Community, Diversity, Sustainability and other Overused Words

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  • What are business expense cards and how do they work?

    Stacker, Erica Dorfman|Updated Mar 14, 2025

    Managing business expenses used to mean shuffling paper receipts, chasing down employees for documentation, and discovering budget issues weeks after they occurred. But modern companies are discovering a better way to handle spending through business expense cards—specialized tools that put real control and visibility right at their fingertips. Think about your current expense process. Maybe you're still dealing with expense reports that take hours to process, or perhaps y...

  • Proof of citizenship to enroll in school? GOP lawmakers eye barriers for undocumented students.

    Stacker, Kalyn Belsha for Chalkbeat|Updated Mar 14, 2025

    Republican lawmakers in at least five states are seeking to block undocumented children from attending public school for free or to inquire about students' immigration status in ways that courts have held violate children's educational rights, Chalkbeat reports. The rationale often centers around cost: Proponents say states and local school districts are spending too much to educate undocumented immigrants and that their parents should bear the financial responsibility for...

  • In America's State Legislatures, the overall partisan composition across all 50 state legislatures changed by 0.7% in favor of Republicans

    Stacker, Nathan Maxwell|Updated Mar 14, 2025

    In the Nov. 5, 2024, elections, Republicans gained 55 state legislative seats, Democrats lost 54, and Independents and minor party officeholders lost one, Ballotpedia reports. That means the overall partisan composition across all 50 state legislatures changed by 0.7% in favor of Republicans. In 2022, the partisan composition changed 0.4% toward Republicans, with Democrats losing four seats, Republicans gaining 27 seats, and Independents and minor party officeholders losing...

  • 8 expert weight loss tips for women over 40

    Stacker, Lindsay Boyers|Updated Mar 14, 2025

    As you approach middle age, you may notice that it's getting harder to zip up your jeans and your clothes are feeling a little too tight, especially around your belly. Unfortunately, this is normal. Studies show that women gain an average of 1.5 pounds per year during the menopause transition, largely due to a decline in estrogen levels. Decreasing estrogen levels changes how your body stores fat, typically moving away from the hips and thighs to accumulate around the...

  • Mango farms where? Climate change is scrambling where the world's food is grown.

    Stacker, Ayurella Horn-Muller for Grist|Updated Mar 14, 2025

    Twelve years ago, Vincenzo Amata stumbled upon a plot of flowering trees while wandering the Sicilian countryside. Before long, he found a farmer tending the grove. As Amata asked one question after another, the stranger tugged a mango off a tree and offered it to him. He didn't know it, but his first bite of the bright yellow fruit would change his life. "I can still taste it to this day," Amata said in Italian. The burst of sweet flavor, coupled with its smooth, velvety...

  • 5 ways small business owners can reduce taxes in 2025

    Stacker, John Malone for Ramp|Updated Mar 14, 2025

    If you wait until tax season to think about taxes, you are already behind. The number one mistake Ramp sees small business owners make when it comes to taxes is failing to plan. Most small business owners treat taxes as a once-a-year obligation. They meet with their accountant in March or April, hand over a stack of documents, and hope for the best. By that point, most opportunities to reduce taxes are long gone. Tax savings happen before the year ends, not when filing a...

  • How to rent out your house: 12 steps to success

    Stacker, Ryan Squires|Updated Mar 14, 2025

    The question of how to rent out your house might arise due to a move, financial reasons, or an emotional attachment to the property that keeps you from selling it. The process can be daunting, though. There are legal elements to understand, tenants to screen, and home improvements to ensure your rental is competitive and attractive to applicants. Don't let fear of the unknown stop you. There are tricks and tools available that make home rental a breeze. Below, TurboTenant...

  • How a tribe won a legal battle against the federal Bureau of Indian Education - and still lost

    Stacker, Neal Morton for The Hechinger Report|Updated Mar 14, 2025

    Kambria Siyuja always felt like the smartest kid in Supai, Arizona. Raised by educators in this tribal village at the base of the Grand Canyon, she started kindergarten a little ahead of her peers. Her teachers at Havasupai Elementary School often asked Siyuja to tutor younger students and sometimes even let her run their classrooms. She graduated valedictorian of her class. But once she left the K-8 school at the top of her grade, Siyuja stopped feeling so smart. "I didn't...

  • Fish are thriving in the river Seine

    Stacker, Peter Yeung for Reasons to be Cheerful|Updated Mar 14, 2025

    On a damp and grimly grey winter day in Paris, Bill François is a beacon of positivity. After a brief stroll along the River Seine, he comes to a halt at the Henri IV Dock with Notre Dame Cathedral just about visible through the mist. Here, François flicks his wrist back and then gently launches a fishing line out into the choppy waters. "The Seine is a wild place in the heart of Paris," enthuses François, who has come prepared in an all-weather outfit that includes a cap, su...

  • 7 chemicals found in everyday products that might be harming your health

    Stacker, Charlotte LoBuono|Updated Mar 11, 2025

    Microplastics in single-use water bottles, phthalates in nail polish, and BPA in canned food containers—it's hard to avoid questionable chemicals in today's world. With so many potential dangers in everyday objects, consumers may feel rightfully overwhelmed. And it certainly doesn't help that some companies have chosen to tout their supposedly environmentally safe products and processes, even as other parts of their business harm the environment—a practice called "gr...

  • 9 ways to eggs-perience Easter in Barcelona

    Stacker, Rose Winter|Updated Mar 11, 2025

    From a day trip to Montserrat monastery to a Palm Sunday procession, Rose Winter, writing for GetYourGuide, shares an overview of nine must-do activities to celebrate Easter in Barcelona. Easter traditions: Elaborate floats and ceremonial parades throughout Holy Week. Families also enjoy Mona de Pascua, a traditional chocolate cake decorated with colorful sweets and topped with an egg. Best free Easter activity: The Good Friday Parade Key Easter dates: Palm Sunday, Good...

  • Americans today are as divided on the value of public education as they are along party lines

    Stacker, Martin Slagter, Data Work By Elena Cox|Updated Mar 11, 2025

    While educating America's youth should not be a political issue, the statistics tell a different story. The partisan divide over the value of public education has become increasingly potent. Approximately 3 in 4 Democratic-leaning Americans view K-12 public education positively, as opposed to just a third of Republicans. These stats are according to a Pew Research Center national survey conducted in January 2024, which Stacker used to analyze partisan divides on public...

  • Can you live in a commercial property?

    Stacker, Jessica Crosby|Updated Mar 11, 2025

    If you're a small business owner, there's a good chance you practically live at your job. But can you live in a commercial property? The short answer is—it depends. Local zoning laws and insurance coverage make a big difference depending on your location. It's usually wise not to live in a commercial property unless your lease includes living on premises. You don't want to get evicted from both your home and business. Property owners insure their buildings for specific purpose...

  • As tariffs loom and global currency values fluctuate, goods from these top US trade partners may shift in price

    Stacker, Ben Popken, Data Work By Marco Dalla Stella|Updated Mar 11, 2025

    Since his reelection, President Trump has followed through on campaign promises to impose tariffs on America's biggest trading partners—Canada, China, and Mexico—in an attempt to further his terms on trade, borders, and drug trafficking crackdowns. But the tariff threats, reversals, deals, and reprisals are leaving consumers, businesses, and economists experiencing whiplash about what's going to happen next. Tariffs are import taxes on foreign goods, but it's not foreign com...

  • $1K a month to live in a shipping container: SLC's cautionary tale of making homes out of cargo boxes

    Stacker, Tony Semerad for The Salt Lake Tribune|Updated Mar 11, 2025

    If the developer building a six-story apartment complex in Salt Lake City out of shipping containers had it to do over again, he says he probably wouldn't. Box 500 Apartments, the blocky blue-and-silver structure at 543 S. 500 West, might be one of the most creative multistory housing experiments to get underway in Utah's capital. The idea: Stack a series of rectangular steel containers to create affordable units, at a time when the Beehive State really needs them. While the...

  • As loneliness reaches epidemic levels, here's how the 15 biggest cities rank

    Stacker, Andrea Richards, Data Work By Kayla Zhu|Updated Mar 11, 2025

    In 2023, U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy declared an American epidemic of loneliness and isolation, releasing an extensive advisory on the danger that a lack of social connection causes to health. Loneliness affects more Americans than diabetes or obesity. Being lonely can be more dangerous, too. It increases the risk of premature mortality by 26%, according to researchers cited in the surgeon general's report, and is as lethal as smoking 15 cigarettes a day. The problem of...

  • How much do travel nurses make?

    Stacker, Moira K. McGhee|Updated Mar 11, 2025

    Demand for travel nurses remains steady, though compensation has dipped from pandemic highs as some health systems reduce contract labor. Still, many registered nurses (RNs) and licensed practical nurses (LPNs) can earn more than staff nurses in similar roles, especially in high-demand specialties or locations with urgent needs. Vivian Health explores how much travel nurses earned in early March 2025 to help you decide whether travel nursing is still worth it. We also explain...

  • Bird flu is on the rise across the US. Are cats at risk?

    Stacker, Jennifer Huizen, Data Work By Emma Rubin|Updated Mar 7, 2025

    If you've been shopping for eggs lately, you're probably aware that prices are rising as the latest bird flu outbreak takes its toll on the nation's chickens. The most prevalent strain of the disease, H5N1, has been identified in all 50 states and Puerto Rico, and more than 157 million birds have been affected by the disease since the outbreak began in January 2022. While avian influenza, aka bird flu, is ravaging wild and farmed bird populations, its transmission to nonavian...

  • 'Alarming' national data: Teens use cellphones for quarter of school day

    Stacker, Marianna McMurdock - The 74|Updated Mar 7, 2025

    As districts and government officials nationwide consider curbing smartphones' reach, new research has revealed teens miss at least one and a half hours of school because they are on their phones. A quarter of the 13-18-year-olds in the study used devices for two hours each school day, which lasts around seven hours. The averages outnumber minutes allotted for lunch and period breaks combined, showing youth are distracted by phones throughout huge chunks of class time. Teen...

  • Oh, great: Rat populations are surging as cities heat up

    Stacker, Matt Simon for Grist|Updated Mar 7, 2025

    Rats are, in many ways, better adapted to cities than the humans that built them. While urbanites struggle with crowds, sparse parking spaces, and their upstairs neighbors stomping around at 4 a.m., rats are living their best lives. Huddled safely underground, they pop up at night to chew through heaps of food waste in dumpsters and hot dogs left on stoops. Now, scientists have found yet another gnawing advantage for rats, Grist reports. A study published in January in the...

  • The Los Angeles River kayaker on a 're-naturalization' mission

    Stacker, Michaela Haas for Reasons to be Cheerful|Updated Mar 7, 2025

    If the Los Angeles River were a living being, she would be called a survivor. From her headwaters in the Simi Hills and Santa Susana Mountains, her 51 miles wind through one of the most densely populated regions of the country and then flow straight down into the Pacific Ocean near Long Beach. The City of Angels owes its existence to her; over 1,000 years ago, the Tongva established the first settlement on her banks near where Los Angeles City Hall stands today. However, she...

  • Arizona officials struggle to straighten out voter rolls after proof-of-citizenship mixup

    Stacker, Jen Fifield for Votebeat|Updated Mar 7, 2025

    Because of a 20-year-old government foul-up, about 200,000 Arizona voters will need to come up with proof of their citizenship soon in order to protect their full voting rights, and they might not even know about it yet. County officials waited six months for the Secretary of State's Office to give them the final list of affected voters who need to be contacted, and clear legal guidance on how to do that so voters are treated fairly across the state. After all, in a few...

  • Does alcohol worsen (or cause) Irritable Bowel Syndrome?

    Stacker, Nima Mehran|Updated Mar 7, 2025

    Irritable bowel syndrome, or IBS, is a disorder that affects the large intestine and can cause a variety of uncomfortable gastrointestinal symptoms. While multiple things can trigger flare-ups, diet is a major component. Alcoholic beverages can worsen IBS symptoms, reports SaveHealth, a prescription discount website. The way in which alcohol might affect a person with IBS varies. If you decide to drink, pay attention to how it affects you and to the contents of the drink....

  • Most Democrat-leaning states

    Stacker, Cu Fleshman|Updated Mar 7, 2025

    Considering a Republican candidate won the United States presidential election in November 2024, it's easy to assume most Americans identify as Republicans. The data, however, tells a different story. According to Gallup, 28% of Americans considered themselves Democrats in 2024, the same percentage who identified as Republicans. A far greater number (43%) identified as Independents. When choosing between the two major parties, Gallup's data shows that 45% of Americans lean tow...

  • 10 of the biggest weight loss myths, according to an obesity medicine expert

    Stacker, Craig Primack, MD, FACP, FAAP, MFOMA for Hers|Updated Mar 7, 2025

    One quick online search or scroll through social media and you'll find an endless amount of weight loss advice. But it's hard to know what's backed by science and what's a waste of your time—or worse, what's downright dangerous. Below, Hers separates the fad from fact and busts some common weight loss myths. Myth 1: Losing Weight Is All About Willpower Willpower is a hopefully small part of weight loss, but it's not the only thing at play. If your weight loss efforts don't w...

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