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Oct. 17, 2025, 2:50 PM EDTBy Erika EdwardsSouth Carolina’s measles outbreak has grown to 15 cases, state health officials reported Friday, a small increase from a few days ago. The new cases are among those who’d been exposed to the virus at school, but developed symptoms in quarantine. It’s not known if they’re adults or children, but 139 students are still currently in quarantine in the state.”We are fortunate that those we have identified as being exposed to measles are complying with our guidance to quarantine for the period that they could not expose others,” Dr. Linda Bell, epidemiologist for South Carolina, said in a statement to NBC News. Those who aren’t vaccinated against measles are recommended to stay home, away from others for a 21-day quarantine. That’s how long it can take to develop measles symptoms — high fever, red eyes and a rash — after being exposed.”We recognize that quarantining is challenging for families and communities, and we continue to strongly encourage getting vaccinated, which would make quarantining unnecessary due to the MMR vaccine’s proven effectiveness for decades,” Bell said, referring to the measles-mumps-rubella shot.As measles keeps popping up in some pockets of the United States, the possibility of being exposed to the highly contagious virus continues. At least 1,596 measles cases have been confirmed in 2025, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, but it’s unclear how many people have been asked to quarantine. In Ohio, where five cases in the central part of the state have been reported within the last 2½ weeks, quarantine for 122 people was expected to end Friday. A 1-year-old had to be hospitalized for several days after developing pneumonia. The quarantine disruptions are prompting some pushback in the affected communities. “For many in our community, they’re frustrated, like, ‘Why don’t you just get your kid vaccinated?’” Dr. Mysheika Roberts, health commissioner for Columbus, Ohio, said in an interview. Measles exposures, including one at an early childhood learning center late last month, triggered the 21-day quarantine, she said.“When you make a decision not to vaccinate your child or to delay the vaccination, you’re not just impacting your child and your household. You can be impacting that entire community,” Roberts said. “It’s a ripple effect that I don’t think the average individual who makes this decision understands.”In the Minneapolis-St. Paul area, 118 kids are now back in school after they were exposed to an outbreak of 20 measles cases. Their quarantine ended Wednesday, according to a spokesman for the Minnesota Health Department. Still, public health officials are bracing for future outbreaks. “We actually anticipate that more cases may occur,” Bell said during a media briefing Thursday. “The measles virus won’t be contained within schools, within school districts or by county lines.”“My concern is that this is going to keep happening, that this is going to be our new normal,” Roberts said.Children who have been given the MMR vaccine don’t have to quarantine if exposed. Two doses, given around age 1 and again around age 5, are 97% effective in preventing measles infections, according to the CDC. Erika EdwardsErika Edwards is a health and medical news writer and reporter for NBC News and “TODAY.”

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The measles outbreak among children in South Carolina is still growing, even though a small number of the quarantined school kids have been allowed back in class.



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Oct. 28, 2025, 2:28 PM EDTBy Rebecca Cohen, Jay Blackman and Tom CostelloAs the government shutdown drags on, federal employees who support the country’s airports, such as air traffic controllers and Transportation Security Administration workers, say they are still in the dark about when they will next be paid. On Tuesday, workers received their first zero-dollar paycheck, reflecting two weeks of unpaid work amid the ongoing government shutdown. During the nearly monthlong shutdown, these individuals, whose roles are deemed essential, have been required to show up for work without the promise of a paycheck at the end of a standard pay period. Their last payout was a partial paycheck that included funds for time worked in September before the shutdown that began Oct. 1. Also Tuesday, controllers took matters into their own hands, pushing back on the work the government is demanding of them by handing out leaflets that describe the impact of the shutdown on aviation workers and how people can contact their members of Congress to call for the shutdown to end. The actions were scheduled to take place at nearly 20 airports nationwide. “We are here to ensure that the flying public is safe every time they get on an airplane. We have to be 100% focused, 100% of the time,” Pete LeFevre, an air traffic controller out of Washington Dulles International Airport, said in an interview with NBC News. “And all we’re looking for is to be relieved of the financial uncertainty that comes with the government shutdown, and we’d like to be paid as soon as possible.”While these federal employees will eventually receive back pay when the government shutdown ends, thanks to a 2018 law, the uncertainty of when that will be has air traffic controllers taking up side gigs to stay afloat. Some of these workers are now driving for DoorDash or Uber after their grueling work schedules, prompting a few to call in sick due to the job’s stress and the extra hours off the clock. The air traffic control industry is understaffed, and current controllers had already been working six-day weeks, 10-hour shifts, before the shutdown. “They should never work a side job, that they should never get off a night shift and then go wait tables,” Nick Daniels, president of the National Air Traffic Controllers Association, said at a news conference Tuesday at LaGuardia Airport in New York. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said at the Tuesday news conference that he has been encouraging controllers to go to work and “do really important work for our country,” while acknowledging the unease of working without assured pay. “They can’t make it without two paychecks,” Duffy said of controllers, adding later, “controllers and those other critical employees need our government to be open and they need to be paid.”He acknowledged that there have been “less problems” in the airspace this time around compared with prior shutdowns, due to his asking controllers to go to work. LeFevre added that the lack of pay adds another layer of stress to the already high-stress position. “It’s uncomfortable,” he said. “We do our best to leave all of our stress and worry at the door, but financial stress is challenging and it’s unique and it’s different, and it’s permeating.”The air traffic controller made clear that flying is still safe, and that his colleagues are working to ensure safety in the skies — something Duffy also called out during the news conference. Duffy has previously said that if there aren’t enough controllers to handle the workload on any given day, flights will be delayed and canceled to mitigate risk. Within the U.S., 2,109 flights had been delayed as of 1 p.m., according to flight tracking website FlightAware. At least 118 flights had been canceled. It was not immediately clear whether those delays and cancellations were a direct result of controllers calling out of work due to the shutdown. But the lack of immediate pay is also having a notable impact on real people in their lives outside the office. LaShanda Palmer, a TSA worker and the president of Local 333, which represents Philadelphia and Wilmington Airport TSA employees, said this is the “most trying” shutdown she’s been through in her 23 years in the industry.”We’re all one step away from being out on the street right about now,” Palmer told NBC News. “I have officers calling me honestly. They don’t have money for gas, they don’t have money to get child care, they don’t have food. It is extremely hard this go around. 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November 15, 2025
Savewith a NBCUniversal ProfileCreate your free profile or log in to save this articleNov. 15, 2025, 4:19 PM ESTBy Alexandra MarquezRep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., who was once one of President Donald Trump’s most vocal supporters, said Saturday that she’s facing threats following the president’s criticism of her on social media.”I am now being contacted by private security firms with warnings for my safety as a hot bed of threats against me are being fueled and egged on by the most powerful man in the world. The man I supported and helped get elected,” Greene wrote in a post on X on Saturday. “As a Republican, who overwhelmingly votes for President Trump‘s bills and agenda, his aggression against me which also fuels the venomous nature of his radical internet trolls (many of whom are paid), this is completely shocking to everyone,” the congresswoman added in her post.Greene’s revelation comes after Trump attacked Greene in post on social media and rescinded his endorsement of her, calling her “wacky” and accusing her of complaining too much. The president also suggested he could back a primary challenger against her. The White House and U.S. Capitol Police didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment on Greene’s social media posts. USCP has said that the rates of threats against politicians — including members of Congress — have risen in recent years, according to the U.S. Capitol Police.In a 2024 report, USCP said that the number of “threat assessment cases has climbed for the second year in a row,” citing investigations of 9,474 concerning statements and direct threats against congressional lawmakers. Members of Congress have also expressed concerns about their safety overall, following the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk. Trump on Saturday morning posted about Greene, who has become increasingly critical of the president in recent weeks, on his Truth Social account multiple times. In one post, the president said Greene “betrayed” her party with her criticism, and in another, Trump called Greene a “traitor” and a “disgrace” to the Republican party.In recent weeks, Greene has broken with her party and with the president, most recently criticizing him for focusing too much on foreign issues and calling for him to make his “America First” agenda a priority.During the federal government shutdown, which stretched from the beginning of October into the beginning of November, Greene publicly broke with her party and Speaker Mike Johnson on healthcare, accusing GOP leaders of having “no solution” for Americans facing rising healthcare costs.In recent days, Greene and three other Republican House lawmakers faced pressure from the White House to remove their names from a House petition that will force a floor vote on a measure calling for the Justice Department to release files it has related to Jeffrey Epstein.Greene has doubled down on her support for releasing the files, writing in her social media post about the new threats she’s receiving that, “I now have a small understanding of the fear and pressure the women, who are victims of Jeffrey Epstein and his cabal, must feel.”In a separate post, from her personal account, Greene said her stance on the Epstein files is one of the reasons for Trump’s attacks.She added, “It really makes you wonder what is in those files and who and what country is putting so much pressure on him? I forgive him and I will pray for him to return to his original MAGA promises.”Earlier this week, lawmakers on the House Oversight and Reform Committee released a trove of Epstein-related documents, including emails from Epstein where he often references Trump. Trump has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing and has never been charged with any criminal activity related to the case.In a post on Truth Social Wednesday, Trump accused Democrats of “using the Jeffrey Epstein Hoax to try and deflect from their massive failures.”Alexandra MarquezAlexandra Marquez is a politics reporter for NBC News.Yamiche Alcindor contributed.
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