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I-80 westbound reopen at Clipper Gap due to overturned vehicle

One person was injured after a vehicle overturned on Interstate 80 north of Auburn, authorities said. The area is now seeing significant traffic delays. The incident happened Sunday afternoon on the westbound lanes of the highway near Clipper Gap in Placer County, Caltrans said on social media. Clipper Gap is between Auburn and Colfax. One person was taken to an area hospital with minor injuries, according to Placer Hills Fire Protection District on social media. Photos from the district show a vehicle blocking most of the road. Placer authorities said westbound lanes were initially closed but are now reopened. They do warn that traffic is still moving slowly. Follow our real-time traffic map for the latest.(App users, click here to see a real-time traffic map.)It’s unclear how the trailer overturned. No other details were released. The California Highway Patrol, Placer County Sheriff’s Office and local first responders also responded to the crash. This is a developing story, stay with KCRA 3 for the latest.

One person was injured after a vehicle overturned on Interstate 80 north of Auburn, authorities said. The area is now seeing significant traffic delays.

The incident happened Sunday afternoon on the westbound lanes of the highway near Clipper Gap in Placer County, Caltrans said on social media. Clipper Gap is between Auburn and Colfax.

One person was taken to an area hospital with minor injuries, according to Placer Hills Fire Protection District on social media. Photos from the district show a vehicle blocking most of the road.

This content is imported from Facebook. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

Placer authorities said westbound lanes were initially closed but are now reopened. They do warn that traffic is still moving slowly.

Follow our real-time traffic map for the latest.

(App users, click here to see a real-time traffic map.)

It’s unclear how the trailer overturned. No other details were released.

This content is imported from Twitter. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

The California Highway Patrol, Placer County Sheriff’s Office and local first responders also responded to the crash.

This is a developing story, stay with KCRA 3 for the latest.

.

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GOP lawmaker warns party on abortion

Republican Rep. Nancy Mace of South Carolina said Sunday that abortion could hinder her party’s chances in the midterm elections if it continues pushing harsh policies, such as a ban without exceptions for rape.

“I do think that it will be an issue in November if we’re not moderating ourselves — that we’re including exceptions for women who have been raped, for girls who are victims of incest and certainly in every instance where the life of the mother is at stake,” Mace said in an interview on NBC News’ “Meet the Press.”

“’The Handmaid’s Tale’ was not supposed to be a road map, right?” she added, referring to Margaret Atwood’s 1985 dystopian novel in which women are forced to give birth. “This is a place where we can be in the center, we can protect life, and we can protect where people are on both sides of the aisle.”

After the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, a federal judge allowed South Carolina’s six-week abortion ban to go into effect. Legislators in the state have recently held hearings to consider further restrictions, including a bill that would ban abortion in all instances except to save the life of the mother and criminalize the act of helping someone obtain an abortion.

Mace, who described herself as “staunchly pro-life,” said the measures are out of step with voters in her state. She also urged legislators to moderate their approach by considering gestational limits of 15 to 20 weeks.

“The vast majority of people here are OK with some guardrails, but they don’t want the extremity of either side,” Mace said.

A national NBC News poll, conducted in May after the leak of a draft majority opinion indicated that the Supreme Court would strike down Roe, found that support for abortion rights has reached a record high. A combined 60% of respondents said abortion should be either always legal (37%) or legal most of the time (23%), and a combined 37% said abortion should be illegal, either with exceptions (32%) or without exceptions ( 5%).

As she criticized a law in her state that requires rape survivors to report their assaults to law enforcement to qualify for abortion exceptions, Mace, who has spoken openly about having been raped at 16, said: “It took me a week to tell my mother . … I can’t tell you how traumatic that event was in my life.”

Mace was one of eight House Republicans who voted with all 220 Democrats on a bill that would codify the right to contraception nationwide.

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The Sinema-Manchin split that shaped Dems’ deal

Ultimately, Sinema took a scalpel to the corporate minimum tax and scuttled any changes to carried interest, which Manchin called particularly “painful.” Triangulating between them through all of it: Schumer, whose job was harmonizing the views of the very public Manchin with an often-silent Sinema.

“We argue with each other on issues, but we try to respect each other,” Schumer said of Manchin on Sunday as he chomped on a celebratory meal of leftover pasta cooked by his wife. “Sinema, if she gives you her word about her, you got it. But she she’s not a schmoozer like Manchin.”

Almost exactly one year after Manchin and Sinema teamed with Republicans to pass a historic infrastructure bill, the two moderates on Sunday cast decisive votes for Democrats’ second piece of the puzzle. It was far smaller than the party’s original $3.5 trillion vision, but larger than the slim health care legislation that lawmakers were considering just two weeks ago. It’s probably the last big party-line bill Democrats will be able to deliver for years, with the House expected to flip to Republicans in the November elections.

The package delivered more than $300 billion in climate and energy investments, reformed prescription drug prices and created a new minimum tax on large corporations. Sunday’s passage of the legislation marked a triumphant moment for a party that for years has talked a big game on lowering drug prices and fighting climate change.

The yearlong drama demonstrated the difficulties Schumer faces every day in running a 50-50 Senate, corralling a caucus that includes 47 other senators with their own ideas plus Sinema and Manchin, two centrist senators with divergent priorities.

Twice in full view on the Senate floor, Manchin animatedly conversed with Sinema about his deal, including pieces of the tax legislation that Sinema felt would stymie economic growth in Arizona. Manchin observed of his relationship with Sinema and the tax dispute: “We have more in common than we do n’t. I just have a difference on this.”

“They both are pains in the neck, but pains in the neck who I respect,” said Sen. John Hickenlooper (D-Col.) admiringly. “I don’t feel they’ve ever misled me, or said something that was untrue.”

Manchin killed the $1.7 trillion Build Back Better bill back in December after failed negotiations with President Joe Biden. Two months later, Schumer and Manchin broke bread, and Manchin delivered his negotiating position: He wanted to wait until April before trying again. And when they did, he only wanted to talk to Schumer.

After Russia invaded Ukraine and Europe’s energy supplies were squeezed while US gas prices rising, Manchin then saw an opportunity to make big climate change investments while simultaneously boosting fossil fuel production this spring.

“That is the catapult that basically launched me,” Manchin said in an interview. “Iran is the greatest proliferator supportive of terrorism in the world, right? And we’re going to give them money? Over my dead body.”

By late June, he and Schumer were looking at a package that brought in more than $1 trillion in revenue and spent significantly more than the package that passed Sunday. Sinema’s team was generally clued into that package and she told leaders in mid-July she still didn’t support the carried interest provision.

But Manchin began having second thoughts after the July 4 recess, as inflation indicators continued to flash red. Then came July 14.

“I just said, ‘Chuck, I can’t do that’ … That’s when he got mad,” Manchin said. “Half-hour later, they put the dogs on me.”

Manchin says he never took it personally, yet there are two schools of thought in the Democratic caucus about whether that pressure campaign worked. Some argue that the attacks on Manchin from his own colleagues drove him back to the table. Others say a cohort of Democratic senators who quietly reassured Manchin amid the blowback proved far more effective.

After that blow up, Democrats coalesced around prescription drug reform and a short extension of Affordable Care Act subsidies, relegating energy, climate change and taxes to the dustbin. Manchin quietly summarized his talks with Schumer just four days later. When they announced their deal on July 27, the Democratic Caucus was triumphant.

There was one problem: Sinema was now in the dark.

In fact, Sinema was informed about the deal by No. 2 Republican John Thune on the Senate floor. She had huge influence on the Build Back Better bill, stripping out tax rate increases to assemble a tax package more palatable to her business-friendly state. And she and Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) laid the groundwork last year for what would become a key part of Democrats’ prescription drug proposal.

But Sinema never agreed to the carried interest provision. And she had other objections.

As Manchin and Sinema held their own conversations, they were helped along by Hickenlooper and Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.). While Warner tried to come to a compromise on carried interest with Sinema, Hickenlooper suggested a stock buyback excise tax to compensate for Sinema’s requested changes on the corporate minimum tax.

“There’s kind of been a trust-building relationship going on,” Warner said. “It became clear that some of the changes that Sen. Sinema wanted were creating some holes.”

On Aug. 4, Warner joined Manchin on his house boat to talk about the deal Sinema would soon announce on taxes. After getting soaked in a rainstorm, Warner left with a new outfit — wearing a pair of Manchin’s shorts and a T-shirt — and a hope that Manchin, Sinema and Schumer would see eye-to-eye. (On Saturday Manchin returned Warner’s suit, fully pressed.)

But Sinema wasn’t quite done, even after scuttling language that limited business’s ability to write off some investments. When Democrats unveiled the final legislation Saturday, it imposed the 15 percent minimum tax on some businesses owned by private equity. That had been included in previous versions of the legislation but omitted from the initial draft of the deal with Manchin.

Synema opposed it, an alarming development.

“I thought we wouldn’t pass the bill,” Schumer said. “It was hard to figure out how to make it work.”

Manchin said once he agreed with Schumer the two were “hooked to the hip” at preventing changes to the bill that could jeopardize its passage, which Schumer said was a “linchpin” of the agreement. Sinema had no such deal, and when the legislation came to the floor for amendment votes she’d privately teamed with Thune to reverse the tax change.

That required Manchin and the rest of the Democrats to make yet another compromise. Schumer went around the Senate floor telling his members that while they may not like it, they had to eat the change to pass the bill.

Schumer’s members were unhappy, according to one Senate Democrat, but exhausted and resigned to doing what it took to finish the bill. Warner stepped in with a way to fill that revenue hole, too. About 15 minutes later, the bill passed after 22 hours on the Senate floor.

For Schumer, it was the capstone of a 50-50 Senate in which he passed new laws on gun safety, infrastructure, veteran health benefits and microchip manufacturing. For Sinema, the moment demonstrated that she’s simply not in lockstep with Manchin — or the rest of her caucus.

And for Manchin, the converted legislation his reputation from the guy that stopped Biden’s agenda cold in his tracks to the coal-state senator that not only cut a deal on climate, but helped sell it any way he could.

“I’ve never seen a more balanced piece of legislation coming together,” Manchin said. “We never knew this day would ever come.”

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Muslim Community Expresses Fear After Killings of Men in Albuquerque

Muhammad Imtiaz Hussain is afraid to step outside his home in Albuquerque to water his plants. Or retrieve books from his car of him. Or even venture out onto his balcony from him.

“My kids won’t let me go outside of my apartment,” said Mr. Hussain, 41, whose younger brother Muhammad Afzaal Hussain, 27, was fatally shot a week ago Monday just a few blocks away. He was one of four Muslim men who were killed recently in the city — three in the past two weeks — and authorities believe the deaths are connected and meant to target the Muslim community.

The latest victim, a Muslim man in his mid-20s from South Asia whose name has not been released by the police, was killed on Friday just before midnight. Another man, Aftab Hussein, 41, was fatally shot on July 26. Authorities say that the killings of all three might be connected to the November 2021 killing of Mohammad Ahmadi, 62, outside a business he and his brother de el ran.

Credit…

As the Albuquerque Police, the FBI and the State Police appealed to the public for help in finding the killer or killers — on Sunday authorities described a vehicle of interest, a dark-colored, four-door Volkswagen sedan — the attacks have left Muslims in a state of terror.

One member who attended the Islamic Center of New Mexico, the same mosque as all four of the victims, said that he may never return, citing a fear of becoming “bait.”

Other members have temporarily left the state to stay with family members in other parts of the country to wait out the investigation. One man, who immigrated from Iraq, said that he felt safer back when he first came to the country in the 1980s. Another member, Salem Ansari, said that some who attend the mosque and work night shifts have quit their jobs.

“This situation is getting so much worse,” Mr. Ansari said.

Ahmad Assed, president of the mosque, said that he grew up in Albuquerque attending the Islamic Center but never felt isolated as a Muslim in the city. But now, he said, the community is going through a “sort of managed panic.”

The elder Mr. Hussain said that he had lived safely in his neighborhood for eight years since moving to the United States with his wife and children. His brother Muhammad arrived in 2017, and both men would go to the library at midnight or buy coffees late into the evening while attending the University of New Mexico as international students.

“Now, I look outside the window and think, ‘Oh, this is the place where my brother was killed. Should we move?’” he said.

Mr. Hussain said that he had initially hoped to send his brother’s body back to be buried with family in Pakistan, but the numerous gunshot wounds had made his brother unrecognizable, and Mr. Hussain did not want his family to see him. The killer “wanted to finish him — the whole nine yards,” he said.

In general, anti-Muslim hate crimes in the United States have been trending downward. Brian Levin, a professor of criminal justice at California State University at San Bernardino and the director of the school’s Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism, said that the number of hate crimes reported against Muslims was lower in 2020 than in any year since 9 /11, though I have added that those numbers may be skewed because of pandemic restrictions.

But he said that hate crimes remain a concern: They rose more than 20 percent in 2021 and increased another 4.7 percent in the first half of 2022, the center reported. Also, “underlying anti-Muslim attitudes” are pervasive and resurface during times of national hardship, according to Professor Levin’s studies.

The authorities said that they are refraining from using the term “hate” in labeling the crimes until a motive could be established.

Just last year, the Islamic Center faced an attempted arson from a woman who the police say set three fires on the mosque playground and one fire at the mosque’s main entry. No one was injured, and the woman was arrested and charged with Arson. The case is pending.

The Islamic Center has instructed its nearly 2,500 members to stay home as much as they can, use the “buddy system” when going out and refrain from “engaging with or agitating” anyone, Mr. Assed said.

He added that he still felt supported by other communities but that this time he also was feeling a sense of “hopelessness and despair.”

“I do watch my back and get in the car. I’m watching all my surroundings,” he said. “You don’t know whether they’re following you from the mosque, if they’re actually watching people going in and out of the mosque and following them elsewhere. The pattern is unknown.”

Some community members have expressed frustration about the lack of details from the police investigation, but Mr. Assed said he was in contact with authorities and understood why they have kept any developments under wraps. Authorities have neither elaborated on why they believe the killings are linked nor indicated whether there were any witnesses.

Mr. Hussain said that he wanted the federal and state governments to pour as many resources as possible into catching the killer.

But until someone is caught, nothing is likely to lessen his fear — or his grief.

“My 5-year-old keeps asking, ‘Hey, where is my uncle?’” he said. “She’ll see me crying and say, ‘Are you a crybaby? Why are you crying?’ But we can’t tell her. Not yet.”

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The Sinema-Manchin split that shaped Dems’ deal

Ultimately, Sinema took a scalpel to the corporate minimum tax and scuttled any changes to carried interest, which Manchin called particularly “painful.” Triangulating between them through all of it: Schumer, whose job was harmonizing the views of the very public Manchin with an often-silent Sinema.

“We argue with each other on issues, but we try to respect each other,” Schumer said of Manchin on Sunday as he chomped on a celebratory meal of leftover pasta cooked by his wife. “Sinema, if she gives you her word about her, you got it. But she she’s not a schmoozer like Manchin.”

Almost exactly one year after Manchin and Sinema teamed with Republicans to pass a historic infrastructure bill, the two moderates on Sunday cast decisive votes for Democrats’ second piece of the puzzle. It was far smaller than the party’s original $3.5 trillion vision, but larger than the slim health care legislation that lawmakers were considering just two weeks ago. It’s probably the last big party-line bill Democrats will be able to deliver for years, with the House expected to flip to Republicans in the November elections.

The package delivered more than $300 billion in climate and energy investments, reformed prescription drug prices and created a new minimum tax on large corporations. Sunday’s passage of the legislation marked a triumphant moment for a party that for years has talked a big game on lowering drug prices and fighting climate change.

The yearlong drama demonstrated the difficulties Schumer faces every day in running a 50-50 Senate, corralling a caucus that includes 47 other senators with their own ideas plus Sinema and Manchin, two centrist senators with divergent priorities.

Twice in full view on the Senate floor, Manchin animatedly conversed with Sinema about his deal, including pieces of the tax legislation that Sinema felt would stymie economic growth in Arizona. Manchin observed of his relationship with Sinema and the tax dispute: “We have more in common than we do n’t. I just have a difference on this.”

“They both are pains in the neck, but pains in the neck who I respect,” said Sen. John Hickenlooper (D-Col.) admiringly. “I don’t feel they’ve ever misled me, or said something that was untrue.”

Manchin killed the $1.7 trillion Build Back Better bill back in December after failed negotiations with President Joe Biden. Two months later, Schumer and Manchin broke bread, and Manchin delivered his negotiating position: He wanted to wait until April before trying again. And when they did, he only wanted to talk to Schumer.

After Russia invaded Ukraine and Europe’s energy supplies were squeezed while US gas prices rising, Manchin then saw an opportunity to make big climate change investments while simultaneously boosting fossil fuel production this spring.

“That is the catapult that basically launched me,” Manchin said in an interview. “Iran is the greatest proliferator supportive of terrorism in the world, right? And we’re going to give them money? Over my dead body.”

By late June, he and Schumer were looking at a package that brought in more than $1 trillion in revenue and spent significantly more than the package that passed Sunday. Sinema’s team was generally clued into that package and she told leaders in mid-July she still didn’t support the carried interest provision.

But Manchin began having second thoughts after the July 4 recess, as inflation indicators continued to flash red. Then came July 14.

“I just said, ‘Chuck, I can’t do that’ … That’s when he got mad,” Manchin said. “Half-hour later, they put the dogs on me.”

Manchin says he never took it personally, yet there are two schools of thought in the Democratic caucus about whether that pressure campaign worked. Some argue that the attacks on Manchin from his own colleagues drove him back to the table. Others say a cohort of Democratic senators who quietly reassured Manchin amid the blowback proved far more effective.

After that blow up, Democrats coalesced around prescription drug reform and a short extension of Affordable Care Act subsidies, relegating energy, climate change and taxes to the dustbin. Manchin quietly summarized his talks with Schumer just four days later. When they announced their deal on July 27, the Democratic Caucus was triumphant.

There was one problem: Sinema was now in the dark.

In fact, Sinema was informed about the deal by No. 2 Republican John Thune on the Senate floor. She had huge influence on the Build Back Better bill, stripping out tax rate increases to assemble a tax package more palatable to her business-friendly state. And she and Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) laid the groundwork last year for what would become a key part of Democrats’ prescription drug proposal.

But Sinema never agreed to the carried interest provision. And she had other objections.

As Manchin and Sinema held their own conversations, they were helped along by Hickenlooper and Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.). While Warner tried to come to a compromise on carried interest with Sinema, Hickenlooper suggested a stock buyback excise tax to compensate for Sinema’s requested changes on the corporate minimum tax.

“There’s kind of been a trust-building relationship going on,” Warner said. “It became clear that some of the changes that Sen. Sinema wanted were creating some holes.”

On Aug. 4, Warner joined Manchin on his house boat to talk about the deal Sinema would soon announce on taxes. After getting soaked in a rainstorm, Warner left with a new outfit — wearing a pair of Manchin’s shorts and a T-shirt — and a hope that Manchin, Sinema and Schumer would see eye-to-eye. (On Saturday Manchin returned Warner’s suit, fully pressed.)

But Sinema wasn’t quite done, even after scuttling language that limited business’s ability to write off some investments. When Democrats unveiled the final legislation Saturday, it imposed the 15 percent minimum tax on some businesses owned by private equity. That had been included in previous versions of the legislation but omitted from the initial draft of the deal with Manchin.

Synema opposed it, an alarming development.

“I thought we wouldn’t pass the bill,” Schumer said. “It was hard to figure out how to make it work.”

Manchin said once he agreed with Schumer the two were “hooked to the hip” at preventing changes to the bill that could jeopardize its passage, which Schumer said was a “linchpin” of the agreement. Sinema had no such deal, and when the legislation came to the floor for amendment votes she’d privately teamed with Thune to reverse the tax change.

That required Manchin and the rest of the Democrats to make yet another compromise. Schumer went around the Senate floor telling his members that while they may not like it, they had to eat the change to pass the bill.

Schumer’s members were unhappy, according to one Senate Democrat, but exhausted and resigned to doing what it took to finish the bill. Warner stepped in with a way to fill that revenue hole, too. About 15 minutes later, the bill passed after 22 hours on the Senate floor.

For Schumer, it was the capstone of a 50-50 Senate in which he passed new laws on gun safety, infrastructure, veteran health benefits and microchip manufacturing. For Sinema, the moment demonstrated that she’s simply not in lockstep with Manchin — or the rest of her caucus.

And for Manchin, the converted legislation his reputation from the guy that stopped Biden’s agenda cold in his tracks to the coal-state senator that not only cut a deal on climate, but helped sell it any way he could.

“I’ve never seen a more balanced piece of legislation coming together,” Manchin said. “We never knew this day would ever come.”

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Aspiring OBGYNs Are Worried About Adequate Training Post-Roe V. Wade

  • Several states have imposed bans on abortion since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade.
  • The decision has worried many medical students who are interested in becoming OBGYNs.
  • Students said bans on abortion could limit their training and exposure to life-saving care.

Before the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, Lyle Suh was heavily considering becoming an obstetrician-gynecologist.

But now she’s less sure.

“This has pushed me away more for my own mental health,” Suh, who is in her third year of medical school, told Insider. “I truly can’t see myself going into a field that is governed so heavily. Like medicine already has so many things that are out of our hands – this kind of just adds another shackle to what we can do.”

Suh’s experience echoes those of other medical students who are considering specializing in reproductive care but also recognize they will enter a field where they will have to navigate confusing bureaucratic catacombs and a political minefield.

‘They’re going to have to go through all of these hurdles’

Natalie Sorias, a third-year medical student at the University of Massachusetts, told Insider that she’s passionate about women’s reproductive healthcare, and despite the challenges ahead, she’ll most likely continue to try to work in the field.

“I went into medical school trying to keep as much of an open mind as possible,” Sorias told Insider, “but the population that I really care about is women.”

Sorias, who also researches female genital mutilation in Cairo, said she noticed that the “people who were kind of neglected, were women” and that “inevitably impacts children.”

As a first-generation Egyptian-American, Sorias said she was disappointed, heartbroken, and angry at the decision to overturn Roe v. Wade.

“Being immigrants – people come to America bragging about its advancements and its incredible healthcare and all these things,” she said. “I just kind of really hoped that being in this country would mean being a part of the worldwide example of reproductive justice. It’s just kind of embarrassing that we’re not and it’s really disappointing for the people that it would affect.”

abortion opponent protest sign

Pro-life demonstrators carry signs as they march January 23, 2006 in downtown Los Altos, California. Dozens of pro-life supporters from St. Nicholas Church marched to mark the 33rd anniversary of the supreme court decision to legalize abortion.

Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images


She is now concerned about matching into a residency program in a state that does not offer the full range of education on reproductive health, including abortions at various stages, as well as how competitive programs may become in states where abortion is legal.

Following medical school, students continue training in a residency program, where they become resident physicians. Nearly 44% of obstetrics and gynecology residents – or 2,638 out of 6,007 – are training in programs located in states that are “certain or likely to lack access to in-state abortion training” because of statewide bans on the procedure, according to an April study published in the journal “Obstetrics & Gynecology.”

“That’s not only difficult,” Sorias said. “It also very much increases the competition for anybody trying to go into [Obstetrics]which is gatekeeping a career that needs more providers to begin with.”

Eshani Dixit, a medical student at Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, echoed Sorias’ concern.

“It definitely is looking more and more difficult in terms of making sure I have access to education that’s not only relevant to my desire to become an abortion provider but also just relevant to the practice of obstetrics and gynecology as a field and making sure that we ‘re providing quality care to our patients,” Dixit told Insider.

She said she fears being in a state where only a medical emergency will allow her to perform an abortion legally.

“But I’m nervous about being in those types of situations and not having the exposure to adequately care for the patients that I am serving,” she said.

Morgan Levy is a third-year med student at the University of Miami in Florida, where abortions are banned after 15 weeks with a few exceptions, such as to save a pregnant patient’s life.

Levy said she will have to consider a residency rotation out of state because she worries that there is a “significant portion of the training in the field” that she “would not be able to obtain simply because the procedure would not be legal for a patient to get.”

“I think that’s a reality that a lot of students are going to face,” Levy said. “They’re going to have to go through all of these hurdles to go and find somewhere that they can actually get the training they’re looking for.”

‘We do what’s best for the patient’

Abortion provider

A general view of an exam room inside the Hope Clinic For Women in Granite City, Illinois, on June 27, 2022. – Abortion is now banned in Missouri.

ANGELA WEISS/AFP via Getty Images


The “Obstetrics & Gynecology” study recommended that programs establish “travel rotations for residents to obtain abortion training in states with protected abortion access.” However, the study noted that travel rotations may not be feasible for the large number of residents who are training in states with limited access to abortion.

The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education, which accredits residency programs, submitted proposals that would require programs in states with restrictions on abortion to provide residents with alternative training in states that don’t.

“The proposed revisions help ensure obstetrics and gynecology residency programs provide residents with the knowledge, skills, and abilities necessary to practice comprehensive reproductive health care in the United States without resulting in any resident, physician educator, or residency program violating the law,” a spokesperson for the ACGME said in a statement.

The proposed revisions are still open for public comment before they are submitted to the ACGME Board for approval.

Suh said she is fearful of providers becoming too apathetic to patients’ needs as they are now placed in uncertain circumstances when seeking abortions.

“We do what’s best for the patient. We go through the best treatment, then the next,” she said. But she said if she ends up in a state abortion is restricted then the scope of her training and the care she can deliver are compromised.

She added that she thinks doctors have to do their best to do no harm and “when there’s fully set laws that prevent you from giving the best possible care to a patient, that’s just very mentally taxing.”

Suh said even if she ends up in a state where abortion isn’t heavily banned, there’s still a ripple effect.

“Even though we’re in a state that it’s very much still legal to get an abortion, we are seeing a noticeable increase in the amount of people who come in to see what options there are to permanently become infertile,” Suh ​​said.

Both Sorias and Suh said they’re concerned about the adequate training all residents in OBGYN are going to receive as a result of states having different policies.

“Every single OBGYN should be well trained and skilled at providing abortions because it is life-saving care,” Sorias said. “So it doesn’t make any sense to me that over 50% of the country’s OBGYN providers are in a place where they don’t know how to do that. I would be very disappointed and scared.”

Maureen Phipps, chief executive officer of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, said that following the overturn of Roe, “the impact on physician training will be dire, and the consequences will be long lasting.”

“Medical education should be comprehensive, and our trainees must be prepared to meet all patient needs with confidence. When 44% of OBGYN residents are trained in states that are now empowered to ban abortion, patients will have to question whether their ob-gyn has had access to the quality of training that we have all come to expect,” Phipps said in a statement.

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NYC Mayor Eric Adams blasts Texas Gov. Greg Abbott after second bus of migrants arrives: ‘This is horrific’

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

New York City Mayor Eric Adams blasted Texas Gov. Greg Abbott on Sunday after a second bus full of illegal migrants arrived at his doorstep.

Adams gave a news conference Sunday morning at the Port Authority where he greeted an incoming bus of around 40 migrants — only 14 of whom disembarked in the Big Apple.

New York City Mayor Eric Adams, left, and Texas Gov.  Greg Abbott

New York City Mayor Eric Adams, left, and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott
(Getty Images)

“This is horrific when you think about what the governor is doing,” Adams said, noting that many of the arriving families did not realize they were coming to New York City.

“We’re finding that some of the families are on the bus that wanted to go to other locations, and they were not allowed to do so,” the mayor said. “They were forced on the bus with the understanding that they were going to other locations that they wanted to go to, and when they tried to explain they were not allowed to do so.”

NPR BLASTS GOP GOVERNORS FOR BUSING ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS TO DC ‘WITH NO PLAN FOR WHAT’S NEXT’

His comments follow the first arrival of around 50 migrants at a Port Authority in New York City on Friday. The bus arrived on the orders of Abbott, who has been shipping border-crossers into liberal cities to bring attention to the issue of illegal immigration in his own state.

Adams has accused the governor of using innocent people “as political pawns to manufacture a crisis.”

On Sunday, he complained that Abbott’s administration was not giving New York City a proper heads-up when the migrants will be arriving.

113 HAITIAN MIGRANTS IN CUSTODY AFTER BOAT RUNS AGROUND OFF FLORIDA COAST

“They’re not letting us know when the buses are leaving. They’re not letting us know what are the needs of the people on the bus,” Adams said. “They are not giving us any information, so we’re unable to really provide the service to people en route.”

Abbott has also been sending illegal immigrants to Washington, DC, since April to protest the Biden administration’s refusal to act on the border crisis plaguing Texas.

“In addition to Washington, DC, New York City is the ideal destination for these migrants, who can receive the abundance of city services and housing that Mayor Eric Adams has boasted about within the sanctuary city,” Abbott said in a statement on Friday.

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He added: “I hope he follows through on his promise of welcoming all migrants with open arms so that our overrun and overwhelmed border towns can find relief.”

Fox News’ Timothy HJ Nerozzi contributed to this report.

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These seven GOP senators voted to keep $35 insulin cap in reconciliation bill

Seven Republican senators voted with all 50 Democrats to maintain a $35 monthly cap on the price of insulin in the Democrats’ $700 billion climate, health and tax reconciliation bill.

The measure targeting people not covered by Medicare was ultimately blocked from being included in the Inflation Reduction Act when it fell three votes short of the 60 required to override a ruling from the parliament Senatearian.

The seven Republicans who voted with Democrats were Sens. Bill Cassidy (La.), Susan Collins (Maine), Josh Hawley (Mo.), Cindy Hyde-Smith (Miss.), John Kennedy (La.), Lisa Murkowski (Alaska ) and Dan Sullivan (Alaska).

Many of the seven Republicans who supported the measure have been vocal in their criticism of the reconciliation package broadly — and all of them voted against the bill as a whole.

Democrats won a partial victory when the parliamentarian allowed the $35 insulin cap to apply to Medicare beneficiaries, which could influence prices in the private market.

The Inflation Reduction Act passed the Senate Sunday 51-50, with Vice President Kamala Harris casting the tiebreaker vote.

“While I don’t oppose everything in it, there is no doubt in my mind, based on both substance & process, the Senate should not have passed it,” Murkowski wrote on Twitter after the passage.

Kennedy had proposed his own amendment related to insulin costs, but ended up siding with the Democrats on theirs — though he called his colleagues across the aisle “a special kind of stupid” for the tax increases in the so-called Inflation Reduction Act.

“Democrats’ tax and spending spree will do nothing to decrease inflation, but will raise the tax bill falling on everyday Americans,” Cassidy wrote on Twitter Sunday. “I proudly voted no.”

Hyde-Smith released a statement calling the legislation “a long, forced march toward more economic hardship and more government in our lives.”

The reconciliation bill came out of an agreement between Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (DN.Y.) and Sen. Joe Manchin (DW.Va.), and is aimed at investing in domestic energy and lowering prescription drug costs by closing tax loopholes on wealthy individuals and corporations.

The Hill has reached out to the offices of GOP senators who supported the insulin cap for comment.

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More human remains found at Lake Mead as shoreline continues to recede

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4 dead, including 2 children, after suspected drunk driver crashes into golf cart in Texas

Four people are dead after a suspected drunk driver crashed into a golf cart in Texas.

Officers from the Galveston Police Department responded to the scene at the intersection of 33rd Street and Avenue R around 11:35 pm Saturday and found the adult driver of the golf cart dead at the scene, police said.

An adult female passenger and two children were transported to the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston, where they later died, police said.

Another adult and child that were in the golf cart were also transported to the hospital and are in critical condition.

Investigators believe the driver of a black Hyundai SUV was traveling eastbound on Avenue R and failed to stop. He then struck the golf cart, which was traveling northbound, and a black Dodge pickup truck, which was traveling southbound, police said.

PHOTO: Miguel Espinoza is pictured in a booking photo provided by the Galveston Police Department, Aug. 7, 2022.

Miguel Espinoza is pictured in a booking photo provided by the Galveston Police Department, Aug. 7, 2022.

Galveston Police Department via AP

The suspected driver of the SUV, 45-year-old Miguel Espinoza of Rosenberg, Texas, and the passenger in the Hyundai SUV sustained minor injuries and were treated and released from the hospital, police said.

Espinoza has been charged with four counts of intoxication manslaughter, police said. He is currently being held in the Galveston County jail, online records show.

The victims’ identities are pending release until next of kin has been notified, police said.