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States, Cities Are Hard-Pressed to Fight Violent ICE Arrest Tactics

22 January 2026 at 06:46
1/22/26
ICE’S TACTICS
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State leaders who want to curb the increasingly violent arrest tactics of immigration enforcement agents in Minneapolis and elsewhere are struggling to push back.

They’ve promised civil rights legislation that could offer alleged victims another route to courts, ordered up official tribunals to gather video and other records, or asked cities to refuse requests to cooperate with raids. But for the most part, states looking for concrete ways to push back find themselves largely hamstrung.

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ICE Is Using Medicaid Data to Find Out Where Immigrants Live

21 January 2026 at 06:46
1/21/26
DEPORTATIONS
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In a win for President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown, a recent court ruling has cleared the way for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to resume using states’ Medicaid data to find people who are in the country illegally.

The case is ongoing. But for now, immigrants — including those who are in the country legally — will have to weigh the benefits of gaining health coverage against the risk that enrolling in Medicaid could make them or their family members easier for ICE to find.

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Report: Americans Pay for 96% of Trump's Foreign Tariffs

21 January 2026 at 06:40
1/21/26
TARRIFS
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New research shows Americans are paying almost the entire cost of President Donald Trump’s tariffs, directly challenging his repeated assertion that foreign nations absorb the burden.

Nearly all tariff costs fall on American importers and consumers, underscoring that Americans – not foreign entities – are covering the expense, according to a report from the Kiel Institute for the World Economy, a German think tank.

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Vaccine Myths That Won’t Die and How to Counter Them—Part 2

21 January 2026 at 06:36
1/21/26
WAR ON VACCINES
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Part 1 of this article was published in HSNW, 19 January 2026.

In the first part of this article, we explored four key myths and why they don’t stand up to scrutiny:

•  ‘Vaccines were never properly tested’

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Vaccine Myths That Won't Die and How to Counter Them—Part 1

19 January 2026 at 06:42
1/19/26
WAR ON VACCINES
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In consulting rooms across America, physicians face a challenge that no medical school prepared them for. A parent arrives with a list of concerns gathered from social media, podcasts, and well-meaning friends. The questions sound scientific. The language borrows from immunology. The citations reference real studies. And yet the conclusions are wrong.

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Trump Is Trying to Kill Clean Energy. The Market Has Other Plans.

19 January 2026 at 06:34
1/19/26
ENERGY SECURITY
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A year ago, Donald Trump assumed the presidency for a second time and immediately got to work dismantling the climate progress that Joe Biden’s administration had made.

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ICE Killing of Driver in Minneapolis Involved Tactics Many Police Departments Warn Against − but Not ICE Itself

10 January 2026 at 06:46
1/9/26
ICE’S DANGEROUS TACTICS
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Minneapolis is once again the focus of debates about violence involving law enforcement after an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer shot and killed Renee Nicole Good, a 37-year-old mother, in her car.

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Quiet Dismantling: How “Shared Decision-Making” Weakens Vaccine Policy and Harms Kids

10 January 2026 at 06:41
1/9/26
WAR ON VACCINES
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On Monday, acting Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Director Jim O’Neill signed a decision memo adopting the most significant weakening of childhood vaccine recommendations in modern American history.

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Agentic experience’s promise to transform federal service delivery

29 December 2025 at 13:20

How many times have you logged into a system to complete a task that should have taken minutes but ended up taking hours? Whether renewing a credential, accessing benefits or updating a record, these experiences often feel tedious and time-consuming. As you search for the right page, click through drop-down menus, input data and submit forms, you are essentially doing the system’s work for it.

Technology has digitized countless services, but it hasn’t yet humanized them. The next leap in human-computer interaction isn’t about building better buttons; it’s about building agents that act on our behalf. Agentic experience (AX) represents that next evolution: a model where humans direct intelligent systems to deliver desired outcomes.

In the context of federal government, where complex workflows and interactions with multiple systems are common, the shift to AX will be transformational. It will free up time for employees and contractors to focus on mission-critical work while reducing errors, accelerating service delivery, and improving public trust.

The next frontier: Federal leadership in AX

User experience (UX) is not going away; it is rapidly evolving to include agentic experience.  For decades, UX has focused on how people interact with digital systems to accomplish tasks: A human navigates interfaces, completes steps and makes decisions. The system is a passive tool, and the user does all the work.

AX flips that model: Intelligent agents act on the user’s behalf, executing tasks based on intent. Humans guide outcomes rather than performing every step.

Instead of logging into multiple systems to file a report, an AI agent could authenticate and retrieve necessary data, complete the form, and deliver the final output for review. The person remains in control but no longer must perform every procedural step.

The federal government is uniquely positioned to lead in this space. Agencies already manage vast, mission-critical systems that serve millions of citizens. By applying human-centered design principles to agentic technologies, they can create experiences that are equitable and effective.

Federal agencies have already begun exploring frameworks for responsible AI with an emphasis on transparency, reliability and ethical use. These same principles must anchor the development of agentic systems.

A helpful parallel comes from the self-driving car industry. Companies like Waymo have learned that passengers trust autonomy more when they can see what the car “sees.” Similarly, agentic systems should make their reasoning visible, showing users what the agent perceives, decides and does on their behalf.

What AX could look like in federal missions

The power of AX lies in its ability to streamline complex, multi-system workflows that currently slow down mission delivery. Here are a few hypothetical examples of how AX could enhance efficiency at federal agencies.

At the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, a program analyst needs to compile a quarterly compliance report that pulls data from several systems. Today, that process might require manual queries, spreadsheet consolidation and error checks. With AX, an intelligent agent could aggregate and validate data automatically, flag anomalies, and generate a polished report, saving days of manual labor and ensuring consistency across datasets.

For veterans seeking benefits, requests at the Department of Veterans Affairs typically involve multiple forms and offices. AX could change that. A veteran could state an intent, such as “I’d like to update my address and apply for housing assistance,” and the system would handle the rest: confirming eligibility, updating records across systems, and alerting the user once completed. The result is faster service and a more human experience that builds trust between veterans and their government.

Clinicians and administrators spend significant time navigating electronic health record systems to manage patient data. An AX-enabled system within the Military Health System could interpret a clinician’s request to “schedule post-operative appointment in two weeks, notify the patient, and update the care plan,” execute those steps across systems, and confirm completion. This allows healthcare professionals to spend more time on patient care rather than administrative tasks.

Principles for designing trustworthy AX

To foster confidence and accountability in agentic systems, here are six guiding principles that echo human-centered design’s emphasis on empathy, understanding and outcomes. They extend familiar human experience (HX) practices into a new era where AI partners act alongside humans.

  • Transparent: Users should understand what the agent did, along with the why and how. Decision visibility builds confidence.
  • Controllable: Humans remain in charge. Users can intervene, adjust autonomy levels, or revoke actions.
  • Contextual: Agents must understand user goals and operational context to act appropriately.
  • Reliable: Predictability, safety and consistency are essential to maintaining trust.
  • Adaptive: Agents should learn and improve within clear, testable boundaries.
  • Ethical: Every action and decision must align with human, organizational and societal values.

Preparing for the next design evolution

For federal agencies, adopting AX requires designing ecosystems where AI agents can navigate systems safely and effectively. That means modernizing data infrastructure, enforcing interoperability standards, and implementing strong governance to monitor and audit agentic behavior.

As agentic systems emerge, the roles of designers, product strategists and technologists will evolve. Designers will become orchestrators of ecosystems, ensuring that human oversight and system transparency remain central. To measure AX success, we must prioritize trust, reliability and ethics — for example, assessing how ethically an agent interacts with humans and how accurately it presents its work to users.

Designers will also need new tools, such as a formalized AX blueprint, to map user intent, system interactions and agent pathways. This blueprint will help agencies visualize how human intent translates into autonomous action, ensuring accountability and ethical safeguards.

Building the bridge between AI and human intent

The transition to AX isn’t about replacing workers with automation; it’s about amplifying human capability. Intelligent AI agents can handle repetitive, transactional work, freeing the federal workforce to focus on strategic, mission-driven decisions.

To achieve this responsibly, agencies should start small: piloting agentic workflows in low-risk environments, establishing transparency protocols, and engaging users early through testing and iteration. By validating early and often — an approach rooted in human-centered design — agencies can build systems that adapt, learn and earn trust over time.

AX represents a paradigm shift in how government interacts with technology. It reframes the relationship from “user and tool” to “human and collaborator.” When designed with transparency, control and ethics at the core, AX can transform how federal agencies deliver on their missions — reducing friction, increasing efficiency and restoring trust in public systems.

As we move into the age of agentic systems, one truth remains constant: Great solutions start with great experiences for the people who use them. Agentic AI will inevitably change how we work; government and industry must design these systems to serve people, purpose and the public good.

Chris Capuano is the human experience (HX) practice lead at Tria Federal. 

The post Agentic experience’s promise to transform federal service delivery first appeared on Federal News Network.

© Getty Images/Userba011d64_201

Agentic AI technology concept with coding and digital gears.

What Happens When Disaster Recovery Becomes a Luxury Good

29 December 2025 at 10:49
12/29/25
DISASTER RECOVERY
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This story is part of The Disaster Economy, a Grist series exploring the often chaotic, lucrative world of disaster response and recovery. It is published with support from the CO2 Foundation.

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University of Central Florida’s Tinley Park MHC secures top spot at the 2025 DOE CyberForce Competition

By: Staff
9 December 2025 at 06:44
12/9/25
CYBERSECURITY
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The U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Office of Cybersecurity, Energy Security and Emergency Response (CESER) and DOE’s Argonne National Laboratory announced the winners of the eleventh CyberForce Competition held on Nov. 15 in Tinley Park, Illinois. At the end of the competition, Tinley Park MHC from the University of Central Florida defeated 93 teams from 73 universities to claim first place.

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EPA’s Climate Science Erasure

By: Staff
9 December 2025 at 06:34
12/9/25
TARGETING SCIENCE
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The Trump administration has removed scientific data and climate change information from U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) webpages, including all references to human activities driving climate change. This includes key U.S. climate change indicators such as changes in temperature, drought and extreme precipitation over the last few decades.

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Aluminum in Vaccines: Separating RFK Jr.’s Claims from Scientific Evidence

8 December 2025 at 10:11
12/8/25
TARGETING SCIENCE
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The US health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr, believes that aluminum in vaccines can cause health issues, such as neurological disorders, allergies and autoimmune diseases. This contradicts scientific evidence from many studies that have confirmed the safety of vaccines and aluminum “adjuvants” – substances that boost vaccines’ effectiveness.

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CDC Advisers Drop Decades-Old Universal Hepatitis B Birth Dose Recommendation, Suggest Blood Testing After One Dose

8 December 2025 at 09:42
12/8/25
TARGETING SCIENCE
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On Friday morning, after contentious discussion, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) voted 8-3 to drop the recommendation for a universal birth hepatitis B vaccine dose and 6-4 to suggest that parents use serologic testing—which detects antibodies in the blood—to determine whether more than one dose of the three-dose series are needed.

Under the first recommendation, only infants born to mothers who test positive for hepatitis B would receive a birth dose, while parents of other babies would be advised to postpone the first dose for at least two months.

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More Industries Want Trump’s Help Hiring Immigrant Labor After Farms Get a Break

4 December 2025 at 10:33
12/4/25
IMMIGRATION
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As food prices remain high, the Trump administration has made it easier for farmers to hire foreign guest workers and to pay them less. Now, other industries with large immigrant workforces also are asking for relief as they combat labor shortages and raids.

Visas for temporary foreign workers are a quick fix with bipartisan support in Congress. And Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins’ office told Stateline that “streamlining” visas for both agricultural and other jobs is a priority for the Trump administration.

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Lawmakers Call for Probe of How Firm Tied to Kristi Noem Got Piece of $220 Million DHS Ad Contracts

1 December 2025 at 06:38
12/1/25
DHS
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In recent days, five U.S. senators and two representatives requested documents from the Department of Homeland Security and a formal investigation into how a firm closely tied to DHS Secretary Kristi Noem ended up receiving money from a $220 million, taxpayer-funded ad campaign.

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CDC’s New Deputy Director Is Vocal Critic of Vaccines, Advocated for Ivermectin

29 November 2025 at 06:38
11/29/25
PUBLIC HEALTH
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Ralph Abraham, MD, the former Louisiana surgeon general, has been quietly named the deputy director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), a controversial pick to help lead the nation’s top infectious disease organization as the second highest-ranking CDC official. 

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