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MEXICO CITY, June 30 (Reuters) - Mexico on Friday banned fishing with gillnets in the northern Gulf of California as part of its pledge to save a critically-endangered species of porpoise whose cause has been championed by Hollywood actor Leonardo DiCaprio and others.<br><br>The snub-nosed vaquita porpoise has all but died out due to gillnet fishing for shrimp and totoaba, a delicacy in Asia. Mexico three  chăn ga gối hanvico, chan ga goi hanvico, địa chỉ mua chăn ga gối hanvico, dia chi mua chan ga goi hanvico, chăn ga gối hanvico hà nội, chan ga goi hanvico ha noi weeks ago unveiled a plan with DiCaprio to protect the diminutive marine [https://hanvico.org/san-pham/dem-bong-ep-hanvico.html đệm bông ép hanvico,dem bong ep hanvico, mua đệm bông ép hanvico, mua dem bong ep hanvico, đệm bông ép hanvico ở hà nội, dem bong ep hanvico o ha noi, mua đệm bông ép hanvico, mua dem bong ep hanvico] hanvico, dem hanvico, hanvico, chăn ga gối [https://hanvico.org/san-pham/dem-lo-xo-hanvico.html đệm lò xo hanvico hà nội] hanvico, chan ga gối hanvico, chan ga goi dem hanvico, chan ga goi hanvico mammal.<br><br>Gillnets,  [https://hanvico.org/san-pham/ruot-goi-hanvico.html mua ruot goi hanvico] which use mesh sizes designed to allow fish to get only their head through the netting but not their body, are blamed for trapping the vaquita porpoises and killing them.<br><br>In its official gazette, the Mexican government said it had issued a permanent ban on fishing with gillnets in the northern Gulf of California, where the few remaining vaquitas live.<br><br>DiCaprio's foundation estimated in early June there are now fewer than 30 vaquitas left in the wild.<br><br>On his Twitter account, the American actor hailed as "great news" the announcement that a previous temporary ban on the nets had been made permanent, offering his thanks to Mexican President Enrique [http://Www.Houzz.com/?search=Pena%20Nieto Pena Nieto] and the World Wildlife Fund.<br><br>Pena Nieto retweeted DiCaprio's remarks. (Reporting by Dave Graham and Noe Torres; Editing by Nick Macfie)
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov. John Kasich once again stood against fellow Republicans in the Ohio Legislature on Friday to support Medicaid expansion, which now provides health insurance to 700,000 low-income Ohioans.<br><br>The 2016 presidential contender vetoed a proposed freeze of the expansion and 46 other items from Ohio's state budget before signing it just ahead of a midnight deadline Friday.<br><br>"I understand the fiscal concerns that we have, but we've been able to manage it," Kasich said. "I wouldn't do anything that's going to put the state in a position of where we couldn't have fiscal stability."<br><br>Ohio Gov. John Kasich, right, joined by Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper, speaks during a news conference at the National Press Club in Washington, Tuesday, June 27, 2017, about Republican legislation overhauling the Obama health care law. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)<br><br>Conservatives had called on the outspoken Kasich to set a  [https://hanvico.org/san-pham/ruot-chan-hanvico.html ruot chan hanvico] national example by leaving in place state budget provisions calling for freezing new expansion enrollment starting July 1, 2018, [https://hanvico.org/san-pham/dem-lo-xo-hanvico.html mua dem lo xo hanvico ha noi] and preventing those who drop off from re-enrolling. Exemptions were written into the bill for those undergoing mental health or drug addiction treatment, but the administration said they had no legal force.<br><br>Kasich said he believes the state and nation "can deal with the fact that people have needs and at the same time we can be fiscally responsible." He noted the expansion has yielded Ohio nearly $300 million for opiate addiction, double what the Legislature had allotted in the budget.<br><br>He is one of the Republican Party's staunchest defenders of the expansion made possible under the federal health care law now targeted for replacement by his party. He was forced to make an end-run around GOP lawmakers in 2013 to become one of the first Republican governors to take advantage of the option.<br><br>This time, they have the option to defy him.<br><br>The Republican-led Legislature already has scheduled sessions Thursday where they'll attempt an override vote. Ohio's Republican legislators face potential pushback from their constituents in the politically divided battleground state for not acting to curb government health care spending.<br><br>Ohio's expansion [http://Wordpress.org/search/population population] is larger than originally expected, costing almost $5 billion - though most of that is picked up by the federal government. Many of those on the program are the working poor, mentally ill or drug addicted.<br><br>The Kasich administration has estimated that 500,000 Ohioans could lose coverage under a freeze within the first 18 months.<br><br>Anticipating his veto, Republican budget writers made sure not to count on savings from the freeze  hanvico ([https://hanvico.org hanvico.org]) to make the budget balance, as the state constitution requires.

Revision as of 05:19, 18 August 2017

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov. John Kasich once again stood against fellow Republicans in the Ohio Legislature on Friday to support Medicaid expansion, which now provides health insurance to 700,000 low-income Ohioans.

The 2016 presidential contender vetoed a proposed freeze of the expansion and 46 other items from Ohio's state budget before signing it just ahead of a midnight deadline Friday.

"I understand the fiscal concerns that we have, but we've been able to manage it," Kasich said. "I wouldn't do anything that's going to put the state in a position of where we couldn't have fiscal stability."

Ohio Gov. John Kasich, right, joined by Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper, speaks during a news conference at the National Press Club in Washington, Tuesday, June 27, 2017, about Republican legislation overhauling the Obama health care law. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

Conservatives had called on the outspoken Kasich to set a ruot chan hanvico national example by leaving in place state budget provisions calling for freezing new expansion enrollment starting July 1, 2018, mua dem lo xo hanvico ha noi and preventing those who drop off from re-enrolling. Exemptions were written into the bill for those undergoing mental health or drug addiction treatment, but the administration said they had no legal force.

Kasich said he believes the state and nation "can deal with the fact that people have needs and at the same time we can be fiscally responsible." He noted the expansion has yielded Ohio nearly $300 million for opiate addiction, double what the Legislature had allotted in the budget.

He is one of the Republican Party's staunchest defenders of the expansion made possible under the federal health care law now targeted for replacement by his party. He was forced to make an end-run around GOP lawmakers in 2013 to become one of the first Republican governors to take advantage of the option.

This time, they have the option to defy him.

The Republican-led Legislature already has scheduled sessions Thursday where they'll attempt an override vote. Ohio's Republican legislators face potential pushback from their constituents in the politically divided battleground state for not acting to curb government health care spending.

Ohio's expansion population is larger than originally expected, costing almost $5 billion - though most of that is picked up by the federal government. Many of those on the program are the working poor, mentally ill or drug addicted.

The Kasich administration has estimated that 500,000 Ohioans could lose coverage under a freeze within the first 18 months.

Anticipating his veto, Republican budget writers made sure not to count on savings from the freeze hanvico (hanvico.org) to make the budget balance, as the state constitution requires.