skip to main content
skip to newscasts

Thursday, March 13, 2025

Public News Service Logo
facebook instagram linkedin reddit youtube twitter
view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

As shutdown deadline nears, Senate Democrats say they won't vote for GOP-led bill; After USDA funding freeze, Colorado farmers brace for tariffs; NM protests against Musk's Tesla dealerships expand to Sandoval County; Local economic partnership helps MT town embrace new work sectors.

view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

Senate Democrats refuse to support GOP budget bill. The EU and Canada respond to steel and aluminum tariffs and some groups work to counter Christian Nationalism, which they call a threat to democracy.

view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

Many fear the Trump administration's effort to raise money fast could include sale of public lands, thousands of farmers wait for payouts frozen by the USDA, and a shortage has rural America's doctors coming out of retirement.

Library kiosks in TX expand book access in the state

play audio
Play

Monday, October 14, 2024   

With book bans in public schools increasing, public libraries have a larger purpose. The Town of Little Elm in northeast Texas has found a unique way to help people get a library book.

Little Elm is the latest city in Texas to provide the public with a 24-hour library kiosk to dispense books and DVDs.

The library's Managing Director of Library Services Diana Slavinsky said there is only one main library in the town, and they wanted to offer services to more people.

"The kiosk itself is like a vending machine," said Slavinsky. "There are 340 titles on display, and you can use your library card to check out materials from there. It - like - rotates around like a carousel. It displays everything nicely, so it's a fun kiosk."

Other library systems across the state offering kiosks include Garland, Grand Prairie, Harlingen, and Houston.

The Little Elm Kiosk is available to anyone with a library card, which are free for all Texas residents.

Slavinski said books from the main library can be transferred to the kiosk for after-hours pick-ups.

She added that with book bans increasing, she said she hopes the kiosk is a way to ensure anyone who wants a book can get it.

"I think always as a library we want to get books in hands," said Slavinsky. "We want to get library cards in hands. We definitely see this as a method of improving access to materials. "

House Bill 900, which was passed by the Texas Legislature in 2023, restricts what books students can check out of school libraries - leading districts across the state to take hundreds of books off school shelves.



get more stories like this via email

more stories
"In Utah, we've been consistently told that transitioning away from coal would devastate our rural communities, but this report reveals a different reality," said Luis Miranda, Utah-based Campaign Organizer for the Sierra Club. (Adobe Stock)

Environment

play sound

The Sierra Club's Utah chapter said electric utility PacifiCorp's long-term plan to embrace renewable energy has changed and is now placing more relia…


Social Issues

play sound

New data show fewer than half of rural Gen Z'ers believe they can find a good job in their community, compared to nearly 70% of their urban peers…

Environment

play sound

As federal funding for climate initiatives faces steep cuts, nonprofits and philanthropic organizations are stepping into the breach, calling out the …


The U.S. solar industry employs more than 263,000 workers, with jobs in installation, manufacturing, and research continuing to grow. (rh2010/Adobe Stock)

Environment

play sound

Michigan ranks 26th in the U.S. for total installed solar capacity, while global capacity rose 21% from 2023. However, there are industry concerns …

Social Issues

play sound

Educators are expressing outrage at the mass layoffs of half the U.S. Department of Education workforce. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon said …

Social Issues

play sound

Republicans in Washington, D.C. remain focused on greatly reducing federal spending. However, a backlash is mounting in Congressional districts…

Social Issues

play sound

Maryland ranks second in the nation for charging children who have committed crimes as adults. But one expert says a more trauma-informed response in …

 

Phone: 303.448.9105 Toll Free: 888.891.9416 Fax: 208.247.1830 Your trusted member- and audience-supported news source since 1996 Copyright © 2021