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Saturday, May 2, 2026

Sinister racket outside Home Depot that you’re paying for — and now they want more

 Taxpayer funded pro-illegal immigration groups are demanding millions of dollars from LA residents to help them attack ICE and fund day laborer hubs near Home Depot sites.

The groups are already getting $1-million-a-year from LA City Council, and are now demanding a $2-million-a-year funding increase to help them fight against ICE operations and maintain buildings outside the hardware stores.

The hubs offer everything from restrooms to free legal services and employment advice to day laborers, all paid for by nonprofits funded by taxpayers.

A facility where day laborers wait for work at Home Depot.CA Post
The exterior of a Home Depot store with several people, including day laborers, waiting outside.CA Post

Socialist councilmember Eunisses Hernandez has backed the move that would see groups like the Central American Resource Center (CARECEN) rake in more taxpayer money to support illegals.

“The work centers have been a rescue due to the conditions we have been living in. That’s why I’m asking that the budget be increased to $3 million for these work centers,” Hernandez asked the City’s Budget and Finance Committee in meetings this week.

The extraordinary demands come as LA’s $15 billion budget meetings rage on, meetings that heard police claim they don’t have enough officers or funding to properly secure the 2028 Olympic games.

Susan Collins, a Sherman Oaks resident who has repeatedly spoken out on city spending, pushed back sharply on the proposal to increase funding for day laborer trailers.

“I’m a first-generation American. I support immigration and value what immigrants contribute,” Collins said. “But when the city tells taxpayers there isn’t enough money to keep streetlights on or fix our roads, this is not the moment to triple funding for these trailer programs.”

Luis Hernandez, from CARECEN which runs an operation at Home Depot in Cypress Park, said demand for his services has surged from illegal workers seeking help.

“The demand for deportation defense has never been greater,” CARECEN rep Diana Camilla told the budget committee in City Hall meetings.

Day laborers looking for work at the Cypress Park Home Depot.David Buchan for Ca Post
Pablo Flores, who works out of Cypress Park daily, told The California Post the day laborer center there operates only Monday through Friday.CA Post

The cost to taxpayers for running just one day worker center at a Home Depot in Cypress Park is $121,684 per year. City records show taxpayers paid $77,000 to set up the center, which was supposed to run up to seven days a week from 6am in the morning.

Pablo Flores, who works out of Cypress Park daily and claims he’s legal, told The California Post the center is only open Monday to Friday between 7am and 3pm.

He says about 20 to 25 workers at that location have been detained by ICE in recent months.

Day laborers waiting for work at a facility near a Home Depot.CA Post

He said the center is staffed with one employee when open — although he wasn’t sure what they did.

Home Depot was pulled into the program by city officials in the ’90s to curb chaos from day laborers gathering outside its stores — even leasing parking spaces to the city where the hubs were built.

When The Post visited a West Los Angeles Home Depot, a worker said he used to regularly see employees from Instituto de Educación Popular del Sur de California, the nonprofit funded by the city to operate at that location, present on site.

He said he rarely sees them anymore and when they do show up, they are often accompanied by attorneys.

At a recent visit to the Westlake Home Depot, The California Post found the official center largely empty, while day laborers gathered across the lot near the entrance, waiting where contractors actually pull up and hire.

Los Angeles City Council already spends $1 million a year paying nonprofits to provide authorized shelters for day laborers — of whom 80% are in America illegally.

The system traces back to the 1990s and early 2000s, when day laborers gathered outside hardware stores and along busy corridors, waiting for work and drawing complaints over traffic congestion, disorder and public disturbances.

Day laborers wait outside a Home Depot for work in Los Angeles.CA Post

City leaders responded by formalizing the system, moving hiring into designated, city-backed spaces with oversight and basic amenities.

City records show Los Angeles required several home improvement stores, through land-use approvals, to set aside space for these centers, in some cases leasing parking lot land to the city for as little as $1 a year.

That approach dragged private companies like The Home Depot into the center of a volatile immigration fight, tying them to enforcement activity they don’t control while exposing them to legal risk and public backlash.

Despite a taxpayer-funded day laborer facility on site, only two workers were seen waiting inside while the rest gathered outside the designated area.CA Post
A city-funded day laborer facility at the Home Depot where workers are supposed to wait for jobs in Los Angeles.CA Post

“We aren’t notified that immigration enforcement activities are going to happen, and we aren’t involved in the operations,” a spokesperson for Home Depot told The Post. “We aren’t coordinating with ICE or Border Patrol. We cannot legally interfere with federal enforcement agencies, including preventing them from coming into our stores and parking lots.”

Over time, millions have been poured into a system that still doesn’t function the way it was sold.

Still, progressive policy makers like State Assemblymember Jessica Caloza, who represents the 52nd District covering East Los Angeles, Northeast Los Angeles, and South Glendale, has called for a boycott of Home Depot.

“I urge Angelenos to boycott Home Depot and support our local small businesses,” Caloza has said.

She tied the company directly to the enforcement climate, adding, “This eviction is not a coincidence. The Trump Administration has been terrorizing our state and is in our backyards thanks to Home Depot.”

But some say the system the city set up is why these areas are being targated.

“The city forced this model into place,” said Scott Meyer, a candidate for California’s 30th Congressional District. “They built it, paid for it, and now they’re attacking the business hosting it.”

Meyer said the failed system reflects a broader pattern of city, county and state spending without measured outcomes.

Two laborers waiting for work.David Buchan for Ca Post
A trailer operated by Instituto de Educación Popular del Sur de California is positioned to support day laborers, but workers say its presence has dwindled in recent months.CA Post
Day laborers gather near the edge of a Home Depot lot in West LA, while the nearby trailer meant to serve them appears largely inactive.CA Post

“It’s difficult to find a single idea, policy or program from the Mayor’s office or City Hall that’s achieved any beneficial results,” he said.

The Home Depot, meanwhile, remains a major employer and taxpayer in Los Angeles and througout the state, generating billions in economic activity, supporting more than 292,000 jobs, contributing $4.6 billion in tax revenue, and giving back through nearly $85 million in charitable investments and more than 283,000 volunteer hours.

We reached out to Hernandez and Caloza for comment on the story.

https://nypost.com/2026/05/01/us-news/pro-illegal-immigration-groups-ask-city-of-la-for-3m-to-help-fight-ice/

Friday, May 1, 2026

Teen Cannabis Use Tied to Slower Cognitive Development

 Cannabis use among teenagers is linked to delayed cognitive development and worse memory over time, the largest US study to date showed.

In an analysis of over 11,000 teenagers, cannabis use was associated with reduced improvement in memory, attention, language, and processing speed, compared to adolescents who did not use cannabis.

When researchers zeroed in on specific cannabis components, they found that those who used tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) showed worse memory as they grew older, compared to nonusers.

“Adolescence is a critical time for brain development, and what we’re seeing is that teens who start using cannabis aren’t improving at the same rate as their peers,” lead author Natasha Wade, PhD, and assistant professor of psychiatry at UC San Diego School of Medicine, said in a news release. “These differences may seem small at first, but they can add up in ways that affect learning, memory and everyday functioning.”

The study was published online April 20th in Neuropsychopharmacology.

Key Window of Brain Development 

Over the past few decades, the number of teenagers using cannabis has remained high, with an estimated 1 in 5 high schoolers using cannabis. Cannabis potency has also increased significantly over time, raising concerns over the risk of heightened adverse effects, particularly for younger users.

During adolescence, cannabis exposure may disrupt brain development and is associated with a significantly higher likelihood of incident psychiatric disorders and worse academic performance.

To gain a comprehensive picture of the effects of cannabis use on neurocognitive trajectories in this age group, the investigators included 11,036 teenagers (47% female) in their analysis. Teens were recruited at ages 9-10 years from 21 sites across the US and followed for over 10 years.

They were interviewed about their past-year substance use at annual follow-ups, along with a mid-year assessment. Caregivers were questioned about their child’s medicinal cannabidiol (CBD) use. The investigators combined this self-report data with toxicological testing on participants’ hair, urine, and saliva throughout the study.

Participants inhibitory control were assessed by the Flanker Inhibitory Control and Attention task, and receptive language was tested by having participants listen to a word and match it to a picture. To evaluate their visuospatial performance, participants were asked to identify the correct location of an item in various orientations. Verbal recall and memory were assessed using the Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test. Other tasks assessed participants’ oral reading, processing speed, working memory, and episodic memory.

Covariates included age, sex, lifetime substance use, sociodemographic factors, family history of substance use, and prenatal substance exposure. 

Findings Over Time 

Initially, teen cannabis users’ working memory performance appeared to be better than nonusers. However, as they got older, their improvement slowed relative to controls and at age 17, cannabis use was associated with worse performance (P = .0001).

At ages 9 and 10, cannabis user’s inhibitory control was superior to controls (P < .01 for both). Over time, this relationship flipped such that by ages 15-17, users’ inhibitory control was worse (P < .0001 for all ages).

The same trend over time was shown for teen cannabis users’ processing speed, oral reading, episodic memory, receptive language, verbal recall, and visuospatial performance, culminating with statistically significant worse performance at ages 15-17.

Secondary hair analyses showed that THC was linked to a lower rate of episodic memory improvement (P = .007). At ages 15-17, THC teens showed worse episodic memory than controls and CBD teens.

“These results point to THC as a likely driver of the changes we’re seeing,” Wade said. “It also highlights how complicated cannabis products can be, especially since some products labeled as CBD may still contain THC.”

However, the authors also noted that this finding should be interpreted cautiously as the CBD positive subsample consisted of just 21 participants. There were no significant relationships found for the other neurocognitive tasks in this secondary hair analysis.

“Findings support interventions aimed at delaying cannabis initiation during early adolescence and integrating neuroscience-informed psychoeducation about cognitive development during sensitive periods,” the investigators wrote.

Limitations of the study were possible selection bias that may reduce generalizability and potential external contamination of hair samples.

The ABCD Study is supported by the National Institutes of Health and additional federal partners. The authors declared no competing interests.

https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/teen-cannabis-use-tied-slower-cognitive-development-2026a1000e0h

Russia downs 5 drones flying toward Moscow

 Moscow Mayor Sergey Sobyanin announced that Russian air defenses downed five Ukrainian drones flying toward the capital.

He added that emergency services are responding to the situation, although there is no information on casualties or damage. Earlier during the night, as per local time, one of the largest airports serving Moscow, Vnukovo, temporarily halted traffic. Flight restrictions have also been imposed at several other airports amid the conflict with Ukraine.

In the meantime, traffic at the Vnukovo Airport was normalized.

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/Russia-downs-5-drones-flying-toward-Moscow/66203968

Cigna’s exit adds to ObamaCare marketplace upheaval

 Cigna is pulling out of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) exchanges in 2027, the company said, adding to the turmoil facing the individual marketplace after the loss of enhanced federal subsidies. 

Executives announced the decision on Cigna’s earnings call Thursday, a day when the company reported a better-than-expected first quarter, including $1.7 billion in first quarter net income. 

Cigna is now the second company to exit the ACA marketplace, after CVS’s Aetna stopped offering plans for this year. 

“We did not make this decision lightly, and appreciate the importance of ensuring patients have continuity through the transition,” said Brian Evanko, the company’s president and incoming chief executive.  

Evanko said he didn’t see a “clear path” to scale the ACA business to a size that would achieve a meaningful impact on the company’s bottom line. Cigna’s ACA footprint is a small portion of its overall market share; the decision to exit the exchanges will impact 369,000 members across 11 states. The company has 18.3 million total members. 

But its enrollment dropped 17 percent compared to the first quarter of 2025 — 369,000 in 2026 compared to 446,000 in 2025. 

“This is small business for us today, and it’s been shrinking in recent years,” Evanko said.  

Overall ACA enrollment dropped this year after Congress failed to extend enhanced subsidies that help reduce premiums for many enrollees. The subsidies made insurance free for the lowest-income customers and helped reduce premiums for people who earned more than about $63,000 per year.

Initial sign-ups had already fallen by about 1.2 million people, and those numbers are likely to grow as more people see unaffordable bills and can’t pay. 

The Trump administration has argued that the decline in enrollment is due to a crackdown on fraud, and the only people dropping coverage shouldn’t have been enrolled to begin with.

Insurers will have to price the uncertainty into their rates, leading to potentially even higher premiums. The people most likely to end their coverage when bills rise are younger and healthier. That leaves sicker policyholders with more expensive medical costs, leading insurers to raise rates to cover the higher spending. 

So far, the exit of two plans from the marketplace has not raised the same concerns as 2017, when some counties had no ACA plans amid upheaval. But affordability and the rising cost of healthcare are top issues for voters, and the issue is likely to feature prominently in the midterm elections.  

Democrats hammered Republicans earlier this year for failing to agree to an extension of the enhanced subsidies, and those attacks will likely intensify as November approaches. 

https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/5859943-cigna-leaving-aca-exchanges/

Appeals court blocks mail-order mifepristone, restricting abortion access nationwide

 A federal appeals court late Friday blocked the ability of doctors to prescribe the abortion pill mifepristone through telehealth and dispensed through the mail.

A three-judge panel on the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals sided with Louisiana in a lawsuit against the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The court issued a temporary nationwide injunction that reinstates a 2021 nationwide requirement that mifepristone must be prescribed and dispensed in person.

Mifepristone is one of the two drugs commonly used in medication abortions.

The FDA permanently lifted the in-person requirement in 2023, leading to a surge in pills prescribed over the internet in the wake of the Dobbs ruling that overturned the constitutional right to an abortion.

Louisiana argued the FDA rules made it easier for abortion pills to be mailed into states where abortion is banned. The appeals court said Louisiana showed it was likely to succeed in its challenge and was suffering irreparable harm.

“Every abortion facilitated by FDA’s action cancels Louisiana’s ban on medical abortions and undermines its policy that ‘every unborn child is human being from the moment of conception and is, therefore, a legal person,’” the ruling stated.

The ruling Friday sets up a likely appeal to the Supreme Court and overrides a lower court’s ruling earlier this month that had paused the lawsuit while the Trump administration’s FDA conducts a review on the safety of mifepristone.

“Make no mistake: this ruling is not grounded in science or patient safety,” Brittany Fonteno, CEO of The National Abortion Federation, said in a statement. “It is a politically-driven decision that overrides medical expertise and years of research, and threatens to upend how abortion care is delivered nationwide.”

Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) said in a statement that the “real-world consequences” of the decision “are devastating and immediate.”

“Mifepristone is safe and effective—millions of women have used this medication since the FDA approved it over 25 years ago,” she said. “The only reason mifepristone is regulated as heavily as it already is, is because of anti-abortion politics, not because of science.”

https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/5860135-mifepristone-telehealth-prescription-blocked/