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tv   CBS News Roundup  CBS  June 25, 2024 2:42am-3:30am PDT

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and around this amazonian village as part of a project to fight tropical diseases. >> what are you looking for? >> we're looking for specifically in water bodies that are potentially breeding sites for malaria vectors, for mosquitos. >> reporter: brian fernandez is part of the team. >> so the idea is to build a model that can predict where an outbreak can be. >> reporter: to even begin building that model, the team uses not only the drones, which can capture a shot every three seconds, but weather sensors to track conditions, even small recording devices to hear changes in what kinds of animals are roaming the area and what diseases they might bring. for the local kids, it's a novelty. but for gabriel carrasco, it's a way to help the children and their families. he's leading the research at the cayetano heredia peruvian university in lima.
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>> what we are trying to do is help people in really poor areas to survive. >> they're vulnerable in those areas. >> exactly. >> reporter: vulnerable in several ways. while the developing world's carbon footprint is small compared to industrialized countries, a warming planet, he says, can affect tropical regions disproportionately. >> events are more frequent. so, for example, el nino is more frequent now than some years ago. flooding events or extreme heat events are more intense. we observe some of these extreme events in areas where they were not previously reported as well. >> reporter: all can result in ideal breeding grounds for mosquitos. we visited this hospital in iquitos just as peru declared a health emergency due to surging cases of dengue, a mosquito-borne disease this young man was being treated for. dr. cesar asayag specializes in
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infectious diseases. >> if you end in the hospital, ■ you're not working. >> >> not all the people have a salary and have to take some vacation days. >> reporter: tropical diseases cost affected households $33 billion a year in lost income and productivity according to the world health organization, which is why back in his lab, carrasco is working to take all the information that's been collected in the field and, with the help of a.i., generate that program that can predict an outbreak. >> the idea now is how we can make those models much more accurate, much more detailed at the village level, or at the level that is useful for a direct impact to the population. >> reporter: he showed us just how detailed the information can be with all those drone photos turned into 3-d images to track water, even deforestation. >> what could potentially come with it? >> so there's a lot of studies that show that malaria
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mosquitos, for example, like recent deforested areas. >> reporter: eventually, he says, the technology can help areas around the world with limited medicines, vaccines, and doctors deploy them strategically to help contain the spread. that model is still potentially years away. so for now, the team keeps searching for answers in the heart of the peruvian amazon. heart of the peruvian amazon. manuel bojorquez, iquitos, peru. wanna know a secret? more than just my armpits stink. facts. that's why i use secret whole body deodorant for clinically proven odor protection everywhere. so i smell great all day, all hike, and all night. secret whole body deodorant. new centrum menopause supplements help unpause life when symptoms pause it. with a multivitamin plus hot flash support. (♪♪) daily zz for quality sleep. (♪♪) and enxtra for focus and clarity. centrum, powered by clinically studied ingredients. talenti salted caramel truffle layers, with creamy salted caramel gelato.
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actor kevin costner shocked his millions of fans when he announced he wouldn't be back for another season of the hit tv series "yellowstone." costner, as it now turns out, has an even more ambitious project on his hands, and as you might expect, he will be in a saddle. tracy smith has more. >> reporter: when frank sinatra sang "my way," he could have been singing about kevin costner. the oscar-winning actor/director is at work on his most ambitious project to date, a four-part saga of the american west, and just like old blue eyes, he's doing it his way. by the way, sinatra liked to have a little fun with reporters too. >> looks like you did your homework. >> i did. >> i'm looking at that, and i'm thinking i wonder what i was supposed to be doing. >> it's nothing you can't answer. >> right. show the people just for a second.
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i have to deal with this. >> so you finished shooting parts one and two. you're in the middle of three and four. your baby, part one, is about to be born. how are you? >> i'm okay. i'm okay. i'm like a wagon headed west too. i've just run into everything that you can imagine. i have to hold on to the rope because i've got this pact with the audience that i'm going to give them something. i'm going to let them -- i want them to go west. >> reporter: go west, indeed. costner's "horizon: an american saga" is spectacular in every sense. >> why don't you help her. >> reporter: there are four parts, each one feature length. and costner says he put his own money, $38 million, into the project so far. >> i just hear -- i don't know if you've seen "the producers," but i hear nathan lane's voice
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saying "never -- >> put your own money. >> "-- in the show." >> no, it's true. but it's not true for me. you know, conventional wisdom, right? what if everybody's wrong? >> reporter: and you can practically see where all the money goes, especially if you happen by one of costner's shooting locations, like the one he showed us outside of moab, utah. around here, it's not so much a movie set as a time capsule. every detail is accurate down to the doorknobs. >> do you feel like the setting is a character too, the town is a character? >> yeah. no, you want to create an environment that's authentic. so it's an important piece. >> you and i are standing guard on one of the last great open spaces. >> that looks like a promising place. >> the place i might be able to see myself. >> reporter: the story is authentic too, about the lure of the old west and the tragedy of the people who lived here first. >> these towns, they weren't like mushrooms.
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they didn't just pop up. they were fought for. this land was contested, and it was always an ugly finish for the native americans, always. so those are themes that while i'm embarrassed by that, kind of ashamed of how it went down, i'm also not afraid to talk about it. i like it. >> yeah, and there's a story there. there's a hell of a story there. >> there can be. there can be. >> let's roll, camera. >> reporter: costner's own story is pretty epic as well. his directorial debut was 1990's "dances with wolves," and he had to put his own money into that one too. when it premiered, "the new yorker" film critic pauline kael called it childishly naive, but costner had the last laugh. >> "dances with wolves." >> reporter: the film won best picture, and costner took home best director as well. costner's made other big movies, of course. you might know him from a few baseball films in the '80s, but
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it seems he's always felt comfortable in a cowboy hat. >> nothing happens in this valley i don't know about. >> reporter: he helped make taylor sheridan's "yellowstone" a monster hit for our parent company, paramount. but that's over now, maybe. >> so tell me, did you have to leave "yellowstone" in order to complete "horizon"? >> no. i -- i did everything that i was contracted to do with "yellowstone." >> would you like to go back? >> yeah. if i liked the story, where it was going, i would go back. >> you get up there and get him. >> reporter: but right now, he has his sights set on something else. "horizon, part one" is in theaters next week. part two comes in august. and parts three and four are due sometime after that. >> how did it grow from one to four parts? >> i wasn't done, you know? i mean, listen, how one became four, even i kind of like go, really, kevin?
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but it's so good right now. i really love it. >> tomorrow, you be aware of the time. i want you to draw your water and get your team hitched ahead of all these others, and don't stop anyone asking for help. >> reporter: costner says he's had this story in his back pocket for three decades, so why did he make these films now? he says the young man in this scene, his real son, hayes, is a big reason. >> it's all right. you're going to be with dad. >> i saw hayes at 13, and i said, i got to do this movie. >> it was your son? >> yeah. i said i want him in that movie. i'm going to make it. >> and that was it? >> that was it. [ cheers and applause ] >> reporter: the film's debut in cannes last month earned him a standing ovation and also drew some less than glowing reviews.
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but to 69-year-old kevin costner, making the movie is worth anything and everything. >> will you ever put your money in a project again? >> i probably will. i -- i -- in the world of business, of movies, i don't think i should have to. but the reality, if nobody wants to go fishing with me, i'm going to go anyway. >> if you have any money. no, you will. you will. >> no. that was mean. no, i'm teasing. >> sorry. >> it's okay. >> you just set it right up there. >> one more good deal, i'm out of business. >> reporter: now he's hoping crowds will line up, like fans who got a sneak peek on tuesday at joint reserve base fort worth texas. >> welcome to the stage mr. kevin costner. [ applause ] >> reporter: he's still raising money for parts three and four. but like a famous cowboy once said, courage is being scared to death and saddling up anyway. >> this is the hardest thing you've ever done in your life?
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>> it has been, and it continues to be. you know, if i hear the word "billionaire" one more time, i think i'm just going to roll over because i don't have that kind of money. and i believe in this enough to just go shh. all these guys, all these scaredy cats, it's probably why they have so much, because they're smart and they hold on to it. i'm not that. i just really believe in the idea of what this can be, and so i just keep pushing it. >> that was tracy smith with kevin costner. stay with us. you're watching "cbs news roundup."
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for more than 100 years, the only flamingos you were likely to see in florida were inside zoos. well, after some powerful hurricanes blew the pink birds back into the sunshine state, the flamingo population now on the rise. and florida officials are keeping track of the numbers. cristian benavides has more. >> reporter: from plastic lawn ornaments to the state lottery, flamingos and florida just go together. >> when people think of flamingos, they think of florida and vice versa. >> reporter: ron magill at zoo miami snapped this photograph of flamingos riding out hurricane andrew inside a zoo bathroom
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nearly 32 years ago. >> flamingos historically were native birds here. >> the once native population was decimated in the 1800s for the bird's vibrant feathers and meat. since then, wild flamingos have been nearly nonexistent until late last year when hurricane id idalia's winds carries them to the u.s. it led to a number of sightings and in some cases the birds aren't leaving. so many wild flamingos have popped up that the first ever flamingo census took place this year. >> we are getting our own surveys, and then we're asking the public for what they saw too. >> reporter: jerry lorenz with the audubon society spearheaded the count. the census turned up 101 wild flamingos, including more than 50 in florida bay, 18 in the pine island area, and 14 at merritt island national wildlife refuge. >> considering that a decade ago, i would have considered four a very large number of flamingos, so we're pretty happy with that number. >> reporter: lorenz credits conservation efforts in the everglades for the triumphant
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return. >> we've improved the habitat. these birds are not only coming back. they're coming back to a place they find that they like. >> reporter: he hopes to see nesting flamingo populations flourish in their once native florida home. cristian benavides, cbs news, miami. and that's today's "cbs news roundup." for some of you, the news continues. for others, be sure to tune in later for "cbs mornings" and follow us online at cbsnews.com. reporting from the cbs news broadcast center in new york city, i'm shanelle kaul. ♪
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hello and thanks so much for watching. i'm shanelle kaul in new york, and here are some of the stories we're tracking on "cbs news roundup." deadly and destructive floodwaters are ravaging iowa, minnesota, and south dakota. israel's prime minister says he won't agree to a peace plan ending the war in gaza as he moves troops north to face hezbollah. and wikileaks founder julian assange strikes a deal with the u.s., allowing him to go free from prison. millions of americans in parts of the midwest are now under threat as rivers continue to rise with some reaching record levels. at least one person died in iowa when his truck was swept away. flooding also reaching the rooftops of buildings, cutting off entire neighborhoods and shutting down roadways. people in parts of the minnesota river valley are being told to evacuate after raging floodwaters overwhelmed this
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historic dam opened in 1910. and now even more rain is in the forecast. cbs's jonah kaplan reports from spencer, iowa. >> reporter: historic rainfall is causing rivers to swell in parts of the midwest. >> i think the term people are using is unprecedented. >> reporter: in mrn, governor tim walls activating the national guard to help residents in waterville while officials kept a close eye on possible dam breaches in low-lying areas. >> minnesotans are tough and our communities are strong and we will get through this together. >> reporter: aerial video shows the extent of devastation in iowa, where governor kim reynolds declared a disaster for 21 counties. >> at this time, it's estimated that at least 1,900 properties are impacted and hundreds have been destroyed. >> reporter: in the town of spencer, streets have turned into rivers, leaving residents with nowhere to go. all this water is from a historic crest from this river that's moved well beyond the bridge. you can see it's covered this entire stretch, many businesses.
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there are neighbors on each side. and in south dakota, at least one person was killed after heavy rains and flooding inundated the eastern part of the state. and floodwaters there continue to pose a threat. officials in affected areas are working with the federal government to deliver assistance to hard-hit areas as the severe weather threat shifts east. jonah kaplan, cbs news, spencer, iwa. there is now concern over mounting problems at the international space station. a scheduled spacewalk was called off at the last minute on monday due to a water leak in one of the astronauts' spacesuits. all this as nasa has again postponed the return to earth of boeing starliner's first crewed mission. here's cbs's mark strassmann. >> ignition and liftoff! >> reporter: just hours after starliner's june 5th launch came the first sign of trouble. >> starliner, it looks like we picked up a couple more helium leaks.
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>> all right. we're ready to copy and find out exactly what you mean. >> reporter: the spacecraft had launched with one small helium leak. now it has five. starliner also lost five small maneuvering engines on its final approach to the space station. all but one were recovered. but the glitches convinced nasa to delay starliner's return to earth. >> we want to give our teams a little bit more time to look at the data, do some analysis, and make sure we're really ready to come home. >> reporter: krx news space analyst bill harwood. >> it's not like they're stranded on the space station, but nasa just wants to get as much information as they can before the crew comes home. >> reporter: so far, all these problems have been in star starliner's service module. engineers need to examine the faulty hardware while in space. >> that's why they're making this big effort to get as much data as they can because that's what they're going to have to base their decisions on downstream. >> reporter: starliner could
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stay in space at least a few more weeks before it would have to return to earth. until it does, astronauts butch wilmore and sunny williams will be extra hands to help out on the space station. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu says the intense phase of the war in gaza is about to end although he also expects fighting there to continue. netanyahu also announced israel is moving troops to its northern border with lebanon, where the risk of war with the iranian-backed group hezbollah increases by the day. cbs's imtiaz tyab reports from tel aviv. >> reporter: flanked by security, prime minister netanyahu said the heaviest fighting against hamas in rafah was nearly over. "it doesn't mean that the war is about to end," he says, "but the war in its intense phase is about to end in rafah." but when asked about the israeli proposal president biden
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outlined weeks ago for a cease-fire in gaza and hostage release deal with hamas, netanyahu said, "our terms are not to end the war," a statement he later walked back, saying he was, in fact, committed to the proposal. a proposal the families of hostages are also desperate for. three of them, including the parents of american hirsch goldberg pollin allowed for the release of videos of abductions that hamas fighters filmed. but it was netanyahu's comments that troops in gaza would be redeployed to the north that has intensified fears. this time with the powerful iranian-backed hezbollah movement. we traveled to northern israel, where many communities are now ghost towns after the israeli military and hezbollah began trading cross-border fire back in october. israel's defense minister, yoav gallant, was heckled by protesters as he arrived in
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washington for a series of high-level meetings. gallant's closed-door talks about a potential war in lebanon comes as cbs learned the u.s. aircraft carrier eisenhower will move from the red sea into the eastern mediterranean as concerns about a full-scale conflict breaking out on israel's northern front only mount. imtiaz tyab, cbs news, tel aviv. the founder of wikileaks, julian assange, has agreed to plead guilty to a felony charge for violating america's espionage act. assange is expected to appear in a u.s. courtroom in the maria na islands on wednesday, this according to court records. prosecutors have accepted a sentence of five years to coincide with the amount of time he's already spent in a british prison while fighting extradition to the u.s. the infowars media platform owned by conspiracy theorist alex jones is about to be shut down and sold off. that's according to a u.s. bankruptcy court.
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jones owes $1.5 billion in lawsuit judgments to families of victims in the 2012 sandy hook elementary school shooting for repeatedly calling the tragedy a hoax. and florida panthers fans will be celebrating a huge win after the panthers beat the edmonton oilers 2-1 in game seven of the stanley cup final, making them nhl champions for the first time. this was the panthers' third attempt in their 30-year history at the championship title. next on "cbs news roundup," we take the pulse of young voters, who could hold the keys to the upcoming presidential election.
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[inspirational music] ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪ so when they stand and tell the stories ♪ ♪ of who we are and what we've done ♪ ♪ of a thousand things that we could leave behind us ♪ ♪ if they say just one word ♪ ♪ let that word be ♪ ♪ kindness ♪
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♪ you can save the world with kindness ♪ ♪ your kindness ♪ ♪ kindness ♪ ♪ this is "cbs news roundup." i'm shanelle kaul in new york.
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with less than five months until the presidential election, we're looking at how younger voters feel about the candidates and the issues facing the nation. a new cbs news poll shows voters under the age of 30 favor president biden by more than 20 points. the question is how many of those young voters will actually show up at the polls? cbs's caitlin huey-burns went on a listening tour in the battleground state of arizona. >> chaotic. >> kind of scared a little bit. i don't feel like anything is improving. >> shambles. >> reporter: these are the voices of young voters in arizona describing how they feel about the state of the country right now, and their vote could be key in picking the next president if they show up. >> the couch is looking real comfy right now. >> so you'd be entirely comfortable staying home? >> for sure, absolutely. >> reporter: roger ward is 29 and doesn't feel like any ofthe candidates are speaking to issues affecting young black americans. >> you have to give us something
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to vote for. >> do you think that sitting this election out sends a message? >> absolutely, because we're weaponizing our vote. >> i just registered a week ago. >> reporter: adam french, who is 26, was planning to sit this one out until he considered a third option. >> i didn't feel like inspire, but, yeah, seeing rfk was like, okay, now i actually want to like vote. >> reporter: at an arts festival in phoenix, other first-time voters spoke about their concerns. >> i'm not happy about my options, but i do understand that if i don't vote, then it's probably a vote for trump, and i don't want that. >> reporter: new cbs news polling shows 66% of voters under 30 say they will definitely vote in november. but that's far less than older americans. young voters were key to biden's victory in 2020. but among those who did show up four years ago, only three-quarters say they'll do so
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again. and the economy is a central issue. our new poll shows a majority feel it's gotten harder to buy a house, raise a family, and get a good job. some said that's driving their support for trump. >> he seems more competent. the cost of everything is kind of going up in general. >> reporter: the economy is also critical for biden's supporters, like rudy morales, a recent college grad who's working at a starbucks while she looks for a career. >> it's kind of unfortunate that my current job is paying more than my future job. >> reporter: and it's not lost on young voters that they are having to choose between the two oldest candidates. half of them say neither trump nor biden understands younger people, and they're less likely to want to vote because of that. >> preferably somebody under the age of 50 would be awesome. in 2020, it's the same options you had then, and we all saw how that went. >> reporter: it's also worth noting that while the economy is
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a top driver for young voters, the issues of abortion, climate, and race and diversity rank higher for them than for other age groups. all of those issues are likely to be asked at the debate this thursday. caitlin huey-burns, cbs news, washington. one issue on the ballot this fall, abortion rights. it was two years ago yesterday that the supreme court overturned roe v. wade, ending the constitutional right to an abortion. in many states, the procedure is now either illegal or greatly restricted. janet shamlian paid a visit to north carolina, which has now become a sanctuary for out-of-state patients seeking abortion care. >> reporter: this is an abortion clinic in charlotte, north carolina. but for months now, a steady stream of patients have been coming to a woman's choice from hundreds of miles away since florida banned abortion at six weeks in early may. >> how has the ban in florida been impacting this clinic?
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>> um, tremendously. over the past couple weeks, we have seen an influx in patients, double, triple the numbers. >> reporter: worker dallas blake says patients tell her stories of ten-hour drives and having to take unpaid days off of work to make the trip here. florida doctors perform more than 84,000 abortions last year, including almost 8,000 from patients who lived in other states. north carolina is now the only southern state south of virginia which hasn't restricted the procedure at six weeks or banned it altogether. >> what type of hardship would that be for you? >> that would be extremely hard. honestly, i would be a wreck because that's ridiculous. >> reporter: cbs news spoke with clinic patients. some telling us if they'd had to travel out of state, they might not have been able to do it and have been forced to continue the pregnancy, like hope, who lives in charlotte. >> i barely made it here today because my daughter isn't in day care. so i had to get a babysitter.
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i had to make sure i had a babysitter twice -- actually three times because i can't bring her here. >> reporter: that's because north carolina requires a 72-hour waiting period between initial consultation and the procedure, keeping some in hotels near here for days. >> i never, ever thought that i would be trying to do distinguish one state's law from another, yet alone my own state. >> reporter: dr. chelsea ward is the medical director. >> it's hard to keep up. it really is. i see more and more patients from out of state, and i wonder -- i can only imagine what they had to go through in order to get here. >> reporter: the road to abortion care two years after the overturning of roe v. wade, for many a much longer one. janet shamlian, charlotte, north carolina. >> cbs news will have complete coverage of thursday's presidential debate hosted by cnn. you can watch it right here or stream it on cbsnews.com. "cbs news roundup" will be right "cbs news roundup" will be right back. so rich. so indulgent.
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gunmen opening fire at a police traffic post, turning the streets of the capital, makhachkala, into a bloodbath. bursting into a russian orthodox church, shooting parishioners and a priest in coordinated simultaneous attacks, armed assailants also opened fire on a synagogue 75 miles south in the coastal city of derbent, then setting the building on fire. the city is home to a small and ancient jewish community. investigation officials say at least 15 officers were killed, and the priest of the orthodox church, who officials described as brutally murdered. no one has claimed responsibility, but government officials are describing it as a terrorist attack. it comes three months after 145 people were killed in an attack claimed by isis on a concert hall outside moscow. russia's predominantly muslim republic of dagestan has been a hotbed of islamic extremism for decades. we were there in 2013 after the
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boston bombers were believed to have been radicalized there in the weeks before triggering their homemade bombs at the boston marathon. dagestani officials say the anti-terror operation has concluded, and a number of attackers are under arrest. so you may remember it was in dagestan that the anti-semitic mob stormed a plane arriving from tel aviv last october. so this region has a history of unrest. the governor of dagestan has announced three days of mourning for the victims, and president putin has expressed his condolences to those who lost loved ones in the attack. "cbs news roundup" will be right back.
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eco-friendly energy could look like this. the long pipes being drilled into the ground will help heat and cool this home using geothermal energy. the process takes advantage of temperatures underground, which tend to stay around 55 degrees year-round. in the winter, fluid is sent through the warm ground, then enters a pump that heats it even more and distributes hot air into the house. >> the goal is to take advantage of the fact that the soil has a lot of heat capacity, a lot of availability of heat. >> reporter: in the summer, the system is reversed. hot air is pulled out of the home and sent through the ground to cool. residential geothermal makes up just 1% of the u.s. heating and cooling market, but now there are new incentives. >> there's an amazing policy landscape helping homeowners afford this technology. >> reporter: kathy hoe nun is the co-oun r owner of geothermal
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dandelion and says like solar, the government is offering tax breaks. >> on the federal level, we have the investment tax credit, where the federal government just pays for 30% of the system. >> reporter: that would mean a homeowner buying a $30,000 system would pay $21,000, and many states have their own tax credits, which can bring the price down even more. >> nobody else, none of our neighbors, our friends have done this. so they're all looking up to us to see how the performance is going to be. >> reporter: homeowners using geothermal energy can save anywhere from 30% to 70% on heating and cooling costs depending on where they live. people in places with cold winters and hot summers see the largest
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it's time to get away and cash in at cache creek casino resort. to rock and to roll. to go all out or go all in with four stars and rising stars. northern california's premier casino resort is the perfect place to do as much... or as little as you want. make your getaway now and cache in at cache creek casino resort.
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liz neeley: you know, you've probably heard it said that some people have to hit rock bottom before they really come to the lord and give him their life. and that's what happened. i probably had a lot of anxiety at that point about my future, but as i began to study the word and a lot of dr. stanley's teachings and sermons, i began to realize that, through the love of jesus, god saved me for a purpose.
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♪ ♪ california sky ♪ ♪ todos alcanzamos las estrellas ♪ ♪ sunny state of mind ♪ ♪ flexin' all the time ♪ ♪ todo es dorado ♪ ♪ y nos gusta picante ♪ ♪ cause this place is caliente ♪ ♪ 'tamos enchilado ♪ ♪ feels so golden ♪ ♪ livin' in the golden state with you ♪ ♪ feels so golden ♪ ♪ vive en el estado dorado oooh ♪ ♪ we got that drip, drip, drip ♪ ♪ come take a sip, sip, sip ♪ ♪ feels so golden ♪ ♪ vive en el estado dorado ♪ it's tuesday, june 25th, 2024. this is "cbs news mornings." breaking overnight, julian assange cutting a deal. the wikileaks

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