SunFest attendees agree: It's time pot was legal in Florida But that may change with a vote for a question on Florida’s ballot in November. If voters pass the measure, anyone 21 years old and older could use and possess up to 3 ounces of marijuana — and not ... 05/5/2024 - 7:04 am | View Link
As the US moves to reclassify marijuana as a less dangerous drug, could more states legalize it? A federal proposal to reclassify marijuana as a less dangerous drug has raised the hopes of some pot backers that more states will embrace cannabis ... 05/4/2024 - 3:46 am | View Link
Biden’s big move on marijuana: Will voters give him credit? The Biden administration soon will take a big step toward bringing federal policy on weed more in line with what the public says it prefers. 05/3/2024 - 11:00 pm | View Link
Joe Biden, Pot President? Biden, a suit-wearing president who is more statesman than stoner, has become something of the pot president. It could elevate his standing specifically with young voters, who support rescheduling, or ... 05/3/2024 - 12:36 pm | View Link
Falls gives 1st reading to enact ban on pot sales NEWTON FALLS — Village council in a 4-1 vote Wednesday gave the first reading to placing a moratorium on issuing building permits or ... 05/1/2024 - 5:51 pm | View Link
Judge William M. Conley watched as the Cardinal-Hickory Creek Transmission Line inched toward the Upper Mississippi River National Wildlife Refuge—a 240,000-acre bird sanctuary through which the fully funded power project lacked the permits to pass. By January 2022, he’d seen enough. It “amounts to little more than an orchestrated trainwreck,” Conley, an Obama-appointed federal judge from the Western District of Wisconsin, wrote in a scathing 23-page opinion that delayed construction.
More than two years have passed since Conley blasted the consortium of utilities and government entities behind the massive clean energy project for “playing a shell game,” accused them of behaving “cavalierly,” and derided their legal arguments as “thin porridge indeed.” Since then, the legal battle has continued ricocheting through the courts, shedding light on one of the most intractable debates in the struggle to decarbonize the US economy.
At the last maternity and neonatal hospital in Rafah, the devastation has already arrived. “There is no safe place in Gaza from a healthcare perspective—and beyond,” Bridget Rochios, a certified nurse-midwife from California volunteering at Al-Helal Al-Emirati Maternity Hospital, told me.
As Israel prepares a ground invasion of Rafah, Rochios—who is working with the Canadian healthcare organization Gila and talked to me by told me by phone on Thursday afternoon—says the hospital has seen a massive influx of patients.
How Poor Tracking of Bird Flu Leaves Dairy Workers at Risk The New York TimesReadout LOUD podcast: What to know about H5N1 bird flu STATFDA preparing for possible bird flu outbreak in humans CBS NewsJust One Human Is Infected by Bird Flu in the US. More Cases Are Likely Yahoo FinanceHow Bird Flu Caught the Dairy Industry Off Guard Scientific American
City leaders have zeroed in on a strategy they hope can break downtown Denver out of what Mayor Mike Johnston has described as the area’s post-COVID “doom loop.”
The key to that strategy: the expansion of an obscure special taxing authority that played a key part in downtown’s last big boom.
Johnston and other city and business leaders stood in front of the dormant fountains outside Union Station on Thursday morning to announce a plan they say could generate $500 million in public investment in downtown Denver over the coming decade.
The approach relies on a strategic funding tool that helped turn Union Station from an all-but-deserted bus terminal into an anchor of downtown Denver’s economic resurgence in the 2010s. Namely, the Johnston administration and its partners are intent on expanding the boundaries of the Denver Downtown Development Authority to cover all of the city’s core, including the long-floundering Central Business District.
Once expanded, that entity — created to pay off $400 million in public debt incurred building infrastructure around the station — would collect incremental property taxes from participating businesses and property owners to back bonds that can be used to fund a host of economic development work and projects, officials explained.
What kind of work?
In roughly 100 days, President Joe Biden is set to stand on a stage in Chicago’s United Center and accept his party’s presidential nomination. The organizers of this year’s Democratic National Convention hope America will focus its attention at that moment on Biden’s words and the cheers and enthusiasm of the crowd in the arena.
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But many Democrats fear that voters’ attention will be at best divided between the heavily stage-managed activities in the arena and the chaos unfolding just outside it.