VA terminates key union contractsNew Foto - VA terminates key union contracts

The Department of Veterans Affairs is terminating collective bargaining agreements with several key government unions representing its employees. In an announcement Wednesday, the VA said the move is in response to anexecutive orderPresident Donald Trump signed in March that nixed collective bargaining rights for many federal workers in the name of national security. The agency's decision comes after a federal appellate court lifted a lower court ban on the ending of union contracts on Friday, although the Trump administration previously issued guidance that agencies should not terminate any collective bargaining agreements until litigation challenging the order is over. "Too often, unions that represent VA employees fight against the best interests of Veterans while protecting and rewarding bad workers," VA Secretary Doug Collins said in a statement. "We're making sure VA resources and employees are singularly focused on the job we were sent here to do: providing top-notch care and service to those who wore the uniform." The VA said it notified five major unions that their contracts for "bargaining-unit employees" were being terminated: the American Federation of Government Employees; the National Association of Government Employees; the National Federation of Federal Employees; the National Nurses Organizing Committee/National Nurses United; and the Service Employees International Union. Contracts covering the roughly 4,000 VA police officers, firefighters or security guards represented by those unions will remain in place, the agency said. The VA said the move will allow staff to "spend more time with Veterans," noting that in 2024, nearly 2,000 union employees "spent more than 750,000 hours of work on taxpayer-funded union time." Without those obligations, "those hours can now be used to serve Veterans instead of union bosses," the agency said. The move will also open up more physical space for veterans' needs, the VA said. "More than 187,000 square feet of its office and clinical space is currently being used by union representatives free of charge," the agency said, adding that it has "cost VA millions of dollars in lost rent and expenses." The agency also says labor contracts have restricted managers' ability to hire, promote and reward high performing employees and to hold poor performers accountable. The move was met with outrage by at least two of the top unions representing VA employees. AFGE, which represents 320,000 employees at the agency, said it is assessing its options to challenge Collins' move. "Secretary Collins' decision to rip up the negotiated union contract for majority of its workforce is another clear example of retaliation against AFGE members for speaking out against the illegal, anti-worker, and anti-veteran policies of this administration," AFGE National President Everett Kelley said in a statement. He noted that Collins' action is "inconsistent" with Office of Personnel Managementguidanceinstructing agencies to hold off on ending union agreements while the legal challenges played out. Those losing their representation by AFGE and several other unions include nurses, doctors, housekeepers, maintenance, food service workers, lawyers, mental health specialists, cemetery workers and others, according to AFGE. NNU, the largest union of registered nurses in the country, said the VA's announcement to terminate its contract and those of the other unions "is an attack on those who dedicate their lives in the service of others." "We know this administration is hellbent on silencing nurses and other VA workers to steamroll the destruction of the VA," the nurses' union said in a statement to CNN. "It is because of VA nurses' ability to speak up about patient safety through our union that our nation's veterans receive the highest level of care." NNU says it will "continue to pursue legal action with our fellow unions." The department's move comes just days after a federal appeals court in California lifted a lower court's preliminary injunction that had blocked several federal agencies from canceling certain union contracts. Trump's expansiveexecutive orderapplies to more than 1 million federal workers across many agencies, including the departments of State, Defense, Justice and Health and Human Services. The order is aimed at stopping federal unions that have "declared war on President Trump's agenda," according to a White House fact sheet. It noted that the largest union – AFGE – has filed many grievances to "block Trump policies." "President Trump refuses to let union obstruction interfere with his efforts to protect Americans and our national interests," the fact sheet said. The two largest federal employee unions – AFGE and the National Treasury Employees Union – sued in separate courts, saying Trump was retaliating for their advocacy for their members and for federal services. The unions wereinitially successfulin blocking the order in separate federal district courts, but they each lost on theappellate level. NNU, as well as other unions, joined AFGE in its lawsuit against the executive order. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

VA terminates key union contracts

VA terminates key union contracts The Department of Veterans Affairs is terminating collective bargaining agreements with several key govern...
Meet the Republican Senate candidate in Kentucky who could be the next JD VanceNew Foto - Meet the Republican Senate candidate in Kentucky who could be the next JD Vance

Nate Morris grew up in Louisville, Kentucky, with a single mother, an absent father and grandparents who schooled him in Appalachian culture and the ways of the working class. After an elite education that included a bachelor's degree from George Washington University and an MBA from Oxford, he built an innovative waste management company that attracted money frombig-name investorsandcomparisons to Uber. Now Morris is positioning himself as the outsider in a Republican Senate primary that will determine whom the party nominates next year to succeedMitch McConnell. Since launching his campaignin June, Morris has relentlessly attacked McConnell, whose name graces the state GOP's headquarters, while characterizing his two rivals, Rep. Andy Barr and former state Attorney General Daniel Cameron, as squishy extensions of McConnell's legacy. Morris' biography and anti-establishment pitch, tailored to President Donald Trump's right-wing populist base, is reminiscent of the formula that sent JD Vance from the private sector to the Senate — and, most recently, to the vice presidency. "Nate's life story is strikingly similar" to Vance's, Charlie Kirk, an influential figure in Trump's MAGA movement who has campaigned with Morris,wrote last month in a post on X. Vance, a Yale Law graduate, chronicled his own turbulent childhood — a single mother who struggled with addiction, a "revolving door of father figures" and grandparents who shouldered a heavy load in raising him — in his 2016 memoir, "Hillbilly Elegy." He grew up in Middletown, Ohio, and frequently visited family in Jackson, Kentucky. Morris' family descends from nearby Morgan County. At 44 and 41, respectively, Morris and Vance are also close in age. They struck up a friendship several years ago, when Morris was running Rubicon, the high-tech trash and recycling company he founded, and Vance was working in Silicon Valley venture capital. "I sent him an email and I said, 'Hey, I see you've got Kentucky roots, I'd love to connect,'" Morris recalled in an interview this week with NBC News. "He wrote me back pretty quickly." They soon learned they had more in common than their bios. "We connected on everything from politics to technology and, of course, junk food," Morris said. "I knew he was a real hillbilly when we started talking about what we like to eat. He said, 'You know, I'm having a hard time finding some of the things I like out here, out West.'" Morris promptly shipped a couple of cases of Big Red, a regionally popular soda, to Vance in California. "It's what we call a trailer treat in Kentucky," Morris said. "It's a staple in the hillbilly palate." Morris was among the notable names at afundraiserVance put together for Trump last year in Ohio. And Vance encouraged Morris to take a look at the Kentucky Senate race, a source familiar with the conversation said. "JD is a friend, and I've been very inspired by his success and what he's been able to do as a senator and vice president," Morris said. "He represents the American dream." Morris talks frequently of his mother, recalling how she worked multiple jobs and relied on food stamps to raise him. In his interview with NBC News, he also described "typical deadbeat dad issues" — his estranged father's gambling addiction and delinquent child support. "My mother had personal struggles and challenges … and she had to deal with a lot of things that a lot of Kentuckians have to deal with, and that really took its toll," Morris said. "But, you know, we stayed really tight as a family unit between my mom and my grandparents." By Morris' count, 19 of his family members worked at the Ford Motor Co. plant in Louisville. His maternal grandfather served as the local United Auto Workers president and often took Morris with him to the union hall. Those experiences in the 1990s — particularly fallout from the North American Free Trade Agreement, whichVance has citedas a formative moment of his youth — helped shape his politics. "It was members of my family that, when NAFTA came through, lost their jobs because they went to Mexico," Morris said. His grandparents, he added, "were Reagan Democrats, but they were very conservative people who always felt that the American workers should be put first." Morris wanted to "get away from a lot of the challenges" of his childhood and channeled his energy into high school football. When a severe neck injury sidelined him, he gravitated toward the debate team and Boys Nation, an American Legion program that took him to Washington, D.C., where he met then-President Bill Clinton. After returning to Washington for college, he landed internships with a local congresswoman and, later, with McConnell. It's that latter piece of Morris' biography that his critics wield against him, arguing he's not the outsider he proclaims to be. Morris' Washington connections also led him to a fundraising role with then-President George W. Bush's re-election bid. At 23, he raised more than $50,000, earning him status as one of the campaign's youngest "Bush Mavericks." Among those impressed was McConnell, who, in a 2004 profile of Morris by the Lexington Herald-Leader, remarked that he was "the kind of kid you remember because he seems to be so sincere and so dedicated to the cause." Morris ratedfurther profile treatmenta decade later, when he emerged as a key adviser to Kentucky's other Republican senator, Rand Paul, who was preparing to run for president and whose vision for the future of the Republican Party appeared to be ascendant at the time. Many thought then that Morris himself would one day run for office in Kentucky. His Senate campaign is no surprise, but his decision to critically center McConnell in it has been notable. Hiscampaign launch videoincluded footage ofBarrandCameronreferring to McConnell as a "mentor." A statement from Cameron's campaign described Morris' McConnell-bashing as "completely fake" while emphasizing his past work for the senator and charging that he has an "authenticity problem." Morris, in his interview, countered that his work for McConnell "showed me exactly what I didn't want to be." "I know that seems advantageous for me to say that now, but it's the truth," Morris said. The culture around McConnell "was just around power," he added. "We all have desires to want to be more and get more. That's the human component. But there was no element of service. There was no higher purpose. There was no, 'Let's make this about Kentucky.'" Addressing a breakfast crowd before last weekend's annual Fancy Farm picnic, a major political event in western Kentucky,McConnell winked at Morris' candidacy, wondering "how you'd want to be different from the longest-serving Senate leader in American history." Morris arrived at the picnic ina garbage truck— a nod to his business career and to his campaign pledge to "trash" McConnell, Barr and Cameron. On stage,he alluded to all three. "I thought this was Fancy Farm," he said. "I didn't realize this was Bring Your Boys to Work day." Loud boos were audible throughout Morris' remarks. "The main thing that stood out about his speech was that it was angry and trashy, not that of a statesman at all," said a Republican operative who was at the event and is not affiliated with anyone in the race. Barr's campaign seized on the reaction, issuing a statement for this article asserting that "Andy Barr dominated Fancy Farm." "Meanwhile," the campaign added, "Nate Morris was booed worse than the lone Democrat speaker at Fancy Farm — his performance widely panned as one of the worst ever by a Republican." In Morris' mind, the criticism misses the mark. Why would anyone expect him to change his message because he was at an event stacked with McConnell-aligned GOP insiders? "When you're a disrupter, that's what you've got to do," Morris said in his interview. "You've got to take the fight right to the establishment." Morris' campaign is already outpacing his rivals on the Kentucky airwaves, with nearly $1.6 million spent on ads through Wednesday, according to AdImpact, an ad-tracking firm. A Barr-aligned group has spent $596,000. Cameron's campaign has spent less than $3,000. Nevertheless, Barr, Cameron and their allies have registered Morris as a threat. Both quickly attacked Morris when he entered the race, scrutinizing his past business practices and charging that he has not demonstrated sufficient loyalty to Trump. Cameron's campaign, for example, has called attention toa contributionthat Morris made to a Nikki Haley PAC in 2021. The donation came after Haley hadvowed not to challenge Trumpin 2024, though she eventually did. Whoever wins the GOP nomination will be heavily favored to win the Senate seat. Kentucky has not elected a Democrat to the Senate since awarding Wendell Ford a fourth and final term in 1992. The primary dynamics are not unlike Vance's 2022 Senate race in Ohio, where he was initially dismissed as too much of a neophyte. Vance's opponents also questioned his allegiance to Trump, noting how critical he had been of him years earlier. Other Republicans, including a former state treasurer and former state party chair, commanded more support from local grassroots activists and Washington insiders. Then-Rep. Jim Banks, R-Ind., was the first member of Congress to back Vance. And Vance's friendly relationships with Donald Trump Jr. and Kirk, the MAGA influencer, placed him in good standing in Trump world. Trump himself endorsed Vance weeks before the primary. Ohio's 2024 Senate primary played out similarly, with businessman Bernie Moreno riding Trump and Vance endorsements to the GOP nomination over a state senator backed by establishment-friendly Gov. Mike DeWine. Moreno, like Vance, went on to win the general election. There are common denominators between those winning campaigns and Morris' bid. He declared his candidacy on Trump Jr.'s podcast and held his first major event with Kirk. Key Vance and Moreno advisers, including strategist Andy Surabian and pollster Tony Fabrizio, are now working with him. Banks and Moreno were the first two senators to endorse him. (Barr also boasts some MAGA world endorsements, including from Rep. Elise Stefanik, R-N.Y., and activist Riley Gaines.) If and when Trump and Vance will join them remains unclear. In the meantime, Kentucky observers are curious to see if Morris' Vance-like story and anti-McConnell message can work. "I think it's a mixed bag, because I think there's frustration with McConnell for things he's done the last maybe five to eight years among the base, but he's got, he's in a very long career, and he's done a lot for not just the state, but for the Republican Party in Kentucky," said Tres Watson, a former communications director for the Kentucky GOP. Watson, who is not affiliated with any of the Senate campaigns, hesitated only slightly when asked who he believes is more popular in Kentucky these days: Vance or McConnell. "I mean, probably JD Vance," he said.

Meet the Republican Senate candidate in Kentucky who could be the next JD Vance

Meet the Republican Senate candidate in Kentucky who could be the next JD Vance Nate Morris grew up in Louisville, Kentucky, with a single m...
Travis Kelce's transformation: Chiefs star trims down, gears up for another Super Bowl runNew Foto - Travis Kelce's transformation: Chiefs star trims down, gears up for another Super Bowl run

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (AP) — It's easy to seeTravis Kelcemaking plays on the practice fields of Missouri Western State University these days, whether they be those highlight-reel catches, deft maneuvers in the open field or, yes, the occasional pancake block on a running play. The thing is that there is less of theChiefstight end to see. Kelce won't exactly cop to it — leave that to Chiefs coach Andy Reid, who called him "svelte" — but the four-time All-Pro trimmed down considerably since the end of last season, when he was last seen walking dejectedly off the turf at the Superdome in New Orleans, the Chiefs having been dismantled by the Philadelphia Eagles in the Super Bowl. The sting of the loss probably had a lot to do with his offseason work. You see, some questioned whether the 40-22 defeat might drive the nearly 36-year-old Kelce into retirement, especially given the number of off-the-field pursuits vying for his time. There's the TV shows and films, including the new "Happy Gilmore" flick, along with his popular podcast and his celebrity girlfriend, the pop superstarTaylor Swift. Yet instead of calling it quits, Kelce seemed to redouble his efforts. He used the "New Heights" podcast with his brother, retired Eagles center Jason Kelce, to quickly make it clear that he wasn't going anywhere. Then, apparently, he locked himself in the gym and went to work, trimming down to the kind of shape Kelce was in earlier in his career. "He's svelte right now. He looks like he's 20," Reid opined. "He's doing a nice job. He's worked hard to get to this spot here." And avoid the spot he found himself in last year. By almost any measure, the season Kelce had would have been deemed a success. He appeared in 16 regular-season games, caught 97 passes for 823 yards and three scores, and stepped back into a go-to role for the offense when the Chiefs lost wide receivers Marquise Brown and Rashee Rice to injuries for nearly the entire season. Yet the measure Kelce uses has never been the same used by others. For one thing, the only thing that really matters to him is the Super Bowl, and the Chiefs came up short last season. For another, Kelce is accustomed to 1,000-yard seasons and double-digit touchdown passes, the kinds of numbers that have made him an almost certain first-ballot Hall of Famer. "You know," Kelce said Wednesday, after training camp was moved indoors as a storm swept through, "football is the biggest driving forced I've ever had. I love coming out here and focusing on this and trying to get better for another run." Kelce has always called Missouri Western his "sanctuary," where he can get away from distractions and focus on football. That hasn't changed as he prepares to enter his 13th season. "You get out here to St. Joe," Kelce said, "and you're going to training camp, man, it just really signifies like, coming together. The chemistry, the culture that you need to have to keep getting better every single day, every single week throughout the year. "I think you can really just focus in on your craft," he said, "and being the best. You care for the guys around you." That's evident in the way that Kelce has taken younger players under his guidance. Not just other tight ends, either, but anybody trying to get an edge, whether it be rookie left tackle Josh Simmons or first-year cornerback Nohl Williams. "Every year he just gets wiser and wiser," fellow Chiefs tight end Noah Gray said. "Watching him and his practice habits and the way he works always rubs off on us. When you've a leader like that, that continues to lead the room, continues to lead the team, it rubs off on everybody else and it makes a huge difference." Kelce balked when he was asked about his fondest training camp memory, given that this could well be his last — "Ask me that when I retire," he quipped. But there is nevertheless a distinct feeling that Kelce poured himself into his offseason, getting in the best shape he possibly could, so that he would have no regrets as Kansas City pursed another Super Bowl title. "I mean, we got a long way to go. It's still, I think, close to a month until our first real game," Kelce said. "We got some time to work on our techniques and test it out on some other teams in preseason. But right now, it's just the work phase, man. I'm not really trying to evaluate anything. We're just all trying to get right, get into football shape, and get mentally tough." ___ AP NFL:https://apnews.com/hub/NFL

Travis Kelce's transformation: Chiefs star trims down, gears up for another Super Bowl run

Travis Kelce's transformation: Chiefs star trims down, gears up for another Super Bowl run ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (AP) — It's easy to seeTr...
Ohio State's QB competition between Julian Sayin and Lincoln Kienholz remains too close to callNew Foto - Ohio State's QB competition between Julian Sayin and Lincoln Kienholz remains too close to call

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — After the first quarter of Ohio State's preseason practices, the competition between Julian Sayin and Lincoln Kienholz for the starting quarterback spot remains too close to call. "The competition continues," coach Ryan Day said. "They both have had good moments and moments where they're growing. I will say I've been pleased with the progress. It's going to go right down to the wire. "The positives of having a competition is that you know every day you got to bring it. The guys are always on edge, they're uncomfortable, they're working at it. I think that's healthy for the entire building." A quarterback competition the season after winning the College Football Playoff championship is routine at Ohio State. The circumstances, though, are different. In 2015, Cardale Jones and J.T. Barrett both had experience as they battled. Jones led the Buckeyes to the title when he started the Big Ten championship and both CFP games after Barrett broke his ankle against Michigan. Sayin and Kienholz have a combined 34 pass attempts and 90 college snaps. They are competing to replace Will Howard, who transferred from Kansas State and threw for a Big Ten-high 4,010 yards and 35 touchdowns in leading the Buckeyes to theirsixth national title. Quarterbacks coach Billy Fessler is looking for consistency, especially as the Buckeyes start getting more into situational scenarios during practices the next two weeks. "We have to be great on third down and in the red zone. That's where quarterbacks make their money," Fessler said. "We're in a spot where we're getting more and more of those situations every day. So it's an opportunity for those guys to go out and compete." Sayin has shown better arm strength, though Keinholz has more athleticism after playing three sports in high school. Sayin originally committed to Alabama as the top-rated quarterback in the Class of 2024 and was taking classes when Nick Saban retired. Sayin then entered the transfer portal last spring and came to Ohio State. He played in four games, including the CFP first-round contest against Tennessee, and was 5 for 12 for 84 yards and one touchdown while taking 27 snaps. The sophomore is the slight favorite to emerge as the starter for the Aug. 30 opener against Texas, but he hasn't paid any attention to the outside hype. "I feel like I'm developing in my footwork accuracy and mechanics. It's just all about building confidence. You make a great play, you start to build that confidence," Sayin said. The last snaps Kienholz took in a game were in the 2023 Cotton Bowl against Missouri after starter Devin Brown was injured in the first half. Keinholz struggled, as he completed only six of 17 passes for 86 yards. However, the junior had a great offseason and was one of eight Ohio State players named an Iron Buckeye, which goes to players who excel during offseason workouts. "As a freshman going in there, I didn't really know a whole lot. I didn't really know how protections worked and I mean, now that's something that I feel like I'm pretty good at, and I go out and and execute that well," Keinholz said. "I've been in the offense for three years now, so it's something that I think just more time, more reps and film study, it's helped me get better." Freshman Tavien St. Clair is also getting snaps, but is still getting up to speed with the offense. He did come in as an early enrollee and participated in spring practices. Besides quarterback, Day and the coaching staff are looking for some of the positions to get an established starting group toward the end of the week. Day used a phrase from safeties coach Matt Guerrieri in comparing this week to the third round of a golf tournament, which is typically called moving day. "This is moving week. We want to have our identity and it doesn't need to be in stone, but the players can tell us what we're doing and what our identity is coming out of this week," Day said. ___ AP college football:https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-pollandhttps://apnews.com/hub/college-football

Ohio State's QB competition between Julian Sayin and Lincoln Kienholz remains too close to call

Ohio State's QB competition between Julian Sayin and Lincoln Kienholz remains too close to call COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — After the first qu...
Trump hits India with additional 25% tariff over Russian oil importsNew Foto - Trump hits India with additional 25% tariff over Russian oil imports

Washington— President Trump signed anexecutive orderon Wednesday imposing an additional 25% tariff on goods from India because it continues to buy oil from Russia. The announcement by the presidentcomes just a weekafter he said he would be slapping a 25% tariff on imports from India, as well as an unspecified "penalty," because of its purchases of Russian military equipment and energy. The additional tariff are set to take effect in 21 days, according to the directive. The latest action brings the total duties imposed on Indian products to 50%. Mr. Trump criticized India then as having tariffs that are "far too high" and "the most strenuous and obnoxious non-monetary trade barriers of any country." The president has sought to target countries doing business with Russia as part of his efforts to pressure the Kremlin to reach a peace deal with Ukraine. Russian President Vladimir Putinmet with Steve Witkoff, Mr. Trump's special envoy, in Moscow on Wednesday, according to the Kremlin. Mr. Trump hasgiven Putin until Fridayto agree to a ceasefire with Ukraine or face "severe tariffs" and other economic penalties. Tariffs are a signature piece of the president's trade agenda, and Mr. Trump has used the levies as a way to force U.S. trading partners to the table to negotiate trade agreements. The president announced last weekhigher duties against more than 60 countriesahead of a Friday deadline for them to cut trade deals with his administration. Those tariffs are set to take effect this week. The U.S. had a $45.8 billion trade deficit with India last year, an increase of 5.9% over 2023, according todatafrom the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative. Mr. Trumpmet with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modiat the White House earlier this year and said that the U.S. would be boosting military sales to India. He also said he and Modi reached a deal on oil and gas that would make the U.S. India's leading supplier. Sneak peek: The Strange Shooting of Alex Pennig Quadruple murder suspect captured in Tennessee, officials confirm Neil deGrasse Tyson weighs in on plans for a moon-based nuclear reactor

Trump hits India with additional 25% tariff over Russian oil imports

Trump hits India with additional 25% tariff over Russian oil imports Washington— President Trump signed anexecutive orderon Wednesday imposi...
Homeland Security removes age limits for ICE recruits to boost hiring for Trump deportationsNew Foto - Homeland Security removes age limits for ICE recruits to boost hiring for Trump deportations

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Department of Homeland Security said Wednesday that it is removing age limits for new hires at the agency responsible for immigration enforcement, as it aims toexpand hiringafter a massive infusion of cash from Congress. The department said in a news release that it would waive age limits for new applicants so "even more patriots will qualify to join ICE," the agency responsible for finding, arresting, detaining and removing people who are in the U.S. illegally. The agency is at the center of theTrumpadministration's efforts to carry out PresidentDonald Trump'smass deportation agenda. Earlier this summer Congress passed a spending bill that gives ICE money to hire 10,000 more staff. Currently, ICE applicants must be 21 years old and no older than 37 or 40, depending on what position they are applying for. In an interview with Fox & Friends, Homeland Security SecretaryKristi Noemsaid applicants could be as young as 18. "We no longer have a cap on how old you can be or you can continue at age 18, sign up for ICE and join us and be a part of it. We'll get you trained and ready to be equipped to go out on the streets and help protect families," Noem said. The department said all recruits would have to go through medical and drug screening and complete aphysical fitness test. The agency promoted the age-limit changes on social media with enthusiastic tones, casting the immigration-enforcement efforts as not only patriotic but also epic and even cinematic. One post was accompanied by an image that looked like a recruiting poster showing images of a young man and an older man, both wearing military style tactical gear and holding weapons with the words "NO AGE CAP JOIN ICE NOW" emblazoned on the bottom. "We're taking father/son bonding to a whole new level," it said. Another showed an advertisement for a Ford Club Wagon — a large van once popular for how many people it could carry — with the words: "Think about how many criminal illegal aliens you could fit in this bad boy?" Written at the bottom of the image was the words "Want to deport illegals with your absolute boys?" Absolute boys is a slang term used to praise someone. ICE earlier announced a recruiting campaign aimed at finding and hiring the deportation officers, investigators and lawyers it will need to meet its hiring goals. As part of that campaign the agency is offering an eye-catching bonus of upto $50,000 for new recruitsas well as other benefits like student loan forgiveness and abundant overtime for deportation officers.

Homeland Security removes age limits for ICE recruits to boost hiring for Trump deportations

Homeland Security removes age limits for ICE recruits to boost hiring for Trump deportations WASHINGTON (AP) — The Department of Homeland Se...
Aaron Rodgers is open to playing in Steelers' preseason opener as rookie QB Howard deals with injuryNew Foto - Aaron Rodgers is open to playing in Steelers' preseason opener as rookie QB Howard deals with injury

LATROBE, Pa. (AP) —Aaron Rodgersbelieves the new-lookPittsburgh Steelersoffense is starting to figure things out. The veteran quarterback says he's even open to showcasing how far it's come in Saturday's preseason opener against Jacksonville ... if coach Mike Tomlin asks. "It's an interesting conversation," Rodgers said Wednesday. "I think Mike and I have that at some point. I don't think it's in the plan for me to play this week, but whatever Mike wants to do, I'm fully on board." The 41-year-old last appeared in an exhibition game two years ago during his first season with theNew York Jets. Before that, the NFL's oldest active player hadn't run onto the field for a game that didn't count since 2018. The short-term loss of rookie quarterbackWill Howardmight complicate things. The former Ohio State star is dealing with a hand injury and won't be available, leaving Rodgers, veteran Mason Rudolph and Skylar Thompson to split the snaps against the Jaguars. Howard, whom Rodgers has actively taken under his wing since signing a one-year deal with the Steelers in early June, smacked his hand against a helmet in practice on Tuesday. "It (stinks) for him for sure ... because he's had such a nice camp as a young player and then watching him in minicamp and just seeing his, you know, command of the offense," Rodgers said. "But this year is a growth year for him. It's a year to watch and learn and obviously better himself. This (should) just be a minor setback for him." After being regularly dominated during the opening 10 or so practices at Saint Vincent College, Rodgers thinks he's seen some progress in recent days as he grows more comfortable in offensive coordinator Arthur Smith's system. The two spent several hours on Tuesday talking about offensive philosophy beyond mere Xs and Os, and Rodgers said Smith wants the offense to be a collaborative process. "He's not a rigid guy at all, you know?" Rodgers said. "So ... ideas that I have or ideas that some of the receivers are giving to me to give to him, everything is taken into consideration, which I really appreciate." ___ AP NFL:https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

Aaron Rodgers is open to playing in Steelers' preseason opener as rookie QB Howard deals with injury

Aaron Rodgers is open to playing in Steelers' preseason opener as rookie QB Howard deals with injury LATROBE, Pa. (AP) —Aaron Rodgersbel...

 

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