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Youth drug use is down, but overdoses have risen. One town’s schools have a possible solution

The Hechinger Report reports Fort Kent, Maine, launches a recovery high school to combat rising youth overdoses, prioritizing education and sobriety.

How the AI-enabled race for taxpayer money starts in a superintendent’s inbox

Chalkbeat reports that superintendents are overwhelmed by marketing emails from ed tech companies, complicating their search for quality tools amid tight budgets.

When ICE shows up, these businesses will be ready

Reasons to be Cheerful reports on a rising network of 4th Amendment Workplaces in North Carolina, training businesses to protect immigrant workers from ICE raids.

‘They want to keep denying us our rights’: Workers in the dairy industry fight for basic labor protections

The Economic Hardship Reporting Project and The Guardian reports Vermont dairy workers, often undocumented, struggle for basic labor rights, earning below minimum wage with no protections.

What the US can teach other countries about home-based child care

The Hechinger Report reports on global home-based child care, highlighting South Africa's push for policy reform and training in early childhood education.

Portugal cleared hundreds of thousands of immigration files. What the backlog means for expats now

Movingto reports Portugal has cleared 525,000 immigration files and held 763,000 appointments, easing backlog pressure, while expats must navigate stricter processes.

What Americans think about election policy and how the 2026 elections will go

Votebeat reports Americans are concerned about election fraud and voter disenfranchisement ahead of the 2026 midterms, supporting voter ID but opposing federal oversight.

Ready to recall: These meats are behind 40% of USDA food warnings

Sentient reports that 40% of USDA food warnings involve ready-to-eat meats, contributing to significant recalls due to contamination and health risks.

The controversies surrounding the new Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library

RE:PUBLIC reports the Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library in North Dakota opens July 4, sparking controversy over Roosevelt's views on Indigenous people and current leadership’s conservation policies.

How a data center derailed $240,000 for affordable housing in a rural area

The Daily Yonder reports that a proposed data center derailed $240,000 in affordable housing funding in Wiscasset, Maine, raising concerns over lost opportunities.

How gangs connected to India are terrorizing a California immigrant community

CalMatters reports that California's immigrant Sikh community faces intimidation from Indian gangs, threatening safety and extorting money during events like Kabaddi tournaments.

Four years after Supreme Court ruling, more candidates repay campaign loans with post-election cash

OpenSecrets reports that following a Supreme Court ruling, candidates are increasingly using post-election funds to repay personal campaign loans, prompting ethical concerns.

Portugal's golden visa moved from property to private capital. Here's what changed.

Movingto reports Portugal's golden visa program has shifted from real estate investments to private capital, focusing on job creation and innovation.

Survey finds 3 in 5 women have felt unsafe in a rideshare, with most using fake phone calls as a safety tactic

A Case for Women reports on industry trends, analysis, and strategies for effective SEO and link building to enhance online visibility.

Portugal put golden visa renewals online. The paper trail still matters.

Movingto reports Portugal's golden visa renewals will be handled online from February 2026, streamlining the process but emphasizing the importance of maintaining thorough records for compliance.

Trump officials, billionaires and the quiet reshaping of America's public lands

Floodlight reports on the impact of wealthy interests on public lands access in Montana, highlighting significant land swaps that threaten local rights.

North America's emergency plans were built for seniors who don't exist anymore

Life Assure reports that most older adults in North America now use cell phones, with only 12.3% relying on landlines.

How same-sex divorce differs from traditional divorce, and where the law still has gaps

Skillern Firm Divorce & Child Custody Lawyers reports that same-sex divorce mirrors traditional divorce mostly but faces unique legal gaps, especially regarding parentage and pre-marriage assets.

5 countries are driving the EB-2 NIW surge. Here’s why.

Manifest Law reports that China, India, Iran, Nigeria, and Bangladesh lead in EB-2 NIW approvals, driven by advanced degrees and U.S. national interests.

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