Judge halts White House’s rollback of presidential records-retention policies

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By Katelyn Polantz, Tierney Sneed, CNN

(CNN) — A federal judge said Wednesday that White House staff must preserve their official records, including communications that they send via non-official text message services, pushing back on attempts to free President Donald Trump from record-keeping obligations that were set by Congress.

The 54-page opinion from Judge John Bates of the DC District Court, puts on hold an attempt by the administration to roll back the Presidential Records Act, which was a major reform following the Watergate scandal and the state of then-President Richard Nixon’s records.

“Congress has the enumerated power to regulate presidential records,” Bates wrote.

“While the presidency is a singularly important institution, that gravity does not free it from modest constraint,” the judge added.

Yet Bates declined to put any restrictions directly on the president, the vice president, the National Archives and archivist, the Justice Department or the attorney general.

Still, the court proceedings are also likely to set up major additional challenges in the near future between the autonomy of the presidency, which Trump has extensively moved to expand during his second term in office, against the oversight ability of Congress and the enforcement powers of federal courts.

Attorneys representing presidential scholars, historians, the press and public transparency groups had argued to Bates that presidential records could be destroyed quickly absent court intervention.

“It could happen at any moment,” a lawyer for the American Historical Association and the group American Oversight told Bates in court last week.

Bates also wrote extensively about the history of the Presidential Records Act and the historical value of White House documents.

“The Act democratizes the history of an indispensable institution,” Bates wrote. “Access to those records allows future Presidents to pick up where their predecessors left off, Congress to identify inefficiency and misfeasance, and the public to learn from the mistakes of the past.”

DOJ memo kicks off records fight

The Trump administration launched its attack on the half-century-old Presidential Records Act with a memo last month from the Office of Legal Counsel, a Justice Department office that gives advice to the executive branch.

That internal opinion for the executive branch said the Justice Department concluded the law was unconstitutional. The opinion was shocking for a number of reasons, including for how it seemed to eschew Supreme Court precedent backing Congress’ power to regulate presidential record preservation.

Trump’s current White House counsel, David Warrington, in April issued internal guidance to the president’s staff, saying his guidance replaced the Presidential Records Act. The guidance came just days after the DOJ changed internal executive branch policy to say the Presidential Records Act was unsound, because it was congressional overreach.

Warrington, in his new guidance, didn’t mention the president or vice president’s own records at all. And the guidance only addressed the preservation of email and text messages, rather than all electronic records, which the PRA encompasses. The new guidance appears to leave out disappearing electronic communications like Signal chats, Bates said during his questioning of the attorneys.

Bates’ opinion Wednesday said that the guidance for when text messages should be preserved was out of step with what the law required.

A Justice Department attorney argued in court last week the “lion’s share” of presidential records are being preserved, because work being done by president

Harvest Preparatory Academy anuncia histórica expansión educativa en San Luis

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Abigahil Padilla

SAN LUIS, Ariz. (KYMA) – Con gran entusiasmo y la participación de familias, estudiantes y líderes comunitarios, Harvest Preparatory Academy llevó a cabo ayer por la tarde un importante evento en el campus actual de San Luis para anunciar nuevos detalles sobre la construcción de su futuro complejo educativo en la ciudad.

Durante el evento, celebrado en la cafetería del campus Harvest Prep San Luis, la directora ejecutiva y fundadora de la institución, Deborah Ybarra, presentó oficialmente la visión y avances del proyecto que promete transformar la oferta educativa en la región.

La presentación incluyó información sobre el calendario de construcción, oportunidades de inscripción para nuevas familias y los planes de crecimiento a largo plazo del nuevo campus, considerado uno de los proyectos educativos más ambiciosos para la comunidad de San Luis.

De acuerdo con los detalles compartidos durante el evento, la primera fase del campus tendrá capacidad para aproximadamente 1,200 estudiantes.

Además, el proyecto contempla futuras expansiones que permitirán atender hasta 2,500 alumnos en los próximos años.

Actualmente, Harvest Preparatory Academy es reconocido como el único distrito escolar con calificación “A” en el condado de Yuma y ha sido nombrado como la escuela número uno en Ciencias en Arizona, gracias a sus programas STEM, logros académicos y proyectos de investigación estudiantil.

La actividad reunió a decenas de asistentes interesados en conocer de primera mano el impacto que tendrá el nuevo campus en la comunidad.

Además de la presentación oficial, los presentes pudieron convivir con personal escolar y obtener información sobre el proceso de inscripción para futuros estudiantes.

Con este anuncio, Harvest Preparatory Academy reafirma su compromiso con el crecimiento educativo y el desarrollo de nuevas oportunidades para las familias de San Luis y sus alrededores.

The post Harvest Preparatory Academy anuncia histórica expansión educativa en San Luis appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Nearly a third of National Park island home to rare wildlife has burned in spate of Southern California wildfires

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By Kate S. Petersen, CNN

(CNN) — A large wildfire has burned nearly a third of Santa Rosa Island in California’s Channel Islands National Park — an area home to dozens of rare plants and animals, including some found nowhere else in the world.

The blaze ignited on Friday and has grown to nearly 17,000 acres as of Tuesday evening, making it the largest fire in the state this year, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. It is 26% contained.

The fire has already claimed two historic structures on the island and forced the evacuation of 11 National Park employees on Sunday, according to the Santa Barbara County Fire Department. The island is also closed to visitors.

The fire has also moved through the island’s grove of Torrey Pine trees, a rare and critically endangered native pine species that now only grows naturally on Santa Rosa Island and a small preserve near San Diego, according to the National Park Service. Firefighters are scheduled to assess the grove for damage on Wednesday.

The Channel Islands have been described as akin to the Galápagos in South America, with their isolation allowing for the evolution of unique species. Santa Rosa Island alone is home to around 46 endemic or unique plants and animals, according to the parks service.

Cal Fire reported “extreme fire behavior” on Monday, but winds improved enough on Tuesday to allow aircraft attacks. The fire’s growth was more limited than previous days, according to the National Interagency Fire Center.

Officials say the fire is “human-caused” but still under investigation. Coast Guard Southwest District spokesperson Kenneth Wiese told CNN the investigation is being handled by the National Parks Service.

The US Coast Guard responded to the fire on Friday and rescued a 67-year-old sailor whose boat crashed into rocks there, according to posts on social media. Photos provided to CNN by the Coast Guard show the man standing near the letters “SOS” carved into charred ground.

Thousands under evacuation alerts from Southern California fires

On the mainland, multiple wildfires have prompted evacuations in Southern California.

In Riverside County, evacuations have been ordered for the Bain Fire, which has reached 1,456 acres and was 25% contained as of Wednesday morning. More than 700 people are under evacuation orders, while an additional 18,800 are under evacuation warnings.

Four people were injured in the blaze and taken to the hospital, CalFire spokesperson Maggie Cline De La Rosa told CNN. Three of the injuries were minor and one was a “traumatic injury.” The department did not have additional information on that injury.

Elsewhere in the county, two firefighters and one civilian were also injured in the Verona Fire. The firefighters were transported to the hospital, but the civilian refused transport, De La Rosa said. Evacuation orders have also been issued 1,100 people

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