Saturday, April 16, 2022

DeJoy insists on a gas-powered USPS mail truck fleet — why?

 


Adam Schiff for Congress


While President Biden signed a landmark Post Office reform bill into law last week — finally putting the Postal Service on solid footing again — Trump’s handpicked Postmaster General Louis DeJoy was still at work trying to sabotage and undermine the USPS with his backward and destructive policies.

As the Post Office negotiates a contract to purchase a fleet of 160,000 new mail trucks, DeJoy is pushing for a 90% gasoline-powered fleet. Talk about behind the times.

You read that right. DeJoy wants to pay over $11 billion in taxpayer dollars for a fleet that doesn’t even get 9 miles per gallon — which would pump 20 million metric tons of CO2 into the atmosphere. That’s the equivalent of adding 4.3 million passenger cars to America’s roads.

He won’t even consider the more cost-effective, sustainable alternative of an all-electric fleet. What else would you expect from a Trump loyalist?

...this is outrageous, short-sighted, and just plain stupid. If you agree the USPS needs to reverse course immediately and move to an all-electric mail truck fleet, add your name to my urgent petition today.

ADD YOUR NAME

I don’t need to tell you what a disaster it would be to lock in this contract. Why on earth would we willingly pump more toxic pollutants into the atmosphere knowing there are better alternatives?

Last week’s report from the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change shows just how dire things are, and how little time we have left to act to stave off the worst effects of the climate crisis.

You have to be deep in fossil fuel lobbyists’ pockets or deep in denial to think a new gas-powered fleet is a good idea in 2022.

...add your name to my petition demanding the USPS reverse course on their gas-powered mail truck fleet and invest our taxpayer dollars into electric vehicles.

ADD YOUR NAME

The American people did not elect President Biden and Democratic majorities in Congress for one Trump crony at the head of the USPS to continue with this destructive policy. Thanks for adding your name — we can’t let DeJoy get away with this.

— Adam

150 E. Olive Ave., Suite 208 Burbank CA, 91502

WWW.ADAMSCHIFF.COM | CONTACT@ADAMSCHIFF.COM | PRIVACY POLICY

PAID FOR AND AUTHORIZED BY SCHIFF FOR CONGRESS






Time for reflection and renewal

 


As we celebrate the holiday weekend, I want to reach out and wish you a peaceful time of personal reflection and inspiration.

As for me, I’m inspired by all of you. With everything going on in the world, it’s easy to feel hopeless and retreat into ourselves. But you have been there right alongside me during the hard times, ready to lend your voice and your support to the causes and hopes we share. For that, I’m extremely grateful.

Spring is a time of renewal and hope. Whether you observe Easter, Passover, or another holiday, I hope you have the chance to relax and celebrate with your family and friends.

So Happy Easter, Chag Pesach Sameach, peaceful holidays, and have a hopeful and happy spring.

– David


 
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Democrat David Cicilline proudly represents Rhode Island's 1st Congressional District. An advocate for LGBTQ+ rights, a leader on gun violence prevention, and a fighter for Rhode Island families — David is one of our fiercest legislators in Congress today. Our campaign is powered by supporters like you, and your grassroots support is critical to helping David's campaign for Rhode Island's 1st District.
 
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RSN: FOCUS | ‘I Felt a True Joy’: Why Ukrainians Are Returning to Kyiv

 

 

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16 April 22

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Oleksii Sobolev and Kateryna Mykhalko in Kyiv, Ukraine. (photo: VICE)
FOCUS | ‘I Felt a True Joy’: Why Ukrainians Are Returning to Kyiv
Ruby Lott-Lavigna, VICE
Lott-Lavigna writes: "After Russian troops withdrew from the Kyiv suburbs, some of those who fled during the bombardment are making the difficult decision to go home."
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States scale back food stamp benefits even as prices soar

 

RUSSIAN INVASION OF UKRAINE DESTROYED FARM EQUIPMENT IN A REGION THAT PROVIDES LARGE QUANTITIES OF FOOD. 

FOOD PRICES WILL CONTINUE TO RISE DUE TO THE SHORTAGE AS REPUBLICANS SLASH BENEFITS TO HUNGRY AMERICANS. 


States scale back food stamp benefits even as prices soar

Month by month, more of the roughly 40 million Americans who get help buying groceries through the federal food stamp program are seeing their benefits plunge

The payments to low-income individuals and families are dropping as governors end COVID-19 disaster declarations and opt out of an ongoing federal program that made their states eligible for dramatic increases in SNAP benefits, also known as food stamps. The U.S. Department of Agriculture began offering the increased benefit in April 2020 in response to surging unemployment after the COVID-19 pandemic swept over the country.

The result is that depending on the politics of a state, individuals and families in need find themselves eligible for significantly different levels of help buying food.

Nebraska took the most aggressive action anywhere in the country, ending the emergency benefits four months into the pandemic in July 2020 in a move Republican Gov. Pete Ricketts said was necessary to "show the rest of the country how to get back to normal.”

Since then, nearly a dozen states with Republican leadership have taken similar action, with Iowa this month being the most recent place to slash the benefits. Benefits also will be cut in Wyoming and Kentucky in the next month. Arkansas, Florida, Idaho, Missouri, Mississippi, Montana, North Dakota, Nebraska, South Dakota and Tennessee have also scaled back the benefits.

Republican leaders argue that the extra benefits were intended to only temporarily help people forced out of work by the pandemic. Now that the virus has eased, they maintain, there is no longer a need to offer the higher payments at a time when businesses in most states are struggling to find enough workers.

But the extra benefits also help out families in need at a time of skyrocketing prices for food. Recipients receive at least $95 per month under the program, but some individuals and families typically eligible for only small benefits can get hundreds of dollars in extra payments each month.

The entire program would come to a halt if the federal government decides to end its public health emergency, though the Biden administration so far hasn’t signaled an intention to do so.

For Tara Kramer, 45, of Des Moines, the decision by Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds to end the emergency payments starting April 1 meant her monthly SNAP benefit plunged from $250 in March to $20 in April. Kramer, who has a genetic disorder that can cause intense pain, said the extra money enabled her to buy healthier food that made her feel better and help her to live a more active life.

“My heart sank,” Kramer said. “All the memories from before the emergency allotment came rushing back.”

Alex Murphy, a spokesman for Reynolds, noted the extra benefits were always intended to help people who lost jobs because of the pandemic and said, “we have to return to pre-pandemic life.” Murphy pointed out that Iowa has over 86,000 job openings listed on a state unemployment website.

But Kramer said she’s not able to work and that even getting out of her apartment can be a struggle at times.

Vince Hall, who oversees public policy for the nationwide food bank network Feeding America, said ending the extra benefits ignores the reality that even as the pandemic wanes there hasn’t been a decline in demand at food banks.

Wages have been increasing in the United States and the national unemployment rate in March dropped to 3.6%, but those gains have been offset by an 8.5% increase in inflation compared to a year ago. Food is among items rising the fastest, leaving many families unable to buy enough groceries.

“The COVID pandemic is giving way to a hunger pandemic,” Hall said. “We’re in a real, real struggle.”

Feeding America, which represents 200 food banks, reports that demand for food has increased just as these organizations are seeing individual donations dwindle and food costs rise. The organization estimates the nation’s food banks will spend 40% more to buy food in the fiscal year ending June 2022 as in the previous year.

For people like Annie Ballan, 51, of Omaha, Nebraska, the decision by Ricketts to stop participating in the program reduced the SNAP payments she and her son receive from nearly $500 a month to $41. Both have health problems and can’t work.

“From the middle of the month to the end of the month, people have no food,” Ballan said, her voice rising in anger. “This is all the governor’s fault. He says he loves Nebraskans, that Nebraskans are wonderful, but he’s cut off our food.”

The demand on food banks will only grow as more states reduce their SNAP payments, which typically provide nine meals for every one meal offered by food banks, Hall said.

Valerie Andrews, 59, of St. Charles, Missouri, said the SNAP benefits that she and her husband rely on fell from $430 a month to $219 when Missouri ended the extra payments in August 2021. Andrews, who is disabled, said she tries to budget carefully and gets food regularly from a food pantry but it's difficult.

“We’re barely making it from paycheck to paycheck,” she said. “It gets pretty rough most of the time.”

Officials at food banks and pantries said they will do their best to meet increased demand but there is no way they can fully offset the drop in SNAP benefits.

Matt Unger, director of the Des Moines Area Religious Council network of food pantries in Iowa’s capital city, noted the pantry's cost for a 5-ounce can of chicken as jumped from 54 cents in March 2019 to a current price of $1.05.

“Costs are just going through the roof,” he said.

———

AP writer Grant Schulte contributed to this story from Omaha, Nebraska.






Walker raises $5.5M in Georgia Senate race, trailing Warnock

 

HERSCHEL WALKER IS A LIAR, CHEAT, JUST LIKE tRUMP. 
He's incapable of articulating a coherent comment when interviewed.

HERSCHEL WALKE is a LOSER & AN EMBARASSMENT! 


Maybe MEGA DONORS need to test for IQ before contributing to these losers! 

GEORGIA: PLEASE STOP ELECTING STUPID PEOPLE! 



Walker raises $5.5M in Georgia Senate race, trailing Warnock


ATLANTA (AP) — Football icon and Georgia Republican Herschel Walker said Friday that his U.S. Senate campaign had raised $5.5 million in the first three months of 2022, a big haul that is still dwarfed by the $13.6 million that Democratic incumbent Raphael Warnock raised in the same period.

Walker is the GOP front-runner, but faces five other Republicans in the May 24 primary. A June 21 runoff, if necessary, would settle the Republican nomination.

Georgia will be a key battleground in the 2022 midterm elections to determine which party controls the U.S. Senate. Republicans had long dominated statewide races until Georgia helped elect Joe Biden to the presidency and enabled Democrats to control the Senate by electing Warnock and fellow Democrat Jon Ossoff in a January 2021 runoff.

Walker has raised $14.6 million since announcing his run. His campaign did not immediately say Friday how much cash he had on hand, and Walker's campaign had not yet filed a report with the Federal Election Commission.

Other candidates in the GOP primary include Agriculture Commissioner Gary Black, Navy veteran and former bank executive Latham Saddler, construction company owner Kelvin King, former state Rep. Josh Clark and former Army general Jonathan “Jon” McColumn. None of the Republicans had announced or filed numbers by early Friday.

Walker, a political newcomer, is a football icon who won the Heisman Trophy at the University of Georgia and went on to star in the NFL. President Donald Trump, a close friend of Walker's, is backing his run.

In the Democratic primary, Warnock is a heavy favorite to defeat Tamara Johnson-Shealey. Libertarian Chase Oliver will also be on the general election ballot in November.

Walker's campaign said it received donations from more than 50,000 givers.

“The Republican nominee against Warnock will have to raise money and bring new voters to the table. I am doing both,” Walker said in a statement.

Warnock said Thursday that he has $25.6 million on hand. He's raised $43 million for this election cycle, after raising more than $125 million for his 2020 Senate race.

Warnock, who is pastor of the Atlanta church where the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. preached, became Georgia’s first Black U.S. senator after winning a special election in 2020 to fill the unexpired term of Republican Sen. Johnny Isakson. Isakson stepped down because of failing health; he died in December.

LINK






Your next grocery trip

 

Beto O'Rourke

U.S. grocery shoppers have been warned to expect higher prices and even empty store shelves in the coming days. You might be one of them.

So you should know there’s only one person to blame: Greg Abbott.

Abbott’s latest political stunt at the border caused a massive slowdown in key U.S. supply chains. Earlier this week, trucks carrying produce across the busiest trade crossing in the Rio Grande Valley — which usually sees up to $70 million daily in American imports — came to a standstill. Now, some of our grocery stores are running dry.

It’s hard to overstate the problems caused by Greg Abbott’s border stunt. By injecting chaos into an already-stressed supply chain, Abbott is driving up inflation, hurting businesses, and even jeopardizing jobs in Texas.

There's a pretty clear pattern here. Greg Abbott will always make us pay the price. Whether he’s inflating our grocery bills with political stunts at the border, or driving up Texans’ utility bills with his corrupt handling of the power grid crisis, he just doesn’t care when Texans get hurt.

We need your help to stop Greg Abbott; our economy and our livelihoods are on the line in this race. Donate $10 or whatever you can right now to help us elect Beto and defeat Greg Abbott in November.


We need a governor who keeps the lights on, keeps the shelves stocked, and never hurts the people of Texas just to score cheap political points. We need to do everything in our power to fire Greg Abbott.

Thank you so much for taking action today,

Beto for Texas






 

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WEEK IN REVIEW: IRS Must 'Take On Wealthy Tax Cheats'

 

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The Week in Review
New GOP Laws 'Will Devastate Abortion Access Across Large Parts of the Nation'
"Florida has been a critical haven for abortion access in the South, and this ban will decimate abortion access for Floridians and the entire region," one group said after the governor's signature.
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Defying Schultz's Union-Busting, Starbucks Workers Rack Up Win After Win
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Biden Answers Zelenskyy's Plea to 'Arm Ukraine Now' With $800 Million in Weapons
Peace advocates have expressed concerns that weapons transfers from the West will draw out Russia's war while enriching arms-makers.
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'Keep Fighting': Schumer 'Making Progress' on Canceling Student Debt
"Write, call, email," urged the Democratic leader, who said President Joe Biden is "more open" to the proposal than ever before.
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Warren, Chu Say IRS Must 'Take On Wealthy Tax Cheats' and Stop Targeting the Poor
"The most vulnerable taxpayers should not shoulder the burden of insufficient IRS enforcement funding," Sen. Elizabeth Warren and Rep. Judy Chu write in a new letter.
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The GOP just tried to kick hundreds of students off the voter rolls

    This year, MAGA GOP activists in Georgia attempted to disenfranchise hundreds of students by trying to kick them off the voter rolls. De...