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Morning Briefing

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Wednesday, Jun 24 2026 8:53 AM

Full Issue

Second-Largest School District In US Enacts Strict Screen-Time Limits

Los Angeles public schools approved a resolution to strictly slash screen time for students, with zero screen usage until second grade and tiered limits as they age. Also in the news: Michigan, Missouri, Colorado, Texas, Georgia, and Indiana.

Los Angeles public schools will ban screens for its youngest learners and limit device usage for other students, marking one of the most aggressive attempts to restrict the amount of time children spend on devices at school. The new rules, approved on Tuesday, will be phased in starting in August following backlash to the devices districts nationwide have spent billions on since the coronavirus pandemic. The Los Angeles school board had passed a resolution in April that required the district to limit students screen time. (Lumpkin, 6/23)

More news from California

The appellate court granted a preliminary injunction blocking enforcement of a law that bars school employees from disclosing a students gender identity, sexual orientation or expression to parents without the student's consent. (Sharp, 6/22)

Citing a series of violent crimes that followed criminal defendants being spared of convictions due to diagnosed mental illnesses, state lawmakers have pushed forward legislation backed by California prosecutors to limit who can qualify. (Queally, 6/18)

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Each Wednesday, the California Weekly Roundup features original reporting from our as well as a comprehensive collection of the latest health headlines from the Golden State.

Other health news from across the U.S.

Michigan took another step Monday in its effort to eliminate medical debt for thousands of residents. The state announced it would wipe out $74 million in medical debt for 71,871 individuals. Its the second round of a program that began last year, when the state said it would help residents erase more than $144 million in medical debt. The move comes amid a bipartisan push to offer patients more protections from collections by keeping them from going underwater on their hospital bills. (Newman, 6/23)

The St. Louis County Council on Tuesday, in front of an angry audience, delayed approving money to keep medical staff working at the jail and juvenile detention center after contracts expire next week. County health Director Dr. Kanika Cunningham said the county will prepare to care for over 1,200 detainees with a skeleton nursing staff because of the councils delay. (Landis, 6/23)

For years, the money on Jessie Dorris electronic benefits transfer, or EBT, card was enough to buy groceries for herself and her son. As a single mom who was working to improve their lives, she carefully maintained a tight budget every month. Butgrocery costs kept going up, and despite Dorris remaining frugal with her spending, the money wasnt stretching as far. (Hindi, 6/24)

Last year, Texas became the first state to require warning labels on thousands of food and beverages containing common 44 dyes or additives, cleared the way for ivermectin to be sold without a prescription and approved a $3 billion fund for dementia research. All three were headline-making in their own right. But nine months later, all three bills considered health priorities by Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and House Speaker Dustin Burrows have run aground, either stuck in the courts or left to linger in the state agency rulemaking process. (Langford, 6/23)

An Army sergeant was sentenced to life in a military prison Tuesday for shootings last summer that wounded five people at a base in Georgia. A military judge at Fort Stewart sentenced Sgt. Quornelius Radford to life with a possibility of parole, local news outlets reported, after a court-martial last week in which the soldier was convicted of attempted murder. Army prosecutors accused Radford, 29, of targeting leaders of his supply unit when he opened fire with a personal handgun last August. He wounded four fellow soldiers and his then-fiance, Raekwon Smith, who testified he was shot after following Radford onto Fort Stewart fearing the soldier was suicidal. (6/23)

Adilah Patton went to the emergency room at Eskenazi Health. After being discharged, the 21-year-old spent the night in the waiting room. It was January 2018. Patton was trying to stay warm that winter; the temperature outside was 34 degrees and she had no home of her own. Hospital police arrested her for trespassing. Eskenazis officers wrote in their report that Patton had previously caused a disturbance at the hospital by loitering. They gave her another trespass card with orders: unless seeking medical treatment, stay away. (Molloy, 6/23)

Last month, former law enforcement officer Anthony Maez, 62, was shopping at Target when a child in the next aisle started to cry. The sound triggered a memory of a scene he had watched while investigating violent sex crimes against kids, and he had to escape the store. Maezs life has been routinely interrupted by traumatic flashbacks like this. Its the burden he carries after spending more than a decade pursuing predators without receiving adequate mental health support. (Levine and Wagner, 6/23)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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