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NEWSOM says he ll tap Black woman to DIFI seat— SANDERS, WARREN, BOOKER decry RECALL — CALEG pols traveled despite COVID — COX loses staff

NEWSOM says he ll tap Black woman to DIFI seat— SANDERS, WARREN, BOOKER decry RECALL — CALEG pols traveled despite COVID — COX loses staff
politico.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from politico.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

California mulls relaxing rules about ballot signatures

SACRAMENTO, Calif.    California’s Democratic-controlled Legislature is considering whether to make it more difficult for local election officials to reject ballots because a voter’s signature doesn’t exactly match what’s on file. Voters who cast ballots by mail must now sign their ballot. Election officials then compare that signature to the one in the voter’s registration file. Election officials can disqualify ballots if the signatures don’t match. But comparing signatures can be tricky because people don’t always sign their name the same way. It’s a bigger issue after the November election, when more than 86% of votes in California were vote-by-mail ballots.

In Nevada, Unemployed Workers Wait for Aid That Will Still Not Be Enough

In Nevada, Unemployed Workers Wait for Aid That Will Still Not Be Enough Stimulus checks may be on their way, but those struggling to get by worry that the money will soon be gone. “Every morning I wake up thinking about where my help is going to come from,” one woman said. Guadalupe Rodriguez, left, moved in with Bobby Hernandez, a co-worker who was laid off, and another roommate late last year. The three are still struggling to pay bills.Credit.Bridget Bennett for The New York Times March 12, 2021 LAS VEGAS Bobby Hernandez plans to spend his stimulus check on medication to manage his diabetes. Wilma Estrella will use hers to pay the electricity bill. Lizbeth Ramos intends to catch up on the rent, though the money will not be enough to cover all that she owes.

Public colleges and universities brace for steep budget cuts spurred by the pandemic

POLITICO Biden s Covid relief won t shield many public colleges from pandemic s blow States dependent on sectors such as tourism and fossil fuel development expect the economic damage to drag out for years. The University of Alaska system has cut programs and followed through on implementing a 5 percent tuition increase as oil revenue in the state declines. | Mark Thiessen/AP Photo Updated: Link Copied Dozens of public universities that never fully recovered from the Great Recession now find themselves at the mercy of budget cuts driven by a pandemic that’s decimated their state’s biggest industries. Many states managed to avoid a financial cave-in of their fiscal 2021 budgets, owing in large part to money doled out by Congress meant to shore up local economies battered by Covid-19. But those that largely depend on revenue from hard-hit industries like tourism and fossil fuels face big unknowns even with the new influx of federal relief President Joe Biden signed this wee

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