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‘Their tank is empty’: Local public health officials combat staff burnout, low pay, harassment
By: Laura Olson and Susan J. Demas - September 30, 2021
WASHINGTON — Eighteen months into the COVID-19 pandemic, state and local public health departments that were already struggling with too few workers and too little money have been pushed to the brink — and for some, beyond the brink. “My staff is burnt out, overworked and underpaid,” Dr. Mysheika Roberts, health commissioner with the Columbus Public Health […]
Senate GOP torpedoes U.S. govt. funding bill, raising odds of federal fiscal crises
By: Laura Olson - September 27, 2021
WASHINGTON — U.S. Senate Republicans blocked an attempt by Democrats on Monday evening to begin debate on a broad bill that would avert multiple looming fiscal crises for the federal government. The measure to briefly keep the government operating past the end of the fiscal year on Thursday, as well as to increase the borrowing limit […]
House oversight panel seeks testimony from company conducting Arizona’s so-called ‘audit’
By: Laura Olson - September 27, 2021
WASHINGTON — Congressional Democrats on Friday requested that the company behind a months-long review of Arizona’s election results appear at a hearing next month, after officials from Cyber Ninjas refused to cooperate with document requests from the U.S. House Oversight and Reform Committee. Top Democrats on that panel, Reps. Carolyn Maloney of New York and Jamie […]
Orphaned, infected, in crisis: How the pandemic is traumatizing kids
By: Laura Olson - September 25, 2021
WASHINGTON — The coronavirus pandemic has brought heartbreaking consequences for millions of U.S. children, even as most avoided serious illness themselves, pediatric experts told Congress on Wednesday. Take, for instance, a young girl from Tennessee named Sophia, whose story was relayed by Dr. Margaret Rush, president of Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt University. Within […]
Who will get a booster shot? A Q&A about what the feds are saying
By: Laura Olson - September 23, 2021
Updated 8:44 a.m., 9/24/2021, with information about frontline workers being added to the list of those who will be eligible for the booster shot. WASHINGTON — Booster shots soon will begin rolling out to some Americans who received the two-shot vaccine made by Pfizer—after a contentious and confusing federal approval process that isn’t over yet. […]
U.S. House Dems pass $28.6B in disaster aid for recovery from hurricanes, wildfires, floods
By: Laura Olson - September 21, 2021
Updated, 6:16 a.m., 9/22/21 with vote WASHINGTON — Congressional Democrats unveiled a short-term spending measure on Tuesday that would keep the federal government operating through Dec. 3 and provide $28.6 billion for costs related to recent natural disasters. The bill was passed by the House on a party-line vote Tuesday night, 220-211. Michigan’s delegation split […]
Michigan joins AG coalition against Miss. abortion ban, SCOTUS to hear case in December
By: Laura Olson - September 21, 2021
WASHINGTON — The U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments on Dec. 1 in a case that threatens to overturn decades of abortion protections established under the landmark 1973 ruling in Roe v. Wade. The upcoming case, Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, stems from a Mississippi law that bans most abortions after 15 weeks. It has been […]
FDA panel backs COVID-19 booster shots only for seniors and high-risk Americans
By: Laura Olson - September 18, 2021
WASHINGTON — A federal health advisory panel wrestled Friday with whether to widely authorize a booster dose of Pfizer’s two-shot COVID-19 vaccine for most Americans, ultimately recommending that a third dose be offered only to older or higher-risk individuals. The Biden administration had hoped that states could begin rolling out a wide national booster shot […]
How House Dems would expand Medicare and Medicaid and lower prescription drug costs
By: Laura Olson - September 17, 2021
WASHINGTON — New Medicare benefits for older Americans, like dental care. An expansion of eligibility for Medicaid for low-income people in Republican-controlled states that have declined to take that step. And potentially an historic effort to rein in prescription drug prices — if congressional Democrats can work through objections from moderates in their party. The massive […]
Putting on pandemic pounds: State obesity rates hit all-time highs
By: Laura Olson - September 16, 2021
WASHINGTON — The number of states with high obesity among residents has nearly doubled since 2018, according to new data Wednesday from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Michigan was one of 16 states that had obesity rates among adult residents of at least 35% last year, with 35.2%. Iowa, Ohio, Delaware and […]
Arizona attorney general first to sue over Biden vaccine mandate on private businesses
By: Laura Olson - September 15, 2021
WASHINGTON — Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich on Tuesday filed the first lawsuit against the Biden administration’s upcoming COVID-19 vaccine mandate for private companies with at least 100 employees, arguing that the federal requirement violates the U.S. Constitution. In the legal complaint, Brnovich argues that the vaccine mandate President Joe Biden announced last week violates the Equal Protection Clause, claiming […]
Billions of dollars in federal rental aid remains stalled in slow-moving states, localities
By: Laura Olson - September 14, 2021
WASHINGTON — Make it simpler to apply for rental assistance money. Allow landlords to apply on behalf of unresponsive tenants. And consolidate two overlapping federal programs aimed at getting financial help to struggling renters. Those were among the proposals that U.S. House members weighed during a hearing Friday on how to better help states and localities […]