California moving forward with partisan redistricting effort to counter Texas’ move

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By MICHAEL R. BLOOD and TRÂN NGUYỄN, Associated Press

LOS ANGELES (AP) — California Gov. Gavin Newsom is calling for a Nov. 4 special election on new U.S. House maps designed to win more Democratic seats.

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His move is in response to Republican efforts to pick up five seats in Texas. Newsom released a campaign ad on social media Thursday as Democrats kicked off a press conference.

State lawmakers technically need to declare the special election and they plan to do so next week.

Democrats have not yet released their draft maps, but they aim to pick up five more seats.

The maps need voter approval. That’s because voters previously granted the power to draw maps to an independent commission instead of lawmakers.

Kathy Cargill selling several Duluth properties on Park Point

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DULUTH — Having torn down all but two of the 14 homes she purchased on Park Point, leaving behind fenced-off empty lots and creating a public outcry last year, a billionaire owner is now selling several of her properties.

Kathy Cargill amassed the properties, totaling some 24 parcels, from 2021 to 2024, under North Shore LS LLC, but kept her plans for the lots under wraps, threatening to sue the News Tribune when asked about it and telling the Wall Street Journal later that she wouldn’t hold to her original plans of beautifying Park Point and perhaps bringing pickleball courts and a coffee shop to the neighborhood after Duluth Mayor Roger Reinert expressed concern over the loss of residential properties in the city.

It appears that at least some of her properties are destined for new owners.

A sale is pending at two locations, 1301 S. Lake Ave. and 2217 Minnesota Ave., and two remain on the market: 1521 Minnesota Ave. and 1439 Minnesota Ave. The Minnesota Star Tribune first reported the properties listed for sale.

All three are listed by Sotheby’s International Realty.

Reached by phone Wednesday, Marc Owens-Kurtz, the properties’ listing agent, hung up when a News Tribune reporter introduced himself.

Cargill did not respond to a voicemail seeking comment Wednesday.

On the Lake Superior side near the S-curve and 12th Street Beach, the sale of 1301 S. Lake Ave. includes two additional, adjacent parcels: 1302 Minnesota Ave. and 1314 Minnesota Ave. Each empty parcel once contained a home, but those were torn down after Cargill purchased them.

The combined three-parcel property is listed for $850,000. Cargill purchased the homes for a combined $1.73 million in late 2022 and early 2023.

The other under contract is 2217 Minnesota Ave., one of two homes Cargill purchased but did not raze on Park Point. The 2,742-square-foot, four-bedroom, two-bath home contains two parcels on the harbor side and is listed for $799,900. Cargill purchased it in March 2024 for $655,000.

Another four parcels are listed for sale at 1521 Minnesota Ave. The empty property once contained a home, which Cargill removed. It is listed for $575,000. Cargill purchased it for $465,000 in February 2024.

Two parcels at 1439 Minnesota Ave. are for sale for $499,900. Its home was also torn down after Cargill purchased it in January 2024 for $465,000.

As of Wednesday evening, Cargill’s other Park Point properties — a $2.5 million mansion and 12 other empty parcels — had not been listed for sale.

RELATED: Joe Soucheray: Kathy Cargill had me at ‘McLaren’ …

Cargill spurred outrage and national interest in late 2024 and early 2025, beginning with the News Tribune’s first report on her purchases, in which she described the houses she tore down as “pieces of crap.”

Then, when the Wall Street Journal spoke with her, she doubled down and called Duluth a “small-minded community” and that Reinert “peed in his Cheerios” by requesting to discuss plans for several properties.

Duluthians responded with a food drive for Cheerios donations.

Since then, Cargill’s activity on Park Point has slowed, and purchases by North Shore LS have stopped.

She married James R. Cargill II, who Forbes identifies as one of 12 billionaire heirs to Cargill, an agribusiness juggernaut that’s the nation’s largest privately held company. The magazine estimated James Cargill’s net worth at $4.5 billion, placing him in 288th place on its list of the nation’s wealthiest people.

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Supreme Court allows enforcement of Mississippi social media age verification law

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By MARK SHERMAN, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court on Thursday refused for now to block enforcement of a Mississippi law aimed at regulating the use of social media by children, an issue of growing national concern.

The justices rejected an emergency appeal from a tech industry group, NetChoice, that is challenging laws passed in Mississippi and other states that require social media users to verify their ages. The court had been asked to keep the law on hold while a lawsuit plays out.

There were no noted dissents from the brief, unsigned order. But Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote to say that NetChoice could eventually succeed in showing that the law is indeed unconstitutional.

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Kavanaugh said he nevertheless agreed with the court’s decision because the tech group had not shown it would suffer legal harm if the measure went into effect as the lawsuit unfolded.

NetChoice argues that the Mississippi law threatens privacy rights and unconstitutionally restricts the free expression of users of all ages.

A federal judge agreed and prevented the 2024 law from taking effect. But a three-judge panel of the 5th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals ruled in July that the law could be enforced while the lawsuit proceeds.

It’s the latest legal development as court challenges play out against similar laws in states across the country.

Parents and even some teenagers are growing increasingly concerned about the effects of social media use on young people. Supporters of the new laws have said they are needed to help curb the explosive use of social media among young people, and what researchers say is an associated increase in depression and anxiety.

Mississippi Attorney General Lynn Fitch told the justices that age verification could help protect young people from “sexual abuse, trafficking, physical violence, sextortion, and more,” activities that Fitch noted are not protected by the First Amendment.

NetChoice represents some of the country’s most high-profile technology companies, including Google, which owns YouTube; Snap Inc., the parent company of Snapchat; and Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram.

NetChoice has filed similar lawsuits in ArkansasFloridaGeorgiaOhio and Utah.

New York allowed pot shops to open too close to schools. Now they might have to move

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By ANTHONY IZAGUIRRE

Since New York began licensing recreational marijuana stores about three years ago, the state has been using a simple tactic to ensure pot shops are kept a legally-mandated distance from local schools: Measure from the door of the dispensary to the door of the school.

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But officials recently made a startling admission: They’d misread the law and had been measuring incorrectly the whole time. Now, about 100 cannabis shops are in limbo, crossing their fingers for a legislative fix while wondering whether they’ll have to relocate.

The news was like dropping “a grenade in the laps” of business owners, said Osbert Orduña, who owns a New York City dispensary called The Cannabis Place that is now deemed to be too close to a nearby preschool.

“The way that they executed this was a complete and utter failure in leadership,” he said.

The admission is just the latest bungle from New York’s beleaguered legal marijuana program, which has been hamstrung by legal challenges, a slow rollout and gaps in the law that allowed an illicit market to flourish.

Business owners found out about the issue from the Office of Cannabis Management last month, which admitted it should have been measuring from the edge of a school’s property line, rather than its entrance, to ensure weed stores were kept at least 500 feet away.

“To give you this news, and for the weight of it, I am incredibly sorry,” said Felicia A.B. Reid, acting executive director of the cannabis agency, said in notices to the businesses.

A sign is displayed outside of Yerba Buena in the Brooklyn borough of New York, Tuesday, Aug. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

The error impacts a sizable share of the state’s roughly 450 cannabis dispensaries.

About 60 of those were licensed using the erroneous measurement system, mostly in New York City, plus around another 40 that have licenses but are yet to open their doors.

On top of that, there are almost 50 other businesses that have applied for licenses under the incorrect measurement system and are awaiting final approval from the agency. The state has set aside a pot of money where applicants can get up to $250,000 to help relocate.

The existing shops have been told they can remain open for now, and even continue to operate with their expired licenses as long as the businesses file an application for a renewal.

Regulators say they are urging state lawmakers to create a permanent fix that will allow the shops to stay put. But they have also noted that is not guaranteed. The state Legislature isn’t scheduled to sit again until January.

Meanwhile, business owners say they’re being forced to operate in a gray area.

Jillian Dragutsky, who opened a dispensary called Yerba Buena in Brooklyn a few months ago, worries the issue still jeopardizes a dispensary’s ability to bank, get insurance and purchase inventory since they are supposed to have valid licenses in place.

Jillian Dragutsky, CEO and founder of Yerba Buena, talks with a customer at her marijuana dispensary in the Brooklyn borough of New York, Tuesday, Aug. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

“How do you grow your business not knowing where you’re going to be a few months from now?” Dragutsky said.

In a statement, the cannabis office said businesses can obtain “proof of a valid license or a letter of good standing to operate” by contacting the agency.

An internal review of the cannabis office released last year detailed numerous problems at the agency, including inexperienced management and shifting licensure rules, while state leaders promised an administrative overhaul.

Gov. Kathy Hochul, who has previously said the program has been a “disaster,” called the school proximity problem “a major screw up” and vowed to find a legislative fix.

“These people have worked hard. They’ve waited a long time. They put their life savings into something that they thought was going to help them support their families,” she said. “So what I’m been doing is first of all reassuring them that you’re going to be OK. Secondly, we need to get the law changed to have a fix.”