Orange County scores and player stats for Tuesday, Nov. 18

Support our high school sports coverage by becoming a digital subscriber. Subscribe now Scores and stats from Orange County games on Tuesday, Nov. 18. Click here for details about sending your team’s scores and stats to the Register. The deadline for submitting information is 10: 45 p. m. Monday through Friday and 10 p. m. Saturday. TUESDAY’S SCORES BOYS SOCCER NONLEAGUE Tarbut V’Torah 4, Capistrano Valley Christian 3 Bolsa Grande 2, Santiago 1 Rancho Alamitos 2, Garden Grove 0 GIRLS SOCCER NONLEAGUE Los Amigos 1, Bolsa Grande 0 Orange 1, Mary Star of the Sea 0 Godinez 5, Western 1.
https://www.ocregister.com/2025/11/18/orange-county-scores-and-player-stats-for-tuesday-nov-18/

Iowa’s mental health revamp shows little change

Laura Semprini of Iowa City knows what it is like to call behavioral health providers in a desperate attempt to get an appointment during a time of need, just to be told, “Come in three months.” This experience is not uncommon, with the average wait time for behavioral health services in the U. S. being 48 days, according to a November 2024 study by the Health Resources and Services Administration National Center for Health Workforce Analysis. The same study said six in 10 psychiatrists do not accept new patients, making wait times a more significant barrier to accessing care. Semprini now works as a remote peer support coordinator for the Johnson County chapter of the National Alliance of Mental Illness, or NAMI. Although she has been fortunate enough to access behavioral health services when she needed it, Semprini said she understands, as a patient and a provider, there are notable barriers in access to care. In an attempt to streamline services and improve access to behavioral health care across Iowa, a new statewide system was implemented on July 1. After being signed into law by Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds and passing the Iowa Legislature with bipartisan support in March 2024, the new Behavioral Health Service System reorganized resources across the state. State officials and some mental health advocates said the system will be a more effective way of providing care, while Johnson County officials say the system will be too far removed from the needs of local communities. Semprini worked on the advisory council and governing board for the East Central Region, one of 14 former behavioral health regions across the state. She said much of the old system was working, but there were areas that needed improvement, such as the difficulty in providing substance abuse and behavioral health care together, considering the high rates of the co-occurring diseases. According to a study published by the World Psychiatry Journal and archived in the National Library of Medicine, around 50 percent of individuals with severe mental illness also deal with substance abuse. Marissa Eyanson, director of the division of behavioral health for Iowa Health and Human Services, or Iowa HHS, said the old system was outdated in terms of laws and services designed to provide care to Iowans. She said Iowa HHS conducted a statewide assessment to identify problems with the old system. Eyanson said the previous system was inconsistent in providing care and often led to individuals not receiving help until they were in crisis. She said the new system was developed from a “community-driven, statewide effort,” and has been modernized to fit the current needs of the state to prioritize early intervention. Early intervention initiatives include increased services in locations such as schools or jails places where individuals are likely to gain access to care for the first time, Eyanson said. Johnson County Supervisor Rod Sullivan said funding previously came directly from the county until the funds were combined into regions in 2014, when Johnson County became part of the East Central Region, one of 14 former regions in the state. The old regions each had different entities administering services. Now, the regions combine to form seven districts, and funding is funneled through the Iowa Primary Care Association, or PCA, a singular Administrative Service Organization in an attempt to limit complexities in funding distribution. Iowa PCA said it does not deliver direct clinical care but rather “builds and supports a network,” which reaches across the state to do so. Iowa PCA said it contracts with 124 behavioral health providers across Iowa to deliver care as efficiently and consistently as possible. “Our goal is to ensure Iowans can get connected to care regardless of where they live or what coverage they have,” Abby Ferenzi, senior director of behavioral health services at the Iowa PCA, said in a statement. Semprini said while some providers’ contracts changed as a part of the realignment, NAMI’s contract remained largely the same, though funding for staff training is no longer included. Navigating the behavioral health system Eyanson said a major issue Iowa HHS found was difficulty navigating the old system, leading to hardship in accessing services. “[People] often found there were too many doors but not enough of the right doors,” Eyanson said. She said the addition of system navigators, a “boots on the ground” mechanism to help Iowans maneuver the behavioral health system, has been an immediately impactful change with the new system. Navigators are located throughout the districts and make care more accessible through a less cumbersome process. “We don’t replace local providers we connect and support them, and we strive to make sure rural residents have the same clear pathways to care as urban Iowans,” Ferenzi said in the statement to The Daily Iowan. Iowa PCA has already participated in more than 4, 000 calls to connect Iowans to behavioral health resources across the state from July 1 to late October, the organization said. Eyanson said the previous system had other system navigation tools that were not as accessible, as some had eligibility requirements. Both the “Your Life Iowa” line and the 988 lifeline existed before the transition, but Eyanson said the lines are being emphasized in the new system as another tool for providing immediate assistance to those in need. “What we are trying to do is get people connected sooner,” Eyanson said. “The most common reason folks get sicker with behavioral health-related issues is because they waited to get care, [or] they didn’t know where to go,” Eyanson said. Semprini said Iowa has a shortage of health care providers, and while there are increasing options through telehealth, peer support can also help bridge the gap. She thinks NAMI has been supported by Iowa PCA in prioritizing peer support services. Eyanson said the streamlining of services in the new system should help retain providers across Iowa, fighting the provider shortage nationwide. According to the HRSA, more than 122 million Americans live in an area facing a shortage of mental health professionals. The Association of American Medical Colleges reported Iowa was 44th in the nation in patient-to-physician ratio in 2024. The data represent all physicians, not just behavioral health professionals. “We find that within services and systems that are complex, sometimes people will leave the profession just because they’re done having to deal with the noisiness of that level of administrative effort,” Eyanson said. Existing barriers to behavioral health care Sullivan, the Johnson County supervisor who has 35 years of experience in the behavioral health field, said while access to services is a nationwide problem, it only gets more difficult in rural areas. However, the issue has more to do with proper funding, compared to the system used to deliver services. He said the new system will turn out worse for Iowans, and previous barriers to care will continue within the new system because state funding for services is not increasing. “Iowa does not adequately fund Medicaid,” Sullivan said. “No matter how you provide the service, if they are not funding it adequately, you can’t do what is necessary.” According to a 2025 report from the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonprofit providing research on health policy, Iowa has the highest rate of mental illness among non-elderly Medicaid recipients, at 51 percent. Medicaid funding is split between the state and federal government. In budget year 2025, $2. 2 billion in state funds and $6. 8 billion in federal funds were appropriated in Iowa for Medicaid. Sullivan no longer sits on a state behavioral health advisory board, as district boards do not have direct interaction with county supervisors. “They are taking the county’s output out of the process and moving it to a state-driven system,” Sullivan said. “Everything state-driven ends up being, in my opinion, worse, because [it is] more removed from the people.” Johnson County Supervisor Lisa Green-Douglass said county-level influence in the system had been decreasing since the realignment was developed and passed into law in March 2024, noting the new governing board, the District 7 Advisory Council, does not include any elected officials. Green-Douglass said having elected officials on the board allows it to be held accountable, “because if they are unhappy with what you are doing, you don’t get reelected.” Semprini works on the new advisory council as both a provider and advisor as a person who has lived experience with mental illness and said even though there are no elected officials on the board, Iowa PCA and Iowa HHS have worked to get input from a wide variety of sources. These sources include patients, law enforcement, and elected officials, on the transition. Sullivan said the new system intends to fix barriers to care throughout Iowa, but he doesn’t think it will be possible without funding increases. “We are going to see less availability [of services],” Sullivan said. “We might see some improvements on some of the very acute stuff, but I would expect things are going to get worse and not better.” Sullivan said he still attends a monthly system of care meeting in Johnson County to discuss access to services, and while he feels like he still has adequate knowledge about the system and services, he no longer has direct input. Redistributing funds Eyanson said while the distribution and organization of state-appropriated funds for the behavioral health system have changed, the dollar amount has not. For fiscal 2026, $236 million has been allocated for the system, a number that has not changed from fiscal 2025. Iowa Rep. Timi Brown-Powers, D-Waterloo, said not only is the behavioral health system not funded enough, but she foresees cuts considering the recent projections that the Iowa revenue is projected to fall $800 million in fiscal 2026, leading to potential complications with the state budget. Eyanson said she does not anticipate any changes in the amount of funding appropriated to Iowa’s behavioral health system, even in light of potential budget difficulties and revenue falls. Brown-Powers said the new behavioral health system looks good “on paper” but will be ineffective without proper funding. Eyanson said the “streamlined administrative effort” prioritized in the new system, particularly through the use of Iowa PCA as an Administrative Service Organization, has saved the state money, which is being reinvested to expand services, such as school-based behavioral health care and system navigation. Eyanson said while the installation of the statewide system was only a few months ago, she has already received feedback in spaces that are improving, including reduced administrative effort from providers. “That means providers get to spend more time being providers,” she said. Eyanson emphasized the goals of Iowa HHS in providing services to all Iowans more efficiently and effectively than before. “It really doesn’t matter where you are, where you sit, who you are ­you should be able to get connected to the services, the resources that you need, and be able to feel confident about how to do it,” Eyanson said.
https://dailyiowan.com/2025/11/18/iowas-mental-health-revamp-shows-little-change/

Floyd County supervisors continue discussing Sheriff’s Office equipment requests

The Floyd County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday continued reviewing major equipment funding requests from the Sheriff’s Office, including new in-car computers and a proposed 10-year replacement contract for body and vehicle video cameras. The board also voted to begin the process of joining the Iowa Retirement Investors’ Club (RIC), changing the optional retirement savings program available to county employees [.].
https://www.charlescitypress.com/articles/charles-city-press-local-news/floyd-county-supervisors-continue-discussing-sheriffs-office-equipment-requests/

Roblox rolls out new safety features including AI age verification

The massive online gaming platform Roblox, which is used by millions of children under the age of 13, announced it’ll soon require every player to scan their face and use AI-powered facial technology to estimate their age. Jo Ling Kent reports it comes after dozens of families have sued Roblox and Discord for allegedly failing to protect children from sexual predators on their platforms.
https://www.cbsnews.com/video/roblox-rolls-out-new-safety-features-including-ai-age-verification/

Miss Universe judge resigns ahead of pageant, claims Top 30 ‘pre-selected’ by ‘impromptu jury’

Miss Universe judge Omar Harfouch has abruptly resigned from the pageant’s official jury just days before this year’s competition is set to kick off on Nov. 21. Harfouch took to his Instagram Stories on Tuesday to claim that the Top 30 finalists had been chosen in secret long before the judges ever cast a vote. His exit has sparked a wave of confusion and frustration among contestants, many of whom say they learned about the alleged pre-selection online rather than from the Miss Universe Organization itself. Harfouch claimed he discovered that an “impromptu jury” had already chosen which contestants would move forward out of the 136 women competing. According to him, some people within this unauthorized group had personal ties to participating contestants including individuals responsible for counting votes and handling results. He argued that such connections created an undeniable conflict of interest. Harfouch also claimed that the existence of this alleged secret jury came to his attention through social media rather than any internal Miss Universe communication. “The results of this selection are currently being kept secret,” he wrote. When Harfouch pushed for answers, he said the organization responded by posting a list of names involved in the process without explaining what those people actually did. He described the move as an attempt to quiet criticism without offering any meaningful clarification and, after what he described as a tense exchange with Miss Universe leadership, ultimately stepped away from the panel. “After having a disrespectful conversation with [Miss Universe CEO] Raul Rocha about the lack of transparency in the Miss Universe voting process, I decided to resign from the jury and refuse to be part of this charade,” Harfouch announced. Harfouch also announced that he was withdrawing the musical performance he had prepared for the competition. The Miss Universe Organization, meanwhile, quickly rejected his allegations and insisted that its procedures remain legitimate and tightly controlled. “The Miss Universe Organization firmly clarifies that no impromptu jury has been created, that no external group has been authorized to evaluate delegates or select finalists, and that all competition evaluations continue to follow the established, transparent, and supervised MUO protocols,” the organization said in a statement. “Given [Mr. Harfouch’s] expressed confusion, his public mischaracterization of the program, and his stated desire not to participate, the Miss Universe Organization respectfully acknowledges his withdrawal from the official judging panel,” the pageant added. This wouldn’t be the first controversy to unfold just days before this year’s Miss Universe pageant kicks off on Nov. 21.
https://nypost.com/2025/11/18/entertainment/miss-universe-judge-resigns-ahead-of-pageant/

Federal Reserve releases new guidance for bank oversight in move praised by industry

By CHRISTOPHER RUGABER and KEN SWEET WASHINGTON (AP) The Federal Reserve’s top banking regulator on Tuesday released new guidelines for the agency’s supervision of the financial system, earning praise from industry trade groups and criticism from her predecessor. In a set of sweeping changes, the principles call for bank examiners to focus on material financial risks and to “not become distracted from this priority by devoting excessive attention to processes, procedures, and documentation.” The guidelines are set out in a memo originally distributed to Fed employees Oct. 29 but released Tuesday. Michelle Bowman, the Fed’s vice chair for supervision, said the principles will “sharpen” the central bank’s focus and build “a more effective supervisory framework.” “By anchoring our work in material financial risks, we strengthen the banking system’s foundation while upholding transparency, accountability, and fairness,” Bowman said in a written statement. Bowman was named vice chair by President Donald Trump in March. Since Trump took office, federal bank regulators have been rolling back regulations that govern the nation’s banking system and other financial services companies. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, created after the 2008 financial crisis, is effectively not operating presently and has negated several of the regulations it put into place under President Joe Biden. Also Tuesday, Fed governor Michael Barr, who preceded Bowman as the vice chair for supervision, sharply criticized the changes in banking oversight at the Fed and at other agencies this year. “We are now, I believe, at a moment of inflection in the regulatory and supervisory approaches that help keep banks healthy,” Barr said in a speech. “There are growing pressures to weaken supervision . in ways that will make it harder for examiners to act before it is too late to prevent a build-up of excessive risk.” The announcement by the Fed matches a similar move by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which also loosened how it measures risk among the banks it supervises as well as removed issues like reputational risk from how examiners look at the banks. Under the Fed’s new rules, banks can only be tested for material risks to their businesses or balance sheets, such as bad loans or unsound business practices. Banks will also able to self-certify on certain risk and supervision issues. These changes have been among the top priority for the banking industry since President Trump was elected into office. “Banks are most resilient when their examiners prioritize material financial risks, not check-the-box compliance exercises,” said Greg Baer, president and CEO of the Bank Policy Institute. Under the new framework, the Fed will also defer to other major bank regulators, including the OCC and state-level regulators, when it comes to who should supervise and examine these institutions. Bowman has also moved to reduce the Fed’s regulatory staffing by about 30%, mostly through attrition, a step Barr also criticized Tuesday. The cuts “will impair supervisors’ ability to act with the speed, force, and agility appropriate to the risks facing individual banks and the financial system,” Barr said. “Such a drastically reduced staff will slow response time for the public and the banks themselves, limit supervisory findings and enforcement actions, and erode supervisors’ ability to be forward-looking.”.
https://www.santacruzsentinel.com/2025/11/18/federal-reserve-bank-supervision/

Unearthed figurine in Israel bears early depiction of bestiality

Talk about ruffling feathers. A team in Israel has uncovered a petite clay figurine barely the size of a postage stamp that seems to immortalize a goose making an indecent proposal to a woman. Dug up from a long-lost settlement in the country’s north, the cheeky artifact could be the oldest known example of human-animal hanky-panky. Laurent Davin of Hebrew University explained to the Daily Mail that encounters between animal spirits and humans pop up often in animistic cultures usually in the realm of dreams, visions or myth. The archaeologists have even whipped up a fresh illustration to decode the blink-and-you’ll-miss-it details and, well, it’s a lot. The tiny carving appears to show a nude woman, who doesn’t look too thrilled, bent forward as an oversized goose climbs aboard, its beak pressed gently to her head like some prehistoric lover’s whisper. The bizarre bauble, dug up with other clay scraps at the Nahal Ein Gev II site in northern Israel, features what researchers say are clearly carved breasts and a triangular pubic patch. Some optimists have floated a tamer theory maybe she was just hauling home a freshly killed bird but the goose looks anything but dead and is very much running the show. Tests indicate the figurine was shaped from local clay and fired around 400°C roughly 12, 000 years ago, proving that ancient artisans were, indeed, cooking up some wild scenes. Back then, the region was home to the Natufians the OG Middle Eastern trendsetters who ditched the roaming life, built the first real neighborhoods and basically invented staying put. And the Holy Land keeps serving up surprises this month. As The Post previously reported, archaeologists recently uncovered Canaanite ritual artifacts plus a 5, 000-year-old winepress near Tel Megiddo. The Israel Antiquities Authority announced on November 5, revealing the dig ran alongside the construction of Highway 66 in the Jezreel Valley. Tel Megiddo aka “Armageddon” from the Book of Revelation literally means “mountain of Megiddo” in Hebrew, and the digs unearthed treasures spanning Israel’s Early Bronze Age (around 3000 B. C.) to the Late Bronze Age (circa 1270 B. C.). The crown jewel? A rock-cut winepress, officials are calling the oldest ever found in the country. Ultimately, from myth-making to geese getting frisky, the ancient area just proved the past was weirder than we imagined.
https://nypost.com/2025/11/18/science/ancient-israeli-figurine-shows-goose-love-scene/