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Several moderate Senate Republicans are discussing a potential counteroffer to President Biden s $2 trillion infrastructure proposal, which they consider to be too big and containing too many provisions unrelated to traditional infrastructure projects, such as highways, bridges and trains.Senator Shelley Moore Capito, a Republican from West Virginia, said in an interview with CNBC on Wednesday that the sweet spot for an infrastructure proposal would be between $600 and $800 billion and would focus on roads, bridges, ports
stanley cup , airports including broadband into that, [and] water infrastructure. Capito later told reporters on Thursday that the $600 to
stanley cup $800 billion number was just a ballpark figure. It may not even be that much. I don t know. I just kind of threw that out as a talking point, Capito said.Senator Bill Cassidy, of Louisiana, told reporters on Wednesday that Republicans were working with a bipartisan group including Republican Governor Larry Hogan of Maryland, the president of the National Governors Association, and other members of Congress. I thin
stanley cup k we ll have a proposal, Cassidy said.Nebraska Senator Deb Fischer told reporters that she was working with Capito trying to put together truly an infrastructure bill. The American people want us to be able to work together on this. They know the needs that are out there, when we talk about traditional infrastructure they want to see us get something done, Fischer said Ikid LGBT pride parades across the world
COVINGTON, Ky. -- Every jail is full of stories.Me and my brother we turned to stealing and doping,rdqu
stanley cup o; one Kenton County, Kentucky jail inmate said. Being a drug addict was something I thought I needed to be, said another.While the stories the inmates are telling may not sound like it at first, they are all stories of hope. Jeremy Westerman is serving seven years for dealing drugs to support his own opioid habit. Jeremy Westerman speaks to a group of fellow inmates CBS News You come in here, your hope comes back. You get your wits back, he said. Jason Merrick is a reformed addict and former i
adidas campus nmate who took hard lessons and translated them into a new substance abuse treatment program, an innovative approach to kicking opiates for good. Jason Merrick CBS News Merrick said it is easy to identify inmates that are in jail because of an opioid addiction. Eighty-three percent of our intakes are directly or indirectly related to substance use, he said.Merrick combines the traditional tools of psychotherapy and 12-step support groups with a new one: Inmates are given an in
stanley cup jection of the drug Vivitrol just before theyrsquo;re released and then once a month after they get out.