The Pew Charitable Trusts

10/26/2021 | News release | Distributed by Public on 10/26/2021 09:31

Top State Stories 10/26

miamiherald.com

The U.S. Department of Education jumped back in Florida's mask mandate battle, this time warning the state that it will intervene if the Florida Department of Education sanctions school districts to offset federal grant awards.

latimes.com

Three months after California Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom required state workers to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 or undergo weekly testing, many public agencies face low vaccination rates, and most state-run workplaces have failed to test unvaccinated employees.

al.com

Alabama Republican Gov. Kay Ivey issued an order directing state agencies not to enforce a federal vaccine mandate scheduled to go into effect Dec. 8 and cooperate with efforts to overturn the requirement.

oregonlive.com

Nine months into the nation's first-of-its-kind experiment to decriminalize hard drugs, Oregon's new approach has done little so far to connect people with treatment, via tickets for small amounts of drugs, even as the state is on track to reach a record for opiate-related overdose deaths.

iowacapitaldispatch.com

The study found evidence of perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances-also known as PFAS or "forever chemicals"-in nearly a third of the 60 Iowa streams that U.S. Geological Survey field staff sampled in 2019 and 2020. It was the first-known statewide attempt to determine the prevalence of the chemicals in largely rural areas.

newsobserver.com

A new method for delivering mail to North Carolina prison inmates will help foil drug smugglers, state officials say. But critics worry that the change will further fray connections between prisoners and the outside world.

missoulian.com

Missoula County officials say they haven't received any response from Montana Gov. Greg Gianforte, a Republican, about $143.4 million in federal money that's supposed to help with contact tracing.

denverpost.com

The Colorado health department wants businesses and restaurants to implement mask or vaccine mandates to stem the spread of the coronavirus and is preparing for the possibility that statewide action will be needed as hospitals continue to fill with COVID-19 patients.

clarionledger.com

Public university employees across Mississippi will now have to receive COVID-19 vaccinations by late November after the state's higher education board reversed course on a requirement ban.

apnews.com

One of the programs will provide $4 million in tuition support via scholarships and student loan relief to help Maine students pursuing careers in nursing and other health professions, Democratic Gov. Janet Mills said. The state will also use $8.5 million for tuition forgiveness to help workers gain new skills and earn advanced credentials, she said.

cleveland.com

The Ohio Department of Health announced new quarantine guidelines, called Masks to Stay and Tests to Play, allowing children exposed to the coronavirus to stay in school unless they started experiencing symptoms of the illness or tested positive. Each school district will decide whether to adopt the guidelines.

apnews.com

The Georgia Department of Public Health announced the 50% milestone. Nationally, a little more than 57% of the entire population is fully vaccinated, according to data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

courant.com

Connecticut Democratic state Rep. Michael DiMassa, who was arrested on federal charges in a still-unfolding probe of the alleged theft of more than $600,000 in federal COVID-19 relief funds, has resigned from the state legislature.

vtdigger.org

A special panel advising Vermont lawmakers about how to redraw House and Senate district maps has proposed the wholesale elimination of multimember districts.

8newsnow.com

Gov. Steve Sisolak and Nevada Treasurer Zach Conine, both Democrats, are launching a first-in-the-nation grant program designed to help children with disabilities and their families. The $5,000 grants, using federal pandemic relief aid, will help the families pay for education, transportation, housing and assisted technology.

alaskapublic.org

As the Dixon Glacier keeps retreating, the Alaska Energy Authority says it can expand the capacity of a nearby hydropower project using the water coming off the glacier.

inquirer.com

Pennsylvania has allocated tens of millions of dollars to Real Alternatives, a private nonprofit in Harrisburg that funnels money into crisis pregnancy centers. Such facilities advertise services offering pregnancy and parenting support to low-income women with the fundamental aim of dissuading them from getting abortions.

wvgazettemail.com

Victims of domestic violence and sexual assault in one West Virginia county can now get protective and personal safety orders against perpetrators by filing remotely. Since January, 10,000 domestic violence and protective orders have been filed in West Virginia.

argusleader.com

A battle between conservatives and moderates within South Dakota's Republican Party continues to drive a divide between the state House and Senate. There's no guarantee the state legislature will find common ground.

spokesman.com

Washington's medical students have a problem: There simply aren't enough cadavers available for scientific use. Donations at several Washington universities have declined since the beginning of the pandemic.