reporter: there s certainly more people out here today than we ve seen in days past, especially because today we know exactly what we will get decisions on because it s the last day. you mentioned those two big cases, of course at the end of pride month. that case that has to do with whether or not a web designer can refuse to design a wedding website for a gay couple. we could see some reaction to that. the biggest one we re watching for is on student loans, whether or not biden s student loan forgiveness program will stand. the biden administration was using a congressional act started after 9/11 in 2003. it was continued through the pandemic, even invoke bid betsy devoss under the trump administration. can student loans be forgiven in their entirety forever? this would affect about 43,000 people, sorry, we re starting to get some decisions just in now. so i m going to go listen for what those are, and i said 43,000, that s 43 million people, and i ll be back to you when
let s have a negotiation. let s walk out where the american people win. this hour, how did a stranger get past secret service and on the national security advisor s home at 3:00 in the morning? the battle over abortion. north carolina republicans override democratic governor roy cooper s veto of a bill banning most abortions after 12 weeks. a three-judge panel on the fifth circuit court of appeal will hear the arguments against the texas ruling all but banning the abortion pill, a case that will inevitably go back to the supreme court. good day, everyone. i m andrea mitchell in new york. president biden heading to hiroshima, japan, this hour, for meetings with g7 allies. cancelling stops in australia and new guinea to return to washington for what he hopes will be a final agreement to raise the debt ceiling. a meeting between the president, speaker mccarthy and other congressional leaders ended tuesday with an agreement to streamline the talks, with the white house and
Child & Family Service hosted a lunchtime gathering of more than 30 local nonprofit leaders and partners in Waikīkī earlier this week to share its pilot program results of “Transition To Success,” which took place on Maui and Kauaʻi and showed statistical improvement in positive changes in the lives of its 986 participants.
FRESNO, Calif. (KSEE/KGPE) – Philanthropist MacKenzie Scott has donated millions to nearly 80 California-based nonprofit organizations – and one of them is right here in the Central Valley. The organization Scott donated to is called “Shine Together,” which helps young mothers break the cycle of generational poverty. They received $2 million from Scott. Scott, who […]
Students in these Title I schools face challenges like language barriers, generational poverty, lack of resources, but they also struggle to retain teachers.