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WASHINGTON After a full year of fruitless job hunting, Natasha Baebler
just gave up.She'd already abandoned hope of getting work in her field,
working with the disabled. But she couldn't land anything else, either
not even a job interview at a telephone call center.Until she feels
confident enough to send out resumes again, she'll get by on food
stamps and disability checks from Social Security and live with her parents
in St. Louis."I'm not proud of it," says Baebler, who is in
her mid-30s and is blind. "The only way I'm able to sustain
any semblance of self-preservation is to rely on government programs that
I have no desire to be on."Baebler's frustrating experience has become all
too common nearly four years after the Great Recession ended: Many Americans
are still so discouraged that they've given up on the job market.Older
Americans have retired early. Younger ones have enrolled in school. Others
have suspended their job hunt until the employment landscape brightens.
Some, like Baebler, are collecting disability checks.It isn't supposed to
be this way. After a recession, an improving economy is supposed to
bring people back into the job market.Instead, the number of Americans in
the labor force those who have a job or are looking
for one fell by nearly half a million people from February
to March, the government said Friday. And the percentage of working-age
adults in the labor force what's called the participation rate
fe
Friday that media need to address the "absolute and
paramount" lawmaker secrecy assertion."It's a legal argument for how and
why the Nevada Legislature should be able to meet and deliberate in
secret, and then act on the basis of a secret document," Smith
said. "I hope it doesn't represent the Legislature's view of its responsibility
to the public. I'm certain that it doesn't represent the public's view
of the Legislature's responsibility to the people of Nevada."The report
consists of two, 25-page summaries and a thick white binder with 900
pages of supporting material. It was prepared by a Las Vegas attorney
hired Feb. 28 as the panel's independent counsel, and was considered by
the panel behind closed doors on March 26.The seven-member Assembly commission
emerged to vote 6-1 to recommend Brooks' expulsion. The Assembly on March
28 ratified the recommendation by voice vote, making Brooks the first elected
Nevada lawmaker expelled from office since statehood in 1864.Brooks responded
that he had been convicted of no crime. But he had been
arrested twice -- on allegations that he threatened at least one other
lawmaker, and after a physical scuffle with a police officer called to
a domestic argument at his estranged wife's home.Brooks was arrested a third
time after a freeway chase and violent struggle with police in California
just hours after being expelled from the Nevada Assembly.He was being held
in a county jail in San Bernardino C
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