Person is shot in a high school in Maryland and a suspect is in custody, police say

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ROCKVILLE, Md. (AP) — One person was shot inside a high school in Maryland on Monday as police said that a person was in custody and the school’s campus was on lockdown.

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Police have a person in custody related to the shooting, according to the Montgomery County Department of Police in a post on X.

Officers were dispatched at 2:15 p.m. because of reports of shots fired at Thomas S. Wootton High School in Rockville, a suburb of Washington, D.C., the department said.

“We’re just still in lockdown, the police are here, the kids are all in the classrooms,” said Tabitha Davis, an administrator at the school, who wasn’t able to provide more information in a brief phone interview with The Associated Press.

Rockville is the seat of Montgomery County, Maryland’s most populous.

Governors tackle rising cost of living with relief checks, tax cuts and housing policy

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By GEOFF MULVIHILL, Associated Press

State officials are attempting to address voters’ worries about the rising cost of living, including housing and everyday items such as groceries, utilities and child care.

As governors give their annual state of the state speeches, many of them are designing their messages to speak to constituents’ concerns about affordability.

Because the issue is so broad, there are a lot of things governors can try. But for the same reason, there’s no one policy that’s likely to bridge the gap between stagnated wages and expenses that are growing for many people.

Maine’s Democratic Gov. Janet Mills for example, wants to send $300 relief checks to 725,000 residents. Others are imposing caps on utility hikes or calling for easier ways to build more housing.

FILE – Democratic Gov. Janet Mills delivers her State of the State address, Jan. 30, 2024, at the State House in Augusta, Maine. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty, File)

Affordability is a major concern across US

The idea of improving affordability was at the heart of New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s campaign last year, and it’s resonating nationally.

About half of U.S. adults — 54% — said the cost of groceries was a “major source” of stress in their lives, according to an AP-NORC poll from October. At least 4 in 10 said the cost of housing, their savings, their pay, and the cost of health care were “major” sources of stress in that poll.

AP-NORC polling from December found about 9 in 10 U.S. adults said they had experienced higher prices than usual for groceries in recent months, and about 7 in 10 said that about electricity.

The government’s main measure of inflation shows that average annual prices rose by less than 3% from 2012 until 2021, when prices rose sharply. Since the middle of 2023, annual increases have been hovering around 3% — but price tags are higher than they were before the surge. And some costs — including electricity and housing — have risen faster than the average.

Democrats and Republicans disagree over approach

Republicans have long prioritized tax cuts as a way to give some people relief. Officials in states including Florida, Georgia and North Dakota are aiming to eliminate property taxes for homeowners over time. Kentucky and Mississippi are on long-term paths to get rid of income taxes. Critics of those approaches warn that such moves could increase states’ reliance on sales taxes, which disproportionately affect low-income people.

When President Donald Trump was seeking a return to the White House in 2024, he promised to “make America affordable again” and has recently returned to the theme.

But he’s been critical of the way his political opponents talk about affordability, repeatedly calling it a hoax or scam by Democrats, whom he blames for higher prices.

That made an opening for Democratic governors to criticize the president as out of touch with everyday Americans without uttering his name.

“There are some who have even called affordability a hoax or a con job,” Virginia’s new governor, Abigail Spanberger, said in her address. “And I would invite them to come to Virginia and engage with the families and the business leaders I have met … because the facts tell a different story.”

FILE – California Gov. Gavin Newsom reacts during a news conference in Wasco, Calif., Tuesday, Feb. 3, 2026. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes, File)

Housing may be the biggest affordability factor

California Gov. Gavin Newsom, Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey and Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs, all Democrats, have called for multiprong approaches to affordability with a focus on housing.

In her state of the commonwealth speech last month, Healey called for converting empty offices into apartments and using government-owned property to build housing. Hobbs proposed charging a nightly fee on vacation rentals and using the money it generates to help families with housing and utility costs. Newsom told lawmakers they should pass a law to stop institutional investors from buying homes in bulk.

Francis Torres, director of housing and infrastructure projects at the Bipartisan Policy Center, said that some of the most sweeping actions don’t immediately lead to new housing. “There’s a difference between legalizing housing on paper and the housing actually being built,” he said. And that’s a reason that officials are also trying to offer support with down payments and other methods intended to help in the meantime.

Trump has argued for policies to keep the value of housing high — which protects current homeowners but hurts many renters and people looking to buy their first home.

FILE – U.S. Sen. Mike Braun, R-Ind., announces his run for Indiana governor on Dec. 12, 2022, in Indianapolis. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy, File)

Governors pay attention to rising utility costs

In New Jersey, utility rates were a big part of the conversation in last year’s governor race. When Democrat Mikie Sherrill was sworn in in January, she immediately signed two executive orders: one to freeze utility rates and another aimed at establishing more electricity production, including solar and nuclear power.

Indiana Republican Gov. Mike Braun is supporting a measure that wouldn’t allow investor-owned utilities to increase their profit margins unless they provide customers with affordable energy.

Healey, who is running for reelection this year, announced in her January state of the state speech that all customers’ electric bills would be reduced by 25% and gas bills by 10% in February and March. Part of the electric reduction is to come from a fund that would otherwise pay for clean energy and efficiency projects. Utilities agreed to the rest of the reductions.

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Other approaches include income taxes and higher wages

In Washington state, Democratic Gov. Bob Ferguson, is calling for an income tax on those who make over $1 million a year — in a state that now has no income taxes.

He’s framing it as a way to help other Washington residents with their expenses — by using some of the revenue to pay for an expanded tax credit for working families and to give small business owners a tax break.

Indiana’s Braun said the key to affordability is attracting more and higher-wage jobs to the state, something he said has been happening already, pointing to hourly earnings that grew faster than the national average last year.

In Rhode Island, Democratic Gov. Daniel McKee this month unveiled what he calls an “Affordability for All” agenda that leans heavily on tax policy and includes creating a refundable child tax credit, lowering taxes on gasoline and eliminating them on Social Security, as most states already have.

Associated Press journalists Michael Casey and Linley Sanders contributed to this article.

Daughter of governor candidate Jeff Johnson stabbed to death in St. Cloud

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A 22-year-old St. Cloud woman stabbed to death Saturday has been identified as Hallie Marie Tobler. Tobler is the daughter of former St. Cloud City Council member and 2026 Republican gubernatorial candidate Jeff Johnson, who announced early Monday that he is suspending his campaign, according to the Republican Party of Minnesota.

The Midwest Medical Examiner’s Office, which performed an autopsy on Tobler’s body, determined her injuries to multiple stab wounds. A man found injured at the scene has been identified as Hallie’s husband, 23-year-old Dylan Michael Tobler, also of St. Cloud.

In a January appearance in Stearns County District Court, Dylan Tobler pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct, a petty misdemeanor, stemming from a June 2025 incident in which he choked Hallie Tobler.

Based on the investigation, authorities believe Dylan Tobler is responsible for Hallie’s injuries and death, as well as his own injuries. Dylan Tobler remains at the St. Cloud Hospital in stable condition, where he is in police custody.

Upon his release from the hospital he will be held at Stearns County Jail on charges related to the homicide, according to police. The investigation is still active, and the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension is assisting.

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St. Paul: I-94 closure scrapped Saturday as workers struggled with bridge beam

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After back-to-back weather delays, the long-planned weekend closure of Interstate 94 east of downtown St. Paul was short-lived.

This time, plummeting temperatures were not the culprit for yet another delay in the replacement of the Kellogg Boulevard/Third Street bridge.

After closing a section of I-94 in both directions on Friday night, crews planning to set beams for the new bridge scrapped the operation the next morning and had the interstate reopened by about noon on Saturday, more than 24 hours ahead of schedule.

The problem? Work crews with Lunda Construction were not able to get their trailer situated correctly to pick up and set the first beam, which repeatedly rolled or leaned on the trailer, making it unsafe to back into position given the elevation of the highway. After deliberating for about two hours on Saturday morning, they abandoned the effort.

Beam setting will be rescheduled for a future weekend.

A spokesperson for the Minnesota Department of Transportation referred questions to St. Paul Public Works. While MnDOT is in charging of closing segments of the interstate when bridge work necessitates, the Kellogg Blvd/Third Street bridge replacement is a city project.

“They had some unforeseen technical difficulties with the beam, so they got the interstate reopened as quickly as possible,” said Lisa Hiebert, a spokesperson for St. Paul Public Works. “It sounds like they need some extra-specialized equipment, and now they have to work with MnDOT to determine when that can happen because it requires the interstate to be closed in order to get these beams in place.”

Hiebert said more information will likely become available later this week.

This isn’t the first delay for the beam setting. The planned weekend closure of I-94 was rescheduled from Jan. 16 through Jan. 18 to Jan. 23 through Jan. 25 due to severe cold and weather-related safety conditions, and then postponed again from Jan. 23 though Jan. 25 to Feb. 6 through Feb. 8 due to weather.

The $91 million bridge replacement project began in July 2024 and is expected to be complete in the fall of 2027. The bridge, which connects Kellogg Boulevard from Broadway Street to Mounds Boulevard, was limited to its three center lanes in 2014 after cracks were found in the bridge’s cantilevers, the support arms extending from the structure’s piers.

A city review found the structure was no longer in step with updated federal standards, but it took another decade for the city to assemble funding for bridge demolition and replacement.

For more information, visit stpaul.gov/kellogg-3.

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