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Restaurants Facing Labor Crunch Ask Trump for Immigration Relief

Restaurants Facing Labor Crunch Ask Trump for Immigration Relief

Bloomberg12 hours ago
The US trade group representing restaurants urged President Donald Trump to weigh immigration relief for some workers, saying the industry is struggling to fill job openings.
In a July 1 letter, the National Restaurant Association encouraged the president to consider 'deferred action with work authorization on a select basis for long-serving employees who pass background checks, pay taxes and meet rigorous vetting standards,' according to a copy of the document seen by Bloomberg News.
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Minnesota lawmaker shootings suspect tells judge he's ‘looking forward' to facts coming out at trial
Minnesota lawmaker shootings suspect tells judge he's ‘looking forward' to facts coming out at trial

Yahoo

time11 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Minnesota lawmaker shootings suspect tells judge he's ‘looking forward' to facts coming out at trial

Vance Boelter, the suspected shooter of two Minnesota lawmakers and their spouses, told the judge during a court hearing Thursday he's 'looking forward' to the facts coming out at trial. Boelter, 57, is facing both state and federal charges related to the deadly shootings of Democratic State House Speaker Emerita Melissa Hortman, and her husband Mark, on June 14. He's also been charged over the shootings of Democratic State Senator John Hoffman and his wife, Yvette, who both survived the attack. Boelter is yet to enter a plea. During the federal court hearing, Boelter waived his right to a detention hearing, where prosecutors provide evidence supporting the suspect's charges, and told the judge he was 'looking forward to court,' where the truth would come out, The New York Times reported. Boelter said this included events related to 'what happened before the 14th,' seemingly referring to the date of the shootings. During the hearing, the judge ordered Boelter to remain in jail while awaiting trial. At his last hearing in late June, a sleep-deprived Boelter complained to a judge over the treatment he had received at the Sherberne County Jail. Boelter's lawyer, Manvir Atwal, said her client had been placed on suicide watch and was living in a cell with only a mat and a pillow. She also claimed the lights were kept on all day and night and another inmate in Boelter's unit had been spreading feces on the wall. Boelter told the judge he hadn't slept for 12 or 14 days and he'd 'appreciate' delaying proceedings, 'So I can get some sleep.' The judge agreed and postponed the hearing until Thursday. The suspect said in court Thursday the lights were still being kept on 24/7, and it has made it difficult to 'know if it's day or night,' the NYT reported. Sherburne County Sheriff Joel Brott called Boelter's complaints 'absurd' in a statement made after the suspect's June 27 hearing. "He is not in a hotel. He's in jail, where a person belongs when they commit the heinous crimes he is accused of committing,' the sheriff said. 'Lights are on 24-7, and need to be so correctional officers doing welfare checks can see that the inmates are okay.' Federal prosecutors say Boelter disguised himself as a police officer to carry out the attacks, which occurred at the lawmakers' Minneapolis-area homes in the early morning hours. Boelter was arrested near his rural Minnesota home after a two-day manhunt. Authorities called the shootings 'politically-motivated.' Prosecutors say handwritten notes were found in Boelter's car with the names of dozens of Minnesota state and federal elected officials which included some of their home addresses. Boelter's wife, Jenny, said in a statement through her lawyer late last month she and her family are 'appalled and horrified' by the shootings. "We are absolutely shocked, heartbroken and completely blindsided,' she said. 'This violence does not at all align with our beliefs as a family. It is a betrayal of everything we hold true as tenets of our Christian faith.'

Cluely's ARR doubled in a week to $7M, founder Roy Lee says. But rivals are coming.
Cluely's ARR doubled in a week to $7M, founder Roy Lee says. But rivals are coming.

Yahoo

time13 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Cluely's ARR doubled in a week to $7M, founder Roy Lee says. But rivals are coming.

Cluely's revenue has skyrocketed to about $7 million in ARR since it launched its new enterprise product a week ago, founder Roy Lee told TechCrunch. 'Every single person who has a meeting or an interview is testing this out.' Cluely, one of Silicon Valley's most-talked-about startups, offers products that use AI to analyze online conversations, deliver real-time notes, provide context, and suggest questions to ask. This information appeared discreetly on the user's screen, invisible to others. For weeks leading up to the product reveal, Lee boasted that the company's annual recurring revenue (ARR) exceeded $3 million and that the startup was profitable. The increase in interest is coming from consumers and businesses alike, he said. Cluely is a startup born of controversy after Lee posted in a viral X thread saying he was suspended by Columbia University because he and a co-founder developed a tool to cheat on job interviews for software engineers. He turned around and created a product and startup out of the tech, originally using the marketing tagline that it helps you 'cheat on everything.' Now that it is backed by big-league VCs like Andreessen Horowitz, Abstract Ventures, and Susa Ventures, it has toned down its marketing to 'Everything You Need. Before You Ask. … This feels like cheating.' It has turned into a Silicon Valley sensation from its rage-bait marketing. But the startup's controversial history hasn't stopped businesses from showing interest in Cluely's product, Lee insists, telling us that it has signed a public company that just this week doubled its annual contract with Cluely to $2.5 million. Lee declined to name the company. The enterprise version of the product is similar to the consumer offering, but it comes with some extra features such as team management and additional security settings, Lee said. Business use cases include sales calls, customer support, and remote tutoring. Which Cluely features are the most interesting to customers? According to Lee, it's Cluely's ability to take real-time notes. 'Meeting notes have been a proven very sticky, very interesting AI use case. The only problem with them is they're all post-call,' Lee said of competitors' products. 'You want to look back at them in the middle of a meeting, and that is what we offer.' However, Cluely's real-time notetaker may be easy to replicate. On Thursday, Pickle, a company that describes itself as a digital clone factory, claimed on X that it built Glass, an open source, free product with very similar functionality to Cluely. By mid-day it had already garnered over 850 stars and been forked nearly 150 times — indicating that the open source developer community is giving this free version a try. Time will tell if Cluely's meteoric rise can withstand competition from free copycat products like Glass. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Slate Auto drops ‘under $20,000' pricing after Trump administration ends federal EV tax credit
Slate Auto drops ‘under $20,000' pricing after Trump administration ends federal EV tax credit

Yahoo

time13 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Slate Auto drops ‘under $20,000' pricing after Trump administration ends federal EV tax credit

Slate Auto, the electric vehicle startup backed by Jeff Bezos, has stopped promoting that its upcoming pickup truck will start 'under $20,000' following passage of President Trump's tax cut bill. The bill, which is expected to be signed into law by Trump on July 4, will cause the federal EV tax credit to end in September — a $7,500 incentive that Slate had counted on to help its all-electric pickup clear that mark. When Slate came out of stealth mode in April, the startup heavily promoted that its all-electric pickup would start at 'under $20,000' with the $7,500 federal EV tax credit. That language was still on Slate's website as recently as yesterday according to the Web Archive. The change is a potential blow to the young company's attempt to make a radically affordable electric vehicle. Slate didn't provide a precise price for the EV at its launch event; and it has yet to say what the actual starting price of its vehicle will be, sans-credit. A Slate spokesperson declined to comment on the change. The company won't start building the truck until the end of 2026 at the earliest. Slate's business is also built around making this vehicle highly customizable, which means it's possible that few people will buy the base model to begin with. The sub-$20,000 price had been a big attraction point for the brand new company's product, and it was a major focus following its April launch event. The auto industry has 'driven prices to a place that most Americans simply can't afford,' chief commercial officer Jeremy Snyder said during the event. 'But we're here to change that.' 'We are building the affordable vehicle that has long been promised but never been delivered,' CEO Chris Barman added at the time. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

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