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How auto parts tariffs could raise car insurance premiums in 2025

CheapInsurance.com reports tariffs on auto parts could raise car insurance premiums by 2025, impacting lower-income and multi-car households most.

During a quiet summer election, one clerk practices to make future elections smoother

Votebeat reports Livonia City Clerk Lori Miller is testing new election processes during August’s quiet election to ensure smoother future elections.

Why many Black Americans are boycotting big-box retail stores: ‘Using my money to resist’

The Economic Hardship Reporting Project and The Guardian report many Black Americans are boycotting big-box stores like Target and Amazon, favoring local businesses instead.

The trouble with Trump’s homelessness plan

The Marshall Project reports Trump’s plan to involuntarily commit more homeless people faces criticism for ignoring root causes, like housing affordability.

America’s child care system relies on immigrants. Without them, it could collapse

The Hechinger Report reports America's child care system significantly relies on immigrants like Maggi, facing threats from anti-immigration policies.

How Trump used the criminal system to massively expand immigration detention

The Marshall Project reports that the Trump administration expanded immigration detention dramatically, leading to dire conditions in overcrowded facilities.

As Republicans spar over IVF, some turn to obscure MAHA-backed alternative

Stateline reports Republican support for IVF is fracturing amid rising far-right views, as some promote alternative treatments like restorative reproductive medicine.

$50 a week for 40 weeks: How no-strings cash changed the lives of teens

The Hechinger Report reports that a $50 weekly cash program for New Orleans teens boosted attendance and financial skills but had mixed academic impacts.

Rural communities, tribes sue EPA over $2.8 billion in canceled funding for flood mitigation and resilience projects

The Daily Yonder looks into rural communities and tribes that are suing the EPA over the cancelation of $2.8 billion in crucial flood mitigation funding.

Research shows evictions are a public health problem. Can eviction prevention be a solution?

Next City reports that evictions in Detroit heighten health risks for Black mothers, linking stress from neighborhood evictions to preterm births.

‘This bill protects our precious waters’: How a Florida environmental group scored a win against Big Oil

The Economic Hardship Reporting Project and The Guardian report Florida's DEP denied an oil drilling permit after community efforts led to House Bill 1143, protecting Apalachicola's waters.

AmeriCorps is under siege. What happens in the communities it serves?

States Newsroom reports that AmeriCorps faces severe funding cuts, impacting community services and member placements across the U.S.

Gun violence in this Midwestern city isn’t abating. Its leaders halted programs that could help.

The Trace reports that Fort Wayne, Indiana, has no government-supported violence prevention or intervention program, which local activists say is contributing to a growing gap in outreach to the young people most active in the streets.

‘We opened a door nobody knew existed’: How displaced Black families won reparations in Portland

Next City reports on Portland's historic $8.5M settlement for Black families displaced in urban renewal, acknowledging systemic racial injustices.

Some California winemakers don’t want tariffs on their European competitors. Here’s why

CalMatters reports some California winemakers oppose European wine tariffs, fearing they harm domestic producers amid rising costs and declining sales.

Most gun violence victims are enrolled in Medicaid. Trump’s cuts are putting them at risk.

The Trace examines the potential effects of the "One Big Beautiful Bill" on the healthcare sector, violence prevention, and mental health services.

A federal program helps families eat healthy meals. Trump’s new legislation cuts it.

Chalkbeat reports that Trump's legislation cuts SNAP-Ed funding, risking increased child hunger and reduced access to fresh produce for families.

Many voters in this state could benefit from a ballot in Arabic, but the law isn’t on their side

Votebeat reports on the need for Arabic ballots in Michigan, highlighting a lack of legal requirements despite a growing Arabic-speaking population.

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