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Demystifying money
Money Mavens helps women take control of their finances
Joanna Nash remembers a time when the simplest way for her to be heard in a financial meeting was to put on a pair of heels – not for fashion or confidence but leverage. Early in her career, Nash learned eye level mattered. In rooms dominated by men, she made sure she could look decision-makers directly in the eye. It was a small, calculated adjustment, but it reflected a larger reality: women were present in financial conversations without being centered in them.
Money Mavens travel different paths to success
Cathie Keegan did not walk into Joanna Nash’s office looking for a job. She arrived as a client navigating family responsibility, financial planning and the question of what comes next. For nearly a decade, Keegan had stepped away from the professional world to care for her mother. Now her mother was living in assisted care, and Keegan felt ready to return to work. She mentioned this almost in passing.
Home Builders honoree reflects, looks forward
When the Home Builders Association of Greater Chattanooga named Nerren Pratt its 2025 Developer of the Year, the recognition reflected more than a single project or milestone. It honored a development philosophy rooted in long-term thinking, careful stewardship of land and a commitment to building neighborhoods that endure.
Judicial restraint: Just because you can doesn’t mean you should
One of the ways in which the courts reinforce public confidence in the judiciary and the rule of law is judicial restraint. Judicial restraint calls for modesty in judges’ rulings, language, temperament and official behavior. It requires the exercise of great discipline on the part of the judge.
iSustain endows work of UT graduate student
iSustain is investing in the next generation of sustainability leaders. For 2025, that investment is centered on Jesse Roman, a dual-degree MBA and chemical engineering student whose work bridges business strategy and materials science. Based in Chattanooga, iSustain annually supports graduate business students at the University of Tennessee who plan to apply their education to real-world challenges in manufacturing, materials and supply chains. Roman has been named the latest recipient of the iSustain Sustainability Endowment, a program designed to strengthen the workforce pipeline.
Newsmakers: Baker Donelson adds Grayson as associate
Baker Donelson has added Katie Philyaw Grayson as an associate in its Chattanooga office, expanding the firm’s Advocacy Department. Grayson focuses her practice on a variety of litigation matters, assisting clients throughout all stages of the litigation process. Before joining the firm, she served as a law clerk for Judge Curtis L. Collier of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee and previously worked as a judicial intern for Judge R. David Proctor of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Alabama.
News briefs: Hamilton County’s 2025 property sales top $4B
Hamilton County recorded more than $4.18 billion in property sales during 2025, along with more than $5.09 billion in mortgage loan value, according to the annual Sales & Mortgages Report from the Hamilton County Register of Deeds. Total conveyance value generated $15.4 million in conveyance tax collected for the state on recorded property sales. Mortgage activity also remained strong, with recorded loan values totaling $5 billion and producing $5.7 million in mortgage tax revenue.
Calendar: Holocaust Remembrance Day Commemoration
The Jewish Cultural Center will host an author event featuring Bea Lurie, co-author of “Life Must Go On,” a book that chronicles the life of her father, a child survivor of the Holocaust, beginning Jan 27 at 5:30 p.m. The event will take place at the Jewish Cultural Center, 5461 North Terrace Road, and will include a dessert reception. There is no cost to attend, though registration is requested at jewishchattanooga.org. Books will be available for purchase. During the program, Lurie will share the story of her father as portrayed in the book, which recounts his survival of six concentration camps during the Holocaust.
New tax laws for 2026 that you should know
In addition to resolutions and fresh starts, the new year ushers in several tax changes that could affect your wallet. Whether you’re saving for retirement, funding your child’s education or supporting your favorite charity, here are a few things you need to know about the tax landscape in 2026.
Women’s hoop stars open 4-week showcase
The strongest collection of talent in Athletes Unlimited Basketball history will be on display this season in Nashville as the women’s professional league kicks off its fifth championship season. The 40-player roster features a mix of veterans and rising pros, with 20 returning players and 20 newcomers gracing the court at Nashville’s Municipal Auditorium.
Could Vrabel have had the same success with Titans?
As the Tennessee Titans move into a new era with Robert Saleh as head coach, let’s pause for a moment to ponder what might have been. Is there an alternate reality football universe in which Amy Adams Strunk doesn’t fire Mike Vrabel two years ago, and it is the Titans who are in the AFC Championship Game just one step away from the Super Bowl with only Jarrett Stidham standing in the way?
Let’s hope Saleh learned from Jets flop
If you had told Tennessee Titans fans back in October that former Jets head coach/current 49ers defensive coordinator Robert Saleh would be hired to coach the team in 2026, the reaction probably would have been mostly positive. Now that the process has played out with Saleh being hired late Monday night by the Titans, is that same optimism still in place?
Super duo: Patriots, Seahawks
The NFL heads to the conference championship round this weekend with two intriguing matchups, including one for the third time in the NFC where the Los Angeles Rams and Seattle Seahawks settle things once and for all, at least for this season. Over in the AFC, the Denver Broncos’ hopes were dealt a severe blow with news that QB Bo Nix suffered a season-ending ankle injury in their overtime win against Buffalo.
Biggest car-shopping trends, tips for 2026
A shortage of vehicles, rising prices and high borrowing costs have made it challenging in recent years for some people to purchase a new or used vehicle. Thankfully, the automotive market is shifting in ways that could be beneficial if you’re planning to buy a vehicle in the next few months.
What to know about Greenland's role in nuclear defense and Trump's 'Golden Dome'
PARIS (AP) — In a hypothetical nuclear war involving Russia, China and the United States, the island of Greenland would be in the middle of Armageddon. The strategic importance of the Arctic territory — under the flight paths that nuclear-armed missiles from China and Russia could take on their way to incinerating targets in the United States, and vice versa — is one of the reasons U.S. President Donald Trump has cited in his disruptive campaign to wrest control of Greenland from Denmark, alarming Greenlanders and longtime allies in Europe alike.
Former DEA agent sentenced to 5 years in prison for using badge to protect drug trafficking friends
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — In two decades of kicking in doors for the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, Joseph Bongiovanni often took on the risks of being the "lead breacher," meaning he was the first person into the room. On Wednesday, he felt a familiar uncertainty awaiting sentencing for using his DEA badge to protect childhood friends who became prolific drug traffickers in Buffalo, New York.
What to know about FDA's review of new Zyn advertising proposal
WASHINGTON (AP) — Americans who smoke may soon be hearing a lot more about Zyn, the flavored nicotine pouches that have generated billions in sales while going viral on social media. The Food and Drug Administration is holding a public meeting Thursday to consider whether Philip Morris International can advertise its pouches as a less-harmful alternative for adults who currently smoke cigarettes.
Paramount extends its deadline for its Warner Bros. Discovery tender offer, again
NEW YORK (AP) — Skydance-owned Paramount is again extending the tender offer window in its $77.9 billion hostile takeover bid for Warner Bros. Discovery, while doubling down on a coming proxy fight. Warner stockholders now have until Feb. 20 to sell their shares to Paramount for $30 apiece in cash — a price that remains unchanged, giving the offer a total enterprise value of over $108 billion including debt. It marks the second extension the company has made since challenging Warner's merger agreement with Netflix last month.
As Trump talks tariffs, his Argentine ally welcomes a first shipload of Chinese EVs
ZÁRATE, Argentina (AP) — The vast field of over 5,800 electric and hybrid vehicles gleamed on the cargo deck of the BYD Changzhou, an Chinese container vessel unloading Wednesday at a river port in eastern Argentina. In other places, such a scene would not be noteworthy. Chinese automaker BYD has sped up its exports and undercut rivals the world over, alarming Washington, upsetting Western and Japanese auto giants and unnerving local industries across Southeast Asia, Africa and Latin America.
Prices ticked up in November as Americans keep spending, a key inflation measure shows
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge ticked up in November in the latest sign that prices remain stubbornly elevated, while consumers spent at a healthy pace. Consumer prices rose 2.8% in November from a year earlier, the Commerce Department said Thursday, up from a 2.7% annual pace in October. Excluding the volatile food and energy categories, core prices also increased 2.8% in November from a year ago, slightly higher than October's 2.7%.
Consumer spending pushes US economy up 4.4% in third quarter, fastest in two years
WASHINGTON (AP) — Powered by strong consumer spending, the U.S. economy grew at the fastest pace in two years from July through September, the government said Thursday in a slight upgrade of its first estimate. America's gross domestic product — the nation's output of goods and services — rose at a 4,4% annual pace in the third quarter, the Commerce Department reported Thursday, up from 3.8% in the April-June quarter and from the 4.3% growth the department initially estimated. The economy hasn't grown faster since third-quarter 2023.
US applications for jobless benefits inch up last week to a still-low 200,000
WASHINGTON (AP) — The number of Americans who applied for unemployment benefits inched up last week but U.S. layoffs remain historically low despite signs of a softening labor market. U.S. filings for jobless aid for the week ending Jan. 17 rose by 1,000 to 200,000, up from 199,000 the previous week, the Labor Department reported Thursday. That's fewer than the 207,000 new applications that analysts surveyed by the data firm FactSet were expecting.
Inflation fears are high. A new poll shows one group is particularly worried
WASHINGTON (AP) — Anxiety about costs and affordability is particularly high among Asian Americans, Pacific Islanders and Native Hawaiians, even at a moment when economic stress is widespread, according to a new poll. About half of Asian American and Pacific Islander adults said they wanted the government to prioritize addressing the high cost of living and inflation, according to the survey from AAPI Data and The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, which was conducted in early December. In comparison, a December AP-NORC poll found that about one-third of U.S. adults overall rated inflation and financial worries as the most pressing problems.
Japan records a 5th straight yearly trade deficit
TOKYO (AP) — Japan posted a trade deficit for the fifth straight year in 2025, according to government data released Thursday, as exports were hit by U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs and a diplomatic rift with neighboring China. For the full year, Japan logged a 2.65 trillion yen ($17 billion) trade deficit, the Finance Ministry reported in its preliminary data.
Trump's European threats could make it harder for future US leaders to repair ties
WASHINGTON (AP) — Barely a month into his presidency, Joe Biden had a message for Europe. "America is back," Biden told the Munich Security Conference in 2021. "The transatlantic alliance is back." It was a promise Biden delivered often as he sought to cast the disruptions of his predecessor, Donald Trump, as an anomaly. But nearly five years later, Biden's assurances have proven short-lived.
Trump sues JPMorgan for $5 billion, alleges bank closed his accounts for political reasons
NEW YORK (AP) — President Donald Trump sued banking giant JPMorgan Chase and its CEO Jamie Dimon for $5 billion, accusing JPMorgan of debanking him and his businesses for political reasons after he left office in January 2021. The lawsuit, filed in Miami-Dade County court in Florida, alleges that JPMorgan abruptly closed multiple accounts in February 2021 with just 60 days notice and no explanation. By doing so, Trump claims JPMorgan cut the president and his businesses off from millions of dollars, disrupted their operations and forced Trump and the businesses to urgently open bank accounts elsewhere.
Paramount extends its deadline for its Warner Bros. tender offer, again
NEW YORK (AP) — Skydance-owned Paramount is again extending the tender offer window in its $77.9 billion hostile takeover bid for Warner Bros. Discovery, while doubling down on a coming proxy fight. Warner stockholders now have until Feb. 20 to sell their shares to Paramount for $30 apiece in cash — a price that remains unchanged, giving the offer a total enterprise value of over $108 billion including debt. It marks the second extension the company has made since challenging Warner's merger agreement with Netflix last month.
Google offers users option to plug AI mode into their photos, email for more personalized answers
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Google is leveraging its artificial intelligence technology to open a new peephole for its dominant search engine to tailor answers that draw upon people's interests, habits, travel itineraries and photo libraries. The new option rolling out Thursday will give millions of people the option of turning on a recently introduced tool called "Personal Intelligence" within the AI mode that has been available on Google's search engine since last year. The technology will be first offered in the U.S. to Google AI Pro and Ultra subscribers, as well as an option within its experimental Labs division for anyone with a personal Google account.
House approves final spending bills as Democrats denounce ICE funding
WASHINGTON (AP) — The House passed this year's final batch of spending bills on Thursday as lawmakers, still smarting from last fall's record 43-day shutdown, worked to avoid another funding lapse for a broad swath of the federal government. The four bills total about $1.2 trillion in spending and now move to the Senate, with final passage needed next week before a Jan. 30 deadline to avoid a partial government shutdown.
US sanctions Costa Rican drug network, including an aesthetic salon, for trafficking cocaine
WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. imposed sanctions on five Costa Ricans and five Costa Rican entities for allegedly helping to transport tons of cocaine from Colombia, storing the drugs in Costa Rica, then shipping them to the U.S. and Europe. The Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control alleges that Costa Rican national Luis Manuel Picado Grijalba, sanctioned Thursday, is the leader of the network and one of the most prolific international drug dealers in the Caribbean, along with his brother Jordie Kevin Picado Grijalba.
Stamkos breaks late tie with 3rd goal of game, Predators rally to beat Senators 5-3
NASHVILLE (AP) — Steven Stamkos broke a tie with 2:13 left with his third goal of the game and the Nashville Predators overcame a three-goal deficit to beat the Ottawa Senators 5-3 on Thursday night. After Stamkos tied it at 3 with 9:53 left with his second power-play goal of the game, Ryan O'Reilly beat the Senators to the puck behind the goal line and popped it out front to Stamkos, who batted it out of the air past goalie James Reimer.
Blakes scores 20, No. 5 Vanderbilt moves to 20-0 in win over Auburn
NASHVILLE (AP) — Mikayla Blakes scored 20 points for her 15th 20-plus point performance of the season as No. 5 Vanderbilt remained undefeated with an 81-53 win over Auburn on Thursday night. The Commodores (20-0, 6-0 Southeastern Conference) are one of five NCAA Division I basketball teams still undefeated, alongside the No. 1 UConn women, the No. 1 Arizona men, the No. 7 Nebraska men, and the No. 25 Miami (Ohio) men.
Pauldo's 21 points lead No. 17 Lady Vols over No. 11 Kentucky 60-58
KNOXVILLE (AP) — Mia Pauldo scored 21 points and No. 17 Tennessee beat No. 11 Kentucky 60-58 on Thursday night for its seventh victory in a row. Pauldo, who hit the 20-point mark for the second time this season, shot 9 of 22 from the field and 2 of 11 from beyond the arc for the Lady Vols (14-3, 6-0 Southeastern Conference).
In the case of the Federal Reserve, Supreme Court appears to carve out a murky exception
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court for the past year has repeatedly allowed President Donald Trump to fire heads of independent agencies, but it appears to be drawing a line with the Federal Reserve. The court has signaled for months that it sees the Fed in a different light. It has said that the president can fire directors of other agencies for any reason, but can remove Fed governors only "for cause," which is often interpreted to mean neglect of duty or malfeasance.
US completes withdrawal from World Health Organization
NEW YORK (AP) — The U.S. has finalized its withdrawal from the World Health Organization, one year after President Donald Trump announced America was ending its 78-year-old commitment, federal officials said Thursday. But it's hardly a clean break.
Immigrants often don't open the door to ICE, but that may no longer stop officers
SAN DIEGO (AP) — Since coming to the United States 30 years ago from Mexico, Fernando Perez said U.S. immigration officers have stopped by his home numerous times, but he has never once answered the door. "There are rules and I know them," said Perez, speaking in a mix of English and Spanish in a Home Depot parking lot where he has routinely sought work as a day laborer from contractors and people renovating their homes.
Economic leaders at Davos say global growth is resilient despite disruption from Trump
DAVOS, Switzerland (AP) — Leading global economic policymakers at the World Economic Forum in Davos urged countries and businesses to filter out the turmoil from a week of clashes with the Trump administration and focus on boosting growth and fighting inequality in a world where trade will continue to flow and international cooperation is still badly needed.
2028 Olympics could bring big wins for Los Angeles labor unions
LOS ANGELES (AP) — As Los Angeles ramps up for the 2028 Olympics, local unions are drawing inspiration from the Paris Games when hotel workers went on strike a day before opening ceremonies. The French workers waved signs at the five-star hotel where members of the International Olympic Committee were staying, threatening "No Olympics!" if their demands were not met. A slew of labor union strikes surrounding those Games netted gains from higher salaries to better retirement benefits.
UK's Starmer urges Trump to apologize for 'insulting and frankly appalling' NATO remark
LONDON (AP) — British Prime Minister Keir Starmer has urged U.S. President Donald Trump to apologize for his false assertion that troops from NATO countries — other than Americans — stayed away from the front line during the war in Afghanistan. Trump said that he wasn't sure NATO would be there to support the United States if and when requested, provoking outrage and distress among many in the United Kingdom on Friday.
NCAA approves uniform patches, opening up revenue possibilities for athletic departments
The NCAA unearthed another revenue stream Friday when Division I leaders approved patches for uniforms in a move that could generate millions to fund athletic departments that are looking for new ways to pay players. Beginning Aug. 1, Division I teams can place up to two patches of no more than 4 square inches on uniforms for regular-season games. Those are in addition to the logos already allowed for the uniform manufacturers.
What to know about the deal to keep TikTok in US
TikTok has at last finalized a deal to keep the popular video sharing platform operating in the U.S. after years of uncertainty, but questions remain about whether users' experience will change and whether the changes actually address security concerns around the app.
US hits 9 tankers with sanctions over Iranian oil during protest crackdown and internet shutdown
WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States on Friday imposed sanctions on a fleet of nine ships and their owners accused of transporting hundreds of millions of dollars in forbidden Iranian oil to foreign markets. The sanctions are being imposed because of Iran's "shutdown of internet access to conceal its abuses" against its citizens during its crackdown on nationwide protests, the U.S. Treasury Department said. They "target a critical component of how Iran generates the funds used to repress its own people," Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said.
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