Rechercher dans ce blog

Sunday, April 30, 2023

Charges remain pending for turkey poachers who violated Kansas, Nebraska laws - WIBW

NORTON CO., Kan. (WIBW) - Charges remain pending for two turkey poachers who allegedly violated hunting laws in both Kansas and Nebraska.

Game Wardens with the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks say they recently came across a pair that had been hunting turkey in Norton Co.

When the hunters noticed the Game Wardens, officials said one attempted to fill out a Nebraska turkey tag for a bird that was previously killed in Kansas.

Officials noted that three turkeys were seized in connection with violations of hunting regulations in both Kansas and Nebraska. Charges remain pending.

Adblock test (Why?)


Charges remain pending for turkey poachers who violated Kansas, Nebraska laws - WIBW
Read More

Pending Home Sales Decreased 5.2% in March - National Association of Realtors

WASHINGTON (April 27, 2023) – Pending home sales decreased in March for the first time since November 2022, according to the National Association of REALTORS®. Three U.S. regions posted monthly losses, while the South increased. All four regions saw year-over-year declines in transactions.

The Pending Home Sales Index (PHSI)* – a forward-looking indicator of home sales based on contract signings – waned by 5.2% to 78.9 in March. Year over year, pending transactions dropped by 23.2%. An index of 100 is equal to the level of contract activity in 2001.

"The lack of housing inventory is a major constraint to rising sales," said NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun. "Multiple offers are still occurring on about a third of all listings, and 28% of homes are selling above list price. Limited housing supply is simply not meeting demand nationally."

NAR forecasts that the economy will continue adding jobs, albeit at a slower pace, and mortgage rates will drop – with the 30-year fixed mortgage rate progressively falling to 6.0% this year and to 5.6% in 2024. Housing starts will fall from last year by 7.3% in 2023, to 1.44 million, and then increase 6.9% in 2024, to 1.54 million.

"Sales in the second half of the year should be notably better than the first half as job gains continue and more favorable mortgage rates are expected," said Yun. "Sales of new homes are already matching 2019 pre-COVID activity and are expected to increase in 2023, largely due to plentiful inventory in this segment of the market."

With continued job gains and improving interest rates, NAR anticipates existing-home sales will steadily improve in the upcoming months but will still come up short on an annual figure. Existing-home sales will drop from the prior year by 9.3% in 2023, to 4.56 million, before increasing by 15.4% in 2024, to 5.26 million. Newly constructed home sales will increase from last year by 4.5% in 2023, to 670,000, due to more plentiful inventory in this segment of the market, and increase by another 11.9% in 2024, to 750,000.

Compared to last year, NAR forecasts that median existing-home prices will mostly stabilize – with the national median existing-home price decreasing by 1.8% in 2023, to $379,600, and then improving by 2.8% in 2024, to $390,000. The expensive West region of the U.S. will see lower prices, but the affordable Midwest region will likely squeak out a positive gain. The median new home price will be lower by 1.9% in 2023, to $449,100, followed by an improvement of 4.2% in 2024, to $468,000.

Pending Home Sales Regional Breakdown

The Northeast PHSI fell 8.1% from last month to 66.6, a decline of 24.3% from March 2022. The Midwest index dropped 10.7% to 75.7 in March, down 21.5% from one year ago.

The South PHSI improved 0.2% to 99.6 in March, falling 19.8% from the prior year. The West index decreased 8.0% in March to 59.4, reducing 32.2% from March 2022.

The National Association of REALTORS® is America's largest trade association, representing more than 1.5 million members involved in all aspects of the residential and commercial real estate industries. The term REALTOR® is a registered collective membership mark that identifies a real estate professional who is a member of the National Association of REALTORS® and subscribes to its strict Code of Ethics.

# # #

*The Pending Home Sales Index is a leading indicator for the housing sector, based on pending sales of existing homes. A sale is listed as pending when the contract has been signed but the transaction has not closed, though the sale usually is finalized within one or two months of signing.

Pending contracts are good early indicators of upcoming sales closings. However, the amount of time between pending contracts and completed sales is not identical for all home sales. Variations in the length of the process from pending contract to closed sale can be caused by issues such as buyer difficulties with obtaining mortgage financing, home inspection problems, or appraisal issues.

The index is based on a sample that covers about 40% of multiple listing service data each month. In developing the model for the index, it was demonstrated that the level of monthly sales-contract activity parallels the level of closed existing-home sales in the following two months.

An index of 100 is equal to the average level of contract activity during 2001, which was the first year to be examined. By coincidence, the volume of existing-home sales in 2001 fell within the range of 5.0 to 5.5 million, which is considered normal for the current U.S. population.

NOTE: Existing-Home Sales for April will be reported on May 18. The next Pending Home Sales Index will be on May 25. All release times are 10 a.m. Eastern. View the NAR Statistical News Release Schedule.

Adblock test (Why?)


Pending Home Sales Decreased 5.2% in March - National Association of Realtors
Read More

Villager facing pending DUI lands back behind bars - Villages-News

Daniel Lee Messerschmidt was booked Saturday at the Sumter County Detention Center
Daniel Lee Messerschmidt was booked Saturday at the Sumter County Detention Center.

A Villager facing a pending drunk driving charge after crashing his SUV in December landed back behind bars Saturday after he was caught back behind the wheel.

Daniel Lee Messerschmidt, 66, of the Village of Bonita, was booked Saturday at the Sumter County Detention Center. He was being held without bond as his arrest was considered a violation of his probation.

It’s the latest trip to the jail for the oral surgeon who studied at the University of Illinois Chicago College of Dentistry.

Earlier this year, Messerschmidt, a former resident of the Village of Poinciana, was sentenced in a child mentoring case in which he apparently developed an infatuation on the mother of the child he was supposed to be mentoring through the Dads for a Day program. When she rebuffed the then-married Villager, the woman came home and her found clothes had been scattered on the back steps of her residence. Her iMac computer was on the floor of the kitchen with the screen shattered, the arrest report said. Messerschmidt was ordered to seek mental health counseling, placed on probation for three years and ordered to perform 200 hours of community service. He and his wife divorced after his arrest.

Daniel Messerschmidt posted this photo of himself on social media
Daniel Messerschmidt posted this photo of himself on social media.

Prior to sentencing, he was arrested on a charge of driving under the influence after crashing his SUV.

He was involved in the accident in the wee hours Dec. 17 on Morse Boulevard, south of Bonita Boulevard, according to an arrest report from the Florida Highway Patrol. When a trooper went to interview Messerschmidt at the emergency room, it appeared as if he had been drinking. He failed field sobriety exercises and provided breath samples that registered .105 and .100 blood alcohol content. He was arrested on a charge of driving under the influence. At the time, Messerschmidt had been free on bond in the child mentoring case. His bond was later revoked.

Adblock test (Why?)


Villager facing pending DUI lands back behind bars - Villages-News
Read More

Pending home sales fall for the first time since November - MarketWatch

The numbers: Contract signings on U.S. homes fell for the first time since last November, as buyers faced a tough market in March due to an undersupply of houses.  

U.S. pending-home sales fell 5.2% in March, according to the monthly index released Thursday by the National Association of Realtors (NAR).

Sales dropped for the first time since...

Adblock test (Why?)


Pending home sales fall for the first time since November - MarketWatch
Read More

Saturday, April 29, 2023

With Oakland A’s back in town, fans hold protest in response to pending Las Vegas deal: ‘I feel anger and betrayal’ - The Mercury News

A's fan Keefe Mahar walks on bridge with a protest sign "Fisher is Scum" as groups called Oakland Forever and (Un)Rooted in Oakland gather in protest to the team's potential move to Las Vegas outside the ballpark before Friday night's game against the Cincinnati Red on Friday, April 28, 2023 in Oakland, Calif. (Josie Lepe for Bay Area News Group)
A’s fan Keefe Mahar walks on bridge with a protest sign “Fisher is Scum” as groups called Oakland Forever and (Un)Rooted in Oakland gather in protest to the team’s potential move to Las Vegas outside the ballpark before Friday night’s game against the Cincinnati Red on Friday, April 28, 2023 in Oakland, Calif. (Josie Lepe for Bay Area News Group)

OAKLAND — Overlooking a river of sewage and sidestepping broken glass on a concrete pathway connecting the BART station to the Coliseum, a few dozen A’s fans gathered before Friday night’s game to protest the team’s expected move to Las Vegas.

The rally, organized by a pair of fan groups in response to the A’s announcement that they agreed to buy land for a new ballpark in Vegas, started with just a few people holding cardboard signs around 5 p.m.

It was more of a small gathering than a protest, but as more fans crossed the bridge to enter the stadium closer to the 6:45 p.m. game time, many joined to express their frustration with the team’s expected move after 55 years in Oakland.

  • Oakland A's fan Mike Davis-Adams works on his protest sign...

    Oakland A's fan Mike Davis-Adams works on his protest sign as the group gathers to protest the team’s potential move to Las Vegas outside the ballpark before Friday night’s game against the Cincinnati Reds. On Friday, April 28, 2023 in Oakland, Calif. (Josie Lepe for Bay Area News Group)

  • AÕs fan Sam Miller, and Dave Miller walk on bridge...

    AÕs fan Sam Miller, and Dave Miller walk on bridge with a protest sign saying Ò SellÓ, in protest of the teamÕs potential move to Las Vegas outside the ballpark before Friday nightÕs game against the Cincinnati Reds on Friday, April 28, 2023 in Oakland, Calif. (Josie Lepe for Bay Area News Group)

  • Oakland Athletics fan Chris Scott, left, and others hold up...

    Oakland Athletics fan Chris Scott, left, and others hold up sign as they protest the team's potential move to Las Vegas and call for the ownership to sell the team before a baseball game between the Athletics and the Cincinnati Reds in Oakland, Calif., Friday, April 28, 2023. (Josie Lepe for Bay Area News Group)

“There’s solidarity,” said A’s fan Chris Scott, who lives in the East Bay. “It’s a way to express our feelings and not just sulk and get walked on by a terrible ownership group.”

Scott was holding signs that read, “Sell #Fisherout” in a message to owner John Fisher, who took over full ownership of the team in 2016. Several fans held similar signs, including one that read, “Rooted in Oakland” with “Rooted” crossed out, a response to the team’s ironic slogan, which is still displayed in a banner across one side of the Coliseum.

“I feel anger and betrayal,” said lifelong A’s fan Keefe Mahar, who made the trip from West Sacramento. “But we’re used to this. It’s not like, ‘Oh this just happened.’ It’s been going on for 20-something years. We’ve been worrying about this moment for 20 years and it’s finally here.”

  • Oakland A's fans chant in protest “ Sell the team...

    Oakland A's fans chant in protest “ Sell the team and Fisher Sucks” during the game against the Cincinnati Reds during the sixth inning on Friday, April 28, 2023 in Oakland, Calif. (Josie Lepe for Bay Area News Group)

  • Oakland A's fans chant in protest “ Sell the team...

    Oakland A's fans chant in protest “ Sell the team and Fisher Sucks” during the game against the Cincinnati Reds during the sixth inning on Friday, April 28, 2023 in Oakland, Calif. (Josie Lepe for Bay Area News Group)

  • Oakland A's fans chant in protest during the game against...

    Oakland A's fans chant in protest during the game against the Cincinnati Reds during the sixth inning on Friday, April 28, 2023 in Oakland, Calif. (Josie Lepe for Bay Area News Group)

  • Oakland A's fans chant in protest during the game against...

    Oakland A's fans chant in protest during the game against the Cincinnati Reds during the sixth inning on Friday, April 28, 2023 in Oakland, Calif. (Josie Lepe for Bay Area News Group)

Friday’s game against the Reds was the A’s first game back in Oakland since announcing the deal with Las Vegas late on April 19, the last day of the club’s previous homestand.

“Coming back, we’ll see how the fans react,” said A’s infielder Jace Peterson. “Hopefully it’s good and hopefully they understand it has nothing to do with the players. We can’t control any of that. We’re here to get wins for them, play hard for them and put on a show for them. I’m sure they understand that. They’re upset and hurt, I’m sure. But it doesn’t matter what we think or what we say.”

There was some debate among the protestors as to whether or not they’d actually attend Friday’s game. The original plan was for them to stay outside the stadium but several fans said they’d probably go in.

As of an hour before game time, tickets were available on StubHub for as low as $3.

Mahar said he’d probably attend the game. He became an A’s fan due to his mother, Lorna Keefe, who died a few weeks ago. She was 73.

“My mom is – was – a big A’s fan,” he said. “We used to talk A’s baseball all the time. It’s weird, you feel like a jerk because it’s like, ‘Sure, this is just a sports team, big deal.’ But it’s more than that.

“So many people can relate. It’s a generational sport. People get into baseball because of who their parents or grandparents are rooting for.”

Mahar said the last game his mom watched was Opening Day, when the A’s beat Shohei Ohtani and the Angels, 2-1, at the Coliseum.

“So she went out on a good note,” he said. “As mad as I was when (the Vegas deal was announced), it happened a week or so after she passed. I was like, ‘At least she didn’t know about it.’ It gives you some weird comfort.”

At least a handful of the protesters made it inside the stadium and set up in right field, where they hung signs that said “SELL” and “STAY” over the wall while chanting, “sell the team” and some harsher chants directed towards Fisher.

Oakland A's fans post signs at the game against the Cincinnati Reds during the first inning of a baseball game on Friday, April 28, 2023 in Oakland, Calif. (Josie Lepe for Bay Area News Group)
Oakland A’s fans post signs at the game against the Cincinnati Reds during the first inning of a baseball game on Friday, April 28, 2023 in Oakland, Calif. (Josie Lepe for Bay Area News Group) 

A’s manager Mark Kotsay said before the game he understood the fans’ frustration.

“If you don’t have feelings for the fans right now, you haven’t been in this organization or don’t understand what the history of this organization is about,” Kotsay said. “We definitely understand what the fans are going through. Our mindset is that we need to perform and play the game, to give the effort and show the grit we talk about.”

The team’s deal to buy land in Las Vegas has not been a conversation in the clubhouse, the manager said.

“Our topic of conversation has been, how do we win more games?” he said.

The A’s entered Friday 5-21 and in danger of setting a new MLB record for most losses in the month of April with a three-game set with the Reds still remaining. The 1988 Orioles hold the record with 22 losses.

“All we can control is our preparation,” Peterson said. “I hate it for the Oakland fanbase. I know there are great fans here in Oakland. With the Warriors and the Raiders moving too, it’s unfortunate, but that’s the kind of stuff that we have no say in, we have no control over. It’s way above our pay-grade. We’re going to show up and work.”

Adblock test (Why?)


With Oakland A’s back in town, fans hold protest in response to pending Las Vegas deal: ‘I feel anger and betrayal’ - The Mercury News
Read More

REMINDER! The De Soto Grand Parade is today, weather pending! - WWSB

BRADENTON, Fla. (WWSB) - REMINDER! The De Soto Grand Parade is today, weather pending!

Roads will close beginning at 5 p.m. The parade begins at 7 p.m. Roads will reopen after pedestrian traffic is clear and the streets are clean.

Road closures are as follows:

🚧 Green Bridge (both directions)

🚧 Manatee Avenue W. between 1st St. W. & 43rd St. W.

🚧 39th St. W. between 9th Ave. W. & Manatee Ave.

🚧 9th Avenue W. between 30th St. W. & 39th St. W.

Adblock test (Why?)


REMINDER! The De Soto Grand Parade is today, weather pending! - WWSB
Read More

Friday, April 28, 2023

Charges pending in Clarksburg bar shooting - WDTV

CLARKSBURG, W.Va (WDTV) - Authorities say charges are pending in a Clarksburg bar shooting that sent three people to the hospital.

The shooting happened early Sunday morning at Good Times Bar on Milford St. in Clarksburg.

Three people were shot and sent to area hospitals.

One of them, 49-year-old Gary Meeks, of Stonewood, is in critical condition.

Detectives told 5 News on Friday they’re still working to get statements from people at the bar as well as other evidence.

What evidence they do have has been sent to State Police for firearm forensics.

They say until they get the results, no charges will be filed.

The other two men who were shot were listed in stable condition.

FOR PRIOR COVERAGE

3 people shot at Clarksburg bar

Police ID victims in Clarksburg bar shooting

Adblock test (Why?)


Charges pending in Clarksburg bar shooting - WDTV
Read More

Charges pending for two in U.S. 17 'road rage' incident - WECT

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

Charges pending for two in U.S. 17 'road rage' incident  WECT
Charges pending for two in U.S. 17 'road rage' incident - WECT
Read More

Russian TV Alarmed by Ukraine's Pending Counteroffensive - Newsweek

Russian state TV hosts and guests in a recent segment seemed worried about Ukraine's pending counteroffensive, stressing that Russian troops should continue to prepare for Kyiv's attacks amid Russia's ongoing war with the Eastern European country.

Anton Gerashchenko, adviser to Ukraine's Minister of Internal Affairs, posted to Twitter on Friday the clip of the Russian state TV segment with English subtitles, and wrote that Russia "worrying about Ukrainian counteroffensive now seems to be a regular installment on Russian propaganda shows."

The battle between Russian and Ukrainian forces has extended to major cities since the war began last February, including in Kyiv, Odessa, Kherson, and Bakhmut, the latter of which has seen months-long of intense fighting. Meanwhile, Western nations continue to send military aid to Ukraine, including tanks, artillery, and advanced military equipment to help the war-torn country prepare for its spring counteroffensive.

Still, Russian forces based along southern and eastern Ukraine have been maintaining and advancing their positions ahead of Kyiv's counteroffensive, according to Denis Pushilin, a Russian politician and the acting head of the Donetsk People's Republic.

"The enemy continues to saturate the line of contact with reconnaissance assets, modern drones not commercial Chinese drones, but military drones from various countries, and Ukrainian drones with good cameras often appear," a Russian TV guest said during the televised segment.

The Russian TV guest continued: "The enemy is saturating the line of contact with electronic warfare and electronic suppression, as well as with reconnaissance equipment. This is also a sign that the Kyiv regime is actively preparing for counter-offensive actions. All in all, it is alarming along the entire line of contact."

Later on during the segment, a TV host warned Russian troops against relaxing because Ukrainian forces are "colossal for the current times," adding that weaponry provided by the West is a "deadly danger" to Russian soldiers and civilians.

"And even based on the political conjuncture that is taking place, they will, of course, attack," the host predicted. "We don't know which way or where. We [Russia] are preparing, but the main thing for us now is not to make the mistakes that we obviously made in the autumn. And in this sense, we are not waiting, we are preparing. We should not relax because there is a lot at stake."

Rehearsal of the Victory Day
Russian servicemen talk in central Moscow on April 27. Russian state TV hosts and guests in a recent segment seemed worried about Ukraine's pending counteroffensive, stressing that Russian troops should continue to prepare for Kyiv's attacks amid Russia's ongoing war with the Eastern European country. ALEXANDER NEMENOV/AFP via Getty Images

The Russian military situation has been "tense" in combat hotpots in the Donetsk area, Pushilin told the state-owned Rossiya-24 television channel on Thursday.

"The Ugledar area remains tense," Pushilin said, according to Russian news agency TASS, using the Russian name of the Ukrainian town of Vuhledar, where intense fighting has been recently reported. "The enemy has been making sporadic attempts to counterattack in the effort to improve their positions...but our units have been advancing anyway."

"The situation remains tense, but it is fully under control," he added.

Russian troops also advanced around Bakhmut and cut the last route available for the resupply of Ukrainian troops who are still battling in the city, according to Pushilin.

Newsweek reached out by email to the Russian defense ministry for comment.

Adblock test (Why?)


Russian TV Alarmed by Ukraine's Pending Counteroffensive - Newsweek
Read More

Pending Home Sales Fall 5.2% in March Amid Low Inventory of Houses for Sale - U.S. News & World Report

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

Pending Home Sales Fall 5.2% in March Amid Low Inventory of Houses for Sale  U.S. News & World Report
Pending Home Sales Fall 5.2% in March Amid Low Inventory of Houses for Sale - U.S. News & World Report
Read More

Thursday, April 27, 2023

Pending Home Sales Unexpectedly Declined in March - Mortgage News Daily

The Pending Home Sales data from the National Association of Realtors (NAR) is one of the most timely measurements of home sales activity in terms of monthly data because it measures sales contracts as opposed to closings. 

2023 was off to a strong start with big gains in January followed by another modest improvement in February.  March's data was expected to follow suit with a 0.5% increase, but the actual number came in 5.2% lower.  Throw all of the above on a chart along with the past few years and it looks like this:

To be sure, context matters if we're going to use words like "strong."  The past two months of gains were only really strong relative to the very low numbers seen at the end of 2022.  That's fine though.  We shouldn't expect a resounding surge back to long-term highs in an environment where inventory remains excruciatingly tight with rates still uncomfortably close to multi-decade highs.

NAR put the blame on inventory this time around, with Chief Economist Lawrence Yun saying "The lack of housing inventory is a major constraint to rising sales. Multiple offers are still occurring on about a third of all listings, and 28% of homes are selling above list price. Limited housing supply is simply not meeting demand nationally."  

But it wouldn't be unfair to consider that the relatively higher rates in March had an impact as well.  

 

Adblock test (Why?)


Pending Home Sales Unexpectedly Declined in March - Mortgage News Daily
Read More

US pending home sales slump unexpectedly in March - Reuters

April 27 (Reuters) - Contracts to buy U.S. previously owned homes tumbled unexpectedly in March to snap a three-month rebound, raising a caution flag about what had appeared to be a nascent recovery in a housing market that has been clobbered by rising interest rates.

The National Association of Realtors (NAR) said on Thursday its Pending Home Sales Index, based on signed contracts, fell 5.2% last month to 78.9, the lowest since December. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast pending sales to have increased 0.5% in March, but the reported decline was larger than even the most pessimistic estimate in the survey.

"The lack of housing inventory is a major constraint to rising sales," said NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun. "Multiple offers are still occurring on about a third of all listings, and 28% of homes are selling above list price. Limited housing supply is simply not meeting demand nationally."

The housing market has been the sector of the economy most visibly affected by the Federal Reserve's aggressive run of interest rate increases aimed at bringing down inflation, but 2023 had begun with some indications the worst may have passed.

That optimism was dented earlier this month when NAR reported that existing home sales slid 2.4% last month. While some firming has continued in the much-smaller market for new homes, the pending homes data suggests the market's overall recovery is likely to be choppy.

Yun said sales should improve later in the year as he expects continued job growth and mortgage interest rates to fall to about 6% by year end from the current 6.55%.

Contract signings were lower in the Northeast, Midwest and West, while the South saw a fractional gain.

Reporting by Dan Burns; Editing by Andrea Ricci

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Adblock test (Why?)


US pending home sales slump unexpectedly in March - Reuters
Read More

US Pending Home Sales Fall 5.2%, Biggest Drop Since September - Bloomberg

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

US Pending Home Sales Fall 5.2%, Biggest Drop Since September  Bloomberg
US Pending Home Sales Fall 5.2%, Biggest Drop Since September - Bloomberg
Read More

US Pending Home Sales Fall 5.2%, Biggest Drop Since September - Bloomberg

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

US Pending Home Sales Fall 5.2%, Biggest Drop Since September  Bloomberg
US Pending Home Sales Fall 5.2%, Biggest Drop Since September - Bloomberg
Read More

Wednesday, April 26, 2023

Amazon's pending price hike stirs debate among media owners - Digiday

Amazon Advertising is arguably the rising star of adland, with its Amazon Publisher Services posing a realistic contender to market incumbent Google when it comes to the industry’s sell-side monetization options.

Although, an upcoming price increase for a service that helps media owners access APS’ lucrative buyer demand may have some weighing their options with the age-old quandary of “who should foot the bill?” — fueling debate among those affected.

In recent weeks, representatives of Amazon Publisher Services began contacting supply-side platforms, ad tech companies that connect publishers with advertisers, informing them of a pending increase for its Transparent Ad Marketplace (TAM). Amazon confirmed that the TAM bidding structure would change on May 1 in a statement provided to Digiday.

“Effective May 1, 2023, APS will implement a change to our TAM buyer fees,” according to an email attributed to APS that was also shared with Digiday by a publisher-side source, who declined to be named. “We are replacing the current $0.01 CPM fee on paid impressions with a 2.5% fee on net revenue delivered to publishers. There will be no change to auction mechanics as buyers are contractually required to submit net bids to Amazon.”

An Amazon spokesperson was unable to provide comment on record by press time. Albeit, multiple sources pointed out how the communiquĂ© went on to assert “that it is against buyer contracts with APS to charge publishers post-auction.”

Per multiple sources, the wording of the above poses those on the sell-side of the industry with a dilemma, as SSPs have historically shouldered the CPM fee under the previous APS billing model. An intuitive reaction would be to pass such price increases along the supply chain with publishers (ultimately) footing the bill.

PreBid or TAM?

However, the above wording suggests such a move is out of bounds with the scenario, prompting a debate about what they should do next. One option would be to shift from Amazon’s TAM to PreBid, open-source software that can help publishers source demand from open independent SSPs without the fees often associated with Big Tech’s platforms.

Meanwhile, Matt Barash, svp, Americas, global publishing, at Index Exchange, told Digiday that his outlet would shoulder the increase in APS’ buyer fees during May. “In a tough economy, margin matters and so the alternative in PreBid becomes cost-effective for a publisher willing to make the integration, and recoup the investment over the long haul,” he added. “We’re going to pick up the tab for the first month to help buyers better understand their options.”

David Kohl, CEO of TrustX, a sell-side service for publishers, told Digiday that “sophisticated publishers” are likely to opt for supply paths whereby the industry’s notorious “tech tax” is minimized. However, separate sources told Digiday that migrating to a different platform will likely lead to a reduction in TAM-related revenue, as much of its demand comes from the Amazon DSP.

“Publishers now need to yield optimize and see if they could get the demand / budget via other sources. I believe mostly not,” added a separate source who requested anonymity due to their employer’s PR policy. “This means, that this is almost a mandatory fee unless advertisers will move out spend from Amazon DSP which means they loose access to Amazon Audience Targeting.”

Costs keep rising

Rob Beeler of publisher consulting service Beeler.Tech further told Digiday it will negatively impact publishers’ ability to optimize their programmatic setups. “Amazon or the SSPs have to solve [issues] so that publishers have accurate data about what the bids and the revenue they’re collecting [via TAM],” he added. “This is going to cause discrepancies, it’s murky.”

Chris Kane, CEO of consultancy service source, characterized the latest developments as “a pretty clear movement of ad tech vendors to cut out other ad tech vendors,” but that publishers are still going to face an increase in their “ad tech tax” no matter what.

“It seems like publishers are unanimously saying, ‘Our effective ad tech fees are increasing, and we don’t really have any leverage to push back,'” he added.

Adblock test (Why?)


Amazon's pending price hike stirs debate among media owners - Digiday
Read More

Tuesday, April 25, 2023

Floridians beware: Pending legislation would lead to predatory pricing of water systems - Tallahassee Democrat

Two lawsuits now pending, both challenging controversial House Bill 1020 - WLBT

JACKSON, Miss. (WLBT) -One controversy is moving from legislative to legal territory as House Bill 1020 and Senate Bill 2343 are challenged in federal court. The bills give an expanded role to Capitol Police and the creation of a new temporary Capitol Complex Improvement District court with an appointed judge and prosecutors.

The Governor took to social media Monday to respond to NAACP President Derrick Johnson.

But the president of the Jackson branch of the NAACP says this about the fight.

“It’s definitely not over,” said Nsombi Lambright-Haynes. “This is the next phase of it.”

The recently filed federal lawsuit argues the House Bill 1020 and Senate Bill 2343 is designed to suppress black residents’ from exercising their First Amendment rights and strips them of their political control.

“Hopefully, the injunction will go through in Capital Police will never be able to completely monitor the entire city.”

It’s familiar arguments that we heard throughout the session from members like House minority leader Rep. Robert Johnson.

“It’s unconstitutional on its face,” said Johnson. “It has a it has racial undertones that are not good for the state and it looks extremely bad, and it’s going to take time to litigate it is going to hold things up when we ought to be doing things to help Jackson instead of trying to take over Jackson.”

But conferee Sen. Brice Wiggins maintains that’s not the case.

“You can’t not do stuff because you’re afraid somebody’s going to file a lawsuit,” explained Wiggins. “And if we did that, then we would never get anything done in this building....nobody thinks that this is going to solve every issue, but it certainly will help. And at the end of the day, we have to do something about the crime in Jackson.”

The Mayor commented for the first time on camera Monday about the bill signing and suit.

“I think that my communication around that legislation has been clear and consistent. I’ve called it not only racist and draconian. It is oppressive legislation. We look forward to our day in court. We’re grateful for organizations like the NAACP,” Mayor Lumumba said.

Three Jackson residents have filed another lawsuit today. This one in Hinds County Chancery court asking that the court block the implementation of House Bill 1020. They argue it violates the state constitution.

Want more WLBT news in your inbox? Click here to subscribe to our newsletter.

See a spelling or grammar error in our story? Please click here to report it and include the headline of the story in your email.

Adblock test (Why?)


Two lawsuits now pending, both challenging controversial House Bill 1020 - WLBT
Read More

DC United defender Mohanad Jeahze suspended pending investigation | MLSSoccer.com - MLSsoccer.com

Voices: Joseph Lowery

By the numbers: 10 early-season All-Star performers

National Writer: Charles Boehm

Who were the best young-player performers in MLS Matchday 9?

Transfer Tracker

LA Galaxy sign Costa Rican midfielder Gino Vivi

US Open Cup

How to watch & stream 2023 US Open Cup

Player of the Matchday

Philadelphia Union's Mikael Uhre named Player of the Matchday

Sporting Kansas City striker Willy Agada out 3 months with leg fracture

Instant Replay

Dissecting Sporting KC's red card & why Aidan Morris was ruled offside

Player of the Matchday 9: Mikael Uhre

Far-post curlers galore! | Vote for your Goal of the Matchday

HIGHLIGHTS: Atlanta United FC vs. Chicago Fire FC | April 23, 2023

MLS Season Pass

Get MLS Season Pass on the Apple TV app

Adblock test (Why?)


DC United defender Mohanad Jeahze suspended pending investigation | MLSSoccer.com - MLSsoccer.com
Read More

Monday, April 24, 2023

Making The Grade preview: State accountability rating changes pending while TEA actively evaluates districts - KWTX

(KWTX/Making The Grade) Five years after its introduction, the Texas Education Agency is refreshing its accountability rating system.

The system scores districts and school campuses handing down A-F letter grades each year, with 2020 and 2021 paused during the pandemic.

In the first Making the Grade segment, KWTX explained the three domains that make up a score.

Tonight at 10 on KWTX, we will explain the proposed changes within those domains, as they’ve been relayed to districts in Central Texas.

“These are not final changes that we’ve been given from TEA it is the best information that we know as of today,” Dr. Deanna Lovesmith the Assistant Superintendent of Teaching and Learning at Belton ISD explained to their Board of Trustees earlier this year.

STAAR testing and other evaluations for the rating are currently happening, or already past despite final changes and rules for the next five years not being released until August.

The ratings for the 2022-2023 school year are set to come out in September.

Adblock test (Why?)


Making The Grade preview: State accountability rating changes pending while TEA actively evaluates districts - KWTX
Read More

"Judges Have No Business Giving Interviews On Pending Cases": Supreme Court - NDTV

'Judges Have No Business Giving Interviews On Pending Cases': Supreme Court
Kolkata:

Observing that judges have no business granting interviews on pending matters, the Supreme Court on Monday sought a report within four days from the Registrar General of the Calcutta High Court on whether Justice Abhijit Gangopadhyay gave an interview to a news channel about the case related to the school job-for-bribe case in West Bengal.

“I just want to say it that judges have no business granting interviews on matters which are pending,” Chief Justice D Y Chandachud, sharing a bench with Justice P S Narasimha, said while taking strong note of the purported interview given by Justice Gangopadhyay to a news channel about the case.

"The petitioner (TMC leader Abhishek Banerjee) has annexed a translated transcript of an interview of Justice Abhijit Gangopadhyay on a TV Channel ABP Ananda. The Registrar General of Calcutta High Court is directed to clarify from the judge as to whether he had been interviewed by... of the news channel. The Registrar General is directed to file his affidavit before this court on or before Thursday. We will list it on Friday,” the bench said.

The top court said it's order will not come in the way of the ongoing investigation by the CBI and the Enforcement Directorate (ED) in the alleged scam.

On being told by Additional Solicitor General S V Raju, appearing for the central probe agencies, that this may lead to stalling of the ongoing probe, the bench said the judge should not be giving an interview about the pending case that is before the single judge bench.

Senior Advocate Abhishek Manu Singhvi, appearing for Banerjee, referred to the translated transcription of the interview given by Justice Gangopadhyay in which he allegedly spoke against the TMC MP and party general secretary.

"With the greatest respect and humility, this just cannot be done,” the senior lawyer said.

On being told that the purported interview was there on social media, the bench said it wanted the Registrar General to file an affidavit to this effect and, at the moment, it was not getting into the merits of the case.

"I just want to say that judges have no business granting interviews on matters which are pending. If he said that about the petitioner, he has no business participating in the proceedings. The question is whether a judge who has made statements like these about a political personality should he be allowed to participate in the hearings. There has to be some process," the CJI orally observed.

The CJI said the judge should have recused himself and paved way for setting up another bench by the chief justice of the high court.

On April 17, the top court had stayed the Calcutta High Court's April 13 order directing the CBI and the Enforcement Directorate to interrogate Banerjee and Kuntal Ghosh, an accused in the case, and file a report in HC based on that.

Prior to this, the single judge bench of the Calcutta High Court of Justice Gangopadhyay had also directed the West Bengal police not to lodge any FIR against CBI and Enforcement Directorate officers probing the alleged scam.

The top court had taken the TMC leader's plea for urgent hearing after Singhvi mentioned it.

“List the petition on April 24, 2023. Till the next date of listing, there shall be a stay of all the directions against the petitioner (Banerjee) in pursuance to the directions contained in the impugned order of the single judge bench of the high court on April 13,” the top court had said.

The high court had taken note of the March 29 public speech of Abhishek Banerjee, a nephew of Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, in which he had purportedly said that Ghosh, an accused in the case, was being pressured by the central probe agencies to name him in the case.

Kuntal Ghosh, an accused in the school jobs scam case currently lodged in custody, had also soon after alleged that he was being pressured by investigators to allege the complicity of Banerjee, TMC's unofficial number two.

Singhvi had also referred to the high court order which said no police station in the state shall lodge any FIR against the CBI and ED officers probing the recruitment scam.

The Calcutta High Court had on April 13 passed a slew of directions asking the police not to lodge FIRs on complaints against officers of the CBI or the ED investigating the alleged recruitment scam related to the West Bengal Central School Service Commission and the West Bengal Board of Primary Education without its permission.

It had asked the central agencies to probe the role of Banerjee, saying such an "interrogation should be made soon".

The high court was hearing a petition related to alleged irregularities in recruitment of teaching and non-teaching staff in West Bengal government-sponsored and aided schools.

The high court had said that Ghosh could also be questioned soon by the central agencies along with Banerjee.

Holding that the complaint by Ghosh, alleging pressure from officials to implicate Banerjee in the case, was made on March 31 before the special CBI court and on April 1 to Hastings police station in Kolkata, the high court had said the matter requires investigation.

"It is a matter to be enquired and investigated whether Kuntal Ghosh took the cue from the public speech of said Abhishek Banerjee for which both of them can be interrogated both by ED and by CBI and such interrogation should be made soon," the HC judge had said.

Maintaining that "terrorising" investigating officers of a probe agency by filing a complaint before the police is wholly unwarranted, the high court had said such endeavours are to be stopped forthwith as otherwise officers will not be able to act in a fearless manner.

The HC had said Ghosh had not complained of any torture by CBI or ED officers immediately after his custody with the two agencies ended, and when he was sent to judicial remand, but did so in the complaints of March 31 and April 1.

Ghosh was in ED custody after his arrest by the agency till February 2, and in CBI custody from February 20 to 23.

The high court had said if the money trail from the teaching jobs scam is considered a human body, the CBI and ED have reached maximum up to the waist of the body in the investigation and the heart and the head are yet to be touched.

The single judge had expressed hope that the agencies will be able to do so.

(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Adblock test (Why?)


"Judges Have No Business Giving Interviews On Pending Cases": Supreme Court - NDTV
Read More

Latest sequel to Hawaii film tax credit program pending at Legislature - Honolulu Star-Advertiser

Mahalo for supporting Honolulu Star-Advertiser. Enjoy this free story!

Hawaii lawmakers have written several different scripts this year to dramatically alter the state’s ever-changing film industry tax credit program, and one controversial draft is still pending at the Legislature.

Some of this year’s proposed legislation intended to increase the annual subsidy available to makers of movies, TV shows, commercials and other film and television industry productions beyond the current $50 million, after a move several years ago to rein in escalating rebate payments.

Another measure sought to establish a new tax credit for building certain media production facilities, including film studios.

And one bill aimed to have the Hawaii State Film Office audited and abolished, with all its functions, including tax credit program support, transferred to a new commission.

All the bills that set out to do these things stalled in February or March and cannot be revived this year.

Yet various elements from some of the stalled bills — as well as other ideas to overhaul the film industry tax credit program — were recently inserted into a loosely related bill previously wholly focused on establishing a wage rebate program for small, local independent film and TV productions.

The late change-up for House Bill 1373 is being criticized by some observers as unfair to the public and perhaps unconstitutional.

Film industry stakeholders also have major qualms about the bill, which received all its tax credit change language after the last public hearing on the measure held April 5 by two Senate committees.

“This amounts to bad legislation,” said Tom Yamachika, president of the Tax Foundation of Hawaii, a nonprofit advertising the motto “Good Government Depends on an Informed Public.”

HB 1373 would increase the tax rebate program’s annual payout cap for a single year to $75 million next year from $50 million in order to pay a backlog of unpaid refunds.

The bill also would impose new qualifying criteria for credits, close a window through which the state accrues future obligations to pay subsidies that top $50 million in a single year, and create a $25 million annual tax credit available through 2032 for building film studios and certain other media production facilities.

If enacted into law with film tax credit program changes, HB 1373 would be the sixth time the Legislature has significantly modified the program over the last two decades, and the fourth time in seven years.

However, the new tax rebate provisions in the bill face opposition on several fronts.

‘Way over the line’

Yamachika said it’s obvious that all the tax provisions added to HB 1373 don’t materially relate to the bill’s “workforce development” title covering the bill’s original intent to provide a wage rebate for small independent productions that find it hard to benefit from the existing tax credit program.

“You can’t shove unrelated stuff into a bill outside of its title,” he said.

Hawaii’s Constitution states that no bill shall become law unless it passes three readings in each house of the Legislature on separate days. Two years ago, the Hawaii Supreme Court ruled in a 3-2 decision that this reading requirement begins anew “after a non-­germane amendment changes the purpose of a bill so that it is no longer related to the original bill as introduced.”

Sen. Donovan Dela Cruz, a proponent of the current version of HB 1373, said the bill satisfies this standard because tax credit incentives help develop the film industry workforce along with the bill’s original material that remains.

Dela Cruz (D, Mililani-­Wahiawa-Whitmore Village) also said there was public debate on elements added to HB 1373 during hearings on other bills.

All the tax credit provisions were added to HB 1373 by the Senate Ways and Means Committee chaired by Dela Cruz, and the Senate Committee on Energy, Economic Development and Tourism chaired by Sen. Lynn DeCoite.

DeCoite also introduced further amendments to HB 1373 on the floor of the Senate on April 11 just before the full Senate passed the bill on a 21-1 vote.

DeCoite (D, East and Upcountry Maui-Molokai-­Lanai) declined to discuss the maneuvers in a requested interview. But she said during the April 5 hearing that she proposed the changes after careful and meaningful discussion with Dela Cruz and in consultation with the state Department of Taxation and the state Department of Business, Economic Development and Tourism. She also said during the hearing that people had previously shared testimony on what can move the film industry forward in Hawaii.

DBEDT, which includes a division that houses the State Film Office and supports increasing tax credits for the industry, has privately raised objections to the bill since the tax credit amendments were added.

In a public statement Friday, the agency said it is actively engaged with the Senate and House of Representatives to gain agreement on tax credit program provisions in the bill.

One provision would restrict credits from being claimed on wages for employees who are not Hawaii taxpayers. Yamachika said that can’t be done under the U.S. Constitution’s commerce clause.

“That’s just way over the line,” he said.

Another provision would prevent credits from being claimed on any salary over $1 million for a single person. The industry fears that productions with highly paid stars will seek other places to film if this provision becomes law.

Other provisions would add reporting and audit conditions, change the size of credits depending on whether work is being done in an enterprise zone, and equalize the credit between counties.

Currently, the rebate on qualified expenses is 22% on Oahu and 27% on the neighbor islands.

It’s unclear whether House leaders would be willing to negotiate with Senate counterparts to agree on a mutually acceptable version of the bill, which is needed for HB 1373 to become law.

It is clear, however, that lawmakers have a long history of wanting to alter the tax credit program, which has been praised for diversifying the economy by helping attract more film productions, but is also criticized as a waste of taxpayer revenue subsidizing an industry that would exist here without tax credits.

Take 1, 2, 3 …

Hawaii is one of 32 states, three U.S. territories and at least 60 countries offering film tax credits, according to a 2021 University of Hawaii Economic Research Organization analysis.

An initial version of Hawaii’s program started in 1997 offering rebates of 4% on general excise tax and 6% on transient accommodations tax expenditures. A year later, the TAT rebate was increased to 7.25%.

In 2006, an overhaul was made to offer rebates on a wide range of industry spending taxed in the state. This rebate was 15% on Oahu and 20% in other counties, with a maximum $8 million per production and a 2016 program sunset to stimulate the industry for a decade.

To qualify, a production had to spend at least $200,000 on qualified expenses including equipment, services, cast and crew wages, post-production work such as editing, airfare to or from Hawaii, shipping and insurance.

With the sunset three years away, lawmakers in 2013, under industry lobbying, hiked credits to 20% on Oahu and 25% on the neighbor islands, raised the per-production rebate to $15 million and delayed a sunset to 2019.

The Tax Foundation at the time called the program, which cost the state $32 million in 2013, a “drain on the state treasury” and said no rational basis existed for increasing and extending credits other than to keep pace with escalating incentives elsewhere.

As the program’s cost to the state was on its way to $62 million in 2017, the Legislature moved to rein it in by establishing a $35 million annual payout limit. However, this cap was to take effect in 2019 and still obligated the state to pay all qualified credit claims in years when the annual payout limit wasn’t reached or after the program’s sunset, which got pushed back further to 2026.

The $35 million payout cap, however, never took effect as scheduled in 2019. Instead, lawmakers that year raised the limit to $50 million while mandating that new credit claims over the annual payout limit would not be subject to future payment after 2025.

Then last year, rebates got increased to 22% on Oahu and 27% on the neighbor islands while the per-production cap grew to $17 million and the sunset extended to 2033.

Assessing impact

State Department of Taxation data suggests that the annual payout caps depressed film industry work in Hawaii, as payouts dropped from $80 million in 2018 to $39 million in 2019 and $42 million in 2020.

Yet in 2021, claims totaled $66 million and are estimated to be $79 million in 2022, according to DBEDT data.

Ongoing or recent productions have included NBC’s “Magnum P.I.,” “Doogie Kamealoha, M.D.” on Disney+, CBS’s “NCIS: Hawai‘i” and HBO’s Emmy Award-winning series “The White Lotus.”

Christopher P. Lee, founder and director of the Academy for Creative Media at UH, said in written testimony on a bill introduced this year to raise the annual payout cap to $75 million, Senate Bill 1495, that the program has been a success and a payout increase would be good.

“A stable, reliable credit is essential to continuing the growth of this vital diversification of (the) state’s economy.

Walea Constantinau, film commissioner for the City and County of Honolulu, also endorsed a $75 million annual payout ceiling in written testimony on another bill, HB 932, that proposed changing the existing limit before it stalled like SB 1495.

“The credit is the fuel that drives the engine that powers the current and future development of Hawaii’s film industry,” she said. “The current cap creates a ceiling that is hindering the job growth and infrastructure development.”

UHERO in its 2021 analysis recommended increasing the annual payout to $75 million, but also questioned whether inflation-adjusted industry spending in Hawaii, which more than doubled from $165 million in 2007 to $356 million in 2019, can continue expanding for another decade and contribute measurably to more economic diversification.

The analysis by UH economists Sumner La Croix and James Mak recommended ending the tax credit program in 2030, saying the main reason productions film in Hawaii is access to the state’s natural and cultural capital.

The two economists also suggested that DBEDT conduct a more rigorous analysis of the impact of the film tax credit program.

Another local economist, Paul Brewbaker of TZ Economics, responded to the UHERO report with encouragement for measuring such impact and questioned the cost-benefit of tax credits for particular industries.

Brewbaker, in his response, noted the state doesn’t offer plate lunch makers a 20% spending rebate because they help diversify the economy, and that the makers of “Hawaii Five-0” were not likely going to make the TV show in Georgia.

“Enough winging it,” Brewbaker said.

Hawaii film industry tax rebates

2013: $32 million

2014: $34 million

2015: $40 million

2016: $32 million

2017: $62 million

2018: $80 million

2019: $39 million

2020: $42 million

2021: $66 million*

2022: $79 million**

*claims

**estimated claims

Source: Department of Taxation and Department of Business, Economic Development and Tourism

Adblock test (Why?)


Latest sequel to Hawaii film tax credit program pending at Legislature - Honolulu Star-Advertiser
Read More

Sunday, April 23, 2023

Hemp Fest-goers have much to celebrate, hope for with pending NC cannabis legislation - WLOS

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

Hemp Fest-goers have much to celebrate, hope for with pending NC cannabis legislation  WLOS
Hemp Fest-goers have much to celebrate, hope for with pending NC cannabis legislation - WLOS
Read More

Football, cheerleading, marching band approved for Roanoke College, pending funding - WSLS 10

SALEM, Va. – Football, cheerleading, and marching band could soon be coming to Roanoke College.

The school’s board of trustees voted on a proposal by President Frank Shushok Jr. to reinstate football as a varsity sport and add varsity cheerleading. A marching band program was also listed in the proposal.

“Over the academic year, I have had many individual conversations with students, faculty and staff about the potential addition of a football team and associated programs,” Shushok said. “Cultivating a successful football program, along with a marching band and competitive cheer, can breathe life into a college campus, bringing together our faculty, staff, students, alumni and the community in a unified spirit of passion and pride.”

Roanoke College has not had a football team since 1942, when it was discontinued because of constraints of WWII.

The three new programs will launch only if the school can raise $1.2 million needed.

Roanoke College officials said the school has set a June 1 deadline to raise the initial investment, but the timeline will be adjusted if funding isn’t obtained by then.

The college said their goal is to start the programs by 2024.

Adblock test (Why?)


Football, cheerleading, marching band approved for Roanoke College, pending funding - WSLS 10
Read More

Football, cheerleading, marching band approved for Roanoke College, pending funding - WSLS 10

SALEM, Va. – Football, cheerleading, and marching band could soon be coming to Roanoke College.

The school’s board of trustees voted on a proposal by President Frank Shushok Jr. to reinstate football as a varsity sport and add varsity cheerleading. A marching band program was also listed in the proposal.

“Over the academic year, I have had many individual conversations with students, faculty and staff about the potential addition of a football team and associated programs,” Shushok said. “Cultivating a successful football program, along with a marching band and competitive cheer, can breathe life into a college campus, bringing together our faculty, staff, students, alumni and the community in a unified spirit of passion and pride.”

Roanoke College has not had a football team since 1942, when it was discontinued because of constraints of WWII.

The three new programs will launch only if the school can raise $1.2 million needed.

Roanoke College officials said the school has set a June 1 deadline to raise the initial investment, but the timeline will be adjusted if funding isn’t obtained by then.

The college said their goal is to start the programs by 2024.

Adblock test (Why?)


Football, cheerleading, marching band approved for Roanoke College, pending funding - WSLS 10
Read More

Friday, April 21, 2023

Oregon secures three-year supply of mifepristone, pending court action - Oregon Public Broadcasting

Boxes of the drug mifepristone sit on a shelf at the West Alabama Women's Center in Tuscaloosa, Ala., on March 16, 2022. Danco Laboratories is asking the Supreme Court to preserve access to its abortion pill free from restrictions imposed by lower court rulings, while a legal fight continues.

Boxes of the drug mifepristone sit on a shelf at the West Alabama Women's Center in Tuscaloosa, Ala., on March 16, 2022. Danco Laboratories is asking the Supreme Court to preserve access to its abortion pill free from restrictions imposed by lower court rulings, while a legal fight continues.

Allen G. Breed / AP

Oregon has secured a three-year supply of mifepristone, the abortion medication at the center of a high-profile fight before the U.S. Supreme Court, Gov. Tina Kotek announced Thursday.

THANKS TO OUR SPONSOR:

The upshot, Kotek says: Regardless of whatever decision the court comes to regarding whether the drug should be more tightly regulated — or available at all — patients in Oregon will have access for years to come.

“I will make sure that patients are able to access the medication they need and providers are able to provide that medication without unnecessary, politically-motivated interference and intimidation,” Kotek said in a statement. “To our providers, to the patients who live in Oregon or have been forced to come to our state for care, and to those who are helping people access the care they need, know that I have your back.”

According to a release from Kotek’s office, the state is partnering with Oregon Health and Science University to secure 22,500 doses of mifepristone. The governor is also instructing state boards that license medical providers to clarify that the state “supports providers in continuing to provide reproductive health care, consistent with the established standards of care, including prescribing, dispensing and using mifepristone regardless of the upcoming Supreme Court decision in the Texas lawsuit,” the release said.

Kotek’s office said Thursday the doses are already in the state’s possession. It was not clear from the release how they will be distributed to providers.

In 2000, the FDA approved the use of mifepristone to carry out abortions. It is typically taken in tandem with another drug, misoprostol. Currently, more than half of abortions in the U.S. are medication abortions that employ both drugs.

But the availability of mifepristone has been challenged by anti-abortion groups. Earlier this month, a federal judge in Texas ruled that federal approval of the drug should be overturned. An appeals court in New Orleans put part of the ruling on hold, pending appeal, while ruling that access to mifepristone should revert to tighter regulations that existed until 2016. The Supreme Court is currently considering whether to allow restrictions to move forward as the case proceeds. The high court has indicated a decision could come as soon as Friday.

THANKS TO OUR SPONSOR:

Complicating matters, a federal judge in Washington state issued a very different ruling recently. That decision barred the FDA from making any changes to mifepristone regulation in 17 states and the District of Columbia that had filed suit in his court alleging the FDA has targeted the drug for excessive regulation.

Kotek on Thursday said the rulings hampering access to mifepristone “set an alarming precedent of putting politics above established science, medical evidence, and a patient’s health, life, and well-being — with potential implications beyond this one medication.”

“This meritless lawsuit is part of a larger campaign to ban abortion in every state, including those with legal protections for abortion access,” Kotek said. “We cannot afford to stand by and watch our fundamental right to reproductive health care be stripped away.”

With the move, Oregon joins Washington and other states in stockpiling abortion drugs in advance of Supreme Court action. Washington Gov. Jay Inslee announced in early April his state had secured a three-year supply of mifepristone.

The plaintiffs in the Texas case are a coalition of anti-abortion advocacy groups and four physicians who oppose abortion. The suit does not include as plaintiffs anyone who has taken the drug.

The plaintiffs argued that the FDA exceeded its authority when it approved mifepristone in 2000 and that its review and monitoring of the drug’s safety has been inadequate.

The doctors in the case argue they have standing to sue because they have to treat women who experience complications using the medication and need follow-up hospital care, creating a moral conflict and strain on their practice.

Lawyers for the FDA argue that such complications are rare and do not give the plaintiffs standing to sue. They say the drug has been used more than five million times and the agency has held a consistent scientific position on the drug’s safety and efficacy across five presidential administrations.

The most common complication of medication abortion is that it doesn’t work. In that case, a follow-up surgical abortion is required.

In fewer than 1% of cases, medication abortions can cause more serious complications. These include prolonged heavy bleeding, infections and sepsis, and ruptured ectopic pregnancies.

In the U.S., medication abortion has an associated mortality rate of less than 1 in 100,000, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. The mortality rate associated with giving birth is 23.8 deaths per 100,000 live births, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

THANKS TO OUR SPONSOR:

Adblock test (Why?)


Oregon secures three-year supply of mifepristone, pending court action - Oregon Public Broadcasting
Read More

2024 NFL Free Agency: 6 pending free agents on defense who deserve to get paid | NFL News, Rankings and Statistics - Pro Football Focus

• The consistently elite Chris Jones is primed for a big payday: While ranking behind Aaron Donald for most of his career, Jones has be...