May 12, 2021

Unemployment Benefits, Jobs and America’s Recovery Puzzle

Analysis by Anneken Tappe America’s job market is in a weird spot: it’s still millions of jobs short of where it was before the pandemic, but businesses complain they can’t find staff. Opponents of enhanced unemployment benefits during Covid say the government aid is so cushy, the jobless don’t want to return to work. On

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Police Reform Talks Stall Over Accountability Standards

By Manu Raju, Jessica Dean and Paula Reid A bipartisan group of negotiators is stymied over a key issue in talks on overhauling policing practices nationwide: The standard for charging police officers with crimes. And now, the Justice Department is directly engaged in the talks to help resolve the stalemate and ease the path for

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More GOP States End Federal Jobless Benefits Early

By Tami Luhby Five more Republican governors are joining their peers in terminating federal pandemic unemployment benefits early, citing workforce shortages in their states. Jobless residents in Missouri, Iowa, Idaho, Tennessee and Wyoming join those in several other states who will soon lose the $300 weekly federal boost to their state benefits, though Congress has

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Hundreds of cars lined up at the Mississippi State Fairgrounds in Jackson, as their drivers sought to receive a Farmers to Families food box and two and a half dozen eggs distributed by the Mississippi Department of Agriculture and Commerce, Wednesday, April 21, 2021. The volunteers distributed 2,592 food boxes containing meat, milk, cheese, yogurt, potatoes and apples as part of agency's effort to help Mississippi families struggling to cope with the consequences of COVID-19. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

US Ends Farmers to Families Pandemic Food Box Program

By Katie Lobosco As the country slowly climbs out of the pandemic, the Biden administration is ending a program that delivered nearly 167 million boxes of fresh food to families in need and helped farmers sell their produce at a time when supply chain disruptions forced them to dump milk and destroy their crops. It’s

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ELIZABETH CITY, NC - MAY 11: Khalil Ferebee (C), son of Andrew Brown Jr., speaks at a news conference with lawyer Harry Daniel on May 11, 2021 in Elizabeth City, North Carolina. Ferebee and others were able to view additional police video footage of his father's death at the hands of officers from the Pasquotank County Sheriff's Office on April 21. (Photo by Sean Rayford/Getty Images)

Family Demands Full Release of Andrew Brown Jr. Shooting Video

By Madeline Holcombe Following the family’s viewing of body and dash camera footage of Andrew Brown Jr.’s death, attorneys for the family recommitted to pursuing the full release of all videos of the shooting. “We will move fairly quickly on that matter to go before the court to make our arguments to get the videos

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SILVER SPRING, MD - APRIL 8: Construction continues near unfinished Purple Line rail tracks at the Paul Sarbanes Transit Center on April 8, 2021 in Silver Spring, Maryland. The planned 16.2 mile light rail line project is being administered by the Maryland Transit Administration (MTA), an agency of the Maryland Department of Transportation. At the end of March, President Joe Biden introduced a $2.3 trillion plan to overhaul and upgrade the nations infrastructure. The plan aims to revitalize the U.S. transportation infrastructure, water systems, broadband internet, make investments in manufacturing and job training efforts, and other goals. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

Build Back Better: Growth, Jobs, and Inequality Solutions

Opinion by Mark Zandi There is a lot to like in the President’s Build Back Better plan. It is big — with a total of $4.5 trillion in increased government spending and tax credits over the next decade — but we have big economic problems. One major issue in the American economy is that underlying

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A store clerk posts a sign at a Marathon gas station in Elizabethtown, North Carolina, U.S., on Monday, May 10, 2021. Gas stations along the U.S. East Coast are beginning to run out of fuel as North Americas biggest petroleum pipeline races to recover from a paralyzing cyberattack that has kept it shut shut for three days. Photographer: Andrew Sherman/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Colonial Pipeline Hack Sparks Gas Shortages, Panic Buying

By Matt Egan A growing number of gas stations along the East Coast are without fuel as nervous drivers aggressively fill up their tanks following a ransomware attack that shut down the Colonial Pipeline, a critical artery for gasoline. The panic-buying threatens to exacerbate the supply shock. As of 9 pm ET Tuesday, 12.3% of

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President Joe Biden speaks about the April jobs report in the East Room of the White House, Friday, May 7, 2021, in Washington. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

Biden, Congress Leaders Meet on Bipartisan Infrastructure Plan

By Maegan Vazquez President Joe Biden faces a crucial moment on Wednesday in what is shaping up as an important week for his infrastructure priorities when he holds his first bipartisan meeting with the top four members of congressional leadership at the White House. According to the White House, the meeting will include Vice President

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