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"National Parks Remove Signs About Climate, Slavery And Japanese Detention"

"The National Park Service has removed signs at Acadia National Park in Maine that make reference to climate change amid the Trump administration’s wider effort to remove information that it says undermines “the remarkable achievements of the United States.” A sign has also been removed from at least one additional park that referred to slavery, the detention of Japanese Americans during World War II and conflicts with Native Americans."

Source: Washington Post, 09/22/2025

Webinar: Vanishing Numbers — How Federal Data Manipulation and Removal Threaten Journalism and Public Trust

The Journalist's Resource will host a discussion with experts: a former federal statistical agency commissioner; a leading demographer recognized internationally for tracking disaster recovery and climate impacts; and a senior national data leader who has driven innovation in public-interest data across federal, local and nonprofit sectors. 12 p.m. ET.

DEADLINE: NPPF Bob & Millie Lynn Grant

The National Press Photographers Foundation invites applications by Oct 31, 2025 for this $4,000 grant which encourages photojournalists to pursue stories that expose the side of American society that tends to be under-covered and ignored.

DEADLINE: NPPF Michel du Cille Fellowship

The National Press Photographers Foundation (NPPF) offers a $15,000 annual fellowship to a professional U.S. visual journalist for a project that meets the highest standards of contemporary storytelling. Deadline: Nov 14, 2025.

DEADLINE: U.S. Health System Reporting Fellowship and International Health Study Fellowship

Apply by Oct 10, 2025 for one of two of the Association of Health Care Journalists most competitive and career-changing reporting fellowships. Join an informational webinar on Sept. 24, 2025 at 2-3 p.m. ET.

Up in the Air: Climate Policy Without the Endangerment Finding

Join the UCLA Emmett Institute for a virtual discussion on the fight over the endangerment finding, the Trump administration's possible motivations and legal justifications, as well as the pushback from the scientific community, and what lies ahead in the process. 3:15 p.m. ET.

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