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Salvage food stores have long been a place for people to find deals at a deep discount, but inflation and some rebranding is making them grow in popularity. These stores sell what mainstream retailers call “unsellables,” often products like dented cans and boxes, things on the cusp of sell-by dates, and weird holiday marketing attempts. Another thing fueling interest is the small subgenre on social media where people chronicle their trips and display their hauls like trophies. Some people just love finding a good deal. Kim Severson, food correspondent at the NY Times, joins us for what to know about salvage stores.
Next, almost $400 million went to a veteran retraining program as part of the American Rescue Plan, but a lack of oversight and the involvement of for-profit schools led to a flop where only 397 veterans landed jobs. It’s known as the Veteran Rapid Retraining Program or VRRAP. One school where there were problems was the Chicago-based Future Tech Career Institute. Students there said that schedules were disorganized and didn’t follow a set syllabus, and school-issued laptops didn’t have enough memory and couldn’t run critical software. Lisa Rein, reporter at the Washington Post covering the federal government, joins us for more.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Salvage food stores have long been a place for people to find deals at a deep discount, but inflation and some rebranding is making them grow in popularity. These stores sell what mainstream retailers call “unsellables,” often products like dented cans and boxes, things on the cusp of sell-by dates, and weird holiday marketing attempts. Another thing fueling interest is the small subgenre on social media where people chronicle their trips and display their hauls like trophies. Some people just love finding a good deal. Kim Severson, food correspondent at the NY Times, joins us for what to know about salvage stores.
Next, almost $400 million went to a veteran retraining program as part of the American Rescue Plan, but a lack of oversight and the involvement of for-profit schools led to a flop where only 397 veterans landed jobs. It’s known as the Veteran Rapid Retraining Program or VRRAP. One school where there were problems was the Chicago-based Future Tech Career Institute. Students there said that schedules were disorganized and didn’t follow a set syllabus, and school-issued laptops didn’t have enough memory and couldn’t run critical software. Lisa Rein, reporter at the Washington Post covering the federal government, joins us for more.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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