Fox News was hit with another sexual harassment claim Monday, as on-air contributor Julie Roginsky filed a lawsuit against the network's former chief executive, Roger Ailes, and its current co-president, Bill Shine.

The suit filed Monday in New York State Supreme Court is the latest legal salvo in what has become a spiraling crisis for the 21st Century Fox unit.

Fox News was rocked over the weekend by a report of $13 million in payouts for sexual harassment complaints made against prime-time star Bill O'Reilly.

The top-rated cable channel has been buffeted by sexual harassment complaints since former anchor Gretchen Carlson filed a lawsuit against Ailes in July.

Fox News recently reached a $2.5 million settlement with former contributor Tamara Holder, who accused a former vice president in charge of Fox News Latino of sexually assaulting her.

Roginsky is a Democratic political consultant who is paid to appear on various Fox News programs. According to her Twitter account, she served as a panelist on Saturday's edition of the network's “Bulls & Bears” business show.

A Fox News representative was not available to comment.

UPS to deliver on Saturday

United Parcel Service will add Saturday ground deliveries, making one of the biggest shipping-time changes in its 109-year history in response to rising demand from online shoppers.

Homes and businesses will no longer have to wait until Monday to receive packages, while online and brick-and-mortar retailers can send goods on Saturday for Monday delivery. The expansion of a test program begun last year will eventually add 6,000 jobs, Atlanta-based UPS said in a statement Monday.

Saturday operations will help UPS defend against FedEx, which already drops off ground-shipped items at homes that day, and the U.S. Postal Service, which also makes Sunday deliveries in some markets.

Obama-era coal rule scrapped

The Interior Department is scrapping an Obama-era rule aimed at ensuring that coal companies don't shortchange taxpayers on huge volumes of coal extracted from public lands, primarily in the West.

The Trump administration had put the rule on hold after mining companies challenged the regulation in federal court. Monday's action repeals the Obama-era rule and begins a process seeking public comments on whether to change the way the government values coal mined on federal lands.

The Trump administration described the repeal as another sign it has stopped a so-called “war on coal” by the federal government.

THE BOTTOM LINE

$19.9M That's the amount of a fine the vaccines unit of French pharmaceutical company Sanofi SA will pay for overcharging the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs for two products between 2002 and 2011. By law, drug manufacturers cannot charge the VA more than a maximum level called the Federal Ceiling Price for drugs. The government on Monday did not identify the products involved.