Trump to expand his control over federal workers

WASHINGTON, Feb 5 (Reuters) - ​The Trump ‌administration on ‌Thursday finalized its overhaul of ⁠the ‌U.S. government's civil ‍service system, according to a ​government ‌statement, giving the president the power to ⁠hire and ​fire ​an estimated 50,000 career ‍federal ⁠employees.

(Reporting by Courtney ⁠Rozen; Editing ‌by Chizu ‌Nomiyama )

Trump to expand his control over federal workers

WASHINGTON, Feb 5 (Reuters) - ​The Trump ‌administration on ‌Thursday finalized its overhaul of ⁠the ‌U.S. government...
Allrecipes / Chips Ahoy

Allrecipes / Chips Ahoy

The U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) hasannouncedan expansion of a 2025 recall on Chips Ahoy cookies due to a possible choking hazard. Mondelēz Global LLC initially initiated a recall for its Chips Ahoy Baked Bites Brookies on Dec. 24, 2025, for a potential hazard due to a mixing process error that may have left clumps of corn starch in the cookies. As of Feb. 4, 2026, Mondelēz Global LLC has expanded the recall to include one additional code date and two more universal product codes (UPCs) for the cookies.

How To Identify the Recalled Chips Ahoy Cookies

The recalled Chips Ahoy Baked Bites Brookies were sold in four packaging sizes and can be identified by the following information:

  • 22.4-ounce Chips Ahoy Baked Bites Brookie eight-count Caddie with UPC 44000086688, Case GTN 10044000086678, and best-by dates of May 9, 10, 11, and 12 of 2026.

  • 2.8-ounce Chips Ahoy Baked Bites Brookie Pouch with UPC 4400008667 and best-by dates of May 9, 10, 110, and 12 of 2026.

  • 7.0-ounce Chips Ahoy! Baked Bites Brookie five-count with UPC 44000085650, Case GTN 10044000085657, and best-by dates of May 10, 12, and 18 of 2026.

  • 1.4-ounce Chips Ahoy Baked Bites Brookie Pouch with UPC 4400008566 and best-by dates of May 10, 12, and 18 of 2026.

The recalled Chips Ahoy products were sold at retailers nationwide. No other Chips Ahoy or Mondelēz Global LLC products, other than those with best-by dates listed above, are impacted by this recall.

What To Do if You Have the Recalled Chips Ahoy Cookies

Mondelēz Global LLC recalled the Chips Ahoy cookies because of a mixing process error that "resulted in the formation of small corn starch clumps in the product." The company is concerned that the starch clumps may present a choking hazard, especially for children or the elderly.

While no illnesses or injuries have been reported at this time, it is still not safe to consume the product. If you have the recalled Chips Ahoy Baked Bites Brookies, you should throw them away or return them to the place of purchase for a full refund.

For questions regarding this recall, you can call Mondelēz Global LLC at 1-855-535-5948.

Read the original article onAllrecipes

FDA Announces Recall on Chips Ahoy Cookies for Possible Choking Hazard

Allrecipes / Chips Ahoy The U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) hasannouncedan expansion of a 2025 recall on Chips Ahoy cookies due ...
The sun rises in the distance and throws warm light across a crowd of protesters holding signs and bundled against the cold. (Kevin Mohatt / Reuters)

Department of Homeland Security plans to purchase and operate mega warehouses to use as immigration detention centers are raising concerns among lawmakers, local residents and government contractors.

The proposed centers are so large that some could house as many as 8,000 detainees at once, according to a DHS spreadsheet of more than 20 potential locations that was verified by NBC News. The largest federal prison in the U.S., for example,has roughly 4,000 inmates.

At least two facilities have already been secured.

One is outsidePhoenix, where Immigration and Customs Enforcement paid $70 million for a building the sizeof seven football fields, according to NBC affiliate KPNX of Phoenix. ICE purchased the 418,000-square-foot warehouse in an industrial park in Surprise.

Surprise city officials said in a statementthat they were not aware of the purchase, that they had not been notified of it and that they had not been contacted by DHS or any other federal agency.

The other is outsidePhiladelphia, where ICE bought a warehousefor $87.4 million last month for possible conversion into an immigration detention center, according to NBC Philadelphia.

President Donald Trump said in an interview with NBC News on Wednesday that hisadministration could use a "softer touch"on immigration enforcement after federal agents shot and killed two U.S. citizens last month in Minneapolis. But Trump also said he hopes to push hisimmigration crackdown into five more cities.

And as the administration's expanding plans for mass immigrant detention,which NBC News first reportedin November, are coming into sharper focus, concerns are only growing.

Pro-immigrant community groups in Colorado, Mississippi and Arizona have already voiced opposition, and Arizona lawmakers said they worry the purchase of the massive building would mean aggressive immigration enforcement was coming to their area, KPNX reported.

In Hutchins, Texas, on Wednesday night, the League of United Latin American Citizens and state officials demonstrated against a proposed ICE facility.

Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., said in a statement Wednesday that he strongly opposed the possibility ofa detention center near Byhalia, Mississippi.

"I am all for immigration enforcement, but this site was meant for economic development and job creation," he posted on X, along with a letter to Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem. "We cannot suddenly flood Byhalia with an influx of up to 10,000 detainees."

Democratic lawmakershave criticized a proposed facility in Roxbury, New Jersey. And immigrant advocates say apossible detention center in Hudson, Colorado,a rural area more than 30 miles from Denver, would mean lawyers and family members would have difficulty visiting, in part because there is no good public transportation that far away from the city, according to NBC affiliate KUSA of Denver.

To win an ICE warehouse contract, a company must already be doing business with the U.S. Navy or partner with companies that do business with the Navy, according to an executive at a company that houses detainees and is under consideration to run one of the new ICE warehouses. The process was similar when the Trump administration built its largest detention center to date — a sprawling tent facility in Texas.

Two government contractors told NBC News they were worried that new warehouses — and the large numbers of immigrants who would be housed in them — would present safety problems.

Hiring staff members for more than 2,500 people, especially in more rural areas, would be very challenging, an executive said.

A Google street view screenshot shows a large, newly-built office industrial complex in a desert landscape. (Google Maps)

At one site, building a detention center the size DHS has requested could drain the town's water supply, the executive said.

Another contractor told NBC News that any detention facility with more than 1,500 detainees would be risky.

The housing estimates for the warehouses are based on the square footage of potential facilities, and they could change after they are outfitted to accommodate people living in them.

ICE currently houses more than 70,000 immigrants in 224 facilities nationwide, according to the agency's data from early February.

The single ICE facility already in operation, at Fort Bliss, Texas, not far from the U.S.-Mexico border, has been plagued with problems. At least three immigrants died at the facility over 44 days;the medical examiner ruled one of the deaths a homicide.

Members of Congress have demanded access to the facility over safety concerns andhave gone to courtto ask a federal judge to stop the Trump administration's policies that limited access to the facilities and required a week's notice before a visit. A judge ordered Homeland Security this week to allow lawmakers to make unannounced visits.

Concerns grow over ICE plans to build mega warehouses for immigration detention

Department of Homeland Security plans to purchase and operate mega warehouses to use as immigration detention centers are raising concerns ...
South Carolina measles vaccinations jump in January after major outbreak

By Chad Terhune and Julie Steenhuysen

SPARTANBURG, South Carolina/CHICAGO, Feb 4 (Reuters) - Measles vaccinations have doubled in recent months in a South Carolina region hit hard by the disease's worst outbreak in the U.S. in more than two decades, but health ​officials warned that far more immunizations are needed to contain the virus' spread.

The outbreak, like those in other regions, has been ‌fueled by a rise in vaccine hesitancy since the COVID-19 pandemic, leaving many U.S. communities vulnerable to outbreaks of measles and other vaccine-preventable diseases.

The number of measles, mumps and ‌rubella (MMR) vaccine doses administered in Spartanburg County, near the North Carolina border and the epicenter of the latest outbreak, has increased 102% over the past four months compared with the same period a year earlier, according to state data shared with Reuters. More than 1,000 additional shots were delivered in January.

Statewide, MMR immunizations were up 28% during the same four-month period.

"These monthly totals are some of the highest we've seen in years," Dr. Linda Bell, ⁠South Carolina's state epidemiologist, said in emailed comments ‌to Reuters.

She said 1,178 doses of MMR vaccines were given to infants aged six to 11 months across the state. Of those, 55% were in Spartanburg County and neighboring Greenville County.

"These early doses are essential to protecting ‍young children from measles," she said.

Bell said there are likely a few thousand children and adults, however, who remain unvaccinated against measles in Spartanburg County.

HERD IMMUNITY REQUIRES 95% COVERAGE

Measles, among the most infectious of pathogens, requires that 95% of the population be vaccinated in order to prevent its spread. In Spartanburg County, 89% of ​school children have received the required vaccinations, state data show.

Three pediatricians in the Spartanburg area told Reuters the increase in vaccinations likely ‌reflected a variety of patients and motives.

Many parents have sought early MMR shots for children who are six to 11 months old rather than waiting for the first dose normally given at 12 months, doctors said. Parents also have moved up the second dose, which is normally given at age four. The MMR vaccine is 97% effective after two doses.

They added that some families are catching up on routine shots that were missed prior to the outbreak, while other patients may be seeking vaccination after exposure, which can exempt them from quarantine if administered within 72 ⁠hours.

Louis Eubank, deputy incident commander for South Carolina's measles response, said in an ​email that mobile health units have primarily vaccinated adults, while increases reported by clinics and ​pharmacies have predominantly been among children under the age of four.

Reaching people who are hesitant about all vaccines, however, and persuading them to come in for the MMR shot has proven difficult, the pediatricians said.

Stuart Simko, a pediatrician ‍at Prisma Health in Greer, South ⁠Carolina, in the state's northwest corner, said the escalation in cases and increased exposure at schools and in the community had recently encouraged more parents to get their children immunized.

"We are getting people who weren't vaccinated calling. I think we've reached that level of, 'Oh ⁠wow. This looks like it's more than just a smolder. This is starting to catch fire,'" Simko said.

"That fear is starting to pick up among people of going ‌out and understanding you can go to Walmart and be exposed."

(Reporting by Chad Terhune in Spartanburg and Julie Steenhuysen in ‌Chicago; Additional reporting by Siddhi Mahatole in Bengaluru; Editing by Edmund Klamann)

South Carolina measles vaccinations jump in January after major outbreak

By Chad Terhune and Julie Steenhuysen SPARTANBURG, South Carolina/CHICAGO, Feb 4 (Reuters) - Measles vaccination...
All 166 worshippers abducted in Nigeria's northern Kaduna state freed, Christian group says

By Ahmed Kingimi and Hamza Ibrahim

Reuters

MAIDUGURI, Nigeria, Feb 5 (Reuters) - All 166 worshippers kidnapped during attacks on ​two churches in Kurmin Wali in northern Nigeria's ‌Kaduna state last month have been released, the Christian Association of Nigeria ‌said on Thursday.

Reverend John Hayab, chairman of the northern chapter of CAN, said every abducted worshipper had now returned, without giving details on whether a ransom was paid or ⁠how the release ‌was secured.

CAN leader in Kaduna, Reverend Caleb Ma'aji, also confirmed the release, saying he just ‍returned from the government house in Kaduna where the governor is set to receive the worshippers.

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"The stage is set for them to ​be brought... His Excellency will meet with them. This ‌is a result of the prayers we have offered," he said.

Nigerian government officials have yet to comment publicly on the release.

The assault on the Kaduna churches was among the latest in a string of mass abductions that ⁠has intensified pressure on the Nigerian ​government. Nigeria has also faced scrutiny ​from U.S. President Donald Trump, who has accused the country of failing to stop the persecution ‍of Christians. ⁠U.S. forces struck what they described as terrorist targets on December 25.

Abuja says it is working with Washington ⁠to improve security and denies any systematic persecution of Christians.

(Additional reporting ‌by Hamza Ibrahim in Kano, Writing by Elisha ‌Bala-Gbogbo; Editing by Alex Richardson)

All 166 worshippers abducted in Nigeria's northern Kaduna state freed, Christian group says

By Ahmed Kingimi and Hamza Ibrahim MAIDUGURI, Nigeria, Feb 5 (Reuters) - All 166 worshippers kidnapped during ...
Cold Fatigued Northeast About To Get Colder, Windy Again This Weekend

After parts of the Northeast saw a top 10 coldest two-week period to end January, the region cannot seem to catch a break.

The Weather Channel

The active pattern that has set up across the Eastern U.S. will continue to bring in reinforcing shots of bitterly cold arctic air. The next delivery of fresh frigid air will arrive this weekend behind a cold front.

Ahead of the cold front, high temperatures may rise slightly above freezing for a day or so. That may not sound warm, but to New Yorkers, this is exciting news.

NYC finally broke its nine-day streak of at-or-below freezing temperatures on Monday, as its high hit 35 degrees.

Washington D.C. also saw 9 consecutive days at or below freezing, which was the 6th longest stretch for the city and the longest stretch since 1989.

The bitter cold settles in this weekend. Dozens of daily record cold highs will be in jeopardy both on Saturday and Sunday. These records are hard to accomplish during the coldest time of the year, but we keep seeing repeated rounds of record cold.

Here are the latest forecast highs for the Northeast.

Northeast Forecast High Temperatures

Gusty north to northwest winds will add to the misery, as wind chills plunge below zero once again both Saturday and Sunday.

Any Relief Coming?

Some milder, or at least less cold, air is coming to the East, but it may take until late next week to arrive. Meanwhile, the cooler air will be swapping coasts to the West Coast.

Recap Of The 2026 Cold So Far

This year has started off quite chilly for parts of the East.

In mid-January, a system brought rare southern snow to parts of Alabama, Georgia and the Florida panhandle.

Next up wasWinter Storm Fern. This was a significant storm that brought bitter cold, ice, snow, rain and sleet to millions. Some communities are stillwithout power.

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Just one week after Winter Storm Fern, we were trackingWinter Storm Gianna, which brought even more snow, cold air and gusty winds to the Southeast.

(RECAPS:Winter Storm Fern Recap|Winter Storm Gianna)

And with each winter storm came those dreaded arctic blasts. Fortunately, this latest cold air will not surge as deep into the South.

A Silver Lining From The Cold

With the ongoing bitter cold streak for the Northeast, that cold air often moves over the Great Lakes to get to the region.

As a result, the lakes are freezing, with Lake Erie nearly 100% frozen over:

Lake Erie is the shallowest lake, so it freezing over is not uncommon. However, this does impact lake-effect snow.

In order to have powerful lake-effect snow bands, bitter cold air is needed to move over the relatively warmer waters of the Great Lakes.

(MORE:Lake-Effect Snow)

So, places like Buffalo may only be see snowfall from low-pressure systems for the time being.

That is good, because the city has seen over 60 inches of snowfall since December, about 10 inches above average.

Tiffany Savonais a meteorologist for weather.com with more than 15 years of experience in forecasting the weather across the country.

Rob Shackelford is a meteorologist and climate scientist at weather.com. He received his undergraduate and master's degrees from the University of Georgia studying meteorology and experimenting with alternative hurricane forecasting tools.

Cold Fatigued Northeast About To Get Colder, Windy Again This Weekend

After parts of the Northeast saw a top 10 coldest two-week period to end January, the region cannot seem to catch a break...
Nigeria deploys troops after 170 killed in deadly Kwara village attack

By Camillus Eboh

Reuters People dig graves with shovels after a deadly attack by an armed gang in Katsina, Nigeria, February 4, 2026, in this screengrab from video. Reuters TV/via REUTERS People stand around graves after a deadly attack by an armed gang in Katsina, Nigeria, February 4, 2026, in this screengrab from video. Reuters TV/via REUTERS

Deadly attack by an armed gang on a village in northern Nigeria

ABUJA, Feb 5 (Reuters) - Nigeria's President Bola Tinubu has deployed an army battalion to Kaiama district in the central Kwara ​state after suspected jihadist fighters killed 170 people in an overnight ‌attack, his office said on Thursday.

Tuesday's assault on Woro village was the deadliest this year in ‌the state bordering Niger, a hotspot where Islamic State West Africa Province and other armed groups have stepped up village attacks and mass kidnappings.

The violence highlights fears that jihadist factions from the north are pushing south along the Niger-Kwara axis ⁠toward the Kainji forest, which ‌security analysts warn could become their next stronghold.

Nigeria has come under scrutiny after U.S. President Donald Trump accused it last ‍year of failing to protect Christians amid Islamist attacks and mass kidnappings. U.S. forces struck what they described as terrorist targets on December 25.

Abuja says it is working with Washington ​to improve security and denies any systematic persecution of Christians.

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Tinubu said the ‌new military unit would stem further attacks and protect remote communities. He condemned the attack as "cowardly and barbaric," saying the gunmen targeted villagers who had rejected attempts to impose extremist rule.

"It is commendable that community members, even though Muslims, refused to be conscripted into a belief that promotes violence over peace," ⁠Tinubu said in a statement.

Residents told Reuters ​the attackers were jihadists who had long preached ​in the village, urging locals to abandon the Nigerian state and adopt Sharia rule. When villagers refused, the militants opened fire.

About ‍38 houses were destroyed, ⁠said Saidu Baba Ahmed, a lawmaker representing the district at the state assembly.

In a separate attack in northern Katsina state on Tuesday, gunmen ⁠killed at least 21 people, moving from house to house to shoot their victims, residents and ‌local police said.

(Additional reporting by Ardo Hazzad in Bauchi and ‌Tife Owolabi in Yenagoa; Writing Elisha Bala-Gbogbo)

Nigeria deploys troops after 170 killed in deadly Kwara village attack

By Camillus Eboh Deadly attack by an armed gang on a village in northern Nigeria ABUJA, Feb 5 (Reuters) - Ni...

 

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