is difficult to style with a bra underneath. That's where built-in bras come in. No more worrying about visible bra straps or finding the right bra to wear under certain outfits. But what exactly is a built-in bra, and how does it differ from other bra styles? Honeylove explains.What Exactly is a Built-In Bra?A built-in bra is a bra that is integrated directly into a garment, such as a tank top, dress or bodysuit. This design eliminates the need for a separate bra, as the support and shaping are built right into the clothing itself.Built-in bras come in a range of styles, from simple shelf bras to more structured designs with molded cups, padding, underwire, and adjustable straps. The level of support and shaping provided can vary greatly depending on the specific garment style and construction.For example, a casual sundress might feature a simple, unlined shelf bra that offers light support and coverage, while a formal gown could have a fully structured, underwire built-in bra with molded cups and boning for maximum support and shaping. Activewear tops and bodysuits often fall somewhere in between, with medium support built-in bras that feature compressive fabrics, removable padding and wide, supportive straps.How Do Built-In Bras Differ from Shelf Bras?While both built-in bras and shelf bras are integrated into garments, there are some key differences in their construction and the level of support they provide. Built-in bras often offer more structured support, shaping and coverage compared to simple shelf bras.When shopping for a garment with a built-in bra, look for features like molded cups, padding, full 360-degree support bands and compressive fabrics. These elements work together to provide support, shaping and comfort, making built-in bras a more functional and supportive option.In contrast, shelf bras are usually just an extra layer of fabric and elastic sewn into the garment. They provide light support and modesty but minimal shaping or separation. Shelf bras sometimes only extend from side seam to side seam in the front, while built-in bras typically wrap all the way around the back for added support.Types of Built-In Bra GarmentsBuilt-in bras can be found in a variety of garment styles, each offering different levels of support, shaping and customization: 1. Casual Camis and SundressesCasual camis and sundresses often feature lightly padded fabric shelf bras for a bit of modesty and support. These built-in bras are best suited for smaller bust sizes or low-impact activities, as they provide minimal shaping and lift.2. Activewear TanksActivewear tanks with built-in bras usually have more structured, molded cups and compressive fabrics. These garments are designed to provide support and minimize bounce during workouts, making them a great choice for medium to high-impact activities.3. Shaping Bodysuits and InnerwearShaping bodysuits and innerwear tend to have the most structured built-in bras with features like underwire, adjustable straps, and hook-and-eye bands. These garments offer the most customizable fit and support along with all-over shaping and smoothing benefits.4. Special Occasion DressesSpecial occasion dresses with built-in bras range from simple shelf bras to molded cups with padding and boning. The level of support and shaping varies based on the style and fabric of the dress, so it's a good idea to try on different options to find the best fit for your body and the occasion.Key Features to Look for in a Supportive Built-In BraWhen shopping for a garment with a built-in bra, keep an eye out for these features that enhance support, shaping, and comfort:1. Molded Cups and PaddingMolded cups help shape and separate the breasts, preventing a uniboob look. Padding provides additional shaping and nipple coverage, creating a smooth silhouette under clothing.2. Full 360-Degree Support BandA supportive underband that wraps all the way around the torso is important for optimal support. This full band anchors the bra below the bust, preventing it from riding up and distributing the weight evenly.3. Wider, Adjustable StrapsThicker straps distribute weight better and offer more support than thin ones. Look for adjustable straps that allow you to customize the fit and support level to your unique body and preferences.4. Compressive, Substantial FabricsAvoid built-in bras made with thin, unlined fabrics that offer little support. Instead, opt for garments made with compressive, substantive materials that provide added shaping and support, ensuring a smooth, flattering fit.5. Adequate Cup Capacity and CoverageMake sure the built-in bra has enough room in the cups to fully contain your breasts without spillage or overflow. Look for sufficient coverage to avoid overexposure, especially when bending or moving, ensuring you feel confident and secure in the garment.Can a Built-In Bra Replace a Regular Bra?For many people, a well-constructed built-in bra with supportive features can provide enough support to be worn on its own, especially for small to average bust sizes. When deciding if a built-in bra can replace a regular bra for you, consider the level of support and shaping provided by the built-in bra, the intended use of the garment (casual wear, workouts, special occasions), and your personal comfort and support requirements based on your bust size and shape.It's always a good idea to start by finding out your bra size. Use this bra size calculator to find your perfect fit.This story was produced by Honeylove and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |
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| | July 2026 music festivals ranked by lineup valueJuly 2026 music festivals ranked by lineup valueSummer festival calendars are crowded, and ticket prices can vary sharply from one event to the next. Some festivals charge premium prices for large international lineups. Others offer lower-cost passes while still booking artists with strong audience demand.That makes “value” difficult to judge from price alone. A cheaper pass is not automatically a better deal, and a higher-priced festival can still look competitive if the lineup is unusually strong.To compare July 2026 festivals more directly for this article, Viberate analyzed medium and big music festivals in Europe and North America using a lineup-strength-to-ticket-price index. The analysis compared each festival’s reviewed Total Lineup Score (calculated based on artists' performance on Viberate), with the lowest verified multi-day general admission ticket price available from official festival or ticketing sources.The result is not a ranking of the “best” festivals overall. Location, travel costs, genre preference, camping, fees, and on-site expenses can all change what a ticket is worth to an individual attendee. Instead, this ranking measures one specific question: Which verified July 2026 festivals offer the most lineup strength per $100 of multi-day general admission ticket cost?MethodologyViberate started with the top 50 medium and big festivals returned by its July festival database filter for Europe and North America, sorted by Performance Score. Because the database month filter can include festivals with July editions from past years, each candidate was manually reviewed to confirm whether it has a July 2026 edition.Festivals were included only if they met all of the following criteria: they had confirmed July 2026 dates, a Total Lineup Score calculated based on artists' performance on Viberate, a reviewed lineup artist count, at least 10 confirmed lineup artists at the time of analysis, and a verified multi-day general admission ticket price. Festivals were excluded if they did not have a confirmed July 2026 edition, only had single-day pricing, lacked comparable general admission pricing, had sold-out or unavailable standard GA passes, had unclear ticket packages, or had fewer than 10 confirmed lineup artists.Ticket prices were collected from official festival websites or official ticketing partners. The analysis used the lowest verified multi-day general admission price available for each festival, excluding VIP passes, resale listings, camping, hotel packages, travel packages, and optional add-ons. Prices were converted to U.S. dollars using ECB euro foreign exchange reference rates from May 27, 2026.The final Value Index was calculated as:Value Index equals reviewed Total Lineup Score in thousands divided by ticket price in US dollars, multiplied by 100.In plain terms, the index shows how many lineup-score points, expressed in thousands, each festival offers per $100 of verified multi-day GA ticket cost. Artist count was used as a secondary quality-control field to understand lineup depth, but it did not determine the ranking.1. Holika — SpainHolika ranked first in the analysis by a wide margin, driven by a low verified multi-day ticket price and a strong reviewed lineup score. The Spanish festival had a reviewed Total Lineup Score of 91.3K and a converted ticket price of $59.34, producing a Value Index of 153.87.That does not mean Holika is the largest festival in the dataset. It means its lineup strength is high relative to its verified ticket cost. Among the festivals analyzed, no other event delivered as much reviewed lineup score per $100.2. Morriña Festival — SpainMorriña Festival placed second, with a reviewed Total Lineup Score of 141.5K and a converted ticket price of $110.55. Its Value Index was 127.99.The festival’s ranking reflects a combination that matters in this analysis: a strong reviewed lineup score and a still-relatively low multi-day GA price. Morriña was one of only two festivals in the final ranking with a Value Index above 100.3. Les Déferlantes Sud de France — FranceLes Déferlantes Sud de France ranked third with a Value Index of 65.42. Its reviewed Total Lineup Score was 141.6K, nearly identical to Morriña Festival’s, but its higher converted ticket price of $216.45 lowered its lineup-to-price ratio.This shows why price normalization matters. Two festivals can have similar lineup strength but produce very different value scores once ticket cost is included.4. MEO Marés Vivas — PortugalMEO Marés Vivas ranked fourth with a Value Index of 61.36. Its reviewed Total Lineup Score was 71.4K, and its converted ticket price was $116.37.Compared with some higher-scoring festivals, MEO Marés Vivas ranked well because of price efficiency. It did not need one of the highest lineup scores in the dataset to perform strongly on the index.5. Ruisrock Festival — FinlandRuisrock Festival ranked fifth, with a reviewed Total Lineup Score of 104.3K and a converted ticket price of $278.12. Its Value Index was 37.50.Ruisrock’s ranking shows the other side of the calculation. The festival has a strong lineup score, but a higher ticket price places it below lower-priced festivals with similar or moderately lower lineup strength.6. Rock Fest — United StatesRock Fest in Cadott, Wisconsin, ranked sixth with a Value Index of 30.50. Its reviewed Total Lineup Score was 54.6K, and its verified ticket price was $179.00.It was the highest-ranked U.S. festival in the analysis. Its placement came from a relatively moderate ticket price compared with other North American festivals in the dataset.7. Hinterland Music Festival — United StatesHinterland Music Festival ranked seventh, with a reviewed Total Lineup Score of 115.8K and a converted ticket price of $390.00. Its Value Index was 29.69.Hinterland had one of the stronger reviewed lineup scores among the final entries. Its ticket price, however, kept it below several European festivals with lower verified GA costs.8. Slottsfjell Festival — NorwaySlottsfjell Festival ranked eighth with a Value Index of 25.29. Its reviewed Total Lineup Score was 98.0K, and its converted ticket price was $387.47.The Norwegian festival’s lineup score was competitive, but its converted ticket price placed it in the same pattern as several higher-cost festivals: strong lineup, lower value index because of price.9. Kappa Futur Festival — ItalyKappa Futur Festival ranked ninth with a Value Index of 22.21. Its reviewed Total Lineup Score was 64.6K, and its converted ticket price was $290.93.The electronic music festival remained in the top 10 despite a higher ticket cost because its reviewed lineup score was still strong enough to keep its lineup-to-price ratio above most of the remaining dataset.10. Afro Nation Portugal — PortugalAfro Nation Portugal ranked 10th, with a reviewed Total Lineup Score of 93.6K and a converted ticket price of $464.32. Its Value Index was 20.16.Afro Nation’s placement shows how higher ticket prices affect the ranking. Its lineup score was one of the stronger scores among the analyzed festivals, but its ticket price reduced its score-per-dollar efficiency.11. Stavernfestivalen — NorwayStavernfestivalen ranked 11th with a Value Index of 19.28. Its reviewed Total Lineup Score was 45.5K, and its converted ticket price was $236.04.The festival’s placement reflects a mid-range combination of lineup strength and ticket price. It did not have one of the highest lineup scores, but its verified GA price kept it competitive.12. Rock Fest Barcelona — SpainRock Fest Barcelona ranked 12th, with a reviewed Total Lineup Score of 48.4K and a converted ticket price of $261.83. Its Value Index was 18.49.The Spanish rock and metal festival landed in the top 15 because its ticket price remained moderate relative to its reviewed lineup score.13. Badlands Music Festival — CanadaBadlands Music Festival ranked 13th with a Value Index of 17.86. Its reviewed Total Lineup Score was 69.3K, and its converted ticket price was $387.96.Badlands had a stronger lineup score than several festivals ranked above it, but its higher converted ticket price lowered its final position.14. VIBE Fesztivál — RomaniaVIBE Fesztivál ranked 14th, with a reviewed Total Lineup Score of 17.4K and a converted ticket price of $110.86. Its Value Index was 15.70.Its lineup score was lower than most festivals in the top 15, but its low verified ticket price kept it in the ranking.15. Musilac Aix-les-Bains — FranceMusilac Aix-les-Bains ranked 15th with a Value Index of 15.62. Its reviewed Total Lineup Score was 39.8K, and its converted ticket price was $254.85.The French festival rounded out the top 15 because its reviewed lineup score and verified multi-day GA price remained competitive after currency conversion.Lower ticket prices drove the highest value scoresThe top of the ranking was shaped heavily by ticket price. Holika and Morriña Festival both ranked above festivals with similar or stronger lineup profiles because their verified multi-day GA prices were much lower than most competitors in the dataset.This does not mean lower-priced festivals always rank higher. The index still requires lineup strength. But when a festival combines a strong reviewed lineup score with a low verified ticket price, the value score rises quickly.Higher-priced festivals still performed when lineup scores were strongSeveral higher-priced festivals remained in the top 15 because their lineup scores were strong enough to offset some of the price difference. Hinterland Music Festival, Slottsfjell Festival, Afro Nation Portugal, and Badlands Music Festival all had converted ticket prices above $380, but each still made the ranking because of lineup strength.The analysis therefore does not simply reward cheap tickets. It rewards the relationship between lineup strength and price.Why some major festivals were excludedSome high-profile July festivals did not appear in the final ranking because their ticket structures or lineup data were not comparable. The analysis excluded festivals that only offered single-day tickets, lacked available standard GA pricing, had sold-out comparable passes, did not have a confirmed July 2026 edition, or had fewer than 10 confirmed lineup artists at the time of analysis.This matters because the lineup score reflects a festival lineup, not one day of programming. Comparing a full festival lineup score against a single-day ticket would inflate the value score and weaken the ranking. Including a festival with only a few confirmed artists could also overstate value before the 2026 lineup is far enough along to compare fairly.What this ranking does and does not showThis ranking measures lineup value by one specific definition: reviewed Total Lineup Score per $100 of verified multi-day GA ticket cost. It does not account for travel expenses, accommodation, local prices, camping, parking, food and drink, fees not clearly included in listed prices, or personal genre preference.It also does not claim that one festival is better than another overall. A higher Value Index means a festival ranked higher on this specific lineup-score-to-ticket-price measure.For readers comparing festival tickets, the results show how much the underlying economics can vary. A festival with a moderate ticket price can outrank a more famous or more expensive event if its lineup score is strong enough. A high-priced event can still perform well if its lineup strength is high.The clearest value scores came from festivals where both sides of the equation worked together: strong reviewed lineup data and relatively low verified ticket prices. That is the main takeaway from the ranking. In a market where festival costs are not always easy to compare, the strongest value signals came from events where the lineup and price were aligned.This story was produced by Viberate and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. |