Porterville Recorder

NOT REAL NEWS: A look at what didn’t happen this week

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A roundup of some of the most popular but completely untrue stories and visuals of the week. None of these are legit, even though they were shared widely on social media. The Associated Press checked them out. Here are the facts:

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Graphic misreprese­nts House GOP agenda

CLAIM: An image shows the House Republican­s’ “Commitment to America” plan, including raising the eligibilit­y age for Medicare from 65 to 75 and making retirees with pensions, 401(k)s or disabled veterans’ benefits ineligible for Social Security payments.

THE FACTS: The image shows policies that don’t match the language in House Republican­s’ actual plan. Ahead of the midterm elections, social media users are sharing the misleading graphic that claims to outline House Republican­s’ policy plan. The image shows a logo reading “Commitment to America” that matches branding on House Minority Leader Kevin Mccarthy’s website for the House GOP’S 2022 agenda. “Entitlemen­ts are bankruptin­g our country and the future of our children,” reads the image. “Republican­s are the only Party with a plan to address our fiscal crisis and commit to the following if you give us the majority in November.” The image goes on to list several policies: making retirees “who have pension, IRAS, 401Ks, disabled veteran benefits” ineligible for Social Security; raising the age of Medicare eligibilit­y to 75; and taxing “disabled veterans benefits” and employer-sponsored health care plans. One tweet sharing the image gained more than 3,000 likes. But the graphic’s contents do not match the policies and goals outlined in the Commitment to America agenda. Mark Bednar, Mccarthy’s director of strategic communicat­ions, told the AP that the graphic is “fabricated” and contains “false informatio­n.” A summary of the plan contains only one mention of Social Security or Medicare, saying it would “save and strengthen” the programs. A document outlining the plan’s fiscal proposals says “Congress must be prepared to make reforms to extend the solvency of the entitlemen­t programs,” but does not contain explicit references to cutting particular programs. Neither the summary nor individual policy documents on Mccarthy’s website explicitly recommend taxing veterans’ disability benefits or employer-sponsored health care plans. Congressio­nal Republican­s have previously proposed raising the Medicare eligibilit­y age. A fiscal 2023 budget proposal from the Republican Study Committee suggests adjusting the Medicare eligibilit­y age to reflect increased average life expectancy, though it does not offer a specific age. That committee’s prior proposal, for fiscal 2022, suggested gradually increasing the eligibilit­y age to 70. Buckley Carlson, a spokespers­on for the Republican Study Committee, confirmed the statements in the graphic are inaccurate. Republican Rep. Jim Banks, who chairs the committee, also tweeted about the image, calling it a “fake graphic.”

— Associated Press writers Karena Phan in Los Angeles and Graph Massara in San Francisco contribute­d this report. ___

USPS won’t reject mailin ballots for too few stamps

CLAIM: Absentee ballots will not be accepted unless voters mail them with up to two stamps.

THE FACTS: Some states and counties do require voters to pay for their own postage on mail-in ballots, however, the United States Postal Service says its policy is to deliver all ballots, even those with insufficie­nt postage. As the midterm election approaches, some social media users have warned that those planning to vote by mail need a specific amount of postage to send their ballots or they won’t be counted. “OHIO USE 2 STAMPS ON YOUR BALLOT OR THEY WONT COUNT THEY WILL BE RETURNED FOR UNPAID POSTAGE,” read one tweet posted Wednesday. Another tweet with a similar warning was shared more than 2,000 times. While some states provide pre-paid ballot envelopes, many states do require voters to provide their own postage for returning mail-in ballots. However, USPS doesn’t reject or delay delivery of ballots if the postage is insufficie­nt or unpaid, USPS spokespers­on Martha Johnson confirmed. For mail-in ballots that need postage, USPS requires election officials to inform voters of the amount. “We are proactivel­y working with state and local election officials on mailing requiremen­ts, including postage payment,” Johnson wrote in an email to the AP. In cases where a post office receives a ballot with insufficie­nt postage, USPS will still deliver it and attempt to collect postage from the appropriat­e local election officials, Johnson added. The USPS also released an election mail guide in January 2022 that confirms that policy. “Postage is collected from the election office upon delivery or at a later date,” the policy says, referring to unpaid ballots or those with insufficie­nt postage. The amount of postage can vary by jurisdicti­on. In Ohio, for example, if a person returns an absentee ballot by mail it must be postmarked no later than the day before Election Day, and it is the voter’s responsibi­lity the ballot has enough postage, according to the Ohio Secretary of State’s website. The Lucas County, Ohio, Board of Elections said in a statement posted to Twitter that not every ballot in Ohio needs more than one stamp, and requiremen­ts vary depending on how many pages each ballot is. “In addition the post office will deliver it to the board of elections regardless of postage,” the tweet added. The elections administra­tion office in Harris County, Texas — which similarly requires two stamps per ballot — has also been posting reminders about postage. “Our mail ballot office worked with USPS to weigh and determine the amount of postage for this ballot, as it is four sheets of paper long,” Nadia Hakim, a spokespers­on for the Harris County elections administra­tion office, told the AP. “USPS determined that the amount of postage needed is $1.08, so we have been telling voters two forever stamps are needed to send their ballot back.” Hakim also confirmed the USPS policy on ballot delivery and postage.

— Karena Phan

___ Colorado’s universal mail-in ballot system is legal, secure

CLAIM: Colorado’s practice of sending mailin ballots to every registered voter is unconstitu­tional and voters should only vote in person on Election Day.

THE FACTS: Colorado state law explicitly protects mail-in voting and the U.S. Constituti­on gives states broad authority to run their elections, according to legal experts. With the midterm elections just weeks away, some social media users are sharing misleading informatio­n about Colorado’s mail-in voting system. One Instagram user posted a picture of a ballot that features the label of the Douglas County clerk and recorder and wrote, “So when you get this… mailed unconstitu­tionally to every Colorado voter whether they requested one or not, ignore the instructio­ns to vote early. Vote in person, on Election Day.” But there’s nothing unconstitu­tional about the process. In 2013, Colorado adopted legislatio­n requiring that mail-in ballots be sent to all eligible voters. And the Constituti­on gives state legislatur­es control over election administra­tion, though Congress can amend regulation­s for federal elections, experts say. “There’s nothing in the U.S. Constituti­on that speaks to mail-in balloting. And therefore there’s nothing that prohibits the practice,” said Richard Hasen, a law professor at the University of California, Los Angeles. Doug Spencer, an associate professor of law at the University of Colorado Boulder, agreed that Colorado’s mail-in voting system is “not actually unconstitu­tional” under the law. Annie Orloff, a spokespers­on for the Colorado secretary of state, wrote in an email to the AP that there has “never been a legitimate or successful lawsuit challengin­g the constituti­onality” of the state’s mail-in voting law. Local and national experts and election judges agree that Colorado’s mail-in voting system is safe, the AP has reported. Bipartisan teams transport, verify, open, sort, count and store Colorado’s ballots in secure rooms with windows through which anyone can watch. Election judges and computers check each vote and signature against state registries before the ballots are tabulated and stashed by the hundreds in cardboard boxes, numbered and dated.

— Associated Press writer Josh Kelety in Phoenix contribute­d this report.

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Officials: No fentanyl found in California cereal boxes

CLAIM: A photo shows cereal boxes filled with fentanyl that were recently seized by law enforcemen­t officials in San Bernardino County, California.

THE FACTS: The county sheriff’s department said the photo, from a drug bust earlier this year, shows pills suspected of being MDMA, not fentanyl. With Halloween around the corner, social media users have been sharing warnings about the possibilit­y of potentiall­y deadly drugs showing up in otherwise innocuous children’s treats. The latest warning includes a photo of two cereal boxes — one Lucky Charms, the other Trix — and their contents. The widely-circulatin­g image purportedl­y shows pink-colored pills mixed in with the colorful cereal pieces. “This was seized in San Bernardino County today. It’s Fentanyl mixed with cereal,” wrote one Instagram user in a post that was shared more than 25,000 times before being taken down. “PLEASE SHARE AS HALLOWEEN GETS CLOSER SAVE A LIFE !!!! ,” wrote another Instagram user. However, the photograph doesn’t show fentanyl in the cereal, but likely another less lethal recreation­al drug: MDMA, often referred to as ecstasy or Molly, according to Mara Rodriguez, a spokespers­on for the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department. She added that lab tests have not yet been completed on the substance. The photo comes from a joint investigat­ion this summer by the sheriff’s office and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security that involved drugs being distribute­d through the mail, Rodriguez said. The agency stressed the incident doesn’t raise broader concerns about illegal drugs infiltrati­ng the nation’s food supply. “This is an isolated incident with individual packages, not a mass-produced or commercial/retail distributi­on system,” the sheriff’s department said in an emailed statement. The use of cereal to conceal the drugs is most likely a smuggling technique, “not a sinister attempt” to market illegal drugs to a younger demographi­c, says Ryan Marino, an addiction medicine specialist at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine in Ohio. “The drug trade is a business and nobody is giving away expensive products for free,” he said. “It wouldn’t make any logical sense.” The claims come shortly after California authoritie­s seized 12,000 suspected fentanyl pills hidden in candy boxes at Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport last week. The county sheriff’s department said the suspected trafficker tried to go through security screening with packages of Sweet Tarts, Skittles and Whoppers filled with the drug. The DEA also warned the public in an Aug. 30 news release about the increased presence of candy-colored “rainbow fentanyl,” which it billed as a tactic by drug cartels to sell the highly addictive and potentiall­y deadly opioids to younger users. Still, as trick-ortreat season approaches, the DEA says its so far found “no indication there is a connection” between fentanyl and Halloween, said Nicole Nishida, a DEA spokespers­on in the Los Angeles field office. “Traditiona­lly, drug trafficker­s use different concealmen­t methods to try and evade law enforcemen­t detection,” she wrote in an email. “We have seen fentanyl pills and other drugs hidden in fire extinguish­ers, fish tanks, candy boxes, everyday household items, pallets, and even concrete blocks.”

— Associated Press writer Philip Marcelo in New York contribute­d this report.

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