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May 15 2026TECHNOLOGY

Elk Grove backs new security camera plan to tackle rising theft

The city council in Elk Grove recently agreed to a plan that puts more eyes on the streets. Starting soon, police will get live feeds from cameras set up by local businesses. The goal? To catch crimes as they happen and respond faster. Small shops can even get up to $5, 000 to help pay for the camer

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May 15 2026POLITICS

California's Money Surplus: How Tech is Filling State Coffers

California's latest budget update shows the state sitting on $16. 5 billion more than expected, thanks largely to the tech industry's AI gold rush. This extra cash means no immediate budget shortfalls, allowing the governor to keep funding favorite programs without cutting corners. While this might

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May 15 2026ENVIRONMENT

How Alaska’s Changing Seasons Explain Why You Should Care About Wildfires

Alaska doesn’t ease into wildfire season gradually—it jumps in fast. While the state still fights leftover winter melts in March and early April, the real shift happens as snow disappears and spring winds kick in, turning last year’s dry grass into kindling. Most Alaskans know the risks by now: one

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May 13 2026HEALTH

High Blood Pressure Among Teens in Meerut’s Cities

Teenagers living in the urban parts of Meerut are facing a growing health risk: high blood pressure. Recent studies show that more young people now have elevated blood levels than ever before, a trend that spans both rich and poor nations. The rise is not limited to adults; it begins early, even

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May 13 2026CRIME

Airbnb steps up checks before busy holiday weekend

This Memorial Day weekend could see thousands of Airbnb bookings get extra screening. The company says it uses software to spot rentals likely to host parties. Guests who raise red flags—like booking a whole house last minute or having a history of disruptive stays—may get blocked or steered toward

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May 13 2026HEALTH

How to Keep Your Brain Sharp Without Breaking the Bank

Most people worry about losing their memory as they age. A recent survey found that 88% of Americans see brain health as a top priority. But shockingly, only 9% feel they know how to actually protect their brains. This gap between concern and action is a big problem, especially since Alzheimer’s cas

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May 12 2026TECHNOLOGY

How AI is changing contract reviews for legal teams

Legal teams often struggle to apply their hard-earned expertise consistently across every contract they review. Even the best attorneys face challenges when manually checking agreements against internal rules, because human review is slow and mistakes can slip through. A new tool aims to fix this by

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May 12 2026HEALTH

How Migraine Patients Use Healthcare When Standard Treatments Fail

For many people with stubborn migraines that don’t respond to usual treatments, life becomes a cycle of doctor visits, tests, and trial-and-error medications. Research shows these patients often need more than the standard three attempts at preventive drugs before finding something that works. But w

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May 12 2026HEALTH

Why many adults in Africa struggle with staying active

One major health issue quietly spreading across Africa is the growing problem of lack of exercise among adults. While many countries focus on diseases like malaria or hunger, physical inactivity is quietly becoming a silent killer. Experts recently gathered data from multiple studies to understand j

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May 12 2026HEALTH

Staten Island trains workers to spot suicide and overdose risks at the same time

Staten Island is tackling two big problems—overdose deaths and suicide—by teaching frontline workers how to handle both at once. Around 300 people have already gone through a six-part training that mixes mental health and drug-use screening. The idea is to catch warning signs early, whether someone

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