Texas to put restraints on businesses tapping into the energy grid

ODESSA — Texas will need a lot more energy in the future.

Driven largely by demand from businesses such as data centers and the oil and gas industry, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, the state’s grid operator, predicts the state’s energy needs will nearly double in six years.

State Sen. Phil King, R-Weatherford, worries ERCOT is not working with a full picture.

He told a legislative panel as much in February.

“We do not have accurate load forecasting. No one knows if the forecast is real,” he said. Large companies, he added, are requiring ERCOT to plan “for load growth at dramatically higher levels than experienced ever in the history of Texas, and frankly, ever in the history of the United States.”

And “without credible data, we run the risk of overbuilding, with high costs being passed on to consumers, or underbuilding, further exacerbating scarcity,” he said.

He believes his legislation, Senate Bill 6, will put restraints on the state’s open-energy market, and help the grid plan for the future to save rate payers money and avoid another catastrophe when extreme weather strikes again.

The bill, which has already won Senate approval and is expected to start its journey in the Texas House Wednesday with a committee hearing, would place more requirements on businesses meant to help ERCOT better forecast the electricity needs. Businesses would also have to pay more in advance of operating.

While business groups have said they agree the grid needs more security, they believe King’s bill is too heavy-handed. They said some of his proposals won’t help ERCOT’s planning and put their operations at risk.

They want changes to the bill, such as removing language that would grant ERCOT the ability to disconnect power to major energy users during an emergency, and new rules on arrangements between power generators and companies.

Michael Jewell, an attorney who has represented large industrial companies on energy issues and policy, said King’s legislation will need to strike a balance between addressing the growth without scaring companies away.

“This legislation is important to finding that balance, that we can bring these large loads into the ERCOT region, grow the Texas economy, and support the development of this technology,” he said. “But we also want to be sure that we, as Texans, will continue to have reliable electricity.”

King’s bill only applies to industrial-sized facilities, or those needing more than 75 Megawatts.

Under the bill, businesses wanting to plug into the grid must disclose whether they have similar requests elsewhere in Texas or out of state. Companies must tell ERCOT if their backup generators can meet at least 50% of their power. During an emergency, ERCOT could instruct facilities to use that power, instead of the grid. Another provision allows ERCOT to shut off a facility’s power in an emergency. ERCOT must give the facilities a day’s notice.

Facilities sometimes negotiate directly with power generators, like gas-fired plants, to satisfy their electricity needs without connecting to the grid. The bill gives the Public Utility Commission, which regulates electricity and some water and wastewater, authority over such arrangements, allowing it to approve or reject them, in addition to 180 days of review.

Companies would also have to pay an electric, municipal utility or a cooperative at least $100,000 to study the transmission work necessary to transport electricity to their facilities. Companies must also demonstrate that they can afford to contribute to the construction of transmission lines and purchase any equipment or services.

The bill also directs the utility commission to determine how to better allocate transmission costs, including looking at peak demand, the point at which supply meets demand.

King acknowledged the strain on the state’s power grid means more businesses are moving to Texas, something he supports.

“I want to make it very clear that while this load growth is a strain on the ERCOT grid, it is also an excellent opportunity for the state of Texas,” King said in February. “So long as we manage it properly (and) not create reliability risks or pricing issues for everyday Texans.”

Groups consisting of the facilities King is targeting said parts of his proposals won’t benefit ERCOT’s efforts to make the grid reliable or lower prices.

Dan Diorio, a government affairs expert for the Data Center Coalition, a national group, said it is supportive of the goals the bill is trying to reach. But in its current form, the group said it has lingering concerns as the bill moves through the House, including a provision requiring companies to disclose information that he said is unnecessary for the grid, such as out-of-state requests for electricity. He said ERCOT can separate serious requests within Texas.

“This is a highly competitive industry,” he said. “So not only do we have competitive concerns about that, because this is proprietary information, but how is that going to inform the forecast correctly?”

He said diesel makes up most backup power generation, and is a fuel overseen by the federal government and the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. Forcing companies to run emergency generators could lead to air emissions violations and air pollution, Diorio said.

Diorio added that the information data centers collect and maintain — including from local and state authorities — could be put at risk when the system shuts down. Proposing to shut off power, even with a notice, could risk public safety, adding that the bill does not offer enough specificity regarding how the shut-off would be implemented.

Walt Baum, president of Powering Texans, a group representing natural gas power generators, said the bill imposes administrative requirements on agreements between power companies and facilities.

In this case, the company would pay the power generator directly for the needed electricity. Baum said a company could otherwise go directly to the grid, drawing out the same amount of electricity it would have gotten from the generator directly. The amount of energy used would not change.

“And the impact on the grid is the same,” he said.

Article originally published by The Texas Tribune. To read the originally published article, click here.

Lawmakers close in on goal of keeping defendants in jail

AUSTIN – After struggling for years to gain enough bipartisan support to tighten the state’s bail laws, Texas Republicans appear closer than ever to achieving their elusive goal of amending the state Constitution to keep more defendants behind bars pretrial.

GOP leaders see the issue as a matter of life and death, arguing that stricter bail laws are needed to curb violent crime tied to defendants who are out on bond. Critics, led by civil rights groups and progressive Democrats, view the bail crackdown as an infringement of the civil liberties of defendants who are legally presumed innocent and an unfunded mandate to counties who could see their jail populations soar.

The push to stiffen Texas’ bail laws has been largely spearheaded by Gov. Greg Abbott, who has named the issue an emergency item for three straight sessions. But the effort has repeatedly stalled in the House, thwarted by Democrats who have killed GOP bail measures by running out the clock or denying the two-thirds support needed from both chambers to put a constitutional amendment before voters.

Fresh off a victory on school vouchers — his other top priority — Abbott has zeroed in on the bail measure, which he recently painted as one of the most important pieces of legislation this session.

“There are thousands of bills that are working their way through the Legislature,” Abbott said in Houston last week. “None of them have the deadly consequences as much as this legislation — to amend the Constitution to keep these deadly, dangerous, violent criminals off the streets.”

Lawmakers this session are actively negotiating a package that could win support from all 88 House Republicans and at least 12 Democrats, the minimum threshold to reach two-thirds of the 150-member House.

The measure is set to mirror past proposals that would have given judges the option to deny bail in a wider array of violent offenses. But the House’s lead negotiator said that for some cases, the measure could go even further by requiring judges to withhold bail, rather than giving them discretion to do so.

Under the state Constitution, defendants — who are legally presumed innocent — are largely guaranteed the right to pretrial release, except in limited circumstances, such as when charged with capital murder.

Automatically denying bail is a new proposal that has not appeared in any legislative drafts this session. It was a recent demand of Abbott’s, who abruptly called for the more far-reaching standard during his Houston stop last week.

Even with the stiffer policy on the table, lead negotiators on bail from both chambers expressed optimism about reaching an agreement that could win enough support to clear the House.

“We’re close to an agreement,” Rep. John Smithee, R-Amarillo and chair of the House Criminal Jurisprudence Committee, said in an interview Tuesday, adding that he was hopeful the package would move through his panel this week with less than a month of session left. “We’ve made a lot of progress. We’ve narrowed a lot of the issues down.”

Sen. Joan Huffman, R-Houston and the longtime sponsor of bail-related legislation in the upper chamber, said in a statement Monday that she was “optimistic” one of the measures would “soon advance to the House floor for a record vote.” Huffman’s bail amendments have routinely breezed through the Senate with bipartisan support, most recently passing the chamber on a 28-2 vote earlier this year.

At least some House Democrats are cautiously on board, though the situation remained fluid as of Tuesday afternoon without a compromise proposal for lawmakers to scour. Rep. Gene Wu, D-Houston and chair of the House Democratic Caucus, told The Texas Tribune Tuesday that he anticipated reaching a “reasonable” agreement lacking the “most extreme” proposals.

“It’s something our communities have been asking for for a while,” Wu said. “I’m expecting an agreement that probably the bulk of the body will vote for.”

The proposal’s momentum in the House this session reflects a yearslong shift in Texas away from efforts to curtail mass incarceration, reduce wealth-based detention and keep nonviolent offenders out of jail. Instead, under Abbott and Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, state leaders have swerved toward a tough-on-crime approach to legislating, including through bills that would likely grow the state’s incarcerated population, increase penalties for various crimes and exempt police from deadly conduct charges. And while they have failed to amend the Constitution’s bail provisions, GOP lawmakers have approved more modest changes restricting access to cashless personal bonds, needing only majority support to send the legislation to Abbott’s desk.

As recently as 2021, a constitutional amendment tightening the state’s bail laws — similar to this session’s measure — won the requisite 100 votes in the House, but died as a casualty of a Democratic walkout over a voting bill.

“There’s some added pressure on the Democrats to get it done, just simply because this is a really big problem, and it’s a bipartisan issue,” said Nikki Pressley, Texas state director of Right on Crime at the Texas Public Policy Foundation. “People feel unsafe, and we’re seeing stories all the time, over and over, of people getting out on bond and then seriously hurting someone.”

When the bail provisions died in 2021, Abbott called a special session. This time, Patrick has said he would force a special session if the Legislature failed to agree on bail measures.

“If these bills do not pass the House, I see no reason for us not to go to a special session and another special session and another special session,” Patrick said in February and again in March. “We will not leave here until these bills pass the House, period. If it takes two years, we’ll keep coming back.”

It is unclear whether Abbott’s proposal to require pretrial detention in some cases will make it into the final measure, though Huffman and Smithee both expressed support for it.

That proposal raised alarm among civil rights advocates, who called it an attack on liberty and the constitutional guarantee to due process. And it sparked accusations from Democrats that Abbott was moving the goalposts and looking to keep bail reform as a campaign issue ahead of the 2026 elections.

“Obviously, he doesn’t want us to solve the problem,” Rep. Ann Johnson, D-Houston, said in an interview Tuesday, arguing that automatic denial of bail “completely supersedes” the judicial discretion needed in the courts. “He wants to make this a divisional issue between Republicans and Democrats, and so he’s demonizing my community around public safety.”

In pushing for the bail provisions, Abbott has called out several Harris County Democrats by name, highlighting violent crimes in their districts allegedly committed by people out on bond. Johnson, the former chief human trafficking prosecutor in Harris County, introduced her own legislation to expand the cases in which judges could deny bail, proposing a narrower set of offenses than the GOP legislation, with many of the same violent charges. Her proposal also sets deadlines for when judges must deny bail and would allow defendants to appeal such orders to the Court of Criminal Appeals. The amendment has not received a committee hearing.

An Abbott spokesperson reiterated that the governor was pushing to automatically deny bail in certain cases to rein in “activist judges” setting “weak bail.”

“Governor Abbott will work with the Legislature to require judges deny bail to criminals charged with capital murder and other heinous violent crimes,” Abbott press secretary Andrew Mahaleris said in a statement Tuesday. “Democrats must choose — support the safety of the citizens they represent, or the criminals who kill them.”

The Senate this session has approved four bills to keep criminal defendants accused of certain violent crimes behind bars while they await the resolution of their cases.

Bail is a legal mechanism used around the country to incentivize defendants who have not been convicted to appear at court hearings. Defendants can pay the full bail amount, which is refundable if they go to all their hearings, or they can pay a nonrefundable partial deposit to a bail bond company that fronts the full amount. Defendants who cannot afford to pay a deposit or their bail are often left detained for weeks or months.

The upper chamber’s main bail measure, Senate Joint Resolution 5, would amend the Texas Constitution to allow judges to deny bail under an expanded list of criminal charges, including murder, aggravated kidnapping, robbery or assault with a weapon.

Republican leaders, along with crime victims and their supporters, said the legislation is necessary to keep dangerous people behind bars before their trials. They pointed to numerous examples of defendants accused of violent crimes being released on bond and then committing new crimes, including a number of high-profile murder cases in Harris County.

In negotiations on the package, Democrats have sought to narrow the list of charges where judges could deny bail to avoid sweeping in defendants who aren’t a public safety threat or flight risk. They have also tried to include language that instructs judges to use the “least restrictive means” to secure public safety and ensure a defendant appears in court.

Under his push to automatically deny bail, Abbott would require defendants to prove to a judge that they are not a threat to public safety and will appear in court to get bail.

“Judges have far too much discretion to set easy bail on dangerous criminals,” he said at a news conference last week surrounded by the families of crime victims. “This shifts the burden for repeat violent criminals to prove that they are not a danger to the community before they’re released.”

Smithee, the House Criminal Jurisprudence chair, said that Abbott’s proposal was “appropriate” in certain cases, arguing that some judges were shirking their duty by letting dangerous defendants out on low and no bond. The ongoing discussions, he added, centered on defining the offenses that would qualify for automatic denial of bail.

“It’s certainly reserved for the most egregious offenses,” including murder and human trafficking, he said. “The bill really needs to do two things: One, it needs to give good judges the ability to do their job — in other words, to protect the public. And on the other hand, it needs to rein in some of the judges who’ve neglected to do that.”

Chuck Cook, whose elderly mother, Rosalie Cook, was stabbed and killed by a man who had nearly 70 prior arrests and was out of jail on two cashless bonds, urged lawmakers to “picture my mother’s face and make a decision accordingly” as they considered bail legislation.

“My mom died a lonely, painful death,” Cook said by Abbott’s side last week. “The system is supposed to be designed to protect the public and, most importantly, the most vulnerable. The system failed my mother.”

Civil rights advocates slammed both Abbott’s proposal and the existing legislation, arguing that the measure would undermine defendants’ constitutional right to due process and swell the state’s already overcrowded jails without improving public safety.

“Pretrial detention tears families apart, drains public resources and punishes people who haven’t been convicted of anything,” Nick Hudson, senior manager of policy and advocacy at the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas, said, noting studies finding that pretrial detention is associated with an increased likelihood of later committing a crime. “All Texans should be worried about an attack on their right to be free before trial. Anybody can be accused of an offense.”

Hudson also criticized Abbott’s proposal for automatic denial of bail, which he said “just totally inverts the basic idea of innocent until proven guilty.”

Kirsten Budwine, an attorney at the Texas Civil Rights Project, argued that the legislation would “make Texans less safe by destabilizing the lives of legally innocent people.” She cited the 1987 U.S. Supreme Court ruling stating that “liberty is the norm, and detention prior to trial or without trial is the carefully limited exception.”

“This bail package blatantly disregards that by doing the opposite — making pretrial detention the norm and liberty the exception,” she said, noting the stories of people who spent months in pretrial detention for crimes they did not commit. “People spend days, months and even years in jail just for the prosecutor to drop the case. But at that point, the harm has already been done.”

Smithee said it is a balancing act to craft a constitutional amendment that can satisfy the push to crack down on bail practices without going so far as to alienate Democrats and Republicans alike. The forthcoming package, he said, “operates within those confines.”

Article originally published by The Texas Tribune. To read the originally published article, click here.

Most travelers must have a REAL ID now to fly in US, or face extra screening

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — REAL ID requirements for those flying within the United States begin Wednesday after nearly 20 years of delays.

The day ahead of the deadline, people lined up at government offices across the country to secure their compliant IDs. In Chicago, officials established a Real ID Supercenter for walk-in appointments, while officials in California and elsewhere planned to continue offering extended hours for the crush of appointments.

“I’m here today so I won’t be right on the deadline, which is tomorrow,” said Marion Henderson, who applied for her REAL ID on Tuesday in Jackson, Mississippi.

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem on Tuesday assured people who don’t yet have a REAL ID but need to take a domestic flight Wednesday that they will be able to fly after clearing additional identity checks.

Some complained about the need to secure the ID after waiting in line for hours.

Michael Aceto waited in line at a DMV in King of Prussia, in the Philadelphia suburbs, for about two and a half hours Tuesday before getting his REAL ID.

“It’s a pain in the butt. It’s really a lot of time. Everybody’s got to take off from work to be here,” he said. “It’s a big waste of time as far as I’m concerned.”

The Transportation Security Administration warned people who don’t have identification that complies with REAL ID requirements to arrive early at the airport and be prepared for advanced screening to avoid causing delays.

The new requirements have been the subject of many Reddit threads and Facebook group discussions in recent weeks, with numerous people expressing confusion about whether they can travel without a REAL ID, sharing details about wait times and seeking advice on how to meet the requirements.

Noem told a congressional panel that 81% of travelers already have REAL IDs. She said security checkpoints will also be accepting passports and tribal identification, like they have already been doing.

Those who still lack an identification that complies with the REAL ID law “may be diverted to a different line, have an extra step,” Noem said.

“But people will be allowed to fly,” she said. “We will make sure it’s as seamless as possible.”

REAL ID is a federally compliant state-issued license or identification card that Homeland Security says is a more secure form of identification. It was a recommendation by the 9/11 Commission and signed into law in 2005. It was supposed to be rolled out in 2008 but the implementation had been repeatedly delayed.

¨The whole idea here is to better validate those individuals that were encountering a checkpoint to ensure they are who exactly they say they are,” said Thomas Carter, TSA’s Federal Security Director in New Jersey.

Carter said those without a REAL ID should give themselves extra time to clear security.

“If they do that, I do not have a belief that this will cause people to miss their flights if they take that additional time in,” he said.

Besides serving as a valid form of identification to fly domestically, people will also need a REAL ID to access certain federal buildings and facilities.

State government offices that issue driver’s licenses and state IDs have seen a significant increase in demand for REAL ID and some have extended their office hours to meet the demand. Some officials have recommended people wait for a while to get REAL ID compliant licenses and cards if they don’t have flight planned in the next few months.

“We are encouraging people who have passports or other REAL ID-compliant documents and people who don’t have travel plans in the next few months to wait until after the current rush to apply for a REAL ID,” said Erin Johnson, a spokesperson with the Minnesota Department of Public Safety.

Johnson said that the department has seen a significant increase in demand for REAL ID in recent weeks. In February, there were more than 48,000 applications for a REAL ID; that has nearly doubled to over 99,000 in April, she said.

Kentucky bourbon exports at risk as Trump-Canada trade tensions escalate

Bryan Woolston/Getty Images

(FRANKFORT, KY) -- Kentucky's bourbon industry faces potential devastation as President Donald Trump's latest tariff dispute with Canada threatens to halt $43 million in annual whiskey exports. During Tuesday's Oval Office meeting with Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, Trump maintained his hard stance on tariffs, declaring that Canada would need to make significant concessions to see any relief.

The dispute is part of a broader trade conflict that has particularly impacted American spirits, with Canadian retaliatory tariffs targeting bourbon producers.

Rep. Morgan McGarvey (D-KY), chair of the Congressional Bourbon Caucus, expressed concern about the meeting's outcomes in an interview with ABC News.

"With Kentucky, Canada is our largest trading partner," McGarvey said. "We're going to lose tens of millions of dollars in bourbon sales in Ontario province alone, not to mention the whole country, because of what Trump's policies are doing."

The congressman highlighted how the administration's shifting tariff policies are affecting Kentucky's distilleries. When asked about conditions for ending the tariffs, Trump indicated there were none, a stance McGarvey found particularly troubling.

"If you're using tariffs as a negotiating tactic, but then you say there's nothing you can do to get rid of it, that's going to be problematic," McGarvey noted.

McGarvey criticized the administration's approach to trade policy, highlighting the chaos it has created for local businesses.

"There was one week I was working with the bourbon companies in my district where, quite literally, on Monday, the tariffs were on. On Tuesday, they were off. On Wednesday, they were on. On Thursday, they were off again," he explained.

The impact extends beyond just sales figures. Kentucky's bourbon industry supports over 22,500 jobs and contributes $9 billion annually to the state's economy. The ongoing trade dispute threatens this economic engine, with some distilleries already reporting decreased international orders and considering production cutbacks.

Beyond trade concerns, McGarvey also addressed proposed cuts to Medicare and Medicaid that could impact Kentucky residents.

"The Republican budget that Donald Trump has been pushing will cut Medicaid, 46% of the kids in Kentucky have health insurance through Medicaid," he said, emphasizing that Kentucky receives more federal Medicaid dollars than its entire state budget.

The congressman, who serves on the Veterans Affairs Committee, also expressed strong opposition to recently announced VA staffing cuts.

"Cutting 80,000 people from the VA workforce is not going to help our veterans access their benefits," McGarvey stated. "We made them a promise, both a legal and a moral obligation, that we would take care of them after their service."

As negotiations continue with Canada, uncertainty remains about whether a deal can be reached before the 90-day pause expires. McGarvey and his colleagues continue to push for what he calls "serious, certain strategic trade policies that are beneficial to American workers and consumers."

Copyright © 2025, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Police searching for missing girl after mother arrested for allegedly locking sibling in closet

Austin Police Department

(AUSTIN) -- Police in Texas said they are looking for a missing 9-year-old girl who hasn't been seen in over seven years whose disappearance was uncovered after the child's mother was arrested for allegedly locking her 7-year-old daughter in a closet for weeks.

Virginia Marie Gonzales, 33, of Austin, was arrested on a charge of injury to a child after the 7-year-old girl was found "locked in a closet and starving" last month, according to Austin Detective Russell Constable.

The girl's grandmother called police after she found the child "malnourished, soiled and barricaded in a bedroom closet" on April 3, according to the arrest warrant affidavit. The grandmother had gone to the apartment after Gonzales was arrested for marijuana possession, according to the affidavit.

Gonzales allegedly barricaded her child in the closet for a month, feeding her a hot dog or corn dog in the morning and evening and half a cup of water daily, according to the affidavit.

The girl was immediately taken to a local hospital for medical treatment, where she was found to weigh 29 pounds and had signs of malnourishment, according to the affidavit. She is currently recovering, Constable said during a press briefing Tuesday, calling the case "emotionally difficult."

There were six other children in the home between the ages of 2 and 14 who appeared to be physically healthy, police said. Though during the investigation, authorities learned that there was an eighth child, Ava Marie Gonzales, who was not inside the home and had not been seen by family or friends since December 2017, when she was 2 and in the custody of her mother, police said.

"Austin Police Department's missing person detectives are seriously concerned about Ava's welfare, given the circumstances in which Ava's 7-year-old sibling was found," Constable said.

ABC News reached out to Gonzales' attorney and did not immediately receive a response. She is being held in the Travis County Correctional Complex on $75,000 bond and has a court hearing scheduled next week, online jail and court records show.

Ava has not been reported missing by her mother or anyone else, Constable said.

Constable said the girl's mother has "provided conflicting information to many different family members" about Ava's whereabouts, and police are asking for anyone who may have seen her or knows where she is to come forward.

Police have not identified her father, he said.

Constable said Gonzales has provided police some information regarding her missing child that they are trying to corroborate.

"We're hoping to get some more information and try to figure out where she is," he said.

As far as Austin police are aware, none of Gonzales' children are enrolled in school, Constable said.

Police released an age-progressed photo of Ava, who has brown hair and brown eyes.

Anyone with information is asked to email ava@austintexas.gov or can anonymously call Crime Stoppers at 512-572-8477.

ABC News' Amanda Morris contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2025, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Failed Soviet-era spacecraft expected to crash back to Earth within days

NASA

(MOSCOW) -- A failed Soviet-era spacecraft that became trapped in Earth’s orbit by mistake more than 50 years ago is forecast to make a crash landing back on Earth in the early morning hours of Saturday, according to space experts.

Cosmos 482, launched in 1972 as part of the Soviet Union's Venera program, which intended to explore Venus, is expected to return to Earth at 3:34 a.m. ET, according to SatTrackCam Leiden, a satellite tracking station in Leiden, the Netherlands.

But because of the uncertainty with its decaying orbit, the lander could come down as early as Friday evening and as late as Saturday afternoon, according to estimates from the European Space Agency, SatTrackCam Leiden and The Aerospace Corporation.

As of Thursday, the landing location was estimated to be anywhere between 52 N and 52 S latitude, according to NASA. This large swath contains the United States, as well as most of the continents on Earth.

Since 70% of the planet is covered with water, it’s likely the probe will land in the ocean but there is a small chance it could hit a populated area.

The craft is about 3.2 feet across and weighs about 1,190 pounds.

The risk of Cosmos 482 striking people on the ground is low, but not impossible, Jonathan McDowell, an astronomer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, wrote on his website last month.

"No need for major concern, but you wouldn't want it bashing you on the head," McDowell wrote.

Cosmos 482 experienced a successful initial launch on March 31, 1972, and temporarily orbited Earth.

However, the unmanned spacecraft did not achieve sufficient velocity to launch into a Venus transfer trajectory, NASA said, and the payload -- or the portion of the craft significantly related to the craft's primary mission -- was unable to exit Earth's orbit.

Astronomers hypothesize that a malfunction on a timer caused the engine to burn prematurely, NASA said.

The spacecraft separated into four pieces. Two of the pieces, which remained in low orbit, decayed within 48 hours. Orbital decay refers to an incremental decrease in altitude, gradually closing a craft's distance to Earth, according to NASA.

The other two pieces -- including the large lander probe -- became stuck in Earth's higher orbit. It has experienced orbital decay for decades, NASA said, and that decay has brought it close enough to reenter the planet's atmosphere around May 10.

Because the probe was designed to withstand entry into Venus' atmosphere -- which is 90 times denser than Earth's -- it is possible that parts of it could survive reentry and continue onward to the planet's surface, according to NASA.

Astronomers are increasingly monitoring space junk left near Earth during launches of satellites and other spacecraft. There are currently more than 1.2 million known pieces of space debris, 50,000 of which measure more than 4 inches across, according to a 2025 report by the European Space Agency.

"Even if we created no new space debris, it would not be enough to prevent a runaway series of collisions and fragmentations," the ESA said in a statement.

ABC News' Matthew Glasser contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2025, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Severe weather leaves extensive damage across East Texas

Severe weather leaves extensive damage across East TexasTYLER – According to our news partner KETK, the City of Frankston said the city has nearly 25 homes with trees toppled on them and one injury as a result of severe weather.

East Texas was slammed with severe weather Tuesday afternoon that caused quite a scare for people in Frankston. Even though the storm has passed, the damage has left its mark on the community. At one Frankston home, more than five trees fell directly on top of the roof.

The Frankston Office of Emergency Management Coordinator Gerald Hall said the path of the storm is quite noticeable in the city.

In a separate neighborhood, one person went to the hospital with a broken ankle after a tree fell on the person’s home. Continue reading Severe weather leaves extensive damage across East Texas

Why it feels like allergy season is getting longer, more severe

Angelika Warmuth/picture alliance via Getty Images

(NEW YORK) -- Temperatures are beginning to warm up, indicating the arrival of spring -- and of allergy season for millions of Americans.

Research shows that allergy seasons may be hitting people harder by starting earlier, lasting longer and creating more pollen.

Growing seasons -- the time of year that conditions allow plants to grow -- start earlier and last longer than they did 30 years ago, according to a report from the Allergy and Asthma Foundation of America.

Additionally, pollen concentrations have increased up to 21% across North America over the last three decades, data from the USA National Phenology Network shows.

Allergists told ABC News a mix of climate change and more carbon emissions has led to plants in many areas having longer growing seasons and higher pollen counts.

"Research has definitely shown that the seasons are indeed expanding," Dr. William Reisacher, an otolaryngic allergist at Weill Cornell Medicine and New York-Presbyterian Hospital, told ABC News. "We're seeing longer pollinating seasons. We're seeing higher levels of pollen."

What causes seasonal allergies?

Allergies occur when the immune system views food, medicine, plants or something else as a harmful substance and overreacts.

Some seasonal allergies, also known as allergic rhinitis or hay fever, occur due to pollen, which are tiny grains that are dispersed from certain flowering plants.

"Allergies are essentially your immune system overreacting to things that you're exposed to in your environment," Dr. Thanai Pongdee, a consultant allergist-immunologist at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, told ABC News. "So, for example, if you have hay fever and are allergic to tree pollen or grass pollen this time of year, when you breathe that pollen in, your immune system recognizes it and causes a cascade of events where various chemicals get released -- one of the main ones being histamine, and these chemicals cause the symptoms that many experience."

This leads to symptoms including runny nose, sneezing, congestion and itchy, watery eyes, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Reactions can range from mildly annoying symptoms to life-threatening reactions including anaphylactic shock, which can cause multiple organs to fail.

As of 2021, an estimated 25.7% of U.S. adults and 18.9% of U.S. children have seasonal allergies, according to the CDC's National Center for Health Statistics.

Why are allergy seasons getting longer?

Allergy season typically begins in the spring, around March, and typically ends in the fall, lasting as late as November.

"When we refer to seasonal allergic rhinitis, we are usually referring to allergic symptoms that occupy a certain time of the year," Reisacher said.

"So, springtime, at least in the northeast, is typically when the trees are pollinating whereas in the summertime, we see the grass is pollinating, and then in the fall, it's all about the weeds," he continued. "Ragweed is the most common pollen present at that time of the year."

However, research has suggested that allergy seasons are getting longer and worse.

"Allergy season is getting longer -- in fact it is an average of 13 days longer compared with 20 years ago," Dr. Purvi Parikh, an allergist and immunologist at NYU Langone Health, told ABC News.

A 2022 study from the University of Michigan found that, by the end of the century, pollen emissions could begin 40 days earlier in the spring than occurred between 1995 and 2014, meaning there could be an additional 19 days of high pollen counts.

Allergists say climate change is one of the biggest reasons why allergy seasons are getting longer.

A 2021 study found human-caused climate change is worsening North American pollen season, causing them to lengthen by 20 days on average between 1990 and 2018.

Reisacher said that as the globe experiences warmer temperatures each year, more storms are occurring, which kicks up more pollen.

"It travels for many more miles on the wind, and it makes it more allergenic, so it gets deeper into our body, into our lungs and even through the tissues that protect our body," he said.

The warming planet also means that it's taking longer to see the first frost, which usually occurs in the fall and hold pollen underground, he said. A longer time to get to the first frost means pollen has a longer time to stay in the air.

Reisacher said greenhouse gases are another reason for the longer allergy season. He said more carbon dioxide has been released into the air due to fossil fuels. Plants feed off carbon dioxide, and this has released more pollen into the air.

"There has been a direct correlation between the levels of [carbon dioxide] in the atmosphere and the amount of pollen that plants, including ragweed, are producing," he said. "So, it's hard to deny that that is a factor."

Reisacher and Parikh say this means there will likely be more people who experience seasonal allergies over the next several years.

How to treat seasonal allergies
Allergists said there are a number of over-the-counter medications that people can try as well as nasal sprays and rinses.

Some are tailored to relieve symptoms while others are used to prevent symptoms. Additionally, only certain medications work for certain symptoms.

"Start with 24-hour antihistamines. They last longer with fewer side effects," Parikh said. "[You] can also add nasal steroid or antihistamine sprays as well as eye drops. However, if you aren't improving, please see an allergist."

Pongdee said allergy shots may be effective for those who are looking for long-term solutions and are not relief from daily medication.

Reisacher recommends starting medications a few weeks before allergy season starts because they need time to take effect.

He said there are also steps people can take to at home to prevent pollen from coming indoors including keeping windows closed in the early morning when pollination is higher, using air conditioner filters. separating indoor and outdoor clothing and showeing to get pollen off skin and out of hair.

"You want to create a safe haven, and that's your bedroom," Reisacher said. "You want to create a pollen-free environment in your bedroom so that at least you have seven or eight hours that your immune system can rest without having to react to pollen."

Copyright © 2025, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

ICE targets businesses and restaurants across DC

Luke Barr/ABC News

(WASHINGTON) -- U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement conducted raids targeting businesses in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday, sources confirmed to ABC News.

A coalition of activists had warned delivery drivers and restaurants of the planned enforcement one day prior.

"I have heard those reports, I've been getting them all morning. I am disturbed by them," Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser told reporters on Tuesday. "It appears that ICE is at restaurants or even in neighborhoods, and it doesn't look like they're targeting criminals. It is disrupting."

She also emphasized that the Metropolitan Police Department was not involved.

Multiple sources told ABC News that federal law enforcement officials visited dozens of restaurants, carry-out spots and bars across several neighborhoods in Washington, including U Street, 14th Street, Chinatown, Dupont Circle and Mount Vernon Triangle. The visits spanned a wide range of establishments, from fast-casual spots to fine-dining restaurants and luxury cocktail bars, reflecting the breadth of the operation.

At many restaurants, agents distributed information and pamphlets requesting to see I-9 forms to verify the identities and employment authorizations for all employees dating back to one year ago. Some restaurants were told that federal officials would return in three days.?Following Tuesday's visits, some restaurant owners chose to close preemptively.

George Escobar, chief of programs and services at CASA, an organization geared toward improving the quality of life for the working class, told ABC News on Tuesday that the organization regularly receives tips about planned raids -- but that this one was different.

"This one, to be honest, alarmed us a little bit because it was really specific," Escobar said.

The organization has run a 24-hour tip hot line since the first Trump administration.

"We're experienced. We don't get alarmed by, like, you know, any old threat because, you know, they're frequent, right? And they come in all different types of forms," he said.

However, in this instance, CASA was warned that ICE would be using President Donald Trump's executive order aimed at the "beautification" of Washington, D.C., to justify the raids, Escobar said.

"We received notice about a specific kind of operation on how they were going to be conducted: what the pretense of maybe entering some of these small businesses were going to be, the fact that they were looking specifically at food businesses and possibly delivery workers," he explained.

ABC News reached out to the Department of Homeland Security and ICE for comment but did not receive a response.

"If ICE wants to snatch up every single immigrant working in food service and delivery, then the entire industry will collapse," Amy Fischer, a core organizer with Migrant Solidarity Mutual Aid Network, which supports migrants arriving in the capital, said in a statement.

The Restaurant Association Metropolitan Washington, which represents the more than 60,000 restaurant workers in the area, said in a statement shared with ABC News that it is "deeply concerned" by the reports of ICE raids and drop-ins across Washington, D.C.

RAMW said it urges "policymakers on a local and federal level to consider the real-world impact on local businesses and communities."

"Immigrants make up a significant portion of our workforce at all levels. From dishwashers to executive chefs to restaurant owners, immigrants are irreplaceable contributors to our most celebrated restaurants and beloved neighborhood establishments," it added. "The immigrant workforce has been essential to sustaining and growing our local restaurant industry and has been a major contributor to our local economy.

"At a time when our economy is already fragile, losing even one staff member at a single establishment has a profound impact on the operations of a restaurant and its ability to serve patrons," RAMW added. "Disrupting restaurant staffing across the industry can create a damaging ripple effect felt immediately throughout the entire local economy."

Copyright © 2025, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Raja Krishnamoorthi launches bid for open Illinois Senate seat

Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) -- Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi of Illinois has announced his bid to run for Senate in 2026, confirming speculations that he would join the quickly expanding field of primary competitors looking to win the safe Democratic seat left open by Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., who is retiring at the end of his term.

In an interview with ABC News, the five-term congressman said he's running on a record of confronting "bullies" like Donald Trump and is keenly focused on opposing agencies such as the Department of Government Efficiency, led by Elon Musk.

"I have a track record of standing up to Donald Trump in Congress. I voted for impeaching him twice, but I also … played a big role in the first impeachment hearings on Capitol Hill," said Krishnamoorthi, who entered the House in 2016, now serves as the top Democrat on the House's China select committee on the Chinese Communist Party and is a senior member of the Intelligence and Oversight committees.

"But I have a track record of standing up to lots of bullies, whether it's the e-cigarette companies that prey on our youth and try to hook them on vapes or it's Purdue pharmaceuticals that try to hook a generation to Oxycontin. I've gone after all of them. They put a target on my back, but I got results, and now we need results with Donald Trump, Elon Musk and DOGE," he added.

Krishnamoorthi added that he is running to fight for the economic prosperity of Illinoisans who are "suffering under the economic chaos unleashed by Donald Trump, Elon Musk and DOGE."

"We need to focus like a laser on their economic problems right now, even at the same time that we're standing up to Donald Trump," he told ABC News.

Krishnamoorthi's bid will kick off with three campaign stops on Friday as he "vows to 'stand up and fight back' against Trump's agenda. The congressman, who represents much of Chicago's northwestern suburbs, will make stops in his hometown of Peoria, Illinois, and in Schaumburg, Illinois, where he currently lives.

"My roots are in Peoria. I represent the suburbs. I've worked in the city for many years. So I want to try to trace that journey that I've had in Illinois but also speak to as many people as possible across Illinois," he told ABC News.

In an announcement video released on Wednesday, Krishnamoorthi called the actions occurring within the White House "insanity" and suggested that he is a Democrat who can "fight back" against the Trump administration. The Democratic Party is grappling with questions over its political direction following the startling loss of all three branches of government during the 2024 elections.

"People want to know, at this moment, in this time, where is the power to fight back? What does it look like?" Krishnamoorthi said in the video. "Well, I'll tell you: It looks like you and you and you, all of us ready to stand up and fight back. I spent my life standing up to bullies, fighting for everyday people. So I'll never be quiet while billionaires like Elon Musk and a convicted felon deny the dreams of the next generation for their own egos and personal profit. That's why I'm running for the United States Senate."

The Harvard University-educated lawyer who received his undergraduate degree in mechanical engineering from Princeton University was born in central Illinois to Indian immigrants.

Ahead of his election to Congress, Krishnamoorthi served in a number of state roles and as a policy director in the Obama administration. In his announcement video released on Wednesday, the congressman referred to himself as "Raja" and referenced the fact that former President Barack Obama, too, had an ethnically ambiguous sounding name, saying, "I worked on a friend's campaign who showed that Illinois will give you a shot even if you have a funny name. And inspired by Barack's example, I was elected to Congress."

"Yes, I know the name is long, so like always, just call me Raja," he concluded the video.

Krishnamoorthi, one of the front-runners in the already hotly contested race, has amassed over a $19 million war chest ahead of his launch, with a stunning $3 million raised in just the first three months of 2025.

His bid comes after Durbin announced in April that he would not seek a sixth term. Illinois Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton jumped in the race less than 48 hours after Durbin's announcement and quickly earned the endorsements of billionaire Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Illinois' other senator, Tammy Duckworth.

"At the end of the day, the most important thing is I get the endorsement from the people of Illinois," Krishnamoorthi told ABC News when asked about his posture among the already crowded primary field.

"They need to have their say. … We need to make sure that the process plays out, unfolds, that they are able to kick the tires and assess who they want to hire to represent them in the U.S. Senate, and I'm going to do everything in my power to earn their support," he added.

Krishnamoorthi's announcement also comes just a day after his colleague, Rep. Robin Kelly, D-Ill., declared her own bid for the seat. In an announcement video posted on Tuesday, Kelly brought up how in Congress, she does not stand up during moments of silence to mark mass shootings because, she said, "moments of silence in Congress just aren't going to cut it anymore."

Kelly is also the former Illinois Democratic Party chairwoman and a member of House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries' leadership team. It's reported that Rep. Lauren Underwood, who is also a member of Jeffries' leadership circle, is still exploring a run for the seat.

Krishnamoorthi told ABC News that his record, paired with his ability to "stand up" to Trump distinctly, makes him uniquely positioned for the role.

"I think that your track record matters. I think that the diversity of your experiences, plus … where you come from, I think that matters," he said. "I think that most of all, who is going to be the most effective at standing up to Donald Trump but also delivering for constituents?"

Durbin said he doesn't plan on endorsing any particular candidate but is not ruling out the possibility in an "extreme case."

"I hope I do not have to," Durbin said.

Still, Krishnamoorthi linked himself to Durbin as he launched his bid for Senate on Wednesday, lauding him as a "titan" who was a "fellow son of downstate."

"Senator Dick Durbin is a titan who will go down as one of the most effective and dedicated public servants in Illinois history. I am deeply humbled by the encouragement I have received from friends, family members, and community leaders encouraging me, a fellow son of downstate, to run for the U.S. Senate," Krishnamoorthi said in a statement announcing his candidacy.

 

Copyright © 2025, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Fed holds interest rates steady, defying pressure from Trump

Vincent Alban/Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) -- The Federal Reserve held interest rates steady on Wednesday, just weeks after President Donald Trump intensified calls for lower borrowing costs and voiced eagerness about the potential "termination" of Fed Chair Jerome Powell.

In recent days, Trump has dialed back his attacks on Powell, saying he will not fire Powell before the end of the top central banker's term next year. Trump has reiterated his displeasure with the level of interest rates, however, urging the central bank to lower them.

Speaking at a press conference in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday, Powell said the economy remains in "solid shape" but warned Trump's tariff policy could cause higher inflation and an economic slowdown.

"If the large increase in tariffs that have been announced are sustained, they're likely to generate a rise in inflation and a slowdown of economic growth," Powell said Wednesday.

"All of these policies are evolving, however, and their effects on the economy remain highly uncertain," Powell added.

When asked about Trump's call for lower rates, Powell shrugged off criticism from the president.

"It doesn’t affect our doing our job at all," Powell said. "We’re always going to consider only the economic data, the outlook, the balance of risks – and that’s it."

The move marked the Fed's second consecutive decision to maintain the current level of interest rates, repeating an approach taken in January. Before that, the Fed had cut rates at three consecutive meetings.

"For now, it does seem like a fairly clear decision for us to wait and see," Powell said.

"Risks of higher unemployment and higher inflation have risen," the FOMC said in a statement.

Last month, Powell raised the possibility that Trump's tariffs may cause what economists call "stagflation," which is when inflation rises and the economy slows.

If the Fed raises interest rates as a means of protecting against tariff-induced inflation under such a scenario, it risks stifling borrowing and slowing the economy further. On the other hand, if the Fed lowers rates to stimulate the economy in the face of a potential slowdown, it threatens to boost spending and worsen inflation.

Still, Powell pointed to solid economic performance as a reason to take a patient approach as policymakers await the impact of tariffs.

"For the time being, we are well-positioned to wait for greater clarity," Powell told an audience at the Economic Club of Chicago.

Powell noted the possibility of a shift in economic conditions, saying, "Life moves pretty fast."

The rate decision arrives days after fresh data showed robust job growth in April.

Despite flagging consumer sentiment and market turmoil, the labor market has provided a bright spot since Trump took office. Meanwhile, inflation cooled in March, the most recent month for which data is available.

Even so, recession fears are mounting on Wall Street as Trump's tariffs threaten to upend global trade. Goldman Sachs earlier this month hiked its odds of a recession from 35% to 45%. JPMorgan pegged the probability of a recession this year at 60%.

A government report last week showed the U.S. economy shrank over the first three months of 2025, much of which took place as Trump's flurry of tariff proposals stoked uncertainty among businesses and consumers.

U.S. gross domestic product, or GDP, declined at a 0.3% annualized rate over three months ending in March, according to government data released on Wednesday. The figure marked a sharp dropoff from 2.4% annualized growth over the final three months of 2024.

The rate decision on Wednesday also marks the first adjustment of borrowing costs since Trump's closely watched "Liberation Day" tariff announcement on April 2, which triggered the biggest single-day stock market drop since the COVID-19 pandemic.

Days later, Trump suspended a major swathe of the tariffs, sending the market to one of its largest ever single-day increases. A simultaneous escalation of tariffs on Chinese goods kept the effective tariff rate at its highest level in more than a century, the Yale Budget Lab found.

The White House is seeking to strike trade agreements with dozens of U.S. trade partners before the 90-day suspension of so-called "reciprocal tariffs" expires in July.

"As we gain a better understanding of the policy changes, we will have a better sense of the implications for the economy," Powell said last month.

Copyright © 2025, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Election process for next pope commences with papal conclave

Vatican Media via Vatican Pool/Getty Images

(VATICAN CITY) -- The papal conclave, the secretive election process to elect the next leader of the Roman Catholic Church, commenced on Wednesday, bringing cardinals from all over the world to select the 267th pope.

Since the death of Pope Francis on April 21, a total of 220 cardinals -- the church's highest-ranking clergy -- have gathered in Rome to mourn the loss of the former pontiff and begin the secret conclave.

Overall, 133 cardinals will be voting during the conclave, the most electors ever, with 108 of them appointed by Pope Francis. All cardinals under the age of 80 are eligible to participate in the election process.

The majority of the cardinals are coming from Europe, including 17 electors from Italy, five from Spain and five from France. There are 16 cardinal electors from North America, including 10 from the United States. Additionally, there are four from Central America, 17 from South America, 18 from Africa, 23 from Asia and four from Oceania. Argentina, the home country of Francis, has four cardinal electors.

All 220 cardinals attended a mass at St. Peter's Basilica on Wednesday morning before the start of the conclave. The voting cardinals then proceeded to the Pauline Chapel, then walked in a procession to the Sistine Chapel, where the voting will take place.

 

Each of the 133 cardinals lined up to place their hand on the Book of the Gospels to take the oath, a promise to keep secret anything relating to the election of the new pope.

Voting commenced when the Master of Ceremony said "extra omnes" -- or "everyone out" -- on Wednesday afternoon, ordering all those who are not cardinal electors to exit the Sistine Chapel prior to the start of the conclave. The voting, which will occur twice daily, will continue until two-thirds of the cardinals have agreed on a pope.

The ballots are burned after each vote and the smoke will emanate from the chimney that was built on top of the Sistine Chapel. Black smoke signifies a decision has not been reached and the voting will continue, whereas white smoke will mean a new holy leader of the church has been confirmed.

The first day of the conclave concluded with black smoke, signifying that the next pope has not been elected yet.

A pope could be elected as soon as the first ballot, or the process could continue for days. Since 1831, no conclave has lasted for more than four days.

Up to four rounds of voting typically take place in a day. If no clear choice has emerged after three days, balloting is suspended for 24 hours to allow cardinal electors time to reflect. Another seven rounds of balloting then takes place, followed by another break, and so on.

If no pope is elected after 33 or 34 votes -- generally about 13 days -- then a new rule introduced by Pope Benedict XVI decrees the two leading candidates as determined by previous ballots will engage in a runoff vote. If the candidates are members of the conclave, they cannot vote in the runoff but are present for it. Whichever candidate receives the necessary two-thirds majority of the votes is the new pope.

Cardinal Jean-Paul Vesco, the archbishop of Algiers, told ABC News it would be "unexpected" if the conclave goes past Friday.

Similarly, the cardinal of Baghdad, Louis Raphael Sako, reportedly told journalists at the Vatican last week that he expects a "short conclave."

"It will be a short conclave, two, three days," Sako said, as quoted by Italy's ANSA news agency.

When asked if he had an idea of who he would vote for to become the new pope, Sako replied, "I have a very clear idea but I cannot say it."

Names of cardinals who appear to be front-runners for the papacy have been swirling since the death of Francis.

Any baptized Catholic male is eligible to take Francis' place, but experts said Pietro Parolin, the cardinal secretary of state, and Luis Tagle, the archbishop of Manila in the Philippines, are the top contenders.

An American cardinal, Robert Prevost, has also started to emerge as a front-runner, according to Father James Martin, a papal contributor for ABC.

Overall, Martin said cardinals will be looking for "someone who is holy, someone who is a good evangelizer who can proclaim the gospel and someone who is a good manager."

"Those three things are tough to find in one person," Martin said Monday on ABC News Live.

During the conclave, recording technology of any kind is forbidden, with technicians checking to ensure there are no secretly installed bugs or other like devices inside the Sistine Chapel or adjacent areas. The cardinals' cellphones will be taken away at the start of the conclave and will be returned to them after the election of the new pope.

ABC News' Christopher Watson and Phoebe Natanson contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2025, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Milwaukee struggles through growing lead crisis — with federal help nowhere to be found

Kat Cisar and her six-year-old twins, who attend a Milwaukee school that was found to have hazardous lead in the building. (ABC News)

(MILWAUKEE) -- Kat Cisar, a mother of 6-year-old twins, found out in late February that her kids were potentially being exposed to harmful lead paint and dust at their Milwaukee school. By May, their school was on a growing list of eight others across the city, found to have degrading, chipping interiors that were putting children at risk.

Several schools have had to temporarily close for remediation efforts, including the one Cisar's kids attend.

"We put a lot of faith in our institutions, in our schools, and it's just so disheartening when those systems fail," Cisar said.

Milwaukee's lead crisis began late last year, when a young student's high blood lead levels were traced back to the student's school.

Since then, health officials have been combing through other Milwaukee schools to find deteriorated conditions that could harm more children. The plan now is to inspect roughly half of the district's 106 schools built before 1978 -- when lead paint was banned -- in time for school to return in the fall. They plan to inspect the other half before the end of the year.

In the last few months, tests have turned up elevated blood lead levels in at least three more students, and the health department expects that number to grow as it continues to offer free testing clinics around the city.

Lead exposure — especially harmful for young children — can cause growth delays, attention disorders and even brain damage, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Cisar's own children's tests for lead levels showed no acute poisoning, but Cisar said they'll have to keep monitoring it. Her children attended the school for three years.

"When you have little kids who are 3, 4, 5, 6 years old in a classroom like that, that's worrisome," she said.

The local impacts of federal cuts

Despite public health officials' requests, federal help is not coming to Milwaukee -- for now. The CDC's National Center for Environmental Health was gutted on April 1, as part of the Trump administration's effort to lay off 10,000 employees at the Health and Human Services Department (HHS), which oversees agencies like FDA and CDC.

The cuts included lead exposure experts who were planning to fly to Milwaukee later that month to help the city respond to the situation.

That has complicated the on-the-ground response, Milwaukee Commissioner of Health Mike Totaraitis told ABC News.

"We rely on the federal government for that expertise," Totoraitis said. "So to see that eliminated overnight was hard to describe, to say the least."

Erik Svendsen, division director of the CDC's National Center for Environmental Health before it was eliminated, said the layoffs have left Milwaukee on its own.

"Without us, there is no other unit at the federal level that is here to support them in doing what they need to do," Svendsen told ABC News.

And not just when it comes to this lead crisis, Svendsen said. Milwaukee -- and other cities -- won't have CDC assistance for other environmental threats that affect the buildings people use, the air people breathe and the water they drink, he said.

"States and local public health departments are on their own now as we prepare for the heat, wildfire, algal bloom, tornado, flood and hurricane seasons," Svendsen said.

An HHS spokesperson told ABC News the CDC's lead prevention work will be consolidated under a new division under HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. — though Svendsen said he and his team have not been rehired.

Without the experts, Svendsen said the future of the work is still in limbo.

For his part, Totoraitis, the Milwaukee health commissioner, said he empathizes with the frustration expressed by parents -- some of whom argue that the issue began at a local level and should be solved there.

"Putting my feet in the parents' shoes… thinking, 'Hey, I'm sending my kid to school, it should be safe, it should be free of lead hazards' — and unfortunately, that's not what we found," Totoraitis said.

"We found that systemic issues of poor maintenance and poor cleaning had left countless hazards across multiple schools that really put students at danger," he said.

But the extent of the problem, Totoraitis said, only furthered his department’s reliance on the experts at the CDC, with whom he said they’d been constantly in contact with for the last few months.

Funding crunch: Hire more teachers or paint a wall?

Buildings in the U.S. built before 1978 can be properly maintained by locking the old paint under layers of fresh new paint. But budget constraints in Milwaukee delayed that upkeep, officials said.

"Underfunding in schools for many, many years has really put districts at a very difficult choice of whether they should have teachers in the classroom and lower class sizes or have a paraprofessional to support -- or whether they paint a wall," said Brenda Cassillius, who started as Milwaukee Public Schools superintendent one month ago.

"And so I think now we are learning and growing," Cassillius said, to "make sure that we have the resources in place to deal with these really serious infrastructure issues."

Cisar, whose twins are back at their school after cleanup efforts, said she still feels like there's lots of blame to go around.

The lack of CDC resources, she said, has only compounded a longstanding issue in Milwaukee. But she said the lack of federal support has been disheartening, nonetheless.

"Maybe that would have just been a little bit of help -- but it really sends the message of, 'You don't matter,'" she said.

Copyright © 2025, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

At least 26 dead in Pakistan in overnight India attacks, military says

Firdous Nazir/NurPhoto via Getty Images

(LONDON and DELHI) -- At least 31 people were killed and dozens more were injured overnight in Pakistan by Indian aerial attacks, Pakistani officials said.

The Pakistani military said the airstrike amounted to a "blatant act of aggression," a characterization disputed by an Indian official, who said it was "measured, non-escalatory, proportionate and responsible."

The strike, which followed Tuesday's missile assault, came amid rising tensions as India continued to blame Pakistan for a deadly attack in April in the disputed Kashmir region, a claim that Pakistan denies. That militant attack, known as the Pahalgam incident, left 26 people dead in Indian-held Kashmir.

Pakistani military officials on Tuesday had vowed to respond from the "air and ground." Officials repeated that warning Wednesday morning, saying Pakistan "reserves the right to respond, in self-defense, at a time, place, and manner of its choosing." The Pakistan National Security Committee said in a statement following a meeting of the committee that "the Armed Forces of Pakistan have duly been authorized to undertake corresponding actions in this regard."

Pakistan's prime minister, Shehbaz Sharif, said India "will pay the price" for the overnight attack on Pakistan in an address to the nation on Wednesday.

"Innocent children and women are among those martyred in India's cowardly attacks," Sharif said. "We pledge that every drop of the blood of these martyrs will be accounted for."

While addressing Pakistan's parliament on Wednesday, Sharif said the Pakistani army taught the Indian army a lesson in "conventional war" during the overnight fighting.

"This was a conventional war, not a nuclear war, and we taught them a lesson in conventional war," Sharif said.

Sharif said Pakistani fighters did not cross into Indian territory during the fighting. Sharif also claimed India did not accept Pakistan's offer to conduct an independent inquiry into last month's Pahalgam attack.

The Indian army confirmed New Delhi's latest strikes on Wednesday, saying in a statement that its forces were "responding appropriately in a calibrated manner."

Indian Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri said India's strikes overnight amounted to a preemptive action, saying Pakistan did not take sufficient steps against "terrorist infrastructure on its territory or on territory under its control."

Two military officials also described the attack, which they said involved nine locations and lasted about 25 minutes. The officials claim the targets were destroyed and that the Indian military is prepared to respond to what she characterizes as "Pakistani misadventures" that would "escalate the situation."

Pakistan said the airstrikes hit numerous locations in Pakistan, not just in Pakistan-administered Kashmir. Pakistan also claimed India hit a hydroelectric dam in Pakistan-administered Kashmir.

At least 46 people were injured in Pakistan, military spokesperson Lt. Gen. Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry said in a press conference earlier Wednesday. The country's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said it had summoned India's top diplomat in Pakistan.

The attack "constitutes a clear violation of Pakistan's sovereignty," the Foreign Ministry said in a statement, adding, "The Indian side was warned that such reckless behavior poses a serious threat to regional peace and stability."

President Donald Trump said he wants to see the fighting between the two countries stop in remarks from the Oval Office on Wednesday.

"I get along with both. I know both very well. And I want to see them work it out. I want to see them stop," he told reporters. "They've got a tit for tat, so hopefully they can stop now."

"If I can do anything to help, I will," he added.

The U.S. Mission to Pakistan issued an alert on Wednesday, saying officials were "aware of reports of military strikes by India into Pakistan."

"This remains an evolving situation, and we are closely monitoring developments," the alert said, adding a reminder that there is a "Do Not Travel" advisory in place for areas along the India-Pakistan border "due to terrorism and the potential for armed conflict."

"We advise U.S. citizens to depart areas of active conflict if they can safely do so, or to shelter in place," embassy staff said.

Copyright © 2025, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

A man with an open asylum case was deported. His lawyers want to know if there are others

BALTIMORE (AP) — Kilmar Abrego Garcia has become a household name as the Trump administration is engaged in an intense legal campaign to keep him locked up in an El Salvador prison despite his mistaken deportation. But his case isn’t the only one of its kind inching through the U.S. court system.

Nearly two months have passed since a 20-year-old Venezuelan native, known only as Cristian in court filings, was deported to El Salvador despite having a pending asylum application. Now his lawyers want to know if there are others like him.

U.S. District Judge Stephanie Gallagher stopped short of ordering the Trump administration to produce a list of any others who are in the same legal situation as Cristian. But the judge made it clear during a hearing Tuesday that she won’t second-guess her earlier order for the Trump administration to facilitate Cristian’s return to the U.S.

Gallagher, who was nominated by President Donald Trump, said it is a “fair inference” that the administration has done nothing to comply with her April 23 decision. She gave the government until Thursday to appeal her ruling before she considers ordering specific steps to comply with the order.

Gallagher said the case isn’t about whether Cristian is entitled to asylum if he is able to return to the U.S.

“The issue is and always has been one of process,” the judge said. “People are entitled to that.”
How does Cristian’s case compare to Kilmar Abrego Garcia’s?

Abrego Garcia and Cristian both were deported on March 15. Dozens of other people were flown from the U.S. to El Salvador after Trump issued a proclamation calling for the arrest and removal of Venezuelan gang members under the Alien Enemies Act, a 1798 wartime law.

Cristian had been transferred into federal custody from a jail in Harris County, Texas, in January. Abrego Garcia was arrested in Maryland, where he lived with his wife — a U.S. citizen — and their children.

Unlike Cristian, Abrego Garcia is a native of El Salvador. A U.S. immigration judge’s order in 2019 protected him from being sent there because he likely faced persecution by local Salvadoran gangs that terrorized him and his family.

Gallagher ruled that the government violated a 2019 settlement agreement when it deported Cristian. She said she was guided by U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis’ ruling that Trump’s Republican administration must facilitate Abrego Garcia’s return.

“Standing by and taking no action is not facilitation,” Gallagher wrote. “In prior cases involving wrongfully removed individuals, courts have ordered, and the government has taken, affirmative steps toward facilitating return.”

Gallagher said her order requires the government to make “a good faith request” for the government of El Salvador to release Cristian to U.S. custody.
What’s the latest on Abrego Garcia’s case?

Xinis, who was nominated by President Barack Obama, ordered the administration to facilitate Abrego Garcia’s return. The judge set May deadlines this month for administration officials to testify under oath about what they have done to comply.

Abrego Garcia’s attorneys said the administration was moving toward bringing him back when it asked for a pause in the court case last month.

“We agreed to that request because we understood it to be made in good faith,” the lawyers said in a news release. “Unfortunately, one week later, it remains unclear what, if anything, the government has done in the past seven days to bring our client home to his family.”
What’s next in Cristian’s case?

The Justice Department is likely to appeal Gallagher’s rulings in Cristian’s favor. Any appeal would be heard by the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. In the meantime, Gallagher refused Tuesday to suspend her April 23 decision.

The judge scheduled Tuesday’s hearing to find out what, if anything, the government has done to comply with her order to facilitate Cristian’s return. Justice Department attorney Richard Ingebretsen merely told her that the State Department was notified of her ruling.

“That is the extent of the information,” Ingebretsen added.

One of Cristian’s attorneys, Kevin DeJong, dismissed that response as a “non-answer” and expressed concern that the administration is trying to avoid complying with the judge’s order.

Ingebretsen said immigration officials have determined that Cristian isn’t entitled to asylum. But the man’s lawyers said he has a right to get a ruling on the merits of his asylum application by the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services.

Meanwhile, Cristian’s lawyers want to know if the U.S. has deported other people who are covered by the same settlement that benefited him.

“There may well be other class members removed and we don’t know about it,” DeJong said. “It’s not acceptable.”