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Monday, December 1, 2025

Before braces: Palate expanders??

 The 8-year-old daughter of “The Real Housewives of New Jersey” star Danielle Cabral has been rocking a bougie new accessory — and no, it’s not bursting with bows, tulle or sequins.

You can’t tell by looking at her, but Valentina Cabral sports a pricey metal appliance that sits inside her mouth and gives her teeth room to shine.

“Her teeth are actually aligned perfectly right now,” Cabral, 40, told The Post. “I definitely have seen a change.”

“The Real Housewives of New Jersey” star Danielle Cabral and her 8-year-old daughter, Valentina, show off her palate expander at a KidZdent office.Michael McWeeney

Forget Labubus“Wicked” dolls and merch from “KPop Demon Hunters.” The latest must-have among Gen Alpha pre-tweens is a $3,000 palate expander that gradually widens the upper jaw to create more space for crowded permanent teeth and correct bite issues.

Parents have been raving about these glow-up gadgets, even though they resemble scaffolding, the upkeep can be stressful, and they may make eating and talking difficult.

“It’s not as bad as you think,” Cabral said, “and it’s really [a] millisecond of time in their whole life.”

Why does the palate need expanding?

The palate is the roof of your mouth, which separates your nasal and oral cavities and plays a crucial role in your breathing, speaking and chewing.

Many people have a narrow palate like Valentina, with one study of orthodontic care finding it in 80% of participants.

Valentina got a removable palate expander in July after her speech suffered with the traditional device.Michael McWeeney

The palate may not develop properly due to genetics, aggressive thumb-sucking or chronic nasal obstruction, resulting in crowded teeth, speech issues and breathing difficulties.

Since the palate is made of two parts, the palate expander works by slowly pulling both halves apart.

“Palatal expanders are most effective when the jaw is still growing, typically between the ages of 7 and 14,” Dr. Barry Glaser, an orthodontist in Westchester County, told The Post.

“Teens and adults may also be candidates for treatment, but results are best in younger patients.”

You don’t need to tell that to Starla Arguijo, 36, who got her latest palate expander in June.

“I wish I would have gotten it done when I was much younger, because I’ve spent my entire life hating my smile,” the Texas mom confessed to The Post.

How do palate expanders work?

Traditional palate expanders attach to the upper back molars with bands. A small screw mechanism connects the two halves of the metal device.

The kid or parent is given a special key to slightly turn the screw each day, with each twist widening the appliance by about 0.25 millimeters.

Valentina demonstrates how to turn the device to widen it, which can be the trickiest part for some kids.Michael McWeeney

“I’m right there with her doing it, but [Valentina] wants to be independent and do it herself now, which gives me anxiety,” Cabral admitted about the turns.

“Sometimes she rotates it the wrong way.”

As the palate widens, new bone tissue forms in the gap to stabilize the expansion.

Palate expanders can be worn for several months, depending on the narrowness of the arch.

After all the turns are made, there’s usually a holding phase to let things settle. Patients might notice better teeth alignment, a wider smile and face shape and even improved breathing and sleep because the nasal passages expanded too.

Connecticut mom Jessica Ziolko said her 8-year-old daughter’s teeth are already less crowded since she got her palate expander in October.

“I took photos before she got the palate expander, and then we took some recently and compared them side by side, and we’ve definitely seen a shift in her teeth,” Ziolko told The Post about her daughter Scarlett, who has a “really high” palate and an open bite — her upper and lower front teeth don’t touch, even when she closes her mouth.

How much does a palate expander cost?

The price varies based on the type of expander, the complexity of the case and insurance coverage.

Ziolko, for one, shelled out $4,500 for Scarlett’s expander and braces.

In Pennsylvania, Sencak Orthodontics reports that the initial orthodontic consultation costs between $100 and $250, while the device is priced $1,000 to $3,000. Follow-up visits for adjustments and monitoring range from $50 to $150 a pop.

An alternative — the Invisalign Palatal Expander, which launched in 2023 — can cost anywhere from $1,000 to over $6,000.

It differs from the traditional appliances in that it is removable and does not feature screws or metal parts.

“The Invisalign system uses a series of 3D-printed expanders,” explained Glaser, an Invisalign provider.

“Patients brush and floss, clean the device and insert it onto the posterior teeth,” he added. “The trays are swapped according to the treatment plan, with no manual turning required.”

What are some downsides of palate expanders?

Experts say that side effects of the expanders can include discomfort, pain, jaw aches and headaches, as well as speech difficulties, sinus pressure, a gap between front teeth and increased saliva.

Arguijo has struggled as the wires press down on her tongue — and she lamented that she sounds like she’s “sick half the time.”

And over in New Jersey, Valentina replaced the traditional expander she got in September 2024 with a removable one in July after “choking” on some words.

“My daughter is an actress, so it really affected her speech in the beginning, and even when she [learned] how to use it, there was a difference in her speech,” Cabral explained.

“She had some big roles that she was up for,” she added, “and [the dentist] said, ‘We can do the removable one.'”

Palate expanders often enhance the braces experience instead of substituting for them.Michael McWeeney

It also changes eating habits, since hard, sticky, chewy and sugary foods can damage the device.

Lottie Weaver’s 9-year-old daughter, Kinlee, said goodbye to Starbursts, suckers and gum when she got her expander in May.

“Things get stuck in it,” the Arizona mom told The Post as she recalled the “hard” adjustment. “The first week, she literally just ate rice and yogurt … and it was sore.”

Do palate expanders replace braces?

Dr. Ben Winters, a Texas-based dentist and orthodontist, said palate expanders are “about as permanent as a jaw surgery would be.”

Yet, they rarely fix smiles on their own.

“Almost universally, people will still undergo braces — if they already have a narrow jaw, there’s probably other things going on: crowding, underbite, overbite, etc.,” Winters, founder of the oral care company Something Nice, told The Post.

“It would be rare to only do an expander and that’s it, but in some mild cases where it perfectly relieves the crowding, I guess it’s a possibility!”

Tips for those considering palate expanders

  • Speak up if there’s discomfort. Arguijo said she changed expanders after “the roof of my mouth kept growing over” the first one. You may have to experiment to find the right one.
  • Do the prescribed turns. A big problem that experts see is patients doing more turns than needed, causing overexpansion, pain or tissue damage. The good news is that a professional can undo the turns.
  • Keep it clean. Weaver recommends a water flosser to spray away the gunk. She also packs a disposable toothbrush and a collapsible cup in her daughter’s backpack in case something gets caught in the expander at school.
  • Educate yourself on the possibilities. Ziolko said her daughter not only needs the expander and braces, but also myofunctional therapy to help correct her mouth breathing and her tongue posture. She figured this out after doing extensive research on orthodontic treatments.

Minn. social service workers slam Walz as ‘100% responsible for massive fraud’ of $1B roiling state

 Hundreds of state workers at the Minnesota Department of Human Services publicly excoriated Gov. Tim Walz for allowing a “massive fraud” scandal to unfold under his watch and retaliating against their whistleblowers.

Over $1 billion in taxpayers’ money was fleeced by dozens of scammers in Minnesota’s Feeding Our Future fraud scandal, the largest known COVID-19 fraud case in the country.

“Tim Walz is 100% responsible for massive fraud in Minnesota. We let Tim Walz know of fraud early on, hoping for a partnership in stopping fraud but no, we got the opposite response,” the Minnesota DHS employees’ X account, which represents over 480 staffers, chided Saturday.

“Tim Walz systematically retaliated against whistleblowers using monitoring, threats, repression, and did his best to discredit fraud reports. Instead of partnership, we got the full weight of retaliation,” the account charged.

“It’s scary, isolating and left us wondering who we can turn to.”

Just last week, the Justice Department prosecuted the 78th defendant in what prosecutors have dubbed the Feeding Our Future fraud scheme. At least 59 people have been convicted so far.

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz downplayed the fraud scandal and ripped into President Trump for seizing on it.AP
Feeding Our Future dissolved in 2022 as it faced scrutiny from prosecutors and federal investigators.AP

During the past five years, fraudsters targeted Minnesota’s generous social safety net by setting up companies that billed the state for social services that prosecutors alleged were never actually provided.

Feeding Our Future, a nonprofit founded in 2016 that purported to help feed school children, had partnered with dozens of local businesses under the pretense of providing food aid.

The nonprofit, which dissolved in 2022, and its partners billed the state, claiming to have helped feed tens of thousands of needy children. In reality, most of that money was squandered on foreign real estate projects, luxury cars, and more.

Other organizations besides Feeding Our Future committed fraud with Minnesota’s social safety net as well.

The fraud largely revolved around dozens of people in the Somali diaspora. Minnesota is home to about 80,000 Somali Americans.

“As staff, we firsthand witnessed and observed fraud happening yet we were shutdown, reassigned and told to keep quiet,” the Minnesota DHS employees’ X account alleged.

Investigators have conducted multiple raids in the Feeding Our Future fraud scandal.Star Tribune via Getty Images

“Sometimes more. Leadership did not want to appear to discriminate against certain communities and were unwilling to take action, such as stopping fraud, that would have an adverse impact on their image.”

Federal prosecutors began charging individuals associated with Feeding Our Future in 2022. As federal investigators parsed through documents, they quickly realized that the fraud was widespread.

One homelessness program started as $2.6 million in 2021 saw its costs soar to $104 million last year, after being rife with fraud, the New York Times reported.

“Minnesota has become the land of 10,000 frauds under Tim Walz,” House Majority Whip Tom Emmer (R-Minn.) told The Post about the scandal.

“This is a total slap in the face to the hardworking, law-abiding people of Minnesota. The Walz administration is either too incompetent or completely unwilling to clean up their own mess.”

Hundreds of workers in the Minnesota Department of Human Services gave a stern rebuke to Gov. Tim Walz.X/Minnesota_DHS

The egregious scandal also drew attention from President Trump, who ripped Minnesota as “a hub of fraudulent money laundering activity.”

Walz returned fire against Trump and noted that “I take responsibility for putting people in jail,” despite federal prosecutors leading many of the charges.

“Donald Trump: Deflect, demonize, come up with no solutions. He’s not going to help fix anything on fraud,” Walz told NBC News’ “Meet the Press” in an interview that aired Sunday. “My God, there’s a big difference between fraud and corruption. And corruption is something he knows about.”

The Minnesota DHS employees’ X account also accused Walz of weakening safeguards and disempowering the Office of the Legislative Auditor during the alarming fraud.

“This is a cascade of systemic failures leading up to Tim Walz,” the workers alleged. “Agency leaders appointed by Tim Walz willfully disregarded rules and laws to keep fraud reports quiet — even to the extent of threatening families of whistleblowers.”

“We can’t fight fraud in Minnesota alone, hence why we’re appealing to the federal levels of government. We need all the help we can get.”

The Post reached out to Walz’s office for comment.

Walz launched his campaign for a third term as governor of Minnesota in September.

Minnesota is one of over a dozen states that don’t have term limits on its governor. But no Minnesota governor has been elected three times since gubernatorial terms were extended from two to four years in 1963.

https://nypost.com/2025/12/01/us-news/minn-social-service-workers-slam-gov-tim-walz-as-100-responsible-for-1b-state-fraud/

Russia warns NATO about preemptive strikes

 The Russian Foreign Ministry issued a statement on Monday regarding NATO's comments about possible "preemptive strikes" against Russia. The ministry said the remarks are an "extremely irresponsible step, demonstrating the alliance's readiness to continue escalating." It warned NATO that it should be "aware of the ensuing risks and potential consequences, including for the alliance members themselves."

NATO Military Committee Chair Giuseppe Cavo Dragone said in an interview with the Financial Times on Sunday that the alliance is considering "more aggressive" actions against Russia's hybrid warfare. He said deterrence, including retaliation and preemptive strikes, should be analyzed "deeply" if NATO comes under more pressure from Russia. However, he noted that such strikes are "further away from our normal way of thinking and behavior" and that legal and jurisdictional frameworks must be taken into account.

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/Russia-warns-NATO-about-preemptive-strikes/65273182