
Trump's crackdown on immigration is taking a toll on child care workers
WASHINGTON (AP) — Not long after President Donald Trump took office in January, staff at CentroNía bilingual preschool began rehearsing what to do if Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials came to the door. As ICE became a regular presence in their historically Latino neighborhood this summer, teachers stopped taking children to nearby parks, libraries and playgrounds that had once been considered an extension of the classroom. And in October, the school scrapped its beloved Hispanic...
Read MoreNational News
- Trump's crackdown on immigration is taking a toll on child care workers
- Supreme Court hears Alabama's appeal to execute a man found to be intellectually disabled
- Democrat wins Miami mayors race for the first time in nearly 30 years
- Florida executes a man convicted of killing a woman during a 1989 home invasion
- Luigi Mangiones notes to self: 'Pluck eyebrows,' 'Keep momentum, FBI slower overnight'
Trump's crackdown on immigration is taking a toll on child care workers
WASHINGTON (AP) — Not long after President Donald Trump took office in January, staff at CentroNía bilingual preschool began rehearsing what to do if Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials came to the door. As ICE became a regular presence in their historically Latino neighborhood this summer, teachers stopped taking children to nearby parks, libraries and playgrounds that had once been considered an extension of the classroom. And in October, the school scrapped its beloved Hispanic...
Read MorePolitics
- Trump's crackdown on immigration is taking a toll on child care workers
- Supreme Court hears Alabama's appeal to execute a man found to be intellectually disabled
- 2 Democrats, 2 strategies: Texas Senate race shows party split on Trump-focus in midterm elections
- Hegseth tells congressional leaders he is weighing release of boat strike video
- Trump once denied using this slur about Haiti and African nations. Now he boasts about it
EPA eliminates mention of fossil fuels in website on warming's causes. Scientists call it misleading
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Environmental Protection Agency has removed any mention of fossil fuels — the main driver of global warming — from its popular online page explaining the causes of climate change. Now it only mentions natural phenomena, even though scientists calculate that nearly all of the warming is due to human activity. Sometime in the past few days or weeks, EPA altered some but not all of its climate change webpages, de-emphasizing and even deleting references to the burning...
Read MoreScience News
- EPA eliminates mention of fossil fuels in website on warming's causes. Scientists call it misleading
- How to watch one of the year's best meteor showers, the Geminids
- Japan assesses damage from 7.5 magnitude quake that injured 34
- A brown pelican 'feeding frenzy' is an encouraging sign for the often-struggling large seabirds
- A dozen former FDA leaders lambaste claims by the agency's current vaccine chief

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