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

Thursday, April 30th, 2026

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Train Food

This is Roald Tweet on Rock Island.On April the first, in 1980, a federal judge ordered the liquidation of the great Rock Island Lines. Local citizens who…

WVIK These fans are boycotting the World Cup. Will they make it a bust? WVIK

These fans are boycotting the World Cup. Will they make it a bust?

Some fans in the U.S. and around the world are unhappy with World Cup ticket prices — and U.S. immigration policies. So they're deciding not to come, raising concerns across the travel industry.

WVIK Supreme Court paves the way for largest-ever drop in Black representation in Congress WVIK

Supreme Court paves the way for largest-ever drop in Black representation in Congress

By weakening Voting Rights Act protections against racial discrimination in redistricting, the Supreme Court has paved the way for the largest-ever drop in representation by Black members of Congress.

WVIK After lackluster tour turnout, Turning Point wraps things up with excited crowd in Idaho WVIK

After lackluster tour turnout, Turning Point wraps things up with excited crowd in Idaho

The final stop on Turning Point USA's college campus tour at the University of Idaho seemed more like the organization's previous events, with audience member debates and an energetic, young crowd.

WVIK The Iraq vet redefining mindfulness, one bourbon at a time WVIK

The Iraq vet redefining mindfulness, one bourbon at a time

Like many vets, it took Fred Minnick time to find the best way to cope with what he would learn was PTSD. For Minnick, sense and peace came with bourbon — and "taste mindfulness."

WVIK Mirroring Gaza, Israel is destroying towns and villages in southern Lebanon WVIK

Mirroring Gaza, Israel is destroying towns and villages in southern Lebanon

In southern Lebanon, towns near the border with Israel have been largely destroyed by Israeli demolitions and strikes. Israel says it has been attacking Hezbollah infrastructure, but civilian infrastructure has also been significantly affected.

WVIK Activists say Israel has intercepted their Gaza aid flotilla near Crete WVIK

Activists say Israel has intercepted their Gaza aid flotilla near Crete

Activists sailing on dozens of boats attempting to break Israel's blockade of the Gaza Strip to deliver aid say Israeli forces intercepted them, detaining the crews while the flotilla was sailing near the Greek island of Crete.

WVIK How rising jet fuel prices are driving up the cost of fighting wildfires WVIK

How rising jet fuel prices are driving up the cost of fighting wildfires

The Iran war has nearly doubled jet fuel prices in the United States. That means the bill for firefighting aircraft operations this summer will likely rise by tens of millions of dollars.

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Why gas prices rocketed up in Illinois and Iowa, other states

Drivers in a handful of states may have noticed pump prices rapidly increase this week. It could impact more states soon.

WVIK How a father and daughter duped NYC's art world with fake Warhols and Banksys WVIK

How a father and daughter duped NYC's art world with fake Warhols and Banksys

A father and daughter in New Jersey have pleaded guilty to running a years-long counterfeiting scheme to trick art galleries and auction houses into buying forged paintings

WVIK Trump says he is weighing reducing American troop presence in Germany after Iran feud WVIK

Trump says he is weighing reducing American troop presence in Germany after Iran feud

President Trump suggested he could soon reduce the U.S. military presence in Germany as he continues to feud with Chancellor Friedrich Merz over the U.S-Israel war against Iran.

Wednesday, April 29th, 2026

KWQC TV-6  Ben McCollum joins Joey Donia for interview after historic run to Elite Eight KWQC TV-6

Ben McCollum joins Joey Donia for interview after historic run to Elite Eight

After leading Iowa the men’s basketball program to the Elite Eight for the first time since 1987, momentum is quickly building for Ben McCollum’s Hawkeyes.

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‘Not a 12th chance’: Republicans demand bail law changes after police shooting

The push came after two Chicago police officers were shot by a felon who was on pretrial release.

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Community members voice concerns about 'History Rocks' tour coming to Davenport elementary school

The America 250 Civics Education Coalition, which created the event, is almost entirely comprised of conservative and right-leaning organizations.

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Community members voice concerns about 'History Rocks' tour coming to Davenport elementary school

The tour has raised concerns from critics due to the number of conservative organizations supporting the initiative.

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Quad Cities leaders hold work session on homelessness

Leaders from 5 cities in the Quad Cities area attended.

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Artist needed for downtown Burlington mural

The selected design should reflect themes of nature, prairie grass and the legacy of Aldo Leopold, a well-known conservationist who was from Burlington.

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Iowa Farm Act to strengthen agriculture advances

The Iowa Senate passed the state's farm act. The Iowa Farm Act would expand Iowa's agritourism industry and give targeted tax relief to farmers. The bill introduced by Iowa Secretary of Agriculture Mike Naig intends to strengthen rural communities and provide more support to farmers. The Senate unanimously passed the bill with an amendment. It [...]

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Illinois bill would ban cellphone use in schools

A bill to ban cell phones in schools is gaining momentum in Illinois. Senate Bill 2427 would ban cellphone use throughout the day in all elementary and middle schools. Cellphones would be restricted during classroom instruction in high schools. The revised version already passed the House and could be on course to pass the Senate. [...]

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Iowa bill would make animal torture a felony

Iowa is the only state in the country where animal torture is not a felony on the first offense, butthat could change soon. If passed, the crime could carry up to five years in prison and a fine of over $10,000. Our Quad Cities News Iowa Capitol Bureau correspondent Teodora Mitov has the latest as [...]

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Davenport's Horizon Science Academy students earns top places at STEMCON

Horizon Science Academy Davenport, delivered an exceptional performance at Concept Schools’ annual STEMCON event, according to a news release. Competing against more than 1,000 students in grades 4–12 from across the network, HSA Davenport students demonstrated excellence, innovation, and determination—earning top placements across multiple competitions. Two all-girls coding teams from HSA Davenport earned first and second [...]

OurQuadCities.com Illinois residents can now call 211 for essential community services OurQuadCities.com

Illinois residents can now call 211 for essential community services

Illinois residents can now call 211 for help locating and connecting with essential community services. 211 Illinois started with 13 counties in 2009. Coverage across the state started April 29. The hotline can help with things like from basic needs like food, housing, legal support and support for veterans. Users can call 211 or text [...]

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How has spring rain impacted drought conditions?

Around six inches of rain fell in the region this April. Illinois State Climatologist Dr. Trent Ford explains if it's helped drought conditions after a dry winter.

KWQC TV-6  Friends of Vander Veer annual plant sale fundraiser to be held Friday through Sunday KWQC TV-6

Friends of Vander Veer annual plant sale fundraiser to be held Friday through Sunday

The non-profit continues the tradition May 1-3. It's a chance to pick up a gift for Mom and stock up on annual, perennial, and tropical plants. Proceeds benefit beautification and education at the park.

OurQuadCities.com Former alderman files open-meetings suit against City of Davenport OurQuadCities.com

Former alderman files open-meetings suit against City of Davenport

A former alderman and Davenport mayoral candidate has filed suit against the Davenport City Council, accusing the council of violating open-meetings law, according to a petition filed April 22 in Scott County Court. In the suit, plaintiff Judith Lee names the council, Kyle Gripp, Jazmin Newton, Richard Dunn, Tim Dunn John Bunk, Ben Jobgen, Mark [...]

KWQC TV-6  Freight House outdoor market season to open this weekend KWQC TV-6

Freight House outdoor market season to open this weekend

The official launch of the 2026 outdoor season is happening May 2 from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. and May 3 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

KWQC TV-6  Red Ginger closing; operations, staff moving to reopened Izumi Steakhouse KWQC TV-6

Red Ginger closing; operations, staff moving to reopened Izumi Steakhouse

Bettendorf’s Red Ginger is closing, with its menu and staff moving to Izumi Steakhouse in Davenport, according to a Facebook post Wednesday.

KWQC TV-6 KWQC TV-6

Traffic Alert: Part of South Prairie Street closed for building facade repairs

The road is closed to through traffic between East Main and East Simmons streets so the Weinberg Arcade buildings facade can be fixed, according to a media release.

Quad-City Times Quad-City Times

Bridge washing to begin Friday in Rock Island, Whiteside and Carroll counties in Illinois

Workers will begin washing bridges in Rock Island, Whiteside and Carroll counties in Illinois, including the Stanley Talbot Memorial (Centennial) Bridge in Rock Island, on Friday, May 1.

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Soaring diesel prices impacting delivery costs for small businesses

A Geneseo, Illinois, business owner weighs in on how long they can avoid passing increased costs to customers.

KWQC TV-6 Iowa House votes to ban warrant resolution clinics after murder case KWQC TV-6

Iowa House votes to ban warrant resolution clinics after murder case

The program allowed Polk County residents with minor warrants like traffic violations or missed court dates to have them cleared by a judge in exchange for meeting the terms of the punishment, like paying a fine.

KWQC TV-6  Quad Cities leaders meet to discuss reducing unsheltered homelessness KWQC TV-6

Quad Cities leaders meet to discuss reducing unsheltered homelessness

Participants from five different cities in the area called the event a momentum-building opportunity where they were able to talk about working together to find solutions.

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Iowa radon mitigation bill moves forward

The Iowa Senate unanimously passed a bill to require passive radon mitigation systems in new homes. Active radon systems use an electric fan to pull radon from the soil and ventilation to disperse it away from the home. A passive system doesn't require a fan or use electricity. House File 1027 was amended to add [...]

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Illinois bills could help fund safety-net hospitals

Two bills in Illinois could help keep hospitals afloat and healthcare service workers on the job. There are 32 safety-net hospitals in Illinois that serve patients with little to no income or health insurance, relying heavily on Medicaid. A proposal in the Illinois Legislature would have the state provide stable funding for safety-net hospitals. Another [...]

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15 Davenport North student athletes sign college commitments

Wildcats from the class of 2026 will be going on to play baseball, football and more.

OurQuadCities.com QC International Airport, Moline, starts its biggest terminal remodel ever OurQuadCities.com

QC International Airport, Moline, starts its biggest terminal remodel ever

In 18 months, the historic brick floors of the Quad Cities International Airport will be replaced with newer, Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)-compliant floors. The clickety-clack of suitcases rolling across the bricks that previewed a memorable trip across the country will now be heard only in memories. "I almost wish we could keep them forever," [...]

KWQC TV-6 Single campus could be coming to Central DeWitt Schools KWQC TV-6

Single campus could be coming to Central DeWitt Schools

The Central DeWitt School District could see some changes to their school after the school board approved its master facilities plan.

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Cooler than normal temps last into the weekend in the Quad Cities

After a warm start to April, things are ending on a much different note! It's gone down below normal lately, and that does not look to change until early next week (May starts on Friday.) Here are the highs for the next 7 days: And this is how they compare to normal for this time [...]

North Scott Press North Scott Press

See how much it costs to attend Arizona Diamondbacks games

Arina P Habich // Shutterstock See how much it costs to attend Arizona Diamondbacks games Way compiled a look at the affordability of attending Arizona Diamondbacks games. Ticket rates were aggregated from official primary ticketing partners and major resale marketplaces based on availability as of March 2025. Estimated game day costs reflect one average ticket, one beer, one hot dog, one soda, and one parking spot. Prices are estimates based on publicly available data and do not include taxes or fees.While Major League Baseball remains one of the most accessible major sports leagues in the U.S., prices vary significantly by market. Large coastal teams tend to command higher ticket prices, while smaller markets often offer more budget-friendly experiences.How much it costs to attend Arizona Diamondbacks games- 2026 Stadium: Chase Field- Ticket prices: $25.15 (National rank: #28 most expensive)- Concession total: $12.70 (National rank: #28 most expensive)--- Beer (16oz): $5.13--- Hot Dog: $3.07--- Soda: $4.50- Average parking price: $18.33- Estimated total cost of attending a game: $56.18MLB teams with the highest average ticket prices#1. New York Yankees ($67.75)#2. Houston Astros ($64.29)#3. Chicago Cubs ($55.10)#4. Los Angeles Dodgers ($54.24)#5. Washington Nationals ($46.02)MLB teams with the lowest average ticket prices#1. Miami Marlins ($23.61)#2. Arizona Diamondbacks ($25.15)#3. Chicago White Sox ($25.58)#4. Cincinnati Reds ($25.58)#5. Pittsburgh Pirates ($26.93) This story was produced by Way and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

WVIK Supreme Court appears to lean toward ending TPS for some migrants WVIK

Supreme Court appears to lean toward ending TPS for some migrants

The U.S. Supreme Court appeared sympathetic to the Trump administration's move to end temporary protected status for Haitians and Syrians in the country.

WVIK Quad Cities airport takes off with $19 million in new improvements WVIK

Quad Cities airport takes off with $19 million in new improvements

The Quad Cities International Airport held a groundbreaking Wednesday, April 29, for the $19-million Phase 2 of its Project GATEWAY, to take a year and a half to complete.

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Body of missing Clinton, Iowa, man found along the Mississippi River in Cordova, Illinois

Dermot Bly was reported missing after he was last seen on April 16. The Rock Island County coroner said his preliminary cause of death is presumed to be drowning.

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Second phase of terminal upgrades begins at Quad Cities International Airport

Phase Two of Project GATEWAY will total over $19 million. This phase is the largest and most publicly visible part of the years-long terminal renovations.

WVIK The Austrian nuns who fled their care home are now in Rome and visited the Vatican WVIK

The Austrian nuns who fled their care home are now in Rome and visited the Vatican

The three octogenarian nuns, who made headlines last year after they broke back into their convent, joined others at St. Peter's Square for a general audience with Pope Leo XIV on Wednesday morning.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

Callais fallout in Alabama: No redistricting now, says Ivey; partisan divides over SCOTUS ruling

Sen. Rodger Smitherman, D-Birmingham, discusses a Democratic congressional map proposal during a special session on redistricting on Wednesday, July 19, 2023 in Montgomery, Ala. Gov. Kay Ivey Wednesday said she would not call a special session for redistricting following a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that will make it significantly harder for plaintiffs to challenge maps on the basis of racial discrimination. (Stew Milne for Alabama Reflector)Wednesday’s Supreme Court ruling significantly limiting majority-minority districts should not have an immediate effect on Alabama’s legislative and congressional districts. But that could change in the future. In a 6-3 decision, in a case called Louisiana v. Callais, Justice Samuel Alito held that a Louisiana congressional map was an unconstitutional racial gerrymander, and ruled that plaintiffs challenging legislative maps for racial discrimination under Section 2 of the 1965 Voting Rights Act had to show intent to discriminate by lawmakers. Under prior case law, plaintiffs had to show the effect of maps was discriminatory.  “The focus of  (Section) 2 must be enforcement of the Fifteenth Amendment’s prohibition on intentional racial discrimination,” Alito wrote. “When (Section) 2 is properly interpreted in the way we have outlined, it is sufficiently congruent with and proportional to the Amendment’s prohibition. While that interpretation does not demand a finding of intentional discrimination, it imposes liability only when the circumstances give rise to a strong inference that intentional discrimination occurred.”  SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act limited states from using maps that would dilute the voting power of minority citizens. Justice Elena Kagan, joined by justices Sonya Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson, dissented from the court’s opinion, Kagan cited Allen v. Milligan, the 2023 U.S. Supreme Court decision which resulted in Alabama drawing a near-majority Black congressional district due in part to polarized racial voting patterns.  Plaintiffs in Milligan argued that a congressional map drawn by the state illegally put Black voters into a single district while also breaking up clusters of other Black voters across the state to minimize the vote of marginalized communities. “Given the state’s racially polarized voting, (marginalized residents) cannot hope—in the way the state’s white citizens can—to elect a person whom they think will well represent their interests,” Kagan wrote. “Their votes matter less than others’ do; they translate into less political voice. Or, as this court put it recently, the cracking makes a ‘minority vote unequal to a vote by a nonminority voter.’” Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey speaks to college and university students during a meal for Higher Education Day, an annual rally for college and university funding, on Feb. 19, 2026 at the Alabama State Capitol. (Brian Lyman/Alabama Reflector) The maps drawn in the wake of Milligan will stay in place for now. Gov. Kay Ivey said in a statement Wednesday afternoon that she supports the Supreme Court’s decision but that the state is “not in position to have a special session at this time” to redraw congressional districts. A federal court last year ordered Alabama to maintain its current maps through 2030. “While I am encouraged by this decision, it does not yet resolve our ongoing redistricting fight over Alabama’s congressional map,” she said. “For too long, federal courts forced states like Alabama into a no-win situation at the hands of activists who want us to draw maps that discriminate against our own citizens based on race.” Alito wrote in his majority opinion Wednesday morning Allen v. Milligan would not be overturned. “(Allen v. Milligan) did not address whether “race-based redistricting” under (Section 2) could ‘extend indefinitely into the future’ despite significant changes in conditions, … nor did it address whether (Section 2) plaintiffs must disentangle race from politics in proving their case,” Alito wrote. Janai Nelson, president and director of counsel for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, said her organization doesn’t think Alabama the court will overturn Milligan in the future. “We are still assessing what the implications are in Alabama, but we, based on our reading of the decision, have no reason to believe that there should be any backtracking in Alabama, and we stand ready to challenge any maps that we feel discriminate against Black voters,” she said. Reactions Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall speaks at the Law Enforcement Medal of Honor ceremony in the Alabama House of Representatives on April 2, 2026 at the Alabama Statehouse in Montgomery, Alabama. (Brian Lyman/Alabama Reflector) Reaction to the court’s decision fell down party lines. Alabama Republicans praised the court’s opinion on Callais. “The Court has shut the door on vote-dilution claims that use racial data to disguise what are really partisan disputes,” Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall, a candidate for U.S. Senate, said in a statement. “Alabama has been fighting this battle for many years, and today the Supreme Court confirmed our long-held argument that States must not use race, either to help or to harm particular voters, when drawing voting districts.” U.S. Rep. Barry Moore, R-Enterprise, who is also running for the Senate, called for the Alabama Legislature to redraw the state’s congressional map following the decision in a post on X Wednesday morning. “I know what it’s like to have my district redrawn to dilute conservative voters’ voices and make way for a Democrat seat,” the post said. “We should be drawing districts based on communities, not race. The Constitution demands it, and the American people deserve it.” Democratic leaders and organizations across the state condemned the decision. “Three years ago, the Supreme Court used [the Voting Rights Act] to require Alabama to draw fairer congressional districts after the Court found the previous maps weren’t giving voters a real choice.” Birmingham Mayor Randall Woodfin said in a social media post Wednesday. “Today, that same Court walked it back … the bigger damage will be at the local level, where two-thirds of Section 2 cases are actually litigated. City councils. School boards. County commissions. The places where everyday democracy happens.” U.S. Rep. Shomari Figures, D-Mobile, speaks with a marcher after crossing the Edmund Pettus Bridge during commemorations of the the 61st anniversary of Bloody Sunday on March 8, 2026 in Selma, Ala. (Estela Munoz for Alabama Reflector) Alabama House Minority Leader Anthony Daniels, D-Huntsville, called the decision a “slap in the face to Black voters in Alabama” in a statement released by the Alabama House Democratic Caucus. “Rest assured that I, and my colleagues in the Alabama House Democratic Caucus, will continue to fight against all forms of gerrymandering. People should have the right to pick the politicians that they want to represent them, not the other way around. As we have said from the beginning, fair elections begin with fair maps,” he said U.S. Rep. Terri Sewell, D-Birmingham, said the decision is a “death sentence” to Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 in a statement posted to social media. “The right-wing Supreme Court has not only turned its back on decades of precedent and ignored the will of the people, but it has weakened the foundational principle safeguarding fair representation for Black and minority voters,” she said. U.S. Rep. Shomari Figures, D-Mobile, whose seat was created as a result of Milligan, said in a statement that while his district will remain until 2030, some states will fight to have their maps redrawn. “Although today’s decision does not make changes to Alabama’s current congressional districts, it has made proving future racial discrimination in redistricting cases significantly tougher,” the statement said. “It will lead to states, primarily in the South, launching immediate efforts to redraw districts in ways that will dilute the impact of Black voters and drastically reduce the number of realistic opportunities to elect Black members to Congress.” Louisiana v. Callais was first argued last year, after a group of non-Black voters in Louisiana challenged a congressional map as being an unconstitutional racial gerrymander when a new district of mostly Black voters was added to the state. Alanah Odoms, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union in Louisiana said Wednesday afternoon the court’s decision will be used as a test case. “There is a federal track that is happening to curtail the rights of Black voters, and there is a state track. It is the same playbook, and it is exactly the same goal,” she said. “What I assert to you today is Louisiana is the test case. It always has been what works here will be exported.” Courtesy of Alabama Reflector

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Davenport speed cabinet knocked over, now back up

One of Davenport’s new mobile speed cabinets got knocked over.

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WIU launches 'Rolling Rural' podcast about rural transportation

John Bannon, host of Rolling Rural, joined The Current to discuss why he wanted to start the podcast and what he hopes viewers learn from it.

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Your first weekend of May!

With the month of May just around the corner, the weather is looking perfect to get outside and enjoy it. While temperatures are remaining cooler than normal in the upper 50s and low 60s heading into the weekend, we will see those temperatures jump back to near 70s by Sunday and for a nice start [...]

River Cities' Reader River Cities' Reader

“For the Love of Peter,” May 8 and 9

As part of the Playcrafters Barn Theatre's third-annual Pride Celebration, the Moline venue will host the debut of local actor/playwright Don Faust's comedy For the Love of Peter, an original one-act being presented on May 8 and 9.

WVIK House extends a controversial spy tool, but Senate path is unclear ahead of deadline WVIK

House extends a controversial spy tool, but Senate path is unclear ahead of deadline

The House has approved a three year extension of the surveillance program known as FISA Section 702. The bill now heads to the Senate, where it faces a difficult path to final passage.

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Lena brewery hosts fundraiser after EF-2 tornado damages town

The Lena Brewing Company was spared from the storm, but several homes, businesses and even the local school sustained extensive tornado damage. Here's how to help.

KWQC TV-6  Quad Cities to host international team handball competition KWQC TV-6

Quad Cities to host international team handball competition

A large handball competition will be held in the Quad Cities.

WVIK Long a dream, it's now real: a fast and accurate TB test that doesn't need phlegm WVIK

Long a dream, it's now real: a fast and accurate TB test that doesn't need phlegm

TB tests use phlegm — not the easiest thing to get or work with. It takes time for results. And there can be false negatives and positives. A new test is more accurate and takes less than half an hour.

Quad-City Times John Deere scholarship sends Davenport students to Iowa with big dreams Quad-City Times

John Deere scholarship sends Davenport students to Iowa with big dreams

Twenty Davenport students are heading to the University of Iowa with 90% tuition covered and big plans for what comes next.

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Chicago man arrested in Lee County scam sting after Paw Paw resident loses $40K

A Chicago man was arrested in a Lee County sting operation after a Paw Paw resident was scammed out of $40,000 in an "FBI agent" phone fraud scheme.

KWQC TV-6  Burlington seeks artists for downtown mural honoring Aldo Leopold KWQC TV-6

Burlington seeks artists for downtown mural honoring Aldo Leopold

Downtown Burlington is inviting artists to submit proposals for a new public mural on Jefferson Street.

OurQuadCities.com Have you seen these suspects? Crime Stoppers wants to know! OurQuadCities.com

Have you seen these suspects? Crime Stoppers wants to know!

Crime Stoppers of the Quad Cities wants your help catching two fugitives. It’s an Our Quad Cities News exclusive. You can get an elevated reward for information on this week’s cases: SABASTIAN BUSTILLOS, 27, 6’, 218 pounds, brown hair, brown eyes. Wanted by Iowa DOC High Risk Unit for escape on convictions for burglary and [...]

KWQC TV-6 Caitlin Clark contracted with the Indiana Fever through 2027 season KWQC TV-6

Caitlin Clark contracted with the Indiana Fever through 2027 season

Clark drew national attention during her time at the University of Iowa.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

The hire many business owners put off is more affordable than they think

The hire many business owners put off is more affordable than they think Here’s a moment most founders recognize: It’s Wednesday evening, you’re rescheduling a meeting you already moved once, and somewhere in a tab you opened this morning is the work you meant to get to.That’s what happens when too many things route through you personally: booking your own flights, chasing a proposal you sent three weeks ago, checking your inbox for the 10th time in an hour because you’re worried you missed something important.Meanwhile, the work that grows the business gets pushed to evenings and weekends, when you’re already depleted, and you never feel like you’re on top of anything.Many business owners recognize this eventually and hire an assistant. One person whose job is to make sure everything that isn’t your highest-value work doesn't land on your desk.In this article, Near shows what hiring an assistant looks like and why business owners are recruiting admin talent in Latin America.Key Takeaways:Hiring VAs or remote executive assistants in Latin America gives business owners experienced, English-proficient professionals who work U.S. hours at 60%-80% below equivalent U.S. salaries.A great assistant returns high-value hours to business owners by taking over scheduling, inbox management, follow-ups, and day-to-day operational decisions.AI tools cannot replace a skilled assistant because proactive judgment, institutional knowledge, and relationship handling require human initiative and oversight.Having a Great Assistant Gives You Time BackThe business case for hiring an assistant is almost always framed around time, but not in the "save 10 hours a week" sense. It’s about which hours you get back.When a great assistant takes over your calendar, you stop losing the first 20 minutes of every morning to rearranging meetings. When they own your inbox, you stop checking it reflexively every 15 minutes. When they manage follow-ups, things get closed.What changes most for a lot of people is the quality of their attention. When logistics are handled, you can think clearly. The focused work that used to get pushed to Sunday night starts happening on Tuesday morning, when you’re at your best.And finally, the work that advances the business gets the hours it deserves.As Dan Martell explains in “Buy Back Your Time,” if your highest-value work is worth more per hour than scheduling meetings and processing vendor emails, hiring an assistant pays for itself.VA, EA, Virtual, In-Person: Does Any of It Matter?Once business owners decide they want this kind of support, the next question is usually about what to call the role.The terms "virtual assistant" and "executive assistant" get used almost interchangeably, but they describe different roles, and the difference matters when you’re trying to hire the right person.A virtual assistant typically handles defined, repeatable tasks: inbox triage, data entry, scheduling, and research. They often work across multiple clients.An executive assistant is a dedicated resource for one person or team. They’re expected to anticipate, not just execute. They manage complex calendars, own communications, coordinate travel, and often serve as a gatekeeper who decides what reaches you and what gets handled before it does.Many business owners, when they describe what they want, are describing an executive assistant, even when they say "VA."But when founders and operators describe their ideal hire, they rarely use formal job titles. They talk about wanting a "second brain," a "right-hand person," or "someone to run alongside me."What they really want is an executive assistant.The “virtual” part of the equation has also become less meaningful. Many teams are distributed now. Whether someone is down the hall or in another city or country, the working relationship looks the same: Slack, video calls, shared docs.What really matters is whether the person has the initiative, judgment, and communication skills to take work off your plate without needing to be managed themselves.Does AI Change the Need for an Assistant?Some business owners might hesitate about hiring an executive assistant or VA because they think the cost isn’t justified if AI can take care of a lot of time-consuming admin tasks.And, to a point, yes, it can.But the gap between what a Claude or OpenClaw agent can do and what a human assistant can do is still huge.AI responds when you ask it to. A great assistant notices when the vendor hasn’t replied in two weeks and follows up without being told.They catch what’s about to become a problem before you know it exists. That kind of proactive judgment is what makes a good assistant genuinely valuable.Also, a human assistant builds institutional knowledge over time. They learn which clients need a warmer tone, which meetings always run long, and which contacts need three nudges before responding. That knowledge compounds with every week they’re in the role. You can’t easily prompt your way to it.Colleen Barry, head of marketing at Ketch, uses AI tools daily. She also works with a VA.“AI can help draft a message, but it won’t actually make sure things get done,” Barry said. “A good VA brings reliability, communication skills, and attention to detail that goes beyond just output. Managing partnerships, coordinating with designers, and following up with vendors: these require persistence and relationship handling.”The best assistants notice what’s about to fall through the cracks, follow up without being asked, and handle the human dynamics of a busy person’s work life.A great assistant makes AI even more usefulAI can’t replace a great assistant. But that doesn’t mean AI shouldn’t play a big part in helping organize your work.If you’re already using AI tools in your business, a skilled assistant is what makes those tools pay off. The AI output still needs someone to review it, apply judgment, and make sure the right version reaches the right person at the right moment.Courtney Hickey, EA to the CEO at Zapier, doesn’t believe AI can replace a good EA. She has used AI to free up her time to deliver even more value in her role.Speaking on the "How I AI" podcast, she described how automation has given her more time to spend on the judgment calls, the relationships, and the other things that can’t be automated.“I definitely am a believer that AI can only enable us in this role”, Hickey said. “There is simply too much to do.”‍Why Hiring in Latin America Makes Hiring an Assistant Feasible for Most CompaniesThe value case for hiring an assistant is clear. The next question most business owners ask is whether they can afford one.U.S. administrative assistants earn $46,000-$69,000 per year. An experienced executive assistant can run considerably higher, up to $115,000. For a small business or a solo operator, that number can feel like the end of the conversation.What many haven’t looked at closely is the option to hire in Latin America.This isn’t offshoring in the traditional sense. Latin American professionals work in time zones that align closely with U.S. business hours. They’re available on your calls and respond to messages during your same workday. Source: Near’s 2026 US vs. LatAm Salary Guide For people who have already hired a VA in the past, they usually have experience with hiring in Southeast Asia, particularly the Philippines, which has long been the go-to offshore VA market.The feedback from business owners who’ve tried to hire from distant time zones is consistent: Asynchronous communication becomes a real tax. And many business owners simply don't want someone working an overnight shift just to accommodate their schedule.The Latin American market offers something different: professionals who work the same hours you do, with strong English proficiency and cultural alignment with U.S. business norms. For owners and executives who’ve tried offshore arrangements and found them operationally frustrating, it’s a meaningfully different experience.In fact, according to Near’s State of LatAm Hiring Report, executive assistant is the fourth most popular role hired by U.S. companies in Latin America, with administrative assistant ranking 10th.What to Look for When You HireThe difference between a hire that transforms how you work and one that adds more to manage almost always comes down to one thing: whether the person takes ownership or just takes direction.The assistants who make the biggest difference don’t wait to be told what to do. They notice what needs doing before you do.That proactiveness is a personality trait you need to screen for.Julia Guillen, a recruiter who specializes in placing executive assistants, described the profile this way:“What I look for is a proactive organizational mindset, someone who stays one step ahead of their executive’s needs rather than waiting to be told. Startup experience is a strong signal, because it tells you the candidate understands urgency and can operate without a lot of structure.”‍In interviews, strong candidates give specific examples. They can describe how they’ve handled competing priorities, explain their systems, and ask smart questions about the role because they’ve already thought about how to do it well.The hiring process should test for this directly. Give candidates a small task relevant to your actual work. Ask how they’ve handled situations where multiple things were urgent at once. The answers will tell you more than a resume.Final ThoughtsMost business owners who hire an assistant say the same thing afterward: They should have done it sooner.The value isn’t only in the tasks that get handled. It’s in the focused hours that open up again and the strategy work that finally gets the attention it deserves.This story was produced by Hire With Near and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

WVIK The Iran war now has a price tag ($25 billion), but still no end date WVIK

The Iran war now has a price tag ($25 billion), but still no end date

The Pentagon estimates the war has cost $25 billion over the past two months. In congressional testimony, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth did not say when the war might end.

KWQC TV-6 KWQC TV-6

Freight House Farmers Market to open for 2026 season

A highly anticipated Quad Cities weekend tradition is returning for another season.

KWQC TV-6  Winter emergency shelter in Moline served over 300 people in 12 weeks KWQC TV-6

Winter emergency shelter in Moline served over 300 people in 12 weeks

The shelter served over 300 people, housing 86 of them.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

10 conversation starters that actually work, according to communication experts

10 conversation starters that actually work, according to communication expertsEven the most social people occasionally have difficulty getting a conversation going, resorting to basic, boring questions like “What do you do?” or “How do you know so-and-so?” Most of the time, these types of conversation starters lead to nothing. There’s nothing meaningful or thought-provoking about them.If you want to have a truly engaging conversation with someone for the first time, you need a powerful conversation starter that’s backed by science. AnyWho covered 10 of the most effective icebreakers and the situations in which they’re best used.Networking and professional conversation starters1. "What's the most interesting thing you've been working on recently?"When trying to get to know someone, most people default to generic work conversations. While it’s a fine icebreaker, making the question more personal is a better way to engage with a new person.Asking them about something interesting they’ve been working on gives you insight into their job but also into who they are as a person and what makes them tick.2. "How did you end up on the path you're on right now?"This is another great example of a personalized question. Everyone has a story to tell, and many people are proud of where they’ve gotten with their careers. You can ask someone about their professional trajectory and how they’ve gotten into the line of work they are currently in.It’s also important to prove that you’re actively listening, says NPR. Create a loop for understanding by repeating what the person said in your own words.3. "What's something you're learning about these days?"No matter what line of work a person is in, they’re always learning something new. We’re curious creatures. A question like this addresses someone’s immediate interests, professional or otherwise, which they’re more likely to eagerly talk about.You should “aim to understand” what the person is saying, rather than just asking for the sake of asking. In an interview with NPR, communication expert Charles Duhigg says this is an important part of being a good communicator.4. "What brought you to this event? What were you hoping to get out of it?"Try to transcend basic questions about the event itself. It can come across as dry, awkward, and forced. Instead, ask someone what they were hoping to achieve by attending. It can reveal personal motivations and offer someone the opportunity to say something genuinely interesting.Follow-up questions are an important part of every successful conversation, behavioral analyst Wendy Patrick says. Use the person’s answers to why they came to an event as a bridge for a deeper conversation.Social gathering conversation starters5. "What's been the highlight of your week?"Social conversations are much less formal than professional ones, so you can ask personal questions. A “highlight-of-your-week” question is a great way to get someone to smile, because they’ll be reflecting on something positive that’s happened to them recently.Psychologically, this sets a conversation off on the right tone. It also helps you identify what someone values in their life.6. "What's something you've been really into lately — could be anything."This is a great question that’s casual and surface-level, but still allows you to get deeper insight into someone’s personality. It’s also an open-ended question, which allows someone to freely express themselves. Instead of asking a more specific question like “What music do you like?” it gives someone room to say what they’re truly passionate about.7. "What's your story?"Some people respond better to deeper questions. Questions like “What’s your story?” and “Who do you want to be in 10 years?” allow people to self-disclose. Self-disclosure is an important part of building bonds, trust, and social connection, says psychological rehabilitation specialist Kendra Cherry.First date conversation starters8. "What's something you're really passionate about that most people don't know?"Dates are tricky for conversation because some people can be guarded or hesitant to share “too much.” Ideally, you want to create a personal connection through conversation. One of the best ways to do this is to ask them to share something with you that other people don’t know. It immediately builds trust and creates an intimate shared secret of sorts.The more questions you ask someone, the more they will generally like you. Researchers at Harvard found that during speed-dating events, people who ask more questions are more likely to receive a second date.At the same time, it’s important to ask genuine questions. The American Psychological Association suggests avoiding “boomerasking,” which is when you ask a question so that you can then answer it yourself.9. "What's the best trip you've ever taken and what made it special?"Similar to the “highlight of your week” question, asking someone about their best trip creates a positive emotional reaction. Most first-date conversations are emotional, an important distinction, according to Charles Duhigg.10. "What's something you've always wanted to learn or try?"As Michigan State University puts it, “understanding interests is key to building relationships.” By asking your date about something they’ve always wanted to learn or try, you gauge what they’re curious about. Understanding these interests helps you find common ground, which is a huge part of compatibility.Making connections that lastConversation is an essential part of the human experience. But it can be challenging to navigate, especially when talking with a new person. A good conversation starter reduces awkwardness for everyone while also providing opportunities to create meaningful relationships.Whether you’re at a professional work event, a social gathering, or a first date, use some of these conversation starters to go beyond surface-level communication and form a connection that lasts.This story was produced by AnyWho and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

OurQuadCities.com Catch Bucky Halker at free Miller program in Fulton OurQuadCities.com

Catch Bucky Halker at free Miller program in Fulton

The Volunteer Millers of de Immigrant Dutch Windmill are hosting folk singer Bucky Halker on Tuesday, May 12 at 6 p.m. at the Windmill Cultural Center, 111- 10th Avenue in Fulton. The performance is part of the 250th anniversary of the United States celebration and will feature songs such as This Land is Your Land [...]

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Chicago man charged after $40K scam, Lee County sting

A Chicago man faces felony charges after a Lee County sting tied to a scam that cost a victim $40,000, officials said.

WVIK Florida lawmakers pass a voting map that could help Republicans flip four House seats WVIK

Florida lawmakers pass a voting map that could help Republicans flip four House seats

The map drawn by Florida Governor Ron DeSantis boosts President Trump's effort to reshape voting before the midterm elections. The GOP likely holds a slight edge over Democrats in redistricting now.

KWQC TV-6  Illinois among states pushing back against rule considered by Department of Labor KWQC TV-6

Illinois among states pushing back against rule considered by Department of Labor

Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul says the department may change how workers are classified as independent contractors.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

Where fuel costs are climbing fastest, and why shelf prices are next

Where fuel costs are climbing fastest, and why shelf prices are nextWhen pump prices dominate the news, the story almost always flows to the coasts. California clears $5.90 a gallon, Hawai‘i tops $6, and Washington pushes past $5.40. Those numbers are eye-catching, and they deserve the attention they get.But the pump is only the first hit. It's the immediate one — visible at every fill-up, felt in every weekly budget — and it's the one that dominates the news cycle.The longer, larger impact is still in the pipeline, and it won't show up as a gas price at all. It will show up as a higher grocery bill, a steeper shipping charge, a bigger quote from the contractor, and a new menu price at the restaurant down the street.Diesel moves roughly 72% of U.S. freight by truck. It powers farm equipment, construction machinery, and the trains and ships that bring in imported goods. From the week of Dec. 29 to the week of April 13, national fleet diesel spend has jumped 61%, a bigger move than gasoline, and that increase is now working its way through the economy as higher prices on goods that have nothing to do with the pump.This analysis draws on the Samsara Fuel Spend Index, which measures real-time gasoline and diesel spend across commercial fueling activity in all 50 states. Because fleets fuel constantly and at scale, their spend moves faster and earlier than consumer retail benchmarks, which makes the Index an early read on where fuel-driven cost pressure is building before it shows up on the grocery shelf, the shipping invoice, or the restaurant menu.States where fuel spend is climbing fastest Samsara Every state on this list started the year well below the national average for both gas and diesel fuel, and now each of these states has seen the average price per gallon of both fuels rise faster, in percentage terms, than any of the traditionally expensive markets. The first consumer impact, the one households will feel this month, is already showing up at gas stations. The second, the pass-through from diesel into food, freight, and housing costs, is still in the pipeline.Idaho: Leading the country on combined fuel run-upIdaho's fleet gasoline spend rose from $2.89 to $4.44 per gallon since late December. Fleet diesel spend went from $3.08 to $5.55 per gallon, an 80% jump. At the retail pump, Idaho drivers are now paying $4.26 per gallon for regular unleaded, up from just over $3 at the start of the year.Idaho is a heavily agricultural state. Diesel powers the equipment that plants and harvests its potato, wheat, sugar beet, and dairy economy. When diesel nearly doubles at the farm level, those costs move through to wholesale produce and dairy prices — not this week, but through the summer and into fall harvest. Idaho households will feel the first impact in their own tanks and the second on their own grocery shelves.Colorado: #1 on gasoline, #2 overallColorado leads the nation in fleet gasoline spend increase, from $2.60 to $4.16 per gallon, up 60%. Fleet diesel spend rose from $2.93 to $4.96 per gallon, up 69%. At the retail pump, Colorado is actually one of the cheaper spots in the West at $3.94 per gallon, reflecting a relatively lower baseline. But the rate of change is what reshapes a monthly budget. A Colorado commuter whose fill-up cost $38 in December is paying closer to $62 now. A Colorado household that was used to spending $200 a month on gas is spending closer to $325.The diesel side will follow. Colorado has heavy freight, agriculture, and construction sectors that all run on diesel, and all are now absorbing a roughly 70% cost increase that will eventually surface in local pricing.Utah: A 64% jump across both fuelsUtah's fleet gasoline spend rose from $2.74 to $4.32 per gallon (up 57%), and fleet diesel spend went from $3.09 to $5.31 per gallon (up 72%). At the retail pump, regular unleaded averages $4.15 per gallon. Utah has the largest average household size in the country, which multiplies the pump impact: more drivers per home, more miles per week. On the goods side, Utah's fast-growing economy, residential construction pipeline, and agricultural sector all run on diesel, and all will reflect higher fuel input costs in prices paid by residents over the coming months.Oregon: Biggest diesel jump in the top 5 and past $5 at the pumpOregon's fleet diesel spend went from $3.30 to $5.95 per gallon since December, an 80% jump tied with Idaho for the largest diesel move in the top five. Fleet gasoline spend rose from $3.44 to $5.05 per gallon, up 47%. Oregon is now averaging $5 per gallon — joining California, Hawai‘i, and Washington in a tier most of the country hasn't reached.Oregon's exposure is unusual. It has no in-state refining, so every gallon sold there came through a pipeline or a truck from somewhere else. As diesel climbs, so does the cost of moving every good into the state, compounding the direct pass-through from freight rates. Oregon households also have one of the longer average commutes in the region, which amplifies the direct gas-pump impact.Arizona: The top-5 state with the highest pump priceArizona combines a 77% fleet diesel spend jump (from $3.33 to $5.90 per gallon) with a 50% fleet gasoline spend jump (from $3.17 to $4.75 per gallon). Retail drivers are feeling it even harder: Arizona's AAA average is now $4.64 per gallon, the sixth-highest in the country and well past the psychological $4 threshold. The state also depends heavily on long-haul diesel freight for groceries and goods as it has minimal in-state food production at scale, which means the pass-through is both larger and faster than in more self-sufficient states.Why these states are taking the biggest percentage hitFive states with no in-state refineries. Five states sit at the far end of the pipeline and distribution systems that originate elsewhere. Five states that started the year below the national average on both fuels are now getting pulled toward it.The states that didn't make this list — California (gas +36%), Hawai‘i (+33%), Washington (+35%) — didn't escape the surge. They're still expensive in absolute terms. But they had less arithmetic room to climb off an already-elevated base. The places that started cheap are converging toward the rest.2 waves of consumer impactThe pump wave arrives first. A household in any of the top-five states filling two cars a week is now paying roughly $150 to $250 more per month on gasoline than it was at New Year's. That's a visible line-item change, the kind households notice on the next card statement or the next trip to the station.The diesel wave arrives second, and it's harder to see because it doesn't show up on a bill with "fuel" on it. It shows up as a 10-cent increase on a loaf of bread. A $4 surcharge on a package delivery. A steeper quote from the contractor. A higher menu price at the local diner. Federal data shows transportation is already the second-largest average household expense behind housing, and diesel pass-through feeds into all of it over weeks and months.For households in the five states on this list, both waves are landing. Gasoline at the pump is the immediate impact. Diesel-driven price increases on everything else are the slower ones, and they typically last longer than the initial fuel move itself, because pricing on goods tends to be stickier on the way down than on the way up.What to watchPump prices in the five states over the next four to eight weeks. If fleet spend eases first, as it tends to, retail pump prices follow within weeks. If fleet spend holds, pump pressure extends into summer.Grocery and shipping costs in the interior South and Mountain West. Diesel pass-through takes a few weeks to reach the shelf, but when it does, food, freight-heavy goods, and building materials move first.Small business pricing in the affected states. Contractors, local delivery services, and restaurants are the businesses most exposed to diesel input costs and the least able to hedge. Their pricing moves tend to be a leading indicator of the broader consumer impact.State-level policy response. Fuel tax holidays, targeted assistance, and utility relief programs tend to emerge when fleet and consumer fuel costs together cross psychological thresholds. All five states on this list are now well past them on one or both fuels.The five states at the top of this list share something beyond geography: they're seeing both fuels spike together, which means their households will feel the run-up twice — once directly at the pump, and again through the cost of nearly everything they buy. Commercial fuel spend has already told us the second wave is on its way. The question now is how long and how hard it lands.A note on methodologyAll fleet spend data comes from the Samsara Fuel Spend Index, a weekly measure of what commercial fleets actually pay for gasoline and diesel, drawn from real-time commercial fueling activity across all 50 states. The Index reflects fleet fuel spend, not consumer retail pump prices, which are typically higher. AAA state-level retail averages are used here for the pump comparison. State-level fleet figures compare the week of Dec. 29, 2025 (the presurge baseline) to the week of April 13, 2026, the most recent week with full state-level coverage at the time of analysis. The "combined average" column averages each state's percentage increase in gasoline and diesel fleet spend. Retail pump prices are AAA state averages from the week of April 13, 2026. The relevance of fleet fuel spend to consumer economics comes through pass-through: fleet-driven costs in freight, agriculture, construction, and local delivery surface in grocery prices, shipping fees, housing costs, and service rates on a lag of weeks to months.This story was produced by Samsara and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

Quad-City Times Quad Cities airport begins $19 million phase 2 renovation Quad-City Times

Quad Cities airport begins $19 million phase 2 renovation

Quad Cities International Airport has begun phase two of its renovation project. Here’s what travelers can expect during the 18-month upgrade to the terminal.

WQAD.com WQAD.com

Body of missing Clinton, Iowa, man found along the Mississippi River in Cordova, Illinois

Dermot Bly was reported missing after he was last seen on April 16. The Rock Island County coroner said his preliminary cause of death is presumed to be drowning.

KWQC TV-6  Quad Cities International Airport breaks ground on $19M terminal upgrade KWQC TV-6

Quad Cities International Airport breaks ground on $19M terminal upgrade

Phase 2 is the largest and most publicly visible phase of the project, costing more than $19 million. The work will take about 18 months to complete.

KWQC TV-6  Work on 3 Mississippi River bridges begins this week KWQC TV-6

Work on 3 Mississippi River bridges begins this week

The Illinois Department of Transportation will begin work on a few Mississippi River bridges this week.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

10 small hypoallergenic dog breeds that barely shed

10 small hypoallergenic dog breeds that barely shedYou love dogs. Your immune system? Not so much.Maybe you’ve spent years admiring other people’s pups from a safe distance, or maybe you already know the exact aisle where your pharmacy keeps the antihistamines. Either way, you’ve probably wondered: Is there a dog out there that won’t leave you reaching for tissues every five minutes?Small hypoallergenic dogs produce less dander and shed minimally, which means fewer allergens circulating through your home. They’re not magic—no dog is truly allergen-free—but for the 10%-20% of the population affected by pet allergies, they make the difference between dreaming about dog ownership and actually living it.Below, Ollie shares 10 small hypoallergenic dog breeds for people with allergies, plus how to pick the right one, what grooming really looks like, and how what goes in the bowl shows up on the coat.What Makes a Dog HypoallergenicThe term “hypoallergenic” gets tossed around a lot, but it simply means reduced allergens—not zero. Small, low-shedding breeds like the bichon frise, miniature schnauzer, toy poodle, and shih tzu produce less dander than other dogs, making them a better match for sensitive sinuses. But regular grooming is still very much part of the deal.The Truth About Dog Allergens and DanderHere’s something that surprises a lot of people: The fur itself isn’t the problem. Allergies are triggered by proteins found in dander (tiny flakes of skin), saliva, and urine. When a dog sheds, those proteins hitch a ride on loose hair and spread throughout your home—onto your couch, your clothes, and yes, your pillow.Low-shedding breeds help because their coats trap dander close to the skin instead of launching it into the air. Curly and wiry coats are especially good at this. Fewer loose hairs floating around means fewer allergens landing on everything you own.Why No Dog Is 100% Allergen-FreeEven the most hypoallergenic breed still produces dander, saliva, and skin oils. And individual reactions vary widely—you might be perfectly fine around a miniature schnauzer but start sneezing the moment a shih tzu climbs into your lap.If allergies are a serious concern, spending time with a specific dog before committing is the smartest move you can make. Visit a breeder, a foster, or a shelter and see how your body responds over a few visits. Your future self and your future dog will thank you.10 Small Hypoallergenic Dog Breeds for Allergy SufferersEach of these breeds consistently makes hypoallergenic lists because of their low-shedding coats and manageable dander levels. But personality, grooming needs, and lifestyle fit vary quite a bit—so finding your match is about more than just the coat.1. Miniature Schnauzer otsphoto // Shutterstock That beard. Those eyebrows. The miniature schnauzer looks like a tiny, distinguished professor—and has the brains to match. Ranking 19 out of 195 breeds with the American Kennel Club, this spirited little terrier has a wiry double coat that sheds minimally and a personality that fills a room.Miniature Schnauzers stand 12-14 inches tall and weigh 11-20 pounds. They’re alert, trainable, and make excellent watchdogs, and they will inform you about every delivery truck, squirrel, and suspicious leaf. Their distinctive facial hair benefits from regular trimming, and their wiry coat stays in great shape with consistent brushing.2. Bichon Frise Eudyptula // Shutterstock The name literally translates to “curly lap dog” in French, and the bichon frise delivers on every word. That cotton-ball coat traps dander close to the skin, and underneath all that fluff is a cheerful, playful dog who thrives on being the center of attention.Bichons stand 9.5-11.5 inches tall and weigh 12-18 pounds. They’re social dogs who love being around people and adapt beautifully to apartment living. Their curly coats require brushing several times a week and professional grooming every four to six weeks—but those curls don’t shed, which is the whole point.3. Shih Tzu chaossart // Shutterstock Originally bred as companion dogs for Chinese royalty, shih tzus have never forgotten their roots. They live for closeness—your lap, your feet, your pillow (they’re not picky as long as they’re near you). They rank 20th in popularity with the AKC, and it’s easy to see why: They are playful, outgoing, and absolutely devoted to their people.Shih tzus stand 9-10.5 inches tall and weigh 9-16.5 pounds. Their luxurious double coat looks high-maintenance, and it can be—daily brushing helps, or many owners opt for a shorter “puppy cut” that keeps things manageable. Either way, expect a lot of personality in a very small package.4. Toy Poodle  Eudyptula // Shutterstock Poodles are often considered the gold standard of hypoallergenic breeds, and the toy poodle packs all that intelligence and elegance into the smallest possible frame. Their curly, dense coats don’t shed, and they’re remarkably trainable—the kind of dog that makes you look like a better dog trainer than you actually are.Toy poodles stand no more than 10 inches tall and weigh 4-6 pounds. Don’t let the size fool you—they have big personalities and thrive with mental stimulation. Professional grooming every four to six weeks keeps their coats from matting, and there’s a whole world of poodle haircuts to explore if you’re feeling creative.5. West Highland White Terrier HanahS // Shutterstock The Westie is as sturdy and spirited as its name suggests. Known for loyalty, playfulness, and a happiness that seems to radiate off that bright white coat, the West Highland terrier is a household companion that won’t stir up your allergies—or let you have a boring day.Westies stand about 11 inches tall and weigh 15-20 pounds. Their dense double coat sheds minimally but benefits from regular brushing and professional grooming every few months. They have plenty of spunk and a terrier’s confidence, which means they’ll approach life (and squirrels) with impressive enthusiasm.6. Scottish Terrier Ondrej Prosicky // Shutterstock You’ll know a Scottie when you see one. Those prominent, pointed ears. That scruffy mustache. The air of a dog who is absolutely certain it’s in charge. The Scottish terrier is confident, dignified, and independent—a thinker who brightens every room it enters, even if it pretends not to care.Scotties stand about 10 inches tall and weigh 18-22 pounds. Their wiry, weather-resistant coat sheds very little and stays healthy with regular brushing and occasional hand-stripping. These are dogs with strong personalities who are loyal to their people but have zero interest in being anyone’s pushover.7. Griffon Bruxellois otsphoto // Shutterstock If you want a dog that doesn’t miss a single thing happening in your home, the Griffon Bruxellois is your match. This loyal and alert little dog has a curiosity that keeps it constantly on the job—investigating every scent, sound, and suspicious crinkle of a snack bag.The Griffon Bruxellois is a true toy breed, standing no more than 10 inches tall and generally weighing up to 10 pounds. What it lacks in size, it makes up for in sheer personality. Their rough coat variety sheds very little and requires regular brushing to keep it tidy. For a dog this small, they have a remarkably commanding presence.8. Bolognese Hristin Velev // Shutterstock The Bolognese is a rare Italian breed with a fluffy white coat that looks like a small cloud of fuzz—but barely sheds or leaves behind dander.Bolognese dogs stand 10-12 inches tall and weigh just 5.5-9 pounds. They’re often described as laid-back and playful, but their loyalty runs deep. This is a breed that bonds to its family and means it. Regular brushing prevents their cottony coats from matting, and their calm temperament makes them wonderful companions for people who appreciate a quieter kind of devotion.9. Chinese Crested Golland // Shutterstock You might not know the name, but you’d recognize this dog anywhere. The Chinese crested only has wisps of fur on its ears, head, and around its legs—the rest is all skin, all confidence. There’s also a fully coated “powderpuff” variety, and both are low-shedding.Chinese cresteds stand 11-13 inches tall and weigh up to 12 pounds. They’re affectionate and lively, with personalities that more than make up for the unconventional look. The hairless variety does benefit from sun protection and basic skincare. If you’re looking for a hypoallergenic breed that comes with its own built-in conversation starter, this is the one.10. Bedlington Terrier Rita_Kochmarjova // Shutterstock The Bedlington terrier looks like a small lamb that wandered into a dog park and decided to stay. With a short, curly coat and a distinctive thin tail, this breed turns heads wherever it goes.Bedlingtons stand 15-17.5 inches tall and weigh 17-23 pounds, making them the largest on this list. They’re charming dogs who enjoy exploring their surroundings at a comfortable pace—but don’t let the gentle appearance fool you. Bedlingtons are loyal, surprisingly athletic, and they won’t shed all over your couch in the process.Are Doodles and Designer Mixes Actually Hypoallergenic?Poodle mixes—Maltipoos, Yorkipoos, schnoodles, Havapoos—are often marketed as hypoallergenic, but the reality is more complicated. Coat type varies widely even within a single litter. Some puppies inherit the poodle’s curly, nonshedding coat; others take after the other parent breed and shed more than you’d expect.If allergies are your primary concern, meeting the specific dog before adopting is essential. A “doodle” name doesn’t guarantee a hypoallergenic coat—it guarantees an adorable face, but that’s about it.Small Dog Breeds That Shed (and May Trigger Allergies)Not every small dog is a good fit for allergy sufferers. These popular breeds shed more than you might think:Chihuahua: Sheds moderately year-round despite the short coat.Pomeranian: Heavy shedder with a thick double coat—all that fluff has to go somewhere.Pug: Short coat, but constant shedding. Pugs are generous that way.Beagle: Double coat that sheds seasonally, and they’re not subtle about it.French Bulldog: Looks low maintenance but sheds more than many people anticipate.How to Choose the Right Small Hypoallergenic DogFinding the right breed goes well beyond coat type. Your lifestyle, living space, and daily routine all play a role. Learn more about dog nutrition and breed-specific care to support your new pup’s health.Evaluate Your Living Space and LifestyleApartment dwellers often do well with bichons, shih tzus, or toy poodles—breeds that adapt to smaller spaces and don’t require a yard. If you have more room and want a dog with terrier energy, a miniature schnauzer or Westie might be a better fit. And if you want a dog that’s happy to match your pace on a quiet evening, the Bolognese or Griffon Bruxellois won’t complain.Match the Breed’s Energy to Your RoutineSome of the breeds on this list are happy with a short walk and plenty of lap time. Others have surprising energy. Toy poodles and bichons benefit from mental stimulation and regular activity. Shih tzus and Bolognese are calmer companions who are content with shorter walks and a good spot on the couch next to you.Understand the Grooming CommitmentHere’s the trade-off with hypoallergenic breeds: Low-shedding doesn’t mean low-maintenance. Most of these dogs need regular brushing—sometimes daily—and professional grooming every four to eight weeks. If that sounds like a lot, a shorter haircut can simplify things, but grooming is still part of the package. Think of it this way: less fur on your furniture, more time at the groomer.Consider Compatibility With Kids and Other PetsBichons and shih tzus tend to be naturally social and great with families. Scottish terriers and Bedlington terriers can be more independent and may do better in quieter households or as the star of a one-dog show.Grooming Essentials for Small Dogs That Don’t ShedLow-shedding coats need consistent care to stay healthy and keep allergens under control. Here’s what that actually looks like.Brushing and Bathing BasicsBrush several times a week to prevent mats and remove trapped dander. Bathing frequency depends on the breed, but regular baths help wash away allergens that build up in the coat. Use the right tools—a slicker brush for curly coats (like your bichon or poodle), a pin brush for silky coats (like your shih tzu).When to Schedule Professional GroomingMost small hypoallergenic dogs benefit from professional grooming every four to eight weeks. Regular haircuts keep coats manageable and reduce dander buildup. A good groomer will also check ears, trim nails, and catch skin issues before they become bigger problems.Simple Ways to Reduce Allergens at HomeBeyond grooming, a few household habits make a real difference. Vacuum frequently—floors and furniture collect dander faster than you’d think. Wash bedding weekly, both yours and your dog’s. Consider keeping the bedroom pet-free for nighttime allergy relief. And a HEPA air purifier can capture airborne allergens effectively—it’s a worthwhile investment for any allergy-prone household.How Fresh Food Supports Coat Health in Small Hypoallergenic DogsWhat goes into the bowl shows up on the coat. Nutrition directly impacts skin health, and healthy skin produces less dander—which is exactly what you want when you’re managing allergies.Diets rich in quality proteins and omega fatty acids support a shinier, healthier coat from the inside out. Fresh, human-grade food with real ingredients—not fillers like corn, wheat, or soy—can help reduce inflammation and support the skin barrier, as shown in this research.Your Next Steps to Finding a Small Hypoallergenic DogThe right small hypoallergenic dog is out there—it just takes a little research and some quality time with potential matches. Visit a breeder, meet a foster, or stop by your local shelter. Spend time with the breed and the specific dog before making it official.Once you find your perfect match, supporting their health with quality nutrition helps them thrive. A fresh, balanced diet can make a real difference in coat health, energy levels, and the kind of wellbeing you can see from across the room—a wagging tail and a coat that looks as good as they feel.FAQs About Small Hypoallergenic Dog BreedsCan you still be allergic to hypoallergenic dogs?Yes. Hypoallergenic means reduced allergens, not zero. Individual sensitivity varies, so spending time with a specific breed or even a specific dog before adopting is always smart.How can you test if a breed triggers your allergies?Spend time with the specific dog in an enclosed space, ideally over multiple visits. This gives your body a chance to react or not before you commit. It’s the most reliable way to know.Are small hypoallergenic dogs available at shelters and rescues?Absolutely. Breed-specific rescues exist for many hypoallergenic breeds, and general shelters sometimes have low-shedding breeds or mixes. Searching online databases like Petfinder can help you find what’s available near you.Which small hypoallergenic dogs are best for apartment living?Bichon frise, shih tzu, toy poodle, and Bolognese breeds all adapt well to smaller spaces. Their moderate energy levels and compact size make them natural apartment dogs—just be prepared for the occasional burst of zoomies.Do small hypoallergenic dog breeds require more grooming than other dogs?Most do. Their low-shedding coats need regular brushing and professional grooming to prevent mats and maintain skin health. It’s a trade-off worth making: less shedding around the house, a bit more time keeping their coat in shape.How can I reduce dog allergy symptoms?If you are a pet owner with allergies who already shares your life with a nonhypoallergenic dog, there are a few methods you can employ to possibly reduce the amount of pet dander.This story was produced by Ollie and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

The life insurance gaps newlyweds don't know they have and what they could cost you

The life insurance gaps newlyweds don't know they have and what they could cost youNewly married couples look forward to spending years together, but life doesn’t always go as planned. If one spouse were to die prematurely, the other could be left struggling financially. Life insurance for newlyweds may not sound romantic, but it’s something that shouldn’t be ignored.After you say “I do,” spend some time reviewing and updating your life insurance policies to avoid expensive — and heartbreaking — gaps. At a minimum, you need enough coverage to pay off debts, replace income and cover final expenses. And as your life grows to include a home, children, or bigger financial goals, your coverage should grow with it.Insure.com outlines the most common life insurance gaps newlyweds face and how to address them before they become costly.Getting married changes your life insurance needs more than most couples realizeConsider a newly married couple whose primary earner dies unexpectedly. A small workplace life insurance policy may cover the funeral and little else — leaving the surviving spouse to sell their home and face difficult financial decisions at an already devastating time.Most newlyweds aren’t thinking about these types of scenarios when they get married, but outdated beneficiary information and inadequate coverage are dangerous gaps in many couples’ finances.You can avoid common pitfalls by being proactive about your life insurance. Don’t treat it as an afterthought but as a crucial component of your new life together.Why marriage is the most important life insurance trigger you'll ever haveMarriage doesn’t just combine lives; it also combines finances. Suddenly, you have shared expenses, goals and dreams, many of which may rely on two incomes. Life insurance ensures your spouse can continue to cover these costs after you’re gone.“Even if you don’t have kids, be proactive and get a policy now,” advises Brandon Norwood, a financial planner at Oak City Financial.Don’t assume that just because you are young and healthy, life insurance can wait. Accidents can happen to anyone, and life is unpredictable. The best time to lock in affordable coverage is while you have your health on your side.“Most people don’t get taller and healthier and skinnier as they get older,” says Daniel Hochler, a managing associate at Forest Hills Financial Group. “Lock in a rate at a young age when you’re youngest and healthiest.”What are the most common life insurance gaps for newlyweds?Newlyweds are at risk of making common mistakes that can result in gaps in their life insurance coverage. These gaps can mean that they don’t have enough coverage or, worse, no coverage at all.Here’s what to avoid.Gap 1: Listing the wrong beneficiaryAny life insurance policy you owned before marriage still pays out to whoever is listed as the beneficiary — even if that's an ex-partner, a former fiancé, or a parent. Marriage doesn’t automatically update a policy.Newlyweds should review and update beneficiary information on all the following accounts:Employer-issued life insurance policiesIndividual life insurance policiesWorkplace retirement accounts such as 401(k)sIRAsBrokerage and other financial accountsIf you fail to update your beneficiaries, your life insurance benefits and other assets could go to the wrong person. If you fail to name any beneficiary, it could be a long legal process before your spouse gets any money. You can update and change your beneficiaries as many times as you want.Gap 2: Your coverage doesn't reflect shared expensesMost newlyweds carry life insurance policies sized for their single life, but marriage nearly always increases monthly costs, debt, and long-term financial obligations. If you haven't recalculated your coverage since the wedding, there's a good chance it's too low to protect your spouse.When you were single, a modest policy might have been enough to cover your own debts and funeral costs. Marriage changes the math. You're no longer just insuring you — you're insuring the lifestyle, home, and future you've built together.Here's what typically grows after marriage:Housing costs. Many couples upgrade to a larger home or take on a first mortgage together, often doubling or tripling their housing debt overnight.Combined debt. Student loans, car loans, and credit card balances you each brought into the marriage now affect both of you. If one spouse dies, the other is often left managing those payments alone.Daily living expenses. Groceries, utilities, insurance, subscriptions, and transportation all scale up for two people — and again when kids arrive.Future goals. Saving for a home, starting a family, funding college, or retiring together all require income that life insurance is meant to replace.Gap 3: Relying only on employer-provided life insuranceWorkplace policies are rarely large enough to meet the needs of married couples and families and the coverage disappears if you leave your job. It should be supplemented with an individual policy because:The payout is too small. Group policies through an employer usually cap the death benefit at roughly one times your annual salary — far less than what most families need to replace lost income, pay off a mortgage, or fund a child's education.The coverage isn't portable. When you leave your job, your life insurance almost always stays behind. That means no protection during the gap between jobs, and potentially higher premiums or denied coverage when you try to buy a new policy at an older age or in worse health.“I would tell people to go ahead and get them, but it’s not going to be anywhere near enough,” Norwood says. A workplace policy almost always needs to be supplemented with an additional life insurance policy.Gap 4: Skipping life insurance for a ‘non-working’ spouseA stay-at-home spouse isn't actually non-working — they're usually providing childcare, household management, and caregiving that would cost tens of thousands of dollars a year to replace. If that spouse dies, the surviving partner has to pay for those services out of pocket while still working and grieving.The average cost of daycare for a single infant hit $332 per week in 2025, or $17,264 a year, according to Care.com. And that's just for one child, with no help for cooking, cleaning, errands, or school pickups.A life insurance policy on a stay-at-home spouse covers those replacement costs. Factor in what it would actually cost to replace the care they provide — a policy of $250,000 to $500,000 is a common starting point — enough to cover several years of childcare and household support while the surviving partner adjusts.Gap 5: Using joint life insuranceConsidering joint vs. separate life insurance? Separate policies are almost always best for newlyweds — each partner gets their own death benefit and coverage that doesn't disappear after a single payout.First-to-die policies pay out when the first spouse passes away and then end, leaving the survivor to buy new coverage at an older age — often at a much higher premium or with new health hurdles.Second-to-die policies don't pay out until both spouses have died, offering no financial help to a surviving partner trying to cover the mortgage or raise kids. These are typically used for estate planning by wealthy couples, not for protecting young families.With separate policies, spouses don’t need to worry about scrambling for new coverage after a loss, waiting for a second death to trigger a payout, and they have the flexibility to size each policy to each partner's role in the family.What gaps in life insurance coverage actually costs newlywedsImagine a couple with two young kids. One spouse earns $75,000 a year, while the other stays home to care for the children. Between an old individual policy and workplace coverage, the earning spouse has $150,000 in total life insurance. Their financial picture looks like this: Insure.com Even before accounting for lost income or childcare, the $150,000 payout falls roughly $175,000 short. The surviving spouse would likely have to sell the home, re-enter the workforce immediately, and place the kids in full-time daycare, all while grieving.And if the stay-at-home spouse were the one to die without coverage, the earning spouse would face tens of thousands in annual childcare and household costs with no financial cushion.How much life insurance do married couples need?A good rule of thumb is the DIME method, which accounts for the four biggest financial obligations your family would face. Add these four numbers together to get a realistic coverage target:Debt. Total all non-mortgage debt: credit cards, student loans, auto loans, personal loans, and medical bills. Your policy should clear these so your spouse isn't stuck making payments.Income. Multiply your annual income by the number of years your family would need it replaced — typically 10 to 15 years, or until your youngest child is financially independent. This is usually the largest piece and the one most couples underestimate.Mortgage. Include your full remaining mortgage balance so your family can stay in the home without the monthly payment hanging over them.Education. Estimate future college costs per child — roughly $100,000 for in-state public college or $200,000+ for private, in today's dollars.For the couple above, DIME works out to: $68,000 in debt + $750,000 in income replacement (10 years at $75,000) + $250,000 mortgage + $200,000 education = roughly $1.27 million in coverage needed. That's more than 8 times what they currently have.How should newlyweds plan for future family changes?Your life insurance needs will shift as your family grows, so it helps to choose coverage that can move with you, not just protect the life you have today. Within a few years of marriage, many couples buy a home, welcome a first child, or take on new financial goals their original policy was never built to cover. Each of those milestones raises the stakes, and the amount of coverage your spouse would need if something happened to you.The good news is you have a few straightforward ways to make sure your coverage keeps pace:Buy more coverage than you need right now. Term life is inexpensive in your 20s and early 30s, so locking in a larger policy early often costs far less than adding coverage later at an older age.Choose a longer term length. A 30-year term gives you room to grow into the coverage as your family, mortgage, and expenses expand, without having to requalify mid-life.Add a guaranteed insurability rider. This add-on lets you increase coverage at major life events, like having a baby or buying a home, without another medical exam. It's not right for everyone, but it's a useful safety net if your health changes.Revisit your coverage every few years. A quick review after any major milestone — a new home, a new baby, a big income jump — keeps your policy aligned with your real life.It's also worth knowing that coverage doesn't only go up. As your mortgage shrinks, debts get paid off, and kids become financially independent, you may need less insurance than you once did. Some couples use a laddering strategy — stacking multiple term policies of different lengths — so coverage steps down naturally as those obligations disappear, keeping premiums lower over time.What newlyweds should consider about coverage before buyingBefore buying life insurance as a couple, think through four big decisions — whether to choose term or permanent coverage, whether to buy separate or joint policies, how long your term should last, and which riders to add. Smaller details like naming a contingent beneficiary, being honest on your application, and locking in rates while you're young can also make a major difference over time.A few extra decisions upfront can shape how well your coverage actually protects your family, and how much you'll pay over the life of the policy.Term vs. permanent life insurance. Term life covers you for a set period (usually 10, 20, or 30 years) and pays out only if you die during that window — simple, affordable, and the right fit for most newlyweds. Permanent life (whole or universal) lasts your entire life as long as premiums are paid and builds cash value over time, but costs significantly more. Most couples start with term because it provides the most protection during the years it's needed most.Separate vs. joint policies. Separate policies give each spouse their own coverage, death benefit, and beneficiary — the most flexible setup for most couples. Joint policies cover both spouses under one plan but only pay out once, which usually leaves one partner underprotected. Two separate policies cost slightly more but ensure each spouse is fully covered no matter what happens.Term length. A 20- vs. 30-year term is a real decision for newlyweds. A good rule of thumb: pick a term that lasts until your youngest future child would finish college, or until your mortgage is paid off, whichever comes later.Lock in rates while you're young and healthy. Premiums are based on your age and health when you apply, so buying in your 20s or early 30s locks in dramatically lower rates for the entire term. Waiting until kids arrive or health changes can make the same coverage significantly more expensive, sometimes thousands of dollars more over the life of the policy.Coordinate coverage between spouses. Both partners need enough coverage, not just the higher earner. If the lower earner or stay-at-home spouse is underinsured, the survivor can still face serious financial strain. Sizing each policy to your family's actual needs ensures no one is left short.Name a contingent beneficiary. Most couples name each other as primary beneficiary but forget to name a backup. If both spouses pass in the same event, a contingent beneficiary — often a trust, sibling, or parent who would care for the kids — ensures the payout goes where you intend.Revisit your coverage after major life events. Life insurance isn't set-it-and-forget-it. Buying a home, having a child, taking a big promotion, or starting a business can all change what your spouse would need. A quick review every few years — or after any major milestone — keeps your coverage aligned with your life.What to do in the first 90 days of marriagePart of settling into married life is making sure all your finances are in order. After the honeymoon is over, take the following steps within 90 days of your nuptials:Audit existing life insurance. Review all the policies you and your spouse own, both individually and as workplace benefits. Understand the type of insurance – term vs. permanent – and benefit amount for each one.Update beneficiaries. Add or update the beneficiary designations on each policy. Insurers may request the name, address and Social Security number (if known) of each beneficiary.Calculate your coverage needs. Use the DIME method or a rule of thumb, such as buying 10-12 times your household income, to see how much life insurance you and your spouse should have.Fill the gaps. If your existing coverage falls short of how much you need, shop for a new policy. Remember, holding all your insurance through your employer can be risky. If you lose or leave your job, you can lose your coverage as well.FAQDoes getting married automatically update your life insurance?No, life insurance must be updated manually after a marriage. Couples should review their current coverage levels, update beneficiary information and purchase more insurance, if needed.How much life insurance does a married couple need?Every couple’s situation is different. A common rule of thumb is to purchase life insurance equal to 10-12 times your income. A more exact method involves adding up how much is needed to pay off debt, replace income and cover future expenses such as children’s college tuition.Should newlyweds get joint or separate life insurance policies?Joint life insurance policies can make sense for some couples, but separate policies may be better suited for newlyweds. That way, each spouse is sure to receive a payment if the other should die. Joint policies list two people, but they typically only pay out after the death of one person.What happens to life insurance if a beneficiary is never updated after marriage?If you don’t update the beneficiary information, the policy’s death benefit will go to whoever you listed previously. That means an ex-spouse could walk away with the money. If there is no beneficiary listed, it will be up to the court to determine who receives the policy payout.This story was produced by Insure.com and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

The affordability crisis is creating a generation of renters

The affordability crisis is creating a generation of rentersUntil recently, the roadmap for buying a home seemed clear: Get a good job, save for a few years, and buy a starter home. But America’s ongoing housing affordability crisis has turned what was once a common milestone into something far less attainable for most would-be buyers.Record-high home prices, elevated mortgage rates, and increased debt are just a few of the many factors that have made homebuying a daunting prospect. With little hope for relief on the horizon, many people are choosing long-term renting over taking on a mortgage, TurboTenant reports.The result is a shift in how people approach housing. What’s next is a generation that may rent longer, delay buying altogether, or rethink what the American Dream looks like.Why homeownership is slipping out of reach for many AmericansWhile renting was once seen as a temporary way to save money for a home, it’s now become a way of life as homeownership slides further out of reach for many. Here’s why.Home prices haven’t corrected from pandemic-era boomsDuring the COVID-19 pandemic, home buying surged amid historically low mortgage rates and the rapid rise of remote work. As a result, pandemic-era purchases severely limited available home inventory and drove up prices across the country, which have remained stubbornly high ever since.According to a February 2025 analysis from Zillow, average home values jumped by more than 45% between 2020 and 2025. Since home values typically increase by around 4% per year, that represents roughly 11 years of growth compressed into just five years, effectively doubling the usual pace.Mortgage rates continue to hover between 6% and 7%Pandemic-era buyers enjoyed extremely low interest rates, which fell to just 2.65% in January 2021, according to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.However, as of 2026, mortgage rates in the U.S. are near 10-year highs, ranging from 6% to 7% nationwide. These elevated rates add hundreds of thousands of dollars to a buyer’s total costs over the life of a mortgage.Let’s break it down: A $500,000 home with a 20% down payment at 3% interest would have a monthly payment of $2,061 and $207,110 in interest over 30 years. At a 6% rate, however, the numbers jump to $2,773 per month and $463,352 in total interest. For many buyers, that difference alone is enough to push them out of the homebuying market and into the ever-growing pool of renters.Wages haven’t kept up with housing costsEven as home prices rise, wages haven’t kept pace. According to Bureau of Labor Statistics data analyzed by Forbes, the average U.S. worker made $64,505 per year in 2025. But to afford the average U.S. home, as of December 2024, a Realtor.com report found that buyers would need an annual household income of $118,530. In other words, purchasing a home often requires two full-time salaries, which puts single-income families at a severe disadvantage.Numerous factors have contributed to stagnant wage growth across the U.S., including a stalled federal minimum wage, offshoring labor, and a decline in union membership, all of which limit workers’ bargaining power. As a result, purchasing a home now requires far more income than most Americans earn. Put simply, the math no longer works for most buyers.Inflation continues to erode buying powerLow wages aren’t the only threat facing American buyers. With persistently high inflation driving up the costs of everything from groceries to electricity, most people worry more about keeping the lights on and putting food on the table than buying a home or saving for a down payment.Much of the typical paycheck now goes toward day-to-day expenses, making it difficult to save enough for a down payment. And even when savings begin to build, unless the funds are held in a high-interest account or another appreciating asset, they won’t grow fast enough to keep up with inflation. That’s a problem with no simple fix.US consumer debt is at an all-time highWith all these economic factors in mind, it’s no surprise that American consumers are carrying record levels of debt. According to a February 2026 report from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, U.S. credit card debt now totals more than $1.28 trillion, a 5.5% increase from the year prior.But credit card debt is just one piece of the puzzle. Many households also carry student loans, medical debt, and auto loans. With so much existing debt already weighing on finances, taking on another large loan has become far less appealing for many would-be buyers, especially given the inflated price tag of homeownership.Americans are rethinking the American DreamWhile would-be buyers have long hoped that the housing affordability crisis is temporary, the fix to all of those problems coming at once isn’t likely. And as the economic landscape continues to shift from one generation to the next, many Americans are recalibrating their expectations for success, quality of life, and long-term security.Of course, there’s no telling what homeownership in the U.S. will look like years or even decades from now. But it’s increasingly clear that we’re already seeing the effects of this shift in mindset. Here’s how the housing crisis is reshaping the nation’s cultural and financial landscape.Renters are in no rush to enter the buying marketBack when homeownership was more attainable, people often planned to rent for a few years before saving enough to buy a home. However, renting indefinitely (with no plans to purchase) has become increasingly common, particularly among younger generations of Americans.A 2023 report from Harvard notes that while renting has declined among millennials, members of Generation Z are now driving much of today’s rental demand. In fact, Gen Z renters account for a growing share of the market, a trend expected to continue as the generation ages.Many of these younger renters prefer to stay closer to jobs and the daily conveniences of city life. According to an Apartments.com study published on March 23, 2026, “64% of Gen Z renters choose renting because it allows them to live closer to major cities and the activity they offer.” While buying a home and settling down was once the standard, the ability to move with fewer strings attached is becoming increasingly appealing.Demand for rentals is outpacing supplyFrom Los Angeles to New York, there are far more renters than available units in most U.S. metros. Plus, strong job growth in areas like Raleigh and Boise is attracting new residents to these lesser-known markets. As a result, housing prices continue to rise, along with rental demand.It’s worth noting that much of this demand is concentrated in affordable housing rather than luxury units. As renting becomes a long-term reality, many individuals are looking for places they can afford without roommates, while others seek single-family homes with enough space to raise children.With the forces behind the housing affordability crisis keeping more people in the rental market for longer, most U.S. metros simply don’t have enough of these rental units to go around. And as fewer people transition into homeownership, the number of renters seeking affordable and single-family options will continue to rise.Why landlords are benefiting from today’s rental marketWith so many Americans choosing to rent rather than buy a home, landlords are in a unique position to benefit from the evolving trend. For those fortunate enough to already own or afford to purchase an investment property, being a landlord unlocks the potential for passive or semi-passive cash flow.People who can’t afford to buy a rental property outright still have ways to benefit from these trends. For instance, house hacking, the practice of renting out a room in one’s home to help cover mortgage costs, presents another way to capitalize on today’s rental-focused housing market.Many existing property owners in the U.S. have already become “accidental landlords.” Unable to sell their homes to buyers wary of high mortgage rates, some homeowners are choosing to rent out their properties instead to generate income that can keep pace with inflation over time.Renting is the smarter long-term financial move for many AmericansMost Americans dream about buying a home at some point. However, the hard truth is that renting may be the better decision for those looking to save money and stretch their income. While renters won’t build equity, they can avoid many of the financial risks that come with property ownership.Considering mortgage rates, rising insurance and maintenance costs, steep property taxes, and more, renting may ultimately make more financial sense in 2026. After all, with today’s housing market limitations, paying hundreds of thousands of dollars in interest alone could create more problems than it solves.Of course, circumstances may change in the future, and Americans’ infatuation with buying their own home likely won’t disappear completely. But in the meantime, renting over buying may be the key to saving more money, preserving flexibility and freedom, and enjoying a higher quality of life overall.Is America becoming a nation of lifelong renters?Buying a home was once a nonnegotiable part of the American dream. But amid the ongoing housing affordability crisis, more Americans are choosing to rent indefinitely and prioritize saving over chasing traditional paths to homeownership.With high mortgage rates and record-low affordability keeping even existing homeowners from selling, many have pivoted to become landlords instead. Rental housing offers the potential for steady, inflation-aligned income, making rental investing an increasingly attractive option in today’s market.Even for those who assume they can’t afford a rental property, many markets across the country still offer untapped potential. In the right conditions, those opportunities can make eventual homeownership more realistic than once imagined.This story was produced by TurboTenant and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

KWQC TV-6  Man charged after Lee County resident scammed out of thousands of dollars in deception scheme, deputies say KWQC TV-6

Man charged after Lee County resident scammed out of thousands of dollars in deception scheme, deputies say

Patel has a court date set for May 21, according to deputies.

WVIK In court, Elon Musk accuses OpenAI of trying to 'have your cake and eat it, too' WVIK

In court, Elon Musk accuses OpenAI of trying to 'have your cake and eat it, too'

In his second day on the stand in the trial he launched against OpenAI, Elon Musk said the AI start-up he'd helped found had strayed from its charitable mission.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

Who keeps the house? Managing a mortgage after a separation.

Who keeps the house? Managing a mortgage after a separation. Emotional bonds created from purchasing a home together — and the financial recalibration required to do so — are intense.Mariana Martinez, a senior family dynamics specialist for Wells Fargo, called buying a home together “a representation of a couple’s love and commitment.”But just as couples fall in love, they can fall out of it. Divorces, annulments, and breakups happen. What once was a couple inextricably linked through love and money is now two individuals severing connections.How does it impact your money? What happens to the home you purchased together?“Making decisions around a shared property and money, in general, is particularly difficult,” Martinez said. “A breakup or divorce adds anxiety and insecurity, particularly if there are children involved, because expenses increase as there are two separate households to support.”While emotions may be running high, taking a clear-eyed look at your financial situation can be helpful. These steps can help you get started.Key takeawaysBuying a home together is a powerful expression of love, but those ties become complex when a relationship ends.Locate and organize key records — bank accounts, insurance policies, property documents, retirement accounts, and more — to understand your financial landscape.Keep open lines of communication with your mortgage servicer.Step 1: Gather financial documentsWhat documents should I look for?Bank, retirement, and investment account statementsLife insurance policiesFinancial records on other things you own, like vehicles, antiques, collectibles, jewelry, and recreational propertyEvidence of business interestsTrust fund agreementsProof of loans you’ve made or money you oweWhere do I look for these documents? They may be in obvious places where you and your partner keep important papers or a safe-deposit box. Check each piece of mail and be alert to anything from insurance companies, credit card companies, banks, investment firms, and mutual fund companies. Ask your accountant, attorney, or financial advisor for copies of tax returns or property ownership documents.Step 2: Monitor your credit reportGet a copy of your credit report (it might be listed under your name and your spouse’s). Review it thoroughly to verify that the information is correct. If it is correct, it will tell you if you or your spouse is delinquent on any account. You might want to hire a wealth management professional to address monetary and investment issues and an accountant to help with tax issues.Step 3: Dig deep to find all assetsAlong with the assets uncovered during your document search, look for easily overlooked items, which may include real estate holdings, limited partnerships, and long-held stocks, mutual funds, or bonds. There may also be work-related assets such as bonuses, perks, tips, commissions, royalties, and expense reimbursements.Step 4: Look at your expenses for the past yearPrepare a comprehensive report noting what you’ve spent on categories like housing, food, clothing, entertainment, school expenses, insurance, taxes, and vacations.Step 5: Review all your accounts, individual and jointGo through your credit card, bank, and investment statements and flag any unusual activity. If you don’t already have a credit card under your own name, consider applying for one.Once you and your partner have a plan to separate, decide when is the right time for you to contact your financial institutions.When the mortgage outlasts the relationshipThe end of a relationship on its own can be life-changing. Adding in a home can heighten emotions.“We tend to attach a lot of emotional value to a home, a place we have built with love and dedication, a place that represents family life,” Martinez said. “A difficult aspect during a divorce or breakup is staying clearheaded while there are overwhelming emotions pulling you in all sorts of directions.”Organizing your finances is a critical first step, and understanding the emotions behind your decisions is important as well. However, knowing how mortgage obligations work during a breakup is just as important.Rulon Washington of the Wells Fargo Home Lending group shared these key facts to help you navigate what happens next with your home.Mortgage servicers look to the note, not the title: Even if both partners are listed on the home’s title, the person named on the mortgage note is legally responsible for payments. To mortgage servicers, all that really matters is who owes the debt. They’re not concerned with civil arrangements or divorce decrees.Servicers typically don’t get involved: As long as the payments are made on time, mortgage servicers aren’t going to reach out. It’s not that they’re cold or aren’t sympathetic to what you and your partner are going through, that’s just not their priority. Servicers will engage, usually, after a missed payment or hardship signals arise, like a loss of income.Divorces guide ownership but don’t bind lenders: If one partner wants to assume ownership of the home after divorce, they can’t just take it. If they’re not on the original mortgage, they’ll have to qualify like anyone else. Lenders will assess their financial viability and, if they’re not capable, the partner whose name is on the mortgage remains responsible unless the home is sold.Keep open lines of communication: Mortgage servicers are more likely to work with people who proactively communicate with them. Increased expenses and loss of income are common after divorces or breakups. Be open about any difficulties you expect before any delinquencies escalate.Understand delinquency: Formal delinquency begins at 60 days of non-payment. At 30 days, servicers will start monitoring and looking into what might be going on. Try, even as you separate, to amicably find a way to keep the account current while you and your partner decide on next steps.Give yourself graceEven with all your financial documents gathered and a clear understanding of the de-coupling process, emotions can still steer decisions in unexpected directions — especially when it comes to your home.“My main suggestion is to keep in mind that emotions often are in the way of us making good financial decisions,” said Martinez. “While intense feelings in a divorce are impossible to avoid, knowing that they can lead you in a direction that is ultimately against your best interests is a good start. For this same reason, advice from a professional, someone who could help you evaluate the situation with more objectivity and neutrality is key.”This story was produced by Wells Fargo and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

Don’t bid your way out of rising cost per acquisition. Build your way out.

Don’t bid your way out of rising cost per acquisition. Build your way out.U.S. retail media ad spend is on track to hit $69.33 billion in 2026, according to eMarketer. Yet across the industry, brands scaling that investment are watching their cost per acquisition (CPA) climb at the same time, with more spend and worse efficiency. The instinct is to go straight into the ad account and start pulling levers: tweak bids, reshuffle audiences, reallocate spend. Most of the time, that's the wrong place to look.In isolation, those actions make sense. But they rely on the assumption that the source of inefficiency sits within the ad account itself.In reality, many of the largest drivers of CPA sit upstream or downstream of media: the strength of the offer, the quality of the creative, and the effectiveness of the conversion journey.This means if the goal is to reduce CPA, the question isn't just what to optimize in-platform. As this article from Brainlabs explains, it’s also critical to understand where the inefficiency is actually coming from.You're probably looking in the wrong placeA CPA problem is often a conversion problem in disguise. The ad is doing its job, getting people to the site. What's failing is everything that happens after the click: a product page that doesn't convert, an offer that isn't competitive, a checkout with too much friction. Optimizing media spend against a broken funnel just means spending more efficiently on something that isn't working.The first things to audit are your product feed and your offer. The feed containing your product titles, descriptions, prices, and images is what platforms use to serve shopping and retail ads, so if that data is incomplete or poorly structured, performance will suffer regardless of how well you bid. If the offer itself isn't compelling on price or value, better targeting won't compensate for it.Bid strategy sits at the end of that list. It's a useful tool for extracting efficiency from a program that's already working, but it can't create efficiency where the fundamentals aren't there. The same logic applies to channel diversification: Expanding into new platforms because they're growing or because a rep made a compelling case isn't a demand strategy. Channel decisions should follow where your audience is and what role that channel plays in the wider system, not trend cycles.The levers that actually move itOnce the conversion fundamentals are sound, two things tend to move CPA: creative and audience structure, and both are consistently underinvested.On creative, the numbers are striking. A 2022 Nielsen study commissioned by Meta examined three years of marketing mix modeling data across 41 brands and found that campaigns with high-quality creative achieved 35% greater effectiveness. Separately, Google's own research attributes 70% of campaign success to creative. Those aren't marginal gains from asset refresh cycles. They reflect the difference between treating creative as a set-and-forget task and running it as a proper testing system.The most effective approach treats creative as a rolling test system instead of a series of one-off campaigns. Running multiple variants per ad set simultaneously, each isolating a single variable such as the opening hook, format, or offer, generates clearer signals about what's actually driving performance. Rather than cutting to a fixed timeline, each variant runs until it reaches a minimum spend threshold before decisions are made. Top performers get scaled, mid-performers get iterated, and bottom performers are cut quickly. The goal is to build a portfolio of working assets and feed learnings continuously into the next round, so performance compounds rather than resets each cycle.Audience structure follows the same logic. Running the same ad to everyone, cold prospects and people who have visited the product page five times alike, treats the funnel as flat when it isn't. The message, offer, and format that works for someone who has never heard of a brand is different from what works for someone already warm, and the inefficiency compounds at scale.The fix is to structure audiences in clear layers: At a minimum, cold prospecting, engaged users, and high-intent or existing customers, each with distinct messaging and creative aligned to where they are in the journey. What moves someone between layers should be behavior rather than time. A site visit or video completion shifts someone from cold to warm. Repeated interactions or an add-to-cart moves them into high-intent. That way, discovery-led creative reaches people at the top, proof and product detail does the work in the middle, and strong conversion drivers close at the bottom.The measurement problem nobody talks aboutEven with the right creative and audience structure in place, most retail advertisers are still making decisions from a distorted picture. Part of that is how CPA gets reported. Part of it is which channels get invested in when pressure builds. Both come back to the same underlying problem: The numbers being used to make decisions don't reflect what's actually happening.Every platform overclaims its contribution. Google takes credit for conversions. Meta takes credit for the same conversions. Reading both dashboards in isolation, without a neutral layer between them, makes double-counting almost inevitable. The more reliable approach is a blended CPA view: total spend across all channels divided by actual conversions from a source you control (your e-commerce platform or analytics tool, not the platforms). That's the real number.From there, incrementality testing tells you which channels are genuinely driving those conversions rather than just claiming them. For most retail advertisers, a realistic starting point is a simple geo holdout test: Pause spend in a small, matched region, keep everything else constant, and measure the difference in conversions from your own data. A clear test design with a success metric based on incremental lift, rather than platform-reported CPA, is what separates a meaningful result from one that simply confirms what the platform already wants you to believe.The same distortion affects channel investment decisions. When CPA is under pressure, upper funnel spend, with elements such as awareness, video, and broader prospecting, is usually the first thing to get cut, because it doesn't show an immediate return in the numbers. But that's the wrong read. Lower-funnel channels like brand search, shopping, and retargeting only look efficient because they're reaching people who are already close to buying. That pool doesn't replenish itself. Upper funnel is what keeps new people flowing into it, so cutting it to protect short-term CPA accelerates the problem rather than solving it.Because the effect isn't immediate, the way to know it's working is to track what moves first: branded search volume, direct traffic, engagement rates, and new user growth. These are early signals that demand is being built, and they will shift before conversion does. If they're not moving, lower funnel CPA will eventually deteriorate, no matter how well the bottom of the funnel is optimized.Bottom lineSustained CPA pressure in retail is rarely a signal that something in-platform needs adjusting. More often it's a signal that something earlier in the chain needs attention: the offer, the creative system, the audience structure, or the measurement layer telling you what's actually working.Start there. Focus on the parts of the system that matter most, and keep evolving as conditions change.This story was produced by Brainlabs and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

OurQuadCities.com OurQuadCities.com

Remains of missing Clinton man found in Rock Island County

The remains of a man reported missing in Clinton were found by authorities in Rock Island County, according to a news release from the Clinton Police Department. The release said the department was contacted by the Rock Island County Sheriff’s Office on April 28. Rock Island County authorities reported finding a dead person along the [...]

KWQC TV-6  Davenport convenience store receives 2026 Choose Iowa Value-Added Grant   KWQC TV-6

Davenport convenience store receives 2026 Choose Iowa Value-Added Grant

A Davenport convenience store has been awarded a Choose Iowa Value-Added Grant.

OurQuadCities.com OurQuadCities.com

IDOT washing 3 QCA bridges starting May 1

Three bridges in the QCA will see some spring cleaning starting on Friday. A news release from the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT) said that work on three Mississippi River bridges in Rock Island, Whiteside and Carroll Counties starts Friday, May 1. The bridges being washed include: • Centennial Bridge (U.S. 67) in Rock Island• [...]

North Scott Press North Scott Press

How to use sales automation the right way

How to use sales automation the right wayTime is the only thing you can't buy.This truth has a lot of implications, but especially so for sales leaders. From meetings booked to the number of customers converted — how you manage your time in the sales world makes all the difference.​​Yet, precious little is being done in the average workplace to make better use of everyone's most limited asset.A McKinsey & Company study in 2020 found that many business leaders at that time were not taking advantage of marketing and sales automation tools and all of their time-saving potential.In fact, automation implementation in sales is severely lacking. This survey found that out of the hundreds of business leaders surveyed, only 26% were automating a sales or marketing process.This is an unfortunate statistic because sales automation has the potential to disrupt the entire sales funnel. Early adopters of sales automation consistently report increases in customer-facing time, higher customer satisfaction, 10%-15% improvements in efficiency, and a sales uplift potential of up to 10%.The simple fact is: putting off implementing sales automation is costing you.In this guide, Apollo goes over the benefits of sales automation, shows you some examples of sales automation in action, and explains how you can use it to streamline your sales and improve your conversion rates.What is sales automation?Sales automation is the process of using artificial intelligence (AI) tools to carry out sales tasks that are normally done manually. It's any software-based solution that helps a salesperson perform their tasks faster, easier, and more efficiently.Without sales automation tools, sales reps will spend the majority of their time doing tedious, nonrevenue-generating tasks (e.g., finding contact information, entering data manually, and updating CRMs).Sales automation frees up sales reps and allows them to spend their time on high-value activities that drive revenue and prioritize the customer experience.You can use sales automation tools in endless ways. They can tackle a single, specific task or offer end-to-end solutions.Whatever your current sales process looks like, sales automation can better it.What tasks can sales automation handle?So, what can you actually hand off to your new robot assistant? It's more than you think. Sales automation is about taking the entire manual, repetitive layer out of your sales process. Here are the most impactful tasks you can automate.Lead routing and assignment: Instead of a manager manually assigning new leads, automation can instantly route them to the right rep based on territory, industry, or company size. This means faster follow-up and no more leads falling through the cracks.Data entry and CRM updates: This is the big one. Automation can log calls, update contact records, change deal stages, and sync information across your tools. It eliminates the mind-numbing task of manual data entry and keeps your CRM data clean and reliable.Personalized email sequences: Go beyond a simple blast. Set up multistep sequences that send personalized follow-ups based on a prospect's actions. If they open an email but don't click, a different message can be triggered. It's personalization at scale.Meeting scheduling: Stop the back-and-forth of finding a time that works. Automation tools can integrate with your calendar, allowing prospects to book a meeting with one click.Reporting and analytics: Get real-time insights without building reports from scratch. Automated dashboards can track team performance, sequence effectiveness, and pipeline health, so you always know where you stand.The benefits of sales automationLet's look at some of the specific ways that sales and marketing automation can take your sales process to the next level.Sales automation increases efficiency and productivityOne of the best things sales automation can do for your business is improve your sales and marketing team's efficiency and productivity.It also helps prevent burnout among your sales reps. Nothing de-energizes and fatigues sales and marketing teams like hours of tedious busywork. When you implement an automation tool, it not only achieves efficient results but also lightens the load of your sales reps and gives them valuable energy to put elsewhere.Sales automation reduces human errorPeople make mistakes. No matter who you hire or how they are trained, there will be human error committed in manual tasks.Sales automation and AI technology can help you make huge steps towards reducing the negative impact that human error has on your sales. Sales automation software can also help you identify small issues before they become larger and more costly.Sales automation improves customer conversion ratesOver 41% of marketers say that sales automation is enabling them to generate more revenue and achieve higher customer conversion rates through email marketing alone.Sales automation technology can help a sales manager set up exactly how they want their customer journey to look. The actions they want to be taken in specific accounts can be automatically triggered and executed, and prospects can be sent down sales funnels that are tailored to their needs.This relieves sales reps from having to manually nurture prospects and allows them to have highly personalized experiences in no time at all.Sales automation reduces costsEven with all the other benefits aside, sales automation reduces your cost, and that alone makes it a worthwhile investment.Sales automation provides data analysisAn important part of any sales motion is testing and optimizing.Sales and marketing automation tools store vast amounts of data, and many of them precisely track your sales activity and provide helpful sales reports and data analysis.Automation platforms gather and store hundreds of data points. From measuring sales performance data to tracking marketing results, these data points can help you improve and optimize across your entire sales funnel.Implementing an automated workflow allows you to easily monitor and respond to changes in customer behaviors, refine customer data, create new data-based campaigns, jumpstart lead generation, and so much more.Sales automation for start-upsIt's no secret that start-ups and SMBs have less cash and fewer resources.If you are a small business leader, you might be thinking, "I'm not sure I can afford to invest in sales automation software..."But that's exactly the reason why you should.Automated sales tools work around the clock for you, at no extra cost. It cuts out the extra tasks that you may not have the budget or the hands for, such as managing customer data, digital sales, social media, email marketing, etc.In fact, small companies are the leaders in AI spending. They invest in a sales automation solution because it has a high ROI and helps them penetrate their new market.Here are some additional pointers for start-ups looking to invest in sales automation software:Find a sales automation platform that is easy to manage. There are some platforms that offer expensive and unnecessary features that start-ups don't need.Prioritize integration capabilities. Invest in a sales automation tool that can seamlessly integrate with your existing technology stack (e.g., Salesforce, HubSpot, other customer relationship management platforms, website CMS).Look for intelligence. Sales software should make your business smarter and more adaptable. As a start-up, you have the ability to be flexible and modify your sales and marketing processes more quickly than enterprise companies. Use sales automation to find ways to improve, and don't forget to test, test, test.Focus on how you can use sales automation to improve conversion rates, not just lead generation. Your platform should help you nurture leads in all stages of the sales pipeline and convert those prospects into happy customers.Look for sales platforms that offer you free trials or accounts; that way, you can see if it makes a good fit before investing your dollar.Frequently asked questions about sales automationWhat's the difference between CRM and sales automation?Think of it this way: Your CRM is the address book, and sales automation is the personal assistant who uses that address book to send emails, schedule meetings, and take notes for you. A CRM stores customer data, while sales automation acts on that data to move deals forward.What are the four main types of sales automation?While there are many tools, automation generally falls into four buckets: fixed (for repetitive, unchanging tasks), programmable (can be changed for new batches), flexible (easily reconfigured for new products), and integrated (a fully unified system where all tools talk to each other).How much does sales automation typically cost?Costs can range from free tools with basic features to thousands per month for enterprise-level platforms. The key is to find a solution that scales with you. Many platforms offer free tiers so you can prove the ROI before you invest heavily.Can small businesses really benefit from sales automation?Absolutely. In fact, they might benefit the most. Automation allows smaller teams to punch above their weight, handling the workload of a much larger sales force without the headcount. It levels the playing field by maximizing the efficiency of every rep.How long does it take to see results from sales automation?You can see immediate results in time savings the day you set it up. Reps will spend less time on data entry right away. Seeing a significant impact on revenue and conversion rates typically takes a full sales cycle, but efficiency gains are instant.This story was produced by Apollo and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

HR leaders call for unified solutions and strategic AI

HR leaders call for unified solutions and strategic AITwo-thirds of HR technology decision-makers are ready to switch providers to get the all-in-one system they need, according to a recent survey of business leaders conducted in September 2025 by Qualtrics and Paylocity, an HR, payroll, and finance software provider.The study drew on insights from more than 500 leaders across HR, finance, IT, and operations to assess how organizations view their HR and payroll software, examining usability, integration, innovation, and outcomes. The findings highlight what works today — and what human capital management (HCM) technology must deliver next.87% of leaders want an all-in-one HR and payroll solutionWhen it comes to HR processes, keeping employee data secure and accurate is critical. From hiring to payroll, benefits, and compliance, every detail matters. But HR isn’t the only department that benefits from getting this right.In their quest for a better solution, a vast majority of decision-makers (87%) are looking for a unified solution. Furthermore, 82% agree that the ability to connect data across HR, finance, and IT is very or extremely important.By making the person record a single source of truth, an all-in-one platform eliminates duplicate data entry, ensuring employee information is kept up to date from job application through offboarding.While leaders want one solution that covers multiple HR and payroll functions, “all in one” does not mean the same as “one size fits all.”The most advanced HCM solutions also integrate easily with other business systems to provide better flexibility and scalability. This includes integrations with transactional systems, like time and benefits, which are key to enhancing operational efficiency and improving employee engagement.But a truly unified platform also breaks down silos to enable more strategic workforce planning, performance management, and employee autonomy.The real value of a comprehensive solution comes from better visibility and reporting. When business leaders have ready access to real-time data analytics, it takes the guesswork out of decision-making.AI innovation must serve a purposeWorkplace technology evolves rapidly, and there’s a massive appetite for smarter tools. Almost half of the surveyed decision-makers strongly agree that HCM software can use AI and automation to improve efficiency. Additionally, 86% say AI can significantly improve HR and payroll processes.The employee experience is shifting, too, with half of all workers today turning to AI for work advice instead of their manager, according to a 2026 study by Randstad.Many modern HR and payroll software solutions have taken note,embedding AI to improve performance management and employee listening, helping companies identify at-risk employees while also automating tasks and accelerating recruitment.The potential impact of these AI-powered tools is compelling, with 2025 research from Market Reports World indicating that automated HR systems can reduce labor administration time by 41%.But business leaders want a voice in how technology evolves.The Paylocity survey found that 78% are looking for a provider who incorporates client feedback in their product roadmap. Yet only 36% strongly agree that their current provider introduces meaningful, beneficial innovations.The Future of HCMThe survey underscores a growing demand for an all-in-one HCM system that leverages AI and innovation to transform how organizations operate.Leaders across HR, finance, and IT increasingly recognize that breaking down data and process silos is critical to strategic workforce planning and faster, more informed decision-making through real-time analytics.Unified solutions that integrate HR, payroll, and other systems not only streamline operations but also provide leaders with the insights they need to make confident, data-driven decisions.But they want purposeful innovation — solutions based on client feedback are the ones that truly deliver value. They’re looking for partners who listen closely to clients and deliver meaningful, practical enhancements that solve real-world challenges.The future of HCM, then, is a unified system that facilitates growth and adapts quickly as work changes.This story was produced by Paylocity and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

US Supreme Court sides with anti-abortion centers facing NJ probe

The high court booted New Jersey's fight against anti-abortion crisis pregnancy centers to a lower court, agreeing that a subpoena chilled the centers' constitutional rights. (Photo by New Jersey Monitor)The U.S. Supreme Court has sided with a coalition of anti-abortion crisis pregnancy centers in its fight against the New Jersey Attorney General’s Office, finding a subpoena that state investigators issued for donor information unconstitutionally chilled the centers’ free speech and association rights. In a unanimous decision issued Wednesday, Justice Neil Gorsuch reversed an appellate court’s ruling that had prevented First Choice Women’s Resource Centers Inc., from airing their constitutional objections to the state’s probe and investigative practices in federal court. Gorsuch’s ruling returns the case to U.S. District Court. Former Attorney General Matt Platkin had been investigating First Choice since 2022, when he created a “reproductive rights strike force” and issued a consumer alert about crisis pregnancy center practices and advertising he deemed deceptive. Investigators subpoenaed donor records in an effort to interview donors to determine if First Choice, which operates five faith-based, anti-abortion centers in Jersey City, Montclair, Morristown, Newark, and New Brunswick, had misled them about its mission and operations, according to court filings. Gorsuch, a nominee of President Donald Trump who joined the bench in 2017, said the nation’s top court has long held that “compelled disclosure of affiliation with groups engaged in advocacy may constitute as effective a restraint on freedom of association” as more direct forms of suppression, citing from NAACP v. Alabama. Gorsuch heavily quoted from that 1958 landmark decision, in which the court forbade the state of Alabama from forcing the NAACP to disclose its membership lists, throughout Wednesday’s ruling. Associational rights carry special significance for political, social, religious, and other minorities, Gorsuch added. “An official demand for private donor information is enough to discourage reasonable individuals from associating with a group. It is enough to discourage groups from expressing dissident views. A government that chooses to make private donor information public may make the damage worse,” he wrote. That pressure exists, though, even without public disclosure, he added. “Just ask yourself, would it have been an answer in NAACP v. Alabama if the State’s Attorney General promised to keep the NAACP’s membership rolls to himself?” Gorsuch wrote. “Since the 1950s, this Court has confronted one official demand after another like the Attorney General’s. Over and again, we have held those demands burden the exercise of First Amendment rights. Disputing none of these precedents but seeking ways around them, the Attorney General has offered a variety of arguments. Some are old, some are new, but none succeeds.” Platkin said he was disappointed with the ruling, which “for the first time, gives organizations extraordinary protections against routine requests for information in connection with state investigations.” “The Court’s opinion today makes it harder for women to access safe and effective life-saving medical and abortion care, and harder to protect Americans from potential deceptive practices,” Platkin said. “As Attorney General, I was proud that my office led some of the most consequential investigations and lawsuits to protect our residents from harm, and am always proud of New Jersey for fighting for reproductive rights.” New Jersey Attorney General Jen Davenport (Photo by Anne-Marie Caruso/New Jersey Monitor) Attorney General Jen Davenport, who replaced Platkin in January, said Gorsuch’s ruling merely returns the case to a lower court, where the legal fight will continue. “Today’s procedural decision holds only that First Choice can pursue its challenge to our subpoena, not that its challenge should prevail. New Jersey law makes clear that nonprofits cannot deceive or defraud New Jerseyans, and we regularly exercise our traditional investigative authority to ensure they are not doing so — regardless of the particular services they provide,” Davenport said. “We look forward to defending our subpoena in court. We will continue to enforce our fraud laws without fear or favor.” First Choice supporters, including the nonprofit’s executive director, Aimee Huber, celebrated the decision. “For more than two years, Attorney General Platkin targeted First Choice with aggressive demands for sensitive documents, including our donors’ identities. He has gone to great lengths to frustrate the important work we do — work that has made a tangible, life-saving difference for tens of thousands of New Jersey women and their children,” Huber said in a statement. “As the Supreme Court recognized, the government can’t evade federal court review when it harasses those who support pro-life ministries just because it disagrees with their message and their mission.” The American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey sided with the anti-abortion centers in this case. “Thankfully, the Court ruled that federal courts remain open for nonprofits to challenge government subpoenas that could be used to target them based on their viewpoint,” said Jeanne LoCicero, the group’s legal director. “It is crucial for advocacy organizations – wherever they fall on the political spectrum – to have a legal path to fight retaliatory conduct by government officials.” SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX Courtesy of New Jersey Monitor

North Scott Press North Scott Press

NC advocacy group pushes for AAPI education, hate crime prevention

Rep. Ya Liu (D-Wake) speaks about House Bill 835, "Learning AAPI Contributions in Schools," at a press conference on April 29, 2026. (Photo: Christine Zhu/NC Newsline)Lawmakers and local advocates called on the North Carolina General Assembly Wednesday to pass bills incorporating AAPI contributions into school curriculums and preventing hate crimes.  North Carolina Asian Americans Together organized the press conference as part of its annual Asian American Advocacy Day. There are more than 300,000 Asian Americans in North Carolina, according to Carolina Demography. Asian Americans are one of the fastest growing communities in the state and across the south. Phuong Tran, communications director at NCAAT, said the group celebrated its 10th anniversary this year. It was founded to provide a voice in the state policy arena for the needs of Asian communities.  “Too many people felt invisible, spoken about or to, but not with,” Tran said. “So we set out to change that, and over the past decade, we built a multilingual state infrastructure for civic participation.” The group worked with lawmakers to introduce House Bill 835, “Learning AAPI Contributions in Schools.” This legislation would ensure the inclusion of the contributions of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders in the American history curriculum, like their work on the transcontinental railroad and Civil Rights Movement.  AAPI advocates, lawmakers promote election reforms, voting rights, DEI at Raleigh lobby day There’s been traction at the local level, Rep. Ya Liu (D-Wake) said.  “In one of the high schools in my district, Green Hope High School, the history teacher started to teach a course on AAPI history, which is so popular that it will be one of the elective courses in Wake County,” Liu said. “We’ll continue to push it at the state level.” The bill was introduced in the House last April, but was assigned to the Rules committee, where bills filed by Democrats are often left to languish.  Lawmakers have also pushed legislation against hate crimes.  Senate Bill 827, “Hate Crimes Prevention Act,” would establish a statewide database to track statistics on hate crimes, train law enforcement officers to identify and respond to them, and increase the punishment for them.  Sen. Jay Chaudhuri (D-Wake), a primary sponsor of the bill, said he filed the measure because the current system isn’t working.  “We lack a comprehensive statewide database tracking hate crimes, which means that we cannot fully see what is happening in our communities,” he said. “Our law enforcement officers often lack the training to identify, respond to and report these crimes. Our prosecutors need better tools to bring these cases to justice, which means too many perpetrators walk away without accountability.” The bill has been assigned to the Senate Committee on Appropriations/Base Budget. Courtesy of NC Newsline

Quad-City Times Quad-City Times

Body of missing Clinton man recovered in Cordova on Tuesday

Dermot Bly, 30, was last seen April 16 while crossing the Mark Morris Memorial Bridge between Clinton and Fulton.

WVIK Four giant, wooden trolls are waiting for you to find them in these Iowa locations WVIK

Four giant, wooden trolls are waiting for you to find them in these Iowa locations

Internationally renowned Danish artist Thomas Dambo is known for creating towering, whimsical trolls that can be found all around the world. Built from reclaimed materials, they've popped up in hidden, natural locations all across the globe. Now, there are four to find in Iowa.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

The best used hybrid SUVs tested by Edmunds

The best used hybrid SUVs tested by EdmundsThe best used hybrid SUV is the Honda CR-V, according to Edmunds' testing and real-world owner reviews. Big, spacious crossovers probably aren't what you think of when you think "great gas mileage." But the CR-V and other hybrid SUVs deliver the practicality you want with a lot less pain at the pump, and you won't need to worry about plugging in to charge the battery. Hybrid crossovers and SUVs come in all shapes and sizes; these top-rated picks represent both the compact and midsize segments, able to accommodate between five and eight passengers. For many, a used hybrid SUV is the best hybrid SUV. You'll save compared to buying new, and your gas bills will be manageable thanks to powertrains that eke the most mileage out of a gallon of fuel.You'll notice that there are several Toyota hybrid options on this list. That's because the automaker offers a gas-electric version of most of its products, and Toyota hybrid SUVs happen to be very efficient, practical, and nice to drive. Regardless of brand, if you're looking for a relatively cheap hybrid SUV, you can't do much better than these. Edmunds included data on the average transaction price for a used model, how much you stand to save over a new model, and the average consumer rating from reviews.1. Used Honda CR-V HybridThe Honda CR-V Hybrid offers a tantalizing premise: all the practicality, capability, and reliability of the Honda CR-V but with much better gas mileage. But while the EPA estimates the CR-V Hybrid gets a combined 40 mpg with front-wheel drive and 37 mpg with all-wheel drive, those figures weren’t replicated in real-world testing. That said, it’s still more efficient than the regular CR-V, and if you go with a 2023 or newer hybrid model, you get the same amount of storage as the nonhybrid version.Average 2023 transaction price: $31,164Savings vs. new: $4,293Edmunds Rating: 8.1 (out of 10)Average owner review (2023): 4.1 (out of 5)Used Honda CR-V Hybrid years for this generation: 2023–20252. Used Toyota Highlander HybridThe Toyota Highlander Hybrid was one of just a few electrified three-row SUVs when it debuted in 2006. More competition has joined the fray, but the late-model Highlander Hybrid remains a compelling choice thanks to its good fuel economy and high seating capacity. Adults won't want to spend much time in the third row, but if you're hauling a bunch of kids, the Highlander's appeal is plain as day. Its EPA-estimated 35 mpg or 36 mpg in combined driving is excellent, and those figures were nearly matched on the test route (33 mpg).Average 2023 transaction price: $39,302Savings vs. new: $9,997Edmunds Rating: 7.8 (out of 10)Average owner review (2023): 4.3 (out of 5)Used Toyota Highlander Hybrid years for this generation: 2020–20253. Used Toyota VenzaThe Toyota Venza was reintroduced in 2021 as a hybrid-only SUV and sold new through 2024. It was originally a little bit more expensive than the Toyota RAV4 and seats five passengers, with a sleek, low roofline setting the Venza apart from its more popular sibling. An upscale interior and sporty styling also help it stand out from the crowd, but the Venza's major selling point is its outstanding fuel economy. The Venza gets an EPA-estimated 39 mpg, but it can reach 44 mpg in combined driving. That is obviously excellent. But paradoxically, the sleek Toyota is smaller inside than the cheaper RAV4, and the four-cylinder engine can't back up the sporty looks. If fuel economy is your primary concern, though, you should give the Venza some thought.Average 2023 transaction price: $31,700Savings vs. new: no longer in productionEdmunds Rating: 7.8 (out of 10)Average owner review (2023): 4.2 (out of 5)Used Toyota Venza years for this generation: 2021–20244. Used Toyota RAV4 HybridThe Toyota RAV4 Hybrid offers an improvement on its gas-only counterpart in a couple of key ways. The first, obviously, is that its fuel economy is excellent. The EPA estimates the RAV4 will get 40 mpg in combined driving, a full 10 mpg better than a gas-only RAV4. The second improvement is the RAV4's powertrain. The extra power offered by the electric motor makes accelerating in the RAV4 a much more pleasant experience; it's a full second quicker than its sibling when going from 0 to 60 mph. You don't lose any storage space by opting for the RAV4 Hybrid, and its interior is reasonably roomy even when loaded up with adults.Average 2023 transaction price: $32,076Savings vs. new: $4,969Edmunds Rating: 7.8 (out of 10)Average owner review (2023): 4.3 (out of 5)Used Toyota RAV4 Hybrid years for this generation: 2019–20255. Used Ford Escape HybridThe Ford Escape's hybrid powertrain is standard or optional on several trim levels, although it varies from year to year. The EPA estimates the Ford Escape Hybrid gets a combined 39 mpg, which is excellent for a vehicle of its size. Otherwise, the Escape is a functional, if not very exciting, SUV. Its acceleration is sluggish, and its technology is dated. But it offers a smooth ride and comfortable seating. If you're looking to save at the pump, the Ford Escape Hybrid is a fine choice for getting from A to B.Average 2023 transaction price: $24,531Savings vs. new: $6,975Edmunds Rating: 7.8 (out of 10)Average owner review (2023): 3.7 (out of 5)Used Ford Escape Hybrid years for this generation: 2020–2025This story was produced by Edmunds and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

Google LSA’s competitive quote feature: What home services businesses should do now

Google LSA’s competitive quote feature: What home services businesses should do nowYour Google Local Services Ads (LSA) leads now go to your competitors automatically. Google LSA’s competitive quote feature lets consumers request estimates from up to four providers at once through a single message. One tap, and your next potential customers become LSA shared leads split between you and three other businesses.That changes the economics of every home services lead you pay for. If your team responds slowly or sends a generic reply, a faster competitor books the job you funded.Getting ahead of this change starts with understanding how Google LSA’s competitive quotes impact home services businesses, what you can do right now to win more of these shared leads, and how this feature works behind the scenes.WebFX breaks it down:How Google LSA’s competitive quotes impact home services businessesGoogle LSA’s competitive quote feature changes three things about how LSA leads work for home services businesses. Each one directly affects your cost per booked job.1. Acquisition costs riseFour businesses get charged for the same lead, while only one wins the job. The other three paid for a lead that converted for a competitor.For home services businesses running tight margins on HVAC, plumbing, or roofing leads, that math hits hard. LSA shared leads that cost the same as standard leads but convert at a lower rate inflate your true cost per booked job.2. Lead exclusivity disappearsThe consumer already has four options lined up before anyone picks up the phone or replies to the message. Showing up in the listing no longer gives you the inside track. Speed and message quality now carry more weight than placement alone.3. Profile performance decides who gets selectedGoogle chooses which four businesses appear in the competitive quote selection. That decision depends on measurable performance signals. Response time, review count and quality, booking rates, and dispute history all play a vital role.Businesses with weak signals do not make the cut, regardless of how much they spend on LSAs. If your follow-up process stays manual or inconsistent, revenue leaks fast.5 ways to book more jobs from Google LSA’s competitive quotesYou can’t control how Google decides which businesses appear in every competitive quote, but you can definitely influence that decision. Here are five things home services businesses can do right now to improve the odds of getting selected and converting the leads that come through.1. Turn on message leadsThe competitive quote feature only applies to message leads. If messaging is turned off in your LSA settings, you do not appear in the competitive quote selection pool at all. That means you are invisible to every consumer who uses the “Get competitive quotes” button. Courtesy of WebFX Turning on messaging also makes your business eligible for lower-cost message leads introduced under Google’s new value-based pricing model. Even outside of competitive quotes, enabling messaging expands your total lead volume.2. Get your response time under 15 minutesGoogle’s competitive quote screen tells consumers the selected businesses “typically reply in 15 minutes.” That sets the expectation. If your actual response time lags behind that number, you lose the lead before you type a word. Courtesy of WebFX The data backs this up. According to research by LeadConnect, 78% of customers buy from the business that responds first, and leads contacted within five minutes are 100 times more likely to qualify than those contacted after 30 minutes. Response time also displays publicly on your LSA listing, so consumers can see whether you are fast or slow before they ever reach out.3. Treat every lead like an LSA shared leadConsumers have always shopped around for home services. The competitive quote feature just formalizes the behavior and puts it inside Google’s interface. Assume that every lead you receive is also talking to other businesses, because with this feature, they probably are. Courtesy of WebFX Check your lead details for the “Customer has also messaged other businesses” flag to confirm whether a specific lead came through competitive quotes. Then adjust your response accordingly by:Acknowledging the specific service the consumer described.Including a clear next step, like scheduling an estimate.Giving a concrete reason to choose your business over the other three.Generic templates lose this race every time, especially with LSA shared leads.4. Strengthen the profile signals Google usesGoogle evaluates several performance metrics when selecting the four businesses that appear in competitive quotes. Strengthening these signals improves your chances of landing in the top four. WebFX 5. Map communication across the full customer journeyWinning the initial competitive quote lead is step one. Booking, closing, and retaining that customer feeds the performance signals Google uses to keep selecting your business for future competitive quotes.A strong home services communication flow covers every stage:New lead outreachMissed call follow-upEstimate appointment confirmationPost-estimate follow-upPost-service feedback requestReview solicitationRecurring service or membership messagingEach touchpoint reinforces the responsiveness and customer experience metrics that determine your LSA visibility.Home services businesses often lose booked jobs because follow-up drops off after the first reply. The initial response gets the conversation started, but the estimate confirmation, the follow-up after a quote, and the review request after the job closes are what keep the cycle spinning. The businesses closing the most competitive quote leads are the ones that treat communication as a system, not a one-time event.How Google LSA’s competitive quote feature worksGoogle LSA’s competitive quote feature is a lead format inside Local Services Ads that allows consumers to request estimates from multiple highly rated businesses at once through a single message. Courtesy of WebFX Here is how the flow works from the consumer side:A homeowner searches for a service like “HVAC repair near me.”Standard LSA listings appear with a new option at the top: “Get competitive quotes.”The consumer taps that button, and Google selects four highly rated professionals in the area who “typically reply in 15 minutes.”The consumer writes one message describing what they need, and hits send.That message goes to all four businesses simultaneously.This feature only applies to message leads. Businesses that have messaging turned off in their LSA settings do not appear in the selection pool at all.Google has tested variations of this feature since October 2024. The search giant internally refers to the feature as “Message Fanout” and officially announced it alongside new value-based pricing for message leads in November 2025. The rollout continues to expand across industries and geographic areas heading into 2026.Google LSA’s competitive quotes vs. traditional LSA leadsTraditional LSA leads work one-to-one. A consumer clicks on your listing, sends a message or calls, and that lead belongs to you. You pay for it, and no one else receives the same inquiry at the same time.Google LSA’s competitive quotes flip that model. The same lead goes to four businesses simultaneously, and each one pays for it. That makes every competitive quote an LSA shared lead by default. Courtesy of WebFX The shift in buyer behavior matters just as much as the billing change. Consumers who use competitive quotes expect fast replies because Google pre-selects businesses that respond quickly. They compare pricing more aggressively because they have multiple options in hand before anyone responds.Decision cycles compress, patience shrinks, and the first business to reply with a relevant, personalized message holds a significant advantage.This story was produced by WebFX and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

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Engine failure leaves West Liberty Fire Department reduced to 1 ambulance

Until a replacement is secured, West Liberty will have to request mutual aid from neighboring towns for EMS calls, which can delay help by more than 20 minutes.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

The data invasion: How AI is changing sport from the Premier League to the local pitch

The data invasion: How AI is changing sport from the Premier League to the local pitchSomewhere in an NBA arena, a system noticed something. LeBron James was dipping his shoulder on left-side three-pointers. Not on the right. Not anywhere else. Only there. He hadn't known. Neither had his coaches. The AI had seen what none of them had.It was not an isolated case.“It’s definitely picking up. There’s the whole ‘Moneyball’ thinking about winning with data, a lot of teams are spending a lot of energy trying to use data to their advantage,” said Sander Christophersen, vice president of product at Veo, a Copenhagen-based AI sports analytics and broadcasting startup.“We're seeing that the game is changing now. All the players obsess about their metrics.”In an industry worth more than half a trillion dollars, the margins for error have always been small. AI is making them smaller.Below, the Infinite Loop by Nebius explores how artificial intelligence is reshaping performance, strategy, and fan experiences across professional and amateur sports.Leveling up the world’s bestOne of the MVPs in AI sports solutions is Genius Sports, founded in 2000 and headquartered in London and New York. The company says its software is used by sports clubs around the world, including every team in the Premier League, the NBA, and the WNBA.Matt Fleckenstein, the company’s chief product and technology officer, said coaches and players are becoming increasingly reliant on its AI performance analytics tools.“Let’s say I want to see every time that the defense was in this particular shape, or every corner play that we ran right. [With Genius] you can quickly query all of this video,” he said.“You can see these rich analytics about what happened on that play and what happens typically in those scenarios, so that you can strategize. Maybe Crystal Palace has an upcoming game against Bournemouth — it will help answer: ‘How should we line up? What's our best opportunity to exploit them off the corner?’”The tools work at the individual level too. Fleckenstein said LeBron James used Genius Sports' software to identify a flaw in his shooting form that had gone undetected.“He was dipping his shoulder when he was shooting from the left side of the floor, and he wasn't doing that anywhere else. He was only able to get at that rich data about his form right from our performance studio tool,” he said.The beAIutiful game?Until recently, the benefits of AI were only available to the pro teams with the deepest pockets. Now, thanks to changing economics in AI infrastructure and some clever engineering, it’s making its way down to the little leagues too.Copenhagen-based Veo, which develops live streaming and AI analytics products for smaller teams, was launched after its cofounder Keld Reinicke was once late to one of his 10-year-old son’s football matches and missed his big moment.“His kid scored a goal, and he wasn’t there to see it, and he was devastated by that,” said Christophersen.Veo's technology automatically can pull analytics from match footage — tracking passes, shots on goal, and movement patterns — while simultaneously live streaming games for friends and family of the next generation of Lionel Messis to watch from anywhere.Part of what made that shift possible is cost. “The price of compute is definitely a big thing. It’s now possible for us to have our own cluster running with our own GPUs, and bring the cost of training our AI models down,” said Christophersen.But Veo’s success points to something the sports world is only beginning to reckon with. While making the pro experience available to more people, AI analytics may be threatening some of sport’s high-risk, high-drama highlights, like the long-range goal in football.“If you look at games at a high level, you will see that there are no shots outside the box anymore. It's so rare. Back in the day, people would always take shots from outside the box,” said Christophersen. “Now they know that they will get berated by their coach after the game, for trying a low-xG (expected goal) option.”150 hours a week, 24 cameras a stadiumThe broadcast experience is changing too.During NFL games, color-coded boxes now appear around the quarterbacks, showing which direction their pass is likely to get disrupted from, based on real-time AI analysis of live footage.“Fan experiences like this require that the AI is very fast: that it's able to process footage dynamically and then render it in time for the three-second delay for broadcast,” explained Jason Corso, cofounder and chief science officer of Voxel51, a Michigan-based startup that develops a platform to maximize the performance of vision models that use huge amounts of data.Genius Sports, across just the NBA, WNBA, and Premier League, films around 150 hours of live sport every week during peak season, with 24 cameras installed in each stadium, adding up to 3,600 hours of footage.Crunching this quantity of data is only part of the challenge, Corso said. Live sport is unpredictable — a more eventful game generates more inference calls — and handling that volatility means that companies like Genius need two core things from cloud providers.“How quickly can they burst their compute based on demand at any one time? And are their compute resources up to date? Do they have H200s, or B200s (Nvidia's later generation of AI chips)? That's been hard for cloud providers because it's expensive to keep building these data centers,” he said.Corso added that many of Voxel51’s customers need cloud resources in their own territories, both to help stay compliant with local regulations like GDPR and to bring down inference costs of shipping data from one place to another with low latency.Looking forward, Corso said that sports teams will begin using more real-time reinforcement learning to influence strategy midgame. Fleckenstein said AI will be used to create whole new augmented reality experiences in which fans can watch live games where digital twins of players are superimposed onto virtual environments.What happens on the pitch still matters most. But increasingly, AI is shaping the game itself — who wins, what fans see, and whether the long-range shot is still worth attempting.This story was produced by the Infinite Loop by Nebius and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

As spending shifts to e-commerce, AI is reshaping the landscape

As spending shifts to e-commerce, AI is reshaping the landscapeOnce a fringe business model, e-commerce has become a staple of purchasing in the U.S. and around the world.Estimates place e-commerce's share of the world's retail at over 23% in 2025, with this figure expected to reach one-quarter by 2030. Even business-to-business (B2B) purchases are increasingly done online.At the same time, artificial intelligence (AI) is playing a bigger role in the online shopping experience. From frontline agentic support to chat-native shopping, AI has become an interface for discovering, evaluating, and purchasing products.As more of the economy moves online and becomes integrated with AI, Passport weighed in on how this tech convergence will impact global commerce.The Global Economy's Ongoing Migration to E-commerceOver the past decade, e-commerce has evolved from a fast-growing channel into a foundational mode of shopping. Adoption is widespread in the U.S. and around the world.The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated this trend, but it also marked a hard reset on customer expectations and set a new bar for digital enablement.The rise of e-commerce opened corridors for international sales, allowing buyers to access more sellers (and vice versa). This has two important implications for businesses:E-commerce can't be an afterthought; it's an ongoing commitment and a prerequisite for scaling in foreign markets.Customers are embracing cross-border commerce and unconventional platforms, creating opportunities for brands that can navigate them.These shifts have driven investments in physical and digital infrastructure that have made global demand more accessible than ever.Though we don't often think of it as such, e-commerce is an ongoing technological revolution that shows no signs of slowing.How AI is Changing E-commerceDespite its recent boom in attention, AI has been in e-commerce for decades. Traditional AI and machine learning have powered logistics, forecasts, marketing, payments, and even public-facing recommendations since the industry's early years.However, generative AI (GenAI) brought these capabilities to new levels and fundamentally changed how people interface with the technology.Since AI's applications are broad, we'll focus on the three most relevant to e-commerce: customer experience, business operations, and decision-making.AI as a Customer Experience (CX) EngineThe most visible change that GenAI brought to e-commerce is chat-based interfacing.While online shoppers had already been interacting with AI in the way of product recommendations and other personalized content, chatbots now represent a viable platform for consumers to discover, evaluate, and purchase products.These "conversations" can take the form of on-page assistants, but shoppers are more likely to use their preferred platform or voice assistant. This avenue alone has already spawned disciplines dedicated to optimizing content for large language models (LLMs).Though overall trust and approval for AI is split, there's evidence that public sentiment is warming to AI and chat-native shopping.GenAI has also enabled businesses to offer more in their digital presentation, such as:Storefront translation and localization for foreign markets.Automation of support tasks that AI can resolve faster than staff.Visual search, virtual try on, and augmented reality (AR) shopping.Hyperpersonalization at every touchpoint based on user data and behavior.Rather than operating behind a curtain, AI can now act as a personal shopping consultant that considers past interactions. When done well, the experience drives conversions, upsells, and repeat purchases.AI as an E-commerce Operations EngineMost of the items in this category were present before the rise of GenAI but have since seen significant improvements.When integrated thoughtfully, AI solutions can improve speed, performance, and scalability.Repetitive tasks can be automated with minimal oversight.Analytics and forecasts become more robust and predictive.Operating at scale is more adaptive, accessible, and affordable.AI excels at identifying trends and discrepancies, which is often applied in logistics, compliance, cybersecurity, order fulfillment, and inventory management.By streamlining these procedures, AI solutions enable e-commerce brands to scale with minimal additional overhead. Meanwhile, teams are freed to focus on higher-order tasks.However, firms that use AI as a quick fix or catch-all solution are unlikely to see meaningful returns. Adding a new technology to your stack can complicate or simplify a procedure, depending on how it's used.AI as a Decision-Making EngineThe previous section shows how AI-powered analytics can help e-commerce brands make better-informed decisions in less time.A second option that GenAI offers is giving AI the resources to make a limited range of decisions autonomously; this model is commonly called agentic AI.Depending on the model, AI agents might have access to live datasets, program interfaces, and even other agents.Traditionally, optimizing any given procedure has been reactive by nature. Teams analyze data, identify opportunities, and manually tune the engine.At its best, agentic AI makes this process automatic and continuous. Agents can analyze performance in real time and make meaningful adjustments without additional human input.However, autonomous AI is still high-risk, high-reward. Given too much autonomy or too few parameters, an agentic AI can cause far greater disruptions than a faulty chatbot. Agents handling simple and well-defined tasks with human oversight are still the best practice.Convergence: AI in E-commerceAs consumer and business spending continues its trend toward online shopping, more of the e-commerce experience is being produced, optimized, and delivered by AI.The convergence of e-commerce and AI adoption has already shifted consumer expectations and continues to introduce new dynamics, challenges, and opportunities to consider.For example, shoppers are widely split in their experiences with AI enablement. Common reactions include:Enjoyment of the functionality and time saved.General distrust of AI and data management practices.Frustration from unhelpful agents or a lack of human assistance.For e-commerce brands, the opportunity is significant, but so is the risk. Embracing AI effectively requires more than adopting new technology but integrating it in a purposeful way that solves problems without creating new ones.Deciding If, When, and How to Use AI for E-commerceGenerative and agentic AI have introduced more nuance in the age-old balance of technology and traditional labor. These new advancements lead to familiar questions, including whether to buy in and, if so, where and how to implement.There's no one-size-fits-all answer to these questions; there are simply too many AI variants and use cases for an easy yes or no. However, noting the common risks and best practices will help you make an informed decision.Risks of AI Implementation in E-commercePoorly executed features can feel irrelevant or intrusive.More cybersecurity and data management considerations.Poor experiences with AI agents can increase cart abandonment.Over-automation can dilute the brand or impede the customer experience.Fragmented systems can create operational complexity rather than reducing it.There's a notable tendency for leaders to overestimate what AI can replace and underestimate how much human oversight it needs.Best Practices for Adopting AI in E-commerceA practical approach starts with focusing on a high-impact area, such as:Inventory managementCustomer personalizationDynamic price optimizationThese use cases tend to deliver measurable results relatively quickly. Piloting an isolated use case gives you a quick and affordable idea of whether your approach to AI is working.Ensure that your AI initiative aligns with measurable business objectives. Technology should support clear outcomes, whether that's conversions, costs, or error rates.AI typically works best as a complement to human decision-making rather than a replacement. The most effective implementations combine automation with expertise.FAQs: AI in E-commerceNew tech raises new questions.Will AI replace e-commerce?AI is unlikely to replace e-commerce as a whole, but it's fundamentally reshaping how customers interact with the process and how businesses scale their operations.How is AI used in e-commerce today?AI is currently used for a wide variety of tasks, not limited to:Personalization and product recommendations.Supply chain logistics and order fulfillment.Customer support and pricing optimization.Compliance checks and fraud detection.Agentic AI solutions, in particular, are enabling e-commerce businesses to automate more complex procedures.How has AI changed e-commerce?AI has enabled dynamic personalization of the customer experience, making every step of the sales funnel more effective (when implemented well). AI has also improved the accessibility of scale, allowing teams to increase their capabilities without as much added overhead. AI's analytical and automation capabilities are powering complex multinational operations.Does AI actually improve e-commerce conversion rates?Yes, when done right. AI-supported shopping can reduce friction, improve relevance, and optimize performance metrics through automated iteration and analysis.How do customers feel about using AI when shopping?Sentiment is mixed, but adoption is growing quickly. Many consumers report using AI for product discovery and research.What are the benefits of integrating AI in an e-commerce store?At its best, AI can help e-commerce businesses operate more efficiently, improve their customer experience, and scale without increasing headcount. Like any technology, these benefits are limited to how effectively it is leveraged.What are the biggest risks of using AI in e-commerce?At its worst, AI can erode data quality, frustrate customers, leak sensitive data, and increase operational complexity. Agentic AI can go a step further by mismanaging any procedures under its control. Teams can minimize these risks with careful implementation and thorough human oversight.How should e-commerce brands implement AI?Brands should begin with a low-risk, high-impact use case. Piloting multiple new programs at once muddies the results and risks excessive complication. Look for applications that are both practical and measurable, such as integrating an AI solution built for a task that currently occupies a lot of your time or resources. Whatever starting point you choose, make sure it ties into a key performance indicator or business goal.This story was produced by Passport and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

KWQC TV-6 Body found, identified as missing Clinton man KWQC TV-6

Body found, identified as missing Clinton man

The body of Dermot Bly was found Tuesday night.

OurQuadCities.com 2026 could be bad year for ticks: Illinois Extension OurQuadCities.com

2026 could be bad year for ticks: Illinois Extension

Doctors and experts across the country are saying 2026 could be a very bad year for ticks and tick-borne illnesses. Teresa Steckler, a commercial agriculture specialist with the University of Illinois Extension, spoke with Our Quad Cities News via Zoom to explain why this year is so bad for ticks and what people can do [...]

KWQC TV-6  Former alderwoman files lawsuit against Davenport City Council KWQC TV-6

Former alderwoman files lawsuit against Davenport City Council

In a lawsuit filed on April 22, former city alderwoman Judith Lee alleges the Davenport City Council violated the open meetings law.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

Affordable destinations for budget-conscious young travelers

Affordable destinations for budget-conscious young travelersForget the idea that seeing the world requires a trust fund. Gen Z and young millennials have reframed international travel as a manageable, budgeted priority rather than a once-in-a-decade extravagance. According to The State of Gen Z & Young Millennial Travel, Vol. III, a survey of more than 1,100 U.S.-based travelers published in April 2026 from EF Ultimate Break and Qualtrics Research, young adults ages 18-35 expect to spend $2,000-$4,000 on a 10-day international trip, with most landing right around $3,000.Whether you're a college student planning your first trip to Europe on a budget or searching for affordable group travel that doesn't compromise on experiences, knowing where to go is half the struggle. EF Ultimate Break shares five destinations that consistently deliver more than their price point. EF Ultimate Break 1. PortugalPortugal is the ultimate “more for less” destination. Lisbon and Porto are stunning, walkable cities where you can eat fresh seafood and tinned fish, drink incredible wine like Vinho Verde and Port, and wander through historic neighborhoods without spending a fortune. The cost of living is lower than in most of Western Europe, which means your meals, drinks, and day-to-day expenses won’t drain your bank account.A coffee and pastéis de nata (life-altering custard tarts) at a local cafe? Maybe 3 euros. A full dinner with wine? You’re looking at 15-20 euros per person at a solid spot. Compare that to Paris or London, where you’d easily spend double or triple that amount for similar quality.According to the study, 69% of young travelers have taken trips to trace their family origins, or plan to—and Portugal, with its deep immigrant roots across the U.S. and Latin America, is an increasingly popular destination for exactly that kind of identity-driven travel. EF Ultimate Break 2. GreeceGreece might feel like a splurge destination, but it’s actually one of the most affordable countries in Europe—especially if you’re traveling with a group tour that bundles everything together. Island hopping, ancient ruins, fresh tzatziki, and sunsets so unreal they look like AI? All doable without breaking the bank.Outside of peak summer season, Greece becomes even easier on the budget. Meals at local tavernas are incredibly affordable (often only 10-15 euros for a full spread), and the islands offer everything from party vibes to quiet beaches, depending on what you’re after.Plus, with 93% of young adults saying learning a new skill while traveling is important, Greece delivers: think traditional Greek cooking classes, mosaic-making workshops, or sailing lessons on the Aegean. You get the bucket-list scenery and something tangible to bring home. EF Ultimate Break 3. SpainSpain offers incredible bang for your buck, especially outside of Barcelona and Madrid. Cities like Valencia and Seville are more affordable, and the food, culture, and nightlife are just as good. Tapas, beaches, architecture, and a lifestyle that prioritizes enjoying life? Sí, por favor.The beauty of Spain is that you can eat and drink incredibly well without spending much. Tapas culture means you can sample a bunch of different dishes for just a few euros each. A glass of wine? Often cheaper than a soda. And the beaches are free, which is always a win. It also helps that Europe remains the undisputed top region for young travelers, with 62% naming European destinations as their first choice, meaning Spain is squarely in the center of where this generation already wants to go. EF Ultimate Break 4. Costa RicaIf you want adventure travel on a budget, Costa Rica is your move. It’s one of the top places to travel on a budget in Latin America, and it delivers on every level—waterfalls, zip lines, beaches, wildlife, and some of the friendliest people you’ll ever meet.The country’s tourism infrastructure is solid, so you’re not roughing it, but prices are still super reasonable compared to other tropical destinations. A typical meal costs around $8-$12, and activities like zip-lining or hot springs visits are way more affordable than you’d expect for the quality of experience you get. It's a particularly strong fit for the 36% of young travelers who identify as nature lovers, given how much outdoor experience the country packs into a modest daily budget. EF Ultimate Break 5. PeruPeru is another top contender for affordable adventure travel. You get Machu Picchu, vibrant cities, and some of the best food in South America—all at prices that won’t make your wallet weep.Meals in Peru are ridiculously affordable, especially if you eat where the locals eat. A full lunch menu (appetizer, main, dessert, and drink) can cost as little as $3-$5. Even upscale dining in Lima won’t cost you nearly as much as it would elsewhere. The food scene is world-class. Peru has been named the world’s leading culinary destination multiple times, and with nearly half of young travelers (44%) identifying as foodies who want to understand a culture through its cuisine, Peru might be the most underrated culinary destination on this entire list.How to make any destination more affordableEven if you're not traveling to one of the most budget-friendly countries, there are ways to keep costs down without feeling like you're missing out.Break up the cost over time. Many tour operators offer installment-based payment options, which means you're not hit with one massive charge up front. Spreading payments over several months makes a $3,000 trip feel considerably more manageable, and by departure day, it's already paid off. Travel during the offseason. Shoulder season (spring and fall) often means lower prices and fewer crowds. You get the same experience without the peak-season markup, and you're not fighting for space at major attractions or waiting in hour-long lines. Travel with others. Group travel is one of the most underrated cost-saving strategies. Shared accommodations, split costs, and collective bargaining power all add up. Bundle where you can. When flights, hotels, transportation, and activities are packaged together, surprise costs become far less likely. Bundled pricing also makes it easier to compare the true cost of a trip against DIY planning, where expenses tend to creep up mid-trip. Eat like a local. Skip the restaurants immediately adjacent to major attractions and explore a few blocks further. Asking residents or fellow travelers for recommendations almost always leads to better food at lower prices, and a more authentic experience to boot.The bottom lineAffordable group travel and budget-friendly destinations aren't a compromise. The places above aren't worth visiting simply because they’re affordable; the affordability is just one part of what makes them smart choices. For a generation that has decided travel is nonnegotiable, the real question is where and when.This story was produced by EF Ultimate Break and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

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SpaceX satellites half the size of pickup trucks are falling from the sky

Billions of people watched in awe as the Artemis II mission took an astronaut crew that included Canadian Jeremy Hansen around the moon and back. It was an awe-inspiring moment for space exploration — but not all the news from space is good for Earth. There are thousands of satellites in low orbit, which means 2,000 kilometers or less above the Earth. Many were sent there by Elon Musk-owned SpaceX, which launched its first Starlink satellite in 2019 and has come to dominate the sky, representing more than two-thirds of all satellites in orbit. Wherever you are in Canada, when you look up at the increasingly bright night sky, you are seeing more satellites and fewer stars. Starlink is an internet provider used by rural farmers, northern First Nations, and airplane passengers criss-crossing Canadian skies. Each of its satellites has a lifespan of roughly five years, after which they reenter Earth’s atmosphere at a rate of one or two satellites per day. At this point, they become what’s known as space junk — burning up entirely or, occasionally, scattering debris. But those occasions will become more common if SpaceX fulfills its ambitions to launch a lot more satellites in the years to come, coinciding with the explosion in data centers and artificial intelligence. That would mean more light pollution in the night sky and more space junk falling back to Earth. Samantha Lawler is a professor of astronomy with the University of Regina and a goat farmer — and she is concerned about space junk. She spoke with The Narwhal from her farm in Saskatchewan (where she did not use Starlink to connect to Zoom) about why we should be concerned about the growing number of satellites over Canada — including the potential for satellite collisions that could make low orbit unusable for everyone, a scenario called Kessler syndrome. “We’re right on the edge of that already,” she said, adding that someone needs to take on the engineering challenge of providing rural internet and other services with fewer satellites. “There is a limit to how many we can safely have in orbit, and I think we’ve crossed that limit.” SpaceX didn’t respond to The Narwhal’s questions about the environmental or safety impacts of their plan, and the Canadian Space Agency didn’t respond when asked if and when an official reporting system might be created. But Lawler had a lot more to say about the current lack of regulations protecting us from their impacts in the sky — or here on Earth. This conversation has been edited for length and clarity. Summary Around 10,000 Starlink satellites represent more than two-thirds of all satellites in low orbit, and SpaceX has ambitions to launch a million more — raising serious environmental and safety concerns. Usually, satellites burn up on reentry, leaving heavy metals and plastics in the atmosphere, but sometimes they leave debris on the ground. Canadians who live near the 50th parallel are under the densest band of satellites. Currently, Canada has no reporting system for space debris and no ability to limit the number of satellites launched into orbit. Existing space laws do not apply to private companies such as SpaceX, and space is not covered by any environmental regulations. What’s your work all about? I study orbital dynamics in the Kuiper belt — so, looking at small icy rocks in the outer solar system and measuring their orbits. I started my position at the University of Regina and moved to a farm with access to dark skies in 2019, right when the first Starlink satellites launched, so I could watch the change in my night sky that I suddenly had access to and see the change in my research data, too. Increasingly, there were more and more satellite streaks in my data. So, I had this unique perspective of seeing that, wow, this was pretty bad, and it’s going to get a lot worse. In 2021, you published an article that said 1 out of every 15 points of light in the night sky would soon be a satellite, not a star. At the time, what were the environmental and scientific concerns about that figure? So, at the time, that one in 15 represented 65,000 satellites — which, when we wrote that paper, I thought was ridiculous. Like, there’s no way we’ll ever get to that. But here we are at around 15,000 with no signs of slowing down. So we might get there, and now there are proposals for millions of satellites. But at the time, I think very few astronomers — and almost no one outside the astronomy community — had any idea how bad this was. There was a small group of astronomers that noticed, “Hey, this is very bad for astronomy. But have you thought about how many of these are going to be burning up, and how many are going to be launched, and how much danger there is in orbit?” I think that’s starting to change now — I’m glad that more people are aware of the issues, but they continue to get worse. So, in the vein of things getting worse, in January, SpaceX requested the authority of the U.S. Federal Communications Commission to launch “a constellation of a million satellites” to serve as an orbital data center. How much worse would a million satellites be? It’s so bad in every possible way. There’s no way we can get to a million satellites — there will be collisions in space, and we’ll be in full Kessler syndrome before we get there. But if somehow, they managed not to crash, they have five-year lifetimes. That would be one reentry every three minutes. And those satellites would have to be bigger than Starlink satellites because of the complexity of a data center versus an internet provider, right? In some of the articles we were writing quickly, we were estimating two tonnes per satellite, but it sounds like, from various things SpaceX has released, that they’ll actually be much bigger than that. So these are as big as the International Space Station in terms of reflecting area, which means the simulations I ran were actually an underestimate of how bright they would be. So — everything is bad, and actually it’s worse than the assumptions I made initially. Really, really bad. Just to linger on that for a minute — all satellites that go up eventually have to come down, and they usually burn up on reentry. What happens when they don’t? So everything that’s in low Earth orbit, which is most of the satellites — including all of the 10,000-plus Starlink satellites — at the end of their life, they get burned up in Earth’s atmosphere, because it’s convenient. And so far, it looks like Starlink is actually doing a pretty good job of burning up. There was one piece of a Starlink satellite that was found in a farm in Saskatchewan a couple of years ago, but they seem to be doing a pretty good job. What that means, though, is that all the mass of the satellites — the solar panels, plastic, metal, batteries — it’s all getting melted and deposited in the upper atmosphere. So, that’s not a good thing. There was a period of time, about six months, where Starlink burned up 500 satellites. That’s around three per day. In that time period, they exceeded the natural infall rate from meteorites by at least twice as much — so, adding at least twice as much aluminum as what naturally comes into the atmosphere every day for six months. So what does that do? We don’t actually know. There are a few preliminary studies showing this aluminum can become alumina, which can cause ozone depletion and change temperatures in the upper atmosphere, but we don’t know the full effects. And because space is not legally considered an environment, all satellites launched from the U.S. are categorically excluded from any kind of environmental regulations. If they get to their steady state of having 42,000 Starlink satellites alone — that’s only one of many megaconstellations they have planned — that’s something like one satellite being burned up every hour in the atmosphere. These are satellites half the size of a Ford F-150 pickup truck. They’re not small. That’s a lot of metal being added to the upper atmosphere, and we don’t know the full effects of it. Why is this changing so rapidly? In 2019, Starlink launched its first satellite — seven years later, we are looking at the possibility of megaconstellations that will blot out the stars? SpaceX does all the launching — all the other megaconstellation companies [such as One Web and Amazon’s LEO] are using SpaceX to get to orbit. It has the infrastructure to do all the launches; they have a lot of U.S. government funding to do those launches, so they’re doing them very, very quickly. It’s very impressive engineering. It just ignores so many of the larger effects. Vytautas Kielaitis // Shutterstock We’re in different provinces, but you and I — and most Canadians — live close to the 50th parallel. You’ve mentioned people on our latitude are particularly affected by satellites. For Canadians who aren’t experts looking for data in the sky, what will they be seeing? I know in my sky, there’s a line where I can always see a Starlink satellite in motion. Just always. So, people might notice that. We are also the highest risk for satellites that aren’t burning up completely, because they’re right over our heads. These are all uncontrolled reentries, so they just reenter somewhere along their orbit, and we’re under the densest part. I think that was demonstrated by the piece that was found in Saskatchewan. That was in 2024, when a farmer found a piece of SpaceX debris on his farm? Actually, there are two separate things: one was a big debris fall in Ituna, Saskatchewan, which was part of the SpaceX Dragon truck. It’s part of the capsule that brings astronauts up to the space station. When it doesn’t burn up completely, it falls — so that was a bunch of very large pieces discovered across many farms. I know of six pieces from that, but there are probably more that people haven’t reported because there is no way to report them. There’s no official reporting system. The second incident was a smaller piece from a Starlink satellite, about the size of a laptop, discovered near Hodgeville, Saskatchewan. With the Ituna debris, it was reported to the Canadian government, and there was some kind of interaction between the Canadian and U.S. governments. In Ituna, SpaceX contacted the farmers directly and came to pick up the pieces. With Hodgeville, the farmer got in touch with SpaceX, and they had him FedEx [the debris] back. So no one in the Canadian government knew about it, which is bad. The Ituna debris fall was spectacular because the pieces were so large and there were so many. But the Starlink debris is much scarier to me, because there are 10,000 of these over our heads, and if they’re not burning up completely, then that’s a lot of pieces that are hitting the ground. Here in Saskatchewan, I look out my window, and it’s just bare fields. It’s the easiest place to find the pieces. But how many pieces are we not finding? These pieces look like something that fell off a car; if you found one in the city, you wouldn’t think it was space junk. Every time there’s a reentry, they just roll the dice, like, “It’ll probably burn up.” But we don’t actually know. There’s no data released on that, and the only way we find out if they aren’t burning up completely is if we find pieces on the ground. You’ve said there’s no reporting system in Canada — do you think that will change? I’ve been in touch with the Canadian Space Agency, and they say they are working on a plan. But I don’t know. Aaron Boley at the Outer Space Institute has set up an email address — spacejunk@outerspaceinstitute.ca — but it’s not official. We’re astronomers, we’re not supposed to be collecting this, but no one else is. After I heard a Starlink piece had fallen in Saskatchewan, I got in touch with the farmer by going on the Evan Bray radio show — like, the lunchtime farmer call-in show, where I go to talk about astronomy all the time — and asking who found it. Saskatchewan is a giant small town, so I actually got in touch with the guy by doing that. And he mentioned that his neighbor has some space junk too, and sent me a photo of this big piece of, like, corrugated metal. I was like, “Come on, that’s not space junk — it’s a piece of tractor or something.” But then he sent me a letter that this guy got from the Canadian government back in 1980, saying, “Thank you for sending us this piece of a Soviet rocket.” So, Saskatchewan has been the debris detector for decades. So maybe 1980 was the time for the Canadian government to start thinking about a space debris plan! But what kind of power does it have? Everything that goes into orbit is covered by the Outer Space Treaty and the Liability Convention, which are these Apollo-era treaties, written at a time when only the U.S. and the Soviet Union were launching stuff into orbit. They’re really not written for private companies. It’s just not set up for our current situation, where most of the satellites are owned by private corporations — by one private corporation, mostly. Senator Paula Simons has launched a Senate inquiry into space junk falling on Canada, which is awesome. So there is starting to be some interest. But nothing has really happened substantively. What feels possible in terms of Canada’s leverage here? It’s hard to imagine the U.S. being receptive to Canada saying, “Hey, slow down the satellite launches until we have a legislative and accountability framework in place.” It’s hard because Canada could say, “SpaceX, you are causing our taxpayer-funded astronomy research to suffer, so you need to pay a fine.” But then SpaceX could turn around and say, “Okay, the Canadian market isn’t that big, we just won’t broadcast to you.” A lot of Canadians are benefitting from Starlink right now — which I don’t think is a good idea, but rural internet is terrible. And then Canada would get all of the downsides and none of the upsides. Is it fair to say SpaceX has a kind of monopoly on space now? SpaceX controls orbit, totally. They have two-thirds of all satellites in low orbit, and if you want to go into space, you effectively have to ask them for permission. During the Artemis launch, they had all these blackout periods where there were Starlink satellites they had to avoid. By their own admission, Starlink does a collision avoidance maneuver every two minutes. I wrote a paper with a bunch of other people that’s being reviewed, but in June, when we wrote it, it predicted that it would take 5.5 days for a catastrophic collision [between satellites] to happen if there were no avoidance maneuvers. It’s since dropped to three days. So if SpaceX gets hacked, or there’s a bad software update, or a giant solar storm, the time we have to avoid a giant collision in orbit is getting shorter and shorter. That’s a bad situation. Why does SpaceX even need 42,000 satellites to provide internet, if OneWeb is doing it with 800? They’ve never been asked to justify the number. Hmm, all this sounds really bad. Is there anything Canadians can or should be doing? We need alternatives on the ground to these internet provider megaconstellations. We need better rural internet. So something Canadians can do very easily is write to all levels of government about getting better internet to rural and remote communities, especially First Nations. I mean, no wonder everyone is using Starlink — I live 10 kilometers from the nearest town, and I can connect to power lines and phone lines and natural gas lines, but I can’t connect to broadband internet. That’s something we can all advocate for — because if people have good internet options based in Canada, then they don’t need to rely on an American billionaire-owned company. This story was produced by The Narwhal and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

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Medical spa’s physician assistant is sanctioned by licensing board

(Photo by Wichayada Suwanachun/Getty Images)A physician assistant from Davenport has had her license placed on probation after being charged with negligence. Recently, the Iowa Board of Physician Assistants charged Jessica Raasch of Davenport with performing medical work without the required supervision, and with negligence in the practice of the profession. The board has alleged that sometime between 2021 and 2023, Raasch worked at an unspecified medical spa that was owned by a nurse practitioner. During that period, the board alleges, Raasch did not have a supervising physician. Patient records that Raasch had maintained while working at the spa were destroyed in 2024 when the spa ceased to exist, according to the board. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX To settle the charges, Raasch agreed to have her license placed on probation for one year and to complete 22 hours of educational training on ethics and professionalism. While her license is on probation, Raasch’s practice will be subject to monitoring by the board, unless she is employed by a hospital or clinic where physician supervision is part of the management structure. Courtesy of Iowa Capital Dispatch