Community, Diversity, Sustainability and other Overused Words

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  • BREAKING NEWS: How to file taxes for an LLC with no income

    Stacker, Cara Hartley|Updated May 4, 2025

    For assistance forming an LLC with your State's Secretary of State, we recommend visiting Signature Filing. They will help you file it quickly and completely online. Sometimes a limited liability company, or LLC, has a year with no business activity. For example, a newly formed LLC might not have started doing business yet, or an older LLC might have become inactive without being formally dissolved. However, even if an inactive LLC has no income or expenses for a year, it...

  • BREAKING NEWS: How to write an effective corporate travel policy

    Stacker, Feli Oliveros|Updated May 4, 2025

    For assistance forming your corporation or writing corporate bylaws, we recommend that you utilize the services of Signature Filing. File easily online at a minimal cost. Whether it's for sales meetings, trade shows, or conferences, travel is important for any business. But with increasing costs and a remote work model, corporate travel has become more complicated than ever. This is why a corporate travel policy, or a set of guidelines to ensure your team is efficient with...

  • How biohazard training for first responders and property managers can help combat the fentanyl crisis

    Stacker, Jon Acosta for Trauma Services|Updated May 4, 2025

    The fentanyl epidemic is most closely associated with drug users—often people who became addicted after being prescribed opioids for pain or injury. However, as abuse rates have increased, fentanyl has turned into a crisis for first responders, property managers, and maintenance workers who have to deal with the aftermath, Trauma Services reports. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, opioids such as fentanyl were involved in 55,529 unintentional o...

  • The number of 18-year-olds is about to drop sharply, packing a wallop for colleges-and the economy

    Stacker, Jon Marcus for The Hechinger Report|Updated May 4, 2025

    Pickup trucks with trailers and cars with yawning trunks pulled up onto untended lawns in front of buildings from which people lugged books, furniture, mattresses, trophy cases and artwork. Anything else of value had already been sold by a company that specializes in auctioning off the leftover assets of failed businesses. At least one of the buildings was soon to be demolished altogether, its red-brick walls dumped into its 1921 foundation. This was the unceremonious end of...

  • The most and least hospitable states for electric vehicle ownership

    Stacker, Andrew Jose, Data Work By Elena Cox|Updated May 4, 2025

    The number of people purchasing and using electric vehicles in the United States reached record levels in 2024, thanks to a combination of federal, state, and local incentives and growing awareness about the impact of greenhouse gases on climate change. However, recent moves by the Trump administration to curb incentives to buy EVs, such as tax credits, pause federal fleets' adoption of EVs, and implement tariffs on EV parts is threatening continued growth. EVs occupied...

  • Cities have a public bathroom crisis. Are smart, portable bathrooms the way forward?

    Stacker, Maylin Tu for Next City|Updated May 4, 2025

    Gerardo Valerio had been looking for a bathroom in Los Angeles' Little Tokyo neighborhood for 20 minutes when he stumbled across a blue and white trailer with "FREE BATHROOM" at the top. At first, he was hesitant to enter the bathroom, which had been installed by the Washington, D.C.-based portable toilet startup Throne. To get in, he had to scan a QR code which pre-loaded a text onto his phone. After sending the text, the door would automatically slide open. "What do I text,...

  • Most popular TV shows on Netflix last week

    Stacker, Chris Compendio|Updated Apr 25, 2025

    It's been 12 years since Netflix changed the way we watch television with the release of its first original series, "Lilyhammer" and "House of Cards," and nothing has been the same since. The binge model, where all episodes are released at once, upended our viewing patterns and got us hooked on new shows in a way we hadn't been before—who knew there could be so much joy in canceling your plans for the weekend to speed through 10-plus episodes of a thrilling series instead? A...

  • 11 iconic mother figures across TV history

    Stacker, Michelle No|Updated Apr 25, 2025

    Television has long archived the evolution of domestic life and the mother figures at its center. While viewers might not have closely tracked the many legislative wins and institutional changes that transformed the role of women in American families, TV makes it easy to compare the maternal norms of today to those of 50 years ago. Lucy Ricardo's slapstick antics in 1951's "I Love Lucy" highlighted just how conservative gender norms had become—and how eager people were to w...

  • Dog breeds gaining popularity

    Stacker, Sophia Crisafulli, Data Work By Wade Zhou|Updated Apr 25, 2025

    Few animals exhibit the absolute, unadulterated joy of a dog greeting its human companion after they arrive home from a long day at work. Dog owners may ask, "Does anyone love me as much as my dog?" As times change, so too do pet owners' preferences when it comes to which breeds they bring home. Breeds once wildly popular just a few decades ago may have fallen out of fashion. In other cases, an underdog can rise to the top of the charts. Take the French bulldog, for instance,...

  • 'Stop the Bleed' kits could help shooting victims. Why don't more people know about them?

    Stacker, Rita Oceguera for The Trace|Updated Apr 25, 2025

    In 2021, Chicago launched a counterterrorism initiative to teach city employees to respond to life-threatening injuries caused by dangerous events, like mass shootings. To do that, the city installed more than 1,000 blood control kits in over 500 municipal buildings. Since then, the Office of Emergency Management and Communications has grown the program by partnering with other agencies and departments. The expanded effort, community leaders say, serves a critical purpose:...

  • Cities have a public bathroom crisis. Are smart, portable bathrooms the way forward?

    Stacker, Maylin Tu for Next City|Updated Apr 25, 2025

    Gerardo Valerio had been looking for a bathroom in Los Angeles' Little Tokyo neighborhood for 20 minutes when he stumbled across a blue and white trailer with "FREE BATHROOM" at the top. At first, he was hesitant to enter the bathroom, which had been installed by the Washington, D.C.-based portable toilet startup Throne. To get in, he had to scan a QR code which pre-loaded a text onto his phone. After sending the text, the door would automatically slide open. "What do I text,...

  • Do women like beards? What science says

    Stacker, Grace Gallagher for Hims|Updated Apr 25, 2025

    Beards are undeniably a part of today's cultural zeitgeist. The market is flooded with beard-care products, glitter beards are an actual trend, and there's even a recognized phobia of beards (pogonophobia), and dating apps for beard lovers. If that doesn't prove that beards have made their mark, what does? Still, plenty of men ask: Do women like beards? The short answer: It depends on the woman, the man, and the style. Fortunately, this isn't just casual barbershop chatter....

  • More states are filling a federal gap by helping police track stolen guns

    Stacker, Chip Brownlee for The Trace|Updated Apr 18, 2025

    On Dec. 6, 2024, Connecticut State Police arrested a 35-year-old man who had allegedly failed to report several of his guns as stolen. It wasn't a mundane arrest: His case appeared to be a classic example of gun trafficking fueled by straw purchasing, a term for when a person buys a gun with the intent of giving or selling it to someone prohibited from possessing it, like a person convicted of a felony. In all, the man had allegedly purchased more than 30 guns, including 16...

  • What a difference a dollar makes: These are the metros where your paycheck stretches the furthest

    Stacker, Ben Popken, Data Work By Elena Cox|Updated Apr 18, 2025

    It's getting hard out there to be an everyday consumer. Prices are up, and so is unemployment. President Donald Trump's shifting positions on tariffs are contributing to a haze of economic uncertainty. Bracing for impact, shoppers are trimming their grocery runs and seeking discounts, and their confidence in the economy is plunging, according to The Conference Board. Wage growth has been slowing, and job seekers are heading into a job market downturn as businesses pause...

  • The best slides for summer 2025

    Stacker, Graeme Campbell for GOAT|Updated Apr 18, 2025

    There are sneakers and then there are summer sneakers. Certain kicks beg to be worn as soon as the weather starts warming up, from Air Force 1s and Stan Smiths to Vans. But some occasions call for something a bit more breezy. Flip flops, pool slides, thongs, sandals—call them what you want—today the world's leading brands are placing more and more emphasis on this category of summer footwear. Put simply, summer slides have never been better. Classic sport styles like the Nik...

  • 50 most popular chain restaurants in America

    Stacker, Paul Feinstein, Madison Troyer|Updated Apr 18, 2025

    Since A&W Root Beer became the first American restaurant to franchise in 1925, the U.S.—not to mention the rest of the world—has been dominated by chains. Iconic establishments like the now-defunct Howard Johnson's trained customers to look toward its distinctive orange roofs for consistency and comfort, while McDonald's revolutionized the industry with its focus on speed and affordability. Over the years, chains have had a tremendous influence on American culture, from Lit...

  • Abandoned coal mines are becoming the batteries of the future

    Stacker, Natasha Khullar Relph for Reasons to be Cheerful|Updated Apr 18, 2025

    From Europe to North America, an energy revolution is breathing new life into empty, long-forgotten coal mine shafts—by repurposing them into places to store renewable energy. Using "gravity batteries," these underground facilities aim to tackle one of renewable energy's greatest challenges: storage. Reasons to be Cheerful reports that the method is simple: Excess renewable energy is used to power winches that lift heavy weights—such as containers filled with sand or rock — up...

  • 9 lives and more? 60 years of groundbreaking medical advancements have improved cat health and longevity.

    Stacker, Colleen Kilday|Updated Apr 18, 2025

    With more than 350 million beloved cat companions in homes across the globe, the veterinary community has focused on research to keep them around for as long as possible. Cat owners today can expect their feline friends to live an average of 13 to 17 years. This is partially attributable to shifts in attitudes about indoor and outdoor domestic cats. In the United States, approximately 3 in 5 cats (63%) are indoors only. Indoor cats are known to live significantly longer than...

  • With an ally in the White House, Moms for Liberty renews its fight against a longtime target

    Stacker, Marta W. Aldrich for Chalkbeat, Erica Meltzer for Chalkbeat|Updated Apr 18, 2025

    In a small recording studio near Nashville, Tennessee, conservative activist Kelly Schenkoske urged an online audience of parents to scour school district websites for contracts that mention social and emotional learning. "Social-emotional learning is far more than just kindness," Schenkoske said. "It is a bait and switch." The bait, according to Schenkoske and other panelists at the recent Moms for Liberty training event, is small shifts in the school day to introduce student...

  • Automotive stocks: The effect of tariffs on shares of popular automakers

    Stacker, Matt Miczulski for Finder, Richard Laycock for Finder|Updated Apr 18, 2025

    The Trump administration announced on March 26 a 25% tariff on imports of automobiles and certain automobile parts, aiming to bolster U.S. manufacturing and protect national security. Unsurprisingly, it sent shockwaves through the automotive industry and financial markets—consumers rushed to buy cars ahead of potential price hikes, and investors scrambled to assess the fallout. According to Finder data, there was plenty of fallout. To add to the uncertainty, on April 14, P...

  • Zoloft vs. Lexapro: A comprehensive comparison of two leading SSRIs

    Stacker, Noah W Chung for SaveHealth|Updated Apr 18, 2025

    In the treatment of mental health disorders like depression and anxiety, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) are often prescribed as first-line treatments. Among the most popular SSRIs are Zoloft (sertraline) and Lexapro (escitalopram)—each with its own strengths, side effect profiles, and clinical indications. While both drugs are designed to regulate serotonin levels in the brain, understanding their nuanced differences can help patients and clinicians make infor...

  • 4 great Mother's Day wine gifts for 2025

    Stacker, Vicki Denig for Sommsation|Updated Apr 14, 2025

    Mother's Day is the perfect occasion to show appreciation for the incredible moms in our lives, and what better way to celebrate than with a thoughtfully curated wine gift? As always, having a few tips to lead you to the perfect gift is always a good idea, and our expert team has a few recs to share. From crisp bottles of bubbly to rich, full-bodied red, Sommsation put together a list of the best wine gifts for Mother's Day 2025. From luxury wine gifts to custom wine gift...

  • The strategic edge: Advanced investment strategies for high-income earners

    Stacker, Tony Molina, CPA, for Range|Updated Apr 14, 2025

    For affluent individuals, building and preserving wealth involves more than picking the right stocks or stashing cash in savings accounts. It requires intentional, strategic investing that accounts for the unique opportunities and challenges of high-income earners. With elevated income levels come tax implications, portfolio considerations, and the need for sophisticated wealth management strategies. This is where advanced investment approaches like Modern Portfolio Theory...

  • Forget the money-this is what actually keeps employees at their jobs

    Stacker, Noah W Chung for SaveHealth|Updated Apr 14, 2025

    In the modern job market, salary has long stood as the holy grail of employment decisions. Yet, in an age where medical bills can spiral into bankruptcy and health crises strike unexpectedly, a different factor has emerged as a silent but potent influence: healthcare benefits. Whether it's a routine doctor visit or catastrophic medical care, the cost-sharing structures employers offer can deeply affect employees' lives—and influence whether they accept, stay in, or leave a j...

  • How sparkling water can make your fitness plan pop

    Stacker, Lindsay Curtis for Ro|Updated Apr 14, 2025

    With its fizzy bubbles and refreshing taste, sparkling water can be a popular choice for those looking for a healthier alternative to soda and a more enticing option than plain water. So, is sparkling water good for weight loss, too? It can be—that is, however, when paired with a healthy diet and regular exercise. As a zero-calorie substitute for sugary drinks, unflavored (keyword) sparkling water can be a smart way to stay hydrated without adding extra calories. It may a...

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