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There's something wrong with the plumbing in Cincinnati.
Billions of gallons of raw sewage ends up in waterways every year.
And for some, that raw sewage is a lot closer to home.
When it's coming out of the drain down there, it's sewage.
The stench was terrible.
Listen to the Backed Up podcast from the NPR Network and Cincinnati Public Radio.
Live from NPR News, I'm Janine Herbst.
The Department of Agriculture has started to issue guidance on how states should implement new work
requirements for people who get food assistance through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program
or SNAP. As MPIR's Maria Godoy reports, estimates suggest the new rules could result in some
2.4 million people losing benefits each month. The changes to SNAP were included in the massive
spending and tax bill President Trump signed into law this summer. Under the new rules,
most able-bodied adults without dependents must now prove they work, volunteer, or take part in a
training program for at least 80 hours a month in order to keep their SNAP benefits.
The changes removed previous exemptions for many parents of teens, veterans, people experiencing
homelessness, foster youth, and adults between the ages of 55 and 65.
The USDA says states have 120-day period to implement the changes.
Maria Godoy, NPR News.
The Trump administration says the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Agency, or
USCIS will now have its own law enforcement agents who can make arrests and carry firearms.
And Pierce Jasmine Garst reports it's a shift for the agency, which reviews applications
for immigrants to become naturalized citizens and issues green cards.
USCIS has up until now been kept separate from making immigration arrests and enforcing deportations.
Under the new rule, the agency will be able to add special agents who can carry firearms
and execute search and arrest warrants.
In a statement, the Department of Homeland Security called it the dawn of a new era
and said the rule will allow USCIS to, quote,
thoroughly fulfill its national security, fraud detection, and public safety missions.
The rule will go into effect after 30 days.
Jasmine Garst and P.R. News, Washington.
Employers added far fewer jobs than expected last month.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics says employers added 22,000 jobs in August, down from the nearly 80,000 jobs that economists were expecting to have been created.
And Pierre Scott Horsley has more on what that means for possible rate cuts.
Forecasters were already betting that Fed policymakers would cut interest rates by at least a quarter percentage point at their next meeting, which is in less than two weeks, to prop up the job market.
after today's report, some investors think the Fed could even go further and order a supersized
half-point rate cut. The reason the Fed has been keeping interest rates this high for this long
is to fight inflation. And so long as the job market was holding up, you know, policymakers felt
like they could take their time before making a change. Now, with these cracks appearing in the
job market, the Fed is being pulled in two different directions, and that's not a comfortable
place for the central bank to be. And Pierre Scott Horsley. This is NPR.
There's newly proposed legislation that aims to boost training, testing, and public education for the nation's emergency alert systems.
Rachel Myro of Member Station KQED has more.
San Francisco Bay Area Congressman Kevin Mullen, a Democrat co-authored a bipartisan bill that would authorize $30 million annually through 2035 for local emergency officials.
Speaking outside a fire station inside of the Bay Bridge,
He said, as our climate changes, we face increasing risks.
Extreme weather is expected to worsen, and across the country, more and more people are living in areas in harm's way.
But the bill faces significant headwinds.
The Trump administration has stripped away funding and gutted staffing for FEMA, the National Weather Service, and other emergency preparedness programs.
For NPR News, I'm Rachel Myro in San Francisco.
Artificial Intelligence Company Anthropic will pay.
a landmark $1.5 billion to settle a class action suit from authors and publishers. It allows
Anthropic to avoid going to trial over copyright claims for downloading millions of books
without permission and storing digital copies of them to train the company's chatbot. Under the
agreement, Anthropic will pay around $3,000 a book and about a half million books are eligible for
that money. Anthropic did not admit any wrongdoing, and this deal still has to be approved by the
courts. All Street lower by the closing bell, the Dowdown 220 points. I'm Janine Herbst,
NPR News, in Washington. This message comes from Wise, the app for using money around the globe.
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