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  • Zach Bryan “With Heaven on Tour” Coming to AT&T Stadium Aug. 22

    Zach Bryan “With Heaven on Tour” Coming to AT&T Stadium Aug. 22













    Zach Bryan “With Heaven on Tour” Coming to AT&T Stadium Aug. 22 | City of Arlington, TX















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  • GNWT Extends Diamond Property Tax Relief to Support Jobs and Northern Economy

    GNWT Extends Diamond Property Tax Relief to Support Jobs and Northern Economy

    The Government of the Northwest Territories (GNWT) is extending targeted property tax relief for diamond mines into the 2026–27 fiscal year to support near-term economic stability for workers, businesses, and northern communities during a period of continued global market and trade uncertainty.

    The extension builds on temporary measures introduced in 2025 and reflects ongoing pressures facing the global diamond industry, including volatile markets, trade disruptions, and elevated operating costs. The GNWT’s decision is intended to reduce the risk of sudden economic disruption while longer-term economic transition and diversification work continues.

    Diamond mining remains the Northwest Territories’ largest private-sector industry and a cornerstone of the territorial economy. Extending the property tax relief into 2026–27 is expected to reduce total diamond mine property tax revenues by approximately $8.8 million, representing a 45 per cent reduction compared with projected revenues without relief.

    As with the 2025 measures, this extension is time-limited and comes with clear expectations around transparency and accountability. The GNWT expects mine operators to continue directing the benefits of this relief toward sustaining NWT-based employment, meeting obligations to local contractors and Indigenous business partners, and maintaining safe and responsible operations.

    The Government of Canada recently announced a $115 million loan to the Ekati Diamond Mine through the Large Enterprise Tariff Loan facility to help maintain operations and protect northern jobs amid trade uncertainty. The GNWT’s extension of property tax relief complements this federal action and reflects a coordinated effort to support workers and communities while broader transition and diversification efforts continue.

    Quotes

    “The diamond sector remains central to the Northwest Territories’ economy, and the people who depend on it continue to face uncertainty driven largely by forces beyond their control. Extending targeted property tax relief is a pragmatic step to support economic stability and help northern families and communities weather ongoing pressures. As with our previous measures, this relief is temporary and comes with clear expectations that benefits support NWT workers, businesses, and Indigenous partners.”

    — Caroline Wawzonek, Minister of Finance

    “This extension is about maintaining stability today while planning responsibly for what comes next. By working alongside Indigenous governments, industry partners, and the Government of Canada, we are supporting workers and local businesses now while laying the groundwork for longer-term economic resilience, diversification, and new opportunities for Northerners.”

    — Caitlin Cleveland, Minister of Industry, Tourism and Investment

    Quick Facts

    • Extending property tax relief into 2026–27 is expected to reduce total diamond mine property tax revenues by approximately $8.8 million, or 45 per cent, compared with projected revenues without relief.
    • The relief applies to all operating diamond mines and is limited to the 2026–27 tax year.
    • Diamond mine property taxes are paid directly to the GNWT, not to municipalities.
    • In 2025, the GNWT introduced additional temporary measures to support the sector, including doubling local diamond valuations and releasing remaining balances from the Large Emitter Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Reducing Investment Fund to support mine cash flow.

    For media requests, please contact:
    Cabinet Communications
    Government of the Northwest Territories
    PressSecretary@gov.nt.ca

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  • Wisconsin adds Robert Steeples to staff – Wisconsin Badgers

    Wisconsin adds Robert Steeples to staff – Wisconsin Badgers

    1. Wisconsin adds Robert Steeples to staff  Wisconsin Badgers
    2. Wisconsin football makes change on defensive backs coaching staff  BadgerExtra
    3. Wisconsin hires former NFL veteran Robert Steeples to coach cornerbacks; Paul Haynes elevated to new role  

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  • Access Denied


    Access Denied

    You don’t have permission to access “http://www.war.gov/News/Releases/Release/Article/4367608/department-of-war-invests-327m-to-accelerate-solid-rocket-motor-component-produ/” on this server.

    Reference #18.d0a0d517.1766548547.3c7d08b0

    https://errors.edgesuite.net/18.d0a0d517.1766548547.3c7d08b0

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  • Texas law restricting kids from app stores blocked

    Texas law restricting kids from app stores blocked

    Audio recording is automated for accessibility. Humans wrote and edited the story. See our AI policy, and give us feedback.

    A federal judge has temporarily blocked a new Texas law adding restrictions on children’s use of app stores.

    Senate Bill 2420, which was supposed to activate on Jan. 1, establishes age verification requirements and mandates parental consent before a minor is allowed to download or make purchases within apps. Its supporters say the law is needed to protect children as they navigate social media and online spaces, while critics say it would violate free speech rights.

    U.S. District Judge Robert Pitman, an Obama appointee, on Tuesday sided with the law’s opponents, saying that parts of it are “unconstitutionally vague” and “exceedingly overbroad.”

    “The Act is akin to a law that would require every bookstore to verify the age of every customer at the door and, for minors, require parental consent before the child or teen could enter and again when they try to purchase a book,” Pitman wrote in a 20-page ruling granting a preliminary injunction.

    “As set out below, the Court finds a likelihood that, when considered on the merits, SB 2420 violates the First Amendment.”

    But state Sen. Angela Paxton, the McKinney Republican who authored SB 2420, is confident that the law will prevail.  

    “We built this bill to equip parents with common sense tools to protect their kids AND to survive court challenges by those who may have lesser priorities,” she said in a written statement. 

    The Computer & Communication Industry Association, which filed the lawsuit in October, cheered the decision.

    “This Order stops the Texas App Store Accountability Act from taking effect in order to preserve the First Amendment rights of app stores, app developers, parents, and younger internet users,” Stephanie Joyce, director of CCIA’s Litigation Center, said in a news release. “It also protects parents’ inviolate right to use their own judgment in safeguarding their children online using the myriad tools our members provide.”

    The law also faced a legal challenge from two Texas teens and Students Engaged in Advancing Texas, a youth-led advocacy organization.

    “App stores allow anyone with a smartphone and an internet connection to access the accumulated sum of virtually all recorded human knowledge and expression,” Adam Sieff, an attorney representing them, said in a statement Tuesday. “Banning students like SEAT’s members, M.F., and Z.B., from accessing these massive libraries without parental consent, just because the government thinks that’s what their parents ought to want, has never been a constitutionally permissible way to protect kids or support families.”

    Under SB 2420, developers must assign age ratings to their apps, disclose the reason for the rating, and notify the app stores of any significant changes. Parental consent is not required for specific emergency or educational applications, such as those providing access to crisis hotlines.

    Gov. Greg Abbott signed the proposal into law in May.

    “Safety and online privacy for Texas children remains a priority for Governor Abbott, which is why he signed SB 2420 into law. Texas will empower parents to have more control over the online content their children can access,” Andrew Mahaleris, his press secretary, said earlier this year.

    Beyond this law, Texas lawmakers have generally made regulating the internet for young people a priority in recent legislative sessions.

    In 2023, the state began requiring companies that operate websites where more than one-third of the material is harmful to minors to use “reasonable” age verification measures to ensure users are at least 18 years old. This law, House Bill 1181, was part of a broader push to prevent children from being exposed to pornography.

    A group of adult entertainment websites sued, arguing the 2023 law violated free speech and privacy protections.

    Texas countered that the state had a right to protect children with what Solicitor General Aaron Nielson framed as “simple, safe and common” restrictions.

    The U.S Supreme Court sided with Texas, deeming the law constitutional in a significant win for the online security movement.

    However, a federal district court has issued several temporary blocks on provisions of another 2023 law — House Bill 18 — that restricts what kinds of materials and advertisements minors can see on social media and the age verification requirements, signaling that courts are not unified on how to regulate social media and online youth presence.


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  • My Favorite BBQ Chicken Recipe Isn’t New. It’s a 75-Year Old Cornell Classic

    My Favorite BBQ Chicken Recipe Isn’t New. It’s a 75-Year Old Cornell Classic

    Winter is in full swing, making it the perfect time to settle in at home with some comfort food. Chicken is a great option, especially if you’re cooking on a budget, but repeating the same old recipes can get old after a few weeks. That’s where…

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  • Plant Science with a Twist

    Newswise — From morning glories spiraling up fence posts to grape vines corkscrewing through arbors, twisted growth is a problem-solving tool found throughout the plant kingdom. Roots “do the twist” all the…

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  • Mobley Jr. Leads Five in Double Digits as Buckeyes Roll Past Grambling State

    Mobley Jr. Leads Five in Double Digits as Buckeyes Roll Past Grambling State

    COLUMBUS, Ohio – Sophomore John Mobley Jr. made five three-pointers and five double-digit scorers lifted Ohio State to an 89-63 win over Grambling State on Tuesday afternoon at the Schottenstein Center.

    The Buckeyes improve to 9-3 on the season…

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  • UN experts urge Iran to stop execution of woman activist

    UN experts urge Iran to stop execution of woman activist

    The UN Human Rights Council’s special rapporteurs on human rights in Iran, violence against women and arbitrary executions, as well as the five members of the working group on discrimination against women and girls, warned in a joint statement,