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Xchx Man thrown from motorcycle and dies due to crash, FHP says
Customers seem to be returning to chain restaurants as companies such as McDonald s, Starbucks and Buffalo Wild Wings have rolled out promotions to win back inflation-weary consumers.New data from Placer.ai shows that foot traffic has increased at some of thes stanley cup e chains that have started offering limited-time value meals and promotions after a period of raising prices.One notable example was that McDonald s stanley cup saw a massive boost in foot traffic in the first week following the June 25 launch of its $5 meal deal. June 25 marked the busiest Tuesday of the year for McDonald s, Placer.ai reported. Placer.ai said foot traffic increased between 5.4% and 7.9% year over year for the four days following the launch of the value meal.The $5 meal deal includes small fries, a four-piece Chicken McNuggets, a small soft drink, and the choice of a McDouble or McChicken sandwich. Top rivals Burger King and Wendy s have also offered similar promotions.RELATED STORY | McDonald s reveals what will be included in $5 value mealsStarbucks has seen a boost in customers on Fridays since rolling out a 50% discount on some beverages served bet stanley botella ween noon and 6 p.m. On the first day of the promotion on May 10, Starbucks had a 20% increase in customers over the same day in 2023.On the Friday before launching the promotion, year-over-year traffic had declined 1.1%.Buffalo Wild Wings has seen an increase in customers on Mondays and Wednesdays, according to Placer.ai. Buffalo Wild Wings launched an unlimited bonel Rtzh Last-minute shoppers pack the mall two days before Christmas
Planned Parenthood announced Monday it will drop f stanley vaso ederal funding over the Trump administration s rule blocking the reproductive rights organization from talking to patients about abortion services. Due to an unethical and dangerous gag rule, the Trump admini stanley canada stration has forced Planned Parenthood grantees out of Title X, Alexis McGill Johnson, the acting president and CEO of the organization, said in a phone call with reporters.Johnson said the organization will continue to fight the rule in court. She said the regulation will reverberate across the country and said the move amounted to an attack on reproductive health care by the Trump administration. We will not be bullied into withholding abortion information from our patients, Johnson said.The organization previously threatened to pull out of the federal family-planning Title X program rather than participate in the so-called gag rule. The Department of Health and Human Services rule would prohibit taxpayer-funded family planning clinics from discussing abortion with patients or referring patients to abortion providers. Critics argue the regulations would affect low-income people, communities of color, the uninsured and rural residents t stanley sverige he most.A spokesperson for HHS, Mia Palmieri Heck, said in a statement, Every grantee had the choice to accept the grant and comply with the program s regulations or not accept the grant if they did not want to comply. Some grantees are now blaming the government for their own actio |
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