by Star News Staff | Sep 6, 2021
by Kendall Tietz High school students in Douglas County, Colorado, staged protests Wednesday calling for the end of a classroom mask mandate, ABC 7 Denver reported. Students from ThunderRidge High School walked out of class around 9:30 a.m. in protest of the...
by Star News Staff | Sep 6, 2021
by Kaylee Greenlee Afghan refugees are subject to security and health screening performed by Department of Homeland Security officials before they’re evacuated to the U.S. or a third country for additional processing, a Biden administration senior official...
by Star News Staff | Sep 6, 2021
by Kendall Tietz The superintendent who will likely fire a pro-Antifa California teacher said his school district has not been able to find any reports from parents or students prior to a Project Veritas video catching him boasting about indoctrinating his...
by Julie Carr | Sep 6, 2021
In a specific discussion, Thursday on First Principles with Phill Kline – host Kline talked with CEO and Editor-in-Chief of The Star News Network, and host of The Tennessee Star Report, Michael Patrick Leahy about the unholy alliance between Big Tech and social...
by The Center Square | Sep 6, 2021
by Scott McClallen The Detroit Public Schools Community District (DPSCD), Michigan’s largest public education system responsible for educating 51,000 children, has reached a new agreement with the Detroit Federation of Teachers (DFT) Local 231 on a two-year...
by The Center Square | Sep 6, 2021
by J.D. Davidson Ohio businesses should profit as the state completes paying off nearly a $1.5 billion loan it needed to cover unemployment benefits during the COVID-19 pandemic, Gov. Mike DeWine said. DeWine announced Ohio began the process of repaying the...
by The Center Square | Sep 6, 2021
by Man Dude Georgia’s rural leaders said communities continue to face a lack of support from the state as the COVID-19 pandemic deteriorates the quality of life in rural areas. David Bridges, interim director of the Center for Rural Prosperity and...
by Chris Butler | Sep 6, 2021
Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr joined 17 states late last week in filing a brief before the U.S. Supreme Court to support the First Amendment rights of Seattle’s Union Gospel Mission. The Mission is seeking Supreme Court review of a recent ruling by the...
by Star News Staff | Sep 6, 2021
by Anthony Gockowski St. Paul police officers “are being pushed to the brink” as they grapple with high turnover and record crime rates, the chief of police told a St. Paul City Council committee Wednesday. Police Chief Todd Axtell’s budget presentation was met...
by Steve Stewart | Sep 6, 2021
Senate President Wilton Simpson, a wealthy Republican from Pasco County whose business holdings include a large egg farm, filed paperwork Friday to run for state agriculture commissioner in 2022. Based on his latest financial disclosure, Simpson is one of the...
by Star News Staff | Sep 6, 2021
by Thomas Catenacci Prominent economic historian Niall Ferguson said current inflation could be in line with where it was in the 1960s during the period that preceded a decade of high consumer prices, CNBC reported. “What is interesting about disasters is that...
by Steve Stewart | Sep 6, 2021
During a special Leon County School Board (LCSB) meeting on Thursday, Board member Rosanne Wood initiated a discussion about vaccine incentives focused on Leon County School (LCS) employees and students. The proposed initiative would provide a monetary...
by Star News Staff | Sep 6, 2021
by Cole Lauterbach An active monsoon season has brought relief from the summer heat, but Arizona officials are warning the rains have resulted in a spike of mosquito-borne illnesses. Two residents have died as a result. The Maricopa County Department of Public...
by The Center Square | Sep 6, 2021
by Tyler Arnold A criminal justice reform advocacy group is urging Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam to use his pardon power generously before leaving office at the end of his term in January. Families Against Mandatory Minimums, which works to repeal mandatory...
by Eric Burk | Sep 6, 2021
Danville Public Schools moved its middle and high school classes to virtual on Friday with about 1,100 out of the district’s total 6,900 students quarantined for COVID-19. The school is using the Labor Day weekend to do a deep-clean. Director of...