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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • California sues Trump admin over renters rights
    A man is standing out of focus behind a dark wooden podium, with it's metal logo in focus. The logo reads, in part, "Office Of The Attorney General" and "liberty and justice under law" in the center.
    California Attorney General Rob Bonta during a news conference on Aug. 28, 2025.

    Topline:

    California has joined 15 other states in a housing rights lawsuit filed Monday that accuses the Trump administration of threatening to cut funding to state agencies that offer additional protections against discrimination.

    The background: The lawsuit deals with enforcement of the 1968 Fair Housing Act. The federal civil rights law bans discrimination against renters based on seven characteristics: race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status and disability. Many states have interpreted the law to ban discrimination against other characteristics as well, such as gender identity, sexual orientation, veteran status and the tenant’s use of government subsidized housing vouchers such as Section 8.

    The dispute: Last September, U.S. Housing and Urban Development told local agencies that the law “does not include protections” for additional groups. The guidance from the department says states cannot use federal funding to promote “gender ideology,” “elective abortions” or “illegal immigration.”

    What’s next: California Attorney General Rob Bonta said in a news conference Monday that the Fair Housing Act sets a floor for enforcement against housing discrimination, not a ceiling. He said he hopes the court will order the Trump administration to stop implementation of the new HUD guidelines within weeks.

    Read on… to learn which other states are joining the lawsuit.

    California has joined 15 other states in a housing rights lawsuit filed Monday that accuses the Trump administration of threatening to cut funding to state agencies that offer additional protections against tenant discrimination.

    The lawsuit deals with enforcement of the 1968 Fair Housing Act. The federal civil rights law bans discrimination against renters based on seven characteristics: race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status and disability.

    Many states have interpreted the law to ban discrimination against other characteristics as well, such as gender identity, sexual orientation, veteran status and the tenant’s use of government subsidized housing vouchers such as Section 8.

    Last September, U.S. Housing and Urban Development — known as HUD — told state and local agencies that the law “does not include protections” for additional groups.

    The department’s guidance said that states cannot use federal funding to promote “gender ideology,” “elective abortions” or “illegal immigration.”

    California Attorney General Rob Bonta said in a news conference Monday that the Fair Housing Act sets a floor for enforcement against housing discrimination, not a ceiling.

    “Under this guidance, states like California could lose millions in federal funding if we continue enforcing these broader protections,” Bonta said. “HUD's proposal would weaken California's ability to take action when a landlord denies someone housing based on their status as a veteran or as a senior or a LGBTQ plus individual.”

    LAist asked the HUD federal Housing and Urban Development department about the lawsuit, but did not receive a response in time for this story.

    Who filed the lawsuit?  

    The lawsuit was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California.

    Illinois State Attorney General Kwame Raoul co-led the lawsuit with Bonta. The other states joining the lawsuit are Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington and the District of Columbia.

    The complaint alleges that the Trump administration’s threat of pulling funding violates the U.S. Constitution, as well as the federal Administrative Procedure Act.

    “The Trump administration is attempting to roll back civil rights enforcement in housing at the federal level and pressure states to weaken their own protections as well,” Bonta said.

    What’s next?

    Bonta said he hopes the court will order the federal government to stop implementation of HUD’s new guidelines within weeks.

    This is California’s 62nd lawsuit against the Trump administration.

  • Judge blocks scaled back vaccine recommendations
    A federal judge Monday dealt a major blow to the Trump administration's efforts to overhaul the nation's vaccine policies, including the controversial decision to slash the number of federally recommended vaccinations for children.


    About the decision: U.S. District Court Judge Brian Murphy in Boston put a hold on the decisions made by an influential Centers for Disease Control and Prevention vaccine advisory committee, ruling that Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. had improperly replaced the entire committee. The judge ruled that Kennedy and his committee had made arbitrary and capricious decisions, ignoring a long-used, well-regarded scientific process for developing vaccine policies. He wrote in his ruling, "the government has disregarded those methods and thereby undermined the integrity of its actions."


    What's next: The administration plans to appeal the decision, according to Department of Health and Human Services spokesman Andrew Nixon. "HHS looks forward to this judge's decision being overturned just like his other attempts to keep the Trump administration from governing," Nixon wrote in an email to NPR. Nixon, confirmed, however that the ruling had forced the CDC vaccine committee, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, or ACIP, to postpone a meeting that was planned for Wednesday and Thursday. The committee was expected to raise new questions about the COVID-19 vaccines and possibly revamp how federal vaccine policies are formulated.

    A federal judge Monday dealt a major blow to the Trump administration's efforts to overhaul the nation's vaccine policies, including the controversial decision to slash the number of federally recommended vaccinations for children.

    U.S. District Court Judge Brian Murphy in Boston put a hold on the decisions made by an influential Centers for Disease Control and Prevention vaccine advisory committee, ruling that Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. had improperly replaced the entire committee.

    The decision was hailed by the American Academy of Pediatrics and other leading health groups that brought the lawsuit, as well as infectious disease experts around the country.

    "Today's ruling is a historic and welcome outcome for children, communities, and pediatricians everywhere," said Dr. Andrew Racine, the pediatric academy's president.

    The administration plans to appeal the decision, according to Department of Health and Human Services spokesman Andrew Nixon. "HHS looks forward to this judge's decision being overturned just like his other attempts to keep the Trump administration from governing," Nixon wrote in an email to NPR.

    Nixon, confirmed, however that the ruling had forced the CDC vaccine committee, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, or ACIP, to postpone a meeting that was planned for Wednesday and Thursday. The committee was expected to raise new questions about the COVID-19 vaccines and possibly revamp how federal vaccine policies are formulated.

    The judge ruled that Kennedy and his committee had made arbitrary and capricious decisions, ignoring a long-used, well-regarded scientific process for developing vaccine policies. He wrote in his ruling, "the government has disregarded those methods and thereby undermined the integrity of its actions."


    The ACIP, whose members Kennedy fired and replaced largely with new members who also criticized vaccines, had issued a series of contentious recommendations, including a recommendation that all babies get vaccinated against hepatitis B at birth. The judge's ruling stays the appointment of 13 committee members appointed by Kennedy since June 2025, when the previous members were fired.

    Administration lawyers had argued that the changes were the result of different interpretations of vaccine data.

    "This is a significant victory for public health, evidence-based medicine, the rule of law, and the American people," Richard Hughes, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, told reporters after the ruling.
    Copyright 2026 NPR

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  • Team USA to play NFL pros for LA28 preview
    Two male presenting Black people play flag football as a small crowd watches on in the background. They wear black and white uniforms.
    Baron Davis goes against Matt Barnes at the 5th Annual Athletes vs. Cancer celebrity flag football game hosted by Matt Barnes and Snoop Dogg in 2018 in Los Angeles.

    Topline:

    Team USA men's flag football team will play current and former NFL players, including Hall of Famer Tom Brady, on Saturday in L.A. The Fanatics Flag Football classic will give fans a chance to see the game being played at BMO Stadium, which will host the first-ever Olympics flag football events in 2028.

    Why it matters: Men and women's flag football is one of five new games in the 2028 L.A. Summer Olympics.

    Why now: The one-day Fanatics Flag Football classic was moved to L.A. from Saudi Arabia after the Iran War started.

    The backstory: Flag football has been around for years, but its popularity among girls is skyrocketing, and that’s one reason officials gave the green light to include it in the summer Olympics.

    How to watch it: The games will be broadcast starting at 1 p.m. on Fox Sports, Fox One, and Tubi. Tickets are still available through Ticketmaster.

    Go deeper: The NFL is promoting interest in flag football among girls.

  • See the standout moments from Team USA

    Topline:

    Team USA finished second in the overall Paralympics medal count, after 10 days of competition in which American athletes made dazzling debuts, defended titles and cemented legacies.

    Why it matters: China topped the medal count for the second Winter Games in a row, with 44 total medals (15 gold), followed by the U.S. with 24 total medals, including 13 gold. The U.S. improved on its fifth-place standing from 2022. This is the same number of gold medals it won in 2018, in what officials are calling its "strongest gold-medal showing in the last 20 years."

    More details: A total of 28 American Paralympians and two guides reached the podium this year. Six of them won medals for the first time, and six of them earned multiple medals, according to the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee (USOPC).

    Read on... for more about the highlights from Team USA.

    Team USA finished second in the overall Paralympics medal count, after 10 days of competition in which American athletes made dazzling debuts, defended titles and cemented legacies.

    One of the many made-for-TV moments came just hours before the closing ceremony on Sunday, when the U.S. sled hockey team defeated rival Canada to claim its record fifth gold medal in a row.

    "You don't ever start out and try to be the only five-time gold medalist in the sport," said captain Josh Pauls after personally achieving that very feat. "But to be with these guys, to lead them and kind of pass on that tradition, it's the ultimate honor."

    The day — and the Games — ended with the closing ceremony in Cortina d'Ampezzo, featuring performances, speeches and the extinguishing of the Paralympic flame. American skiers Kendall Gretsch and Andrew Kurka, who are both leaving Italy with new medals, carried the flag for Team USA.

    "I've been involved in four Games and have only been able to go to two closing ceremonies: in PyeongChang, where I won my gold and silver, and this year, where I won my bronze," said Kurka, who medaled in men's super-G. "It's been a career filled with ups and downs, but even the small victories count for me."

    Two people in White USA coats and beanies carrying an American flag as people sitting in wheelchairs watch close to blue stands.
    Andrew Kurka and Kendall Gretsch carry the U.S. flag during the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Paralympic Games closing ceremony in Cortina on Sunday.
    (
    Mattia Ozbot
    /
    Getty Images
    )

    At the ceremony, International Paralympic Committee (IPC) President Andrew Parsons declared the Games — the 50th anniversary of the Winter Paralympics — officially over, and a success: "The biggest and most beautiful Winter Paralympics with more athletes, more nations, more women and more global broadcast and digital coverage than ever before."

    A record 611 athletes from 55 countries competed in 79 medal events across six sports.

    China topped the medal count for the second Winter Games in a row, with 44 total medals (15 gold), followed by the U.S. with 24 total medals, including 13 gold. The U.S. improved on its fifth-place standing from 2022. This is the same number of gold medals it won in 2018, in what officials are calling its "strongest gold-medal showing in the last 20 years."

    A total of 28 American Paralympians and two guides reached the podium this year. Six of them won medals for the first time, and six of them earned multiple medals, according to the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee (USOPC).

    In third place — both overall and in gold medals — was Russia, which was allowed to participate under its own flag for the first time since 2014 despite its ongoing war in Ukraine. Ukrainian athletes boycotted both the opening and closing ceremonies in protest.

    But even in a moment of intense geopolitical upheaval, amid conflicts in Europe and the Middle East, the IPC's Parsons said the Paralympics offered "proof that sport can unite us through respect, fairness and human achievement."

    "Paralympians, you rose above pressure, expectation and global tension to keep the focus where it belongs: on you and your sport," he said. "You expanded the imagination of the world. You have shown that excellence is universal and that determination knows no boundaries."

    Parsons passed the proverbial torch to the next Winter Paralympics host: the French Alps for 2030. Those will follow the 2028 Summer Olympics and Paralympics in Los Angeles.


    Team USA highlights

    Hockey players in white and blue uniforms and two in red uniforms fight for a hockey puck in a hockey rink.
    Team USA's Declan Farmer, center, fights for the puck during the gold-medal match against Canada.
    (
    Antonio Calanni
    /
    AP
    )

    On the ice: 

    The U.S. sled hockey team got off to a strong start in an early-round match against Italy, when it beat the host nation 14-1 — the largest margin of victory in the sport's U.S. history.

    It stayed dominant, outscoring opponents 46-6 throughout the tournament before becoming the first Paralympic or Olympic team to win five consecutive winter gold medals.

    "You are going to enjoy something like this, for sure," Coach David Hoff said afterward. "But I don't know if it's just the wins. It's so much more than that. They just love playing together."

    Team USA beat Canada 6-2 on Sunday, thanks to a hat trick from Jack Wallace — who was named "best defender" of the tournament — and goals by Kayden Beasley, Brody Roybal and four-time Paralympian Declan Farmer.

    Farmer, the top scorer and official MVP of these Games, scored 15 goals and 26 points throughout the tournament to become the all-time leading scorer in Paralympic sled hockey history at just 28 years old. But he was quick to share the credit with his teammates.

    "A lot of the guys stepped up and had their best games of the tournament, and we just carried each other," said Farmer. "I'm just so happy for the guys, we earned it together."

    You're forgiven if you have deja vu from last month: This win makes the U.S. the first country to sweep all three Olympic and Paralympic hockey tournaments in one year.

    Team USA also made history in wheelchair curling, with Steve Emt and Laura Dwyer finishing fourth in the brand-new mixed doubles event. That's the United States' best-ever Paralympic finish in the sport.

    "In the two years we've been together, we've shown the world what we're capable of doing and we're going to go home, take some time off, relax, re-group and come back even better next year," said Emt, the most decorated Paralympic curler in U.S. history.

    In Para Nordic Skiing (cross country and biathlon):

    A woman in a ski suit pushes herself with two poles . Large trees and fog are visible in the background.
    Oksana Masters competes in the para cross-country skiing 20km in Tesero, Italy, on Sunday.
    (
    Luke Hales
    /
    Getty Images
    )

    Eight-time, dual-season Paralympian Oksana Masters, the most decorated Winter Paralympian in U.S. history, is leaving Italy with four new gold medals and a bronze in biathlon and cross-country skiing events, bringing her career total to 24 medals.

    That's despite a concussion, infection and injury that almost kept her from competing in the first place.

    "I think that is what makes it so special, because nothing is guaranteed," Masters told NPR on Saturday. "A win's not guaranteed, and the podium's not guaranteed, and so that's been a really great motivator for this whole … year so far."

    Four-time Paralympian Jake Adicoff, with guides Reid Goble and Peter Wolter, won four gold medals in four visually impaired skiing events to set a new record for the most Para cross-country golds won by a Team USA athlete in a single Games.

    Five people wearing white coats and gold medals place their hand over the chest while on a stage. One person on the left side uses a wheelchair.
    Joshua Sweeney, Oksana Masters, Sydney Peterson, Jake Adicoff and his guide Reid Goble of Team USA participate in the medal ceremony after the para cross-country skiing mixed 4x2.5km relay.
    (
    Luke Hales
    /
    Getty Images Europe
    )

    "It's incredibly scary to put a high goal out to the public," the 30-year-old said. "I was doubting it so much this week, I didn't know what was going to happen, but the races came together and I'm just overjoyed."

    One of those was the mixed 4x2.5km relay, where the all-star team of Adicoff, Masters, Josh Sweeney and Sydney Peterson came from behind in the final leg to defend the U.S. title.

    Peterson, competing in her second Paralympics, won four medals — three of them gold — this time around.

    And Kendall Gretsch, closing ceremony flag-bearer, won four medals at her third Winter Paralympics (and fifth total): one gold, one silver and two bronze. That brings her total medal count to 11 across Summer and Winter Games.

    In Alpine skiing:

    A person wearing a helmet, ski suit, using a bucket seat device, flies off the ground past a blue stand and banner that reads "Allianz."
    Andrew Kurka competes in the super-G leg of the para Alpine skiing men's combined.
    (
    Maja Hitij
    /
    Getty Images
    )

    Andrew Kurka won bronze in the men's super-G sitting, adding to his silver and gold from 2018.

    "I'm happy to be here. I'm happy to have a great career. Gold, silver, and bronze, happy to be done," said Kurka, who wrote on Instagram after the closing ceremony that he is stepping back from ski racing to deal with injuries.

    In 2022, he competed with a broken nose, thumb and humerus bone, finishing fourth in the sitting downhill event before withdrawing from the rest of competition. Kurka said in Italy that he's broken over 20 bones in his career.

    "When it comes to it, losing is nothing compared to the pain of failure," he said after winning bronze. "And when it comes down to today, I was just happy to get across that finish line without any injuries and in a relatively quick time. Usually, if I cross the finish line, it's pretty fast."

    Meanwhile, Patrick Halgren won silver in the men's super-G standing event — the first for Team USA since 1998.

    A man with long hair in a braid, wearing a white puffer jacket, smiles as he holds two stuffed animals
    Patrick Halgren celebrates after winning a silver medal in the alpine skiing men's super-G standing on Monday.
    (
    Emilio Morenatti
    /
    AP
    )

    The 33-year-old wasn't necessarily a favorite for the podium, having placed 26th and 24th at his events in the Beijing Paralympics. But Halgren said he felt the presence of his late twin brother Sven — his source of encouragement to try para Alpine skiing — who died in a motorcycle accident in 2016. Halgren himself lost most of his left leg, and nearly his life, in a motorcycle accident three years earlier.

    Halgren, who wowed the internet with his winning performance and rock-star persona, dedicated his win to Sven and called it the "best day of my life until tomorrow."

    "You celebrate the victories the same as the defeats," he added. "I've been blessed to have to develop my character over the last 11 years, losing my leg, and could either roll over and die, or I could become the greatest Patrick Halgren on Earth, and that's what you're seeing."

    In snowboarding: 

    Three women pose for photos while wearing gold medals and holding stuffed animals. Two wear white puffer jackets and one wears an orange jacket.
    Kate Delson, center, and Brenna Huckaby, right, of Team U.S. pose for a photo on the podium during the medal ceremony for the para snowboard banked slalom.
    (
    Maja Hitij
    /
    Getty Images
    )

    Three-time Paralympian Brenna Huckaby leaves Italy as the most decorated Paralympic snowboarder in history.

    She won bronze in the women's banked slalom event — which she dominated in 2022 — to bring her career total to five medals. That came days after she finished sixth in the snowboard cross event, which she still saw as a win.

    "I'm here representing a very small portion of people who want to see themselves represented," Huckaby said. "They want to know that if they lose their leg above the knee, life does not end. I accomplished that here simply by being. So I'm happy."

    First-time Paralympian Kate Delson medaled in both of those events, winning gold in the banked slalom and silver in snowboard cross.

    "I was just stoked to be here, I think it's such a fun course," Delson said after. "I got to get a medal with my teammate, [Huckaby], one of my best friends in the world, that's unreal."

    On the men's side, Noah Elliott won gold in the banked slalom, a repeat of 2018, and silver in snowboard cross to double his career medal count.

    A man in a blue snow suit with a prosthetic rides down a hill. There are trees and large mountains with snow in the background.
    Mike Schultz brought home a bronze medal in his final Paralympics, for which he outfitted many athletes with their prosthetics.
    (
    Evgeniy Maloletka
    /
    AP
    )

    And Mike Schultz earned his fourth career medal — bronze in banked slalom — at the last race of his third and final Paralympics.

    "To finish my last run and bring home a bronze medal, that's storybook stuff there," Schultz said in an emotional Instagram video after watching a compilation of congratulatory messages from his U.S. snowboarding teammates, whom he called his family.

    All the while, the 44-year-old outfitted many para athletes — including some who beat him — with high-performance prosthetics, a business he has run for over a decade, which he plans to pursue in retirement.
    Copyright 2026 NPR

  • Iran war enters third week, prices continue rising

    Topline:

    Prices at the pump are currently averaging $3.718 a gallon, according to the latest data from the American Automobile Association (AAA), which tracks prices nationwide. That's up nearly 80 cents from a month ago. Diesel prices, meanwhile, have grown even more sharply. Diesel is just under $5 a gallon, according to AAA, $1.34 higher than last month.


    Why now: Global oil supplies are experiencing their worst disruption in decades, thanks to a sharp decrease in ship traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, three weeks after the U.S. and Israel's attack on Iran. The Strait of Hormuz is a crucial waterway through which about 20% of the world's oil traffic typically passes. Prices are still lower than they were in 2022, when Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine sent them soaring.

    Why it matters: "Until we see a meaningful resumption of oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz, upward pressure on fuel prices is likely to persist," Patrick de Haan, the head of petroleum analysis at the app GasBuddy, wrote in a note on Monday. Higher gasoline prices put pressure on household budgets, particularly for lower-income Americans. Higher diesel prices have an inflationary impact on nearly all goods in the economy, because diesel is used to power farm equipment, construction equipment, and the trucks, the ships and many of the trains that carry goods around the world.

    Global crude oil prices have been volatile over the last few weeks following the U.S. and Israel's attack on Iran. They spiked to nearly $120 a barrel about a week after the war began, and then fell to around $100, where they have been hovering for several days. Before the war, oil was closer to $70 a barrel.

    U.S. gasoline prices, on the other hand, have gone in only one direction: Up. And up. And up.

    Loading...

    Prices at the pump are currently averaging $3.718 a gallon, according to the latest data from the American Automobile Association (AAA), which tracks prices nationwide. That's up nearly 80 cents from a month ago.

    Diesel prices, meanwhile, have grown even more sharply. Diesel is just under $5 a gallon, according to AAA, $1.34 higher than last month.

    Global oil supplies are experiencing their worst disruption in decades, thanks to a sharp decrease in ship traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, the crucial waterway through which about 20% of the world's oil traffic typically passes, as well as attacks by both sides on critical oil infrastructure.

    Prices are still lower than they were in 2022, when Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine sent them soaring.


    But they could continue to rise.

    "Until we see a meaningful resumption of oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz, upward pressure on fuel prices is likely to persist," Patrick de Haan, the head of petroleum analysis at the app GasBuddy, wrote in a note on Monday. "At the same time, seasonal forces are beginning to intensify as several regions complete the transition to summer gasoline, creating a double headwind that could continue driving pump prices higher in the weeks ahead."

    Summer gasoline is a reformulated blend, required by the Clean Air Act, that is less volatile, which leads to less air pollution during the warmer summer months.

    Higher gasoline prices put pressure on household budgets, particularly for lower-income Americans. Higher diesel prices have an inflationary impact on nearly all goods in the economy, because diesel is used to power farm equipment, construction equipment, and the trucks, the ships and many of the trains that carry goods around the world.

    President Trump has said that while gasoline prices are higher now, they will come down quickly when the war is over. He has also commented that because the U.S. is the world's largest oil producer, "We make a lot of money" when oil prices go up.

    Higher oil prices have other economic implications. For one thing, they incentivize companies and countries to invest more heavily in alternatives to oil, like solar power, batteries and EVs, which become more economically competitive when oil becomes more expensive, and offer protection against the volatility of fossil fuel markets. In the long run, that's positive for efforts to fight climate change and air pollution — and negative for oil producers. The oil cartel OPEC actively avoids pushing oil prices too high, in part because of the risk it poses to long-term oil demand.

    In an attempt to calm markets, last week the International Energy Agency, an organization representing the world's largest oil consumers, announced its largest-ever release of crude oil from national stockpiles, including 172 million barrels from the United States' Strategic Petroleum Reserve.

    Still, after that announcement, oil prices continued to rise.
    Copyright 2026 NPR