tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN August 28, 2022 1:00am-2:00am PDT
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around the world. i'm john vause here in los angeles. ahead here, what was found at donald trump's private home. why director of national intelligence is looking at the classified documents. and also a dangerous and deadly job, we'll look at the efforts of clearing isolated munitions in ukraine's active warzone. and get out now, the warning from a city mayor ahead of record-breaking flooding in
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mississippi. a trump appointed federal judge has indicated that she is likely to grant a request from his legal team to appoint a special master to review evidence of the search of the mar-a-lago estate. a hearing for a final decision is scheduled for thursday. the application for a special master is seen by many legal experts as having no benefit and possibly a delaying tactic. and an advisory will be made on the possible risks of nag at security. michael cohen has more on that. >> reporter: new developments this weekend in the investigation of donald trump's handling or possible mishandling of classified documents.
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the top u.s. intelligence official says intel agencies are conducting a damage assessment of the documents that trump took with him when the white house to mar-a-lago. the director of national intelligence told u.s. lawmakers in a letter that her team and justice department are reviewing the materials recovered from mar-a-lago to see what is still classified. she also said once that is done, her office will, quote, lead an intelligence community assessment of the potential risks to national security that would result from the disclosure of the relevant documents. now, this all can comes shortly after the doj released the fbi affidavit that investigators used to secure that historic search warrant of mar-a-lago. doj refused to release the affidavit but they were ordered by a federal judge to make public a partially un redacted version and that affidavit once we got to see what was inside of it, it showed how investigators
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came to believe that there was probable cause that crimes had been committed at mar-a-lago. specifically related to possible mishandling of classified material as well as potential obstruction of justice. for his part donald trump has denied all wrongdoing. in the sworn affidavit, an fbi agent described how the national archives found 184 classified documents among the 15 boxes that were recovered earlier this year from mar-a-lago. there were 67 documents marked confidential, 92 were marked secret and 25 were top secret, that is the highest level. according to the affidavit, some of the materials had classification markings indicating that the records were about cia sources and spies. other documents were related to extremely sensitive nsa surveillance programs. all this is precisely why the u.s. intelligence community is now doing the damage assessment. marshall cohen, cnn, washington.
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former director of national intelligence james clapper told cnn about police concerns with classified documents being kept at a resort like mar-a-lago. >> i would imagine it is kind of a physical security nightmare in terms of preventing unauthorized access since they really can't control who is in and out of the place. and complicating this further is i think not knowing exactly what the chain of custody has been for these documents since they left the white house. how were they transported, how were they protected, who has had access to them at mar-a-lago, has someone perhaps reproduced these documents or taken pictures of them. >> donald trump has changed his story many times on why the documents were kept at his mar-a-lago estate and his story or narrative does not always match the claims from his legal
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team. former press white house secretary talked about the changing messages coming from her old boss. >> i think that he has got to be concerned. i don't know how he is not. the man is under investigation six, seven, eight ways, different investigations. and now people have gone into his home and removed actual evidence i think the fact that he keeps changing his messaging, to me that is very telling. a lot of times with donald trump he will go to a message and stick to it and double down, triple down even if it is the wrong message. this time the message keeps changing. u.s. justice department released the recondacted affida that led to the search of mar-a-lago. and we have a page by page annotation that breaks it all down in easy to understand language which is very helpful.
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ongoing shelling around the zaporizhzhia power plant continues while adding urgency for calls to allow access to international inspectors. ukrainian technicians keep it in operation. on thursday the 37-year-old facility was knocked off the power grid for a day. artillery being blamed for damaging a crucial power line needed to keep the cores from melting down. head of iaea hopes to have a team there in days but the president of the european commission suggesting that it would be up to russia to end the fighting once and for all. >> if russia stops fighting, there will be no more war in ukraine. but if ukraine stops fighting, there will be no more ukraine. in ukraine, evil will not have
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the last word. >> for more, let's go live to london, salma abdelaziz pulling the early shift for us there. the situation around the zaporizhzhia power plant, i mean, how urgent is it to get the iaea inspectors into that plant, what are they expecting once they get there? >> reporter: it is extremely urgent. if you listen to president zelenskyy, he has repeatedly said that the threat does not just loom over europe, but europe at large. this is the largest complex of its kind in all of europe and since march, it has been under russian control, seized by russian troops. and it is in recent weeks that ukraine is accusing russia of using it as a military base, of using it to fire artillery upon ukrainian army positions knowing full well that the ukrainian military can't fire back on the nuclear power plant without the threat of nuclear disasters. so is this a critical visit that will take place this week by the
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iaea, something ukraine has called for time and time again, something that president zelenskyy has been pleading for and something that russia does welcome. however, they have not agreed of course to pull their troops out of that area, that would create a demilitarized zone. they don't want to see this becoming part of the frontline which it very much is right now. and already those threats felt very real just a few days ago when this nuclear power plant was connected from the power grid, that meant that emergency services for the first time in the history of that power plant, the emergency system had to be ramped up to keep the nuclear reactors cool, to keep the disaster at bay. it has since been reconnected. but russia and ukraine again accusing each other of shelling that nuclear power plant. so a very critical visit that will happen today. but again, this is a nuclear power plant that is part of the
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battlefield, absolutely a matter of concern. >> salma, thank you. appreciate the update. after six months of war, much of the fighting seems to be at a stalemate. and plans for reported counteroffensive in the south have yet to fully materialize. i spoke with a former ukrainian defense minister about what his country still needs and why the counteroffensive might look different than expected. >> we do have manpower, the key problem is weapons. we still don't have enough weapons which we've been asking to provide us and that includes artillery and multiple rocket launchers, most of all that is something which is still don't have in sufficient numbers, but from the other side, we need to understand that counteroffensive may not take place in a traditional sense. what we do right now, we decrease the capacity and capabilities of the enemy of russians and as soon as we see
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that this is like a degree sufficiently enough, we can do the next step. but currently we're destroying their weapons and destroying their positions on a daily basis. including in the kherson area. >> and nearly six months, the almost constant bombardment of ukraine has left the country littered with destroyed buildings and unexploded ordinary nantnces which can cou detonate at any moment. and david mckenzie spent time with a team doing some dangerous work. >> that is where the vast majority of the contamination has gone. >> reporter: for each devastating strike, there is a deadly chain reaction. >> it struck this building and the ammunition which didn't detonate on that initial blast has been kicked out, has been thrown from here, and it can
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travel up to several hundred meters. >> reporter: ammunition like this live round can kill civilians, often children, long after the fighting has stopped. >> you carnage that has been left. >> reporter: in march ukrainian forces struck that farm warehouse housing tons of russian shells and rockets. >> i can only imagine the fireball that was produced when it happened. >> reporter: for this explosive ordinance disposal team -- >> we don't go in aggressive. there is a threat out there. >> reporter: the threat is very real. >> we'll continue with the search straightforward. if i stay stop at anytime, you stop immediately. advance. >> reporter: we have to be all the way back here for our own safety. it shows how dangerous this work is and it is painstaking. this small area has taken
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several days and you are not finished. >> we've merely scratched the surface. >> reporter: and you an entire country potentially. how do you do that job? >> me being here, if removing one item however small, however large it is, saves one life, then for me personally that is a goal that i've reached. >> reporter: when they spot a suspected shell -- >> everyone come back. >> reporter: -- the teach leader must go to alone. using only his fingertips, john works very, very carefully. these shells are designed to destroy defensive positions. if armed, even the slightest nudge could set it off. what is it like when you are there scrambling through not
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knowing what exactly you will find? >> yeah, it is interesting. something that you get used to after time, but still an element of sort of adrenalin kicking in a bit and a few beads of sweat. >> reporter: this shell can be moved safely. soon they will have ukrainian team leaders clearing their own land. this will be an enormous task, she says, since it all must be done carefully. you just can't rush this job. >> nice and steady. >> reporter: even if the war stopped today, it could take years for her country to be safe. david mckenzie, cnn, ukraine. state of emergency has been declared in mississippi as heavy rain and rising waters threaten to flood the state's capital. details when we come back. also coming up, how blackouts are disrupting the lives of thousands across the communist island of cuba.
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governor declared a state of emergency anticipating more heavy rains and flooding. the pearl river expected to rise to at least 36 feet by monday. jackson's mayor having a dire warning for residents. >> if you are capable of getting out now, get out now. get out as soon as possible to prevent any incident or challenge with people trying to leave the area all at once. it is possible for approximately 100 to 150 homes to be impacted by this year's event. >> let's bring in rek van dam. not ofteyou hear a city mayor say t out ahead of river peakg over its banks. >> yeah, and 48 hours ago, they told people to be prepared to leave at a moment's notice. and this is that time when they need to enact that with the governor saying those things because the crest of the river
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is actually occurring about 24 hours prior -- earlier than what they had originally anticipated. so as we've been monitoring the pearl river in downtown jackson, capital of mississippi, we have seen this projection move earlier and earlier in time. so this is where we're hat, 35.11 feet, that puts it at moderate flood stage. but we expecthat, 35.11 feet, that puts it at moderate flood stage. but we expect the crest to occur at 36 feet. and that will put those homes in jeopardy from flooding unfortunately. you can see the flood rivers that follow along the pearl river bisecting the central portions of the state exiting toward the gulf of mexico, these follow along some of the major rivers and tributaries beialask cros -- across the state. and a few showers will bubble up over the day and that will allow for convection or showers and storms to develop.
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any of the slow moving thunderstorms could produce another 1 to 1 1/2 inches of rain today. but the excessive flash flooding that we saw earlier this week, that has passed. that is the good news. you can see how much rain we've acquired since monday. some areas over a foot of rain. and of course that water has to go somewhere, so now it is filtering into those rivers, the pearl river for instance, and that is why we're seeing the cresting take place as the water eventually exits in to the gulf of mexico. you can see the radar is very quiet, no daytime heating from the sun, but that will change. but good news weather prediction center has removed had slight risk of flash flooding from deshl additional rainfall. the florida of panhandle could actually use the rain. and any of these slow moving thunderstorms could get to an inch to an inch and a half or
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so, but that is very localized. so the threat of extremely heavy rain has passed. tropical weather outlook,er want yo i want you to see this because there is this blob of showers and thunderstorms across the central atlantic with a 60% chance of development. we're looking at this very closely for the potential of impacts by the end of the this weekend. >> derek, thank you. foosast moving wildfire in washington is about to have an evacuation order for residents. some say that they were caught off guard by the sudden announcement. >> i have a friend text me and say hey, did you know there is a fire behind your house. so i hopped out in the yard, looked back, didn't know, checked the internet and saw it was level 1 and then my wife and our kids were away and we just met back here and you just told us it is level 3.
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so, yeah, time for us to leave i think. >> evacuation orders have been downgraded as of saturday night, the fire was 10% contained. last report no buildings or structures have been lost. and in oregon the run creek fire has grown to more than 4,000 acres prompting the county sheriff to urge residents to leave the area. one firefighter died after he was struck by a tree. and wildfires in southwest china are mostly contained. volunteers worked with firefighters to bring them under control. hottest weather in decades helped spark the blazes. no injuries or deaths have been reported. and a dire situation in pakistan where flooding continues to get worse. more than 1,000 people are now it dead from the rising water and that includes 348 children. and estimated 33 million people in total have been affected by the crisis.
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pakistan's minister for climate change posted this video online. the bridge was built 5 meters higher than the one they current will i had. and she says these are a climate produced disaster of epic proportions. cuban government blames american sanctions for lack of investment and a disastrous fire. patrick oppmann says the crisis has driven cubans to protest. >> reporter: for many cubans, this is now their life. waiting in the sweltering heat for the lights to come back on. in this neighborhood people say the power is regularly cut by the government amid growing energy shortages for up to 16 hours each day. very difficult really uncomfortable when it is time to go to bet, you can't, he says. mosquitos eat you alive.
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heat doesn't let you sleep. power cuts are nothing new here, but cubans are now dealing with the worst outages in decades as a perfect storm of economic calamity, a drop in tourism and skyrocketing inflation batters the island. and they blame increased u.s. government sanctions for the outages but lack of invest the in the state controlled energy sector and massive fire that destroyed cuba's main storage facility have brought the crisis to the brink. as lights go out more frequently, cubans have taken to the streets in rare protests that the government is the 6 usually doesn't allow. could you ban's president says protestors heed to be patient. some people take advantage of the situation to shout anti-revolutionary slogans he says. others take part in vandalism and that doesn't resolve the
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situation. but government officials admit there is no quick solution to the outages. the power outages have a major impact on people's lives. when the lights go on, food spoils more quickly in the summer heat. people can't go to work or school and they often have to sleep outside on the streets where they are exposed to mosquitos that carry diseases like dengue. there is no indication at this point that the energy crisis will get better anytime soon. wendy is nearly 9 months pregnant and most nights has to sleep on the ground outside her house. she says out loud what many here are thinking. the food spoils and there is no food in the stores. there is nothing, she says. this is going from bad to worse. i want to leave. already a record number of cubans have left the island in the last year. for those that remain, they know there are more long nights like this one to come. patrick oppmann, cnn, havana. live now to central italy
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where pope fran cis is visitinga cathedral devastated by an earthquake 13 years ago. he will meet with loved ones who were affected by the quake. houses were destroyed, thousands were left homeless. coming up here, libya's worse violence in years raising fears the country is spiraling towards greater turmoil. and just one day from the launch of the artemis 1 rocket. a review of the mission to the moon and beyond when we come back.
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welcome back to our viewers in the united states and around the world. i'm john vause. and we're following new details over the top secret documents seized from donald trump's florida home. a trump appointed federal judge has scheduled a hearing for thursday to consider the former president's request for a special master to oversee the fbi's review of evidence which was taken at mar-a-lago. the judge put the parties on notice that she had a preliminary intent to appoint a special master. an independent legal expert would filter out privileged material seized during the search. meantime the u.s. intelligence officials are conducting a damage assessment to determine if national security was put at risk. on friday the justice department released the heavily redacted affidavit that led to the search providing details on why the feds wanted to take this
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unprecedented action. the fbi said it has probable cause to believe that classified national security materials were taken to unauthorized locations at the resort. deadly clashes in tripoli are raising fears for libya's stability. gunfire and explosions were heard across the capital saturday as the worst fighting in years erupted. the health ministry says the clashes killed at least 23 people, 140 others have been hurt. the u.n. mission this libya says neighborhoods were hit by shelling and destroying dozens of buildings and homes. for more, get the latest with nada bashir live from london. what do we know this hour? >> reporter: really this is the most intense round of fighting that we've seen the last two years and it has brought into
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question the security situation in the capital threatening to push the country back into that status of sustained violence that we've seen in the past. of course tripoli is no stranger to this sort of violence, we've seen clashes between these rival factions in the past and this is off the back of months of political stalemate between two key rival factions. you have the u.n. backed international government of national unity led by the prime minister and then in the east, a rival political administration which has essentially appointed its own prime minister. and we saw back in may he and his allied forces attempting to seize control, a failed attempt, but since then we've seen simmering tensions between these two administrations. we've seen the forces allies to the east mobilizing around tripoli over the last few weeks. but it really all came to a head saturday when we saw the intense clashes using live fire and machine guns, even mortars being
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deployed in some central pars of the city, impacting many who have been trapped in their homes as a result of the clashes. we heard yesterday saying that they have been trying to evacuate some of the civilians directly impacted by the clashes. even hospitals in parts of the city were forced to evacuate some of their patients from their wards and send them back to their families for fears of nearby clashes. and there are real concerns now that this could push the political situation in libya into unchartered turmoil despite the last two years where we have seen some semblance of peace at least in the capital. we heard yesterday from the united nations secretary-general calling for return to peace, for all parties to return to open political dialogue. and we also heard from the leader of the gnu, the tripoli based government, he said that the gnu forces have defended the
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country, they have defended trip potentially, and he also confirmed the gnu remains committed to democratic elections. but he also issued a stark warning to members of the opposition during a visit to gnu allied fighters, he said anybody looking to launch a political coup was misled, that that time was long gone. and also said that anybody looking to seize power by force by any means other than democratic elections would meet his gnu allied fighters on the field. nada bashir, thank you. when we come back, school districts starting the school year in desperate need of teachers. why the problem is hitting some areas harder than others. also what the white house is saying about how americans can apply for student debt forgiveness and when it may disappear from their loan. you're watching c"cnn newsroom." .
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seems americans are divided over president biden's plan to forgive thousands of dollars in student loan debt for millions of students. the plan would forgive up to $20,000 for many working and middle class borrowers. now we're learning about how the plan will work and how much it might cost. arlette saenz has details. >> reporter: the white house has started to offer some details on how much they anticipate their student loan forgiveness program to cost. the white house says that they are projecting that it will cost $240 billion over the next decade. that is based on the idea that they would have 75% of eligible borrowers participating, a figure that they have derived from similar loan forgiveness programs in the past. but that figure is far lower than what some experts are projecting.
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analysis from pen wharton says it could cost up to $605 billion over the next decade and possibly over $1 trillion. the white house has pushed back on that analysis saying that it is purely speculative and on the higher end of the spectrum noting that there have been some changes to parts of the program and also saying that that analysis is taking into account 100% of eligible borrowers participating. president biden has said if simply 10% of eligible borrowers participate, that he would deal that a success. and he is continuing to push back on those with economic criticisms of his proposal. >> it is not going to cause inflation, number one. number two, it will generate economic growth, the opposite, because you have people who are in fact now freed up to go borrow money to go buy a home, to be able to start businesses and do the things that need to be done. >> reporter: criticism has come from both sides of the aisle,s and even some democrats. but the top economist from the obama administration says that
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it is akin to pouring half a trillion dollars of gasoline on the inflationary file. one other big question for these eligible americans is when they will start to see relief from the program. the white house said that they will start rolling out applications in the coming weeks with the goal of having that application out by early october. once people file, it will take four to six weeks for them to receive relief and the white house is encouraging applicants to apply by november 15th in order to get that relief. the pause on current federal student loan payments is set to expire at the end of the year. arlette saenz, cnn, the white house. if headlines are accurate, american's education system is in crisis. teacher shortage, some describing that as catastrophic. never thada clark county has mo than 4500 vacancies, some of those teachers. and it can depend on where you
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live and what sort of teacher you need. gym teachers, plenty of them. special ed, not so much. and there was a strike in washington state. >> i'm trying not to tear up because this is not what we want to do. we just want to see what is right and what is fair. >> and ifif pay is not bad, the are also culture wars on critical race theory and angry parents who insist that they know your job better than you do. and then of course the looming fear of mass shootings and the ugly fuel ttile debate that fol each one. a recent survey shows a 34% rise in job dissatisfaction among members since the start of the pandemic from 45% to 79%. 40% of members say that they may leave the job in the next two years. three quarters of teachers say that they would not recommend this profession to others, but
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is there actually a teacher crisis across the country? that is a real question. a national reporter at a nonprofit news organization covering education, he is with us now from vermont. thanks for taking the time to speak with us. >> happy to be here. >> so there is a lot of anecdotal evidence of teacher shortages in some parts of the u.s., but how can it be true that there is no actual data available to answer a very simple and yet crucial question about teacher numbers nationwide? that in itself says a lot. >> yeah, right. it is a very weird thing. but we have very frag mented education system. we have thousands of different school districts governed by thousands of different school boards and they have their own rules and their own data and their own issues. and sometimes they report that data up to states and sometimes they don't and maybe the federal government will collect that data or maybe they won't. and so that just leaves us in a
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situation where we have so many different anecdotes but no definitive answers or no -- at least at the national level on whether there is a teacher shortage or what that looks like nationally. >> so what is known at this point about teacher numbers and where they may or may not be shortfalls? >> right, so we do know that some districts report that it is harder to hire teachers. and so that might mean that there are more classrooms that start the year unfilled and that might mean that they have teachers but they are less skilled or less qualified. but that varies from place to place. again, without data, it is hard to say definitively. what i can say is historically we tend to see the biggest issues and high needs, high poverty schools and in recruiting and retaining skilled teachers and we also tend to see the biggest challenges in certain subjects. math, science, special education and i would expect that it is the same thing this year.
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>> there is record low unemployment right now in the united states, and that is leading to labor shortages in many industries. are those numbers simply reflected in what some people are calling a teacher shortage? >> it is certainly possible. what we have seen he have convery consistently is that schools are having an especially hard time getting school bus drivers and getting substitute teachers actually. and the substitute teacher thing is one where that might seem, oh, well, that is not such a big deal to substitute, but substitute teachers actually allow a school to function, allow teachers to take days off when they are sick. and when you don't have enough subs, the school can devolve into chaos. so i think it is true that the schools are feeling the labor shortage, but it is not always with the regular classroom teachers that they are facing the biggest struggles. >> and a lot of schools have been using pandemic relief money to boost teacher wages to keep
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them from leaving. that will eventually run out. what happens when that money is not there? >> i think that that is part of the issue, that there are some school districts who don't want to raise pay or hire new teachers as much as they would like to just because the covid relief funding which you are right, that is a lot of money, that will run out. and they know if they give a big pay raise now, they will fall off, some call it the funding cliff later, and they would be stuck, oh, we'll have to cut pay later or layoff teachers. and so they are really torn between the two impulses. raise pay to fix the shortage or hire more teachers to help sooth the learning loss, but doing it with temporary funding is not necessarily the wisest long term investment. so i think a lot of leaders are torn and different districts are doing different things. >> ultimately is the long term solution here just to basically raise teachers wages because
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they are so ridiculously low, they need to pay them more to attract not just more teachers but better teachers? >> there is a little bit of debate about this, but what we do know, teachers on average get lower salaries than other workers with college educations. now, there is some debate about if you account for summers off or if you account for health care, retire the benefits which tend to be more generous teachers, whether that makes up for the lower salaries. and so i can't sort of definitively answer that. but in general, it is right if you have a shortage of labor, one of the best ways to address that is to raise salary. there are other folks who would agree with that, but say, look, we don't have an across the board teacher shortage, we have a teacher shortage in certain areas, math, science, special education, and certain high need schools and those are the places where you should target the salary increases. and so there is a little bit of debate about the best way to do
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that. >> i would challenge anyone who says teachers are paid enough or more than enough to spend a couple days in a classroom with a bunch of kids. >> it is a tough job. >> thanks, matt. still ahead here, as we wait for the launch of the artemis 1 rocket, we'll look at the new protected vests that will be tested during this mission to fly faspast the moon. before treating your chronic migraine— 15 or more headache days a month, each lasting 4 hours or more you're not the only one with questions about botox®. botox® prevents headaches in adults with chronic migraine before they even start—with about 10 minutes of treatment once every 3 months. so, ask your doctor if botox® is right for you, and if a sample is available. effects of botox®
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my dad worked on the apollo program. so to be here on the cusp of the first test flight of the artemis generation, i'm not only excited but it is very, very personal for me. >> first woman director for a mission like this. the u.s. space agency nasa preparing to send astronauts back to the moon for its artemis missions. this time they will use a powerful rocket with the first test launch of an uncrewed capsule set for tomorrow. once launched, it will travel about 1.3 million miles or so over 42 days.
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a record. earlier i spoke with a cnn aviation analyst and he described why the artemis missions are such a big deal for nasa. >> this is not flags and foot prints as we saw 50 years ago with apollo. a sprint to the moon and photo opportunity, selfies if you will as we call them today. the idea here is to build an outpost and learn how to live in space at some distance away. going to mars is a quantum leap beyond that. the distance is greater. the radiation exposure to the crew is greater. and we really don't know how to do it. we don't even know how do the entry, descent and landing for the amount of mass we need to get on the planet in a practical way. so so many unanswered questions that need to be addressed including whether we'll go to mars on the traditional chemical rockets or if we will build some more advanced propulsion perhaps
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with a nuclear power plant that will get us there much faster and allow the astronauts to be in fitter shape when they finally get to the surface of mars. >> one of the biggest health risks to astronauts is exposure to radiation. and this one will be carrying two-man man in a continues to ta vest. >> reporter: and this is not just named after the greek goddess artemis, it is setting the stage for the first woman to walk on the moon and for more to explore deep space. >> we want to spend more time there and that is riskier business. so the monday we learn about the moon itself and the environment where we'll be operating the better we can prepare. >> reporter: one major health concern for astronauts in space is radiation. especially during solar storms. research has shown it can be particularly dangerous for
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organs like breasts and ovearie. so male astronauts have been staying longer in space. and so an experiment that will protect a new protective vest which could help humans especially women spend more time in space. >> would you like to try it? >> let's do it. >> reporter: director of product management for the team that created the vests lets me try on one of the demonstration vests. there are handles on my sides as well. so complete coverage all around. >> yeah. >> reporter: and so this is what the actual inside of the suit looks like and feels like. >> the material is the hydrogen and is that the most effective element in protecting from such kind of radiation.
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>> reporter: the vest varies in thickness from 6.5 millimeters to 65 millimeters fendepending the sensitivity of the area it covers. f phantoms made of special materials will be aboard artemis. >> and one is called helga will be unprotected while the other israeli phantom will be protected with our vest. >> reporter: as nasa prepares to send the first woman to the moon, she says being a woman leading the design on a female focused experiment in a male dominated field is adding extra significance to an already historic project. >> it adds to the general feeling of being part of something very significant and for sure i'm very happy to contribute to the equality between the genders. >> reporter: hadas gold, cnn, tel aviv. cnn.com has an interactive
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la look at that this launch. big day. here is something you don't see every day while going through airport security. clark the bald eagle showing off his impressi plumage. the airline notified them ahead of the arrival so that they could screen him before the flight. he returned to his travel case after passing through security. eagles apparently fly commercial. that wraps up this hour. i'm john vause. yes, i'll be back with 100% more me in the next hour. hope to see you soon. hi. i'm shannon storms bador.
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hello and welcome to our viewers here in the united states and around the world. i'm john vause live in los angeles, coming up here on "cnn newsroom." questions of national security at donald trump's stash of top secret documents at his florida home. a look at what could have been at risk. also ahead -- >> if you are capable of getting out now, get out now. >> fears of massive flooding in mississippi as the governor declares a state of emergency. water levels are expected to rise.
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