tv CBS Evening News CBS February 21, 2025 4:00pm-4:30pm PST
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is that the people in my life have been my teachers, and they stuck by my side. i think that's a big thing. how do you not give up on people? how do you keep pushing and believing in them until they grow into the person that you want for them? that's kind of what today is about for me. you've done it. i have to say, we are here for you. that's why everybody shows up for you. you inspire us every single day, and we love you. 50 years, 50 more! 50 more, yes! barrymore, we love you more, and more, and more. [music playing] [audio logo] [audio logo] ♪ ♪ >> announcer: from cbs evening news headquarters in new york,
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this is that cbs evening news. >> john: good evening, i'm john dickerson. >> maurice: i'm maurice dubois. the cuts keep coming. now president trump is eliminating more than 6,700 jobs that the internal revenue service -- the agency that collect 96% of the money that funds the federal government. >> john: he's doing this at the height of tax season. when americans are checking their mailboxes for the w-2 and a 1099 they need to feel out there 1040s. >> maurice: here's a number for you, 800-829-1040. that is a number many taxpayers will be calling to reach the irs for help and hoping they reach an experience agent to answer their questions. >> john: chief white house correspondent nancy cordes looks tonight at the impact of the irs cuts on workers and americans who depend on them. >> reporter: the cuts this week amounted to about 6 to 8% of the workforce and the sources tell us they don't believe these cuts are over yet.
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what's a sharp reversal for an agency that spent the past two years aggressively trying to boost staffing, to become more responsive to taxpayers. >> i always knew i wanted to work for the irs, this was my dream job. >> reporter: today was day 1 of elizabeth corona job search. the 22-year-old was let go yesterday after six months of the irs where she worked as an auditor on high income tax returns. >> we were already needing more employees to handle the cases that we already have. >> reporter: cbs news obtained an email that was sent to irs workers this week, it's at those being fired and were newer, probationary employees who were not deemed as critical to filing season. >> reporter: what do we know about the people who are being let go? >> i'm hearing it's across all functions. it includes people who provide taxpayer services and answer the phones. >> reporter: she's a tax
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policy expert and it served as a treasury secretary under president biden. >> i don't see how you fire thousands of employees in the middle of filing season how that's not going to put the filing season at risk. >> reporter: and administration officials say in any operation that is in debt you look to cut costs and lay off workers, why isn't that a valid approach in this case? to speak of the irs brings in revenue. for every dollar that you invest in the irs commit reduces budget deficits by $6. >> kevin hassett one of president trump's top economic advisors told reporters at the white house all the federal job cuts will make agencies more efficient. >> nobody's going to the buildings, people are commuting, nobody is due what their jobs. reporter mike you're saying everybody being let go was doing a bad job? >> i'm saying we are studying every agency and deciding who to let go and why. we are doing so very rationally with a lot of support from analysis.
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>> reporter: i asked him about the many fired workers who say they have no record of poor performance. >> i've never seen a person who was laid off her poor performance say they were performing poorly. >> those statements are an insult to me, absolutely. i'm getting choked up thinking about that. that is offensive to me. >> maurice: here we are in tax season, what kind of impact do we expect the cuts to have on taxpayers? >> reporter: in the short term we will see fewer audits of wealthy individualsnd small businesses. those audits bring in a lot of revenue. you could also start to see wait times to get someone on the phone begin to inch back up. they had come down pretty precipitously since 2022 when congress passed $80 billion in additional funds to help the irs modernize and hire more workers. those are the new workers who are now being shown the door. >> maurice: nancy cordes at the white house tonight,
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thank you. >> john: the president is also targeting the consumer financial protection bureau. earlier this month he fired the director, rohit chopra. >> maurice: the cfpb nearly 14 years old was the brainchild of his nemesis elizabeth warren and the democratic senator from massachusetts is leading the fight to save it. >> john: lesley stahl will have more about the agency and the president's attempts to dismantle it this sunday on "60 minutes" and that she has with us now. help people understand what are the stakes here? >> this agency looks over consumers who had been defrauded. they can sue a big bank or a payday lender and get the money returned to the consumer. damages. what's one of the only agencies, the only agency were a little guy can go and have their problems with big banks settled and taken care of. >> maurice: along those same lines, elon musk the richest man
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in the world, might he stand to possibly benefit from some action like this? >> reporter: if the young men who have been working with him go into this agency and combed through their computers, he could find data on his rivals. one of the things they oversee, they are a watchdog agency, regulator is high tech companies that do payment apps, have a payment app -- east starting one. it's called x money and he could see what his rivals are up to. that would be a conflict of interest. but it could help him greatly if he chose to do that to. >> maurice: all potentially. >> reporter: a potentially. >> john: where does this go now from here? >> reporter: everything is frozen right now, nobody's going to get any refund. there aren't being cases being prosecuted right now. every thing has stopped in pl
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place. >> john: lesley stahl on the consumer financial protection bureau. >> maurice: a reminder you can see who report this sunday on "60 minutes." now some of the top stories from around the world in tonight's evening news roundup. >> john: a man charged murdering unitedhealthcare ceo brian thompson appeared at a new york court hearing today for the first time since his arraignment in december. luigi mangione was shackled and wore a bulletproof vest. supporters cheered as he entered the court. >> maurice: los angeles mayor carolyn bass removed kristin crowley as fire chief today though she is staying with the department. she claims crowley did not give her adequate warning ahead of the january wildfires. the mayor said she would not have left the country had she known the extent of the fire risk. >> john: stocks took a dive today following a report that consumer confidence has dipped to. losses on the s&p 500 wiped out the last of the two and half percent gain since trump took
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office. hamas plans to release six more israeli hostages tomorrow. would put out a list of their names today. israel will in turn release 600 palestinian prisoners. >> maurice: the latest swap as part of the cease-fire deal which is still holding despite israel's anger over a return of remains this week. debora patta is in east jerusalem. >> reporter: first israelis were subjected to the macabre expectable of hamas militants handing over coffins they claimed the remains of the bibas family. then the gut-wrenching twist. israel positively identified 4-year-old ariel bibas and his nine month-year-old brother kfir. but the third body was not their mother shiri. hamas has always claimed the bibas family was killed in under israeli air strike. israel now says the brothers were brutally murdered. neither side has provided any
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proof of their claims. but it has unleashed fury from prime minister benjamin netanyahu. >> i vow that i will not rest until the savages that executed our hostages are brought to justice. >> reporter: it prolonged the grief of an anguished nation. five weeks of hope has been replaced by fear that the fragile gaza cease-fire could collapse. the bibas boys aunt ofri levy made an urgent plea of social media -- we are seeking revenge, we just want shiri back and to save the lives of all the living hostages. the cry for the cease-fire to hold is echoed across the ruins of gaza. wahiba muheisen lost her husband and three sons during more than 15 months of war. she lives in a tent near what used to be her home.
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we had enough of war, she told us. i've lost so much. like so many here, she yearns only for a lasting peace. in a new development, hamas says it has handed over another body tonight to the red cross and this time it is shiri bibas. israel will still have to confirm the identity of those remains. >> john: it sounds like the divisions within israel, already deep, are getting deeper. >> reporter: the events surrounding the bibas family have once again expose the searing divisions that have existed in this country. many friends and family of the hostages have been very critical of prime minister netanyahu. blaming him for the failure to bring hostages back home from the very beginning of the war in gaza. we saw that again today, the aunt of the two bibas toddlers
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had harsh words for benjamin netanyahu saying it's israel's responsibility to bring the children back to life and they never be forgiven for abandoning them in captivity. >> maurice: what happens next? the cease-fire set to expire in a matter of days now. >> reporter: it was a six-week truce that was negotiated in gaza. after that a second cease-fire is supposed to kick in but talks to ensure that have not officially begun. in addition to releasing more hostages. round 2 is also supposed to look at plans for the withdrawal of the israeli troops from gaza and what everyone is worried about in this region is the deal to extend the cease-fire is not reached, then the remaining hostages living or dead will not be released. palestinians in gaza who have already endured 15 months of war will once again face is really
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bombardment. >> maurice: debora patta in east jerusalem tonight, thanks so much. >> john: still ahead on cbs evening news a weekend warm-up for parts of the country. >> maurice: and we'll have these stories. >> reporter: i'm david schechter, a new report says glaciers are melting faster than we thought. i went to the fastest warming place to see for myself at we'll take you there. >> reporter: most people consult with their spouse before making wow making major decisions. like bring home a puppy or a 7-foot baseball player. like you did to. >> you have a conversation about it. speak of is a reason why this happened. >> reporter: how it ama became part of the family. when we go on the road to pittsburgh, coming up on cbs evening news. y, maybe i can really, really, really do this. (♪♪) my business has tripled in the last year because of me sharing my videos on tiktok.
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going to go a little bit farther than that. the closer you get to svalbard, norway -- the small of the planes get. but that's not the end of the journey. to study glaciers of the top of the world. >> it's dramatic to see changes from year to year. >> reporter: scientist jack kohler can only get there by boat or chopper. he's been studying melting glaciers for nearly 30 years with the norwegian polar institute. this goes endlessly this way and we are on the river of ice, we are on the glacier. we visited him in september 2023 at the end of norway's summer 600 miles from the north pole. six months before, he had driven a series of stakes in the ice and he came back to measure how much were exposed. >> in april, the ice surface was here. that much ice has melted. >> this was boarded of the ice? >> reporter: and now it's all exposed. speak of the calculations he's
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making a really basic. water out, and no new ice in. it means these glaciers are disappearing and that's what he's measuring. it's happening fast up here, really fast. >> he says melting broke a 50 years of records at the rate of melting nearly three and a half times the long-term average. consistent with the latest research from around the world's. >> reporter: what is the connection between your work and climate change? >> we are documenting the effect of climate change locally here, of course. but i have colleagues all over the globe who are doing similar things and they are all seeing the same thing. speak of the impact of melting glaciers is sea level rise which affects nearly every coastal community in america. >> if you live in florida you see the effect of sea level rise already. there are plenty of pictures of very high tides that are not caused by any storms or anything. it's just a daily occurrence.
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this is because sea level is inexorably rising and glaciers are contributing very significantly to that. >> john: david schecter joins us now from dallas. even before you went to svalbard you been covering this for years. when the study came out, were you surprised? >> reporter: i wasn't surprised, this is part of a large body of research from scientists who continue to work on this issue from around the world. i could see with my own eyes in svalbard i've seen it and glaciers in alaska. you could see it the rising sea levels on manhattan where they are building a multimillion dollar seawall. you could see it in san diego where there is a train line that's being impacted by waters that start to erode the cliffs. this is a problem in this new research is a continuation of this. >> maurice: it seems like an intense experience to be there in norway. were you affected by what you saw?
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>> reporter: i really was. i didn't k know what i was walkg into necessarily. let's do something called a mass balance. i wasn't sure what that was. to be there is standing 6 feet tall and have that steak be several feet over my head, i was as you saw quite shocked to understand -- that's what happens in the course of one season. >> john: david schechter in dallas. >> maurice: parts of the country that are in a deep freezer hoping for a break this weekend. >> john: filling in for lonnie as albert ramon. >> reporter: a big warm up across the country as we warm up the next few days we will feel impacts warming sunday into monday. temperatures will be on the rebound as we head towards sunday. talk about temperatures back in the 60s in the deep south. temperatures will be in the 40s in chicago. as we head towards monday, we are also keeping an eye on atmosphere river, we are looking at moisture increasing in seattle, medford and also portland, oregon.
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that combined with melted snow means a flood threat as we rolled to the next 24 hours in places like western areas of montana. the warm air is not here to s stay. a week from tomorrow the first stretch of march below average temperatures are in the for forecast. >> maurice: bundle up in the windy city. thanks so much. >> john: a basketball player gets a much-needed assist. >> maurice: steve hartman on the road is next. austedo xr significantly reduced dan's td movements. some people saw a response as early as 2 weeks. with austedo xr, dan can stay on his mental health meds— (dan) cool hair! (vo) austedo xr can cause depression, suicidal thoughts, or actions in patients with huntington's disease. pay close attention to and call your doctor if you become depressed, have sudden changes in mood,
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getting grilled for the decisions he makes. in a marriage as he now knows, you really should consult with your partner. this is a big decision! >> when you marry somebody you know how they are going to react to know what they are going to do. >> no, you have a conversation about it. speak of this reason why all this happened. >> reporter: we'll subtlety argument in a minute but first a back story that begins an ocean away. in 2021 a young boy from senegal west africa had dreams of playing basketball in america. the kid named ama sow posted videos hoping some private high school in the states would sponsor him. sure enough, one did. >> you left your family in the hopes you could play basketball? >> i would do anything for basketball. >> reporter: unfortunately not long after ama arrived, the school went out of business live in a 15-year-old boy homeless
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and penniless with nowhere to go. that's when a former staff member here reached out to his old friend gave it to. >> i didn't think if there was anybody else who could take him in, i just said okay. >> reporter: never mind he already had a full house with three kids of his own. david agreed to take in one more without even meeting him. he said he knew his wife would come around which she did. almost immediately. >> ama has never seen a dishwasher, he's never taken a hot shower until he came to america. and grounded everybody. >> reporter: ama now attends the local public high school where his festival dreams are coming true. next year he will play division i college at the university of tennessee-martin. but he says the bigger blessing as a second family he scored.
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>> your family will be there for you forever, they will love you forever they will have you forever. >> reporter: is that what you have here? >> that's what i have here i think. >> reporter: nicole says he definitely does. >> i love him, he's part of our family. >> reporter: so you did it right. >> this time. >> reporter: steve hartman, on the road in pittsburgh. in just 12 months. evenity® is the only bone builder that also helps slow bone loss. and it's proven to significantly reduce spine fracture risk. i knew she started taking evenity®, but she told her friend it builds new bone. builds new bone! [squeak!] so...yeah...we get out, we explore, and do whatever that thing is on the floor. evenity® can increase risk of heart attack, stroke, or death from a heart problem. tell your doctor if you have had a heart attack or stroke. do not take evenity® if you have low blood calcium or are allergic to it,
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>> maurice: finally tonight whether you liked betty white best as the happy homemaker. >> maurice: or the dimwitted rose nylund on golden girls. >> maurice: or whiz on password she was a fixture on tv. she died in 2021 to sedate short of her 100 birthday. >> john: now she will be a fixture on an older medium, the u.s. mail. the post office is rolling out a stamp. >> maurice: her face will be sticking around for ever. that is the cbs evening news, i'm maurice dubois. >> john: i'm john di erson,
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