The States

Teachers Fired for Social Media Posts, Now Taxpayers Have to Pay Settlements | The States

44 min · Gestern
Episode Teachers Fired for Social Media Posts, Now Taxpayers Have to Pay Settlements | The States Cover

Beschreibung

Free speech settlements, population shifts, unemployment trends, and AI safety legislation.   The Center Square's Kim Jarrett joins to discuss the University of Tennessee's board voting in June to pay $1.9 million to settle with a professor fired last September over a personal social media post about Charlie Kirk's death; the board cited cost savings and didn't address the free speech questions raised. A former Oglethorpe County, Georgia teacher reportedly received $300,000 and an Austin Peay University professor got $500,000 while keeping his job, both over Kirk-related posts. A Perry County, Tennessee man spent a month in jail over a Facebook meme before receiving an $830,000 settlement with FIRE's help.   Also in this episode: Texas, Florida and North Carolina lead the nation in gains of prime working-age residents (18-54), while New York, California and Illinois posted the largest losses over the past five years. Analysts project New York could lose 2 congressional seats and California up to 4 after the 2030 census, while Texas and Florida are projected to gain roughly 4 seats each. The unemployment rate fell to 4.2% from 4.3%, but leisure and hospitality lost 61,000 jobs — the sharpest monthly drop since the pandemic — tempering optimism about the headline number. Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker signed what he calls the nation's first and most protective AI safety law, requiring risk mitigation frameworks, mandatory annual third-party audits, and 24-72 hour incident reporting. An AI industry group source says Illinois' law closely mirrors California's SB-53 except for the added third-party audit requirement, which he warns could disrupt the national standard other states were converging on. North Carolina's $34.4 billion budget includes $1 billion for Medicaid and $208.5 million for a new children's hospital, and awaits Gov. Josh Stein's signature. Arizona's SNAP payment error rate rose to 10.8% in FY25, putting the state on track for a roughly $200 million federal penalty if it doesn't fall below 6% by 2028. New York Gov. Kathy Hochul announced $100 million in public safety grants for police technology upgrades during a visit to Nassau County, a competitive GOP-held county. A California appeals panel ruled Los Angeles didn't need voter approval for a SoCalGas franchise fee surcharge, rejecting the argument that it functioned as an illegally imposed tax. Plus, America's Talking:   North Carolina https://www.thecentersquare.com/north_carolina/article_cc6c44d3-054f-4b22-bdd0-b3279dd13f2c.html Arizona - https://www.thecentersquare.com/arizona/article_ecf534a4-9a01-4d6a-b9df-9e766e0b99cb.html New York - https://www.thecentersquare.com/arizona/article_ecf534a4-9a01-4d6a-b9df-9e766e0b99cb.html California - https://www.thecentersquare.com/california/article_073af88f-0e86-53ea-85b4-2904c211922b.html The States delivers taxpayer-focused reporting from around America, powered by The Center Square. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com [https://pcm.adswizz.com] for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

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Episode Teachers Fired for Social Media Posts, Now Taxpayers Have to Pay Settlements | The States Cover

Teachers Fired for Social Media Posts, Now Taxpayers Have to Pay Settlements | The States

Free speech settlements, population shifts, unemployment trends, and AI safety legislation.   The Center Square's Kim Jarrett joins to discuss the University of Tennessee's board voting in June to pay $1.9 million to settle with a professor fired last September over a personal social media post about Charlie Kirk's death; the board cited cost savings and didn't address the free speech questions raised. A former Oglethorpe County, Georgia teacher reportedly received $300,000 and an Austin Peay University professor got $500,000 while keeping his job, both over Kirk-related posts. A Perry County, Tennessee man spent a month in jail over a Facebook meme before receiving an $830,000 settlement with FIRE's help.   Also in this episode: Texas, Florida and North Carolina lead the nation in gains of prime working-age residents (18-54), while New York, California and Illinois posted the largest losses over the past five years. Analysts project New York could lose 2 congressional seats and California up to 4 after the 2030 census, while Texas and Florida are projected to gain roughly 4 seats each. The unemployment rate fell to 4.2% from 4.3%, but leisure and hospitality lost 61,000 jobs — the sharpest monthly drop since the pandemic — tempering optimism about the headline number. Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker signed what he calls the nation's first and most protective AI safety law, requiring risk mitigation frameworks, mandatory annual third-party audits, and 24-72 hour incident reporting. An AI industry group source says Illinois' law closely mirrors California's SB-53 except for the added third-party audit requirement, which he warns could disrupt the national standard other states were converging on. North Carolina's $34.4 billion budget includes $1 billion for Medicaid and $208.5 million for a new children's hospital, and awaits Gov. Josh Stein's signature. Arizona's SNAP payment error rate rose to 10.8% in FY25, putting the state on track for a roughly $200 million federal penalty if it doesn't fall below 6% by 2028. New York Gov. Kathy Hochul announced $100 million in public safety grants for police technology upgrades during a visit to Nassau County, a competitive GOP-held county. A California appeals panel ruled Los Angeles didn't need voter approval for a SoCalGas franchise fee surcharge, rejecting the argument that it functioned as an illegally imposed tax. Plus, America's Talking:   North Carolina https://www.thecentersquare.com/north_carolina/article_cc6c44d3-054f-4b22-bdd0-b3279dd13f2c.html Arizona - https://www.thecentersquare.com/arizona/article_ecf534a4-9a01-4d6a-b9df-9e766e0b99cb.html New York - https://www.thecentersquare.com/arizona/article_ecf534a4-9a01-4d6a-b9df-9e766e0b99cb.html California - https://www.thecentersquare.com/california/article_073af88f-0e86-53ea-85b4-2904c211922b.html The States delivers taxpayer-focused reporting from around America, powered by The Center Square. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com [https://pcm.adswizz.com] for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Gestern44 min
Episode Report: U.S. College Graduates Went on to Lead Chinese Defense, Surveillance Firms | The States Cover

Report: U.S. College Graduates Went on to Lead Chinese Defense, Surveillance Firms | The States

Government Accountability Office estimates billions lost to fraud, U.S. colleges educating Chinese state-linked executives, egg price fixing lawsuit, the end of DOGE, and Michigan passes a state budget. Sam Shulman, Director of Research at Strategy Risks, joins to discuss a report examining Missouri State University's MBA pipeline for Chinese state-linked executives. The program trained over 1,500 students over more than two decades. Graduates went on to lead Chinese defense and surveillance firms like AVIC and iFlytek. Estimated taxpayer cost of the program totals $54 million. Also in this episode: - A 2024 GAO report estimates the federal government loses $233–521 billion annually to fraud. - The Biden administration once called that estimate "not plausible," but the Trump administration now backs it. - None of the GAO's three fraud-prevention recommendations have been fully implemented. - The DOJ reached a proposed settlement with egg producers Cal-Maine, Hickman's, and Versova. - The companies allegedly manipulated egg price quotations. - The settlement includes donating over 53 million eggs to food banks in 17 states. - The Department of Government Efficiency will not issue a closing report after it officially ended July 4th. - Some question the success of the department after it failed to deliver the ambitious savings promised when it started. - Michigan missed its July 1 budget deadline for the second year in a row. - Lawmakers ultimately passed a roughly $80 billion budget after a marathon session. - Republicans criticized the process for lacking transparency. - Democrats highlighted new child care funding and Medicaid protections in the plan. - Wisconsin is projected to have a $2.7 billion surplus tied to inflation-driven sales tax collections. - North Carolina's governor is weighing whether to sign the state budget and other pending bills. - Arizona's congressman marked the one-year anniversary of the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act." - A new report finds rural hospitals at risk of closure in California, Texas, and Kansas. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com [https://pcm.adswizz.com] for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

6. Juli 202645 min
Episode U.S. Supreme Court Allows Late Mail-in Ballots To Be Counted | Weekend Edition Cover

U.S. Supreme Court Allows Late Mail-in Ballots To Be Counted | Weekend Edition

On this edition of the Center Square Radio Hour, The U.S. Supreme Court, in a 5-4 decision on Monday, ruled that states can accept and count mail-in ballots received after the federal Election Day. American voters overwhelmingly support their country’s founding ideals – yet the majority also believe that the U.S. is failing to live up to them, according to new polling.  About half of Americans are confident about the future of democracy in the U.S., with political affiliation and support for Trump or Harris being the most significant demographic divides. And with inflation remaining a concern, how is it impacting the cost of your independence day barbeque? Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com [https://pcm.adswizz.com] for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

4. Juli 202648 min
Episode 86% of Voters Support the Founding Principles, 2/3rds Say We're not Living Up to Them | The State Cover

86% of Voters Support the Founding Principles, 2/3rds Say We're not Living Up to Them | The State

We mark America's 250th birthday with a look at the Declaration of Independence's origins, the economics of the 4th of July, state independence rankings, and a new poll on how Americans view the country's founding principles today.   Hillsdale College professor Richard Samuelson breaks down what really drove the Declaration of Independence — it wasn't just about tea taxes, but the fight for self-government. Samuelson also connects liberty to responsibility and makes the case for federalism, noting that freedom comes with the risk of failure. A new Center Square/Noble Predictive Insights poll finds 86% of voters across party and demographic lines support America's founding principles — but nearly two-thirds say the country isn't living up to them, with broad agreement across party lines. Also in this episode: Ph.D. Economist Orphe Divounguy breaks down the cost of Independence Day and how your barbeque is being impacted by inflation. WalletHub ranks the most and least independent states for 2026: Idaho, Utah, and Hawaii come out on top for financial and social self-reliance, while Kentucky, Louisiana, and Mississippi land at the bottom. The Supreme Court agrees to hear challenges to Illinois' and Connecticut's assault weapons bans, setting up a major Second Amendment fight, while the DOJ sues California and Virginia over new gun restrictions targeting Glocks and semi-automatic rifles. Pennsylvania blows through its budget deadline for the fifth year running, passing a university funding bill amid a $6 billion gap still unresolved. Georgia's new law puts school speed camera programs to a local vote, requiring referendums and adding limits on when and how tickets can be issued. The Trump administration's America250 civics push aims to boost historical literacy as new data shows just 23% of eighth graders are proficient in civics.   Plus, America's Talking:   Illinois, California, Virginia: https://www.thecentersquare.com/national/article_b2bfb834-4334-44c1-9434-30daa57f63d6.html Pennsylvania: https://www.thecentersquare.com/pennsylvania/article_5a49b4cc-25ed-49a6-ad31-825e27bd37c4.html Georgia: https://www.thecentersquare.com/georgia/article_d96da53e-ffa4-41db-baad-3ed120deae75.html   The States delivers taxpayer-focused reporting from around America, powered by The Center Square. ____________ 👉 Read more: https://www.thecentersquare.com 📩 Sign up for the newsletter for daily updates   Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com [https://pcm.adswizz.com] for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

2. Juli 202647 min
Episode Gun Owners Are Watching Illinois Gun Case Heading to the Supreme Court | The States Cover

Gun Owners Are Watching Illinois Gun Case Heading to the Supreme Court | The States

Pennsylvania's teacher pension fund falling short, SCOTUS agrees to hear Illinois gun case, polling shows divide in voters' confidence in the future of democracy, and states' firework taxes. The Center Square's Mark Stricherz reports Pennsylvania's teacher pension fund is $41 billion short and only two-thirds funded, and the Pennsylvania Public School Retirement System blames private equity returns. Pennsylvania and six other states are pulling back their pension investments in private equity. The Center Square's Voters' Voice Poll finds just 47% of Americans are confident in the future of U.S. democracy. Morgan Sweeney joins to discuss the polling, with confidence split sharply along political lines, with Trump voters far more optimistic than Harris voters.   Also in this episode: - The Supreme Court agreed to hear two cases on whether the Second Amendment protects semiautomatic rifles like the AR-15. - A ruling isn't expected for about a year, and existing state gun bans remain in effect until then. - Fireworks laws and taxes vary widely by state, with some charging excise taxes as high as 12%. - The CPSC reported 13,000 fireworks injuries and 15 deaths nationwide last year. - NASA awarded $590 million in new moon lander contracts but still won't say what its full Moon-to-Mars program will cost. - The White House has proposed a 23% cut to NASA's budget while the House pushes to keep funding flat. - Colorado's Democratic primary for governor has been decided, but the Republican race remains too close to call. - Republican incumbents also won primaries in three of Colorado's congressional districts. - Pennsylvania missed its budget deadline for the fifth year in a row, raising fears of another lengthy impasse. Plus, America's Talking:   Moon: https://www.thecentersquare.com/national/article_8ffebec9-f11c-46ef-99d6-7c9cc5a70e2d.html   Colorado: https://www.thecentersquare.com/colorado/article_3055da16-7dad-427c-a999-4300f9f73a6d.html Pennsylvania: https://www.thecentersquare.com/pennsylvania/article_a67b2702-e4fb-4d7e-827c-81165f44f7ef.html The States delivers taxpayer-focused reporting from around America, powered by The Center Square. Video excerpt from Pro Football Talk / NBC Sports used for purposes of news reporting, commentary, and discussion. ____________ 👉 Read more: https://www.thecentersquare.com 📩 Sign up for the newsletter for daily updates Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com [https://pcm.adswizz.com] for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

1. Juli 202638 min