On this day, 3 May 1926 at 11:59 PM, the UK’s only general strike took place when nearly 2 million workers downed tools in support of locked out miners facing pay cuts. Despite solid action lasting over a week, the Trades Union Congress caved in without achieving any concessions.
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Not just Apple: Microsoft has been quietly lobbying to kill Right to Repair bills
Apple pioneered the use of dirtytricks and lobbying to killRight to Repair
legislation, but they’re not the only tech player who’s putting
lobbying muscle into ensuring that you can’t decide who fixes your stuff
(and when it is “unfixable” and must be sent to the landfill).
Rep. Jeff Morris told iFixit Repair Radio that national Right to Repair
legislation was killed by Microsoft, in a piece of horse trading that
saw Microsoft backing funding for STEM education in exchange for Right
to Repair (and unrelated privacy rules) dying.
This is our Really Big Coin. It is big because it makes other things look small when photographed next to it. Actually, it is a 20:1 replica of the EUR 50-cent, you see it being milled out here. We needed to do quite a bit of sanding, lacquering and smudging to obtain the desired look and some climbing to get into required shooting position (you need to get up real high to take good pictures). The result is a short series of photographs, attempting to visually scale down real-sized objects.
Nearly 2,300 teachers have just had a mountain of student loan debt lifted off their backs, according to previously unreleased figures from the U.S. Department of Education. The move follows reporting by NPR that exposed a nightmare for public school teachers across the country.
In exchange for agreeing to work in low-income schools, aspiring teachers could get federal Teacher Education Assistance for College and Higher Education (TEACH) grants from the department to help pay their way through college. But those grants were often unfairly turned into loans that teachers had to pay back.
In December, the Education Department proposed a fix. Now, that fix has been expanded, and thousands more teachers are likely to get help.
“We’ve put teachers who didn’t deserve this stress, this pressure, this financial burden in a position that is frightening and confusing,” says Education Department acting undersecretary and acting assistant secretary Diane Auer Jones. “I can’t give them back those years, and I can’t take away the gray hairs and I can’t take away the stress. It seems like a small thing to do to say, ‘I’m sorry,’ but I’m very sorry. And we want to work to fix it and correct it.”
Photo: Beth Nakamura for NPR Caption: Victoria Libsack, a teacher at Linus Pauling Middle School in Corvallis, Ore., with students Alan Gallardo, 14, (right) and Victor Hernandez, 14. Libsack taught for three years in a low-income Phoenix school. But after her TEACH grants were converted into more than $20,000 in loans, she took a job at a school that doesn’t meet TEACH requirements.
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