California senator pushes 'death on demand' assisted suicide measure A California Democrat is proposing an expansion to the state's assisted suicide law by eradicating ... bill "transforms despair into a policy of death on demand." "Broadening the criteria for ... 04/1/2024 - 11:49 am | View Link
California senator pushes 'death on demand' assisted suicide measure A California Democrat is proposing an expansion to the state's assisted suicide law by eradicating ... TOP MASSACHUSETTS COURT RULES AGAINST OVERTURNING LAW PROHIBITING PHYSICAN-ASSISTED SUICIDE ... 03/31/2024 - 1:00 pm | View Link
Former insurance commissioner warns state agency about California’s ‘uninsurable future’ Who will ultimately bear the cost of the state’s insurance challenges is also unresolved. “That’s what we’re really here to figure out,” said Amy Bach, the executive director of United ... 03/28/2024 - 11:16 pm | View Link
State Farm won't renew homeowners coverage for 72,000 California homes and apartments "This decision was not made lightly and only after careful analysis of State Farm General's financial health ... regulations aimed at calming the state's imploding market by giving insurers ... 03/21/2024 - 10:48 pm | View Link
New California Court for the Mentally Ill Tests a State’s Liberal Values Last year, Tamra carjacked her mother outside a convenience store, her mother said in the court ... The state’s growing homeless population — just over 180,000 people, according to federal ... 03/20/2024 - 1:00 pm | View Link
Former Trump attorney Tim Parlatore explains what he thinks could happen if prosecutors in Donald Trump's hush money criminal trial bring up Trump's other legal problems. He also shares whether he thinks the former president should testify.
President Joe Biden called China “xenophobic” while highlighting the Asian nation’s economic woes, as he sought to make the case for U. S. economic strength during a campaign stop in the swing state of Pennsylvania.
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“They’ve got a population that is more people in retirement than working. They’re not importing anything.
Colorado lawmakers are abandoning plans to overhaul the Regional Transportation District’s governing board and change how its members are selected after transit officials blasted the plan.
Reps. William Lindstedt and Meg Froelich said Wednesday that they are still set to pursue other RTD reforms through House Bill 1447. But they said they plan to drop the bill’s most contentious provision: a plan to eventually cut the board’s size down from 15 elected, voting members to seven voting members — with five elected and two appointed by the governor.
Froelich and Lindstedt told fellow legislators they wanted to further discuss board reform over the coming months.
“We ultimately feel that those sections of the bill should come out, and we will want a longer process,” said Froelich, an Englewood Democrat.