oh, right. i m a little disturbed by that number because i know i m looking at armed carjackings or through the roof right now at 464th this year and well may be murderers are down but carjacking certainly are not down or other major crimes in the city we have to address that. the loss of the d.c. council s passing is not open. ashley: do you think the mayor will sign this question not know she was disheartened by this. i have confidence that she does not agree with the bill. but here is the problem, even though the mayor may disagree with it, the d.c. council has enough votes to override the mayor and sent still to congress. listen, let s go straight to congress. ashley: i know you said you don t agree with those numbers, especially the carjackings. possible homicide you do, but what is it going to take? i feel like i asked this question all the time but what will it take for people to
person should get $350,000 in compensation, and that black-owned businesses should get a quarter of a million dollars on top of that. but california is the first but not the only state to consider reparations. new york city mayor eric adams also publicly supporting the initiative calling it long overdue. and in november, california announced despite nearly a $100 billion surplus last year, the state was currently looking at a $25 million deficit for next year. the california task force has until july 1, 2023, that s their deadline to deliver a final report to the state legislature on just what should be done and how much should be given out. john. john: see which way it goes. madison, thank you. sandra. sandra: inflation putting a damper on the holiday season, level of uncertainty never good for wall street stocks. dow off 464 points, grover
assault. the dallas police chief thinks he never should have been on the streets in the first place. ankle monitors do not work for violent criminals and anyone that says there is some form of accountability by putting an anchor monitor on a violent criminal is being disingenuous. the study tracked 464 violent criminals from arrests in 2021 through may of this year. it found that more than half were out on bond. you heard that right, including one in three murder suspects. the chief does not blame the local d.a. here. rather municipal court judges who he says essentially let the offenders walk. experts say that court records are tough to navigate making it difficult to know which judges make what rulings. this is not just a dallas problem or a texas problem. it is a national problem.
time filling open positions. so maysville, missouri, though, thinks it has found the answer. maysville is a small area, it s a rural area. the district there is moving to a four-day school week. so here s how it works. no school on mondays. the other remaining days are 30 minutes longer. so you have fewer days, but longer hours. of the 464 school districts in missouri, about a quarter have moved to four-day weeks this year. now we ll bring in the architect of this and this is the maysville superintendent chris hueslinga. what are you learning? how are the students reacting to this and how are parents reacting? it is early in the game with this. so far parents have endorsed it. students enjoy having the extra monday off because there are so many activities and being it s a small community they like to do