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Council GOP pushes to remove residency requirement for city employees

Council GOP pushes to remove residency requirement for city employees

Axios2 days ago
City-County Council Republicans want to remove a decades-old residency requirement for city employees.
Why it matters: The removal of the requirement could open up new recruitment opportunities for departments that have struggled to hire, but also dispenses with the long-held notion that the tax dollars paying for public employees should stay in the city.
Catch up quick: Since 1977, anyone who accepts full- or part-time employment with the city or county must live within Marion County within six months of accepting the job.
Yes, but: The rule doesn't apply to interns, firefighters, IMPD, 911 operators or "persons who have specialized skills or training if there is no suitable applicant for the position residing within the limits of Marion County."
What they're saying: Minority Leader Michael-Paul Hart said the proposal came from a roundtable conversation with the county's public safety leaders.
"We said to them, 'How can the City Council address the shortages of employees that you are seeing in your organizations?'" Hart said during a press conference Wednesday. "And they unanimously told us: remove residency requirements."
Hart said they want to expand the talent pool and retain more employees who may leave city employment when they want to move for more affordable housing or better schools — two issues he said he's heard about from city workers.
What's next: The proposal will be introduced to the council Monday, which is also when the next year's city budget will be presented.
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Trump turbocharges redistricting fight
Trump turbocharges redistricting fight

The Hill

time25 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Trump turbocharges redistricting fight

Morning Report is The Hill's a.m. newsletter. Subscribe here. In today's issue: ▪ Trump revives battle over census ▪ What gerrymandering means for voters ▪ FBI fires officials at odds with White House ▪ Israel cabinet backs Gaza City takeover plan President Trump is raising the stakes of the midterms redistricting fight with his push to revive a battle over the census. Trump on Thursday directed the Commerce Department to start work on a 'new' census. Work is already underway for the census scheduled for 2030. The president said in a Truth Social post that the next census should not count those who are in the country without authorization and use the 'results and information gained' from the 2024 presidential election. The plan would likely face significant legal hurdles, writes The Hill's Jared Gans. The Constitution's 14th Amendment says the decennial census should be conducted on the basis of the total number of people in each state. The Supreme Court effectively blocked the citizenship question from being added to the 2020 census. It was unclear Thursday whether the president was calling for a mid-decade census or changes to the next one in 2030. Still, the push adds a new dimension to the fierce redistricting battle playing out across the country, as Republicans seek to gain the upper hand ahead of next year's midterm elections. Trump's call for a new census shows he's doubling down on this strategy of adjusting the terms of engagement in the elections to come, Gans writes. 'From a messaging standpoint, it is ingenious to push the envelope on this front,' Republican strategist Ford O'Connell told The Hill. ▪ The Associated Press: Can Trump hold a census in the middle of a decade and exclude immigrants in the country illegally? Trump himself kicked off the redistricting arms race with his call for Texas Republicans to approve a new congressional map that aims to give the GOP five more seats in the state in next year's midterms. The president said earlier this week the GOP is 'entitled' to five more seats. ▪ ABC News: How gerrymandering has reshaped the political map for red and blue states. ▪ The Atlantic: How Democrats tied their own hands on redistricting. LONE STAR STANDOFF: Democrats in Congress are defending the Democratic legislators who fled the Lone Star State in an effort to block the GOP-controlled Legislature from moving ahead with redrawn maps. The group of more than 50 Texas House Democrats are scattered across various blue states, vowing to wait out the remainder of the special session. Claims by Texas Republicans that the FBI is getting involved in efforts to track down and possibly detain the Democratic state lawmakers are getting strong pushback from Democrats in Congress. Democratic members are investigating how involved the FBI is in the Texas redistricting battle, The Hill's Alexander Bolton reports, and lawmakers who have weighed in on the matter say FBI intervention would be an egregious politicization of the nation's top law enforcement agency. Responding to a claim by Texas Sen. John Cornyn (R) that the FBI will help find the lawmakers who fled the Lone Star State, House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries (N.Y.) said: 'These extremists don't give a damn about public safety.' Jeffries said in a Thursday interview with ABC News that the FBI lacks the legal authority to intervene in a state-level political dispute. 'There would be no authority for the FBI to target Democrats from the Texas Legislature in connection with an act that Democrats have taken that is authorized by the Texas Constitution,' he said, adding that the redistricting effort in Texas is 'a clear power grab because Donald Trump and House Republicans are desperate to try to hold on to their thin majority in the House of Representatives.' Cornyn made the call for FBI involvement, which Gov. Greg Abbott (R) appeared to confirm Thursday when he wrote on social media that Texas authorities and the FBI were 'tracking down' the lawmakers. 'Those who received benefits for skipping a vote face removal from office and potential bribery charges,' he wrote. 'In Texas, there are consequences for your actions.' Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) — who is challenging Cornyn for his Senate seat — on Thursday asked an Illinois court to enforce arrest warrants against the Democratic lawmakers. The warrants are only enforceable within state lines, a largely symbolic threat that ensures any members who return to Texas can be apprehended and returned to the House chamber. It remains unclear what the FBI has agreed to in terms of aiding Republicans. Experts who spoke with The Hill on Wednesday expressed skepticism that the FBI even had the jurisdiction to aid Texas Republicans in forcing Democrats to return to the state. 'I don't see why the FBI would be involved in this at all,' said Richard Painter, who served as associate counsel to the president in the White House counsel's office during former President George W. Bush's second term. ' I mean this is Texas politics and the FBI has no business trying to enforce Texas state law.' BACKFIRE? Various other states have now pushed for midcycle redistricting. Red states, including Indiana, Florida and Missouri, are looking to follow the Lone Star State's example. Blue states, including New York, New Jersey and California, are pushing to redraw their own maps, sometimes in the face of years of Democratic pushes for more equitable maps and independent redistricting commissions. California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) told reporters this week that California is charging ahead with preparations for potential redistricting ahead of the midterms 'in response to the existential realities that we're now facing.' 'We're going to fight fire with fire,' Newsom said. Blue state Republicans at risk of retaliatory redistricting efforts are sounding the alarm on what they dub a Trump-directed Texas power grab. The Hill's Emily Brooks and Caroline Vakil write the Republicans worry efforts to undergo mid-decade districting could ultimately backfire in their home states. Mid-decade redistricting being considered in California alone could cancel out Republicans' wins in Texas. 'I think the whole thing is pretty disgusting,' Rep. Doug LaMalfa (R-Calif.), whose reelection could be at risk if California Democrats pursue new maps, told The Hill of the redistricting battles across the country. He said constituents don't want politicians manufacturing 'a temporary gain by — any side — manipulating lines.' 3 Things to Know Today Trump ordered federal law enforcement to begin patrolling the streets of Washington, D.C., to crack down on crime. Actor Dean Cain says he's becoming an ICE agent. Cain is best known for playing Superman in the mid-1990s 'Lois & Clark' series. The Federal Aviation Administration plans to 'supercharge' hiring efforts to bring on 8,900 new air traffic controllers by 2028. But experts say that may not be enough. Leading the Day The Hill's Elizabeth Crisp spoke with Princeton University professor Samuel Wang, who leads the university's nonpartisan Gerrymandering Project that tracks and seeks to eliminate partisan mapmaking. This conversation has been lightly edited for clarity and length. THE HILL: What are your thoughts on the Texas redistricting fight and the tit for tat that it seems to have sparked? WANG: The Texas redistricting is just an intensification of what Texas already did with its current gerrymander, which already got an F from the Princeton Gerrymandering Project. It's probably worth three seats for Republicans, but by cutting things closer there is both downside risk (they could underperform that) or they could get the five seats that news outlets are claiming. A lot of the talk may not turn into action, since many states either have no legal path, or are already gerrymandered. The only options that will produce multiple seats are Ohio and Florida (for Republicans) and California (for Democrats). Do you think that there is a shift toward more gerrymandering? Or is it just becoming more explicit? No, it's the opposite — gerrymandering has decreased. Since its peak in 2010, gerrymandering has decreased thanks to independent commissions, state court actions, and bipartisan government. But public attention has increased massively, which is a good thing. Do you think that it is possible to have more competitive or purple/swing districts in the current climate? Yes, it is possible. Since 2012, the number of competitive swing congressional districts has nearly doubled. See [ this ] Atlantic piece. Much of what people think of as gerrymandering is just the fact that most districts are partisan, because of voters sorting themselves. Gerrymandering starts from that and makes things worse. Could things get better? Yes! Independent commissions by citizen initiative (Ohio, Illinois), court actions (Wisconsin, Utah), and bipartisan governance (Pennsylvania, Minnesota) can all chip away at the problem. Not Texas, though. Sadly, there are no laws in Texas that restrict congressional redistricting. It all depends on each state's laws. What is the direct impact to voters when the goals are to intentionally create 'red' or 'blue' districts? Gerrymandering reduces competition. Even worse than your topic (congressional redistricting) is legislative redistricting, where there is a direct effect on how people are governed. In that case, legislative gerrymanders in Texas and Illinois do not cancel out. FBI PURGE: Brian Driscoll, who briefly served as acting FBI director at the start of Trump's second term and who refused to turn over a list of agents who worked on Jan. 6 cases, is being fired. The Hill's Rebecca Beitsch reports that Driscoll has been asked to leave the bureau by today and that his removal seems to be part of a wider purge in the agency. 'Last night I was informed that tomorrow will be my last day in the FBI. I understand that you may have a lot of questions regarding why, for which I currently have no answers. No cause has been articulated at this time,' Driscoll wrote in a note to staffers that one shared on LinkedIn. 'Please know that it has been the honor of my life to serve alongside each of you. Thank you for allowing me to stand on your shoulders throughout it all. Our collective sacrifices for those we serve is, and will always be, worth it. I regret nothing. You are my heroes, and I remain in your debt,' he continued. Steve Jensen, the assistant director in charge of the Washington Field Office, reportedly also was asked to leave, along with agent Walter Giardina, who worked on a number of Trump-related cases. The FBI Agents Association said in a statement that it was concerned by reports of the firings of senior leaders and that it was reviewing legal avenues to defend agents who were only doing their jobs. 'Agents are not given the option to pick and choose their cases, and these Agents carried out their assignments with professionalism and integrity,' the agents' union said. 'Most importantly, they followed the law.' When and Where The president will hold bilateral meetings with the prime ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan. At 4:15 p.m., he will participate in a trilateral signing with both prime ministers. The House and Senate are in recess until September. Morning Report's Alexis Simendinger will return on Monday. Zoom In TOOLS OF THE TRADE: Trump rounded out the first day of his new sweeping tariff overhaul by bringing out charts to defend the state of the economy during an event in the Oval Office on Thursday afternoon. The president and conservative economist Stephen Moore mocked a recent Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) report that found the economy added about 250,000 fewer jobs than previously thought in recent months. The duo displayed massive charts highlighting the economy under Trump compared to the Biden administration. 'This one chart really says it better than anything, if you look at this. This is great. But this chart is pretty amazing,' the president said while holding up a diagram Moore made showing median household income growth. The Washington Post reported that Moore and his team at the nonpartisan Committee to Unleash Prosperity created a new model, using data from monthly Census surveys, to predict national income figures with a 3 percent error rate. Their findings were the basis for the charts Trump displayed in the Oval Office. 'This is going to be a big deal for us because no one else has just figured out how to do this,' Moore told the Post. 'It's very positive for Trump.' 'He likes data, especially if it's good news,' Moore added. The effort to highlight more positive material came as Trump again claimed without evidence that BLS numbers were manipulated to make him look bad. Trump has faced criticism from some economists and others over his decision to fire the BLS commissioner who produced last week's report showing dismal job growth. Trump has defended his move to impose sweeping 'reciprocal tariffs' on most U.S. trade partners, which went into effect Thursday after repeated delays and negotiations to work on more favorable agreements. 'Tariffs are flowing into the USA at levels not thought even possible,' the president said Thursday morning. But the news didn't quite arrive in the global financial markets. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed Thursday with a loss of 0.5 percent, falling 224 points, as Trump's tariffs went into place, while the S&P 500 index fell by roughly 0.1 percent. 'We are trying to rebalance trade in America's favor. You know, President Trump has said, and I've said we want to bring back the high-precision manufacturing jobs,' Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in appearance on MSNBC's 'Morning Joe' on Thursday. 'We want to get rid of these big deficits that we have with countries that have created these big surpluses and gutted our manufacturing base and have been terrible for American workers.' Economist and Fox Business host Larry Kudlow, who was director of the National Economic Council during the first Trump administration, insisted this week the worst predictions about Trump's tariffs have not come to fruition. 'All the gloom and doom, tariff inflation, tariff recession, tariff catastrophe, none of that has happened, OK? And in fact, as you noted earlier, the tariff revenues are pouring in,' Kudlow said Thursday in a Fox News interview. FED UP: Meanwhile, Trump has named his new pick to join the Federal Reserve's board of governors, following Adriana Kugler 's early retirement announcement last week. Trump's new nominee is Stephen Miran, who has been a top economic adviser to the president since his return to office in January. 'It is my Great Honor to announce that I have chosen Dr. Stephen Miran, current Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors, to serve in the just vacated seat on the Federal Reserve Board until January 31, 2026,' Trump wrote in a Truth Social post. 'In the meantime, we will continue to search for a permanent replacement.' Miran is a vocal critic of Fed Chair Jerome Powell, whom Trump has been openly feuding with over interest rates. Elsewhere BILATERAL TALKS: Trump is eyeing a meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin as early as next week as he pushes for an end to the war in Ukraine, a potential face-to-face gathering that carries potential risks for the White House at a time when it's gotten tougher on Moscow. Trump has grown increasingly frustrated with Putin as Russia carries out strikes despite U.S. calls for a pause in the fighting. The administration on Wednesday announced tariffs on India over its purchases of Russian oil, and additional sanctions on Russia are set to take effect today. The president told reporters in the Oval Office on Thursday that Putin doesn't have to meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in order for Trump to sit down with the Russian leader, walking back a White House statement from earlier in the day. 'No, he would like to meet with me, and I'll do whatever I can to stop the killing,' Trump said. 'So last month, they lost 14,000 people — killed. Every week is [4,000] or 5,000 people. So I don't like long waits. I think it's a shame.' Much is still unknown about the meeting, including when, where and whether it will happen. The Hill's Brett Samuels and Laura Kelly break down five key questions. ▪ BBC: Why Trump-Putin talks are unlikely to bring a rapid end to the Ukraine war. ▪ CNN: Five ways the Russia-Ukraine war could end. ▪ CNBC: Russia and the United Arab Emirates double down on trade, testing U.S. limits. ALL OF GAZA: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Thursday the Israeli military will begin a new offensive to occupy the entire Gaza Strip in an effort to root out Hamas. The Israeli security Cabinet approved the plan today. Earlier in the week, senior military officials pushed back against the plan, warning that expanding operations could endanger the hostages and kill more Palestinian civilians. The announcement comes 23 months into a war in which Israeli attacks have killed at least 61,000 Palestinians, a third of them children, according to Gaza's Health Ministry. In an interview with Fox News, Netanyahu was asked if Israel would take control of the whole enclave. 'We intend to, in order to assure our security, remove Hamas there, enable the population to be free of Gaza, and to pass it to civilian governance that is not Hamas and not anyone advocating the destruction of Israel,' Netanyahu said. 'We don't want to keep' Gaza, he added. 'We want to have a security perimeter. We don't want to govern it. We don't want to be there as a governing body. We want to hand it over to Arab forces that will govern it properly without threatening us, and giving Gazans a good life.' ▪ Axios: Senior United Nations aid officials met Wednesday with the chair of the U.S.- and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation. ▪ Reuters: The U.S. presented Lebanon with a proposal for disarming Hezbollah by the end of the year, along with ending Israel's military operations in the country. ▪ The Hill: The Department of Justice on Thursday upped the reward for information that leads to the arrest of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. Maduro was indicted in 2020 on U.S. charges of narco-terrorism for allegedly attempting to weaponize cocaine. Opinion India's 50 percent tariff is a US sanction in disguise, columnist Andy Mukherjee writes in Bloomberg. Bring back the presidential fitness test, by The Washington Post editorial board. The Closer And finally… 👏👏👏 Kudos to our Morning Report quiz winners! We were inspired by the growing interest in redistricting and how some politicians are now openly discussing efforts to maximize partisan advantages in House maps. Readers clearly are paying attention to the Texas redistricting fight and the push for more guaranteed 'blue' or 'red' seats. Here's who went 4/4: Mike Collins, Jack Barshay, Robert Bradley, Mark R. Williamson, Linda L. Field, Peter Sprofera, William Bennett, James Morris, Rick Schmidtk, Carmine Petracca, Alan Johnson, Chuck Schoenenberger, Harry Strulovici, Joseph Webster, Pam Manges, William Chittam, Pavel Peykov, William D. Moore, Lynn Gardner, John van Santen, Carmine Petracca, Stan Wasser, Joe Atchue, Steve James, Savannah Petracca and Brian Hogan. Vice President Elbridge Gerry, while serving as the Massachusetts governor in 1812, signed off on a new state Senate map that included a district in the Boston area many likened to a salamander shape. The Boston Gazette described the curiously cut district as the 'Gerry-mander,' and the term stuck (no longer needing a hyphen). Today, the nonpartisan Cook Political Report rates 18 districts as 'toss ups' — meaning the 417 other House districts are packed with reliably Republican voters or Democrats.

Mapping out the future of redistricting
Mapping out the future of redistricting

Politico

timean hour ago

  • Politico

Mapping out the future of redistricting

Good morning and happy Friday. And away we go. It appears Florida is joining the parade of red states considering a redraw of their congressional maps ahead of the 2026 midterms. State House Speaker DANIEL PEREZ announced Thursday he was creating a new select committee to draw up a new map that he said could be tested in the courts well before the next decennial census. (For what it's worth, his announcement came a few hours after President DONALD TRUMP said he wants to do a new census now and not wait until 2030. More on that below.) Here's a few things to keep in mind. While Gov. RON DESANTIS has been talking openly in recent weeks about redrawing the state's congressional map, he's made no secret of his continuing and ongoing disdain of Perez. He has criticized him several times in recent public appearances. So what to make of Perez making the first move on redistricting? One Florida GOP operative, granted anonymity to speak candidly, theorized that 'Danny would not have done that without the White House.' When asked if the White House had gotten involved, a spokesperson for Perez did not respond. Here's the potential problem with White House involvement. While the Florida Supreme Court recently upheld the congressional map that gave Republicans a 20-8 margin, that ruling focused on one part of voter-approved redistricting standards that dealt with protections for minority voters. Voters overwhelmingly approved those standards — called 'Fair Districts' — in 2010. The court ruling didn't disrupt the main part of 'Fair Districts' that prohibits state legislators from redrawing districts for partisan gain or to help incumbents. In his memo about redistricting, Perez acknowledged that, telling House members that 'statements about redistricting that suggest an intent to favor or disfavor an incumbent or political party, which is currently prohibited by the Florida Constitution' would disqualify them from serving on the new committee. Translation: Any signs of partisan influence could give a legal opening for Democrats to challenge whatever map is eventually produced. Perez, for his part, linked the decision to commence with mid-decade redistricting to the court ruling that dealt with minority protections. Another note of intrigue: The ongoing silence from the Florida Senate. DeSantis keeps talking about his good relationship with Senate Republicans while trashing the House. Yet President BEN ALBRITTON has stayed mum about whether he's on board with mid-decade redistricting. It would be hard to envision a scenario where Albritton holds firm against the House and governor, but it's still worth watching. And then there's the Democrats. Unlike the drama happening in Texas that led Democrats to flee that state, Florida Republicans enjoy a supermajority and can push through a new map with or without Democrats. Democrats still reacted swiftly to Perez' move. Florida Democratic Party Chair NIKKI FRIED called it 'corruption, plain and simple.' Rep. MAXWELL FROST said Republicans are 'admitting they can't win without cheating.' A new map could theoretically target Democrats in south Florida and in the Tampa Bay region, places where Republicans have seen gains in recent years. State Democrats have vowed they will fight against map changes, but that will likely require them to mount a lengthy and expensive court battle that may or may not be resolved prior to the 2026 elections. And any legal challenge based on 'Fair Districts' would wind up before the same Supreme Court that just upheld the current map. — Gary Fineout Have a tip, story, suggestion, birthday, anniversary, new job, or any other nugget that Playbook should look at? Get in touch at: kleonard@ and @leonardkl. ... DATELINE TALLAHASSEE ... 'ALLIGATOR ALCATRAZ' EXPANSION GETS PAUSED — A federal judge Thursday ruled construction must temporarily stop at 'Alligator Alcatraz' as hearings challenging the Everglades-based detention center's environmental impact continue. District Judge Kathleen Williams ordered the state to, at the very least, stop installing additional lighting, infrastructure, pavement, filling or fencing and to halt excavation for 14 days. She called the request for the temporary restraining order from the plaintiffs, which represent environmental groups, 'pretty reasonable' to prevent further interruption to the ecosystem. The judge, an Obama-era appointee, said the plaintiffs had introduced evidence of 'ongoing environmental harms.' — Kimberly Leonard DeSantis response: 'Operations at Alligator Alcatraz are ongoing and deportations are continuing,' the governor wrote on X. HARMFUL WATERS — 'For the second summer in a row, Florida wildlife officials said they are suspending the popular scallop harvest along all state waters in Pasco County over worries of unsafe toxins from harmful algal blooms,' reports Max Chesnes of the Tampa Bay Times. 'Water samplers have detected potentially harmful levels of an algal bloom called Pyrodinium bahamense and the toxins it produces.' ACA CUTS COMING — 'With the enhanced advanced premium tax credits for so-called 'Obamacare' plans set to expire at the end of this year, the public relations firm Red Hills Consulting created 'Florida Conservatives for Affordable Health Care,'' reports Christine Sexton of the Florida Phoenix. 'The firm is launching a letter-writing campaign with the goal of encouraging Florida's congressional delegation to support extension of the enhanced premium tax credits that help millions of Florida residents purchase Obamacare health plans.' PENINSULA AND BEYOND BREAKING OVERNIGHT — 'The U.S. government announced on Thursday an unprecedented $50 million reward for information leading to the arrest of Venezuelan ruler Nicolás Maduro, accusing him of heading one of the world's most dangerous narco-trafficking networks,' reports Antonio Delgado of the Miami Herald. 'The reward, which doubles the previous offer, was revealed in a video posted on social media by U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi, who said the Maduro regime has become a direct threat to U.S. national security. Bondi accused Maduro of using foreign terrorist and criminal organizations — including the Tren de Aragua gang, the Mexican Sinaloa Cartel, and the Venezuelan Cartel de los Soles, Cartel of the Suns — to flood the U.S. with cocaine.' ANSWERS ON WORRELL — 'The mysterious grand jury that seemed poised earlier this year to disrupt State Attorney Monique Worrell's return to office examined whether she and her associates failed to preserve government documents and destroyed public records, according to a court filing,' reports Skyler Swisher of the Orlando Sentinel. 'The lawsuit, brought by a former chief investigator in the state attorney's office, Eric Edwards, reveals the first public details of an investigation that brought Worrell to a Polk County grand jury hearing room in January. To date, the grand jury probe has not resulted in any criminal charges, and Edwards says he learned through 'unofficial channels' that it ended in April.' REHEARING REQUESTED — The City of Miami had asked the full bench of Florida's Third District Court of Appeal to rehear a case over its next elections, reports Tess Riski of the Miami Herald. City commissioners voted 3-2 to delay local elections from November 2025 to November 2026, to bring them in line with federal and state elections and improve turnout. But the vote triggered a lawsuit and protest from mayoral candidates who wanted to run this year, given that it would give commissioners and Mayor FRANCIS SUAREZ another year in office and delay their own bids. The plaintiffs said voters should be allowed to weigh in, and a three-judge panel agreed. Now, the city wants the full panel to weigh in, per a new filing. BOOK REMOVALS — 'Broward school administrators have given schools a list of 55 books that must be removed, the latest move in a statewide effort to ban certain materials from school libraries,' reports Scott Travis of the South Florida Sun Sentinel. The list includes: 'Forever…' by Judy Blume; 'Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West' by Gregory Maguire; 'This Book Is Gay,' by Juno Dawson; and 'All Boys Aren't Blue' by George M. Johnson. — 'Firefighters union threatens to sue Miami-Dade over proposed budget,' by WLRN's Joshua Ceballos. — 'FAMU President Marva Johnson rolls out 100-day plan as she makes key appointments,' by Tarah Jean of the Tallahassee Democrat. — 'No charges for driver who drove into crowd of protestors at local Tesla dealership,' by Hannah Phillips of the Palm Beach Post. — 'Hundreds leave Palm Beach County School District teaching positions each year,' reports Wayne Washington of the Palm Beach Post. ...HURRICANE HOLE... PEAK SEASON ASSESSMENT — 'The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration announced Thursday it is continuing to predict an above-normal Atlantic hurricane season,' reports Michaela Mulligan of the Tampa Bay Times. 'Meteorologists expect 13 to 18 named storms, of which five to nine could become hurricanes, and of those two to five could ramp up into a major hurricane, a Category 3 storm or higher.' TRUMPLANDIA AND THE SWAMP PAVING THE WAY TOWARD REDISTRICTING — Trump on Thursday said he was ordering a 'new and highly accurate CENSUS,' saying it will be based on the 'information gained from the Presidential Election of 2024.' 'People who are in our country illegally will NOT BE COUNTED IN THE CENSUS,' he wrote in the Truth Social post announcing the move. The census is a constitutionally mandated count of every person in the United States every 10 years, which was last conducted in 2020. A full census has never been conducted mid-decade in this manner, nor has one ever excluded noncitizens from the count. Censuses are immensely important in American governance; each count determines how many House seats every state gets through a process called apportionment, and the results of the census help direct billions of dollars in federal, state and local funding. — POLITICO's Nicole Markus ODDS, ENDS AND FLORIDA MEN — ''Fake nurse' arrested in Florida after seeing more than 4,000 patients,' per the BBC. BIRTHDAYS: Former state Sen. Jose Javier Rodriguez, Democratic candidate for Florida attorney general … Slater Bayliss with The Advocacy Partners … (Saturday) state Rep. Keith Truenow … Emmett Reed, CEO of Florida Health Care Association ... Mark Harper with the Daytona Beach News-Journal ... former state Rep. Sandy Murman … (Sunday) Joshua Karp of Liftoff Campaigns ... former state Sen. Jeremy Ring … Bay News 9's Phil Willette.

Sex toys, crypto and the WNBA
Sex toys, crypto and the WNBA

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

Sex toys, crypto and the WNBA

Happy Friday!🙋🏼‍♀️ I'm Nicole Fallert. Poppy the axolotl found a new home. WNBA sex toy incidents started by Crypto meme coin group Cryptocurrency meme coin creators say they are responsible for the sex toys being thrown at multiple WNBA games, and they are planning more "pranks." You read that correct: From Atlanta to Los Angeles, no arena has been safe from neon green objects whizzing from the stands, through the air and onto WNBA courts. What to know about Trump's proposed census President Donald Trump announced his intention to "immediately begin work on a new" census, raising questions about whether the plan would be constitutional and how it would affect the partisan makeup of Congress. His announcement came amid Texas Republicans' efforts to perform an unusual mid-decade redrawing of congressional maps, which are normally drawn after the census determines the number of seats in each state's delegation at the beginning of each new decade. Political experts told USA TODAY Republicans want to draw new congressional districts, so they might be able to mitigate the number of seats they lose. More news to know now What's the weather today? Check your local forecast here. IndyCar dragged into controversy with Trump administration's ICE car, 'Speedway Slammer' About 70 miles north of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, home of the Indianapolis 500, a new immigration detention center got a noteworthy and controversial name: 'The Speedway Slammer." In a social media post, Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security Kristi Noem published an image of an Indy car driving past a prison emblazoned with the letters ICE — U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement — and No. 5, which belongs to NTT IndyCar Series driver Pato O'Ward, the only Mexican in the Indy 500 and the series this year. The Speedway Slammer joins "Alligator Alcatraz,'' a detention center in Florida that marked the only other partnership with a state to expand ICE detention capacity. One man's journey to reclaim family land in the American South Heirs' property is usually defined as land handed down without clear, official documentation. Over the course of the 20th century, Black Americans lost roughly 80% of the property they owned at the peak of ownership a few decades after the Civil War because of theft and systemic injustices. How hard could it be to "not lose" several dozen acres of land? In a nation where the scars of slavery and racialized violence still loom, pretty hard, as it turns out. Researchers estimate that between 1865 and 1910, Black Americans acquired 15 million acres of land. But by 2001, an estimated 80% of it had been lost. Read Georgia man Saul Blair's story, the first in a two-part USA TODAY series, "The Heir's Property." Today's talkers Don't want Insta followers seeing your location? Instagram's new feature shows users' current locations, prompting some to worry their location will suddenly be shared on the platform. While location services already existed on the app through the tagging option on posts and stories, some social media users raised concerns about Meta's new map feature that shows a user's last active location. A user's location is updated whenever they open the app or return to the app if it's been running in the background, per Meta. Here's how to turn Instagram map location sharing on and off. Photo of the day: Calling all pommel horse fans Missing last summer's Olympics? Get your gymnastics fix this weekend as the U.S. gymnastics championships kick off in New Orleans. Is Simone Biles competing? Nicole Fallert is a newsletter writer at USA TODAY, sign up for the email here. Want to send Nicole a note? Shoot her an email at NFallert@

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