The Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program began in 2012 and has allowed more than 800,000 people to remain in the US. Since 2009, LWVUS has lobbied in favor of permanent protections and a path to citizenship. They emphasize:
Update: Project Bison for carbon capture is delayed
Scheduled to be operational at the end of 2023, the Wyoming facility — see artist’s rendering in the image below — has had delays. The Sweetwater County site has not yet been selected although it should be within 15 miles
What will be left of the (Federal) Voting Act?
June: we shall receive decisions for cases from the November 2022 sitting of the court. Once again, “SCOTUSblog” lists and summarizes the November cases. Of special interest to the LWV is the decision linked t Section 2 of the Voting
Phoenix is largest city to successfully challenge 2020 Census
My surprise is the size of the changes that have been approved. In a few cities, changes will be made to ” group quarters” — dorms, jails, and nursing homes. Phoenix gained 3550 although neither the redistricting nor legislative number
LVW of Laramie again posts an invitation to recent HS graduates to register & vote
Thanks to the Laramie Boomerang, the Laramie league’s ads are optimally located. For 2023, the ad was at the bottom of the first page of the section containing grad pictures. Above our ad were the Whiting School graduates.
CT will decide on a ballot initiative in Nov on whether to allow early voting
CT is one of six states that doesn’t allow early voting, and absentee voting is apparently strict. The national picture is illustrated by the colored map below. This article introduces a number of other restrictions which may surprise us. Read
Justices Ketanji Brown Jackson & Neil Gorsuch find common ground
Not surprisingly, SCOTUS was unanimous in Tyler v. Hennepin County. Here, Hennepin Co. in MN seized an elderly woman’s home over unpaid taxes, sold it, and kept profits far exceeding her tax debt. Justice Roberts said that the 5th Amendment
WY funding plan flaws especially impact pre-school
Today’s interim committee meetings apply pressure to expose gross inequities. Small wonder the State is being sued for improper educational funding. The article begins with the stunning news of a Cheyenne center closing after 50 years of service to “families
Congressional Management Foundation names finalists “Oscars for Congress”
Senator Rothfuss questions Degenfelder about trans cornerstone of her K-12 plan
Superintendent of Education Degenfelder testified before the Joint Education Committee to explain her new K12 plan and the six areas in which goals are defined. The Secretary embellished enough on area #1 to mention critical race theory and phonics education