“High court probes conditions of Maui wildfire settlement.”
Views expressed in this Hawaii Island News summary are those of the reporters and correspondents. Accessed on 08 February 2025, 1553 UTC.
Content and Source: Email update from the “Hawaii Tribune-Herald.”
https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/FMfcgzQZTCknxPpFxtTgmHZTBWgLmVKr
Please scroll down to read your selections. Thanks for joining us today.
Russ Roberts (https://hawaiinewsdigestonline.com).
![]() |
|
| Saturday • February 8, 2025 | |
Newsmemory.com is the service provider responsible for delivering your subscription to Hawaii Tribune Herald.
Today’s Front Page‘Confused and frightened’By MICHAEL CROWLEY and CHRIS CAMERON NYTimes News Service WASHINGTON – A federal judge said Friday that he would order the Trump administration to halt fornow some elements of its attempt to shut down the United States Agency for International Development. Judge Carl Nichols of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, a 2019 Trump appointee, saidthat he would issue a temporaryrestrainingorder pausing the imminent administrative leave of 2,200 USAID employees and a plan to withdraw…Read more High court probes conditions of Maui wildfire settlementBy ANDREW GOMES Honolulu Star-Advertiser Hawaii Supreme Court justices posed many exacting, and sometimes skeptical, questions Thursday to attorneys in a case pertaining to the validity of a $4 billion deal to settle Maui wildfire litigation. Justices challenged four lawyers over their respective arguments on whether conditions of the proposed settlement affecting insurance company rights comply with Hawaii law. It may be weeks before the court’s five justices render a decision. After…Read more Trump’s orders leave an imprint on the FedBy COLBY SMITH NYTimes News Service WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump has so far restrained himself from trying to meddle with the Federal Reserve on matters related to monetary policy during his second term. But some of the more than 50 executive orders he has signed since returning to the White House are leaving an imprint on the central bank. The latest evidence is a decision by the Fed to halt hiring for permanent workers. The central bank has removed all job postings listed on its website…Read more |
500 Ala Moana Blvd. #7-210, Honolulu, HI 96813 | (808) 529-4747 You are receiving this message because you are subscribed to The Hawaii Tribune Herald. Unsubscribe or if you opted-out and want to receive emails again, opt-in here. To ensure you receive these emails, add Newspaper Alert (nm_hawaiitribuneherald@newsme |
Discover more from Hawaii News Journal
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.





