Regional tribes urge feds to reject new power plant on shores of Lake Superior
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 12:29:38 GMT
MADISON, Wis. — Indigenous tribes in Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin have asked federal officials to deny a utility’s request for a loan to help build a natural gas-fired power plant on the shores of Lake Superior, calling the project unthinkable in the face of climate change.Chippewa tribes located across the northern third of the three states sent a letter to U.S. Department of Agriculture officials on Sunday asking them to deny Dairyland Power Cooperative’s request for a $350 million public loan. The request is intended to cover the utility’s share of the cost of building the Nemadji Trail Energy Center power plant.“As our shared climate rapidly continues to destabilize, it is unconscionable that Dairyland Power Cooperative has not canceled its request for a $350 million public loan and permits to build Nemadji Trail Energy Center,” the tribes said in the letter. It added later, “In short, this location was never the place, and now is obviously not...Vos creates panel to investigate criteria for impeaching Justice Janet Protasiewicz
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 12:29:38 GMT
MADISON, Wis. — Wisconsin’s Republican Assembly leader announced Wednesday that he’s created a panel to investigate the criteria for impeachment as he mulls taking that unprecedented step against a liberal state Supreme Court justice.Republicans are targeting Justice Janet Protasiewicz over comments she made during her winning campaign about redistricting and nearly $10 million in donations she received from the state Democratic Party.The impeachment criteria panel being created by Assembly Speaker Robin Vos will consist of three former Wisconsin Supreme Court justices whom Vos told the Associated Press he would not name until after their work is done. Vos said they were not being paid and he expected their work to be complete in the “next few weeks.”The move to further investigate possible impeachment against Protasiewicz comes the day after Vos and Republicans introduced a bill, modeled after the law in Iowa, where new maps would be drawn by nonpartisan legislative sta...San Francisco city employee stabbed while working in Tenderloin
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 12:29:38 GMT
SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) – In San Francisco’s Tenderloin, a city employee was stabbed while working at one of the city’s SRO hotels, which provide permanent supportive housing. Now, city workers and union officials are calling on the city to do more to ensure workers' safety. The city worker was stabbed four times. They will survive, and a suspect has been arrested, but city workers want more to be done before something like this happens again.San Francisco’s Department of Homelessness and Supportive Housing confirmed that on Wednesday morning, the staffer was attacked at the Windsor Hotel on Eddy Street. VIDEO: Good Samaritan tries to stop thieves outside Fentons Creamery in Oakland “A resident from the Windsor Hotel barged into the office of a case manager with a knife or something that appeared to be a knife and proceeded to stab the case worker four times in front of another worker,” said Cheryl Thornton, a Service Employees International Union member. Thornton also works for...Player of the Week: Gainesville’s Cassie Sengul
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 12:29:38 GMT
Each week, WTOP is picking one student athlete to be featured on air and online as our Player of the Week. This week’s WTOP Player of the Week is Cassandra Sengul of Gainesville High School in Gainesville, Virginia.Sengul is entering her fourth year of varsity golf for the Cardinals and is coming off a 2022 season that saw her place top five in qualifying for The Optimist International Junior Golf Championship at Trump National Golf Course in Doral, Florida. Sengul represented Virginia and the greater D.C. area in the tournament, which featured competitors from Thailand, Argentina and other countries around the world.Last season, Sengul also placed third in the mid-Atlantic Junior PGA Shenandoah Valley Open and first at the PGA First Tee tournament at Caves Valley Country Club.Despite having cerebral palsy, a motor disability that affects the ability to control muscles, Sengul takes no exemptions as a competitor for Gainesville and walks the course with her teammates and opponents. ...PHOTOS: San Diego sky lit up by rocket-like light trail
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 12:29:38 GMT
SAN DIEGO -- San Diegans looked up to the sky Thursday night as a rocket-like light trail blazed over the county. The mysterious object was first seen over the region around 7:30 p.m. While some speculated that it was a SpaceX mission, that doesn't appear to be the case. According to the SpaceX website, the company's last scheduled launch from Vandenberg Space Force Base in Santa Barbara was on Sept. 11.A rocket-like light trail over San Diego on Sept. 14, 2023. (KSWB/FOX 5)A rocket-like light trail over San Diego on Sept. 14, 2023. (KSWB/FOX 5)A rocket-like light trail over San Diego on Sept. 14, 2023. (KSWB/FOX 5)Some social media users as far east as Nevada and Arizona also reported catching a glimpse of the rocket-like object as it soared through the sky.The National Weather Service station in Las Vegas reported seeing what appeared to be the rocket's contrail from their backyard in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter.FOX 5 is currently working to confirm what was seen in the...Escondido school district's gender identity policy blocked by federal judge
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 12:29:38 GMT
ESCONDIDO, Calif. -- A preliminary injunction blocking an Escondido Union School District privacy policy aimed at protecting transgender students' identities was issued by a federal judge on Thursday, siding with the two teachers who sued the district over the policy earlier this year.The lawsuit was brought by Rincon Middle School Teachers, Elizabeth Mirabelli and Lori Ann West, arguing that a policy that requires teachers to get a transgender students' consent to disclose their identity to their parents was a violation of their First Amendment rights.According to the lawsuit, EUSD teachers are required to refer to students by their preferred names and pronouns at school, while reverting to biological pronouns and legal names when speaking with the students' parents.Nondiscrimination policies that prevent harassment based on a students' actual or perceived identity were not included in the scope of the case.District officials say that the policy was put in place to protect transgen...Citing sustainability, Starbucks wants to overhaul its iconic cup. Will customers go along?
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 12:29:38 GMT
TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) — Bethany Patton steps up to the counter and places her pink mug into a shoebox-sized dishwasher. It spins. It whirs. Water splashes inside. After 90 seconds, the door opens and steam emerges. A barista grabs the mug, dries it and prepares Patton’s order — a 16-ounce Starbucks double espresso on ice.For bringing her own cup, Patton gets $1 off her drink.“Saving the environment is important and all, but I probably come here more in knowing that I’m going to get a dollar off,” says Patton, 27, a cancer researcher at Arizona State University. Two friends who came on the afternoon coffee run nod as they hold the cups that they, too, brought along. Just as noteworthy as what they’re carrying is what they are not: the disposable Starbucks cup, an icon in a world where the word is overused.For a generation and more, it has been a cornerstone of consumer society, first in the United States and then globally — the throwaway cup with the emerald logo depicting a longha...More than 700 million people don’t know when – or if – they will eat again, UN food chief says
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 12:29:38 GMT
UNITED NATIONS (AP) — A global hunger crisis has left more than 700 million people not knowing when or if they will eat again, and demand for food is rising relentlessly while humanitarian funding is drying up, the head of the United Nations food agency said Thursday.World Food Program Executive Director Cindy McCain told the U.N. Security Council that because of the lack of funding, the agency has been forced to cut food rations for millions of people, and “more cuts are on the way.”“We are now living with a series of concurrent and long-term crises that will continue to fuel global humanitarian needs,” she said. “This is the humanitarian community’s new reality — our new normal — and we will be dealing with the fallout for years to come.”The WFP chief, the widow of the late U.S. senator John McCain, said the agency estimates that nearly 47 million people in over 50 countries are just one step from famine — and a staggering 45 million children under the age of five are now estimate...Thousands sign up to experience magic mushrooms as Oregon’s novel psilocybin experiment takes off
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 12:29:38 GMT
EUGENE, Ore. (AP) — Psilocybin tea, wind chimes and a tie-dye mattress await those coming to an office suite in Eugene to trip on magic mushrooms. For roughly six hours, adults over 21 can experience what many users describe as vivid geometric shapes, a loss of identity and a oneness with the universe.Epic Healing Eugene — Oregon’s first licensed psilocybin service center — opened in June, marking the state’s unprecedented step in offering the mind-bending drug to the public. The center now has a waitlist of more than 3,000 names, including people with depression, PTSD or end-of-life dread.No prescription or referral is needed, but proponents hope Oregon’s legalization will spark a revolution in mental health care.Colorado voters last year passed a measure allowing regulated use of magic mushrooms starting in 2024, and California’s Legislature this month approved a measure that would allow possession and use of certain plant- and mushroom-based psychedelics, including psilocyb...Iraq steps up repatriations from Islamic State camp in Syria, hoping to reduce militant threats
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 12:29:38 GMT
BAGHDAD (AP) — Iraq is stepping up repatriation of its citizens from a camp in northeastern Syria housing tens of thousands of people, mostly wives and children of Islamic State fighters but also supporters of the militant group. It’s a move that Baghdad hopes will reduce cross-border militant threats and eventually lead to shutting down the facility.After U.S.-backed and Kurdish-led fighters defeated the Islamic State group in Syria in March 2019 — ending its self-proclaimed Islamic “caliphate” that had ruled over a large swath of territory straddling Iraq and Syria — thousands of IS fighters and their families were taken to the camp known as al-Hol.Many of them were Iraqi nationals. Today, Iraqi officials see the facility, close to the Iraq-Syria border, as a major threat to their country’s security, a hotbed of the militants’ radical ideology and a place where thousands of children have been growing up into future militants.It’s “a time bomb that can explo...Latest news
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