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This time, liberal and moderate candidates took control in high-profile races in conservative Iowa, and the swing states of Pennsylvania and Virginia. Pennsylvania saw a number of Democratic victories in school boards, particularly in districts that have recently seen GOP-led school boards adopt policies targeting transgender students, as well as reading materials and curriculum on LGBTQ+ history. Turn PA Blue, a partisan political organization, said Democrats gained control of at least seven school boards and gained ground in a half-dozen others in Pennsylvania, a swing state. In the Central Bucks School District north of Philadelphia, Democrats flipped three seats, ousting the incumbent school board president, and retained two others, giving the party majority control. School board politics have also become contentious in Virginia since 2021, when Republican Gov.
Persons: , ” Randi Weingarten, Michael Geer, , , Bonnie Chang, Glenn Youngkin, Toni Morrison, Stephen Chbosky, Kirk Twigg, Mike Pence, Kim Reynolds, Brittania Morey, ___ Mulvihill, Matthew Barakat, John Hanna, Heather Hollingsworth Organizations: , The American Federation of Teachers, Liberty, Associated Press, Conservative, PA Family Institute, Pennsylvania, Democratic, GOP, Central Bucks School District, Philadelphia Inquirer, Republicans, Turn Bucks, School, Republican Gov, Linn, Mar Community School District, Gov Locations: HARRISBURG, Pa, Iowa, Pennsylvania, Virginia, York County, Philadelphia, Bucks County, Central Bucks, Spotsylvania County, Washington, D.C, Loudoun County, Cedar Rapids, Cherry Hill , New Jersey, Falls Church , Virginia, Topeka , Kansas, Mission , Kansas
The resumption of student-loan payments is expected to add further strain. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . AdvertisementAdvertisementThe US economy has thrived over the past three years, since the initial shock of COVID-19 gave way to a rapid recovery. Here's what banks and economists are saying about the impact of the student-loan payment resumption on the economy. AdvertisementAdvertisementWhat will happen to the economy with the student-loan payment restartIt's difficult to predict how exactly the economy will respond to a surge of borrowers facing student-loan payments again — and it depends on a number of factors.
Persons: , Marshall Steinbaum —, University of Utah —, Jerome Powell, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs, Jeff Gennette, Michael Fiddelke, Jefferies, Education James Kvaal Organizations: Service, Family Institute, University of Utah, Education Department, Federal, United Auto Workers, Bank of America, Education Locations: Helena
As relationship transgressions go, “phubbing” — a portmanteau of “phone” and “snubbing” — is, on the surface, fairly benign. A recent study linked higher levels of phubbing to marital dissatisfaction, and a 2022 study found it can lead to feelings of distrust and ostracism. One study found that those who phub a lot are more likely to be phubbed themselves, creating a kind of ripple effect. He said the issue comes up among the couples he works with on an almost weekly basis. Fortunately for most couples, it’s a relatively easy issue to fix, he said.
Persons: you’ve, , Anthony Chambers, Chambers Organizations: Family Institute, Northwestern University
2013 was the first year when over half of all student loans carried a balance greater than originally borrowed. The 2020 student loan repayment pause shook up this unhealthy dynamic. But student loan repayment had been dwindling for at least a decade before the pause. But an important additional source of student loan misery is the widening and diversifying nature of the Americans who take them out. Our student debt research uses credit reports, both from an annual, representative cross-section of student borrowers and from a single group of borrowers we’ve been following since 2009.
Persons: couldn’t, Laura Beamer, Marshall Steinbaum, doesn’t, It’s, , Biden, we’ve, they’re, , Bill, Organizations: Jain, Institute, University of Utah, White, American, Black, Women, Congress, Department of Education
The repayment poses risks to the economy, with consumer spending likely to be reduced. On Friday, the Supreme Court ruled that Biden's plan to cancel up to $20,000 in student debt will be struck down. But they're a weight, it's about 20 million student-loan borrowers that haven't been paying, they'll have to begin paying more or less in September," Zandi said. White House Principal Deputy Press Secretary Olivia Dalton was asked this week about how the student-loan payment resumption could impact consumer spending. And his concerns are broader than just a contraction in consumer spending.
Persons: , Joe Biden's, Mark Zandi, haven't, Zandi, that's, Ethan Harris, Morgan Stanley, Olivia Dalton, Dalton, Marshall Steinbaum Organizations: Education Department, Service, Moody's, CNBC, Bank, Bank of, UBS, White, Politico, Family Institute, University of Utah Locations: Wall
Student-loan payments are set to resume in October. Bank of America and Morgan Stanley highlighted the strain borrowers will face. 34% of surveyed borrowers don't think they can afford the payments at all, Morgan Stanley said. Morgan Stanley survey on student-loan payments. Morgan StanleyAnd a Monday note from Morgan Stanley researchers said that just 29% of federal student-loan borrowers are confident they'll be able to afford payments without adjusting spending in other areas.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, , Joe Biden's, Donald Trump, Biden, Ethan Harris, Harris, Marshall Steinbaum, Miguel Cardona, Cardona, Ro Khanna Organizations: Bank of America, Service, Joe Biden's Education Department, " Bank of, Family Institute, University of Utah, Senate, Twitter Locations: California
DOYLESTOWN, Pennsylvania, June 24 (Reuters) - On May 12, the library coordinator for Pennsylvania's Central Bucks School District sent an email to colleagues that some conservative parents and Christian advocacy groups had long prayed to see. Liberal groups say the effort amounts to censorship and even bigotry, with disproportionate harm to LGBT students and those in other minority groups. Dana Hunter, a Republican and the chair of the school board, said she sought advice from Jeremy Samek, senior counsel at the Independence Law Center and the Pennsylvania Family Institute. "There are things that everybody would agree, including the ACLU, that you shouldn't be giving to kids," said Samek, who does not live in the school district. Dell'Angelo, one of the board's Democrats, said it was wrong to involve groups that oppose LGBT rights in public school policy, and unethical to do so in secret.
Persons: Maia Kobabe, Juno Dawson, curriculums, Tabitha Dell'Angelo, Dana Hunter, Jeremy Samek, Hunter, Dell'Angelo, Samek, Hannah Beier, Leo Burchell, Shannon Harris, Harris, Jonathan Allen, Paul Thomasch, Claudia Parsons Organizations: Pennsylvania's Central Bucks School District, Republican, Liberal, Family Research Council, Independence Law Center, Pennsylvania Family Institute, Reuters, Republicans, American Association of School Librarians, Liberty, Museum, American, REUTERS, American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvania, U.S . Department of Education's, Civil Rights, U.S, ACLU, Pennsylvania Family, Family Research, Thomson Locations: DOYLESTOWN , Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Bucks, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia , Pennsylvania, U.S, Central Bucks
Ms. Musselwhite doesn’t know how much her monthly payments will be, but she’s thinking about where she might need to cut back — and her partner’s student loan payments will start coming due, too. Then it began to shrink, as those who continued loan payments were able to make progress while interest rates were set at zero. A greater share of Black families with children were eligible than white and Hispanic families, although their prepandemic monthly payments were smaller. (That reflects Black families’ lower incomes, not loan balances, which were higher; 53 percent of Black families were also not making payments before the pandemic.) Economists at the University of Chicago found that rather than paying down other debts, those eligible for the pause increased their leverage by 3 percent on average, or $1,200, compared with ineligible borrowers.
Persons: Musselwhite, Beamer Organizations: Institute, Federal Reserve, University of Chicago
Student-loan payments, and interest, have been on pause for over three years. Interest has been a key driver of surging student-loan balances due to capitalization. "I feel like I've actually been responsible, and I've paid a considerable amount of money on my student loans," Wise said. "The only policy that has ever ended this debt cycle is the repayment pause, and the cycle is all but guaranteed to restart once the repayment pause comes to an end." "It would be political malpractice to have students repay student loans under Biden when Trump provided the relief," California Rep. Ro Khanna told The Washington Post.
Persons: , David Wise, I've, Wise, Miguel Cardona, Joe Biden, Biden, " Cardona, Trump, Ro Khanna Organizations: Service, Education Department, Supreme, Jain, Institute, Federal Student Aid, Congress, Democratic, Biden, Washington Post Locations: California
Education Secretary Miguel Cardona has confirmed student-loan payments will resume this year. In March 2020, former President Donald Trump first implemented the student-loan payment pause to give borrowers financial relief during the pandemic. 'We're looking at a pretty severe fiscal contraction'Steinbaum previously told Insider that the economy has been "more than fine" without borrowers' student-loan payments. But they're a weight, it's about 20 million student-loan borrowers that haven't been paying, they'll have to begin paying more or less in September," Zandi said. Democratic lawmakers have been sounding the alarm on the harmful impacts a payment resumption would have without Biden's broad debt relief.
Persons: Miguel Cardona, , It's, Donald Trump, Trump, Joe Biden, — Biden, We're, Cardona, Biden, Kevin McCarthy, Marshall Steinbaum, Steinbaum, Mark Zandi, haven't, Zandi, that's, it's, Ayanna Pressley, Countess, Ro Khanna Organizations: Supreme, Service, Education, Family Institute, University of Utah, Education Department, Moody's, CNBC, Relief, Getty, Democratic, Massachusetts, Twitter Locations: Washington ,
Her story shows the extra juice that delaying — or as some would argue, canceling — student debt can provide to people's lives and the economy as a whole. "If we cancel student debt, what that really means is the federal government is choosing not to collect payments from debtors on the debt that's already issued," Steinbaum said. Biden's student loan bailout will cost every taxpayer, even those who never went to college, at least $2,500." But to be clear, we don't have the most concrete data about the effects of student loan relief — since, well, it hasn't been done. Do you have a story to share about student debt?
Premarket stocks: Why investors aren't going green
  + stars: | 2022-10-24 | by ( Nicole Goodkind | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +8 min
ESG funds in September saw their largest outflow of investor cash since the March 2020 recession. These ESG and responsible investing funds saw assets under management peak above $8.5 trillion in late 2021. That’s because ESG ratings agencies tend to rate companies against others within their industry, so oil and gas companies are rated separately from automotive companies. A debate over how to regulate ESG funds is also adding to the noisy picture. But the hurdles facing ESG investing show that doing so is easier said than done.
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