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Supply chains are the backbone of the public and private sector. The digital components of these complex systems are at increasing risk of being disrupted, degraded or destroyed.
With dining-out options already few and far between because of COVID, the recent snowstorm has only made things worse for residents and visitors to the Big Apple.
Over the past decade, states have preempted cities across a broad range of policy areas, including policing and health. If anything, the pandemic has only accelerated the trend.
Atlanta's Buckhead neighborhood is rich and mostly white, but the same jump in violent crime that many cities are seeing has alarmed its residents. Some of them think secession is the answer.
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While the key focus on cybersecurity and network safety will remain paramount in 2021, ongoing remote work will present opportunities for training, awareness building and collaboration.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom, speaking of the state’s decision to choose the Oakland-Alameda Coliseum in Oakland and the California State University, Los Angeles campus in east L.A. as the newest locations for the state’s mass vaccination sites. (Reuters — Feb. 3, 2021)
90%
The proportion of the 147 Republican lawmakers who voted to overturn the 2020 presidential election who are now declining to either support or condemn the election fraud narrative that claims Trump won the election. While just two of the 147 total lawmakers still believe that the election was stolen, ten of them have said they do not believe the stolen-election claims and have cited other reasons for voting to overturn the election.
State and local governments have partnered with Tennessee Valley Authority and other private businesses to establish fast-charging stations for electric vehicles every 50 miles along interstates and highways.
The state has installed improved technology that it hopes will help stop thousands of fraudulent unemployment benefits claims from flooding the system. The new tech blocked 576,000 fraudulent login attempts in one day.
The 129-page law includes a new oversight committee, an officer duty to de-escalate situations, limits no-knock warrants and bans chokeholds. Police reform advocates are pleased with the law and want to see it grow further.
A new scorecard ranks state progress toward making EVs the norm. With transportation accounting for 28 percent of greenhouse gas emissions, more needs to be done to meet Paris Accord emission targets.
Dayton, Ohio, Mayor Nan Whaley, speaking in regards to the next Democratic candidate to fill Sen. Rob Portman’s seat after he unexpectedly announced his retirement. (Associated Press — Feb. 3, 2021)
28
The number of executive orders that President Biden has signed since taking office just over two weeks ago. Many expect that Biden will surpass Franklin Roosevelt’s record of signing 30 executive orders in his first month in office.
Already flooded with fraudulent claims, the state’s unemployment agency now must mitigate a data breach that compromised social security numbers, employment data and bank account information for about 1.4 million people.
Now that Trump has left the White House, the Coalition for Sustainable Automotive Regulation has agreed to work with California and the Biden administration on establishing new emission guidelines for the auto industry.
Under Florida’s new proposal, social media companies would be penalized for favoring one political candidate over another and would require the companies to provide a 30-day notice and explanation of suspension.
Republican state Sen. Jeff Mullis has introduced legislation to ban ballot drop boxes, eliminate the state’s automatic voter registration and get rid of no-excuse absentee voting rules.
The COVID-19 pandemic reinforced how central technology is to modern life, but perhaps we are losing something.
In clamping down on access to social media platforms by conspiracy theorists, white supremacists and domestic terrorists, we need to protect our truly marginalized citizens' ability to speak truth to power.
Chad Shaffer, a former state trooper who was on the shortlist for Wayne County, W.Va., candidates to replace the party seat left vacant by the state legislator who resigned after storming the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, alleging the West Virginia GOP intervened in the nomination process and provided their own shortlist to the governor through backdoor politics. The state Supreme Court has temporarily blocked the governor’s appointment while the judges hear challenges to its legality. (Associated Press — Feb. 2, 2021)
The amount that the Biden administration has agreed to pay Ellume, an Australian company that has created the first at-home COVID-19 test that can send results to a smartphone within 15 minutes, to build a manufacturing plant in the United States. Once the manufacturing plant in the U.S. has been completed, the company expects they will be able to provide more than 500,000 of these at-home, rapid tests per day.
Last year’s presidential elections drew masses of volunteers and donations, helping to ensure the state’s election system worked smoothly. But now election workers must produce the same success without the same resources.
The agency has been relying on self-reporting to determine the number of COVID cases that have been contracted in the workplace, resulting in severe undercounts that undermine the severity of workplace risk.
Miami County, Ohio, launched an investigation after it found a hidden surveillance camera in the wall of a county office building. While many are denying prior knowledge of the camera, two officials have resigned since the finding.
The nation's governors signaled strong support for connecting citizens with investments in broadband expansion, more online services and virtual health-care delivery.
Cities and counties face budget shortfalls in the billions, leading to furloughs and hiring freezes. Absent federal aid, further cuts are certain.
Next week the U.S. Senate will begin its second impeachment trial of President Trump, who has already left office. A look back at what has happened in previous trials sheds some light on what might happen next week.
Millions of Americans are living on properties that are at-risk for climate change-related disasters. The solution to the problem is far more complicated than just telling residents to move.
A survey of state and local government employees finds that the prolonged stresses of the pandemic are taking a toll. One in three have considered changing jobs.
Leigh Foy, a chemistry and Advanced Placement biology teacher in Pennsylvania, speaking about the cuts in curriculum she must make to adapt to the constraints and challenges of distance learning. (Associated Press — Feb. 1, 2021)