
Diana Dombrowski
Investigative Reporter at Bloomberg Law
Investigative Reporter @blaw. Alum: @lohud, @SheboyganPress
Articles
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2 months ago |
news.bloombergtax.com | Diana Dombrowski |Alex Ebert |Jon Meltzer |K. Sophie Will
After the Supreme Court weakened a key piece of the Voting Rights Act, voting discrimination cases are not just harder to bring to court but dramatically so, according to a Bloomberg Law analysis and experts who examined the findings. Section 2 of the act, which prohibits racial discrimination in voting practices, was nearly 60% less likely to be cited following the court’s ruling in Brnovich v. Democratic National Committee.
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2 months ago |
news.bloomberglaw.com | Diana Dombrowski |Alex Ebert |Jon Meltzer |K. Sophie Will
After the Supreme Court weakened a key piece of the Voting Rights Act, voting discrimination cases are not just harder to bring to court but dramatically so, according to a Bloomberg Law analysis and experts who examined the findings. Section 2 of the act, which prohibits racial discrimination in voting practices, was nearly 60% less likely to be cited following the court’s ruling in Brnovich v. Democratic National Committee.
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Jun 24, 2024 |
yahoo.com | Gary Stern |Diana Dombrowski
Far more students have been consistently absent from school across the Lower Hudson Valley and the state since the pandemic, which could affect student achievement for years to come. Students are considered "chronically absent" if they miss at least 10% of instructional days during a school year. That's at least 18 days in New York.
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Jun 24, 2024 |
news.yahoo.com | Gary Stern |Diana Dombrowski
Why student absences have soared since the pandemic -- and what schools are doing to helpFar more students have been consistently absent from school across the Lower Hudson Valley and the state since the pandemic, which could affect student achievement for years to come. Students are considered "chronically absent" if they miss at least 10% of instructional days during a school year. That's at least 18 days in New York.
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Jun 11, 2024 |
lohud.com | Diana Dombrowski
The New York State Education Department is proposing that Regents exams no longer be required for high school graduation, although school districts would still be free to give them to students. In a presentation Monday to the state Board of Regents, which has final say, Education Department staff recommended sweeping changes to New York's diploma requirements. The Board of Regents, which makes statewide education policy, will be presented in November with a full plan to make such changes.
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RT @Alex__Ebert: Tech is on trial. AI police tools & the trillion-dollar-industries building them, are at the center of today's court batt…

RT @GaryHarki: I am very excited to have Diana join the team. She is one of the hardest working and most meticulous reporters I know.

RT @GarySternNY: State aid increases small, or none, for Lower Hudson school districts. What did yours get? @domdomdiana explains, with cha…