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Minnesota workers pressure employers to take action against ICE operations

about 7 hours ago
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Some of the US’s biggest companies are coming under increasing pressure to speak out about the Trump administration’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)’s operations in Minnesota.Workers throughout Minnesota have been pressuring their employers to act following the death of Renee Good, an unarmed woman killed by a federal immigration officer in Minneapolis earlier this month.The killing on Saturday of Alex Jeffrey Pretti, a 37-year-old Veterans Affairs Hospital ICU Nurse and member of the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE), intensified those calls from labor unions against ICE.“ICE continues to make everyone less safe, and Minnesota’s Labor Movement repeats and amplifies our call for them to leave our state immediately,” said Bernie Burnham, Minnesota AFL-CIO President, in a statement.“Minnesota’s Labor Movement will continue to actively support and stand in solidarity with every worker who has been unlawfully detained.

We stand shoulder to shoulder with our fellow Minnesotans in the face of a hostile federal government,”On Friday, labor unions, community leaders, and faith leaders organized a Day of Truth & Freedom, calling for an economic blackout of no work, no shopping and no school,Organizers of the Day of Truth & Freedom have been targeting large corporations in demanding they take stands against ICE, including ceasing economic activity with the agency, and banning the agency from entering work sites,Target, Home Depot, Enterprise, Delta Airlines and Hilton were targeted with actions leading up to the 23 January economic blackout,Hundreds of Target workers signed onto a letter addressed to the company’s CEO and other leaders criticizing the company’s silence on the ICE operations in Minnesota.

None of the companies responded to multiple requests for comment,“It’s so sad to see Target so silent,” said Sheletta Brundidge, an activist and organizer in Minneapolis who started a Target boycott with activist Nekima Levy Armstrong against the company rescinding their diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives,Levy Armstrong was recently detained by the FBI for an anti-ICE protest at a Minnesota church,Brundidge’s marketing company previously worked with Target,“That Target CEO should be out in the street talking to people.

He should be part of the protesting.He should make sure that the neighbors to his company’s headquarters are taken care of.Has he gone out to the site where Renee Good was killed and dropped off water or hand warmers? Have they done anything for her children? Has he stepped out of that ivory tower to look around and see what is going on?” added Brundidge.“There was a protest that marched right in front of his headquarters on Friday.They didn’t even mention it, they are silent, and silence says something.

Silence doesn’t mean I don’t know what to say,Silence says I don’t give a damn,I don’t care about the people that shop here,I don’t care about the people who work here,I don’t care about the people in this community.

I don’t care.Keep spending your money.”Target’s executives reportedly met with clergy in Minneapolis last week who protested in the company’s lobby.The Wall Street Journal reported the company began distributing internally updated guidelines for how staff should respond to “unannounced immigration-related contacts”.Hilton has faced scrutiny after a Hampton Inn in its network of hotels cancelled the reservation of ICE agents and Hilton removed it from its network earlier this month.

But this past week, Hilton backed a decision to close a DoubleTree hotel and an Intercontinental hotel where ICE agents were staying in the Twin Cities region following reported bomb threats.“A safety and security issue is a different issue—it’s closed to all,” said Hilton’s CEO, Chris Nassetta.A recent report by North Star Policy Action estimates the immigration enforcement operation is costing taxpayers at least $18m per week.Immigrant workers and business owners generate $41bn annually in economic output for Minnesota.“We want ICE out of Minnesota.

In construction, they are causing harm and chaos.People can’t work,” said a construction worker in Minnesota, a member of Centro de Trabajadores Unidos en La Lucha (CTUL), who requested to remain anonymous for fear of retaliation to their immigration status.The worker and several of his co-workers and allies delivered a petition to the largest US house developer by volume, DR Horton, at their regional office in Lakeville, Minnesota, on 21 January.They are demanding the developer prevent ICE from entering job sites without a valid warrant and to demand an end to the ICE violence and raids.The worker said no one came to speak with the group, but the police were called to ask the group to leave, which they did peacefully.

“The police said we need to leave because it is private property, and a few community members pointed out that this is precisely what we are asking of DR Horton – to not allow ICE on their private job sites without a signed and valid judicial warrant,” said Jac Kovarik, the communications coordinator for CTUL, in a statement on the action.DR Horton did not respond to multiple requests for comment.“Me and my coworkers haven’t been working for a month now,” added the worker.“ICE agents are going to construction sites, they’re circling around, apprehending people, assaulting people without a warrant.”He noted his church has been providing food and helping to cover rent for him and his co-workers as ICE’s operations have halted construction projects for the contractor where he works.

A spokesperson for the US Department of Homeland Security called the actions of labor unions and workers “beyond insane.Why would these labor bosses not want these public safety threats out of their communities?”They added, “these are the criminals these labor bosses are trying to protect,” citing 23 unnamed photos of claimed undocumented immigrants arrested in Minnesota with criminal records.Under the Trump administration, thousands of people targeted by ICE have no criminal record, and numerous US citizens have also been detained.In 2025, Donald Trump also issued more than 1,600 pardons of individuals convicted of crimes, including US Capitol insurrectionists and wealthy campaign donors.
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The ADHD grey zone: why patients are stuck between private diagnosis and NHS care

Sameer Modha knows the ADHD system all too well. He has been diagnosed himself, as have his two children, giving him a clear view of how the system works – and where it breaks down.While his own diagnosis was relatively straightforward, the experience with his daughter was very different. The diagnosis he obtained for his eldest child, after an assessment carried out privately by a “very senior ex-Camhs [child and adolescent mental health service] director, someone who knows the system and has seen a huge amount of this”, was later rejected by the NHS. He was told it was not compliant with guidelines from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice), which sets healthcare standards nationally

1 day ago
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Seeing red over the Greens’ advocacy of ‘buy the supply’ housing policy | Letters

I was surprised to see Siân Berry (Letters, 9 January) advocate that Labour “buy the supply” of landlord homes as a way of increasing the stock of social housing. Siân may want to pay more attention closer to home. The Labour council in Brighton and Hove is pursuing exactly that policy, as was featured in the Guardian last year (Right to buy in reverse: how Brighton is tackling its social housing crisis, 26 October).As with many policy areas, the Greens like soundbites and writing letters, but often have vanishingly little interest in actual policy implementation. It was invariably the case when the Greens ran Brighton and Hove city council: a lot of talking about the climate crisis, but little progress in expanding recycling nor city-wide decarbonisation – something that we are now putting right

2 days ago
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Great Ormond Street hospital cleaners win racial discrimination appeal

Black cleaners at Great Ormond Street hospital were subjected to “indirect race discrimination” by the wait for NHS pay terms and conditions after their services were brought in-house, a tribunal has found.A case against the London children’s hospital brought by 80 cleaners – the majority of whom are from Black and minority ethnic backgrounds – was dismissed by an employment tribunal in 2024.But in a judgment handed down this week in a four-year legal battle, the employment appeal tribunal (EAT) upheld their appeal against the original decision, accepting their claim that they had suffered discrimination in not getting NHS “Agenda for Change” (AfC) pay rates “immediately or shortly thereafter” when their contracts were transferred in 2021.It is understood all staff have now been offered NHS AfC terms. If the hospital does not appeal further, the case is expected to move to discussions over financial remedy

2 days ago
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ADHD waiting lists ‘clogged by patients returning from private care to NHS’

Waiting lists for people with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in England are being clogged by patients returning to NHS care after difficulties with private assessments, a trust has warned.The major NHS trust said people referred by GPs to private clinics using health service funding were increasingly asking to be transferred back after care stalled.These include cases where private clinics are able to diagnose ADHD but their assessments do not always comply with guidelines from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, or where providers lack staff with the appropriate qualifications to support continued prescribing.The consequences for patients can be severe. Some are facing prescription costs of more than £200 a month after GPs said they could no longer work with private clinics under shared care agreements

2 days ago
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Rural and coastal areas of England to get more cancer doctors

Hospitals in rural and coastal parts of England will get more cancer doctors to help tackle stark inequalities that mean people in some areas are far more likely to die from the disease.The plan is part of a government drive to end the “patchy” nature of NHS cancer care, which is characterised by wide postcode lotteries in access to diagnostic tests and treatment.“For too long your chances of seeing a doctor and catching cancer early have depended on where you live,” said Wes Streeting, the health secretary.“That’s not fair and has to stop. Whether you live in a coastal town or a rural village, you deserve the same shot at survival and quality of life as everyone else

3 days ago
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‘Manosphere’ influencers pushing testosterone tests are convincing healthy young men there is something wrong with them, study finds

“If you’re not waking up in the morning with a boner, there’s a large possibility that you have low testosterone levels,” an influencer on TikTok with more than 100,000 followers warns his viewers.Despite screening for low testosterone being medically unwarranted in most young men, this group is being aggressively targeted online by influencers and wellness companies promoting hormone tests and treatments as essential to being a “real man”, a study published in the journal Social Science and Medicine has found.Researchers analysed 46 high-impact posts about low testosterone and testing made by TikTok and Instagram accounts with a combined following of more than 6.8 million, to examine how masculinity and men’s health are being depicted and monetised online.The lead author of the study, Emma Grundtvig Gram, a public health researcher at the University of Copenhagen, said influencers promoting routine testosterone screening often framed normal variations in energy, mood, libido or ageing “as signs of pathology”

3 days ago
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US small businesses are doing fine. Don’t believe me? Look at the numbers

about 3 hours ago
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More than a quarter of Britons say they fear losing jobs to AI in next five years

about 3 hours ago
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Sam Altman’s make-or-break year: can the OpenAI CEO cash in his bet on the future?

about 5 hours ago
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AI needs to augment rather than replace humans or the workplace is doomed | Heather Stewart

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Iva Jovic walking in Venus Williams’ footsteps with Melbourne quarter-final date

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Home hope De Minaur destroys Bublik at Australian Open to set up Alcaraz showdown

about 4 hours ago