Interest rates on federal student loans to be highest in decade

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:24:40 GMT

Interest rates on federal student loans to be highest in decade College will cost more for students borrowing during the 2023-24 academic year as federal student loan interest rates climb to heights not seen in a decade or longer.As of July 1, undergraduates who take out new direct federal student loans will see interest rates rise to 5.50%, the Education Department’s Federal Student Aid office said Tuesday — up from 4.99% in the 2022-23 academic year and 3.73% in 2021-22.Interest rates on graduate direct loans, available to graduate and professional students, will rise to 7.05% from 6.54% the year prior. PLUS loans, which parents and grad students can use to fill in education funding gaps, will jump to 8.05% from 7.54%. Here are the higher 2023-24 rates for each type of federal student loan, compared with the 2022-23 academic year:Undergraduate direct loans: 5.50%, up from 4.99%.Graduate direct loans: 7.05%, up from 6.54%.PLUS loans: 8.05%, up from 7.54%.Undergraduate direct student loan interest rates haven’t been this high since 2013. Interes...

Emergency beach repairs start in New Jersey shore town amid $33M legal fight

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:24:40 GMT

Emergency beach repairs start in New Jersey shore town amid $33M legal fight NORTH WILDWOOD, N.J. (AP) — A bulldozer began moving sand along a stretch of badly eroded beach Monday in a Jersey Shore town where the bitter fight over how to protect its rapidly shrinking shoreline has led to $33 million worth of litigation.Before the summer tourism season kicks off this weekend, North Wildwood hopes to repair dunes in the most heavily eroded section of its beach and restore beach access points to usable condition. The state Department of Environmental Protection granted permission for emergency repairs last week.The town and the state have been fighting for years over how best to protect North Wildwood’s shoreline as it waits to become the last part of the state to receive a beach replenishment project that is still at least two years away.The state has fined North Wildwood $12 million for past unauthorized work on its beaches that the state claims could actually worsen erosion.North Wildwood, in turn, is suing the state for $21 million, which it says is h...

In Cannes, standing ovations stretch on and on – but they’re designed to

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:24:40 GMT

In Cannes, standing ovations stretch on and on  –  but they’re designed to CANNES, France (AP) — The Cannes Film Festival is on, which means stopwatches are out.Nowhere are the length of standing ovations at high-wattage premieres more carefully recorded and parsed than in Cannes. Did a movie garner a triumphant eight-minute standing ovation? Or did the audience stand for a mere four or five minutes?How has such an unlikely metric come to reverberate around the world within minutes of a premiere? And why is everyone standing for so long? Doesn’t anyone’s hands get tired?Such effusive displays of enthusiasm have come to be a hallmark of Cannes and, sometimes, a bit of marketing gimmick for films looking to resonate far from the Croisette. If Cannes, the world’s largest and glitziest film festival, stands for cinematic excess, its thunderous standing ovations can seem like its greatest overindulgence. No one needs a bathroom break?Less widely understood, though, is how the pageantry of Cannes shapes and distorts standing ovations. When audi...

Puerto Rico to decentralize its Education Department in bid to improve services

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:24:40 GMT

Puerto Rico to decentralize its Education Department in bid to improve services SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — Puerto Rico’s Education Department, long considered a bureaucratic behemoth, will be decentralized to better serve students, officials said Monday.The announcement comes amid continuing criticism that the department is inefficient, corrupt and struggling to stem an increase in dropouts.“We want the day-to-day decisions to be made at the regional level and the resources to reach our children directly,” Puerto Rico Gov. Pedro Pierluisi said.U.S. Education Secretary Miguel Cardona traveled to the U.S. territory for the announcement and said he supports the change to overcome what he called the system’s challenges.Officials are expected to outline a decentralization plan and submit it to the governor and island’s education secretary within three months. The change is expected to help deploy federal resources more quickly to where they are needed and give regions and schools more autonomy.Puerto Rico has the sixth largest school district in a U.S. jurisdictio...

Sheriff: Girl, 16, fights off mom to save a sister from being drowned after 2nd sister killed

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:24:40 GMT

Sheriff: Girl, 16, fights off mom to save a sister from being drowned after 2nd sister killed COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — A mother drowned one of her daughters in their South Carolina home and was trying to kill another child when the oldest daughter was awakened by screams and managed to save her sister, a sheriff said.Jamie Bradley Brun, 37, was charged with murder and attempted murder after the attack early Friday in their home on St. Helena Island, Beaufort County Sheriff P.J. Tanner said at a news conference.Brun has talked to investigators and Tanner called it a horrific crime but told reporters he wouldn’t say why Brun wanted to kill her children.“I’m not a mental health expert. It’s not my job to determine if someone has a mental health problem,” the sheriff said.Brun’s 16-year-old daughter was asleep around 1:30 a.m. Friday when her 8-year-old sister’s screams woke her up. The sheriff wouldn’t detail how the mother was trying to drown her child, but said the child’s cries were coming from the bathroom.The teen went into the bathroom and manag...

Air Force looks to better control access to classified data after intelligence leak

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:24:40 GMT

Air Force looks to better control access to classified data after intelligence leak WASHINGTON (AP) — The Air Force said Monday it is looking at ways to better control access to classified information, in the wake of revelations that superiors of the Massachusetts Air National Guard member charged with leaking highly classified documents had raised concerns internally about his handling of sensitive data. Secretary Frank Kendall told reporters that the Air Force needs to better enforce the rules that govern access to classified information based on whether someone with the correct security clearance also has a need to know the information.“It’s a long standing tenet that you don’t get to look at something classified unless there’s a legitimate reason for you to look at it,” Kendall said. “Just because you happen to have a certain level of clearance doesn’t mean you get access to all the material at that level. So we’re taking a hard look at some practices around that.” He said he doesn’t think the service enforced that rule strongly enough. Justice Department...

Roof collapses at school in Thailand, killing 6 people who were sheltering from rain

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:24:40 GMT

Roof collapses at school in Thailand, killing 6 people who were sheltering from rain BANGKOK (AP) — Six people, including four children, died Monday when strong winds from a rainstorm caused a metal roof on a school’s activity center to collapse in northern Thailand, officials said. Eighteen other people were hospitalized, they said.Some students had gone inside the activity center at the Wat Nern Por primary school in Phichit province to shelter from the rain, according to Facebook posts from the official disaster prevention department and public relations office in the province, 300 kilometers (185 miles) north of Bangkok.Patcharin Siri, a staff member of the provincial Public Relations Department, said four children, one parent and one member of the school’s cleaning staff had died.The meteorological department issued a warning for heavy rain in upper Thailand this week. Monday was also the official start of the rainy season.Jintamas Saksornchai, The Associated Press

Bonnie Crombie setting up exploratory committee to run for Ontario Liberal leadership

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:24:40 GMT

Bonnie Crombie setting up exploratory committee to run for Ontario Liberal leadership Mississauga Mayor Bonnie Crombie is exploring a bid to run for the Ontario Liberal leadership.Crombie tells CityNews she has set up an exploratory committee for a potential leadership bid.She was first elected in 2014 to mayoral seat in Mississauga after longtime mayor Hazel McCallion retired and has since been reelected twice in 2018 and 2022.The Ontario Liberals will announce a new leader on Dec. 2 to replace Steven Del Duca, who resigned after the party did not win enough seats in last year’s election to have official party status at the legislature for the second campaign in a row.The party have said they will soon announce the opening date for official candidate registration, but a deadline of Sept. 5 has been set and candidates must have an entry fee of $100,000 and a refundable $25,000 deposit.Party members will cast their votes by ranked ballot on Nov. 25 and Nov. 26, with the Liberals set to announce round-by-round results the following weekend.Crombie recently got her wish...

Supreme Court won’t hear dispute over California law barring sale of foie gras

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:24:40 GMT

Supreme Court won’t hear dispute over California law barring sale of foie gras WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court said Monday it won’t get involved in a dispute over a California animal cruelty law that bars foie gras from being sold in the state, leaving in place a lower court ruling dismissing the case. Foie gras is made from the enlarged livers of force-fed ducks and geese, and animal welfare groups had supported the law. As is typical, the court did not comment in declining to hear the case, and it was among many the court said Monday it would not hear.The law doesn’t completely bar Californians from eating foie gras in the state. Courts have ruled that residents can still order foie gras from out-of-state producers and have it sent to them. Restaurants and retailers are still forbidden from selling it or giving it away, however.The foie gras case had been on hold at the high court while the justices considered a different case involving another California animal cruelty law, that one governing the sale of pork in the state. In that case, the justic...

Ukrainian ambassador welcomes pledges of F-16 fighter jets; urges patience on counteroffensive

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:24:40 GMT

Ukrainian ambassador welcomes pledges of F-16 fighter jets; urges patience on counteroffensive NEWTON, Mass. (AP) — Ukrainian Ambassador Oksana Markarova welcomed pledges of F-16 fighter jets to her country Monday while also urging patience for the launching of a spring counteroffensive against Russia’s full-scale invasion. For Ukrainians, she said, the effort to repel Russian has essentially been one long counterattack.“I wouldn’t label it. Whether it’s going to be one offensive or several. Whether it going to be just the hard, daily work on every front line or we will see some big results in any of them, it doesn’t really matter,” Markarova said. “What matters is the goal is to liberate all Ukraine.”Markarova, speaking after delivering a commencement address at Boston College, said the delivery of F-16 jets is critical to the short and long-term security of the country.The U.S. has agreed to help train pilots in Ukraine to fly F-16 fighter jets, but it has provided few details and said decisions on when, how many, and who will supply the F-16s will be made...