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Is Sam’s Club Plus worth it? What to know about the premium warehouse membership before you sign up

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Everyone knows that becoming a Sam’s Club member can save them money. But there’s a way to take your savings to the next level: An upgraded Sam’s Club Plus membership offers you a 2% reward on your Sam’s Club purchases, plus free shipping, select free prescriptions and more great perks. Sam’s Club Plus memberships cost more to start than the entry-level Club membership, but for many shoppers, a Plus membership will save you more in the long run — potentially hundreds of dollars per year.

If you’ve been thinking about joining Sam’s Club Plus, there’s an incredible membership deal offer right now that you won’t want to miss. Normally priced at $110 per year, now through April 30, 2024 you can join as a Sam’s Club Plus member for just $50 for your first year. This is the best price we’ve seen for Plus memberships, ever.

Tap the button below to sign up, or read on to learn about all the reasons why you might want to upgrade to Sam’s Club Plus.


What’s the difference between Club and Plus memberships?

There are two levels of membership at Sam’s Club. The entry-level membership, Club, offers all the basics: Access to Sam’s Club stores, plus savings on gift cards, travel, gas, new car purchases and home services. All members get free hearing tests and eye exams, with designer glasses starting at $59. You can also get members-only discounts on prescriptions, with prices starting at just $4 for generics.

Normally $50 per year, there’s a promotion right now where you can join Sam’s Club at the Club level for $14 (through April 30).

A Sam’s Club Plus membership is normally $110 per year, but now through April 30, it’s priced at $50 for new members. Plus memberships include all the benefits of a Club-level membership, plus the extra perks listed below.


Best reasons to join Sam’s Club Plus

Sam’s Club Plus members get to enjoy even more perks than regular Sam’s Club members. Not only do they have access to great gas prices, discounted gift cards and Sam’s Club’s under-$5 rotisserie chickens, but the below as well.

Sam’s Club Plus members shop first and get free shipping 

Sam’s Club Plus members can shop the warehouse retailer before anyone else, starting as early as 8 a.m. Monday through Saturday. Free curbside pickup is also available, where a staff member loads up your car with your order. Same-day home delivery is offered at $8 with Plus when you order by 1 p.m.

Plus members have exclusive access to free shipping on most online items — with no order minimum. Some restrictions apply.

Sam’s Club Plus members get select prescriptions filled for free

Another great benefit: Sam’s Club Plus members get 10 select prescription medications for free. Treating Fido or Fluffy? The retailer also offers discounts on pet prescriptions.

Speaking of health, with Sam’s Club Plus you get 20% off a pair of glasses and free shipping on contact lenses (offer does not apply with vision insurance or Medicaid/Medicare). You can also get a zero-cost hearing test and great prices on hearing aids.

Sam’s Club Plus members can rack up to $500 in cash rewards

Plus members get 2% back in Sam’s Cash on qualifying pre-tax purchases for up to $500 a year. So, if you spend at least $2,500 at Sam’s Club in your first year, your Sam’s Club Plus membership will pay for itself in full.

Want even more cash back? If you’re a Plus member using a Sam’s Club Mastercard, you can earn 5% Sam’s Cash back on gas, 3% on Sam’s Club purchases, 3% on dining and 1% on other purchases.

Sam’s Club Plus members save big on tires

All Sam’s Club members can get great deals on tires. But Sam’s Club Plus members get early access to Tire and Battery Center services and save 50% on tire installation (in sets of four).




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Storms slam Houston yet again as more than 1 million customers without power in Texas

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Severe thunderstorms blew out windows in high-rise buildings, downed trees and knocked out power to hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses in the Houston area Thursday as Southeast Texas got pummeled for the second time this month.

Flash flood and severe thunderstorm warnings were issued for multiple counties, with damaging winds and even tornadoes possible into the evening, said Houston’s National Weather Service office.

“Take shelter now if you’re in the path of this storm. Head to the lowest floor!” the NWS office warned on social media.

Streets were flooded and trees were down across the region. CBS affiliate KHOU-TV showed images of shattered windows on an office building in downtown Houston, with glass littering the street below. Video posted to social media showed a downtown street covered in debris.

Video also appeared to show water being blown into Minute Maid Park, the home of the Houston Astros, despite the stadium’s roof being closed. 

Flights were grounded at Houston’s two major airports because of the weather. Sustained winds topping 60 mph were recorded at Bush Intercontinental Airport.

In total, just over one million customers were without power in Texas as of Thursday evening, according to utility tracker PowerOutage.us.

Of that, more than 842,000 customers were without electricity in and around Harris County, which contains Houston. The county is home to more than 4.7 million people.

“Please avoid the roadways if possible, but if you’re out, please use caution and be on the lookout for debris,” Harris County Sheriff Ed Gonzalez wrote on social media. Gonzalez shared an image of vehicles attempting to traverse around a massive tree that had come crashing down into an intersection.

The Houston Independent School District announced all schools would be closed Friday.   

Heavy storms slammed the region during the first week of May, leading to numerous high-water rescues, including some from the rooftops of flooded homes.





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U.S. announces effort to expedite court cases of migrants who cross the border illegally

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The Biden administration on Thursday announced an effort to shorten the time it takes for U.S. immigration judges to decide the asylum cases of certain migrants who enter the country illegally along the border with Mexico.

Migrant adults released by federal border officials after crossing into the U.S. unlawfully will be eligible to be placed in the program, under a joint initiative between the Department of Homeland Security and the Justice Department, which oversees the nation’s immigration courts.

The effort’s objective, senior U.S. officials said, is to speed up the process of granting asylum to migrants with legitimate cases, and rejecting weak cases. Federal officials under Republican and Democratic administrations have said the current years-long timeframe to decide asylum cases serves as a “pull factor” that attracts migration by economic migrants, who don’t qualify for humanitarian protection, but who often use the asylum system to work in the U.S.

Over the past years, the backlog of cases received by the immigration courts has ballooned, leading to wait times that often surpass four years. Fewer than 800 immigration judges are overseeing more than 3.5 million unresolved cases.

Single migrant adults who plan to live in five major U.S. cities — Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles and New York City — could be selected for the new process, which will instruct immigration judges to issue decisions within 180 days, instead of years.

Since the Obama administration, the U.S. has set up several similar programs, colloquially known as “rocket dockets.” While officials have portrayed them as ways to discourage illegal immigration, advocates have said the rocket dockets trample on migrants’ due process by making it more difficult for them to secure lawyers in time for their hearings.

The scope of Thursday’s announcement was not immediately clear, as U.S. officials declined to provide an estimate of the number of migrants who would be placed in the fast-track proceedings. Ten judges have been assigned to the program, one of the officials said during a call with reporters.

The latest rocket docket is the most recent step taken by the Biden administration to curtail unlawful border crossings, which spiked last year to record levels. Last week, the Biden administration published a proposed rule that would allow immigration officials to more quickly reject and deport asylum-seeking migrants who are deemed to endanger public safety or national security.

Last year, the administration implemented a regulation that presumes migrants are ineligible for U.S. asylum if they enter the country illegally after failing to request refuge in another country. It paired that policy with a vast expansion of avenues for some would-be migrants to enter the U.S. legally. 

President Biden, who has increasingly embraced more restrictive border policies, has also been considering a more sweeping measure that would further restrict asylum for those entering the U.S. illegally. The move, which would rely on a presidential authority known as 212(f), would almost certainly face legal challenges.

Administration officials have argued they are exploring unilateral immigration actions due to the collapse of a border security agreement that the White House forged with a bipartisan group of senators earlier this year. While the deal would have severely restricted asylum and increased deportations without legalizing unauthorized immigrants, most Republicans, including former President Donald Trump, rejected it outright.

“This administrative step is no substitute for the sweeping and much-needed changes that the bipartisan Senate bill would deliver, but in the absence of congressional action we will do what we can to most effectively enforce the law and discourage irregular migration,” Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said in a statement Thursday.

The Biden administration has faced unprecedented levels of migration along the southern border, including over two million migrant apprehensions in each of the past two years.

Migrants southern border
Migrants line up to be transferred by U.S. Border Patrol after having crossed the Bravo River in El Paso, Texas, as seen from Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua State, Mexico, on April 18, 2024.

HERIKA MARTINEZ/AFP via Getty Images


In recent months, however, migrant crossings have plunged, bucking historical patterns that have seen migration soar in the spring. Last month, Border Patrol recorded nearly 129,000 migrant apprehensions, down from 137,000 in March, according to government data. U.S. officials have credited increased deportations and an immigration crackdown by Mexico for the surprising drop.



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5/16: The Daily Report with John Dickerson

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5/16: The Daily Report with John Dickerson – CBS News


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John Dickerson reports on the status of a temporary pier designed to provide critical aid to Gaza, the sharp cross-examination of former President Donald Trump’s ex-fixer Michael Cohen, and how used police firearms can wind up in the hands of criminals.

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