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Miranda Lambert Announces New Album; Drops New Song

Brand New ACM Entertainer of the Year Miranda Lambert has some brand new music to share with fans. The singer just announced that her new album, “Palomino,” will drop April 29th.

“This record takes you on a journey through songs,” she writes on Insta. “I hope y’all are ready to travel with us wandering spirits and meet some cool characters with great stories.”

The album contains 15 tracks including the just released song “Strange,” which she wrote with Luke Dick and Natalie Hemby. It also includes a cover of the Mick Jagger solo track “Wandering Spirit,” and a guest appearance by the B-52s on the song “Music City Queen.”

“Palomino” features three songs from her stripped down album, “The Marfa Tapes, “In His Arms,” “Waxahachie” and “Geraldene,” re-recorded with a full band.

Check out “Strange” and the track list below:

  • “Actin’ Up”
  • “Scenes”
  • “In His Arms”
  • “Geraldene”
  • “Tourist”
  • “Music City Queen” feat. The B-52’s
  • “Strange”
  • “Wandering Spirit”
  • “I’ll Be Lovin’ You”
  • “That’s What Makes the Jukebox Play”
  • “Country Money”
  • “If I Was a Cowboy”
  • “Waxahachie”
  • “Pursuit of Happiness”
  • “Carousel”

This day in Country Music History

  • Today in 1969, Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs split up after 25 years as a bluegrass duo.
  • Today in 1989, Ronnie Milsap topped the country charts with “Don’t You Ever Get Tired Of Hurting Me?”
  • Today in 1992, the “No Fences” album by Garth Brooks was certified for sales of seven-million copies.
  • Today in 1994, Martina McBride made her “Tonight Show” debut.
  • Today in 1994, Neal McCoy scored his first number one single with “No Doubt About It.”
  • Today in 1999, Jo Dee Messina made her debut on the “Tonight Show with Jay Leno.”
  • Today in 2000, Theresa Crump married Joe Diffie at Nashville’s Opryland Hotel, with her pet Chihuahua, Lolo, serving as the ring bearer.
  • Today in 2001, “Doc,” starring Billy Ray Cyrus as Clint Cassidy, had its premiere on PAX TV.
  • Today in 2002, Pat Green was hospitalized in Brownsville, Texas after he was attacked by two men on a beach in South Padre.
  • Today in 2002, Tim McGraw’s single “The Cowboy In Me” took the top spot on both the “Billboard” and “Radio & Records'” country charts. With “Bring On The Rain,” his vocal collaboration with Jo Dee Messina at number one on “Billboard” the week before, this made Tim the first artist to have back-to-back singles at the top spot on the “Billboard” Hot country Singles Chart since electronic monitoring began.
  • Today in 2003, Dolly Parton was presented with the 2003 Governor’s Awards in the Arts Lifetime Achievement Award.
  • Today in 2003, at the second annual CMT Flameworthy Video Music Awards, Faith Hill, Toby Keith, and Shania Twain each got five nominations, and The Dixie Chicks, Martina McBride, Tim McGraw, and Keith Urban each got four.
  • Today in 2004, Naomi, Wynonna, and Ashley Judd received the National Award at the Kentucky Governor’s Awards in the Arts ceremony.
  • Today in 2005, The Oak Ridge Boys performed “The Star-Spangled Banner” on ABC’s “Good Morning America” to help launch the National Anthem Project, an initiative to teach Americans the lyrics to the song.
  • Today in 2005, “Black Cloud,” a film written and directed by Rick Schroder opened, featuring Tim McGraw playing a sheriff.
  • Today in 2006, “Your Man” by Josh Turner hit the top of the charts.
  • Today in 2006, Don Williams performed his last Nashville concert. Keith Urban opened, and Williams was joined by Josh Turner for “Lord, I Hope This Day Is Good.”
  • Today in 2007, Jo Dee Messina sang “Heaven Was Needing a Hero” on ABC’s “Extreme Makeover: Home Edition,” in honor of 16-year-old Ransom Tipton-Smith, who lost his life in a car accident two years earlier.
  • Today in 2008, Clint Black released his first digital EP, “The Long Cool EP,” which featured his cover of The Hollies’ “Long Cool Woman (In A Black Dress),” “The Strong One,” and his duet with wife Lisa, “You Still Get To Me.”
  • Today in 2008, Eddy Arnold’s wife, Sally Gayhart Arnold, passed away at a Nashville-area hospital. She had been admitted to the hospital a few days earlier with breathing difficulties. She was 87. At the time of her death Arnold was also in the hospital, recovering from hip replacement surgery he underwent a week earlier.
  • Today in 2009, Darius Rucker and Vic Chesnutt were among the performers a tribute concert honoring R.E.M. at Carnegie Hall in New York.
  • Today in 2010, Lady Antebellum played the second of a two-night stand at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium. The date was originally slated to be the trio’s headlining debut at the venue, but the demand for tickets to the show prompted a second show, scheduled for March 10th.
  • Today in 2011, Billy Ray Cyrus decided to try to reconcile his marriage with wife Tish, and filed papers to stop divorce proceedings.
  • Today in 2011, Jewel, who was five-months pregnant, was driving in Stephenville, Texas when her SUV was hit by a volunteer fire truck. The singer suffered minor injuries in the crash, and her unborn child was fine. Jewel credited her sturdy vehicle for keeping them safe.
  • Today in 2011, Craig Morgan performed at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Alaska at the start of a USO tour that visits six nations over the next week.
  • Today in 2013, Tim McGraw and Taylor Swift released “Highway Don’t Care,” which also features Keith Urban on guitar.
  • Today in 2015, Maren Morris wrote “My Church” and recorded the final vocals the same day in Los Angeles with songwriter/producer busbee.
  • Today in 2017, Dailey & Vincent joined the Grand Ole Opry.
  • Today in 2018, Tim McGraw collapsed on stage in Dublin, Ireland, after his performance of “Humble And Kind.” Wife Faith Hill later announced her husband was suffering from dehydration and the concert was cut short.
  • Today in 2019, the Whitney Houston single, “I Will Always Love You” – which was written and originally recorded by Dolly Parton – was certified eight-times platinum by the RIAA.

MEET THE H & S FEED & COUNTRY STORE PET OF THE WEEK: “AKUA”

This week’s H & S Feed & Country Store Pet of the Week is “Akua”, a 2 year old Retriever, Labrador/Mix. Akua has a sweet disposition, she’s playful, and would be great with kids. Akua gets along with other dogs and cats too! She’s fully vetted, vaccinated, spayed, and ready to meet you!

If you’d like to set up an appointment to meet Akua or any of the pets at Stephen Memorial Animal Shelter, visit https://www.stephenmemorial.org/ and fill out an adoption application.

Check out our visit about Akua with Terry Gott from Stephen Memorial Animal Shelter here:

Attack on Ukrainian hospital draws outrage as talks stall

By EVGENIY MALOLETKA and MSTYSLAV CHERNOV

MARIUPOL, Ukraine (AP) — A Russian airstrike on a Mariupol maternity hospital that killed three people drew outrage on Thursday, with Ukrainian and Western officials branding it a war crime. As talks to reach a broad cease-fire failed, emergency workers renewed efforts to get vital food and medical supplies into besieged cities, and to get traumatized residents out.

Ukrainian authorities said a child was among the dead in Wednesday’s attack in the crucial southern port of Mariupol. Another 17 people were wounded, including women waiting to give birth, doctors and children buried in the rubble.

Images of pregnant women covered in dust and blood dominated news reports in many countries, and brought a new wave of horror at the 2-week-old war sparked by Russia’s invasion, which has killed thousands of soldiers and civilians, driven more than 2 million people from Ukraine and shaken the foundations of European security.

Millions more have been displaced inside the country. Kyiv mayor Vitali Klitschko said Thursday that about 2 million people — half the residents of the capital’s metropolitan area — have left the city, which has become virtually a a fortress.

“Every street, every house … is being fortified,” he said in televised remarks. “Even people who in their lives never intended to change their clothes, now they are in uniform with machine guns in their hands.”

Bombs also fell on two hospitals in a city west of Kyiv on Wednesday, its mayor said. The World Health Organization said it has confirmed 18 attacks on medical facilities since the Russian invasion began two weeks ago.

As the war entered its third week, Western officials said Russian forces have made little progress on the ground in recent days. But they have intensified the bombardment of Mariupol and other cities, trapping hundreds of thousands of people, with food and water running short.

Temporary cease-fires to allow evacuations and humanitarian aid have often faltered, with Ukraine accusing Russia of continuing their bombardments. But Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said 35,000 people managed to get out on Wednesday from several besieged towns, and more efforts were underway on Thursday from towns and cities in eastern and southern Ukraine — including Mariupol — as well as the Kyiv suburbs.

The Mariupol city council posted a video Thursday showing buses driving down a highway, with a note saying that a convoy bringing food and medicine was on the way despite several days of thwarted efforts to reach the city.

“Everyone is working to get help to the people of Mariupol. And it will come,” said Mayor Vadym Boychenko.

Images from the city, where hundreds have died and workers hurried to bury some of the bodies in a mass grave, have drawn condemnation from around the world. The living have resorted to breaking into shops for food or melting snow for water. The city has been without heat for days as nighttime temperatures fall below freezing and daytime ones hover just above it.

When the series of blasts hit the children’s and maternity hospital in Mariupol, the ground shook more than a mile away. Explosions blew out windows and ripped away much of the front of one building. Police and soldiers rushed to the scene to evacuate victims, carrying a bleeding woman with a swollen belly on a stretcher past burning and mangled cars. Another woman wailed as she clutched her child.

Britain’s Armed Forces minister, James Heappey, said that whether hitting the hospital was “indiscriminate” fire into a built-up area or a deliberate targeting, “it is a war crime.”

U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris, on a visit to Ukraine’s neighbor Poland, backed calls for an international war-crimes investigation into the invasion, saying “the eyes of the world are on this war and what Russia has done in terms of this aggression and these atrocities.”

Polish President Andrzej Duda called the strike on the hospital an “act of barbarity” and said “it is obvious to us that in Ukraine Russians are committing war crimes.”

Regional Ukrainian police official Volodymir Nikulin, standing in the ruins, called the Mariupol attack “a war crime without any justification.”

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov dismissed concerns about civilian casualties as “pathetic shrieks” from Russia’s enemies. He claimed without providing evidence that the Mariupol hospital had been seized by far-right radical fighters who were using it as a base — despite the fact that photographs from the aftermath show pregnant women and children at the site.

Several rounds of talks have not stopped the fighting, and a meeting in a Turkish Mediterranean resort between Lavrov and his Ukrainian counterpart Dmytro Kuleba failed to yield much common ground.

In their highest-level talks since the war began, the two sides discussed a 24-hour cease-fire but did not make progress, Kuleba said. He said Russia was still seeking “surrender from Ukraine.”

“This is not what they are going to get,” he said, adding that he was willing to continue the dialogue.

French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz called for an “immediate cease-fire” in a phone call with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday.

Lavrov also said Russia was ready for more negotiations but showed no sign of softening Moscow’s demands. He said Putin could meet with Zelenskyy but only after further negotiations about Russia’s broader grievances.

Russia has alleged that western-looking, U.S.-backed Ukraine posed a threat to its security — but Western officials suspect Putin would like to install a government friendly to Moscow in Kyiv as part of efforts to draw the ex-Soviet state back into its orbit.

Russia’s military is currently struggling, facing stronger than expected Ukrainian resistance and heavier losses of its own troops. But Putin’s invading force of more than 150,000 troops retains possibly insurmountable advantages in firepower as it bears down on key cities.

Despite often heavy shelling on populated areas, American military officials reported little change on the ground over the previous 24 hours, other than Russian progress against the cities of Kharkiv in the east and Mykolaiv in the south, in heavy fighting.

Western countries have sought to hasten the war’s end by imposing punishing sanctions on Russia, and a cascade of global companies have abandoned the country, plunging its economy into isolation.

Britain added more oligarchs to its sanctions list on Thursday, including Roman Abramovich, the billionaire owner of Premier League soccer club Chelsea. The government said Abramovich’s assets — including Chelsea — were frozen, he was banned from visiting the U.K. and barred from transactions with U.K. individuals and businesses.

The fighting has repeatedly raised the specter of a nuclear disaster. It knocked out power to the decommissioned Chernobyl nuclear plant on Wednesday, raising fears about the spent radioactive fuel stored there that must be kept cool. But the U.N. nuclear watchdog agency said it saw “no critical impact on safety.”

Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk pleaded Thursday with the Russian military to allow access for repair crews to restore electricity to the plant, and to fix a damaged gas pipeline in the south that left Mariupol and other towns without heat.

___

Associated Press journalists Yuras Karmanau in Lviv, Ukraine, and Felipe Dana and Andrew Drake in Kyiv, Ukraine, contributed along with other reporters around the world.

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Follow the AP’s coverage of the Ukraine crisis at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

Casey’s CEO says gas prices haven’t slowed buying yet

BY 

RADIO IOWA – The Ankeny-based Casey’s convenience store chain reported net income was up 66% in the third quarter compared to last year as gasoline and in-store sales were both up.

Gas prices in Iowa have increased by 46 cents a gallon in the last week — but Casey’s CEO Darren Rebelez says sales haven’t dropped off.  “This will seem counterintuitive, but when you see prices rapidly increasing like we have over the last week — the consume behavior tends to be more of aggressive buying as opposed to not aggressive buying — because people are afraid it is going to be 20 cents more a gallon tomorrow as it was today,” Rebelez explains.

Rebelez spoke about the gas situation during a conference call for investors on the third-quarter results. “Our gallons have increased far beyond where our current trend line had been going prior to all this happening. Now, at some point when it hits a peak –people are going to have full gas tanks and we’ll see a week or so lag of full volume, and it will start to normalize again,” he says.

Rebelez says things need to be kept in perspective as the gas price approaches $4 a gallon. “The last time was in July of 2008. Certainly, that was during the financial crisis and it peaked out at four dollars and six cents a gallon. By today’s dollars — that would be five dollars and 30 cents a gallon,” Rebelez says.

He says the economic situation is much different now than it was when gas hit the $4 mark.
“All four dollars aren’t created equal,” Rebelez says, “we would need to get to well over five dollars a gallon before we start to see the same dynamic that we saw in 2008. In 2008, you did start to see some demand destruction — but there was also a pretty significant recession taking place at the time. Unemployment at that time was six percent and rising — ultimately getting to ten percent.”

He says unemployment now is below four percent — and there is a labor shortage with employers trying to lure in workers. Rebelez doesn’t think we are at the point where people will cut back on buying gas. “There is a price at which people will start to change behavior — but we think that price is closer to five dollars a gallon than it is to four dollars a gallon right now,” he says.

Rebelez says the midwest market Casey’s serves is different from the national gas market. “The national numbers for retail prices of fuel are heavily influenced by the northeast and the west coast — which are well over four dollars a gallon,” Rebelez says.  “As we sit here today in our market, we are sitting just under four dollars a gallon across our 16-state geography. And the midwest tends to be pretty low relative to others. And part of that is because we blend a lot of ethanol, and ethanol is trading about 70 to 80 cents below gasoline.”

Casey’s saw its fuel gallons sold increase nearly six percent in the third quarter — with a margin of 38.3 cents per gallon compared to nearly 33 cents a gallon one year ago. Total fuel gross profit increased nearly 40 percent to $237.9 million dollars compared to the prior year.

Oskaloosa city manager search continues

The City of Oskaloosa continues to search for a new city manager following Michael Schrock’s resignation back in October.  Oskaloosa Mayor David Krutzfeldt says another city is affecting Oskaloosa’s hiring schedule.

“The consultants we’re working with have said that a number of the people they anticipate applying for the job here in Oskaloosa are actually applying for an opening in Indianola.  And Indianola won’t be done with their search until about the end of the month.  So they’ve asked to extend ours out two more weeks to allow for more resumes to come in.”

Schrock resigned to take a job as assistant city manager in Ankeny.  City Clerk Amy Miller is filling in as Oskaloosa’s interim city manager.

Winter Weather Advisory in effect for southern Iowa

A Winter Weather Advisory remains in effect for Wapello and Monroe Counties in the No Coast Network listening area until 6pm Thursday (3/10).  This advisory also stretches to the Missouri state line and includes Chariton, Osceola and Centerville.  The National Weather Service says one to two inches of snow is expected in the advisory area….with up to three inches of new snow near the state line.

Thomas Rhett’s Wife Had No Idea About His New Album

Back in January Thomas Rhett announced he’ll be releasing the new album “Where We Started” on April 1st. Well, apparently that’s news to his wife Lauren.

Thomas just shared a new TikTok video, with Lauren appearing to be surprised by the news of the release.

“I knew you had Side A and Side B because that makes sense,” she says in the clip referring to his “Country Again” records. “Then you said you were coming out with this middle one … It was shocking to me.”

Lauren, though, has a good excuse for not knowing. “My life revolves around your children,” Lauren argues, referring to their four daughters.

Over the video Thomas writes, “Such a great supporter of my career” captioning it, “So anyway … I have a new album coming out April 1st.” Check it out to the right.

  • ONE MORE THING! As we said, Thomas and Lauren have four daughters, six-year-old Willa, four-year-old Ada, two-year-old Lennon and four-month-old Lillie, They adopted Willa from Uganda and Thomas says another adoption is a “hundred percent” in their future. With four kids under six right now, Thomas says they’ve decided to “take a pause for four or five years,” but he adds, “it’s been put on our hearts very heavily to do that again. We just don’t really know when.”

Source: Thomas Rhett

This day in Country Music History

  • Today in 1973, Tammy Wynette’s “Till I Get It Right” topped the Billboard country singles chart.
  • Today in 1977, “The Best Of The Statler Brothers” album by Statler Brothers was certified gold.
  • Today in 1979, invited by Porter Wagoner, legendary R&B star James Brown played the Grand Ole Opry. His 17-minute set consisted of “Your Cheatin’ Heart” and “Tennessee Waltz.” Some Opry members complained, but Barbara Mandrell said he should’ve been invited to perform five years earlier.
  • Today in 1981, “I Love A Rainy Night” single by Eddie Rabbitt was certified gold.
  • Today in 1992, Vince Gill’s “I Never Knew Lonely” album was released.
  • Today in 1992, Willie Nelson scored a platinum album with “Willie Nelson Sings Kristofferson” and a multi-platinum album with “Greatest Hits (And Some That Will Be).”
  • Today in 1993, k.d. lang’s album, “Ingénue,” was certified platinum.
  • Today in 1993, Travis Tritt’s “T-R-O-U-B-L-E” album was certified platinum.
  • Today in 1995, Aaron Tippin’s debut album, “You’ve Got To Stand For Something” went gold.
  • Today in 1995, Clint Black topped the country charts with “Wherever You Go.”
  • Today in 2000, Vince Gill and Amy Grant were married in a Nashville ceremony complete with bagpipe players.
  • Today in 2001, Diamond Rio’s “One More Day” reached #1 in Billboard.
  • Today in 2003, Dixie Chick Natalie Maines sparked a furor Stateside when she told a London concert crowd, “Just so you know, we’re ashamed the President of the United States is from Texas.” The insanity that followed coined the term “Dixie Chicked” as the band’s name essentially became a dirty word. CDs were burned, and their popularity dropped like a bomb.
  • Today in 2005, CMT debuted Jo Dee Messina’s “My Give A Damn’s Busted.”
  • Today in 2007, Trace Adkins’ “Ladies Love Country Boys” topped the Billboard country chart.
  • Today in 2010, Josh Turner’s album “Deep South” was released.
  • Today in 2014, Cole Swindell’s single, “Hope You Get Lonely Tonight,” hit the airwaves.
  • Today in 2015, Tim McGraw appeared on ABC’s “Repeat After Me,” where an off-camera comedian feeds him lines to spoof an unsuspecting medical aide. Quoting from “Live Like You Were Dying,” he tells the woman, “I’ve never been skydiving, or Rocky Mountain climbing, or bullriding, but I have practiced kissing on my elbow.”
  • Today in 2017, Michelle Wright performed a benefit concert for an animal shelter at the Capitol Theatre in Chatham, Ontario.

 

Top lawmakers reach deal on Ukraine aid, $1.5T spending

By ALAN FRAM

WASHINGTON (AP) — Congressional leaders reached a bipartisan deal early Wednesday providing $13.6 billion to help Ukraine and European allies plus billions more to battle the pandemic as part of an overdue $1.5 trillion measure financing federal agencies for the rest of this year.

Though a tiny fraction of the massive bill, the money countering a Russian blitzkrieg that’s devastated parts of Ukraine and prompted Europe’s worst refugee crisis since World War II ensured the measure would pass with robust bipartisan support. President Joe Biden requested $10 billion for military, humanitarian and economic aid last week, and Democratic and Republican backing was so staunch that the figure grew to $12 billion Monday and $13.6 billion just a day later.

“We’re going to support them against tyranny, oppression, violent acts of subjugation,” Biden said at the White House.

Party leaders planned to whip the 2,741-page measure through the House on Wednesday and the Senate by week’s end, though that chamber’s exact timing was unclear. Lawmakers were spurred by the urgency of helping Ukraine before Russia’s military might makes it too late.

They also faced a Friday deadline to approve the government-wide spending measure or face a weekend election-year federal shutdown. As a backstop against delays, the House planned to pass a bill Wednesday keeping agencies afloat through March 15.

Over $4 billion of the Ukraine aid was to help the country and Eastern European nations cope with the 2 million refugees who’ve already fled the fighting. Another $6.7 billion was for the deployment of U.S. troops and equipment to the region and to transfer American military items to Ukraine and U.S. allies, and there was economic aid and money to enforce economic sanctions against Russia as well.

“War in Europe has focused the energies of Congress to getting something done and getting it done fast,” said Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said the measure would provide loan guarantees to Poland to help it replace aircraft it is sending Ukraine. “It’s been like pulling teeth” to get Democrats to agree to some of the defense spending, he said. But he added, “It’s an important step. It needs to be passed. It needs to be passed quickly.”

The bipartisan rallying behind the Ukraine aid was just one manifestation of Congress’ eagerness to help the beleaguered country, though not all of it has been harmonious.

Republicans accused Biden of moving too slowly to help Ukraine and NATO allies and to impose sanctions against Russia and its president, Vladimir Putin. Democrats countered that time was needed to bring along European allies that rely heavily on Russian energy sources. And a bipartisan push to ban Russian oil imports had become nearly unstoppable before Biden announced Tuesday that he would do that on his own.

The huge overall bill was stocked with victories for both parties.

For Democrats, it provides $730 billion for domestic programs, 6.7% more than last year, the biggest boost in four years. Republicans won $782 billion for defense, 5.6% over last year’s levels.

In contrast, Biden’s 2022 budget last spring proposed a 16% increase for domestic programs and less than 2% more for defense — numbers that were doomed from the start thanks to Democrats’ slender congressional majorities.

The bill was also fueled by large numbers of hometown projects for both parties’ lawmakers, which Congress had banned since 2011 but were revived this year. The spending — once called earmarks, now dubbed community projects — includes money for courthouses in Connecticut and Tennessee and repairs to a post office in West Virginia. And it names a federal building in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, after Sen. Richard Shelby, the state’s senior GOP senator, a chief author of the bill who’s retiring after six terms.

Democrats won $15.6 billion for a fresh round of spending for vaccines, testing and treatments for COVID-19, including $5 billion for fighting the pandemic around the world. That was below Biden’s $22.5 billion request.

Republicans said they’d forced Democrats to pay for the entire amount by pulling back money from COVID-19 relief bills enacted previously. Much of the money was to go to help states and businesses cope with the toll of the pandemic.

There’s added money for child care, job training, economic development in poorer communities and more generous Pell grants for low-income undergraduates. Public health and biomedical research would get increases, including $194 million for Biden’s “Cancer Moonshot” effort to cure the disease.

Citizenship and Immigration Services would get funds to reduce huge backlogs of people trying to enter the U.S. There would be fresh efforts to bolster renewable energy and curb pollution, with some of that aimed specifically at communities of color.

There is added funding to build affordable housing. And the measure distributes billions of dollars initially provided by the bipartisan infrastructure bill enacted last year for road, rail and airport projects.

The bill “delivers transformative federal investments to help lower the cost of living for working families, create American jobs, and provide a lifeline for the vulnerable,” said House Appropriations Committee Chair Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn.

The bill renews programs protecting women against domestic violence and requires many infrastructure operators to report significant cyber attacks and ransomware demands to federal authorities. The Defense Department would have to report on extremist ideologies within the ranks.

The measure retains strict decades-old curbs against using federal money for nearly all abortions. It has $300 million in military assistance for Ukraine and $300 million to help nearby countries like the Baltic nations and Poland. Service members would get 2.7% pay raises, and Navy shipbuilding would get a boost in a counter to China.

It “rejects liberal policies and effectively addresses Republican priorities,” said Shelby, top Republican on the Senate Appropriations Committee.

Since the government’s fiscal year began last Oct. 1, agencies have been running on spending levels approved during Donald Trump’s final weeks in the White House. Congress has approved three short-term bills since then keeping agency doors open.

___

Associated Press writer Farnoush Amiri contributed to this report.

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