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 TAMPA, Fla. 鈥?New data released by Floridas Department of Education shows last year, the number of teachers who left the classroom was slightly down from record high resignations the year prior.While that is some good new stanley cups s, F stanley cup spain lorida investigative reporter Katie LaGrone found there are still serious concerns about what s real stanley cupe ly driving teachers out. I can t say that salary wasn t a considerable factor for a lot of my friends and myself who were looking elsewhere,  said Megan Young, who just left her job as a high school English teacher in St. Augustine.Young took the unusual step of calling it quits in the middle of a school year. I was mentoring teachers in my profession who were making the same amount of money as me, and I had 14 years experience and a master s degree,  Young told LaGrone recently.Colleen Petersen s emotions are still high after 32 years of teaching in St. Lucie County ended when politics ultimately pushed her away this past summer. When I got that email saying you have to pack up your library and you couldn t put it out for the beginning of the school year until it was approved. I was like,  No Im done.  So now my books are all sitting in a warehouse in Port St. Lucie not being used by kids,  she said as she grew emotional.Shawna Berger in Hillsborough County said there was a little bit of everything that finally forced the high school English teacher out. Especially in Florida and around the time of the pandemic, there was a lot of political contention surr Hlmt 66-year-old believed to be oldest person cured of HIV
 MEDINA, Ohio 鈥?Onlookers gathered along the streets of Medina s town square on Tuesday, to wave flags, take pictures and greet a group of cyclists who made their way into town.Medina police, ambulance and fire trucks escorted the riders through the stanley cup  city. Just to let them know we are here and we are supporting them,  said Patty Taylor, who was one of those onlookers.The group is biking across the country in a trek they call  Bay t termo stanley o Brooklyn  to honor the lives lost in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.It s a trek of more than 3,500 miles, and it lasts for more than 40 days. But the organizer of Bay to Brooklyn, Darrell Sales, said it s for one purpose: To make sure the 9/11 first responders who are gone are never forgotten. We wear the 343. We carry it wherever we go,  Sales said.  That s the number of firefighters that died, along with the other 3,000 people that died on 9/11. Sales said the group of 10 cyclists is made up of retired and active firefighters and military service members.Michael DeLeo is a battalion chief with CalFire and one of the riders. He said the 100 miles a day pace is grueling but worth it. I had a couple of ro stanley cup ugh days a few days back. I had some pretty bad leg cramps,  he said.  But just thinking that is just a minuscule feeling of some of the loss, some of the feelings that first responders have experienced. The group began their journey in Santa Clara, California, on Aug. 1. The goal is to make it to New York City in time for the 20th anniversary of Sep