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REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsSept 12 (Reuters) - An abortion rights advocacy group filed lawsuits in three states on Tuesday on behalf of women who say they were denied abortions despite suffering life-threatening pregnancy complications. The Center for Reproductive Rights sued on behalf of eight women and four doctors in Idaho, Tennessee and Oklahoma, three states that have passed some of the strictest abortion bans since the U.S. Supreme Court gutted federal abortion rights by overturning Roe v. Wade in 2022. The lawsuits follow a similar case brought by the center in Texas, where a judge last month sided with five women who were denied abortions and exempted women experiencing pregnancy complications from Texas' stringent abortion ban. The lawsuits in Idaho and Tennessee ask the state courts to clarify those states' legal exceptions for abortions in cases of medical emergencies, so that doctors may perform abortions when they deem them necessary without fear of prosecution. The attorneys general for Tennessee and Idaho and Oklahoma Children's Hospital did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Persons: Marc Hearron, Julie Murray, Evelyn Hockstein, Roe, Wade, Nicole Blackmon, Gabriella Borter, Colleen Jenkins, Rosalba O'Brien Organizations: Center for Reproductive Rights, United States Supreme, REUTERS, Reproductive Rights, Supreme, for Reproductive, Oklahoma Children's, Thomson Locations: Texas, Washington , U.S, Idaho , Tennessee, Oklahoma, U.S, Idaho, Tennessee
Charlie Siringo (right) crosses the Rio Grande on horseback. Photo: Courtesy of Nathan WardA close friend of mine—a fellow historian and avid outdoorsman—likes to joke that while I merely write about the American West, he has actually lived it, crisscrossing the region’s hiking trails, bike paths and ski slopes. My pal might thus admire Charlie Siringo, who did both: He worked as a cowboy and as a detective for the Pinkerton Agency and then published books about his adventures. In “Son of the Old West,” writer Nathan Ward tracks Siringo from Texas to Idaho and seemingly everywhere in between while relating his encounters with an array of characters, some of them among the most famous of his day. As Mr. Ward explains, his book is as much a chronicle of the Old West as it is the study of a colorful, and ubiquitous, frontiersman.
Persons: Charlie Siringo, Nathan Ward, outdoorsman —, Ward Organizations: Pinkerton Agency Locations: Rio Grande, Siringo, Texas, Idaho
The logo of Calgary-based Enbridge, one of North America's largest energy infrastructure companies, is displayed during the LNG 2023 energy trade show in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, July 12, 2023. REUTERS/Chris Helgren Acquire Licensing RightsSept 5 (Reuters) - Enbridge (ENB.TO) will buy three utilities from Dominion Energy (D.N) for $14 billion including debt, the Canadian pipeline operator said on Tuesday, creating North America's largest natural gas provider and doubling its gas distribution business. The deals for East Ohio Gas, Questar Gas, and Public Service Co of North Carolina will consist of $9.4 billion in cash and $4.6 billion of assumed debt. U.S.-listed shares of Enbridge fell 6.5% to $33.01 in extended trading after the company also announced a C$4 billion ($2.9 billion) bought-share sale to fund a portion of the deal. The modest improvement in Enbridge's business risk profile is not enough to "offset ongoing pressure on the company's financial profile," said Gavin MacFarlane, vice president and senior credit officer at Moody's, in a statement.
Persons: Chris Helgren, Berkshire Hathaway, Greg Ebel, Enbridge, Patrick Murray, Moody's, Gavin MacFarlane, Morgan Stanley, Sullivan, Cromwell, McCarthy Tétrault, Arunima Kumar, David French, Denny Thomas, Shailesh Kuber, Sriraj Kalluvila, Richard Chang Organizations: REUTERS, Dominion Energy, East Ohio Gas, Public Service Co, Dominion, Federal Trade Commission, Foreign Investment, Co LLC, RBC Capital Markets, Thomson Locations: Calgary, North, Vancouver , British Columbia, Canada, Canadian, North Carolina, Enbridge, Point, United States, Ohio , North Carolina , Utah , Idaho, Wyoming, North America, Bengaluru, New York
Access to and from Black Rock City, the event site, was closed "for the remainder of the event," organizers said in a statement on social media. The Washoe County Sheriff's Office said the entrance to Burning Man had been closed due to flooding and anyone trying to get in "will be turned away." Local media reported there were around 73,000 "burners" in Black Rock City. The festival gets its name from its culminating event, the burning of a large wooden structure called the Man on the penultimate night. The site is in Nevada's Black Rock Desert, a large, flat, ancient lake bed known as a playa.
Persons: Kitty, Ben Joos, Trevor Hughes, revelers, Paul Reder, Reder, Rich McKay, Rosalba O'Brien Organizations: Black Rock City, USA, Sheriff's, Black, Washoe County Sheriff's, Local, U.S . Bureau of Land Management, Reuters, Thomson Locations: Idaho, Nevada, Black Rock, Pershing, Washoe County, San Francisco, Atlanta
CNN —Labor Day weekend may mark the unofficial end to summer for many, but Mother Nature didn’t get the memo this year. July-like heat sends temperatures skyrocketingTemperatures 10 to 20 degrees above normal levels for September could break or tie close dozens of records as heat builds over Labor Day weekend and into Tuesday. By Sunday, sweltering heat will expand across much of the Great Lakes, Ohio Valley and even portions of the mid-Atlantic. On Labor Day Monday, conditions will feel more like July across nearly two-thirds of the US. Places like Los Angeles and San Francisco may have the best weather in the country for Labor Day weekend.
Persons: Nature didn’t, Idalia Organizations: CNN, Labor, Miami, Orlando, National Weather Service, Hurricane Franklin, Southwest, Rockies, Weather, Idaho and Locations: United States, Upper, Omaha , Nebraska, Sioux Falls , South Dakota, Lakes, Ohio Valley, Atlantic . Minneapolis, Philadelphia, East Coast, Chicago , Washington, New York City, Gulf Coast, Texas, Florida, Houston , New Orleans, Tampa, Alabama, South Carolina, New Jersey, New York, Arizona , Nevada, Utah, Idaho, Idaho and Wyoming, Northwest, California, Seattle, Portland, Portland –, Los Angeles, San Francisco
Wealthy Americans ages 26 to 35 are moving to Florida, Texas, and New Jersey. This was in contrast to the over 5,000 net young high earners who left New York, which still had the highest count of young high earners of any state. Despite losses of nearly 2,700 high earners, New Jersey netted over 1,000 wealthy, young professionals. Connecticut, which ranked sixth for net migration of young high earners, had a similar trend compared with all high earners. Washington, DC, exceeded Washington state at 16%, even though it lost nearly 700 young, wealthy professionals.
Persons: SmartAsset, Austin, Zer Organizations: New Jersey ., New, Service, New Jersey —, California ., Boston Locations: Florida , Texas, New Jersey, New Jersey . Austin, Jacksonville, Denver, New York, California, Wall, Silicon, Miami, Austin , Texas, Jersey City , New Jersey, Florida, Texas, Idaho, Montana, Jersey City, Hoboken, Connecticut, Washington, California . Washington, DC, Colorado, North Carolina, Tennessee, Dallas, Jacksonville , Florida, New York City, Chicago
The company logo is seen on the Micron Technology Inc. offices in Shanghai, China May 25, 2023. REUTERS/Aly Song/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsAug 21 (Reuters) - Micron Technology (MU.O) said on Monday federal funding and investment tax credits would be necessary to develop its memory chip manufacturing facilities in Boise, Idaho and Clay, New York. President Joe Biden last year August signed a landmark bill to provide $52.7 billion in subsidies for U.S. semiconductor production and research. Micron said in September last year it will invest about $15 billion by 2032 for its facility in Idaho and the investment will create 17,000 jobs by 2030. Reporting by Akash Sriram in Bengaluru; Editing by Shinjini GanguliOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Aly, Joe Biden, Akash Sriram, Shinjini Organizations: Micron Technology Inc, REUTERS, Micron Technology, U.S . Department of Commerce, Micron, Thomson Locations: Shanghai, China, Boise , Idaho, Clay , New York, Idaho, New York, Bengaluru
New York CNN —David Solomon, CEO and president of Goldman Sachs, is getting bad press — a lot of bad press. And while shares of Goldman Sachs (GS) may be down by more than 5% this year, they’re still up by about 40% since he took over in 2018. Goldman Sachs did not respond to requests for comment for this article. Before the Bell: What is going on at Goldman Sachs? There have been articles purporting that former Goldman CEO Lloyd Blankfein isn’t happy with the job David Solomon has done and that he has offered to step in to help.
Persons: David Solomon, Goldman Sachs, Marcus, Solomon, they’re, Bell, Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, Lloyd Blankfein isn’t, that’s, Lloyd, he’s, That’s, David, , Juliana Liu, Michelle Toh, ” Julian Evans, Pritchard, Zichun Huang, Hang, Lehman, Hillary, Eva Rothenberg, Harry Reid, Hilary Organizations: CNN Business, Bell, New York CNN, Financial Times, Yale School of Management’s, Leadership Institute, Nokia, BlackBerry, Microsoft, Goldman, People’s Bank of China, Reuters, Capital Economics, Hang Seng, The Bank of Korea, Bank Indonesia, country’s National Bureau of Statistics, Harry, Harry Reid International, San Diego International Locations: New York, Lloyd, China, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Asia, Las Vegas, California, Nevada, Southern California, Idaho
In-N-Out Burger is one of the most beloved burger brands in the US. Rivals envy In-N-Out Burger, which has locations in seven states, for its cultlike fan base. On October 22, the Irvine, California-based fast-food chain plans to mark its 75th anniversary with a bash at the In-N-Out Burger Pomona Dragstrip. "The Ins-N-Outs of In-N-Out Burger" will reveal "the true In-N-Out Story," she wrote on her Instagram page. Here's how In-N-Out, with over 390 locations, has grown into an iconic fast-food brand under a handful of leaders.
Persons: Miley Cyrus, Anthony Bourdain, Harry, Esther Snyder, Lynsi Snyder, Snyder Organizations: Service, Burger Pomona Dragstrip, Forbes Locations: California, Wall, Silicon, Southern California, Irvine , California, Burger, Texas , Oregon, Colorado, Idaho, Tennessee
In-N-Out owner Lynsi Snyder has penned a book titled "The Ins-N-Outs of In-N-Out Burger." "I have waited so long to tell the true In-N-Out Story," Snyder wrote on her Instagram page. Lynsi Snyder, the billionaire owner of the Southern California burger institution, has written a book that promises a revealing look at the 75-year-old family business. She plans to "share the whole truth" about the business through interviews with "several retired In-N-Out family members," Snyder wrote on her Instagram page. Lynsi Snyder, 41, inherited control of the family business in 2017 and became one of the youngest billionaires in the US.
Persons: Lynsi Snyder, Snyder, It's, Harry, Esther Snyder, Guy Snyder, Rich Snyder, Sean Ellingson Organizations: Service Locations: Wall, Silicon, Southern California, Texas , Oregon, Colorado, Idaho, Tennessee, Burger Pomona, Los Angeles
In June, Oklahoma’s Statewide Virtual Charter School Board approved the nation’s first religious public charter school. The Archdiocese of Oklahoma City and the Diocese of Tulsa were given permission to open St. Isidore of Seville Catholic Virtual School in August 2024. That’s right, a religious public school, funded by the state’s taxpayers. Proponents hope this model will spread to the dozens of other states that allow charter schools. Seven percent of public school students in the country attended charter schools as of the fall of 2021, and that number continues to grow.
Persons: Isidore of Organizations: Charter School Board, Oklahoma City, Isidore of Seville Catholic Virtual School Locations: Oklahoma, Archdiocese, Tulsa, St, Isidore of Seville, . Texas, Idaho, Kentucky, Missouri, Louisiana, West Virginia, United States
Those states saw high net migration among those earning above $200,000, meaning more are moving in than out. Florida is one of just nine states without an income tax, and the weather and business opportunities have been major pulls for Americans. Idaho has seen a particularly accelerated rate of high-earners moving to cities such as Boise and Meridian. Texas had the second-highest total net migration with around 9,000, followed by North Carolina at over 5,400. California had a net migration loss of over 27,300 high-earners, while New York had a loss of nearly 20,000.
Persons: Thursday's Organizations: Service, California . Idaho and, Meridian . Idaho, US, Economic Innovation Group Locations: Idaho , Montana, Florida, . California, New York, Wall, Silicon, California . Idaho, California . Idaho and Montana, . Idaho, Boise, Meridian, Texas, North Carolina, South Carolina , Tennessee, Georgia, California, Illinois , Massachusetts, New Jersey, Washington, Thursday's —, Bozeman, Billings
Nuclear fallout from the Trinity Test damaged a batch of the Eastman Kodak Company's X-ray film. In the coming months, 1,111 miles to the northeast, physicists in the Eastman Kodak Company headquarters began following that trail. By testing the particles that settled in one of its manufacturing facilities, Kodak determined that they came from a nuclear bomb. They agreed to give Kodak advance notice of any nuclear testing in exchange for them dropping legal action. It took decades for the rest of the country and the world to find out about the dangers of nuclear fallout.
Persons: they'd, Kodak's, Julian Webb, Webb, Geiger, Sen, Tom Harkin Organizations: Trinity, Eastman Kodak Company's, Kodak, Service, New Mexico Army, Eastman Kodak Company, Atomic Scientists, Atomic Energy Commission, Lions, CDC, Trinity Test Kodak, Manhattan, Trinity Test, Manhattan Project, Corbis, AEC, National Cancer Institute, Iowa Locations: Wall, Silicon, New Mexico, Nevada, Vincennes , Indiana, Alamogordo , New Mexico, Indiana, Rochester , New York, The Rochester , New York, United States, Utah, Idaho
The Weather by the Numbers
  + stars: | 2023-07-15 | by ( Colbi Edmonds | More About Colbi Edmonds | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
A suffocating heat wave has swept across the South and Southwest in the United States, bringing dangerous temperatures and breaking heat records. Here’s what the numbers tell us about the heat and how it is affecting Americans. In California alone, 25 million people will be under heat advisories or excessive heat warnings this weekend. Death Valley National Park is projected to reach or pass 130 degrees, almost reaching the world record temperature of 134 degrees recorded there in 1913. It is forecast to challenge its record temperature of 117 degrees on Sunday.
Organizations: El, Phoenix Locations: United States, Southern, Texas, Nevada, Idaho, Oregon, In California, Las Vegas, El Paso, George , Utah, Miami, Canada, New York, Plains, Great Lakes
The heat index is a measure of how hot it really feels, when humidity and other factors are considered along with the temperature. Already, the excessive heat has killed three hikers, brutalized workers and caused spikes in ambulance calls and emergency-room visits, as cities caution residents to stay indoors and drink water. As of Tuesday evening, more than 61 million people were under excessive heat warnings or advisories, according to data from the National Weather Service. Forecasters have warned that the relentless heat could continue across much of the South through the weekend. The heat will persist next week, with parts of the Great Lakes, Midwest, Idaho and eastern Washington State expected to be up to 10 degrees above normal, said David Roth, a meteorologist with the Weather Prediction Center of the National Weather Service.
Persons: David Roth Organizations: Northern, San, Weather Service, National Weather Service, Washington State, Weather Locations: Northern California, Sacramento, San Joaquin Valley, Southwest, Arizona , New Mexico, Texas, Lakes, Midwest , Idaho, Washington
Oregon Town’s Marijuana Boom Yields Envy in Idaho
  + stars: | 2023-06-15 | by ( Kurtis Lee | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
For John Leeds, the hour-and-a-half commute to and from his job as assistant manager at Treasure Valley Cannabis Company is exhausting, but logistically unavoidable. Like nearly half of the other employees, Mr. Leeds, 39, lives in Idaho and travels along Interstate 84, past sprawling alfalfa and onion fields, to the marijuana shop just across the Oregon state line, where cannabis is legal. “It’s really two different worlds,” Mr. Leeds said. “A lot of whiplash on this issue just in a car ride up and down the highway.”Every day, hundreds of customers and workers like Mr. Leeds make the pilgrimage from Idaho to Ontario, Ore., a small city nestled along the Snake River that is home to 11 dispensaries — roughly one for every 1,000 residents. They can compare the aromas of various strains of marijuana and gather the staff’s insights on THC levels in edibles.
Persons: John Leeds, “ It’s, Mr, Leeds Organizations: Treasure Valley Cannabis, Leeds, Locations: Treasure, Leeds, Idaho, Oregon, , Ontario, edibles
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Thursday weakened a landmark water pollution law by ruling that an Idaho couple's property does not include wetlands subject to federal oversight under the law. The case saw the Sacketts return to the Supreme Court for the second time after the justices ruled in their favor in an earlier case in 2012. The Sacketts turned to the Supreme Court for a second time after the 9th U.S. In 2006, four justices said the Clean Water Act covered wetland with a "continuous surface connection" to a waterway but there was not a clear majority. On March 19, a federal judge blocked the rule in Idaho and Texas, saying it unlawfully expanded federal jurisdiction beyond what Kennedy had envisioned.
Several states, including Georgia, Idaho and most notably Florida, have passed varying laws making it easier to ban books and limit what American educators can teach. I am the president of a private, nonprofit university in Rhode Island, a state founded on the values of freedom and tolerance. The new laws censor their voices as well as those of their faculty and students. Proponents of these laws attempt to justify them by repeating claims that universities are places where political correctness runs rampant and students are intolerant of alternative viewpoints. Students should not ‌violate university policies and ‌shout down speakers they don’t agree with.
About half of U.S. states hiked their minimum wages in January, with a few more gearing up to do so later this year. Eighteen remain the same as the federal minimum, $7.25 per hour, like those in Idaho and Oklahoma. Regardless, none match the living needs of all of their residents, at least according to MIT's Living Wage Calculator. Among the most prevailing fights for a higher wage is an ongoing campaign to raise the federal minimum to $15 per hour. These are the five states with the highest minimum wages in the country, including the average living wage of a single person with no dependents for each according to MIT.
Users can borrow up to $1,000 each time, and they have the option to tip the lender and SoLo Funds. It showcases how simple the SoLo Funds design is, how borrowers have control, and how they set their own terms." After meeting the SoLo Funds team, he invested $1.6 million. SoLo Funds now has more than 100 employees and is a registered B Corp. Here's the original pitch deck that the team used to raise a $1.2 million pre-seed round, which led to raising $10 million in January 2021.
The Greater Idaho movement seeks to redraw state boundaries so rural Oregon can join Idaho. Moving the state boundary would require the approval of Oregon, Idaho, and the US Congress. Matt McCaw, a spokeperson for the group behind the Greater Idaho movement, told Insider they were confident the bill would pass Idaho's Senate in the coming weeks as well. McCaw said the Greater Idaho proposal would be a solution to the "longstanding problem" of the urban-rural divide. Proponents of Greater Idaho have said their plan is a way to avoid conflict, but it's unclear the impact moving the border would actually have.
Fed bank directors generally stay out of the limelight, but many U.S. central bankers view them as a critical resource. "I think the probabilities are far higher of achieving that gentle transition, that smoother transition," San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly told Reuters in an interview. This year, of the 108 spots on the 12 Fed bank boards, 44% are filled by women, and 41% by people of color, a review of the data shows. Still, a majority of the Fed's economists are white men, as are its top two monetary policymakers: Powell and New York Fed President John Williams. Hispanics and Latinos, Menendez notes, are a fast-growing segment of the population but are underrepresented at the Fed at all levels, including on Fed bank boards.
WASHINGTON—The Biden administration came under scrutiny Sunday over its handling of a suspected Chinese surveillance balloon, with Republican lawmakers asking why the craft was allowed to enter and then traverse the U.S. for days before being shot down. The U.S. military first detected the balloon north of the Aleutian Islands in Alaska on Jan. 28 and watched as it then entered northwest Canada and moved over Idaho and Montana and to the southeast before an Air Force jet fighter shot it down off the South Carolina coast on Saturday.
But abortion-rights advocates say legal exceptions do nothing but make abortion bans appear more reasonable than they really are. One shows states with abortion bans with exceptions for rape or incest and the other shows states without those exceptions. One shows states with abortion bans with exceptions for fatal birth defects and the other shows states without those exceptions. One shows states with abortion bans with exceptions for patients with severe health risks and the other shows states without those exceptions. One shows states with abortion bans with exceptions for the life of the patient and the other shows states without those exceptions.
REUTERS/Pascal Rossignol/File PhotoNEW YORK, Jan 18 (Reuters) - A U.S. government agency on Wednesday issued citations against Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O) for failing to keep warehouse workers safe, by exposing them to ergonomic hazards that resulted in serious injuries. The agency said workers at the Florida facility were also exposed to "struck-by" hazards, where merchandise that was unevenly stacked or not secured was susceptible to collapse. Doug Parker, the head of OSHA, said Amazon's processes were "designed for speed but not safety, and they resulted in serious worker injuries." Amazon has said it invests hundreds of millions of dollars annually to ensure worker safety. Safety concerns, including after the deaths of six workers when an Amazon warehouse in Edwardsville, Illinois, collapsed during a December 2021 tornado, have helped spur union campaigns at Amazon warehouses across the country.
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