Migrants crossing the southern border show signs of ‘worsening trauma,’ including sexual assault: report

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Ever since he began volunteering two months ago for weekend shifts at a clinic in one of the largest shelters in the border city of Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, Dr. Brian Elmore has treated about 100 migrants for respiratory viruses and a handful of more serious emergencies, the Associated Press reported.

But what worries him most is something else.

Many migrants are traumatized after their long journeys north.

TEXAS RANCHERS PLEAD FOR HELP FROM GOV. ABBOTT AFTER THIRD ATTEMPTED BREAK-IN AMID MIGRANT CRISIS

The “worsening trauma” experienced by the migrants, the AP reported, often involves witnessing murders and suffering from kidnappings and sexual assault.

“Most of our patients have symptoms of PTSD — I want to initiate a screening for every patient,” Elmore, an emergency medicine doctor at Clinica Hope, told the AP.

The Catholic nonprofit Hope Border Institute opened the clinic this past fall with the help of Bishop Mark Seitz of El Paso, Texas, which borders Juarez, said the AP. 

“The Hope Border Institute (HOPE) brings the perspective of Catholic social teaching to bear on the realities unique to our U.S.-Mexico border region,” the group’s website says. 

“Through a robust program of research and policy work, leadership development and action, we work to build justice and deepen solidarity across the borderlands.”

Professionals including doctors, social workers, clergy and law enforcement say growing numbers of migrants are suffering violence that amounts to torture — and are arriving at the U.S.-Mexican border in desperate need of trauma-informed medical and mental health treatment, the AP reported.

AIR FORCE VETERAN AND HIS WIFE FACED PTSD HEAD-ON WITH THE HELP OF ALL SECURE FOUNDATION

But resources for this specialized care are scarce.

And the network of shelters is so overwhelmed by new arrivals and migrants that only the most severe cases can be handled, according to the AP’s reporting.

One specific example, as a case manager described: “A pregnant 13-year-old … fled gang rapes, and so [she] needs help with child care and middle school.”

DR. MARC SIEGEL: MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS IS ‘MUCH WORSE’ DUE TO THE PANDEMIC

Zury Reyes Borrero, a case manager in Arizona with the Center for Victims of Torture, visited the young girl when she gave birth — and described the circumstances.

“We get people at their most vulnerable. Some don’t even realize they’re in the U.S.,” the case manager told the AP.

In the past six months, Reyes Borrero and a colleague have helped about 100 migrants at Catholic Community Services’ Casa Alitas, a shelter in Tucson, Arizona, she said.

Each visit with a migrant can take hours.

Caseworkers try to build a rapport with the individuals — and focus on empowering them, Reyes Borrero told the AP.

This group of people “might not have any memory that’s safe,” said Sarah Howell, who runs a clinical practice and a nonprofit treating migrant survivors of torture in Houston, Texas.

When she visits patients in their new Texas communities, said Howell, they routinely introduce relatives or neighbors who also need help with severe trauma; yet they reportedly lack the stability and safety necessary for healing.

Most migrants need “first-aid mental health” as well as long-term care that’s even harder to arrange once they disperse from border-area shelters to communities across the country, noted another professional.

Left untreated, such trauma can escalate to where it necessitates psychiatric care instead of therapy and self-help, Dylan Corbett, Hope Border Institute’s executive director, told the AP.

Service providers and migrants alike are saying the most dangerous spot on journeys filled with peril at every step is “la selva” — the Darien Gap jungle separating Colombia from Panama, crossed by increasing numbers of Venezuelans, Cubans and Haitians who first moved to South America and are now seeking safer lives in the United States, the AP reported.

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Natural perils like deadly snakes and rivers only add to the risks of an area rife with bandits preying on migrants, the same source noted.

Meanwhile, over four million migrants have flocked to the southern border since Vice President Kamala Harris was assigned the task of addressing the “root cause” of the crisis nearly two years ago, Fox News Digital reported this weekend.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection tracked 233,000 border encounters in November.

That’s a 35% increase from when Harris was assigned her role on mass migration there in March 2021. 

These encounters are expected to increase after the expiration of Title 42, a pandemic-era policy under President Donald Trump that allows border agents to turn away migrants at the border.

The White House in December could not define exactly what Harris does in her role to address the mass migration.

“I don’t have anything to lay out specifically on what that work looks like,” press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said at a press briefing when asked about the role of the vice president.

The vice president’s office did not respond to a request for comment.

The Associated Press, as well as Fox News Digital’s Patrick Hauf, contributed reporting.

 

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Alabama’s Jermaine Burton addresses controversial incident with Tennessee fan: ‘It was a mistake’

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Alabama wide receiver Jermaine Burton ended the season on a high note as the Crimson Tide powered through Kansas State in the Sugar Bowl on Saturday night 45-20.

Burton led the Crimson Tide with three catches for 87 yards and was one of the five receivers who caught a touchdown pass from Bryce Young. After the game, he spoke to reporters about a controversy from earlier in the season following a loss to Tennessee at Neyland Stadium.

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The wide receiver was going off the field and appeared to push a few fans on his way back to the locker room, including appearing to rough up a female fan. He came under fire after that game but didn’t receive any public form of discipline from coach Nick Saban over the course of the season.

GEORGIA OVERCOMES 14-POINT FOURTH QUARTER DEFICIT OVER OHIO STATE TO ADVANCE TO SECOND STRAIGHT TITLE GAME

“That whole situation, it was a mistake,” Burton said Saturday of the incident in Knoxville, via The Tuscaloosa News. “I can’t hold that against myself forever.… But a mistake is a mistake. You move past it. I’m not going to let situation frame me as a person or shape me as a person because I know who I am, and my team knows who I am.”

He added: “It can be hostile in a lot of situations. The (SEC) can do whatever they can, but it’s not safe for a lot of people.”

Alabama will likely finish the season in the top 5 of the final Associated Press poll. With the win over Kansas State, the team finishes 11-2 on the year.

 

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Here's a list of places imposing rules on travelers from China as Covid surges

Authorities around the world are imposing or considering curbs on travelers from China as Covid-19 cases in the country surge following its relaxation of “zero-Covid” rules.

They cite a lack of information from China on variants and are concerned about a wave of infections. China has rejected criticism of its Covid data and said it expects future mutations to be potentially more transmissible but less severe.

Below is a list of regulations for travelers from China.

Places imposing curbs

United States

The United States will impose mandatory Covid-19 tests on travelers from China beginning on Jan. 5. All air passengers aged two and older will require a negative result from a test no more than two days before departure from China, Hong Kong or Macau. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also said U.S. citizens should also reconsider travel to China, Hong Kong and Macau.

Britain

The UK will require a pre-departure negative Covid-19 test from passengers from China as of Jan. 5, the Department of Health said on Friday.

France

The Arc de Triomphe on New Year’s Eve celebrations in Paris.

Julien De Rosa | Afp | Getty Images

France will require travelers from China to provide a negative Covid test result less than 48 hours before departure, the health and transport ministries said on Friday.

From Jan. 1, France will also carry out random PCR Covid tests upon arrival on some travelers coming from China, a government official told reporters.

Australia

Travelers from China to Australia will need to submit a negative COVID-19 test from Jan. 5, Australian health minister Mark Butler said on Sunday, joining other nations that have implemented similar restrictions as cases surge in China.

India

The country has mandated a Covid-19 negative test report for travelers arriving from China, Hong Kong, Japan, South Korea and Thailand, the health minister said. Passengers from those countries will be quarantined if they show symptoms or test positive.

Canada

Air travelers to Canada from China must test negative for Covid-19 no more than two days before departure, Ottawa said on Saturday, joining other nations that have implemented such restrictions.

Japan

Osaka, Japan.

Sopa Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images

Italy

Italy has ordered Covid-19 antigen swabs and virus sequencing for all travelers from China. Milan’s main airport, Malpensa, had already started testing passengers arriving from Beijing and Shanghai. “The measure is essential to ensure surveillance and detection of possible variants of the virus in order to protect the Italian population,” Health Minister Orazio Schillaci said.

Spain

Malaysia

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Malaysia will screen all inbound travelers for fever and test wastewater from aircraft arriving from China for Covid-19, Minister Zaliha Mustafa said in a statement.

Taiwan

Taiwan’s Central Epidemic Command Centre said all passengers on direct flights from China, as well as by boat at two offshore islands, will have to take PCR tests upon arrival, starting on Jan. 1.

South Korea

South Korea will require travelers from China to provide negative Covid test results before departure, South Korea’s News1 news agency reported on Friday.

Morocco

Rabat, Morocco.

Nurphoto | Nurphoto | Getty Images

Morocco will impose a ban on people arriving from China, whatever their nationality, from Jan. 3 to avert any new wave of coronavirus infections, the foreign ministry said on Saturday.

Places monitoring the situation

Philippines

The Philippines sees a need to intensify the monitoring and implementation of border control for incoming individuals especially from China that is experiencing a record surge in Covid-19 cases, Manila’s health ministry said on Saturday.

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[World] Ukraine must get long-term support, warns Nato chief

BBC News world 

Image source, AFP

Western countries must be prepared to provide long-term support to Ukraine as Russia shows no signs of relenting, Nato’s secretary general has said.

Jens Stoltenberg told the BBC that military support would ensure the survival of Ukraine as a sovereign country and force Russia to sit down and negotiate an end to the war.

Russia’s leader accuses the West of using Ukraine to destroy his country.

Russian missiles and drones have hit Ukraine on New Year’s Eve and Day.

Russia’s partial mobilisation programme, ordered in September, showed Moscow had no desire to end the war at present, Mr Stoltenberg told Radio 4’s World at One programme.

“The Ukrainian forces had the momentum for several months, but we also know that Russia has mobilised many more forces, many of them are now training,” he said.

“All that indicates that they are prepared to continue the war and also try to potentially launch a new offensive.”

Earlier, Russian President Vladimir Putin gave a New Year’s speech, in which he tried to rally people behind his troops fighting in Ukraine, saying that the country’s future was at stake.

His Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky accused Mr Putin of hiding behind his troops rather than leading them.

Twelve out of 20 Russian cruise missiles were shot down on Saturday, the head of Ukraine’s armed forces said. A further 45 Iranian-made kamikaze drones were shot down around Kyiv just hours into the New Year on Sunday, the Ukrainian Air Force said.

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Watch: A local resident describes hearing the explosions and glass shattering

At least one person died and dozens were injured in the attacks.

The strike fuelled anger and hate among Ukrainians already tired of Russia’s unrelenting air campaign.

As explosions rocked the capital, some residents sang the national anthem, while officials accused Russia of deliberately targeting civilians while they gathered to celebrated the New Year.

Andriy Nebitov, the head of the Kyiv police, posted an image to social media of a downed drone with the words “Happy New Year” scribbled across it in Russian.

Image source, Kyiv Police

Image caption,

A downed drone found in a children’s playground in Kyiv with the words ‘Happy New Year’ written in Russian on it

“That is everything you need to know about the terror state and its army,” he wrote on Facebook, adding that the remains had crashed in a children’s playground.

Though no let up in hostilities looks to be in sight, Mr Stoltenberg said Nato must ensure Ukraine stays in a strong position in the event of negotiation talks between the two sides.

“We need to provide support to Ukraine now, including military support, because that’s the only way to convince Russia that they have to sit down and negotiate in good faith and respect Ukraine as a sovereign independent nation in Europe,” Mr Stoltenberg said.

“What we do know is that what Ukraine can achieve around that table is totally dependent on the strength on the battlefield.”

Prior to Mr Stoltenberg’s interview, France – a Nato member – reiterated its backing for Ukraine.

“We will be beside you without fail. We will help you until victory is achieved,” French President Emmanuel Macron said in his own New Year’s address.

 

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Adoptable tuxedo cat named Janet hopes for a happy New Year in a new home

A tuxedo cat in New York is looking to start off the New Year of 2023 on the right “paw” — in a brand new home.

Three-year-old Janet is currently available for adoption at the Animal Rescue Fund (ARF) of the Hamptons.

Janet was first found as a stray by an Operation Cat volunteer — who noticed the cat was “extremely friendly,” according to ARF.

NEW YORK BANS THE SALE OF DOGS, CATS AND RABBITS AT RETAIL PET STORES

The domestic shorthair cat has a gorgeous black-and-white coat in traditional tuxedo fashion.

Janet gets along well with other cats, the shelter told Fox News Digital.

Janet, a three-year-old tuxedo cat, needs a new home — and is hoping for a new family in the New Year of 2023.

Janet, a three-year-old tuxedo cat, needs a new home — and is hoping for a new family in the New Year of 2023.
(ARF)

She also makes the “cutest chirping noises” when she requires attention, the rescue group said.

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And like many other cats, she wants all the attention on her own terms.

The domestic shorthair cat named Janet has a gorgeous black-and-white coat. She's available for adoption and is hoping for a forever home in the New Year.

The domestic shorthair cat named Janet has a gorgeous black-and-white coat. She’s available for adoption and is hoping for a forever home in the New Year.
(ARF)

“She will make a great companion. We just need someone to give her a chance,” ARF said.

The Animal Rescue Fund of the Hamptons opened in 1974 in East Hampton, New York. 

WHITE SHEPHERD DOG IN HAMPTONS LOOKING FOR HER FOREVER HOME: ‘GIVE HER A CHANCE’

ARF has helped thousands of cats and dogs receive compassion, food, shelter, medical care, training and more.

Just ahead of its upcoming 50th anniversary, the rescue has begun renovations of its facilities — which will help ensure its future within the community.

Janet is available for adoption at the Animal Rescue Fund of the Hamptons.

Janet is available for adoption at the Animal Rescue Fund of the Hamptons.
(ARF)

The Forever Home project will include a new welcome center, a new kennel and a training center that will be 8,400 square feet.

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Anyone interested in adopting Janet can learn more at the rescue’s website, arfhamptons.com.

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Want to read about other pets up for adoption? Check out this recent article from Fox News Digital: Eight-year-old Spaniel mix surrendered by his family in New York is hoping for a second chance.

Fox News Digital’s Brittany Kasko contributed to this report.

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China's home prices fell at an accelerating rate in December, survey shows

People visit a residential sales office in Shandong Province, China, on Dec. 15, 2022. Home prices in 100 cities fell for the sixth month in a row in December, according to a private Chinese survey.

Future Publishing | Future Publishing | Getty Images

China’s home prices fell at a faster pace in December, according to a private survey on Sunday, reflecting persistently weak demand amid rising Covid-19 cases despite a slew of support measures.

China’s property market crisis worsened this summer, with official data showing home prices, sales and investment all falling in recent months, adding pressure on the faltering economy.

Home prices in 100 cities fell for the sixth month in a row in December, declining 0.08% from a month earlier after falling 0.06% in November, according to the survey by China Index Academy, one of the country’s largest independent real estate research firms.

Among the 100 cities, 68 cities posted a fall in monthly prices, compared with 57 in November, the survey showed.

China has in recent weeks ramped up support for the industry in a bid to relieve a long-running liquidity squeeze that has hit developers and delayed completion of many housing projects, further undermining buyers’ confidence. The moves have included lifting a ban on fundraising via equity offerings for listed property firms.

The property sector has also got a slight boost after Beijing abruptly dropped its strict zero-Covid policy in early December, which could lure consumers back to showrooms. But the virus is now spreading largely unchecked and likely infecting millions of people a day, according to some international health experts.

“Real estate policies may continue to maintain an accommodative tone with room for policy easing on the supply and demand side in 2023,” said the real estate research firm, adding “the housing market is expected to stabilize gradually next year.”

China real estate is still overvalued, says Ariel's Charlie Bobrinskoy

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Big problem for US Catholic voters: US Catholic bishops

Just In | The Hill 

In 1976 the administrative board of the United States Catholic Conference — then the advocacy arm of the Catholic bishops — took a momentous step, publishing “Political Responsibility: Reflections on an Election Year.” This was something we should note even today for several reasons.

“Political Responsibility” marked the first time the Catholic bishops of the United States intervened directly in the voter decisions that Catholics would make during a presidential election year. Subsequent election year guides would appear, as one will next year. “Political Responsibility” was the first.

There are other reasons why “Political Responsibility” was notable.

The document came during the first presidential election since Roe v. Wade. The document reflected an ambitious effort to enact the call of the Second Vatican Council (1962-1965) for Catholics “to discharge their earthly duties conscientiously.”

But most of all, “Political Responsibility” was notable because the Catholic bishops of the United States were able to do it at all.

Those bishops in 1976 were bold men, confident about the Catholic Church and about the world we all live in. Catholic bishops today are different. They lack that confidence about the Church, the world, and even about each other.

The 2024 presidential election season will lay bare the Catholic Church’s retreat from a public square it once sought its place in — and understanding what has happened among Catholic bishops will help us understand why.

In 1976, the Catholic bishops of the United States put on a national conference of Catholics from around the United States to celebrate the Bicentennial of the United States and Catholic contributions to this nation of immigrants. The conference surprised the bishops when laypeople seized the floor and passed motions calling for the ordination of women and married priests. Still, those bishops remained committed to engaging a conversation with the world. Also in 1976, the bishops became embroiled in the presidential election, while Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter jockeyed for “the Catholic vote.” The bishops risked politicizing the Catholic Church, nearly endangered their tax-exempt status, and they quarreled among themselves about it.

Still the bishops kept on working together to reach out to the world. In 1983, the bishops wrote “The Challenge of Peace,” a pastoral letter that challenged the nuclear arms race, and in 1986 they wrote another pastoral letter about economic justice that aimed at the public debate in the world beyond the Catholic Church.

You won’t find Catholic bishops doing that sort of thing in the United States any longer. After the mid-1980s, the complexion of the bishops’ conference began to change. The transformation has been understood for a long time. Since then, U.S. bishops generally have been men who preferred to confront the culture instead of engaging it. There are exceptions. The bishops are not monolithic, and today, especially because Pope Francis has had a chance to name bishops for almost ten years, there is a sizable minority among U.S. bishops that favors a less confrontational approach. Even as the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops today is dominated by men who reject Pope Francis’s leadership to various degrees, the Conference is a complicated place.

In large part, that is why the Catholic bishops of the United States cannot meet the first presidential election that will follow Dobbs v. Jackson, the decision that reversed Roe, in any way commensurate to how they met the 1976 election.

Today’s bishops found themselves the object of widespread puzzlement when they were unable to revise their current document for Catholic voters, “Faithful Citizenship,” ahead of the 2020 election. The puzzlement continued in 2022, as they found themselves again unable to revise the document for 2024. “Faithful Citizenship” was approved in its current form in 2007. Four presidential elections and Francis’s almost 10-year-old papacy that was six years away from beginning in 2007 have intervened, raising questions about the real usefulness of this unrevised document that itself will be nearly old enough to vote in 2024.

Answers should be quite clear to anyone observing the Catholic Church in the United States closely. To revise the document would expose the divisions among U.S. Catholic bishops in a public way — and also reveal how estranged most of the bishops are from the mainstream of American life. A new document would depend on consensus, even just to draft it. No such consensus exists in 2022. And anything the majority would support on its own would incite embarrassing conversations about whether the Catholic Church really is able to participate in U.S. public life at all.

It is not 1976 anymore.

The differences between 1976 and today matter in other ways, too — for Catholics, and for everyone. In those days, religious affiliation was something that could be taken for granted about most people, as it had been so for centuries. We are living through a remarkable transformation that now finds — for the first time ever — fewer than half of Americans claiming a religious affiliation. The decline of participation among Catholics in the U.S. has been especially precipitous and is especially deserving of attention, given the number of Catholics in the U.S.

Fewer than 50 years ago, the nation’s tens of millions of Catholics could be called by their bishops to be a moral voice in public debate, sharing the perspective of their faith with everyone in hopes of building a world that is more just and peaceful. They spoke for the poor and against nuclear war. Today there are proportionately fewer Catholics to call upon, even if their bishops could manage to issue such a call. This is unknown territory, for our country and our civilization.

The confrontational style favored by U.S. Catholic bishops over the last four decades has not helped Catholics influence the public debate. To all appearances, it has not done much to keep Catholics in the Church, either. As the first presidential campaign since Dobbs gets underway, we will begin to understand what that means for Catholics, for politics, and for our world.

Steven P. Millies, a political theorist, is professor of public theology and director of The Bernardin Center at Catholic Theological Union in Chicago. Follow him on Twitter @stevenpmillies

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Kinzinger on leaving Congress: ‘I’m not going to miss the job’

Just In | The Hill 

Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) said on Sunday that he won’t be missing his job in Congress after his term is set to end when the new House is sworn-in on Tuesday.

“I’m not going to miss the job. I’m glad I’m not going to be back. It gives me time to focus on broader things, bigger fights,” Kinzinger said on CNN’s “State of the Union.” 

Kinzinger said his time in Congress has been a “heck of a ride” since he first took office as an “optimistic and bright-eyed” 32-year-old. He said adjusting to the fact that people will be less interested in what he has to say once he is no longer in Congress will be tough, but that the upcoming Congress is set to face a host of issues.

Kinzinger last year chose not to run for reelection to a seventh term. He was one of 10 House Republicans to vote to impeach former President Trump for his role in the Jan. 6, 2021, riot and was one of two Republicans who served on the committee investigating that day.

The other Republican, Rep. Liz Cheney (Wyo.), who also voted to impeach Trump, lost her primary election in 2022.

All but two of the Republicans who voted to impeach Trump either lost their primaries to Trump-backed challengers or chose to not run for reelection. 

Kinzinger said he would not “do one thing differently” throughout his congressional career, even though the past couple years have been tough on him in Congress. 

“I’ve had extended family that sent me letters telling me I was working on behalf of Satan. I mean that’s not something I could have imagined,” he said. 

He said such a sentiment is reflective of the political state of the country.

“What that does to me is it reminds me of just how bad of a place we’ve gotten to. And you know everybody in their life, and I was no different when I was a young guy, you know, you always imagine a moment where you can stand alone and where you’re like the one person that — that can do the right thing in a crowd, right,” Kinzinger said.

“I feel honored to have been at this moment in history and to have done the right thing. You know my kid’s going to be proud of it. That’s something that I take very seriously and, you know, I wouldn’t have done anything different,” he added. 

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From increases in minimum wage to recreational marijuana, these new laws take effect in 2023



CNN
 — 

As President Joe Biden scored several legislative wins this year, voters across the country headed to the polls in November to decide on local measures.

The passage of several of those measures will lead to new state laws this year. And Americans in 2023 will also feel the impact of several provisions in the Inflation Reduction Act that was enacted over the summer.

Here are some of the state and federal measures set to take effect in 2023.

Nearly half of all US states will increase their minimum wages in 2023.

The hike went into effect in the following states on January 1: Arizona, California, Colorado, Delaware, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Jersey, New Mexico, Ohio, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Vermont and Washington.

Minimum-wage workers in Connecticut will have to wait until June 1 to see the increase, while the change goes into effect in Nevada and Florida on July 1 and September 30, respectively. The hike went into effect in New York on Saturday for workers outside New York City, Long Island and Westchester County.

Of all states, Washington state has the highest minimum wage at $15.74, up from $14.49, followed by California, which now has a minimum wage of $15.50 for all workers, up from $14 for employers with 25 or less employees and $15 for employers with 26 or more employees.

However, Washington, DC, continues to have the highest minimum wage in the country. The increase from $16.10 to $16.50 went into effect Sunday and another hike to $17 is set for July 1.

The push for a higher wage across the country comes as the federal minimum wage has remained the same since 2009, the longest period without change since a minimum wage was established in 1938, according to the Department of Labor.

Efforts by Democrats to pass a $15 minimum wage bill stalled in the Senate in 2021.

03 new laws in 2023

Jeenah Moon/Bloomberg/Getty Images

Five states – Arkansas, Maryland, Missouri, North Dakota and South Dakota – had recreational marijuana on the ballot in the November midterm elections, and voters in Maryland and Missouri approved personal use for those 21 and older.

While legalization has taken effect in Missouri with an amendment to the state constitution, the Maryland law goes into effect on July 1.

The law will also allow those previously convicted of cannabis possession and intent to distribute to apply for record expungement.

Starting January 1, the amount of cannabis a person can possess in Maryland for a fine instead of a criminal penalty increases – from just over a third of an ounce, or 10 grams, to 2.5 ounces.

One of the most significant victories for Biden in 2022 was the Inflation Reduction Act, a $750 billion health care, tax and climate bill, which he signed into law in August.

As part of the legislation, the price of insulin for Medicare beneficiaries will be capped at $35 starting January 1.

About 3.3 million Medicare beneficiaries used insulin in 2020 and spent an average of $54 per insulin prescription the same year, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.

The cap does not apply to those with private insurance coverage after Senate Democrats failed to get at least 10 Republican votes to pass the broader provision.

02 new laws in 2023

Keith Srakocic/AP

There will be changes to the tax credits for those with electric vehicles, also thanks to the Inflation Reduction Act.

The new rule stresses the use of vehicles that were made in North America, requiring much of their battery components and final assembly to be in the continent to be eligible for tax credits. It also mandates at least 40% of the minerals used for the battery to be extracted from the United States or a country that has free trade with the US.

Upon meeting the requirements, new vehicles are eligible for a tax credit of up to $7,500.

Those purchasing used electric vehicles can receive up to $4,000 in credits but it may not exceed 30% of the vehicle’s sale price.

Initially, buyers who purchase vehicles in 2023 will need to wait to receive the tax credit when they file their tax returns for the year in 2024. But starting on January 1, 2024, electric vehicle buyers will be able to receive the money immediately, at the point of sale, if they agree to transfer the credit to their dealership.

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[World] New Year's Eve in pictures: World celebrates arrival of 2023

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Australia welcomes 2023 with Sydney harbour fireworks display

New year celebrations have been in full flow as the world welcomed in 2023.

The Pacific nation of Kiribati was the first to see in the new year, followed by New Zealand an hour later – and thousands gathered in Sydney for the Australian city’s renowned fireworks display.

Later, as the new year swept west through Europe, Africa and the Americas, more cities celebrated with large crowds, fireworks, concerts and parties.

Here are some of the best pictures from around the world.

Fireworks explode over Wat Arun of the temple of dawn during the New Year celebrations, in Bangkok, Thailand, January 1, 2023.Image source, Reuters
Image caption,

In Bangkok, Thailand, fireworks explode over Wat Arun Buddhist temple
A man celebrates New Year's Eve with a kid in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia January 1, 2023.Image source, Reuters
Image caption,

A man and a child celebrate together in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
People in Wuhan, China, release balloons as they gather to celebrate amid a rise of Covid-19 cases in the countryImage source, Reuters
Image caption,

People in Wuhan, China, release balloons as they gather to celebrate amid a rise of Covid-19 cases in the country
Fireworks in SydneyImage source, BIANCA DE MARCHI/EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock
Image caption,

Sydney’s fireworks launched from its Harbour Bridge, Opera House and barges in its famous harbour
Fireworks explode over the London Eye ferris wheel as part of its celebrationsImage source, Reuters
Image caption,

London’s fireworks display was watched by a crowd of 100,000 from the banks of the River Thames
Fireworks explode over Edinburgh Castle during the street party for Hogmanay New Year celebrations in EdinburghImage source, PA Media
Image caption,

Fireworks lit up the sky behind Edinburgh Castle during the city’s first full Hogmanay celebrations in three years
A light and fireworks show displayed on the Arc de Triomphe as revellers celebrate the new year 2023 on the Champs-Elysees avenue in Paris, France, 01 January 2023.Image source, EPA
Image caption,

In Paris, a light and fireworks show was displayed on the Arc de Triomphe as revellers gathered on the Champs-Elysees
People dance during the New Year's Eve celebrations in central Moscow, Russia January 1, 2023. REUTERS/Tatyana MakeyevaImage source, Reuters
Image caption,

In Russia, people gather in central Moscow. The authorities closed the city’s famous Red Square, citing Covid restrictions while increasing the police presence in the area
People gathered next to a Christmas tree to celebrate the New Year eve before a curfew, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in front of the St. Sophia Cathedral in Kyiv, UkraineImage source, Reuters
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In the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv, a family gathers next to a Christmas tree to celebrate the new year before a curfew, amid Russia’s attacks on the country
Fireworks illuminate the Athenian sky as the temple of Parthenon sits atop the Acropolis hill during the New Year celebrations in Athens Greece, 01 January 2023.Image source, EPA
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The sky over the temple of Parthenon atop the Acropolis hill in Athens, Greece
Fireworks explode from the Burj Khalifa, the tallest building in the world, during the celebrations in Dubai, United Arab EmiratesImage source, Reuters
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In Dubai, Burj Khalifa – the tallest building in the world – was the focus of United Arab Emirates’s celebrations
Revellers celebrate during a New Year's Eve party in Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippines,Image source, Reuters
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Joyful faces in Quezon City, near to Manila in the Philippines, as people record the turn of the year
Locals of Mathare, a collection of slums, hold a mass to welcome new year in Nairobi, Kenya on December 31, 2022Image source, Getty Images
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Locals of Mathare, one of Kenya’s poorest settlements, hold a mass to welcome the new year in Nairobi, Kenya
A woman after the New Year's Eve Chimes 2022, at Puerta del Sol, on January 1, 2023, in Madrid, Spain.Image source, Getty Images
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A woman eats grapes in Madrid, a new year tradition in Spain
People gather to celebrate the clocks turning midnight in Seoul, South KoreaImage source, Reuters
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People gather to celebrate the clocks turning midnight in Seoul, South Korea
Revellers release balloons as they take part in New Year celebrations in Tokyo, JapanImage source, Reuters
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Revellers release balloons as they take part in celebrations in Tokyo, Japan
Fireworks explode over Victoria Harbour to celebrate the New Year in Hong KongImage source, Reuters
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Fireworks explode over Victoria Harbour to celebrate in Hong Kong
People celebrate new year in Taipei, in Taiwan, as fireworks light up the skyline from the Taipei 101 buildingImage source, Getty Images
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In Taiwan, fireworks light up the skyline from the Taipei 101 building
A person wears 2023 glasses during New Year celebrations in Times Square during the first New Year's Eve event without restrictions since the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York,Image source, Reuters
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A person wears festive glasses during the Times Square celebrations
Confetti flies around the countdown clock covering people who've gathered in Times Square in New York to welcome in 2023Image source, Reuters
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Confetti flies around the countdown clock in Times Square as New York welcomes 2023
Fireworks fill the sky over Copacabana beach, in Rio de JaneiroImage source, Reuters
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An estimated two million people watched the fireworks fill the sky over Copacabana beach, in Rio de Janeiro
Fireworks illuminate the night sky over Balneario resort city during New Year's celebrations in Acapulco, MexicoImage source, EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock
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People in Acapulco, Mexico, have also been celebrating with fireworks which illuminated the night sky during new year celebrations

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