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cover of episode Why a Colorado mental health provider turned down an ICE contract

Why a Colorado mental health provider turned down an ICE contract

2025/6/18
logo of podcast Marketplace Morning Report

Marketplace Morning Report

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C
Cesar Cuauhtemoc Garcia Hernandez
D
David Brancaccio
J
John Fabricatore
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Jordan Homan
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Nancy Marshall-Genzer
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Nicholas D. Torres
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Paul Dergira BDN
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David Brancaccio: 参议院通过了一项为稳定币建立监管框架的法案,这对于加密货币行业来说无疑是一个重大利好。如果众议院也通过类似的法案,将进一步巩固加密货币在金融领域的地位,并为相关企业带来更多的发展机遇。这项法案的通过,标志着美国在加密货币监管方面迈出了重要一步,为未来的数字经济发展奠定了基础。 Nancy Marshall-Genzer: 参议院通过的法案,即《天才法案》,旨在为希望发行数字美元的私营公司设立明确的规则。然而,值得注意的是,该法案在反腐败措施方面存在不足,并且未能禁止前总统特朗普及其家族从加密货币中获利。尽管如此,众议院正在考虑自己的加密货币立法,并有可能对参议院的法案进行修改,以弥补这些缺陷,从而确保加密货币市场的健康发展。

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Hi, I'm Richard Karn, and you may have seen me on TV talking about the world's number one expandable garden hose. Well, the brand new Pocket Hose Copperhead with Pocket Pivot is here, and it's a total game changer. Old-fashioned hoses get kinks and creases at the spigot, but the Copperhead's Pocket Pivot swivels 360 degrees for full water flow and freedom to water with ease all around your home. When you're all done, this rust-proof anti-burst hose shrinks back down to pocket size for effortless handling and tidy storage.

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There's been a big win in the Senate for cryptocurrency businesses.

I'm David Brancaccio in Los Angeles. The Senate has passed a bill setting up a framework of regulations for what are called stable coins. If something like this passes the House, it'll be a big win for the crypto folks. Marketplace's Nancy Marshall-Genzer has details. Stable coins are a type of cryptocurrency that's pegged to the U.S. dollar. Stable coin backers say they could be used to send payments instantly and directly, cutting out middlemen. The Senate bill is called the Genius Act.

It includes rules for private companies that want to issue digital dollars. The bill passed with some support from Democrats. Most Democrats were opposed, though, pointing out the legislation doesn't include anti-corruption measures or anything prohibiting President Trump and his family from making money from crypto. The House is considering its own crypto legislation and could make changes to the Senate bill. I'm Nancy Marshall-Genzer for Marketplace.

Now, middle of last week, the Trump administration was hardline on immigration raids, including farms and hotels. Late last week, after online posts from President Trump honoring the contributions of immigrant workers, an apparent reprieve for those industries. But coming out of the weekend, back to the hardline. Lobby groups for farms and businesses that employ people from other countries are expressing concern.

Today we continue our coverage. We look at contractors providing legally required services for people detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement. These include medical care, where providers are trying to navigate the administration's assertions that detainees do not have rights to normal due process. Aspen Public Radio's Hallie Zander reports on a mental health facility in Colorado that decided not to take this business. When

When MindSprings, the biggest mental health provider in western Colorado, considered contracting with ICE in January, some in the Grand Junction community were alarmed. Former CEO Dr. Nicholas D. Torres said calls poured in. There were some of our vendors that were telling us they were not going to work with us. There were some places that said they weren't going to renew visas with us.

ICE doesn't have a lot of infrastructure in western Colorado, and Mind Springs was typically filling only 30 of its 48 beds at its inpatient facility. The ICE contract would have filled the extra beds with immigrant detainees. Some immigrant advocates worried that if private companies like Mind Springs provide food, shelter, and medical care, it could make it easier for ICE to detain and deport people.

That's their opinion. Again, Dr. Torres. We have no say in the actual detention process. We're strictly providing those acupuncture health services. Across the country, private contracts with ICE are pretty common. A private prison based in Florida offers facilities. A tech company from Colorado provides data analytics software. And an air travel company out of New Mexico charters planes for deportation flights.

But if there's no contractor available for the price ICE wants to pay. They have to offer a higher price. That's Cesar Cuauhtemoc Garcia Hernandez, an immigration law professor at Ohio State University. He says even though Trump's administration is working to increase funding for ICE, there's always a breaking point.

The more it costs to detain one person, the sooner that the federal government will get to the end of the line. But John Fabricatore, a former ICE field office director, says that's not true when it comes to mandatory detention, even as costs rise. He says ICE will always arrest and detain people involved in serious crimes. And the community members who didn't want MindSprings to contract with ICE were missing the point.

What they actually protested against was providing care that is needed for people that are in a detained setting. And this deprived the local economy of some serious cash. Somewhere else in the United States is going to provide that service, and those people are going to be moved to that location. But it won't be Grand Junction. MindSpring shut down its hospital in March. In Aspen, Colorado, I'm Hallie Zander for Marketplace.

Hi, I'm Richard Karn, and you may have seen me on TV talking about the world's number one expandable garden hose. Well, the brand new Pocket Hose Copperhead with Pocket Pivot is here, and it's a total game changer. Old-fashioned hoses get kinks and creases at the spigot, but the Copperhead's Pocket Pivot swivels 360 degrees for full water flow and freedom to water with ease all around your home. When you're all done, this rust-proof anti-burst hose shrinks back down to pocket size for effortless handling and tidy storage.

Plus, your super light and ultra durable pocket hose copperhead is backed with a 10-year warranty. What could be better than that? I'll tell you what, an exciting radio exclusive offer just for you. For a limited time, you can get a free pocket pivot and their 10-pattern sprayer with the purchase of any size copperhead hose. Just text WATER to 64000. That's WATER to 64000 for your two free gifts with purchase. W-A-T-E-R to 64000.

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The spawn of the horror film 28 Days Later is out in theaters this week, 28 years later, directed by Danny Boyle. In the last decade, horror movies have gone from 4% to 11% of U.S. box office. Marketplace's Stephanie Hughes looks at this flight to fright. Jordan Homan likes the existential questions that movies like 28 Years Later bring up. What if something world-ending happened and you're in this zombie apocalypse?

There are many kinds of death. Some are better than others. How would people really act? Homan works in project development for Phoenix Theaters, which has nine locations across five states. All of them will be showing 28 years later. He's expecting people to show up because they want to be scared, but not by themselves. There's an electricity that's created in that environment.

Paul Dergira BDN is an analyst with Comscore. He says one thing that's boosted horror in the past decade is there have been a number of scary movies that are also critical darlings. He points to the 2017 movie Get Out and more recently Sinners. A lot of people for whom going to a horror movie, not really their cup of tea, came out for those films after reading reviews.

Also, he says, while people can spend a lot of money making horror films, they don't have to. That's different from, say, a superhero movie. But a great horror movie, you could have one person in a room and scare people to death. And he says horror movies do well internationally. Running from zombies has universal appeal. I'm Stephanie Hughes for Marketplace. And in Los Angeles, I'm David Brancaccio. It's the Marketplace Morning Report from APM American Public Media.

Hey there, it's Ryan, co-host of Million Bazillion, a podcast that answers your kids' big questions about money. From slam dunks to home runs, some professional athletes make a lot of money. Because it turns out, if you have a star player, everyone wants to pay you more. This week on the podcast, we keep score of how pay works in the world of sports. Listen to Million Bazillion wherever you get your podcasts.