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Stateline

Nonpartisan, Nonprofit News Service of the Pew Charitable Trusts

Stateline is a nonpartisan, nonprofit news service of the Pew Charitable Trusts that reports and analyzes trends in state policy.

Is the country—along with the aid groups that help in resettlement and local communities that receive refugees—ready for an increase in arrivals? And where will the new arrivals go?
In the absence of federal laws to address the stubborn pay gap between women and men, some states are stepping in with legislation.
Many are feeling the pinch of budget impasses as programs are reduced or eliminated. More than half a dozen states began fiscal year 2016 without a budget.
But nationally, the poverty rate was 14.8 percent last year, meaning 46.7 million people lived in poverty—as many people as there have been the past four years.
Younger gamblers are shying away from slot machines, which poses a revenue problem for casinos and for states.
Many U.S. cities remain deeply segregated. Strict new federal rules require local governments to publicly report segregation in their communities and come up with a plan to combat it.
Economists say capital-intensive industries such as oil extraction have contributed to a gap between economic growth and median household income in many states.
The U.S. Supreme Court decision to legalize same-sex marriage nationwide has state and local governments reconsidering their domestic partner benefits to save money or avoid lawsuits.
In the absence of federal drone regulations, states rush in to pass their own laws on when and where drones can fly.
Many states are embracing early education, but are supporting it in different ways.