Wall Street’s week ended in a slump, with the Dow Jones down nearly 10% from its peak and oil prices leaping over 35% since February, courtesy of renewed conflict in Iran. For Americans—especially Hispanic households—this one-two punch threatens bot…
America’s much-vaunted airport frictionlessness faltered as thousands of unpaid Transportation Security Administration agents called in sick, resulting in the nation’s longest security lines on record. Congress, mired in another Homeland Security funding standoff, briefly lost control; President Trump weighed in late with an order to pay staff from existing funds. It seems the unsung guardians of travel efficiency require more than relentless thanks to report for duty.
New York Governor Kathy Hochul wants to sidestep state environmental reviews for most new housing, insisting local oversight is already cumbersome enough—a nod to a chronic shortage that grows no greener with delay. As we weigh endangered salamanders against rent checks, it appears that in Albany, at least, talk of NIMBYism is nearly as perennial as the housing deficit itself.
A shortage of TSA staff during a partial government shutdown has led the Trump administration to dispatch ICE agents at New York’s LaGuardia, JFK, and Newark airports, ostensibly for crowd control but hardly to travelers’ relief. Unsurprisingly, calls to immigration lawyers are spiking as non-citizens—especially those with pending cases or less-than-perfect paperwork—wonder whether a boarding pass now comes with a one-way ticket to scrutiny.
New York City’s latest Department of Education figures show graduation rates sliding to 81.2%—the sharpest annual drop since 2005—after years of COVID-era testing waivers receded; the state’s wider 85.5% rate offers cold comfort. Fewer waivers, more dropouts (5.2%), and steep setbacks for students with disabilities and English learners suggest the city’s “rigorous instruction” is, for some, a rigour too far.
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On April 22nd, the US Supreme Court will hear Bondi v. Lau, a case testing whether legal permanent residents’ routine trips abroad can jeopardize their status—potentially for millions, according to groups like LatinoJustice and the AALDEF. The government argues it can treat returning green card holders as new arrivals if it suspects past crimes; the organizations counter that this sets a luggage-unfriendly legal precedent.
As America continues to spar over voter identification laws, we note—with a nod to historical ironies—that more than 21 million adults lack the paperwork now considered essential to cast a ballot. Supporters frame ID mandates as pillars of electoral confidence, while opponents, including the ACLU, warn of disproportionate exclusion. Ensuring both trust in outcomes and equitable access might yet prove democracy’s trickiest two-step.
A spike in overdose deaths on Staten Island has been linked to a new veterinary drug infiltrating the illicit market, narcotics experts warn. Despite our best data wrangling, the culprit’s chemical origins render it tricky to detect and rapidly spreading; one local specialist calls it “the big ugly elephant in the room”—hard to ignore, yet proving curiously immune to traditional housecleaning.
As colorectal cancer Awareness Month prompts us to meditate on mortality, Dr. Richard Kops warns that Hispanics in the US are twice-cursed: a higher likelihood of late-stage diagnosis and the disease ranking as their second-leading cancer killer. Yet colonoscopies, early checks, and mundane healthy habits could prevent nine in ten cases—reminding us, yet again, that neglecting the obvious is an old human tradition.
El Diario NY
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