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Pennsylvania’s Senate wants an earlier 2024 presidential primary, partly to have a say on nominees

An early election ballot completion area is prepared at a collection location inside the North Park Ice Skating Rink Lodge area, Oct. 9, 2020, in McCandless, Pa. Pennsylvania's state Senate approved a bill Wednesday, Sept. 20, 2023, to move up the state's 2024 primary election by five weeks to March 19, aiming to avoid a conflict with the Jewish holiday of Passover and give voters more of a say in deciding presidential nominees. (Photo: AP/Keith Srakocic/File)

HARRISBURG, Pa. — Pennsylvania’s state Senate approved a bill Wednesday to move up the state’s 2024 primary election by five weeks to March 19, aiming to avoid a conflict with the Jewish holiday of Passover and give voters more of a say in deciding presidential nominees.

The bill passed, 45-2, although it still requires passage in the state House of Representatives.

Under the bill, the primary election would move from April 23 to March 19, the same primary date as in Ohio, Florida, Illinois, Kansas and Arizona. Still, that date comes after primaries in other big delegate states, including California, Texas, Georgia, Michigan, North Carolina, Virginia, Massachusetts and Tennessee.

Under that scenario, Pennsylvania would leap over Delaware, Rhode Island and Wisconsin, as well as New York where Gov. Kathy Hochul on Wednesday signed a bill that sets that state’s presidential primary for April 2.

Democrats have warned that the change would compress the primary calendar, giving courts and counties less time to handle election-related duties.

Pennsylvania is a premier battleground in presidential elections, but state law sets its primary date on the fourth Tuesday in April, relatively late in the presidential primary calendar. It hasn’t hosted a competitive presidential primary since 2008, when Hillary Clinton pulled off a win to stay alive against Barack Obama, the leader in delegates and eventual winner of that year’s Democratic nomination.

“Here we are, the fifth-most registered voters in the country not having input into who the candidates are for our parties. This bill gives Pennsylvania citizens a voice at the beginning of the process, because it always comes down to us at the end of the process,” Senate President Pro Tempore Kim Ward, R-Westmoreland, told colleagues during floor remarks.

She said she hopes the House returns “soon” to take up the bill. The chamber was scheduled to return to session Tuesday, although House Democratic leaders have not said whether they will support it and would only say Wednesday that they were reviewing the bill.

For now, President Joe Biden faces a couple of Democratic challengers but is expected to secure his party’s nomination, while former President Donald Trump and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis have dominated the early Republican race in a field that is about a dozen deep.

Many states want to hold presidential primaries earlier, to give residents more influence on the trajectory of presidential campaigns. But Pennsylvania lawmakers have long resisted a change because it would push the beginning of the state’s customary 13-week primary season into the winter holidays.

The bill passed Wednesday would compress the primary season to 11 weeks, making Jan. 2 the first day that candidates could start circulating petitions.

This year, more lawmakers are motivated to support a change because April 23 is the first day of Passover, a Jewish holiday when observant Jews typically avoid the same activities they avoid on the Sabbath, such as driving, working or using electricity.

Gov. Josh Shapiro, who is Jewish, has said he supports changing the date.

EE. UU. detiene a más de 4.400 fugitivos en una operación policial a gran escala

Las fuerzas del orden estadounidenses han detenido a 4.455 fugitivos en una operación policial a gran escala desplegada en 20 ciudades del país, señaló este miércoles el Departamento de Justicia. Fotografía de archivo. (Foto: EFE/Larry W. Smith)

Las fuerzas del orden estadounidenses han detenido a 4.455 fugitivos en una operación policial a gran escala desplegada en 20 ciudades del país, señaló este miércoles el Departamento de Justicia.

El dispositivo se prolongó durante tres meses principalmente en Albuquerque, Baltimore, Buffalo, Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, Houston, Kansas, Milwaukee, Nueva Orleans, Puerto Rico y Washington, según su comunicado.

La llamada operación «North Star III» (Estrella del Norte III) se centró en individuos perseguidos por homicidio, agresión sexual o robo y permitió decomisar además 555 armas de fuego, más de un millón de dólares en efectivo y 85 kilogramos de droga.

El fiscal general de Estados Unidos, Merrick Garland, indicó en el comunicado que este despliegue se enmarca en una estrategia de reducción del crimen y que su éxito se basa en la colaboración con distintas agencias de cumplimiento de la ley.

Esta es la tercera operación de este tipo desde julio de 2022 y en total ha permitido arrestar a más de 6.700 personas que huían de la justicia, incluidas 900 acusadas de homicidio, y ha resultado igualmente en la incautación de 900 armas de fuego.

Estudio revela que algunos hispanos se burlan de otros latinos que no hablan español

Banderas enrolladas de países latinoamericanos se encuentran contra una pared antes de un partido de fútbol americano de la NFL entre Los Angeles Rams y Dallas Cowboys en Arlington, Texas, el 1 de octubre de 2017, durante el Mes de la Herencia Hispana. Un estudio difundido el 20 de septiembre de 2023 por el Pew Research Center señala que más de la mitad de los hispanos que hablan muy poco o nada de español asegura que otra persona hispana lo ha hecho sentir avergonzado o mal por eso. (Foto: AP/Michael Ainsworth/File)

En Estados Unidos los mismos latinos se burlan de los hispanos que no hablan español.

Así lo reveló un estudio difundido el miércoles por el Pew Research Center, un centro de investigaciones de Washington que tiene un área dedicada exclusivamente a estudiar a los latinos, el grupo racial de más rápido crecimiento en el país.

El análisis, realizado en base a una encuesta reciente, señaló que más de la mitad de los hispanos que hablan muy poco o nada de español aseguró que otra persona hispana lo ha hecho sentir avergonzado o mal por eso.

Algunos incluso hacen bromas sobre los que no hablan español: cuatro de cada 10 hispanos adultos dijeron que, con mucha frecuencia, escuchan a otros hispanos bromear sobre los latinos que no hablan español o no lo hablan bien, de acuerdo con el análisis “Percepciones y experiencias de los latinos con el idioma español”.

“Y esto puede ser de todo, desde simplemente ser el blanco de bromas hasta quizás ser avergonzado por perder la propia cultura, o ser criticado, o incluso condenado al ostracismo, por no hablar el idioma heredado”, expresó Mark Hugo López, director de investigaciones sobre raza y etnicidad del Pew Research Center. «Todo esto se remonta a cómo la identidad de las personas es percibida por ellos mismos y por quienes los rodean”, agregó en una entrevista telefónica con The Associated Press.

El estudio es parte de la Encuesta Nacional de Latinos que realiza el Pew.

Para el análisis se entrevistó a 7.647 adultos, entre ellos 3.029 hispanos. El margen de error para toda la muestra fue de 1,7 puntos porcentuales.

De acuerdo con el análisis, la gran mayoría de los hispanos de Estados Unidos dijo que puede mantener “bastante bien” o “muy bien” una conversación en español, sobre todo aquellos que forman parte de las primeras generaciones que llegaron como inmigrantes.

Pero aunque el 75% de los latinos estadounidenses aseguró que habla bien el español, casi una cuarta parte (el 24%) dijo que sólo puede conversar “un poquito” o “nada”. Y esto de no hablar en español sucede sobre todo entre aquellos hispanos de tercera generación en adelante: cerca de las dos terceras partes de ellos (65%) dijo que no puede sostener un diálogo en español.

En Estados Unidos viven unos 63,7 millones de hispanos, de acuerdo con información de la Oficina del Censo de 2022.

Las comunidades más numerosas son la de los mexicanos, con 37,2 millones; puertorriqueños, 5,8 millones; salvadoreños, 2,5 millones; dominicanos y cubanos, con 2,4 millones cada uno; guatemaltecos, 1,8 millones; colombianos, 1,4 millones, y hondureños, 1,1 millones.

Sin embargo, el grupo que más ha crecido en los últimos años es el de los venezolanos: un 169% desde 240.000 personas en 2010 a 640.000 en 2021. En contrapartida, aunque el de los mexicanos es el grupo de origen hispano más numeroso, tuvo el crecimiento más moderado en ese mismo período.

Uno de los aspectos que indagó el estudio es el de la identidad latina.

La gran mayoría de los latinos adultos (el 78%) indicó que no es necesario hablar español para ser considerado hispano, mientras que el 21% sostuvo que sí lo es.

Por otra parte, casi dos tercios (el 65%) dijo que es muy importante que las generaciones futuras de latinos en Estados Unidos hablen español, incluido un tercio que dijo que es extremadamente importante.

Dentro del total de la comunidad latina de Estados Unidos, los inmigrantes son cada vez menos. Cerca de un tercio de los hispanos era inmigrante en 2021, por debajo del 37% de 2010.

Después del inglés, el español es el idioma más hablado en los hogares estadounidenses con 41,3 millones de personas, seguido muy por detrás por el chino con 3,4 millones; el hindi, 2,9 millones, y el francés, 2,1 millones, de acuerdo con información del Pew.

Entre los hispanos, el uso del “espanglish” —la modalidad en la que se mezclan palabras en inglés y español— está bastante generalizado: un 63% reportó que lo habla al menos a veces, incluido un 40% que dijo que lo emplea frecuentemente.

“Tal vez esta sea la evolución de la lengua aquí en Estados Unidos», dijo López.

Asimismo, más de las tres cuartas partes de los hispanos bilingües (el 77%) dijo que usan el “espanglish” al menos a veces y la mitad (52%) con mucha frecuencia. El porcentaje del uso del “espanglish” es similar entre los hispanos que hablan preferentemente inglés (54%) y los que hablan sobre todo en español (56%).

Editorial Roundup: Pennsylvania

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. September 17, 2023

Editorial: A state budget compromise is possible, if pragmatism can trump ideology

At least part of the Pennsylvania state budget has remained in limbo for over 10 weeks now, pushing well past the June 30th deadline. Schools, universities and the state judicial system are being forced to make hard choices as the ongoing standoff in Harrisburg has frozen all new or expanded programs. At the center are two $100 million allocations that tackle the state’s education woes in dramatically different ways.

Once the State House reconvenes under Democratic control, the House Democrats and Senate Republicans should strike a grown-up compromise that ensures each side gets some of their priorities. Strict adherence to ideological purity, on the other hand, will ensure the standoff drags on for months, while schools, courts and other institutions suffer.

Give and take

The primary budget, known as the General Appropriation Bill, received Gov. Josh Shapiro’s signature in early August. While there had been hope for an on-time June budget, House Democrats balked at the $100 million Pennsylvania Award for Student Success (PASS) school voucher program, favored by Republicans and supported by Mr. Shapiro. To mollify his own party, the governor enraged the other party by vowing to line-item veto the program. In turn, the Senate Republicans left Harrisburg to reorganize, before returning to pass the main budget several weeks later.

While the governor’s signature did release most of the state’s budget, the Fiscal Code bill, which outlines precisely how some $450 million of the funds allocated in the General Appropriations bill should be spent, remains a point of contention. (Another roughly $500 million is likely destined for the state’s so-called Rainy Day Fund.) Without this crucial piece of legislation, new or expanded programs are effectively paralyzed, lacking the essential “code bill language” that instructs how the funds should be used.

In late August, the Republican-led Senate passed its own Fiscal Code bill, which included $100 million for PASS. The House Democrats are waiting to reconvene until their 102-101 majority is restored by the special election for the heavily Democratic 21st House District, vacated by county executive candidate Sara Innamorato, which will take place on Tuesday.

Setting aside the political maneuvering and tit-for-tat exchanges, the consequences of this year’s budget impasse have been mounting.

Programs delayed and money lost

While the biggest debates are over K-12 education funding, other institutions and programs are being hurt by the delay. For instance, at Pennsylvania’s four state-related schools — Pitt, Temple, Penn State and Lincoln University — tuition discounts for in-state students depend on state funding. For Penn State students, a third of the $15,000 in-state discount comes from the state. At Pitt, it’s around half the $16,000 savings. Lawmakers, largely Republican, requested tuition freezes, but by now all the institutions except Lincoln have opted to hike prices for at least some in-state students.

At both the K-12 and post-secondary level, funding delays make it hard to plan for the next fiscal year. Teachers, professors and administrators are in limbo.

The budget impasse is also draining money from the court system. Two surcharges for court filings, totaling $21.25, expired on July 31st. As a result, the courts are losing $850,000 for every week the budget remains unresolved.

Other programs caught in the crossfire are necessary and humane. Among them: $50 million for the popular Whole Home Repairs program, which pays for needed renovations for low-income homeowners; another $100 million for school mental health counselors plus $10 million in stipends for student teachers; $50 million for emergency health care system relief; and a first-ever state appropriation of for indigent criminal defense.

A clear compromise opportunity

At the heart of the budget debate are two $100 million education allocations with fundamentally different approaches to improving Pennsylvania’s K-12 system: the PASS voucher program and Level Up, a two-year-old program designed to funnel money to the commonwealth’s 100 neediest K-12 school districts. While PASS offers lower-income households the opportunity to subsidize a private or charter education, Level Up offers crucial support to districts in need. They are, in essence, dual $100 million bargaining chips.

Mr. Shapiro has indicated that he still does not personally oppose the voucher program, which is specifically aimed at lower-income families and is described by supporters as a creative way to enhance education funding. The next convening of the Senate and the House will not be before Sept. 18 and Sept. 26, respectively.

While PASS and Level Up aren’t the only chips on the table, they are by far the biggest, and they present the most obvious opportunity for compromise. Ideologues and special interests will howl if they don’t get their way — and that’s exactly the problem. A solution is obvious, if only legislative leaders and the governor can cut through the partisan bluster to grasp it: Include some, but not all, funding for both. Democrats should consider some funding for PASS as a pilot program whose effects can be studied. Republicans should consider agreeing to some Level Up funding the cost of doing business in a divided government.

The line-item veto debacle was the first real misstep in Mr. Shapiro’s tenure, when his reputation as a pragmatically progressive dealmaker came into question. Now, he can restore that lost luster by striking a bargain that benefits both sides and Pennsylvania’s children, while getting government moving again.

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Scranton Times-Tribune. September 17, 2023

Editorial: Trying to make most of Penn’s Woods

People who don’t know Pennsylvania can be forgiven for associating it primarily with its big, vibrant cities of Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. Those areas are indeed economic engines and cultural hubs.

But Penn’s Woods, the state’s vast outdoor resources, still are fundamental to the state’s character, economy and culture. And a solid body of evidence suggests that they are underappreciated, under-marketed and underused.

For example, even though a study commissioned by the Pennsylvania Restaurant and Lodging Association found that tourism supports at least 6.5% of all jobs statewide and generates $43.8 billion a year in state and local taxes, the total state budget for the Pennsylvania Tourism Office is just $9.1 million, less than a third of the $29.8 million that the state budgeted in fiscal 2009.

The study estimated that the state lost $4.48 in state and local tax revenue for every dollar it saved in tourism promotion over that period.

Now the Shapiro administration has taken a modest step toward more aggressively promoting the portion of the state’s tourism draw connected to its natural assets.

The Office of Outdoor Recreation, budgeted at just $422,000 for its inaugural year, will work with state agencies that operate state parks and forests and other recreational assets, and private-sector businesses to develop ways to improve parks, forests and other natural assets, and better promote them to increase visitation.

Already, according to state figures, outdoor recreation generates about $14 billion a year in economic activity statewide. The new office will work with the private and public entities involved in the industry to increase that economic performance and to use it as a catalyst for other sectors of the economy.

The agency will rely on successful operations such as the PA Wilds Center for Entrepreneurship, which helps to drive economic activity in the Pennsylvania Wilds, a wildly remote area of 2.1 million acres across 13 north-central counties that fosters conservation- and recreation-related business development.

The idea behind the new office is to more effectively marshal existing private and state resources to attract more visitors and investment. It’s a worthy exercise to make Penn’s Woods even more valuable.

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Uniontown Herald-Standard. September 16, 2023

Editorial: Blue laws are obsolete — but had their virtues

Once upon a time, life was pretty quiet in Pennsylvania on Sundays.

This was mostly the result of so-called “blue laws” that prohibited many different types of activity on Sunday so that people could rest and turn their attention to religious observance. The first of the commonwealth’s blue laws was enacted in 1779, and it was said they were designed to prevent “vice and immorality” as well as “unlawful gaming,” and to “restrain disorderly spirits and dissipation.”

It was only in 1978 that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled that most blue laws were unenforceable, and in the decades since, Sundays have become more and more like any other day. In fact, the number of hours many retail establishments remain open on Sundays seems to have expanded in recent years — where most would wait to open their doors until noon, some now do so at 11 a.m. or 10 a.m. A few even welcome customers at 9 a.m.

It’s easy to understand why this has happened. Households with both parents working are pressed for time, and sometimes it’s a necessity to hit the stores on a Sunday. And brick-and-mortar retail establishments now have to compete with the 24/7 bazaar that is the internet. For better or worse, a shrinking number of Americans attend church weekly, and Sundays have been given over to other types of secular activities, such as Pittsburgh Steelers games in this region. It makes no sense to stop people from buying and selling and being part of the marketplace on a Sunday.

One of the few lingering restrictions on Sunday commerce in Pennsylvania is the sale of cars. We are one of just 13 states that don’t allow residents to sign the papers and drive off the lot in a new vehicle on a Sunday. State Sen. Marty Flynn, a Lackawanna Democrat, has proposed the law be taken off the books, according to PennLive. Flynn also believes that the mandate that vehicles be inspected annually should be repealed.

There’s really no rational reason to prevent anyone from buying a vehicle on a Sunday. It might be one of the more convenient times in the week for many people. And if a dealership wishes to remain closed on a Sunday, so that they can give their employees a day off, they should be allowed to make that decision on their own.

No question about it, the ability to shop and carry out other types of transactions on a Sunday has certain advantages. But it’s hard not to feel that something has been lost when there is not a day in the week where the pace of life slows, we set aside the busyness that characterizes much of our lives, and we focus on our own well-being, or that of our friends or family.

Blue laws may be obsolete, in some cases laughably so — no one seriously thinks anyone should be prevented from dribbling a basketball in their driveway on a Sunday anymore, or be stopped from mowing the grass. But those blue laws, and the peace and quiet they enforced, were not without their virtues.

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Wilkes-Barre Citizens’ Voice. September 18, 2023

Editorial: Expedite wildlife corridors

Dead animals are a sad and common sight along state highways, but the damage isn’t limited to the unfortunate animals that try to cross busy roads.

About 200 people die every year in vehicle collisions with animals on U.S. roads, which also cause hundreds of millions of dollars in vehicle damage.

State Farm Insurance recently reported that Americans filed 1.8 million auto insurance claims, from July 1, 2022 through June 30, to repair damage resulting from animal collisions. Pennsylvania led the nation with 153,397 of those claims. The company also determined that drivers in Pennsylvania have a 1-in-59 chance of colliding with an animal, the third-highest probability in the nation behind West Virginia and Montana.

Collisions also reflect that highways divide animal habitats. That has been a particular problem in some states, especially California, where highway-facilitated sprawl has prevented predators such as mountain lions and bears from traveling across their full ranges. The result has been more encounters between those animals and people in what have become suburban rather than remote areas.

Many states have constructed wildlife corridors over or beneath highways. They entail terrain similar to the surrounding landscape, and natural barriers on both sides of the highway to funnel animals to the corridor. Camera traps in those corridors regularly capture a remarkably dense and diverse parade of animals safely crossing busy highways.

END

Petróleo otra vez

Isaac Cohen

Al comienzo de otra reunión del banco central en Washington, el precio del petróleo ha llegado a casi $90 por barril, mientras que la gasolina regular sin plomo en Estados Unidos se acerca a $4 por galón. El alza de este componente muy volátil del índice de precios al consumidor ha empujado hacia arriba el índice durante los últimos doce meses, a 3.7 por ciento en agosto desde 3.2 por ciento en julio. Sólo los precios de la gasolina y de otros combustibles el mes pasado contribuyeron más de 20 por ciento al aumento del índice.

Según la Agencia Internacional de Energía basada en París que incluye a las economías avanzadas, citada en el Wall Street Journal (09-14-23), los recortes de producción de la Organización de Países Exportadores de Petróleo, desde enero, han reducido la oferta en 2.5 millones de barriles por día. Esta reducción no ha sido compensada por los aumentos de casi 2 millones de barriles en la producción de otros exportadores principales, tales como Estados Unidos y Brasil. Por ende, los recortes combinados de Arabia Saudita y Rusia, de alrededor de 1.3 millones de barriles por día, han contribuido a empujar los precios del crudo al nivel más alto en los últimos 10 meses.

Además, la agencia anticipa que persistirá la volatilidad de precios, ante el anuncio de Arabia Saudita y Rusia que continuarán los recortes de producción hasta fin de este año. La Agencia Internacional de Energía dijo “la alianza Ruso-Saudita está planteando un reto formidable para los mercados petroleros.”

Oil once more

Isaac Cohen

At the start of another central bank meeting in Washington, the price of oil has reached almost $90 per barrel, while the price of regular unleaded gasoline in the United States is approaching $4 per gallon. The spike in this most volatile component of the consumer price index pushed upward the index over the last twelve months, to 3.7 percent in August from 3.2 percent in July. Just the prices of gasoline and other fuels last month contributed more than 20 percent to the increase in the index.

According to the Paris based International Energy Agency which includes the most advanced economies, quoted in The Wall Street Journal (09/14/23), production cuts from the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, since January, have reduced supply by 2.5 million barrels per day. This reduction has not been compensated by increases in production among other major exporters, such as the United States and Brazil, of almost 2 million barrels per day.   Therefore, the combined production cuts from Saudi Arabia and Russia, of around 1.3 million barrels per day, have contributed to pushing crude prices to the highest level in the last 10 months.

Furthermore, the Agency anticipates that price volatility will persist, given the announcement by Saudi Arabia and Russia that production cuts will continue until the end of this year. The International Energy Agency said, “The Saudi-Russian alliance is proving a formidable challenge for oil markets.”

Temple University says acting president JoAnne A. Epps has died after collapsing on stage

JoAnne A. Epps, acting president of Temple University, speaks during a Temple University graduation ceremony, May 11, 2023, at the Liacouras Center on Temple’s campus in Philadelphia. Epps has died after collapsing at a memorial service Tuesday afternoon, Sept. 19, the university said. (Alejandro A. Alvarez/The Philadelphia Inquirer via AP)

Temple University acting president JoAnne A. Epps died Tuesday shortly after becoming ill on stage at a memorial service, officials said, describing her loss as a gut punch and struggling through emotion as they recalled her nearly four decades of service.

Epps was attending a memorial service at the university for Charles L. Blockson, a curator of a collection of African American artifacts, when she suffered what a doctor speaking at a news conference described as a “sudden episode.”

The Philadelphia Inquirer reported that Epps, who was scheduled to speak at the service, slumped in her chair shortly after the event began and was carried out in the arms of a uniformed officer after the announcer asked if there was a doctor in the house.

Epps was taken to Temple University Hospital, where she was pronounced dead around 3:15 p.m. Tuesday, the university said. She was 72.

Ken Kaiser, senior vice president and chief operating officer at Temple, declined to speculate about Epps’ health prior to her collapse but called her death a “gut punch for all of us right now.”

“We are not aware that President Epps had any health issues,” Kaiser said at the news conference.

Kaiser told The Associated Press that he had known Epps for three decades.

“Joanne was full of life, somebody who was super compassionate and truly cared about other people and had a wonderful way of pulling them all together and getting people excited about even a daunting task, making things fun,” he said.

Temple University Provost Gregory Mandel choked up as he described Epps.

“We are all in deep grief and at a loss for words. To know Joanne is to be her friend,” Mandel said at the news conference.

Mandel said the university’s Board of Trustees would meet Wednesday to “put together a plan for us as we work through this transition.”

Epps, Temple’s former law school dean and provost, was named to the post in April following the resignation of Jason Wingard, the university’s first Black president, who resigned in March after leading the 33,600-student university since July 2021.

Kaiser said Epps started out working at Temple’s bookstore 40 years ago and dedicated herself to improving the university.

In an interview with The Philadelphia Inquirer, Epps vowed to focus on improving enrollment and safety, which had been hit by spiraling crime near the north Philadelphia campus during her predecessor’s tumultuous tenure. The newspaper reported enrollment had dropped by 14% since 2019. She said she believed she was selected in part for her “ability to sort of calm waters.”

“I am obviously humbled and excited and really looking forward to being able to make a contribution to the university that I so love,” Epps told the newspaper. She said she would not be a candidate for the permanent position.

The Temple Association of University Professionals labor union recalled Epps’ personal touch.

“I remember her walking into my office this April, and chatting with me one-on-one about how we could work together to make Temple a better place,” union president Jeffrey Doshna said in a statement.

Gov. Josh Shapiro called her loss “heartbreaking for Philadelphia, saying she had been “a powerful force and constant ambassador for Temple University for nearly four decades.”

Kaiser recalled leaving the office when the COVID-19 pandemic hit and Temple was shutting down.

“It was our last day in the office, we were together and I said, OK, I’ll see you in a couple weeks and I didn’t really see her for two years,” Kaiser said.

He later told her that if he knew they wouldn’t see her for two years, he would have given her a hug.

Officer’s bail revoked in shooting death of driver after prosecutors lodge constitutional challenge

Philadelphia police officer Mark Dial, center, arrives at the Juanita Kidd Stout Center for Criminal Justice in Philadelphia, Tuesday, Sept. 19, 2023, with attorneys for a bail hearing. Brian McMonigle is at left and at right is Fortunato Perri. Dial, a Philadelphia police officer charged in the shooting death of a driver last month is back in custody following the revocation of his bail after prosecutors challenged the constitutionality of his release.(Alejandro A. Alvarez/The Philadelphia Inquirer via AP)

A Philadelphia police officer charged in the shooting death of a driver last month is back in custody following the revocation of his bail after prosecutors challenged the constitutionality of his release.

Officer Mark Dial was taken into custody in the courtroom Tuesday following the ruling. He had surrendered Sept. 8 and posted 10 percent of $500,000 bail. But prosecutors said the Pennsylvania Constitution typically prohibits bail for offenses carrying a life term or if there is evidence the defendant poses a threat to the community.

Dial is charged with murder, voluntary manslaughter, official oppression and four other counts. The 27-year-old officer has served on the force for five years and was suspended with intent to dismiss after officials said he refused to cooperate in the investigation. Defense attorneys contend that the shooting was justified, saying Dial thought 27-year-old Eddie Irizarry had a gun.

Authorities have said Dial shot Irizarry after officers spotted his car being driven erratically around noon Aug. 14 and followed it for several blocks. Officers approached as the driver turned the wrong way down a one-way street and stopped.

Police bodycam footage shows Dial firing at close range through the rolled-up driver’s side window about seven seconds after getting out of a police SUV and striding over to the sedan. He fired a total of six rounds. The bodycam footage shows Irizarry holding a knife in his right hand, by his right leg, before he was shot.

The department backtracked after initially claiming the officers made a traffic stop and shot a person outside the vehicle after he “lunged at” police with a knife. Outgoing Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw said a review of the officers’ body-worn cameras “made it very clear that what we initially reported was not actually what happened.”

Defense attorney Brian McMonagle earlier called the decision to charge Dial with murder “appalling,» saying Irizarry was ordered to show his hands and “instead produced a weapon and pointed it at an armed police officer.”

McMonagle argued Tuesday that the initial police affidavit of probable cause for Dial’s arrest recommended a lead offense of voluntary manslaughter, not murder. He also cited a 2021 state Supreme Court case establishing limited circumstances under which murder defendants could argue for bail, The Philadelphia Inquirer reported.

Pennsylvania wants to make it easier to register to vote when drivers get or renew a license

Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro speaks at the Finishing Trades Institute on March 9, 2023, in Philadelphia. Gov. Shapiro's administration said starting Tuesday Sept. 19 2023 it is making it easier for someone to register to vote when they are getting or renewing a driver's license in Pennsylvania. (Photo: AP/Matt Rourke/File)

HARRISBURG, Pa. — Gov. Josh Shapiro’s administration said starting Tuesday it is making it easier for someone to register to vote when they are getting or renewing a driver’s license in Pennsylvania.

Under the new format, prompts on the computer screens in driver’s license centers will take the user to a template to register to vote. That leaves it up to them to choose not to register. Previously, prompts on the computer screen first asked the user whether they wanted to register to vote.

Twenty-three other states and Washington, D.C., already have varying models of what is called “automatic voter registration,” according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

The Shapiro administration said it does not need legislation or regulation to make the change at driver’s license centers.

There are currently 8.6 million registered voters in Pennsylvania, according to information from the state Department of State. More than 10 million Pennsylvanians out of 13 million total are at least 18 years old, the minimum legal age to vote, according to U.S. Census figures.

States have been required to offer voter registration at driver’s license centers since Congress passed the National Voter Registration Act in 1993.

Researchers from the Public Policy Institute of California, the University of Southern California and the University of California-Berkeley concluded in a 2021 study that automatic voter registration increased registration by several percentage points in states where it was in effect, and boosted the number of people actually voting by more than 1%.

Control of the Pennsylvania House will again hinge on result of a special election

Lindsay Powell, Democratic candidate in a special election to fill a vacant Pennsylvania House seat, visits with campaign workers on the Northside of Pittsburgh, Sept. 9, 2023 and Erin Connolly Autenreith, Republican candidate in a special election to fill a vacant Pennsylvania House seat, sits at a coffee shop in the strip district of downtown Pittsburgh, Sept. 6, 2023. (Photo: AP Gene J. Puskar)

HARRISBURG, Pa. — Control of Pennsylvania’s House of Representatives will again be determined by the results of a special election, this time a race being held Tuesday to fill the seat of a Pittsburgh lawmaker whose resignation put the chamber at a 101-101 partisan tie.

If voters in the heavily-Democratic district cast their ballots for former congressional staffer Lindsay Powell, Democrats will keep the slight majority they previously had. The party has defended its majority in a series of special elections since November.

A win for Erin Connolly Autenreith, a real estate agent and local Republican chairperson, would tilt the partisan divide back to the Republicans, who lost their majority for the first time in 12 years last year.

With either outcome, Pennsylvania’s government will remain divided with Democrat Josh Shapiro in the governor’s office and Republicans holding a Senate majority.

Powell, 32, highlighted recent legislation that Democrats advanced with their newfound power in the chamber, like home repair subsidies and expanded protections for LGBTQ+ people. She sees her election to the seat as a way to continue that work.

Democrats are confident they’ll hold the seat, which has broken favorably for the party in recent elections. Republicans have acknowledged it will be a difficult race to win.

Autenreith, 65, said education is a priority for her, citing school vouchers. Her win, she said, “would boost the Republican party, of course, but that’s not the reason I’m running.»

With control over the calendar, Democrats have advanced a number of their priorities on a one-vote margin.

Senate Republicans have sought to advance their own priorities, like school vouchers, and constitutional amendments implementing voter ID and limiting the governor’s power. If Republicans gain control of the House, they can take some of these questions to voters through proposed constitutional amendments without Shapiro’s approval.

That partisan tension is acute as the state continues to be mired in a budget stalemate more than two months into the fiscal year. Though the governor signed the main $45 billion spending plan, legislation that allows some money to be spent is snarled in a partisan dispute.