Welcome to Sunday Morning futures. Im Jason Chaffetz in for maria bartiromo. Former President Trump and Vice President harris are set to make their case to voters across the nation this Tuesday Night in philadelphia on why they should be elected the 47th president of the united states. We will defeat inflation, and we will make America Affordable again. [cheers and applause] we will make america the dominant if Energy Producer in the world by far. Thats called krill, baby, drill, right . Drill, baby, drill. [cheers and applause] and remember, we have more liquid gold under our feet than any other country. We believe in the promise of america, and that includes a topic were going to discuss today which is what i call an Opportunity Economy, building an community economy. [cheers and applause] an Opportunity Economy. And my vision of an Opportunity Economy is one where everyone can compete and have a real chance to succeed. Jason Coming Up, former housing and urban Development Secretary
Welcome to Sunday Morning futures. Im Jason Chaffetz in for maria bartiromo. Former President Trump and Vice President harris are set to make their case to voters across the nation this Tuesday Night in philadelphia on why they should be elected the 47th president of the united states. We will defeat inflation, and we will make America Affordable again. [cheers and applause] we will make america the dominant if Energy Producer in the world by far. Thats called krill, baby, drill, right . Drill, baby, drill. [cheers and applause] and remember, we have more liquid gold under our feet than any other country. We believe in the promise of america, and that includes a topic were going to discuss today which is what i call an Opportunity Economy, building an community economy. [cheers and applause] an Opportunity Economy. And my vision of an Opportunity Economy is one where everyone can compete and have a real chance to succeed. Jason Coming Up, former housing and urban Development Secretary
The mood was celebratory as Kentucky and federal officials crowded into the Capitol Rotunda on a cold January day in 2001 to announce the end of five years of federal oversight of the state’s problem-ridden juvenile justice system. “We’re never going to slide back to where we were in 1995,” said then-Juvenile Justice Commissioner Ralph […] The post Juvenile justice: ‘From nothing to something and then right back to nothing’ appeared first on Kentucky Lantern.
The mood was celebratory as Kentucky and federal officials crowded into the Capitol Rotunda on a cold January day in 2001 to announce the end of five years of federal
Senate Bill 242 would cost $165 million and include building at least three new facilities and collaboration between the Department of Juvenile Justice, judges and the Cabinet for Health and