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https://www.kcra.com/article/alpine-meadows-avalanche-1982-livecopter-3-rescue/39603073
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The Alpine Meadows avalanche of 1982: How LiveCopter 3 was used to jump-start rescue efforts
Retired KCRA pilot Dann Shively recounts the hours and days following the infamous avalanche from his perspective in LiveCopter 3.
Retired KCRA pilot Dann Shively recounts the hours and days following the infamous avalanche from his perspective in LiveCopter 3.
Retired KCRA pilot Dann Shively recounts the hours and days following the infamous avalanche from his perspective in LiveCopter 3.
March 1982 was an epic month for snow in the Sierra. More than 15 feet of it piled up in one week near Donner Summit — that was on top of a base that was already 90 inches deep.
"All the skiers loved it and then all of sudden it became too much," said Dann Shively, a retired KCRA 3 pilot. "And the businesses up there were suffering too because people couldn't get up there."
By March 30, the snow was so unmanageable that even the ski resorts had to close to the public.
The next day, around 4 p.m., a loud boom rang out at the Alpine Meadows ski area and a huge slab of snow went barreling down the harsh terrain.
Shively remembers when the reports first started coming into the KCRA 3 newsroom.
"I think initially it was just another snow slide. And then all of a sudden the severity came into focus very quickly," Shively said.
The avalanche had swallowed the resort's main ski lodge and parking lot. More than a dozen people were trapped and the weather was only getting worse.
"When (the newsroom) said, 'Go up there,' I said, 'I don't think we can make it but I'll give it a try,'" Shively said.
Shively launched with LiveCopter 3 shortly after and managed to get into the valley near Alpine Meadows. But what he saw below surprised him.
"Nobody was down there. No rescue crews. It was virtually empty," Shively said.
The threat of more avalanches had rescue efforts on hold. Crews had gathered at the resort's entrance along Highway 89 but because of the weather, California Highway Patrol was unable to access the area to start avalanche control.
That's when Shively looked below and noticed that he was being signaled to land.
"As soon as we were on the ground, the ski patrol said we need to use your helicopter to dynamite the cornices," Shively said. "And so we popped the doors off, three ski patrol got in with a big bag of charges and we flew around the resort chucking out dynamite!"
Shively and LiveCopter 3 had been involved in some pretty unique situations before, but this one was definitely a first.
"I must have looked a little worried because at one point one of the ski patrol members said, 'It's OK. We've got a minute delay on the charges,'" Shively said.
After confirming that conditions were safe enough for rescuers, Shively landed LiveCopter 3 in Truckee. He and photographer Will Heryford were stuck there for several days as the snow and wind kept coming.
But LiveCopter 3 had already played its role. Eight people were recovered from the sea of snow, including Anna Conrad who miraculously survived after being buried for five days.
Another seven people died that day.
Tonight, exactly 40 years since the avalanche, a film highlighting the stories of members of the Alpine Meadows community is being shown at the resort. Proceeds from showings of the film are being donated to the American Avalanche Association to support education and research.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/deadly-school-shooting-south-carolina/39603272
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12-year-old dies after being shot at South Carolina middle school, suspect in custody
A 12-year-old has died after being shot at a middle school in Greenville, South Carolina, on Thursday.
Community activist Bruce Wilson said Jamari Cortez Bonaparte Jackson, 12, died at the hospital.
Wilson released the following statement on behalf of the family:
"We are all devastated by today’s tragedy. We love Jamari dearly and we would ask that our privacy be respected as we grieve during this very difficult time."
Greenville County deputies said a school resource officer at Tanglewood Middle School requested backup just before 12:30 p.m.
More than 200 law enforcement officers arrived at the school.
A suspect, who is also 12 years old, was taken into custody near the school, Greenville County Sheriff Hobart Lewis said.
He is is being charged with murder, possession of a weapon during a violent crime, possession of a firearm on school property and unlawful possession of a weapon by a person under the age of 18, Lewis said.
Because of his age, the suspect's name was not released.
"Unfortunately, these are two young men who attended school here," Lewis said. "We don't really know the specifics of why it occurred and why so many people resort to violence, especially with firearms."
Greenville County School Superintendent Burke Royster also spoke outside the school after the shooting.
"I’m not sure after a full and thorough law enforcement investigation anyone will really know what was going through the mind of that young person who took this rash act," Royster said.
Students from the school were taken to Brookwood Church by bus to be reunited with their families.
One mother told sister station WYFF that she was in the school parking lot when she saw police begin arriving.
"I was getting out and the police told me, ‘Get back, get back. You can’t come in,’ and I was like, ‘What’s wrong? What’s wrong?’" Angela said. "They wouldn’t tell me, he said, 'Get back in your car.’ When I was getting in my car, all the police came. Every police in Greenville County was there and ambulance. They were running in with guns, not handguns, rifles."
Angela’s daughter, Prentasia, said they were changing classes when the shooting happened.
"We heard a gunshot, and this boy had a gun and he shot at one boy in his side," Prentasia said. "We all pretty much went into a classroom and some people went outside. We were just in the classroom ‘til it was over."
Another mother spoke to WYFF shortly after she arrived at the school to pick up her son.
"But I was speechless," she said. "My stomach is still upset. I just want to see my son and hug him and just make sure he's fine."
That mother said she wishes there were metal detectors in school.
"So, I would love for Greenville County to do something and put metal detectors. They all come through the same door. They go to the cafeteria they do that. Why don't they put a metal detector and then at least detect there's something there," the mother said.
Greenville County School District spokesman Tim Waller said Tanglewood Middle will have an optional day on Friday. Teachers, students and staff can come and talk to each other and counselors but are not required to attend school on Friday.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/first-lawsuit-florida-law-lgbtq-topics-classroom/39600782
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First lawsuit filed over Florida law restricting certain LGBTQ topics in the classroom
Two LGBTQ rights advocacy groups, as well as students, parents and a teacher in Florida, filed a federal lawsuit Thursday, challenging the state's new law banning certain instruction about sexual orientation and gender identity in the classroom.
It's the first legal challenge seeking to block implementation and enforcement of the law, which Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis signed on Monday. The controversial law, dubbed "Don't Say Gay" by its opponents, is set to take effect in July.
DeSantis told reporters Thursday that he will defend the law "vigorously."
The lawsuit calls the Florida law an "unlawful attempt to stigmatize, silence and erase LGBTQ people in Florida's public schools."
"It seeks to do so by imposing a sweeping, vague ban covering any instruction on 'sexual orientation and gender identity,' and by constructing a diffuse enforcement scheme designed to maximize the chilling effect of this prohibition," the complaint reads.
According to the new "Parental Rights in Education" law in Florida, "classroom instruction by school personnel or third parties on sexual orientation or gender identity may not occur in kindergarten through grade 3 or in a manner that is not age-appropriate or developmentally appropriate for students in accordance with state standards."
Parents would be able to bring civil suits against a school district for any potential rule violation, under the new law.
During the bill signing Monday, DeSantis said that Florida recognizes that "parents have a fundamental role in the education, health care and well-being of their children."
The plaintiffs in Thursday's lawsuit include Equality Florida, an LGBTQ advocacy organization; Family Equality, a New York-based nonprofit; a 17-year-old sophomore in Palmetto, Florida, who identifies as gay; an 18-year-old senior in Osprey, Florida, who identifies as gay; the parent of a transgender fifth-grader in Florida; three same-sex couples living in Florida with young children; and a middle-school public teacher in Grand Ridge, Florida. The complaint was filed by Kaplan Hecker & Fink LLP and the National Center for Lesbian Rights.
The plaintiffs say the new law violates the First and 14th Amendments, and Title IX protections.
"This effort to control young minds through state censorship -- and to demean LGBTQ lives by denying their reality -- is a grave abuse of power. The United States Supreme Court has repeatedly affirmed that LGBTQ people and families are at home in our constitutional order. The State of Florida has no right to declare them outcasts, or to treat their allies as outlaws, by punishing schools where someone dares to affirm their identity and dignity," according to the complaint.
Weighing in on the lawsuit Thursday, DeSantis said he doesn't think that "any of the legal claims have merit."
"These are policy decisions. I don't think it's anything that's invoking First Amendment because schools, states and localities have the ability to set curriculum in public schools. We do that all the time. This is not new," he said, also arguing that the law "does not regulate student speech."
DeSantis' communications director Taryn Fenske told CNN in a statement that "this calculated, politically motivated, virtue-signaling lawsuit is meritless, and we will defend the legality of parents to protect their young children from sexual content in Florida public schools."
Proponents of the new law say it gives parents more oversight over what their children learn and discuss at school and argue that LGBTQ-related topics should be left for families to discuss in private. Opponents say the law will negatively affect an already marginalized community and also argue it would open educators up to an endless barrage of litigation.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/ikea-old-furniture-buyback/39603108
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you are not alone if assembling IKEA furniture causes you to feel frustrated and inadequate. The wordless pictograms instructions for the flat pack furniture that deems an easy feat even causes veteran D wires to stump over the confusing parts. Apparently named. Alan household quotes confirm your home decor is delicately mapped to your emotional identity and a recent study concluded 50% of 50,000 tweets included signs of frustration, particularly when it comes to assembling sofas. Store these handy hacks away for the next time you've got no idea or perhaps we should say no. IKEA your IQ tips begin before you've even left the store. The spruce says if it's dented don't get it. The use of minimal packaging doesn't protect your item as well as you might think this could lead to an honest case of it's not you. It's the item popular Mechanics says to make space and take inventory. Although Insider reports to skip their tools and use your own instead. Level up by using an actual level or the site also recommends opting for wood glue. Yes, you heard me glue when in doubt phone a friend or better still a professional. This will help you remain as emotionally stable as your IKEA table
IKEA will pay you to get its old furniture back
Updated: 3:34 PM PDT Mar 31, 2022
Can't stand that old bookcase and dining table with the mismatched chairs you once thought looked so cool? If you bought them at IKEA, the retailer will pay you to get them back.The Swedish furniture and home goods chain said Thursday it is making its Buy Back & Resell program permanent across its 37 U.S. stores on April 1 after piloting the offer last summer.The company said the service applies only to personally-used Ikea furniture that is fully assembled and fully functional. Ikea won't accept items that have been modified, or altered in any way.Here is what's included on the list of returnable items: office drawer cabinets, sideboards, bookcases, small tables, multimedia furniture, cabinets, dining tables, desks and chairs and stools without upholstery.The program doesn't extend to non-IKEA-branded products or beds, sofas, mattresses, home furnishing accessories, leather products, lighting fixtures or chests of drawers. Any recalled IKEA products also are excluded.IKEA said it will inspect each item for its condition, age and functionality at participating stores, and if it passes muster, customers will get a store credit. The company said all "gently used" items approved for resale will be available in a designated "as is" section in stores at discounted prices.The furniture seller already offers a buyback service in the United Kingdom and Ireland as part of its sustainability push. Customers there can trade in gently used Ikea products in excellent condition and get a store credit worth up to 50% of the original sale price. Items in "very good" condition earn a 40% credit, and "well used" goods get 30% of the original price.Ikea has 465 stores worldwide, and said the initiative is part of its effort to become a "circular" business by 2030. The goal, it said, is to eventually produce products that are 100% made with materials that are recycled, remanufactured, refurbished or reused.
Can't stand that old bookcase and dining table with the mismatched chairs you once thought looked so cool? If you bought them at IKEA, the retailer will pay you to get them back.
The Swedish furniture and home goods chain said Thursday it is making its Buy Back & Resell program permanent across its 37 U.S. stores on April 1 after piloting the offer last summer.
The company said the service applies only to personally-used Ikea furniture that is fully assembled and fully functional. Ikea won't accept items that have been modified, or altered in any way.
Here is what's included on the list of returnable items: office drawer cabinets, sideboards, bookcases, small tables, multimedia furniture, cabinets, dining tables, desks and chairs and stools without upholstery.
The program doesn't extend to non-IKEA-branded products or beds, sofas, mattresses, home furnishing accessories, leather products, lighting fixtures or chests of drawers. Any recalled IKEA products also are excluded.
IKEA said it will inspect each item for its condition, age and functionality at participating stores, and if it passes muster, customers will get a store credit. The company said all "gently used" items approved for resale will be available in a designated "as is" section in stores at discounted prices.
The furniture seller already offers a buyback service in the United Kingdom and Ireland as part of its sustainability push. Customers there can trade in gently used Ikea products in excellent condition and get a store credit worth up to 50% of the original sale price. Items in "very good" condition earn a 40% credit, and "well used" goods get 30% of the original price.
Ikea has 465 stores worldwide, and said the initiative is part of its effort to become a "circular" business by 2030. The goal, it said, is to eventually produce products that are 100% made with materials that are recycled, remanufactured, refurbished or reused.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/prosecutor-seeks-end-to-khashoggi-murder-trial/39603067
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Prosecutor seeks end to Khashoggi murder trial in Turkey, requests transfer to Saudi Arabia
The Turkish prosecutor in the case against 26 Saudi nationals charged in the slaying of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi made a surprise request Thursday that their trial in absentia be suspended and the case transferred to Saudi Arabia, raising fears of a possible coverup.
The panel of judges made no ruling on the prosecutor’s request but said a letter would be sent to Turkey’s Justice Ministry seeking its opinion on the possible transfer of the file to Saudi judicial authorities, the state-run Anadolu Agency reported. The trial was adjourned until April 7.
The development comes as Turkey has been trying to normalize its relationship with Saudi Arabia, which hit an all-time low following Khashoggi’s grisly October 2018 killing. Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said in an interview on Thursday that Saudi authorities were more cooperative on judicial issues with Turkey, but did not elaborate.
In arguing for the transfer, the prosecutor told the court that the Saudi chief public prosecutor’s office requested the Turkish proceedings be transferred to the kingdom in a letter dated March 13, and that international warrants issued by Ankara against the defendants be lifted, according to the private DHA news agency.
The prosecutor said that because the arrest warrants cannot be executed and defense statements cannot be taken, the case would remain inconclusive in Turkey.
Amnesty International urged Turkey to press ahead with the trial, saying if it is transferred to Saudi Arabia, Turkey will be “knowingly and willingly sending the case to a place where it will be covered up.”
Moving Khashoggi’s trial to Saudi Arabia would provide a diplomatic resolution to a dispute that represented the wider troubles between Ankara and the kingdom since the 2011 Arab Spring.
Turkey under Erdogan supported Islamists as the uprisings took hold, while Saudi Arabia and its ally the United Arab Emirates sought to suppress such movements for fear of facing challenges to their autocratic governments. Meanwhile, Turkey sided with Qatar in a diplomatic dispute that saw Doha boycotted by Bahrain, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the UAE.
Since then-President Donald Trump lost the 2020 election, the Gulf Arab states have set aside — but not fully resolved — the Qatar dispute. Meanwhile, Turkey under Erdogan has faced a rapid devaluation of its lira currency over his refusal to hike interest rates. Bilateral trade to the kingdom and the UAE, a major transshipment point for the world economy, also collapsed.
Since the start of 2022, Erdogan has sought to improve those ties, including making his first visit to the UAE in nearly a decade. Saudi Arabia and the UAE, after fighting through the coronavirus pandemic’s economic effects, facing a grinding war in Yemen and struggling with renewed tensions with Iran, also want to resolve the outstanding feud.
Khashoggi disappeared on Oct. 2, 2018, after entering the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, seeking documents that would allow him to marry Hatice Cengiz, a Turkish national who was waiting outside the building. He never emerged.
Turkish officials allege that the Saudi national, who was a United States resident, was killed and then dismembered with a bone saw inside the consulate. His body has not been found. Prior to his killing, Khashoggi had written critically of Saudi Arabia’s crown prince in columns for the Washington Post.
Turkish authorities said he was killed by a team of Saudi agents. Those on trial in absentia include two former aides of the prince.
Saudi officials initially offered conflicting accounts concerning the killing, including claims that Khashoggi had left the consulate building unharmed. But amid mounting international pressure, they stated that Khashoggi’s death was a tragic accident, with the meeting unexpectedly turning violent.
Turkey decided to try the defendants in absentia after Saudi Arabia rejected Turkish demands for their extradition.
The slaying had sparked international condemnation and cast a cloud of suspicion over Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. Western intelligence agencies, as well as the U.S. Congress, have said that an operation of this magnitude could not have happened without his knowledge.
In urging Turkey to proceed with the trial, Amnesty International said Ankara would be complicit in a coverup if it grants the Saudi request for a transfer.
“If the prosecutor’s request is granted, then instead of prosecuting and shedding light on a murder that was committed on its territory ... Turkey will be knowingly and willingly sending the case to a place where it will be covered up,” said Tarik Beyhan, Amnesty’s campaign director for Turkey.
Beyhan said he didn’t want to “think about the possibility” that the prosecutor’s request may be related to the improving ties between Riyadh and Ankara.
“Basic human rights ... should not be made the subject of political negotiations,” he said. “A murder cannot be covered up to fix relations.”
Some of the men were put on trial in Riyadh behind closed doors. A Saudi court issued a final verdict in 2020 that sentenced five mid-level officials and operatives to 20-year jail terms. The court had originally ordered the death penalty, but reduced the punishment after Khashoggi’s son Salah, who lives in Saudi Arabia, announced that he forgave the defendants. Three others were sentenced to lesser jail terms.
On Thursday, Khashoggi's fiancee, Cengiz, appeared to criticize the prosecutor’s request in a tweet in English. “It is an exemplary situation in terms of showing the dilemma facing humanity in the modern era,” she wrote. “Which of the two will we choose? To want to live like a virtuous human being or to build a life by holding material interests above all kinds of values.”
She did not respond to a request for comment.
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Associated Press Writer Jon Gambrell contributed from Dubai.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/rent-relief-prevent-million-evictions/39602016
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Rent relief helped prevent more than 1 million evictions in 2021
The federal government's emergency rental assistance program helped prevent more than one million evictions last year.
An estimated 1.36 million renters avoided an eviction filing in 2021 as a result of the government's unprecedented $46.5 billion rent relief program and other protections, according to a recent analysis by Princeton University's Eviction Lab published earlier this month.
Treasury officials reported Wednesday that $30 billion in emergency rent relief was spent or obligated by the end of February. Despite a slow and confusing initial roll out of the program last spring, more than 4.7 million payments were made to households since January 2021.
Treasury expects the remainder of the funds to be exhausted by the middle of this year.
Impact of the assistance
A national eviction ban was put in place in September 2020. While it did not stop all evictions, it significantly slowed the tide of eviction filings until the emergency aid could reach struggling renters and their landlords, White House and Department of Treasury officials said.
"We knew from the start that we faced a race with time to get the emergency rental assistance flowing to a significant degree by the time the national eviction moratorium was lifted," said Gene Sperling, the White House American Rescue Plan coordinator. "We largely won that race."
In the six states and 31 cities tracked by the Eviction Lab researchers, eviction filings fell sharply at the onset of the pandemic, but then increased in the later months of 2020 even with the ban in place. Given the increased number of renters experiencing economic hardship as the pandemic continued into 2021, experts worried about a "tsunami" of evictions and anticipated the number of filings to skyrocket above levels seen in 2019.
But the opposite happened. In a typical year, roughly 865,000 eviction cases were filed in the areas the Eviction Lab tracks. In 2021, roughly half as many evictions were filed, with 434,304 cases.
Evictions fell in all but one of the 31 cities tracked in 2021. The outlier was Las Vegas, where jobs in tourism evaporated, adversely impacting the large number of renters in the city's service sector, according to the report. New York City had the biggest reduction in eviction filings from typical levels, with the report estimating nearly 184,000 eviction cases were avoided in New York City.
Video below: NY struggles to get rent relief to hurting tenants
The emergency rental assistance was found to have a strong impact on the low-income and majority-Black neighborhoods that see a disproportionate share of eviction cases. Those areas experienced the largest absolute reduction in eviction filings last year, the Eviction Lab report found.
The report found that in 2021 the most disadvantaged neighborhoods experienced the biggest gains in terms of rental housing stability. But it also found that, among the eviction cases filed, women of color were disproportionately affected.
More than 80% of emergency rental assistance reached the lowest income households, according to the Treasury, with about 40% of all applicants who received assistance self-identifying as Black, and about 20% self-identifying as Latino.
Moving remaining money
The federal emergency rent relief was approved in two rounds of funding. The first, which included $25 billion under the Consolidated Appropriations Act at the end of 2020, and $21.55 billion under the American Rescue Plan Act in March 2021.
Some state and local governments have exhausted allotted funds while others have not distributed everything they have received. As a result, Treasury has been reallocating money to ensure it gets to renters most in need.
Of the $25 billion in the first batch of money, Treasury has already moved $2 billion in underused funds. Beginning in April, funds from the second batch will be reallocated.
This process has "allowed dollars to flow to places with high need," said Noel Poyo, Treasury Deputy Assistant Secretary for Community Economic Development. "Generally reallocated funds went to higher need areas with more diverse communities."
He said he expects that trend to continue with the available funds from the second batch of money.
But it is a challenging balance to strike, Poyo said, between getting dollars to places where they are running out of funds and making sure that money is still available in places where assistance may have gotten started more slowly and people remain in need.
Treasury is encouraging state and local governments to use the additional funding to assist more renters and make continued investments in housing stability.
"In just one year, the Emergency Rental Assistance program built a national infrastructure for eviction prevention that never existed before and has helped keep eviction rates well below historic averages throughout the pandemic," said Poyo.
He also suggested state and local governments build on the network for support they have established and provide services like housing counselors, "that will help families avoid economic scarring long after COVID-19 is in the rearview mirror," he said.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/scientists-finally-finish-decoding-entire-human-genome/39601005
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Scientists finally finish decoding entire human genome
Scientists say they have finally assembled the full genetic blueprint for human life, adding the missing pieces to a puzzle nearly completed two decades ago.
Related video above: How Your DNA Data Can Be Used Against You
An international team described the first-ever sequencing of a complete human genome – the set of instructions to build and sustain a human being – in research published Thursday in the journal Science. The previous effort, celebrated across the world, was incomplete because DNA sequencing technologies of the day weren't able to read certain parts of it. Even after updates, it was missing about 8% of the genome.
“Some of the genes that make us uniquely human were actually in this ‘dark matter of the genome’ and they were totally missed,” said Evan Eichler, a University of Washington researcher who participated in the current effort and the original Human Genome Project. “It took 20-plus years, but we finally got it done.”
Many — including Eichler's own students — thought it had been finished already. “I was teaching them, and they said, 'Wait a minute. Isn’t this like the sixth time you guys have declared victory? I said, ’No, this time we really, really did it!”
Scientists said this full picture of the genome will give humanity a greater understanding of our evolution and biology while also opening the door to medical discoveries in areas like aging, neurodegenerative conditions, cancer and heart disease.
“We’re just broadening our opportunities to understand human disease,” said Karen Miga, an author of one of the six studies published Thursday.
The research caps off decades of work. The first draft of the human genome was announced in a White House ceremony in 2000 by leaders of two competing entities: an international publicly funded project led by an agency of the U.S. National Institutes of Health and a private company, Maryland-based Celera Genomics.
The human genome is made up of about 3.1 billion DNA subunits, pairs of chemical bases known by the letters A, C, G and T. Genes are strings of these lettered pairs that contain instructions for making proteins, the building blocks of life. Humans have about 30,000 genes, organized in 23 groups called chromosomes that are found in the nucleus of every cell.
Before now, there were "large and persistent gaps that have been in our map, and these gaps fall in pretty important regions,” Miga said.
Miga, a genomics researcher at the University of California-Santa Cruz, worked with Adam Phillippy of the National Human Genome Research Institute to organize the team of scientists to start from scratch with a new genome with the aim of sequencing all of it, including previously missing pieces. The group, named after the sections at the very ends of chromosomes, called telomeres, is known as the Telomere-to-Telomere, or T2T, consortium.
Their work adds new genetic information to the human genome, corrects previous errors and reveals long stretches of DNA known to play important roles in both evolution and disease. A version of the research was published last year before being reviewed by scientific peers.
“This is a major improvement, I would say, of the Human Genome Project,” doubling its impact, said geneticist Ting Wang of the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, who was not involved in the research.
Eichler said some scientists used to think unknown areas contained “junk." Not him. "Some of us always believed there was gold in those hills," he said. Eichler is paid by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, which also supports The Associated Press's health and science department.
Turns out that gold includes many important genes, he said, such as ones integral to making a person's brain bigger than a chimp's, with more neurons and connections.
To find such genes, scientists needed new ways to read life's cryptic genetic language.
Reading genes requires cutting the strands of DNA into pieces hundreds to thousands of letters long. Sequencing machines read the letters in each piece and scientists try to put the pieces in the right order. That's especially tough in areas where letters repeat.
Scientists said some areas were illegible before improvements in gene sequencing machines that now allow them to, for example, accurately read a million letters of DNA at a time. That allows scientists to see genes with repeated areas as longer strings instead of snippets that they had to later piece together.
Researchers also had to overcome another challenge: Most cells contain genomes from both mother and father, confusing attempts to assemble the pieces correctly. T2T researchers got around this by using a cell line from one “complete hydatidiform mole," an abnormal fertilized egg containing no fetal tissue that has two copies of the father’s DNA and none of the mother’s.
The next step? Mapping more genomes, including ones that include collections of genes from both parents. This effort did not map one of the 23 chromosomes that is found in males, called the Y chromosome, because the mole contained only an X.
Wang said he’s working with the T2T group on the Human Pangenome Reference Consortium, which is trying to generate “reference," or template, genomes for 350 people representing the breadth of human diversity.
“Now we’ve gotten one genome right and we have to do many, many more,” Eichler said. “This is the beginning of something really fantastic for the field of human genetics.”
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https://www.kcra.com/article/americans-health-care-concerns/39593902
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Costs top Americans' health care concerns, new poll finds
Americans' biggest health care priorities revolve largely around affordability, according to a new Kaiser Family Foundation poll, with most wanting to see Congress tackle drug prices. More broadly, inflation and rising costs dominate the public's concerns.
The findings, released Thursday, show that 55% of Americans call inflation and rising prices the biggest problem facing the U.S., far ahead of the Russian invasion of Ukraine (18%), climate change (6%), the COVID-19 pandemic (6%) or crime (6%).
That's true across party lines, although the sentiment is most pronounced within the GOP: About 70% of Republicans call inflation the country's biggest issue, compared with 53% of independents and 46% of Democrats.
Similarly, other recent polls have found the rising cost of living dominating Americans' minds. In a new Quinnipiac poll, 30% of Americans picked inflation as the most urgent issue facing the U.S., with the Russia/Ukraine crisis following at just 14%. NBC polling also found Americans more focused on economic concerns than foreign policy or other issues. And a new Gallup survey said 17% of Americans cited inflation as the nation's top problem, the highest level in its polling since 1985.
The focus on costs remains even when Americans are asked specifically about their priorities for possible health care legislation, the KFF poll finds. Most U.S. adults (61%) say it should be a priority for Congress to limit how much drug companies can raise prescription drug prices each year to no more than the rate of inflation. About half (53%) say Congress should make it a priority to cap out-of-pocket costs for insulin at $35 monthly and to place a limit on out-of-pocket health care costs for seniors (52%).
Fewer, 42%, call it a priority to expand government-provided health insurance in states that have not expanded Medicaid access or to increase funding for access to mental health services and training for mental health providers. Only 25% say that providing more COVID-19 pandemic response funding should be a priority.
"The public's priorities in health reflect deep concern about prices of everything right now, including drug prices," KFF President and CEO Drew Altman said in a news release. "That doesn't mean other things that have long been popular do not have public support too; they do. It just means prices are the preeminent concern."
In their personal finances, most Americans express at least some worry about being able to afford gasoline or other transportation costs (71%) and unexpected medical bills (58%), with many concerned about paying for monthly utility bills (50%) and food (47%). In February 2020, just 40% worried about paying for gas, 38% about monthly utilities and 34% about food, KFF found.
Concerns are magnified for lower-income Americans. Nearly 8 in 10 Americans in households making less than $40,000 a year say they worry about affording as or transportation costs, with more than 6 in 10 also concerned about affording unexpected medical bills (66%), monthly utilities (65%), rent or mortgage payments (63%) and food (62%).
About half of Americans, 51%, say they've put off or gone without some form of medical service in the past year because of its costs.
Twelve years after its passage, the Affordable Care Act remains popular, the KFF poll finds, with 55% of the public viewing it favorably. About one-quarter, 24%, say the law has directly helped them and their family, with 20% saying it hurt them and the rest that it's had no direct effect.
Of those who say they've seen a positive personal impact, about half say the ACA mainly helped by letting someone in their family get or keep health coverage, with 30% saying the ACA mainly made it easier to get needed health care and 20% that it mainly lowered health care or health insurance costs.
Views of both the ACA and its effects are also sharply divided along partisan lines, with 43% of Democrats and just 7% of Republicans saying the ACA has helped them.
Among Americans under 65 who have private health insurance, 56% say they know nothing about the No Surprises Act, a law taking effect this year that protects people with private health insurance from getting large medical bills when they accidentally receive out-of-network health care. Only about 21% say they know even something about the legislation.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/explore-outdoors-death-valley-national-park/39602942
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Explore Outdoors: Don't let the name scare you
Explore Outdoors: Don't let the name scare you
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Explore Outdoors: Don't let the name scare you
Along the border of California and Nevada is a spot that often evokes images of only two things: sand dunes and heat.But stretching across more than 3,000,000 acres, Death Valley National Park is the state's largest national park.It is also home to a landscape so diverse that it stretches from below sea level to heights above where snow falls.To see why the scenery may be so much more inviting that the history of how this landscape got its name, click on the video above.
INYO COUNTY, Calif. —
Along the border of California and Nevada is a spot that often evokes images of only two things: sand dunes and heat.
But stretching across more than 3,000,000 acres, Death Valley National Park is the state's largest national park.
Advertisement
It is also home to a landscape so diverse that it stretches from below sea level to heights above where snow falls.
To see why the scenery may be so much more inviting that the history of how this landscape got its name, click on the video above.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/oscars-producer-police-offered-arrest-will-smith/39603725
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Oscars producer says police offered to arrest Will Smith
Oscars producer Will Packer said Los Angeles police were ready to arrest Will Smith after Smith slapped Chris Rock on the Academy Awards stage.
Related video above: Chris Rock gets warm welcome from Boston crowd during first show post-Oscars slap
"They were saying, you know, this is battery, was a word they used in that moment," Packer said in a clip released by ABC News Thursday night of an interview he gave to "Good Morning America." "They said 'we will go get him. We are prepared. We're prepared to get him right now. You can press charges, we can arrest him.' They were laying out the options."
But Packer said Rock was "very dismissive" of the idea.
"He was like, 'No, no, no, I'm fine,'" Packer said. "And even to the point where I said, 'Rock, let them finish.' The LAPD officers finished laying out what his options were and they said, 'Would you like us to take any action?' And he said no."
The LAPD said in a statement after Sunday night's ceremony that they were aware of the incident, and that Rock had declined to file a police report. The department declined to comment Thursday on Packer's interview, a longer version of which will air on Friday morning.
The Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences met Wednesday to initiate disciplinary proceedings against Smith for violations against the group's standards of conduct. Smith could be suspended, expelled or otherwise sanctioned.
The academy said in a statement that "Mr. Smith's actions at the 94th Oscars were a deeply shocking, traumatic event to witness in-person and on television."
Without giving specifics, the academy said Smith was asked to leave the ceremony at the Dolby Theatre, but refused to do so.
Smith strode from his front row seat on to the stage and slapped Rock after a joke Rock made about Smith's wife, Jada Pinkett Smith, when he was on stage to present the Oscar for best documentary.
On Monday, Smith issued an apology to Rock, the academy and to viewers, saying "I was out of line and I was wrong."
The academy said Smith has the opportunity to defend himself in a written response before the board meets again on April 18.
Rock publicly addressed the incident for the first time, but only briefly, at the beginning of a standup show Wednesday night in Boston, where he was greeted by a thunderous standing ovation. He said "I'm still kind of processing what happened."
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https://www.kcra.com/article/sacramento-lgbt-community-centers-alexis-sanchez-on-transgender-day-of-visibility/39603741
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'A really important day’: Sacramento LGBT Community Center’s Alexis Sanchez on Transgender Day of Visibility
Communities in Sacramento and across the world are marking International Transgender Day of Visibility on Thursday.
The day is meant to celebrate transgender people and raise awareness about discrimination. The Biden administration also said Thursday that Americans will be allowed to choose an “X” for gender on their passport applications beginning on April 11 and the federal government will make it easier for people to change their gender information on their Social Security cards. The Transportation Security Administration said it will also become more inclusive by setting new gender-neutral screening standards at checkpoints.
In Sacramento, the LGBT Community Center has been recognizing Transgender Day of Visibility with several events. Alexis Sanchez, the director of advocacy and training with the center, joined KCRA 3 to talk about what the day means for Sacramento’s transgender community.
| VIDEO BELOW | Alexis Sanchez talks about Biden administration's announcements on Transgender Visibility Day
“Today is a really important day that’s meant to celebrate trans identities and raise awareness of some of the challenges that our community faces,” Sanchez said.
Transgender and gender non-conforming people are often misunderstood due to negative portrayals in the media, she said.
“Oftentimes, we see trans people represented as villains or worse, in ways that perpetuate stereotypes,” Sanchez said.
They also face higher rates of unemployment and housing insecurity. Of nearly 240 anti-LGBTQ bills that have been filed in state legislatures across the country this year, the bulk of them target transgender people, she said.
In Sacramento, the LGBT Community Center operates shelters for LGBTQ youth who are experiencing homelessness. The center also helps with jobs resources.
“We really try to meet people where they are at,” Sanchez said.
Asked about the biggest misconception about transgender people, Sanchez talked about her experiences growing up.
“The way that I saw transgender people portrayed was kind of as the butt of a joke,” she said. “You see a man in a dress in a sitcom and that’s supposed to be something that we laugh at.”
Those depictions, as well as portrayals as sex workers, perpetuate stereotypes “that people carry with them.”
“We’re just like everybody else and are a pretty vibrant and wonderful community,” Sanchez said.
Events at the Sacramento LGBT Community Center on Thursday include an open mic from 5 to 6 p.m. and later a film screening and discussion.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/serving-sacramento-community-champion-brings-free-books-kids/39601956
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Serving Sacramento: CommUNITY Champion brings free books to kids
A Sacramento woman is making sure more children have access to their own books at home.
Colette Charles is the executive director of Serve Sacramento. She’s also our KCRA 3 CommUNITY Champion, honoring people who have made a difference in our community.
“If you have a parent and a child sitting and reading together exchanging what they just read, now we have communication,” Charles said. “We cut off the TV, we put down those computer games, you know, we put the phone down.”
Charles delivers the free books to more than a dozen locations in Sacramento. That includes schools, community centers and women’s shelters. Some of the children receiving the books have a background of trauma in their family.
“If a child can take that book into their room and have a safe place and read and they're not listening to that trauma or feeling that trauma for that brief moment and they’re able to explore, that’s safety," she said.
One of the locations where the books are distributed is the Roberts Family Development Center. The center’s co-founder said it helps broaden the imagination of kids who come there for after-school programs.
“A book gives kids access. Access to ideas, places they may have not been yet, places to go, things to do,” said Derrell Roberts, co-founder of Roberts Family Development Center.
Serve Sacramento also has a summer program. Charles said it helps keep kids out of trouble and on the right track at school.
High school senior Maya Lee participated in the math summer program for five years.
“It’s a fun way to interact with kids while keeping your brain learning during the summer so you don’t come back to school confused,” Lee said.
The organization relies on volunteers, donations and a big dose of dedication from Charles.
“I’m praying that these children go to college or receive some formal type of education that will foster a healthy lifestyle for these children. That’s my goal," Charles said.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/250-000-settlement-texas-son-3-dies-after-brain-eating-amoeba/39603663
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Texas parents reach $250,000 settlement after 3-year-old son dies from brain-eating amoeba
The parents of a 3-year-old boy who died last year after contracting a rare brain-eating amoeba at a splash pad in Arlington, Texas, have reached a $250,000 settlement with the city.
Related video above: Doctors Say Tap Water in Neti Pot Caused Fatal Brain-Eating Amoeba
Bakari Williams died last September after spending five days in the hospital with primary amoebic meningoencephalitis, a rare and often fatal infection caused by an amoeba called Naegleria fowleri, according to previous reporting from CNN and affiliate KTVT.
Williams contracted the infection from a splash pad that officials later determined was improperly tested and maintained.
At a news conference, attorneys for Williams' parents said the child's death was preventable.
Family attorney Brian Hargrove said the $250,000 is the maximum economic recovery allowed against a city under the Texas Tort Claims Act, according to KTVT.
Arlington, in a statement, said the settlement will include a "significant investment in the installation of health and safety equipment and other improvements for our public pools and splash pads."
The city will distribute a new policy manual, the Bakari Williams Protocol, that will guide staff on water treatment, according to Hargrove and the city. "We plan to share this information with other agencies in the aquatics industry so they can learn from our hard lessons," the city said.
New technology will automatically shut off any splash pads where water readings are not in the acceptable ranges and the addition of QR codes will allow visitors to see real-time information about water quality, the statement, obtained by KTVT, said.
"We want you to know that Bakari was a sweet, beautiful and innocent child who did not deserve to die in the manner that he did. For us, this case has been about public awareness," Williams' mother, Kayla Mitchell, said at the news conference, according to the affiliate.
"We want to make certain that nothing like this ever happens again. We want to make certain that what happened to our son, what happened to our family, does not happen to anybody else," said Mitchell.
Naegleria fowleri is commonly found in soil and in fresh warm water such as lakes, rivers and hot springs, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). It can also be found in poorly maintained or unchlorinated pools.
The organism infects people when water containing the amoeba enters the body through the nose, according to the CDC. The Naegleria fowleri amoeba then travels up the nose to the brain, where it destroys the brain tissue, the CDC says.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/cesar-chavez-day-farmworkers-announce-will-retrace-historic-march/39604004
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César Chávez Day: Farmworkers announce they will retrace historic 1966 march
Gov. Gavin Newsom proclaimed March 31, 2022, as César Chávez Day on what would have been the activist's 95th birthday.
On Thursday, many remember Chávez's work and legacy, and they're also taking time to remind Californians that farmworkers deserve equal rights.
"I don't want to continue seeing people treat farmworkers as if they were inferior. If other workers have those rights, farmworkers deserve those rights, too," said Teresa Romero, president of United Farm Workers.
Farmworkers gathered throughout 13 locations including Sacramento and Modesto, to announce that they'll be retracing a march from Delano to Sacramento – the historic trek that Chávez led in 1966 and where the movement for social justice was founded.
Farmworkers are pressing Newsom to support AB 2183 – the Agricultural Labor Relations Voting Choice Act – which would provide more options in how agricultural workers can vote in their union elections. A similar measure was passed by the state legislature last year, but it stopped at Newsom's desk when it was vetoed in Sept. 2021.
One of the advocates present at the Sacramento rally, Marc Grossman knew and worked with Chávez for more than 20 years, says that his vision for better opportunities for Latinos – including better social and economic status, and political influence – is now a reality.
He adds that the dreams that Chávez had, brought an awakening that no one can take away – as their fight for social justice and a brighter future for these workers, continues.
"Once social change begins it can not be undone. You can not uneducate the person who has learned to read, you can not humiliate the person who feels pride, you can not oppress the people who are not afraid anymore," Grossman said.
The pilgrimage from Delano to Sacramento will be happening this summer although no other details have been made available.
| VIDEO BELOW | Hundreds of families march ahead of Cesar Chavez Day
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February frost hurting San Joaquin County crops leads to request for state assistance
San Joaquin County files for emergency declaration from state
San Joaquin County files for emergency declaration from state
San Joaquin County files for emergency declaration from state
February’s frost has led to the pits for some San Joaquin County cherry growers. As a result, the county has filed for an emergency declaration with the state of California, which the San Joaquin Farm Bureau hopes will help farmers financially.
Growers such as James Chinchiolo now have some cherry trees that experienced frost damage. What should be a fruitful sight is almost tough to bare.
“This is the first freeze I've been through. It's a lesson learned — big one. And certainly, we'll adapt and go from there,” Chinchiolo, the owner of Lodi Blooms, told KCRA 3. “We're just in a situation here again of needing to adjust to a really light crop."
Chinchiolo added that he might take steps to prepare for the next freeze by buying devices such as wind machines and machines that blow warm air onto the orchards to prevent frost.
The fourth-generation cherry grower stressed that Lodi Blooms is still tabulating just how much fruit they will harvest, and they are ever optimistic.
“There's also this bit of, 'OK, hunker down, become a warrior, and get through these challenging times,'” Chinchiolo said.
Bruce Blodgett, executive director of the San Joaquin Farm Bureau, said these are challenging times for many growers in the county, as some growers have lost half their crop.
“What that means in pure dollars rather than a $200 million crop, about a $100 million crop, so, a lot of impact to that industry,” Blodgett said. "Those that were just starting to bloom, getting in and really just trying to get that crop set — that freeze just came in and just wiped them out."
Blodgett added that this is the third year in a row that cherry growers have had to contend with factors leading to a lighter harvest. In 2021, Blodgett explained growers had to cope with drought. He also said that the freeze impact varied from orchard to orchard, crop to crop.
“Another person actually has a pretty good crop, who was actually doing some thinning, so we see some real differences based on where they're at in the county,” Blodgett said. “At least those that are going to get a crop are going to get a decent price for a change, so that’s a positive thing, but it is going to drive prices up at the store.”
Blodgett said the county should know in the coming weeks if the disaster declaration has been approved by the state. The declaration should make funding available to impacted growers.
Chinchiolo said his cherry orchards are expected to be in season from May through June, while the entire cherry season lasts until April to June. While Lodi Blooms is still calculating, if the harvest is lighter, at the very least Chinchiolo said, the cherry may be sweeter.
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The nation's oldest active park ranger is hanging up her Smokey hat at the age of 100.Betty Reid Soskin retired Thursday after more than 15 years at the Rosie the Riveter/WWII Home Front National Historical Park in Richmond, California, the National Park Service announced.Soskin "spent her last day providing an interpretive program to the public and visiting with coworkers," a Park Service statement said.She led tours at the park and museum honoring the women who worked in factories during wartime and shared her own experience as a Black woman during the conflict. She worked for the U.S. Air Force in 1942 but quit after learning that "she was employed only because her superiors believed she was white," according to a Park Service biography."Being a primary source in the sharing of that history – my history – and giving shape to a new national park has been exciting and fulfilling," Soskin said in the Park Service statement. "It has proven to bring meaning to my final years."Soskin won a temporary Park Service position at the age of 84 and became a permanent Park Service employee in 2011. She celebrated her 100th birthday last September."Betty has made a profound impact on the National Park Service and the way we carry out our mission," Director Chuck Sams said. "Her efforts remind us that we must seek out and give space for all perspectives so that we can tell a more full and inclusive history of our nation."Soskin was born Betty Charbonnet in Detroit in 1921 but recalled surviving the devastating Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 while living with her Creole family in New Orleans, according to the Park Service biography. Her family then moved to Oakland, California, and Soskin remained in the San Francisco Bay Area, where in 1945 she and her first husband founded one of the first Black-owned record stores in the area, the biography said.She also was a civil rights activist and took part in meetings to develop a general management plan for the Home Front park. She has received several honors.She was named California Woman of the Year in 1995.In 2015, Soskin received a presidential coin from President Barack Obama after she lit the National Christmas tree at the White House. In June 2016, she was awakened in her home by a robber who punched her repeatedly in the face, dragged her out of her bedroom and beat her before making off with the coin and other items. Soskin, then 94, recovered and returned to work just weeks after the attack. The coin was replaced.Soskin also was honored with entry into the Congressional Record. Glamour Magazine named her woman of the year in 2018.
RICHMOND, Calif. — The nation's oldest active park ranger is hanging up her Smokey hat at the age of 100.
Betty Reid Soskin retired Thursday after more than 15 years at the Rosie the Riveter/WWII Home Front National Historical Park in Richmond, California, the National Park Service announced.
Soskin "spent her last day providing an interpretive program to the public and visiting with coworkers," a Park Service statement said.
She led tours at the park and museum honoring the women who worked in factories during wartime and shared her own experience as a Black woman during the conflict. She worked for the U.S. Air Force in 1942 but quit after learning that "she was employed only because her superiors believed she was white," according to a Park Service biography.
"Being a primary source in the sharing of that history – my history – and giving shape to a new national park has been exciting and fulfilling," Soskin said in the Park Service statement. "It has proven to bring meaning to my final years."
Ben Margot
National Park Service Ranger Betty Reid Soskin smiles during an interview at Rosie the Riveter World War II Home Front National Historical Park in Richmond, Calif., July 12, 2016.
Soskin won a temporary Park Service position at the age of 84 and became a permanent Park Service employee in 2011. She celebrated her 100th birthday last September.
"Betty has made a profound impact on the National Park Service and the way we carry out our mission," Director Chuck Sams said. "Her efforts remind us that we must seek out and give space for all perspectives so that we can tell a more full and inclusive history of our nation."
Soskin was born Betty Charbonnet in Detroit in 1921 but recalled surviving the devastating Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 while living with her Creole family in New Orleans, according to the Park Service biography.
Ben Margot
Betty Reid Soskin, a 94-year-old National Park Service Ranger, is pictured at the visitors center of Rosie the Riveter World War II Home Front National Historical Park where she works in Richmond, Calif., July 26, 2016.
Her family then moved to Oakland, California, and Soskin remained in the San Francisco Bay Area, where in 1945 she and her first husband founded one of the first Black-owned record stores in the area, the biography said.
She also was a civil rights activist and took part in meetings to develop a general management plan for the Home Front park. She has received several honors.
She was named California Woman of the Year in 1995.
In 2015, Soskin received a presidential coin from President Barack Obama after she lit the National Christmas tree at the White House.
In June 2016, she was awakened in her home by a robber who punched her repeatedly in the face, dragged her out of her bedroom and beat her before making off with the coin and other items. Soskin, then 94, recovered and returned to work just weeks after the attack. The coin was replaced.
Soskin also was honored with entry into the Congressional Record. Glamour Magazine named her woman of the year in 2018.
Ben Margot
Betty Reid Soskin, a 94-year-old National Park Service Ranger, is pictured at the visitors center of Rosie the Riveter World War II Home Front National Historical Park where she works in Richmond, Calif., July 26, 2016.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/future-kohl-s-about-to-be-decided/39603652
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The future of Kohl's is about to be decided
Kohl's is pushing back against intense pressure from Wall Street to make changes or sell the company.
The retailer sent a sharply worded letter to shareholders Thursday ahead of its annual meeting in May, urging them to reject an activist investor's efforts to gain control of the company and install its own board of directors.
Hedge fund Macellum has criticized Kohl's in recent months, arguing the chain has underperformed competitors and lacks a compelling strategy. It wants Kohl's to consider selling its real estate assets, spin off its e-commerce business or find a buyer for the whole company.
Macellum last month nominated 10 new directors to Kohl's 13-member board, which would give it more than enough votes to approve a takeover.
In its letter Thursday, Kohl's called on shareholders to "reject Macellum's empty agenda" and vote against its "inexperienced, unqualified" board nominees.
Macellum is pushing for "a hasty sale at any price" and its nominees are "not truly independent," Kohl's said, because of their ties to the fund's founder, Jonathan Duskin. Duskin is also one of the board nominees.
"The choice is clear: Re-elect the Kohl's Board ... or elect Jonathan Duskin and his associates to destroy value," Kohl's said in the letter.
Macellum did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Kohl's is also considering a sale of the company.
The retailer said earlier this month that it has engaged with more than 20 potential buyers, a sign of wide interest. Hudson's Bay Co., the owner of Saks Fifth Avenue, is also reportedly considering a bid.
There are also some broader concerns about the pressure from Wall Street and any potential sale of the company.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/kyiv-ukraine-yevhenia-khomenko/39604301
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it's emotional for me. I have to my brothers but their families and I helped my mom. She was born in 1943 and they're staying there through every morning and every night I have to start, I'm starting my day by calling them checking you there live my brothers and their families. They yes, they will come. Yeah. Yeah. They in their age they can actually be benefited with society here too. After the fall of the soviet union, a lot of Ukrainians and individuals from former soviet union countries came to sacramento. So there's an incredibly strong community based here. You know, something like 20,000 Ukrainians in the Greater Sacramento area and a really strong network of churches and businesses and connections. So when people come, they feel Part of the community. The reason people come to places like Sacramento is because there's a high population of people that know them and and because it's relational, there's this feeling of, Hey, we gotta help. We've got to do something. So we're talking about launching 15 more vehicles that over the next probably couple of weeks that will be rescuing more women and Children. We set up a system of host families who can take in refugees that are coming here. Most of them are coming illegally crossing the border into California and then just spreading out. My brother still lives in Ukraine and he lives almost on a shelter bomb shelter. You wanna cry and you don't understand how it's happened on the 21st century. It's so scared and you're here and you you can do nothing for this only you can do it. Just work and help like some money for food, do everything what you can do.
She helped rebuild Kyiv after World War II. Now, the 94-year-old had to flee it
Updated: 8:06 PM PDT Mar 31, 2022
Even as the bombs began to fall, Yevhenia Khomenko didn't want to leave her home in Kyiv, Ukraine."I would rather die there," the 94-year-old said. But eventually, it became too much, and her daughter convinced her to leave the home she had known her entire life.Related video above: Ukrainian Americans prepare for 100,000 refugeesWhen Khomenko was a child, she lived through the Great Famine of Ukraine — one that killed millions, driven by Josef Stalin. Years later, she fled her home during World War II as her country was targeted by Adolf Hitler. She's now had to flee once more over an invasion prompted by Vladimir Putin.The Russian attacks have reminded Khomenko of the bombing, shooting and violence during World War II, she told CNN. The bombs then, as they are now, were unpredictable, and she recalled running anywhere to escape them. Khomenko returned to Kyiv after World War II to help rebuild the city's main square, she said. Now, she's worried the city may never be the same — and that, given her age, she may never return.Her 73-year-old daughter, Raisa Makhnovets, is also worried about that fate. Through tears, she told CNN how difficult it was to persuade her mother to leave Kyiv, and how their attempts to do so quickly became a "horror movie."They had no other family in the city, and first spent two days in a bomb shelter before trying to flee the country by train. The station was overrun with others trying to do the same."I just couldn't believe it was actually happening. The train station was scary," Makhnovets said, speaking in Russian, as many Ukrainians do, and translated by CNN. "So many people with their kids and things, just really terrifying. The first train left without us, then the second. It was so cold waiting there overnight. There were even newborn babies."Makhnovets said it took roughly 20 hours to get from Kyiv to Lviv, in the western part of Ukraine, and then out of the country altogether. She and her mother were then able to fly to the United States on a visa they had obtained years ago. They reunited in Sacramento with five generations of their family, as a great great grandmother and a great grandmother.In Sacramento, Khomenko noted the peace in the California air."It hurts in my soul, for my home, where I lived. But here it's quiet, I don't hear anything. I have a home, and I want to go home. I want to be in my own home. But the circumstances forced us to come here. Just go wherever necessary not to have to see the war," she said, in Russian.Her feelings now are familiar to those from a lifetime ago, Khomenko said, but in her youth, she didn't really understand war in the way she does now.She then told CNN, "I wish you a good life and to not have to endure what we've had to. I hope for friendship between us and all peoples."Seeking refuge in the United StatesAs of late March, there are more than 3.5 million Ukrainians who have been forced to abandon the lives they once knew in search of new ones, but only a fraction of them have ended up in the United States.The Biden administration recently committed to welcoming up to 100,000 Ukrainians, but so far, it has been difficult for them to get into the U.S. The few who have, have had success through the Mexican border — in some cases being granted entry through what's known as humanitarian parole, which allows temporary admission for urgent humanitarian reasons or significant public benefit.It is "far more complicated and different than you ever imagined," said Julia Bikbova, an immigration and litigation attorney who was born and raised in Ukraine and recently visited the Mexican border. She told CNN nearly every Ukrainian she spoke to told her, "Your President announced you're accepting refugees, this is where we are."From October 2021 through February, there were just over 1,300 Ukrainians along the southern U.S. border, according to border patrol data. Data on Ukrainians entering the U.S. in the last month will be released in April, the Department of Homeland Security earlier told CNN.While a timeline on Biden's commitment is still unclear, the current framework for attaining refugee status can take years. So, many have opted to go through Mexico, where a visa is not required for Ukrainians, though they may have to "convince officials in Cancun they're there for vacation," said Bikbova. "No one is flying from Frankfurt or Warsaw to Tijuana," she added.Those that make it into the United States, through humanitarian parole or otherwise, either find family members or people like Vadym Dashkevych: a Ukrainian-born senior pastor at the Spring of Life Ukrainian Church in Sacramento.Dashkevych, and other volunteers around the U.S. like him, pick up Ukrainian families once they're through immigration and help them settle into various cities. For Dashkevych, it's Sacramento.In one week this month, Dashkevych told CNN, he helped seven families find at least a temporary home in the area. But, he emphasized, "family" can include multiple kids, which can add to upwards of 30 people a week."The best way to treat them it's to take them inside our families and inside to American families," Dashkevych said."They need help not only to be on their own, but to help, like, take a cup of tea in the evening, talk, asking questions," he said, adding they've put a call out through their church for people to become host families.He also works with lawyers and other support services to help these families with their long-term future: starting new lives under quiet skies, far away from the war that has uprooted them so suddenly."As of today, that's not only war, there's more. They're just killing people. Regular people. The schools, the kindergarten, the hospitals, and everything," Dashkevych told CNN. "It's gonna be painful. It's gonna take years and years to go through."
Even as the bombs began to fall, Yevhenia Khomenko didn't want to leave her home in Kyiv, Ukraine.
"I would rather die there," the 94-year-old said. But eventually, it became too much, and her daughter convinced her to leave the home she had known her entire life.
Related video above: Ukrainian Americans prepare for 100,000 refugees
When Khomenko was a child, she lived through the Great Famine of Ukraine — one that killed millions, driven by Josef Stalin. Years later, she fled her home during World War II as her country was targeted by Adolf Hitler. She's now had to flee once more over an invasion prompted by Vladimir Putin.
The Russian attacks have reminded Khomenko of the bombing, shooting and violence during World War II, she told CNN. The bombs then, as they are now, were unpredictable, and she recalled running anywhere to escape them. Khomenko returned to Kyiv after World War II to help rebuild the city's main square, she said. Now, she's worried the city may never be the same — and that, given her age, she may never return.
Courtesy Yuliya Kyrylyuk
Yevhenia Khomenko (right) in Kyiv in 1959.
Her 73-year-old daughter, Raisa Makhnovets, is also worried about that fate. Through tears, she told CNN how difficult it was to persuade her mother to leave Kyiv, and how their attempts to do so quickly became a "horror movie."
They had no other family in the city, and first spent two days in a bomb shelter before trying to flee the country by train. The station was overrun with others trying to do the same.
"I just couldn't believe it was actually happening. The train station was scary," Makhnovets said, speaking in Russian, as many Ukrainians do, and translated by CNN. "So many people with their kids and things, just really terrifying. The first train left without us, then the second. It was so cold waiting there overnight. There were even newborn babies."
Makhnovets said it took roughly 20 hours to get from Kyiv to Lviv, in the western part of Ukraine, and then out of the country altogether. She and her mother were then able to fly to the United States on a visa they had obtained years ago. They reunited in Sacramento with five generations of their family, as a great great grandmother and a great grandmother.
Omar Jimenez / CNN
Raisa Makhnovets (L), and her mother Yevhenia Khomenko are seen here in their Sacramento family’s home. Khomenko returned to Kyiv after World War II to help rebuild the city’s main square, now, she’s worried the city may never be the same.
In Sacramento, Khomenko noted the peace in the California air.
"It hurts in my soul, for my home, where I lived. But here it's quiet, I don't hear anything. I have a home, and I want to go home. I want to be in my own home. But the circumstances forced us to come here. Just go wherever necessary not to have to see the war," she said, in Russian.
Her feelings now are familiar to those from a lifetime ago, Khomenko said, but in her youth, she didn't really understand war in the way she does now.
She then told CNN, "I wish you a good life and to not have to endure what we've had to. I hope for friendship between us and all peoples."
Courtesy Yuliya Kyrylyuk
Yevhenia Khomenko in Kyiv in 1959.
Seeking refuge in the United States
As of late March, there are more than 3.5 million Ukrainians who have been forced to abandon the lives they once knew in search of new ones, but only a fraction of them have ended up in the United States.
The Biden administration recently committed to welcoming up to 100,000 Ukrainians, but so far, it has been difficult for them to get into the U.S. The few who have, have had success through the Mexican border — in some cases being granted entry through what's known as humanitarian parole, which allows temporary admission for urgent humanitarian reasons or significant public benefit.
It is "far more complicated and different than you ever imagined," said Julia Bikbova, an immigration and litigation attorney who was born and raised in Ukraine and recently visited the Mexican border. She told CNN nearly every Ukrainian she spoke to told her, "Your President announced you're accepting refugees, this is where we are."
From October 2021 through February, there were just over 1,300 Ukrainians along the southern U.S. border, according to border patrol data. Data on Ukrainians entering the U.S. in the last month will be released in April, the Department of Homeland Security earlier told CNN.
While a timeline on Biden's commitment is still unclear, the current framework for attaining refugee status can take years. So, many have opted to go through Mexico, where a visa is not required for Ukrainians, though they may have to "convince officials in Cancun they're there for vacation," said Bikbova. "No one is flying from Frankfurt or Warsaw to Tijuana," she added.
Those that make it into the United States, through humanitarian parole or otherwise, either find family members or people like Vadym Dashkevych: a Ukrainian-born senior pastor at the Spring of Life Ukrainian Church in Sacramento.
Dashkevych, and other volunteers around the U.S. like him, pick up Ukrainian families once they're through immigration and help them settle into various cities. For Dashkevych, it's Sacramento.
Omar Jimenez / CNN
Senior Pastor Vadym Dashkevych taking a call in Sacramento on his watch from a contact at the Mexican border.
In one week this month, Dashkevych told CNN, he helped seven families find at least a temporary home in the area. But, he emphasized, "family" can include multiple kids, which can add to upwards of 30 people a week.
"The best way to treat them it's to take them inside our families and inside to American families," Dashkevych said.
"They need help not only to be on their own, but to help, like, take a cup of tea in the evening, talk, asking questions," he said, adding they've put a call out through their church for people to become host families.
He also works with lawyers and other support services to help these families with their long-term future: starting new lives under quiet skies, far away from the war that has uprooted them so suddenly.
"As of today, that's not only war, there's more. They're just killing people. Regular people. The schools, the kindergarten, the hospitals, and everything," Dashkevych told CNN. "It's gonna be painful. It's gonna take years and years to go through."
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me. So there anything on the it is and I can't remember Simpson, she's caring, we choose people who have made an exemplary difference in their careers in their fields and in particular those who have given back when the idea of Justice Ginsburg becoming a great american medal winner came to us all. It seemed so obvious she had made way for conversations and case precedent around gender equity around what we as women and men could do and to live equal lives. She had become a course of pop sensation and even made her way into the world of hip hop with her notorious RBG mimicking the notorious B. I. G. And she was also such a dedicated, incredible, passionate advocate for the constitution and for the rights of all. one of the reasons a side of the sure. So because there were so few women jurists and of course there were none on this High Court of the United States until Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, what women would wear was somewhat in question. Many of them I think issued neckties, let's just say that for starters. And so they looked to historic precedents, the beautiful lace collars of the barristers of old and then increasingly as a sign of self expression. The only thing you really could modify in your official judicial. Where was the caller? As Justice Ginsburg time on the high court progress. People sent her callers. She was known like Queen Elizabeth for picking the color to express another layer of communication about a case. One of the more special objects to me that dr jane Ginsburg and mr James Ginsburg gave us was their mothers briefcase, but soft leather, soft sided with her very simple, elegant black with RBG emblazoned in gold. And I think that her hand carried that bag into the court out of the court. And it resonated with me that my professional career, it was made possible by women like her right who braved those paths, who were told that they didn't belong. And yet she carried that in her hand. Every day she walked into court.
US Navy will name a ship after Ruth Bader Ginsburg
Updated: 8:38 PM PDT Mar 31, 2022
The late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg served more than two decades on the U.S. Supreme Court, developed a rock star status and drew standing ovations when she spoke in public. Now the late "Notorious R.B.G." will add another entry to her long list of accomplishments.The Navy will name a ship after her.Related video above: Smithsonian's National Museum of American History honors the late Justice Ruth Bader GinsburgOn the final day of women's history month, the Navy announced that the USNS Ruth Bader Ginsburg will be a John Lewis-class replenishment oiler ship, designated T-AO 212."It is my absolute honor to name the next after the Honorable Ruth Bader Ginsburg," said Navy Secretary Carlos Del Toro in a statement. "She is a historic figure who vigorously advocated for women's rights and gender equality."Ginsburg, who died in September 2020 at the age of 87 due to complications from metastatic pancreas cancer, had served as the senior member of the Supreme Court's liberal wing, delivering progressive votes on some of the most polarizing social issues of the day, including abortion rights, same-sex marriage, voting rights, immigration, health care and affirmative action.She was the second woman to serve on the U.S. Supreme Court behind Justice Sandra Day O'Connor.The John Lewis-class replenishment oiler ships, used to refuel carrier strike groups at sea, are traditionally named after those who fought for civil and human rights. Rep. John Lewis, who died in July 2020 at the age of 80, was a towering figure in the civil rights movement, challenging segregation and leading the march for voting rights in Selma, Alabama. The second ship in the class is named for Harvey Milk, the first openly gay man to be elected to public office in California, became a leader in the fight against anti-gay initiatives.Other ships in the class are named for Earl Warren, Robert F. Kennedy, Lucy Stone, Sojourner Truth and Thurgood Marshall."She is instrumental to why we now have women of all backgrounds, experiences and talents serving within our ranks, side by side with their male Sailor and Marine counterparts," said Del Toro.Del Toro also named Ginsburg's daughter, Jane Ginsburg, as the ship's sponsor. The daughter of the famous jurist will participate in the milestones for the ship, such as its keel laying ceremony, christening and commissioning.
The late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg served more than two decades on the U.S. Supreme Court, developed a rock star status and drew standing ovations when she spoke in public. Now the late "Notorious R.B.G." will add another entry to her long list of accomplishments.
The Navy will name a ship after her.
Related video above: Smithsonian's National Museum of American History honors the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg
On the final day of women's history month, the Navy announced that the USNS Ruth Bader Ginsburg will be a John Lewis-class replenishment oiler ship, designated T-AO 212.
"It is my absolute honor to name the next [replenishment oiler] after the Honorable Ruth Bader Ginsburg," said Navy Secretary Carlos Del Toro in a statement. "She is a historic figure who vigorously advocated for women's rights and gender equality."
Ginsburg, who died in September 2020 at the age of 87 due to complications from metastatic pancreas cancer, had served as the senior member of the Supreme Court's liberal wing, delivering progressive votes on some of the most polarizing social issues of the day, including abortion rights, same-sex marriage, voting rights, immigration, health care and affirmative action.
She was the second woman to serve on the U.S. Supreme Court behind Justice Sandra Day O'Connor.
Nikki Kahn/The Washington Post via Getty Images
Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, celebrating her 20th anniversary on the bench, is photographed in the West conference room at the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, D.C., on Friday, Aug. 30, 2013.
The John Lewis-class replenishment oiler ships, used to refuel carrier strike groups at sea, are traditionally named after those who fought for civil and human rights. Rep. John Lewis, who died in July 2020 at the age of 80, was a towering figure in the civil rights movement, challenging segregation and leading the march for voting rights in Selma, Alabama. The second ship in the class is named for Harvey Milk, the first openly gay man to be elected to public office in California, became a leader in the fight against anti-gay initiatives.
Other ships in the class are named for Earl Warren, Robert F. Kennedy, Lucy Stone, Sojourner Truth and Thurgood Marshall.
"She is instrumental to why we now have women of all backgrounds, experiences and talents serving within our ranks, side by side with their male Sailor and Marine counterparts," said Del Toro.
Del Toro also named Ginsburg's daughter, Jane Ginsburg, as the ship's sponsor. The daughter of the famous jurist will participate in the milestones for the ship, such as its keel laying ceremony, christening and commissioning.
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GULSN:TA BREAKING NEWS OUT OF STOCKTON WERE POLICE ARE NOW INVESTIGATING A DOUBLE SHOOTING. THERE WERE TWO VICTIMS INSI.DE THIS IS HAPPENING BEFORE 8:00 TONIGHT. WE DO KNOW THAT BHOT OF THOSE VICTIMS ARE LISTED AS CRITICAL CONDITION. THEY LATER TRACKED IT DNOW. PO
Man, teen seriously hurt after shot multiple times in Stockton, police say
Updated: 10:39 PM PDT Mar 31, 2022
Two people were sent to a hospital Thursday evening after a shooting in Stockton, police said. Both are in critical condition.Officers found two victims, one a 20-year-old man and the other a 17-year-old boy, inside a vehicle with gunshot wounds near Montauban Avenue and Gillimer Drive around 7:45 p.m., according to the Stockton Police Department.Police said both victims were shot multiple times.Officers found what they believe might be a shooting scene in the 6900 block of Ector Way, a few blocks away from where the victims were found. People are asked to avoid the area while they investigate.There is no suspect information.This shooting happened a day after a Mass was held in Stockton for people impacted by violence. In attendance was Mayor Kevin Lincoln.Last week, shootings in the city killed an 18-year-old man and a 32-year-old man. As of last Tuesday, there were 16 homicides in Stockton so far in 2022, compared to seven in 2021.
STOCKTON, Calif. — Two people were sent to a hospital Thursday evening after a shooting in Stockton, police said. Both are in critical condition.
Officers found two victims, one a 20-year-old man and the other a 17-year-old boy, inside a vehicle with gunshot wounds near Montauban Avenue and Gillimer Drive around 7:45 p.m., according to the Stockton Police Department.
Police said both victims were shot multiple times.
Officers found what they believe might be a shooting scene in the 6900 block of Ector Way, a few blocks away from where the victims were found. People are asked to avoid the area while they investigate.
There is no suspect information.
This shooting happened a day after a Mass was held in Stockton for people impacted by violence. In attendance was Mayor Kevin Lincoln.
Last week, shootings in the city killed an 18-year-old man and a 32-year-old man. As of last Tuesday, there were 16 homicides in Stockton so far in 2022, compared to seven in 2021.
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THE OFFICERS WERE BOOKED THIS WEEK. GULSTAN: IF U'Y’RE HEADING UP HIGHWAY 50 TOWARD TAHOE ANYTIME SOON, THERE’S A GOOD CHANCE YOU’LL HIT SOME TEMPORARY ADRO CLOSURES AND TRAFFIC LIKE TH.IS AS KCRA 3’S KRISTEN SIMOES SHOWS US, THE WORK BEING DONE IS ALL PART OF AN EXTENSIVE CLEANUP ALONG THE HIGHWAY 50 CORRIR,DO AFTER THE CALDOR FE.IR KRISTEN:IX S MONTHS AFTER THE CALDOR FIRE TORCHED 220,000 ACRES OF THE ELDORADO NATIONAL FOREST, CLEAN UP IS UNDERWAY TO CLEAR MASANY AS 5,000 TREES AND MAKE OTHER REPAIRS THAT RIGHT NOW POSE A DIRECT HAZARD TO DRIVERS ON HIGHWAY 50. >> THE BULK OF THE PROJECT IS HAZARDOUS TREE REMOVAL, BUT THERE’S DITCH CLEANING, CULVERT REPAIR, DRAPERY FOR EROSION CONTROL, SO THERE’S A LOT TO IT. A LOT OF INFRASTRUCTURE THATAS W DAMAGED DURING THE FE.IR KRISN:TE A TOTAL OF 20 MILES OF HIGHWAY 50, FROM KYBURZ TO ECHO SUMMIT, WILL BE CLEARED IN A PROJECT THAT REQUIRED AN EMERGENCY CONTRACT AND METICULOUS PLAG.INNN A TEST AT TIMES OF DRIVERS’ PATIENCE, BECAUSE IT ALSO REQUIRES DAILY HIGHWAY CLOSURES AND A REDUCED SPEED LIT.MI CONTRACTORS SAY IT’S WORTH THE WAIT. >> IF WE DON’T DO THIS, THERE’S POTENTIAL FOR ROCKSLIDE, FLOODING, THE CULVERTS GET OVERWHELMEAND D WASH OUT THE ROAD. KRTEN:IS WHAT DRIVERS DON’T SEE IS THE RACE BEHIND THE ROAD CLOSURE TO DROP A TREE, CLEAR THE ROAD A LNDET THE NEXT BATCH OF CARS THROUGH. IT’S A RACE TO KEEP MOTORTSIS MOVING, BUT IT’S ALSO A RACE WITH MOTHER NATURE. >> THE WINTERS OTHISN HIGHWAY ARE PARTICULARLY BAD. THE ELEVATION AND HOW STEEP THE GROUND IS ON BOTH SIDES OFHE T HIGHWAY AND SNOWOAD. L KRISTEN: THIS IS ALREADY CONSIDERED ONE OF THE MOST DANGEROUS STRETCHES OF HIGHWAY IN CALIFORNIA. BUADT D THE FACT THAT THERE ARE NOW DEAD TREES WEIGHTING THOUSANDS OF POUNDS HOVERING OVER THE HIGHWAY WHILE TRAFFIC IS GOING BY, THIS PROJECT PRESENTS A LOT OF ADDED CHALLENGES. >> YOU’RE RIGHT ON TOP OF THE SLOPE HERE, IT’S A NARROW CORRIDOR. KRISN: FARTHER DOWN 50, CABLE NETTING HANGS ON THE STEEPEST PART OF THE MOUNTAINSIDE. AN EFFORT TO KEEP ROCKS IN PLACE. CALFIRE S HAALSO ASSESSED THE DAMAGE AND RECOGNIZES THE URGENCY TO CLEAR THIS AREA BEFORE BAD WEATHER COM
Much of Eldorado National Forest to reopen months after Caldor Fire, but visitors are urged caution
Some parts of national forest where wildfire burned still pose hazards, U.S. Forest Service says
Updated: 9:52 PM PDT Mar 31, 2022
It has been months since a wildfire that burned through El Dorado County at a threatening pace, causing unprecedented evacuations and mostly leveling an entire community, has been extinguished. Now, much of the nearby federal forest land is reopening to the public.(Previous coverage in the video player above).The Eldorado National Forest section of the U.S. Forest Service said most of the area where the Caldor Fire burned will be open again for visitors starting April 1. However, officials are warning people to remain cautious as recently burned areas can still pose as hazards.The forest service is asking people to be wary of the following if visiting Eldorado National Forest:Dead or damaged trees that can fall over, blow down or drop limbs without warning. Visitors are urged not to picnic, camp or park a vehicle close to dead trees, and to stay clear of dead trees on windy days.Burned stumps that might have hollow root chambers from fire burning through it. The root chambers can collapse over time, but a person's body or vehicle weight on the root chambers can also lead to collapse and possible also open holes in the ground.Landslides. When plants die and their roots decompose, they can no longer bind soil in place, leading to a risk of soil and rock shifting and moving easier. Storms or wet weather can also trigger landslides and rockfall.Flash floods and debris flow at burn scars. The destruction a wildfire leaves behind include exposed soil from burnt vegetation and debris. Intense rainfall after fires can trigger flash floods. Visitors are asked to not recreate in areas where wildfires recently burned during wet weather. The forest service says to get to high ground and to not try to hike or drive through if caught in a storm, as entire roads or trail surface can be washed away.These are the areas that are still closed due to wildfire damage.Elkins Flat OHV Trail System 11N46 (Alder Creek Road) 10N40 (Plum Creek Road) 42 Milestone Day Use Area Caples Creek Trailhead Caples Equestrian Trailhead Capps Crossing Campground China Flat Campground and Day Use Area Eagle Rock Day Use Area Elkins Flat OHV Staging Area Gray Rock Campground Lyons Creek Trailhead Martin Meadows Campground Pyramid Creek Trailhead Silver Fork Campground The Caldor Fire, which started Aug. 14 east of Omo Ranch and south of the community of Grizzly Flats, burned 221,835 acres and actively burned for over two months, according to Cal Fire.It wouldn't be until Oct. 21 when firefighters fully contained the wildfire. With complete containment, that means crews established barriers around the fire's perimeter, whether by manmade means such as trenches and backburns or through natural means like rivers and terrain fire can't spread through.Even after a fire is fully contained, hotspots within the containment perimeter can continue to burn for days, weeks and months afterward the main threat is controlled. However, heavy rain and a late 2021 snowstorm in the Sierra helped dampen much of the area where the wildfire burned.While crews had managed to spare most communities from the path of the fire, the Caldor Fire managed to tear through most of the community of Grizzly Flats. Residents are rebuilding, but many have had to relocate after losing their homes.
EL DORADO COUNTY, Calif. — It has been months since a wildfire that burned through El Dorado County at a threatening pace, causing unprecedented evacuations and mostly leveling an entire community, has been extinguished. Now, much of the nearby federal forest land is reopening to the public.
(Previous coverage in the video player above).
The Eldorado National Forest section of the U.S. Forest Service said most of the area where the Caldor Fire burned will be open again for visitors starting April 1. However, officials are warning people to remain cautious as recently burned areas can still pose as hazards.
The forest service is asking people to be wary of the following if visiting Eldorado National Forest:
- Dead or damaged trees that can fall over, blow down or drop limbs without warning. Visitors are urged not to picnic, camp or park a vehicle close to dead trees, and to stay clear of dead trees on windy days.
- Burned stumps that might have hollow root chambers from fire burning through it. The root chambers can collapse over time, but a person's body or vehicle weight on the root chambers can also lead to collapse and possible also open holes in the ground.
- Landslides. When plants die and their roots decompose, they can no longer bind soil in place, leading to a risk of soil and rock shifting and moving easier. Storms or wet weather can also trigger landslides and rockfall.
- Flash floods and debris flow at burn scars. The destruction a wildfire leaves behind include exposed soil from burnt vegetation and debris. Intense rainfall after fires can trigger flash floods. Visitors are asked to not recreate in areas where wildfires recently burned during wet weather. The forest service says to get to high ground and to not try to hike or drive through if caught in a storm, as entire roads or trail surface can be washed away.
These are the areas that are still closed due to wildfire damage.
- Elkins Flat OHV Trail System
- 11N46 (Alder Creek Road)
- 10N40 (Plum Creek Road)
- 42 Milestone Day Use Area
- Caples Creek Trailhead
- Caples Equestrian Trailhead
- Capps Crossing Campground
- China Flat Campground and Day Use Area
- Eagle Rock Day Use Area
- Elkins Flat OHV Staging Area
- Gray Rock Campground
- Lyons Creek Trailhead
- Martin Meadows Campground
- Pyramid Creek Trailhead
- Silver Fork Campground
The Caldor Fire, which started Aug. 14 east of Omo Ranch and south of the community of Grizzly Flats, burned 221,835 acres and actively burned for over two months, according to Cal Fire.
It wouldn't be until Oct. 21 when firefighters fully contained the wildfire. With complete containment, that means crews established barriers around the fire's perimeter, whether by manmade means such as trenches and backburns or through natural means like rivers and terrain fire can't spread through.
Even after a fire is fully contained, hotspots within the containment perimeter can continue to burn for days, weeks and months afterward the main threat is controlled. However, heavy rain and a late 2021 snowstorm in the Sierra helped dampen much of the area where the wildfire burned.
While crews had managed to spare most communities from the path of the fire, the Caldor Fire managed to tear through most of the community of Grizzly Flats. Residents are rebuilding, but many have had to relocate after losing their homes.
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My58 Superstars: Sac State softball aims to win big at Big Sky
There’s plenty of buzz surrounding the Sacramento State softball team this season.
“There’s years that you coach, when you can feel something special in the air and this is one of those years,” head coach Lori Perez said.
Sac State is powered by their potent offense as they’ve parked 36 home runs this season, nine shy of the school record.
The Hornets are one of three programs in the country that have two players in the top 15 in home runs this season. Lexie Webb currently sits in fourth with 13 homers while Lewa Day stands in 15th with 11.
“It’s definitely the long ball. Our girls can hit home runs, which is nice to see,” Webb said.
“We can also do the small game too, we get runners on and then the big ball comes, so it’s a lot of fun,” Day said.
With the hitting combined with the pitching, they hope to get back to the NCAA tournament. Day's approach on aiming for a ring this season is by taking it one game at a time and one day at a time.
The Hornets currently sit at 18-14 overall and 2-1 in Big Sky play. They now get ready for Portland State starting with a doubleheader on Friday at noon.
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Walmart is one of the most popular retail chains in the country and has been for quite some time. If you didn’t know, Walmart has daily deals on favorite items that are called “flash picks.”Walmart says on its website that flash picks offer up to 50% off limited-stock items that are top-rated and popular.For April 1, we thought we’d share with you some of the deals we found for you to take advantage of, perfect for your backyard and warmer weather.And if you’re not interested in those products, there are many offerings to choose from on Walmart’s Flash Picks page.SAVE HUNDREDS ON OUTDOOR SECTIONAL The Sophia & William 7 Pieces Outdoor Patio Rattan Sectional Sofa Set is marked down more than 50%, according to Walmart, with savings of more than $700.The wicker rattan patio furniture sofa chair set comes with a tea table and washable navy blue couch Cushions.Can't see the products below? Click here to view the deal.SAVE 50% ON HAMMOCKSRelax in your backyard on a new hand-braided hammock, priced down more than 50% of its initial retail price. ELEVATE YOUR GARDENSave on this elevated cedar garden bed, perfect for your green thumb. PLANNING AN EVENT?Grab a heavy-duty canopy tent for your next big event, priced down at $98.97 from its initial price of $279.99!STAY SHADEDQuictentis one of the top brands that sell high-quality patio umbrellas. Save more than $10 for this 7.5-foot design.LOVESEAT FURNITURE SETSpice up your yard with this four-piece loveseat set, and savings of more than $200.This 4-piece patio rattan wicker furniture set includes 2 single sofas, 1 loveseat, and 1 coffee table, which is ideal for both indoor and outdoor use.KEEP 'EM COOLKeep your drinks cool in this Lifetime high-performance cooler, with savings of more than $40.This one comes with a 5-year limited warranty.
Walmart is one of the most popular retail chains in the country and has been for quite some time. If you didn’t know, Walmart has daily deals on favorite items that are called “flash picks.”
Walmart says on its website that flash picks offer up to 50% off limited-stock items that are top-rated and popular.
For April 1, we thought we’d share with you some of the deals we found for you to take advantage of, perfect for your backyard and warmer weather.
And if you’re not interested in those products, there are many offerings to choose from on Walmart’s Flash Picks page.
SAVE HUNDREDS ON OUTDOOR SECTIONAL
The Sophia & William 7 Pieces Outdoor Patio Rattan Sectional Sofa Set is marked down more than 50%, according to Walmart, with savings of more than $700.
The wicker rattan patio furniture sofa chair set comes with a tea table and washable navy blue couch Cushions.
Can't see the products below? Click here to view the deal.
7 Pieces Outdoor Sectional Sofa Set
Sophia & William
walmart.com
SAVE 50% ON HAMMOCKS
Relax in your backyard on a new hand-braided hammock, priced down more than 50% of its initial retail price.
Hand-Braided Hammock
Bliss Hammocks
walmart.com
$26.54
ELEVATE YOUR GARDEN
Save on this elevated cedar garden bed, perfect for your green thumb.
Cedar Elevated Garden Bed
Expert Gardener
walmart.com
PLANNING AN EVENT?
Grab a heavy-duty canopy tent for your next big event, priced down at $98.97 from its initial price of $279.99!
Party Wedding Tent Canopy
Costway
walmart.com
$139.99
STAY SHADED
Quictentis one of the top brands that sell high-quality patio umbrellas. Save more than $10 for this 7.5-foot design.
Patio Umbrella
Quictent
walmart.com
$54.99
LOVESEAT FURNITURE SET
Spice up your yard with this four-piece loveseat set, and savings of more than $200.
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$107.00
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https://www.kcra.com/article/crisis-in-ukraine-april-1-2022/39606610
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The Latest: Ukraine braces for renewed attacks as Russian troops leave Chernobyl
Russian troops left the heavily contaminated Chernobyl nuclear site early Friday after returning control to the Ukrainians, authorities said, as residents in parts of eastern Ukraine braced for renewed attacks and awaited blocked supplies of food and other humanitarian relief.
Ukraine’s state power company, Energoatom, said the pullout at Chernobyl came after soldiers received “significant doses” of radiation from digging trenches in the forest in the exclusion zone around the closed plant. The International Atomic Energy Agency said it could not independently confirm the exposure claim.
Here's the latest on the Ukraine-Russia conflict as of 5:30 a.m. (Eastern):
- The European Union will seek China’s assurances that it won’t assist Russia in circumventing economic sanctions leveled over the invasion of Ukraine at an annual summit Friday.
- NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg says Russia does not appear to be scaling back its military operations in Ukraine.
- Russian forces which were in control of the Chernobyl nuclear plant began leaving and have transferred control of the facility to Ukrainian personnel.
- The Ukrainian emergency services say the death toll after a Russian missile strike Tuesday on the regional government headquarters in the southern city of Mykolaiv has risen to 20.
- The U.N. refugee agency says more than 4 million people have now fled Ukraine following Russia’s invasion, a new milestone in the largest refugee crisis in Europe since World War II.
In what would be the first attack of its kind, if confirmed, the governor of Russia's Belgorod region accused Ukraine of flying helicopter gunships across the border on Friday morning and striking an oil depot.
The depot run by Russian energy giant Rosneft is located about 21 miles north of the Ukraine-Russia border. The helicopter attack set the facility ablaze, and two people were injured, according to a Telegram post by Belgorod governor Vyacheslav Gladkov.
“The fire at the oil depot occurred as a result of an airstrike from two helicopters of the armed forces of Ukraine, which entered the territory of Russia at a low altitude,” the governor wrote on the messaging app.
It was not immediately possible to verify the claim or images that were circulating on social media of the alleged attack. Russia has reported shelling from Ukraine before, including an incident last week that killed a military chaplain, but not an incursion of its airspace.
Elsewhere, Ukrainian forces have retaken the villages of Sloboda and Lukashivka, which are south of the besieged northern city of Chernihiv and located along one of the main supply routes between the city and Ukraine's capital, Kyiv, according to Britain's Defense Ministry.
Ukraine has also continued to make successful but limited counterattacks to the east and northeast of Kyiv, the ministry said.
Russian forces have subjected both Chernihiv and Kyiv to continued air and ground-launched missile strikes despite Moscow officials saying Tuesday they planned to reduce military activity in those areas.
Western officials said there were growing indications Russia was using its talk of de-escalation in Ukraine as cover to regroup, resupply its forces and redeploy them for a stepped-up offensive in the eastern part of the country.
Video: Russian tanks destroyed outside Kyiv
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy warned that Russian withdrawals from the north and center of the country were just a military tactic to build up strength for new attacks in the southeast.
“We know their intentions,” Zelenskyy said in his nightly video address to the nation. “We know that they are moving away from those areas where we hit them in order to focus on other, very important ones where it may be difficult for us.”
“There will be battles ahead,” he added.
Ukrainian and Russian negotiators planned to resume talks via video on Friday, five weeks into a conflict that has left thousands dead and driven more than 4 million refugees from Ukraine. There seemed little faith that the two sides would find agreement on their respective demands any time soon.
Russian President Vladimir Putin said conditions weren’t yet “ripe” for a cease-fire and he wasn’t ready for a meeting with Zelenskyy until the negotiators do more work, Italian Premier Mario Draghi said after a Thursday telephone conversation with the Russian leader.
Following a plea from Zelenskyy when he addressed Australian Parliament on Thursday, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said that his country would send mine-resistant armored personnel carriers to Ukraine.
He said Friday the four-wheel-drive Bushmaster vehicles, specifically requested by Zelenskyy, would be flown to Europe but did not say how many would be delivered or when.
“We’re not just sending our prayers, we are sending our guns, we’re sending our munitions, we’re sending our humanitarian aid, we’re sending all of this, our body armor, all of these things, and we’re going to be sending our armored vehicles, our Bushmasters, as well,” Morrison said.
Video: Kirby: Russian troops regrouping for redeployment
In the encircled strategic port city of Mariupol, Russian forces on Thursday blocked a convoy of 45 buses attempting to evacuate people after the Russian military agreed to a limited cease-fire in the area. Only 631 people were able to get out of the city in private cars, according to the Ukrainian government.
Russian forces also seized 14 tons of food and medical supplies in a dozen buses that were trying to make it to Mariupol, Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk said.
The city has been the scene of some of the worst suffering of the war. Tens of thousands of residents managed to get out in the past few weeks by way of humanitarian corridors, reducing the population from a prewar 430,000 to an estimated 100,000 by last week. But continued Russian attacks have repeatedly thwarted aid and evacuation convoys.
The International Atomic Energy Agency said it had been informed by Ukraine that the Russians forces at Chernobyl had transferred control of the site of the world’s worst nuclear disaster to the Ukrainians in writing. The last Russian troops left Chernobyl early Friday, the Ukrainian government agency responsible for the exclusion zone said.
Energoatom gave no details on the condition of the soldiers it said were exposed to radiation and did not say how many were affected. There was no immediate comment from the Kremlin, and the IAEA said it was seeking more information.
Russian forces seized the Chernobyl site in the opening stages of the Feb. 24 invasion, raising fears that they would cause damage or disruption that could spread radiation. The workforce at the site oversees the safe storage of spent fuel rods and the concrete-entombed ruins of the reactor that exploded in 1986.
Edwin Lyman, a nuclear expert with the U.S.-based Union of Concerned Scientists, said it “seems unlikely” a large number of troops would develop severe radiation illness, but it was impossible to know for sure without more details.
IAEA Director-General Rafael Grossi was in the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad on Friday for talks with senior officials there about nuclear issues in Ukraine.
In addition to concerns about Chernobyl, nine of Ukraine's 15 operational reactors are currently in use, including two at the Russian-controlled Zaporizhzhya facility, the IAEA said.
Video: Kharkiv residents clean up debris from air strike
Early this week, the Russians said they would significantly scale back military operations in areas around Kyiv and the northern city of Chernihiv to increase trust between the two sides and help negotiations along.
But in the Kyiv suburbs, regional governor Oleksandr Palviuk said on social media Thursday that Russian forces shelled Irpin and Makariv and that there were battles around Hostomel. Pavliuk said there were Ukrainian counterattacks and some Russian withdrawals around the suburb of Brovary to the east.
At a Ukrainian military checkpoint outside Kyiv, soldiers and officers said they don’t believe Russian forces have given up on the capital.
“What does it mean, significantly scaling down combat actions in the Kyiv and Chernihiv areas?” asked Brig. Gen. Valeriy Embakov. “Does it mean there will be 100 missiles instead of 200 missiles launched on Kyiv or something else?”
NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said intelligence indicates Russia is not scaling back its military operations in Ukraine but is instead trying to regroup, resupply its forces and reinforce its offensive in the Donbas.
“Russia has repeatedly lied about its intentions,” Stoltenberg said. At the same time, he said, pressure is being kept up on Kyiv and other cities, and “we can expect additional offensive actions bringing even more suffering.”
The Donbas is the predominantly Russian-speaking industrial region where Moscow-backed separatists have been battling Ukrainian forces since 2014. In the past few days, the Kremlin, in a seeming shift in its war aims, said that its “main goal” now is gaining control of the Donbas, which consists of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions, including Mariupol.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/character-hugs-coming-back-to-disney-parks/39603351
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Character hugs are coming back to Disney parks
Video above: Indoor mask mandates dropped at Walt Disney World, Disneyland
Of the many safety measures that Disney Parks had to set up to operate during the COVID-19 pandemic, requiring guests to keep a 6-foot distance from the costumed characters must have been one of the hardest. At least emotionally.
For kids (or kids at heart), running into the waiting arms of Mickey Mouse and other beloved characters had been such an impulsive and quintessential part of the experience. Hanging back can be tough.
But finally, hugs are back on the horizon at U.S. Disney properties.
As early as April 18, Disney "will start reintroducing traditional character greetings at Disneyland (in California) and Walt Disney World Resorts, as well as aboard Disney Cruise Line and at Aulani Resort in Hawaii," according to a new post on Thursday on the official Disney Parks blog.
Up close and personal
Getting autographs, snapping photos close up and just sharing a laugh face-to-face with characters such as Mulan and Goofy will all be back on the table.
Disney has a new YouTube video celebrating the upcoming change, with plenty of embraces and high-fives being distributed.
It's all part of the unwinding of coronavirus restrictions — both at the Disney parks and in the United States at large.
"During the past two years, we've taken a very gradual, intentional approach to health and safety protocols," wrote Shawn Slater, senior communications manager for Disney Live Entertainment, in the blog.
"Recent trends and guidance have provided opportunities for us to bring back some of our most beloved magic, like character greetings and dining experiences. While not all locations will be available immediately, we anticipate reopening in phases throughout the spring and early summer."
What else is coming back
It's not just character interactions that will be returning later this spring.
At Disneyland in California, guests can look forward to the return of several nighttime spectaculars, including:
• "Disneyland Forever"
• "Fantasmic!"
• "Main Street Electrical Parade," celebrating its 50th anniversary
• "World of Color"
On Disney Cruise Line ships, fireworks at sea and Broadway-style shows will be coming back.
At Walt Disney World in Florida, shows such as "Mickey's Magical Friendship Faire" have already returned.
On-site hotels
On-site lodging is also bouncing back.
For the first time since March 2020, "all Disney Resort hotels that are part of the Disney Resorts Collection at Walt Disney World" in Florida are now open, according to another Disney Parks blog post on Thursday.
Disney's All-Star Sports Resort reopened on Thursday, the final resort there to do so.
Remaining safety measures
Disney still isn't 100% back to pre-pandemic operations. Take face masks, for instance.
They are optional for fully vaccinated guests in outdoor and indoor locations. Disney asks that visitors who are not fully vaccinated continue wearing face masks in all indoor locations.
And face coverings are still required by all visitors 2 years old and older on Disney buses and monorails. You can click here for their latest safety updates.
Shanghai Disneyland closed
While things are opening up more and more in the United States, Disney has theme parks around the world. And each one must respond to local conditions.
China, an area of the world that has had few spikes during the pandemic, has seen a big increase in cases as the BA.2 variant sweeps through the country.
As a result, Shanghai Disneyland has been closed since March 21.
It's a reminder that park patrons must be ready to adjust to changing conditions, even two years into the pandemic.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/sacramento-republic-fc-image-downtown-stadium-railyards/39603770
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Sacramento Republic FC reveals rendering of downtown stadium at Railyards
The Sacramento Republic FC are currently in the advanced planning stages to build an outdoor stadium at the Railyards. The plan is expected to double the overall size of downtown Sacramento.
The new vision for the 12,000-15,000 seat venue will initially be used as a USL-based stadium, but it could expand to 20,000 seats as needed, if Major League Soccer comes calling or if any FIFA requirements are imposed upon them.
The new stadium design comes from the architectural firm, Manica, which has developed projects like Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, the Chase Center in San Francisco and even, Wembley Stadium in London. The concept can be constructed on an accelerated timeline.
The plans are to host not only just soccer events but Division 1 football, lacrosse, rugby, concerts, high school and college graduations, and any other community events.
A release from Sacramento Republic FC said the stadium is a nearly $1 billion investment, which includes bringing in new housing and mixed-use developments.
The project is almost entirely privately funded by Republic FC Chairman and CEO Kevin Nagle, and other investors.
"We want to build a world-class soccer stadium in The Railyards, and to begin the next decade of Republic FC," Nagle said in a release. "We're ready with a new vision that allows us to take our destiny into our own hands, and to create a community asset that will grow with the team and city."
“I’m grateful to Kevin Nagle for his partnership and his commitment to Sacramento. As a city, we are open to pursuing dual tracks,” said Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg in a prepared statement. “We continue to identify and work with potential Major League Soccer investors, and at the same time we’re ready to work together on an adaptable stadium in the railyards. It’s not one or the other.”
There are still some contractual things that need to be worked out but their hope is to be wrapped up in the next 90-120 days thus moving the project forward.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/affordable-child-care-option-born-from-city-nonprofit-partnership/39606028
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Affordable child care option born from city and nonprofit partnership
As many child care centers closed as a result of the pandemic, a new child care center that promises quality care and affordability is opening in north Sacramento.
A partnership between the city and a Sacramento-area nonprofit group made it possible.
“It's about really addressing children of single parents' needs in addition to that quality, early childhood education,” said Tara Taylor, founder and executive director of Single Mom Strong.
Taylor is the mind and heart behind EmpowerME Preschool and Childcare.
“We are about 30% lower than anywhere else in the region,” Taylor explained of her program’s cost. “So our pricing is the most affordable.”
The part-time rate is $165 per week, according to Taylor. The full-time rate is $195 per week and single parents can volunteer for an hour per week to save an additional $25.
Taylor described EmpowerME Childcare as a cornerstone program of the Single Mom Strong nonprofit organization.
“We always wanted to work to be within 10 to 15 minutes reach of every single parent in the region,” Taylor said.
Single Mom Strong opened a Citrus Heights EmpowerME site in 2019, with fast expansion being the plan.
“We were strategically working to locate in Sacramento, south Sacramento Rancho Cordova just trying to get closer to single moms,” Taylor explained. “Then COVID hit and that slowed that down.”
As the pandemic dragged on, Taylor’s determination to help meet the needs of single parents grew stronger.
“Through COVID, so many child care centers closed,” she said. “It became even more crucial… to get help to people.”
Taylor soon realized the city of Sacramento was on the same page.
“The city has recognized that there's definitely a child care crisis and they have prioritized quality, preschool and child care,” Taylor said.
The city is now allowing Taylor's organization to lease one of its less-often-used Woodlake Clubhouse community center, where the EmpowerME Childcare program runs by day, and others can use it at night and on weekends.
In a statement to KCRA 3 about the partnership between the city and Single Mom Strong, Jackie Beecham, Community Enrichment Division Manager for the city of Sacramento, writes:
“There is a significant demand for affordable quality childcare that has only become more prevalent since the Covid pandemic. The department of youth, parks and community enrichment looks forward to the partnership with Single Mom Strong to bring critical services to Sacramento families. This program will provide a safe space for children to learn and grow, and parents to return to work.”
The key idea is that it’s a preschool and child care option, that’s open to all, at rates that make it more affordable for parents – even in challenging economic times.
“We are a community and we serve a community and so we want to foster community and connection with our neighbors,” said Taylor.
Single Mom Strong is hosting an open house at the EmpowerME site Saturday.
It runs from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at 500 Arden Way in Sacramento.
The center officially opens for business on Monday.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/house-passes-dollar35-a-month-insulin-cap-as-uphill-senate-battle-looms/39609695
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House passes $35-a-month insulin cap as uphill Senate battle looms
The House has passed a bill capping the monthly cost of insulin at $35 for insured patients, part of an election-year push by Democrats for price curbs on prescription drugs at a time of rising inflation.
Video above: President Biden decries high prescription costs: 'shame on us'
Experts say the legislation, which passed 232-193 Thursday, would provide significant relief for privately insured patients with skimpier plans and for Medicare enrollees facing rising out-of-pocket costs for their insulin. Some could save hundreds of dollars annually, and all insured patients would get the benefit of predictable monthly costs for insulin. The bill would not help the uninsured.
But the Affordable Insulin Now Act will serve as a political vehicle to rally Democrats and force Republicans who oppose it into uncomfortable votes ahead of the midterms. For the legislation to pass Congress, 10 Republican senators would have to vote in favor. Democrats acknowledge they don't have an answer for how that's going to happen.
“If 10 Republicans stand between the American people being able to get access to affordable insulin, that's a good question for 10 Republicans to answer,” said Rep. Dan Kildee, D-Mich., a cosponsor of the House bill. “Republicans get diabetes, too. Republicans die from diabetes.”
Public opinion polls have consistently shown support across party lines for congressional action to limit drug costs.
But Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Wash., complained the legislation is only “a small piece of a larger package around government price controls for prescription drugs." Critics say the bill would raise premiums and fails to target pharmaceutical middlemen seen as contributing to high list prices for insulin.
Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, said Democrats could have a deal on prescription drugs if they drop their bid to authorize Medicare to negotiate prices. “Do Democrats really want to help seniors, or would they rather have the campaign issue?" Grassley said.
The insulin bill, which would take effect in 2023, represents just one provision of a much broader prescription drug package in President Joe Biden's social and climate legislation.
In addition to a similar $35 cap on insulin, the Biden bill would authorize Medicare to negotiate prices for a range of drugs, including insulin. It would penalize drugmakers who raise prices faster than inflation and overhaul the Medicare prescription drug benefit to limit out-of-pocket costs for enrollees.
Biden's agenda passed the House only to stall in the Senate because Democrats could not reach consensus. Party leaders haven't abandoned hope of getting the legislation moving again, and preserving its drug pricing curbs largely intact.
The idea of a $35 monthly cost cap for insulin actually has a bipartisan pedigree. The Trump administration had created a voluntary option for Medicare enrollees to get insulin for $35, and the Biden administration continued it.
In the Senate, Republican Susan Collins of Maine and Democrat Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire are working on a bipartisan insulin bill. Georgia Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock has introduced legislation similar to the House bill, with the support of Sen. Majority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York.
Stung by criticism that Biden's economic policies spur inflation, Democrats are redoubling efforts to show how they'd help people cope with costs. On Thursday, the Commerce Department reported a key inflation gauge jumped 6.4% in February compared with a year ago, the largest year-over-year rise since January 1982.
But experts say the House bill would not help uninsured people, who face the highest out-of-pocket costs for insulin. Also, people with diabetes often take other medications as well as insulin. That's done to treat the diabetes itself, along with other serious health conditions often associated with the disease. The House legislation would not help with those costs, either. Collins says she's looking for a way to help uninsured people through her bill.
About 37 million Americans have diabetes, and an estimated 6 million to 7 million use insulin to keep their blood sugars under control. It’s an old drug, refined and improved over the years, that has seen relentless price increases.
Steep list prices don't reflect the rates insurance plans negotiate with manufacturers. But those list prices are used to calculate cost-sharing amounts that patients owe. Patients who can’t afford their insulin reduce or skip doses, a strategy born of desperation, which can lead to serious complications and even death.
Economist Sherry Glied of New York University said the market for insulin is a “total disaster” for many patients, particularly those with skimpy insurance plans or no insurance.
“This will make private insurance for people with diabetes a much more attractive proposition,” said Glied.
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KCRA Today: More details on future home of Sacramento Republic FC, March jobs report, eviction ban extended
KCRA 3 is rounding up all the information you need to know to get a head start on your day.
Here you'll find what you missed overnight, what's happening throughout the day, the forecast and how your commute is shaping up.
You can also watch our morning newscasts live from 4-9 a.m. here.
WHAT'S HAPPENING IN NORCAL
Sacramento Republic FC reveals rendering of downtown stadium at Railyards | The Sacramento Republic FC are currently in the advanced planning stages to build an outdoor stadium at the Railyards. The plan is expected to double the overall size of downtown Sacramento. Read more here.
California lawmakers extend eviction ban for some renters | Tens of thousands of Californians facing eviction on Friday for not paying their rent will get to stay in their homes for at least another three months after Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis signed a law to extend protections just hours before they were scheduled to expire. Read more here.
Much of Eldorado National Forest to reopen months after Caldor Fire, but visitors are urged caution | It has been months since a wildfire that burned through El Dorado County at a threatening pace, causing unprecedented evacuations and mostly leveling an entire community, has been extinguished. Now, much of the nearby federal forest land is reopening to the public. Read more here.
WHAT'S HAPPENING ELSEWHERE
US added 431,000 jobs in March in sign of economic health | America's employers extended a streak of robust hiring in March, adding 431,000 jobs in a sign of the economy's resilience in the face of a still-destructive pandemic and the highest inflation in 40 years. Read more here.
Ukraine braces for renewed attacks as Russian troops leave Chernobyl | Emergency relief and evacuation convoys for the besieged Ukrainian city of Mariupol remained in doubt Friday following reports of Russian interference, while Russian officials accused Ukraine of flying helicopter gunships across a border between the two countries and striking an oil depot. Read more here.
US Navy will name a ship after Ruth Bader Ginsburg | The late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg served more than two decades on the U.S. Supreme Court, developed a rock star status and drew standing ovations when she spoke in public. Now the late "Notorious R.B.G." will add another entry to her long list of accomplishments. Read more here.
WHAT'S COMING UP TODAY
- Negotiations between the union representing teachers and the Sacramento City Unified School District will continue today at 1 p.m.
TODAY'S WEATHER OUTLOOK
Meteorologist Melanie Hunter says Northern California is waking up to a chilly start with several areas in the 40s. The morning is mainly clear, setting us up for a lot of sunshine throughout the afternoon with temperatures warming up above average. By the afternoon, we’re back in the upper 70s with a light wind. By the evening, temperatures will stay mild in the 60s.
(App users, click here to see Doppler radar).
REAL-TIME TRAFFIC MAP
(App users, click here to see our interactive traffic map.)
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https://www.kcra.com/article/pope-makes-historic-apology-to-indigenous-people-of-canada/39610201
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Pope makes historic apology to indigenous people of Canada
Pope Francis on Friday made a historic apology to Indigenous Peoples for the “deplorable” abuses they suffered in Canada’s Catholic-run residential schools and said he hoped to visit Canada in late July to deliver the apology in person to survivors of the church's misguided missionary zeal.
Francis begged forgiveness during an audience with dozens of members of the Metis, Inuit and First Nations communities who came to Rome seeking a papal apology and a commitment from the Catholic Church to repair the damage. The first pope from the Americas said he hoped to visit Canada around the Feast of St. Anna, which falls on July 26.
Video above: More than 600 bodies found at Indigenous school in Canada
More than 150,000 native children in Canada were forced to attend state-funded Christian schools from the 19th century until the 1970s in an effort to isolate them from the influence of their homes and culture. The aim was to Christianize and assimilate them into mainstream society, which previous Canadian governments considered superior.
The Canadian government has admitted that physical and sexual abuse was rampant at the schools, with students beaten for speaking their native languages. That legacy of that abuse and isolation from family has been cited by Indigenous leaders as a root cause of the epidemic rates of alcohol and drug addiction now on Canadian reservations.
After hearing their stories all week, Francis told the Indigenous that the colonial project ripped children from their families, cutting off roots, traditions and culture and provoking inter-generational trauma that is still being felt today. He said it was a “counter-witness” to the same Gospel that the residential school system purported to uphold.
“For the deplorable conduct of those members of the Catholic Church, I ask forgiveness of the Lord,” Francis said. “And I want to tell you from my heart, that I am greatly pained. And I unite myself with the Canadian bishops in apologizing.”
The trip to Rome by the Indigenous was years in the making but gained momentum last year after the discovery of hundreds of unmarked graves outside some of the residential schools in Canada. The three groups of Indigenous met separately with Francis over several hours this week, telling him their stories, culminating with Friday's audience.
Francis spoke in Italian and the Indigenous read his remarks in English translations. The president of the Metis National Council, Cassidy Caron, said the Metis elder sitting next her burst into tears upon hearing what she said was a long-overdue apology.
“The pope's words today were historic, to be sure. They were necessary, and I appreciate them deeply,” Caron told reporters in St. Peter's Square. “And I now look forward to the pope's visit to Canada, where he can offer those sincere words of apology directly to our survivors and their families, whose acceptance and healing ultimately matters most.”
The spiritual adviser of the Assembly of First Nations' delegation, Elder Fred Kelley, echoed the sentiment.
“Today is a day that we’ve been waiting for. And certainly one that will be uplifted in our history," he said. “It’s a historical first step, however, only a first step.”
Video above: Tributes to kids buried at indigenous school site
He and other Indigenous leaders said there was far more for the church to do on the path of reconciliation, but that for now Indigenous leaders insisted on being involved in organizing the papal visit to make sure Francis stops in places that hold spiritual importance to their people.
Natan Obed, president of the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, thanked Francis for addressing all the issues the Indigenous had brought to him. “And he did so in a way that really showed his empathy towards the indigenous people of Canada,” he said.
Nearly three-quarters of Canada’s 130 residential schools were run by Catholic missionary congregations.
Last May, the Tk’emlups te Secwepemc Nation announced the discovery of 215 gravesites near Kamloops, British Columbia, that were found using ground-penetrating radar. It was Canada’s largest Indigenous residential school and the discovery of the graves was the first of numerous, similar grim sites across the country.
Even before the grave sites were discovered, Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission specifically called for a papal apology to be delivered on Canadian soil for the church’s role in the abuses.
In addition, as part of a settlement of a lawsuit involving the Canadian government, churches and the approximately 90,000 surviving students, Canada paid reparations that amounted to billions of dollars being transferred to Indigenous communities. The Catholic Church, for its part, has paid over $50 million and now intends to add $30 million more over the next five years.
Francis said he felt shame for the role that Catholic educators had played in the harm, “in the abuse and disrespect for your identity, your culture and even your spiritual values,” he said. “It is evident that the contents of the faith cannot be transmitted in a way that is extraneous to the faith itself.”
“It is chilling to think of determined efforts to instill a sense of inferiority, to rob people of their cultural identity, to sever their roots, and to consider all the personal and social effects that this continues to entail: unresolved traumas that have become inter-generational traumas,” he said.
After the papal apology, the audience continued with joyous performances of Indigenous prayers by drummers, dancers and fiddlers that Francis watched, applauded and gave a thumbs up to. The Indigenous then presented him with gifts, including snowshoes.
Francis' apology went far beyond what Pope Benedict XVI had offered in 2009 when an Assembly of First Nations delegation visited. At the time, Benedict only expressed his “sorrow at the anguish caused by the deplorable conduct of some members of the church.” But he did not apologize.
The Argentine pope is no stranger to offering apologies for his own errors and for what he himself has termed the “crimes” of the institutional church. Most significantly, during a 2015 visit to Bolivia, he apologized for the sins, crimes and offenses committed by the church against Indigenous Peoples during the colonial-era conquest of the Americas.
He made clear those same colonial crimes occurred far more recently in Canada at the Catholic-run residential schools.
“Your identity and culture has been wounded, many families separated, many children have become victims of this homogenization action, supported by the idea that progress occurs through ideological colonization, according to programs studied at the table rather than respecting the lives of peoples," he said.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/unidentified-man-found-dead-appalachian-trail/39609882
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Authorities ask for help identifying man found dead on Appalachian Trail
The body was found Jan. 21
The body was found Jan. 21
Authorities are asking for help identifying a man found dead along the Appalachian Trail.
Officials say the man's body was found Jan. 21.
The man was wearing a small gray T-shirt, a gray fleece long sleeve shirt, tan Wrangler brand cargo pants size 30x32, gray wool boot socks, and Keen brand hiking boots size 10.5.
The man had a black Thermal-FR brand fleece quarter-zip pullover, a dark gray Champion brand quarter-zip fleece, a black Uline skull cap with rechargeable light attachment and a small black folding shovel.
They are asking anyone with information to contact The Georgia Bureau of Investigation.
Anonymous tips can be submitted by calling 1-800-597-TIPS (8477), online at https://gbi.georgia.gov/submit-tips-online, or by downloading the See Something, Send Something mobile app.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/april-snow-survey-reveals-third-drought-year-in-row/39609423
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April snow survey reveals third drought year in a row
Statewide snowpack is 39% of average
Statewide snowpack is 39% of average
Statewide snowpack is 39% of average
A winter season that started off with the snowiest December on record will go down as a third drought year in a row.
On Friday, officials will trek into remote survey sites across the Sierra to record the snow depth, and more importantly, the water content of the Sierra snowpack.
The manual measurements taken Friday will verify the dismal statistics coming in from hundreds of automated snow sensors located across the Sierra.
Statewide, the snowpack and the water it holds is just 39% of average, according to the California Data Exchange.
The April 1 snow survey is considered to be the most important of the season as this is typically the time of year when the state's snowpack is at its deepest.
Water managers use the April 1 snow survey to gauge how much water will be available in the drier months ahead as that snow turns into runoff.
As California braces for the third drought year in a row, reservoirs are already well below average and will get little help from the snowpack to replenish their storage.
Shasta Lake, the state's largest reservoir, was at 38% of capacity and just 48% of the average for April 1.
Lake Oroville was sitting at 47% of capacity and 67% of average, according to the California Data Exchange.
As the wet season comes to a close, Gov. Gavin Newsom has already called upon water agencies statewide to implement water savings measures.
The California Water Project has notified its customers that it will only be able to deliver 5% of the requested water supplies.
In the Sacramento area, Folsom Lake was at 59% of capacity and 95% of average, according to state statistics.
Water managers are starting to capture more runoff as the threat of flooding fades with the chances for any more significant storms.
As of Friday morning, the surface elevation of Folsom Lake was 426.73 feet above sea level.
The California State Parks implement a 5 mph speed limit across the entire lake once the lake's surface elevation drops below 400 feet.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/covid-19-hospitalizations-have-hit-a-pandemic-low-in-the-us-data-shows/39609685
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COVID-19 hospitalizations have hit a pandemic low in the US, data shows
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Updated: 9:21 AM PDT Apr 1, 2022
JESSICA: THE NUMBER OF PATIENTS HOSPITALEDIZ IN MASSACHUSETTS FOR COVID DOWN TO 210, MORE THAN HALF FULLY VACCINATED. HERE TO TALK ABOUT THAT IS DR. TODD ELLERIN, CHIEF OF IN FECTIOUS DISEASES AT SOUTH SHORE HEALTH. N:BE LET’S BREAK THAT DOWN. THIS IS FROM THE STATE DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH. THE NUMBER IS TWO HUNDRED 10, DOWN FROM 0033 PATIENTS AT THE HEIGHT OF THE OMICRON SURGEON JANUARY, BUT LOOKING AT THIS WEEK’S DATA, 120 FOUR WERE FULLY CCVAINATED WHEN INFECTED, SO ALMOST 60%. ARYOUE SURPRISED THAT HIGH OF A PERCENTAGE IS IN THE HOSPITAL? >> NOT AT ALL AND LET ME EXPLAIN. IMAGINE 100 PERCENT OF PEOPLE IN MASSACHUSETTS WERE VACCINATED. ANY HOSPITALIZED PATIENT WITH COVID WOULD BE VACCINAD BUT MASSACHUSETTS HAS OVER 80% OF US FULLY VACCINATED, THOSE ELIGIBLE NOW. SO YOU EXPECT TO E SEVACCINATED PEOPLE HOSPITALIZED. HERE IS THE RUB, THOUGH. WHEN YOU LOOK AT WHO IS VACCINATED AND HOSPITALIZED, IT TENDS TO BE THE EXTREMES OF AGE, ELDERLY, LSOT OF CHRONIC MEDICAL CONDITIONS. THE PEOPLE WHO ARE UNVACCINATED ARE OFTEN 15, 20 YES YOUNGER, SO YOUNGER UNVACCINATED PEOPLE ARE BEING VACCINATED. AND TO BRING HOME THE POINT, ONLY 18% OF PEOPLE OF MASSACHUSETTS ARE VACCINATED, YET IF YOU LOOK AT YOUR NUMBERS, 41% OF PEOPLE HOSPITALIZED NOW ARE UNVACCINATED, SO THE VACCINES ARE DOING WHAT WE EXPECT. JESSICA: WE HAVE TALKED ABOUT WANTINPRG OTECTION FROM VACCINES AND PRIOR INFECTIONS. DO WE KNOW HOW LONG EACH ONE WILL LAST? DR. ELLERIN: TREHE WAS A RECENT STUDY IN THE NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL PUBLISHED TODAY, AND WTHA IT SHOWS,ND A WE KNOW THIS, IS THAT VACCINE EFFECTIVENESS DOES WANE OVER TIME, AND THAT’S ONE OF THE REASONWHY WE MAY HAVE TO CHANGE OUR SHIFT A LITTLE WITH GOALS. ATHE T VERY BEGINNING, WHEN VACCINES FIRST CAME OUT, WE WERE HEARING 95% EFFECTIVE AGAINST INFECTION. THOSE NUMBERS HAVE DECREASED .IN THE NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL, THE VARIANT OUT OF THE U.K., EFFECTIVENESS DROPPED TO SIX MONTHS, BUT I THINK THE KEY IS THE VACCINES ARE STILL WORKING SO WELL AT PREVENTING SEVERE INFECTION. I THINK THAT WILL HAVE TO BE WHERE WE ARE LOOKING IN THE FUTURE. BEN: A LOT OF PEOPLE WERE INFECTED WITH COVID DURING THE OMICRON SURGEON AND MANY PEOPLE HAD MILD SYMPTOMS -- OMICRON SURGE AND MANY PEOPLE HAD MILD SYMPTOMS. IS IT SAFE FOR THESE PEOPLE TO SKIP THE BOOSTER SHOTS OR NOT? DRELLERI. ABSOLUTELY NOT. EVEN THOUGH WE LEARNED INFECTION DOES PROVIDE IMMUNITY, A STUDY THIS TIME FROM ISRAEL PUBLISHED INHE JOURNAL, 139,000 PEOPLE OMFR ISRLAE, AND ESSENTIALLY, MOST WERE COMPLETELY VACCINATED, HAD TWO DOSES OF VACCINE, AND WHAT TYHE SHOWED IS THAT THOSE WHO WERE VACCINATED ALONE, THERE WERE ABOUT54 WE 3 INFECTIONS, BUT THOSE WHO WERE VACCINATED AND VACCINATED AND ALSO INFECTED, THEY WERE LESS LIKELY TO GET INFECTED, SO WHAT DOES THAT SAY? INFECTION PLUS VACCINE PROTECTS GREATER THAN JUST VACCINE ALONE. AND AGAIN, ONE THING TO REMEMBER , WHAT YOU DO NOT WANTOT O IS GO AND GET INFECTED BECAUSE THESE STUDIES DON’T TELL ABOUT ETH MORBIDITY, COVID LONG-TERM, PROBLEMS, SEPARATION, ISOLATION, THINGS LIKE THAT, SO THAT, SO THE VACCINE IS STILL THE BEST WAY. JESSICA: ONE LAST QUESTION. I ALSO WANT TO ASK ABOUT SEASONAL ALLERGIES. TREE POLLEN IS A BIG PROBLEM NOW. THE FACE MASKS OFFER ANY SORT OF PROTECTION? DR. ELRILE THEY ACTUALLY DO BUT IT IS A DOUBLE-EDGED SWORD -- THE MASKS PROTECT YOUR FACE FROM POLLEN BUT THE EYES ARE EXPOSED. THE OTHER ISSUE IS WHEN YOU BRING THE MASK BACK TOIN ITSELF, YOU CAN CAUSE MORE POLLEN RELEASE IN THE HOME, SO YOU WANT TO BE CAREFUL OF THAT. JUST LIKE COVID, THESE RESPIRATORS ACTUALLY PROTECT BETTER THAN ETH REGULAR SURGICAL MASKS, SO MASKS DO PROTT AGAINST POLLEN, BUT BE CAREFUL DAN REALIZE IT WILL NOT
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COVID-19 hospitalizations have hit a pandemic low in the US, data shows
Fewer people are hospitalized with COVID-19 in the United States now than at any other point in the pandemic, according to data from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.As of Friday, there are 16,138 people in the hospital with COVID-19 — fewer than there have ever been since the HHS first started tracking in July 2020. Just 2% of hospital beds are currently in use for COVID-19 patients.The number of COVID-19 patients in the ICU is also at a low point, with less than 2,000 ICU beds in use for COVID-19 patients in the United States overall, HHS data shows.Previously, the lowest point was in late June 2021, just before delta became the dominant variant in the country. COVID-19 hospitalizations reached a peak in January 2022 amid the omicron surge, when more than 160,000 people were hospitalized with COVID-19 at one time.While the strain on the U.S. hospital system directly related to treating COVID-19 patients has been significantly reduced, experts say that many hospitals are still burdened by staffing shortages and other patients who are coming in sicker after postponing care during the height of the pandemic.Overall, since August 2020, there have been about 4.6 million total hospital admissions for COVID-19 in the U.S., according to data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. More than a third of hospital admissions have been among seniors age 70 and older.Black and Hispanic people have been hospitalized with COVID-19 at more than twice the rate of white people, and American Indians have been more than three times as likely to be hospitalized.
Fewer people are hospitalized with COVID-19 in the United States now than at any other point in the pandemic, according to data from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
As of Friday, there are 16,138 people in the hospital with COVID-19 — fewer than there have ever been since the HHS first started tracking in July 2020. Just 2% of hospital beds are currently in use for COVID-19 patients.
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The number of COVID-19 patients in the ICU is also at a low point, with less than 2,000 ICU beds in use for COVID-19 patients in the United States overall, HHS data shows.
Previously, the lowest point was in late June 2021, just before delta became the dominant variant in the country. COVID-19 hospitalizations reached a peak in January 2022 amid the omicron surge, when more than 160,000 people were hospitalized with COVID-19 at one time.
While the strain on the U.S. hospital system directly related to treating COVID-19 patients has been significantly reduced, experts say that many hospitals are still burdened by staffing shortages and other patients who are coming in sicker after postponing care during the height of the pandemic.
Overall, since August 2020, there have been about 4.6 million total hospital admissions for COVID-19 in the U.S., according to data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. More than a third of hospital admissions have been among seniors age 70 and older.
Black and Hispanic people have been hospitalized with COVID-19 at more than twice the rate of white people, and American Indians have been more than three times as likely to be hospitalized.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/michigan-gov-whitmer-kidnapping-trial-closing/39609761
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Closing arguments begin in trial over Michigan Gov. Whitmer kidnap plot
A prosecutor urged jurors Friday to convict four men in a plot to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, saying they were antigovernment extremists “filled with rage” and intent on igniting a civil war.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Nils Kessler summed up the evidence on the 15th day of trial in federal court in Grand Rapids, Michigan. The case was built with informants, undercover agents, secret recordings and two star witnesses who pleaded guilty and cooperated.
Adam Fox, Barry Croft Jr., Daniel Harris and Brandon Caserta are charged with conspiracy. Three of the men also face additional charges involving weapons.
“They were filled with rage,” Kessler told jurors. “They were paranoid because they knew what they were doing was wrong and they feared they could be caught.”
The four men deny any scheme to get Whitmer at her vacation home, though they were livid with the government as well as restrictions the governor imposed during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Kessler highlighted the testimony of Ty Garbin, who was arrested with the group but quickly agreed to cooperate and pleaded guilty.
“The boogaloo is this whole idea of kicking off a second civil war in the United States. That's what bound these defendants together,” the prosecutor said.
The men were arrested in October 2020 amid talk of raising $4,000 for an explosive that could blow up a bridge and stymie police after a kidnapping, according to trial evidence. Fox twice traveled to northern Michigan to scout the area.
Only one defendant, Harris, chose to testify in his own defense. But his denial of any crime Thursday was met by an aggressive cross-examination in which prosecutors used his own words to show his contempt for Whitmer and even suggestions about how to kill her.
Defense attorneys insist they were under the spell of informants and agents who got them to say and do violent, provocative things.
Harris repeatedly answered “absolutely not” when asked by his lawyer if he was part of a plot. His testimony was perilous because he exposed himself to numerous challenges by prosecutors who had been offering evidence against the group for days.
Harris and Assistant U.S. Attorney Jonathan Roth sometimes talked over each other. At one point, Harris snapped, “Next question.”
“Everyone can take it down a notch,” U.S. District Judge Robert Jonker said later.
Roth confronted Harris with his own chat messages about posing as a pizza deliveryman and killing Whitmer at her door. He reminded Harris, a former Marine, that he worked with explosives while training with the group, especially in Luther, Michigan, in September 2020, about a month before their arrest.
Roth played a conversation of Croft talking about militias overthrowing governments in various states and “breaking a few eggs” if necessary.
“When this man talks to you at a diner about killing people, you don’t stand up and walk out, do you sir?” Roth asked. “You don’t say, ‘This group is not for me,’ do you sir?”
“No,” Harris answered.
A “shoot house” that was intended to resemble Whitmer's second home was a key part of the Luther training weekend, according to the government. Harris admitted that he brought materials but said he didn’t build it with her house in mind.
He didn't participate in an evening ride to Elk Rapids, Michigan, to scout Whitmer’s home and a bridge during that same weekend. Harris said he had purchased $200 of cheap beer and cigarettes so he could return to the camp and “get wasted” with others.
Garbin and Kaleb Franks pleaded guilty and cooperated with investigators. Garbin last week said the group acted willingly and hoped to strike before the election, cause national chaos and prevent Joe Biden from winning the presidency.
Whitmer, a Democrat, rarely talks publicly about the kidnapping plot, though she referred to “surprises” during her term that seemed like “something out of fiction” when she filed for reelection on March 17.
She has blamed former President Donald Trump for fomenting anger over coronavirus restrictions and refusing to condemn right-wing extremists like those charged in the case.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/very-disappointed-parents-continue-sit-in-of-district-office-on-8th-day-of-sacramento-city-unified-teacher-strike/39611377
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'Very disappointed’: Parents continue sit-in of district office on 8th day of Sacramento City Unified teacher strike
Sacramento City Unified students are out of the classroom again on Friday as the teacher strike runs into its eighth day.
On Wednesday, union negotiators marched into the Sac City Unified district building Serna Center, calling for a deal. A group of frustrated parents stayed all night at the Serna Center that night and again on Thursday.
Meanwhile, negotiations between the SCTA and the district will resume at 1 p.m. on Friday.
The teachers union said that late Thursday afternoon that the district asked them some clarifying questions about the teachers' latest proposal, and said it would put together some answers.
Teachers plan to picket at their school sites, then go back to the Serna Center for a rally at 11 a.m.
District parents feeling 'disappointed' and 'worried'
“We are feeling very tired and we are feeling very disappointed in the actions or lack of action of Superintendent [Jorge] Aguilar and the entire Sacramento City Unified School Board,” said parent Amber Verdugo, who is among a group that has been sitting in the Serna Center.
Verdugo said parents are planning for the long-term if a deal is not made soon.
“We are organizing to start working in shifts to make sure that there are always parents in this building so we can take a break, take a shower, go home, sleep on our own beds once in a while because the chairs in this lobby are not terribly comfortable for sleeping in. But we will stick it out until we can reach an equitable agreement for SEIU and SCTA,” Verdugo told KCRA 3.
Parent Russell Taylor said that his wife is a teacher in the district, and they have a son in the district, as well. He says they are afraid of the possibility of losing their current health care services.
“I'm terrified that, you know, the district's trying to make a lot of takebacks as far as our health care goes. And I'm terrified that we're going to lose the care that we have. What they're offering us doesn't offer a lot of services, a lot of families need,” Taylor said.
“There's teachers that are retired that are out of the area that wouldn't have access to the care that they're offering. And I'm just really worried about it,” he continued.
Latest negotiations between SCUSD and SCTA
No new progress has been made since Wednesday when the district increased its one-time stipend offer, HealthNet benefits and increased its bonus for new teachers.
SCUSD has said that its recent offer included increases in one-time stipends offered to teachers, up from 1% to 1.5% for 2019 to 2021 school years, and 3% for the 2021-22 school year, up from 2%.
In terms of health care, the district is now offering to pay 100% of an employee’s health plan for those who choose to stay with HealthNet for one year, while the district looks for an alternative plan to Kaiser. The district's offer would fund 100% of care through Kaiser.
They’ve also offered a $3,000 bonus for anyone switching to Kaiser from the more expensive HealthNet plan.
Another sticking point is staffing. The district has offered to increase the signing bonus for new teachers from $2,000 to $3,000.
In all, the district says its latest offer to the union would give a 9.65% increase in compensation via one-time stipends and an ongoing salary increase.
The teachers unions say the district is well-positioned to accommodate their wishes due to COVID-19-related funding, though the district explains those funds are "one-time funds" and are not sustainable to increase wages and salaries.
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- Tell us: SCUSD families, what are you doing with your kids during the strike?
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https://www.kcra.com/article/covid-19-aid-10-billion-dollar-package/39601210
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Bipartisan deal struck 'in principle' on $10 billion COVID-19 aid package, Romney says
Utah GOP Sen. Mitt Romney said Thursday that Republicans have struck an "agreement in principle" with Democrats on a $10 billion package to help U.S. efforts to combat the COVID-19 pandemic, a breakthrough that could pave the way for new funds to help the United States' response efforts amid growing fears that critical resources are being depleted.
Video above: Biden pushes Congress to pass urgent COVID-19 funding
Romney, the lead GOP negotiator, told reporters the plan is "entirely balanced by offsets." He said the bill text still needs to be drafted and there needs to be a cost estimate from the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office before the Senate can vote on the matter.
The Senate, as a result, scrapped Thursday afternoon's procedural vote on the issue — in order to give time for the bill's text to be drafted and for an official CBO score.
In remarks from the Senate floor, Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said negotiators are "close to a final agreement that would garner bipartisan" support.
"We are working diligently to finalize language of scoring and the final agreement on what should be funded in the final COVID package both domestic and international," Schumer said. "As a sign of good faith, and to encourage us to come to a final agreement, I will reschedule today's procedural vote to a later time."
The goal is to pass the bill next week, Romney said.
The $10 billion price tag overall is less than half of what the White House was seeking. It's also less than the $15.6 billion that had been included in the government funding bill earlier this month, but had to be scrapped after a number of House Democrats opposed the way the money had been offset.
Sen. John Thune of South Dakota, a member of GOP leadership, expressed skepticism that the package could be finished by next week.
"If there was a deal we would be voting on it ... People want to see scores and top lines and what's in it," Thune said.
Democrats also urged caution regarding progress of the talks. Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin pushed back on Senate Republicans saying that there is a "deal in principle."
"I can't go that far," he told reporters. "Schumer's just said he's still working on it."
Romney said the bill would be paid for "almost exclusively" by redirecting money from the American Rescue Plan — the law that Democrats pushed through last year. As part of the offsets, he said that they are pulling money that would have gone to states to provide grants for local businesses.
Sen. Roy Blunt, a Republican from Missouri, told reporters additional offsets would include taking money from a fund that had been intended to go to shuttered concert venues and theaters during the pandemic. He estimated there was still about $2.2 billion from that account Democrats and Republicans could re-purpose. He also said there was aviation manufacturing money from past legislation that totaled around $2 billion that could also be used.
The money is expected to go half toward therapeutics, Blunt said. He added the secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services would then have "a lot of discretion" on how to best use the other half of the funding.
Romney said there "may be $1 billion" of money to deal with global COVID-19 response efforts, even as Democrats were pushing for $5 billion in global aid.
Romney and Blunt predicted there would be "a lot more than 10" Republicans who would back it.
"I believe we get more than 10 Republicans, maybe even significantly more," Blunt said.
The announcement comes after President Joe Biden made a desperate appeal Wednesday for Congress to pass additional funding and fast.
"Congress has to provide the funding America needs to continue to fight COVID-19. We're already seeing the consequences of congressional inaction," Biden said Wednesday, adding that the administration already did not have money to purchase monoclonal antibody therapies, vaccines, and more tests.
The White House has spent weeks warning lawmakers that if Congress didn't act soon they would expire money for vaccinations, to reimburse providers and insurers for out-of-network treatment, underwrite COVID-19 testing and supply personal protective equipment.
"Congress, we need to secure additional supply now, now. We can't wait until we find ourselves in the midst of another surge to act. It will be too late. And we also need this funding to continue our efforts to vaccinate the world," Biden said.
Asked about the tentative deal Thursday, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell would only say: "We're working on it, we will get there."
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https://www.kcra.com/article/covid-19-asylum-limits-us-mexico-border-to-end/39611918
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COVID-19 asylum limits at US-Mexico border to end next month, CDC says
The Centers for Disease Control announced Friday that it is ending a policy that limited asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border to prevent the spread of COVID-19.
The use of public health powers had been widely criticized by Democrats and immigration advocates as an excuse for the United States to shirk its obligations to provide haven to people fleeing persecution. The policy went into effect under President Donald Trump in March 2020. Since then, migrants trying to enter the U.S. have been turned away more than 1.7 million times.
The policy, known as the Title 42 authority, named for a 1944 public health law to prevent communicable disease, will end on paper April 1, but it will not take effect until May 23, to allow border officials time to prepare.
"After considering current public health conditions and an increased availability of tools to fight COVID-19 (such as highly effective vaccines and therapeutics), the CDC director has determined that an order suspending the right to introduce migrants into the United States is no longer necessary," the CDC said in a statement.
The decision is expected to draw more migrants to the U.S.-Mexico border.
The Department of Homeland Security said this week that about 7,100 migrants were coming daily, compared with an average of about 5,900 a day in February — on pace to match or exceed highs from last year, 2019 and other peak periods. But border officials said they are planning for as many as 18,000 arrivals daily.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/house-passes-bill-federally-decriminalize-marijuana/39612341
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House passes bill to federally decriminalize marijuana
The House has voted with a slim bipartisan majority to federally decriminalize marijuana.
The vote was 220 to 204. Republicans Tom McClintock of California, Brian Mast and Matt Gaetz, both of Florida, joined the majority of Democrats in supporting the bill, while Democrats Henry Cuellar of Texas and Chris Pappas of New Hampshire voted against.
The bill, sponsored by Democratic Rep. Jerry Nadler of New York, will prevent federal agencies from denying federal workers security clearances for cannabis use, and will allow the Veterans' Administration to recommend medical marijuana to veterans living with posttraumatic stress disorder, plus gains revenue by authorizing a sales tax on marijuana sales.
The bill also expunges the record of people convicted of non-violent cannabis offenses, which House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said, "can haunt people of color and impact the trajectory of their lives and career indefinitely."
"It can result in difficulty finding employment, difficulty finding housing, denial of access of federal benefits, denial of financial aid at colleges and universities, and denial of the right to vote," Hoyer said. "That's why we're dealing with this."
Senate Democrats have a similar legalization bill in the upper chamber, but neither that bill nor the House-passed MORE Act is expected to clear the 60-vote threshold for passage in the Senate.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi praised the legislation during her weekly news conference Thursday, telling reporters the legislation is "consistent with what is happening in many states across the country."
"It also addresses the injustices of it because of what penalties had been before some of these, this decriminalization took place," she added. "So I'm all for it."
A similar bill was passed in December 2020, and was championed in the House by the late Rep. Don Young of Alaska, who was a co-founder of the House Cannabis Caucus, but died last month before the bill made it to the floor for another vote.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/nyc-amazon-workers-vote-to-unionize-in-historic-labor-win/39612863
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Amazon workers in NYC vote to unionize in historic labor win
Amazon workers in Staten Island, New York, voted to unionize on Friday, marking the first successful U.S. organizing effort in the retail giant’s history and handing an unexpected win to a nascent group that fueled the union drive.
Warehouse workers cast 2,654 votes — or about 55% — in favor of a union, giving the fledgling Amazon Labor Union enough support to pull off a victory. According to the National Labor Relations Board, which is overseeing the process, 2,131 workers — or 45% — rejected the union bid.
The 67 ballots that were challenged by either Amazon or the ALU were not enough to sway the outcome. Federal labor officials said the results of the count won’t be verified until they process any objections — due by April 8 — that both parties may file.
The victory was an uphill battle for the independent group, made up of former and current workers who lacked official backing from an established union and were out-gunned by the deep-pocketed retail giant. Despite obstacles, organizers believed their grassroots approach was more relatable to workers and could help them overcome where established unions have failed in the past. They were right.
Chris Smalls, a fired Amazon employee who has been leading the ALU in its fight on Staten Island, bounded out the NLRB building in Brooklyn on Friday with other union organizers, pumping their fists and jumping, chanting "ALU." They uncorked a bottle of Champagne, and Smalls hailed the victory as a call to arms for other Amazon workers across the sprawling company.
"I hope that everybody’s paying attention now because a lot of people doubted us," he said.
Smalls hopes the success in New York will embolden workers at other facilities to launch their own organizing campaigns. Even his group will soon shift their attention to a neighboring Amazon warehouse on Staten Island, where a separate union election is scheduled to be held in late April. Organizers believe Friday’s win is going to make it easier for them to win there, too.
Amazon posted a statement on its company website Friday saying that it was evaluating its options following the election and signaled it might not accept the results.
"We’re disappointed with the outcome of the election in Staten Island because we believe having a direct relationship with the company is best for our employees," the post said. "We're evaluating our options, including filing objections based on the inappropriate and undue influence by the NLRB that we and others (including the National Retail Federation and U.S. Chamber of Commerce) witnessed in this election."
Amazon has long argued that workers don't need a union because the company already provides good wages as well as benefits such as health care, 401(k) plans and a prepaid college tuition program to help grow workers' careers.
The successful union effort on Staten Island stood in contrast to the one launched in Bessemer, Alabama by the more established Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union. Workers at the warehouse there appear to have rejected a union bid but outstanding challenged ballots could change the outcome. The votes were 993-to-875 against the union. A hearing to review 416 challenged ballots is expected to begin in the next few days.
The union campaigns come at a time of widespread labor unrest at many corporations. Workers at more than 140 Starbucks locations around the country, for instance, have requested union elections and several of them have already been successful.
But Amazon has long been considered a top prize for the labor movement given the company's massive size and impact.
"We are clearly in different moment after two years of the pandemic. Something has changed in the labor landscape," said John Logan, director of labor and employment studies at San Francisco State University. "It is a potential tipping point. We knew that unions were having a moment, but this is much bigger. There is no bigger prize than organizing Amazon."
Logan said he didn’t believe either union — the national or the independent labor group — would stand a chance with Amazon but he's even more shocked that a small union would be victorious given its limited resources. The group had also filed for a union election after getting support from about 30% of the facility’s workforce, a much lower percentage than what unions usually seek.
Logan believes they won in part because Amazon workers saw the organizers as authentic. And it helped that they were in labor-friendly state, he said, adding the grassroots union's win defies traditional thinking that only national unions can take on big companies.
But the ALU might still have a fight ahead of it, according to Erin Hatton, a sociology professor at the University of Buffalo in New York.
"Getting Amazon to the bargaining table will be another feat altogether," Hatton said. "Oftentimes the union will fizzle out because the company doesn't come to the bargaining table in good faith as they're obliged to do."
Amazon has pushed back hard in the lead-up to both elections in Staten Island and Bessemer. The retail giant held mandatory meetings, where workers were told unions are a bad idea. The company also launched an anti-union website targeting workers and placed English and Spanish posters across the Staten Island facility urging them to reject the union. In Bessemer, Amazon has made some changes to but still kept a controversial U.S. Postal Service mailbox that was key in the NLRB's decision to invalidate last year's vote.
Both labor fights faced unique challenges. Alabama, for instance, is a right-to-work state that prohibits a company and a union from signing a contract that requires workers to pay dues to the union that represents them.
The union landscape in Alabama is also starkly different from New York. Last year, union members accounted for 22.2% of wage and salary workers in New York, ranked only behind Hawaii, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. That's more than double the national average of 10.3%. In Alabama, it's 5.9%.
The mostly Black workforce at the Amazon facility, which opened in 2020, mirrors the Bessemer population of more than 70% Black residents, according to the latest U.S. Census data.
Pro-union workers say they want better working conditions, longer breaks and higher wages. Regular full-time employees at the Bessemer facility earn at least $15.80 an hour, higher than the estimated $14.55 per hour on average in the city. That figure is based on an analysis of the U.S. Census Bureau’s annual median household income for Bessemer of $30,284, which could include more than one worker.
The ALU said they don’t have a demographic breakdown of the warehouse workers on Staten Island and Amazon declined to provide the information to The Associated Press, citing the union vote. Internal records leaked to The New York Times from 2019 showed more than 60% of the hourly associates at the facility were Black or Latino, while most of the managers were white or Asian.
Amazon workers there are seeking longer breaks, paid time off for injured employees and an hourly wage of $30, up from a minimum of just over $18 per hour offered by the company. The estimated average wage for the borough is $41 per hour, according to a similar U.S. Census Bureau analysis of Staten Island’s $85,381 median household income.
—
Associated Press staff writers Mae Anderson and Bobby Caina Calvan in New York contributed to this report.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/california-drought-deepens/39613552
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California is experiencing one of the driest starts to spring in decades, data showed Friday, and absent a heavy dose of April and May showers the state’s drought will deepen and that could lead to stricter rules on water use and another devastating wildfire season.New readings showed the water in California's mountain snowpack sat at 38% of average. That’s the lowest mark since the end of the last drought in 2015; only twice since 1988 has the level been lower.State officials highlighted the severity of the drought as they stood at a snow measuring station south of Lake Tahoe, where the landscape included more grass than snow. “You need no more evidence than standing here on this very dry landscape to understand some of the challenges we’re facing here in California,” said Karla Nemeth, director of the California Department of Water Resources. “All Californians need to do their part.”About a third of California’s water supply comes from the snow as it melts and trickles into rivers and reservoirs. April 1 is when the snowpack typically is at its peak and the date is used as a benchmark to predict the state's water supply in the drier, hotter spring and summer months.| STATS | California reservoirs well below averageThere's about 11 inches worth of water sitting in snow in the Sierra Nevada along California's eastern edge, according to the state Department of Water Resources. It's the lowest reading since the depth of the last drought seven years ago, when California ended winter with just 5% of the normal water levels in the mountains.The numbers mark a disappointing end to California's winter, which began with heavy December storms that put the snowpack at 160% of the average. But there has been little precipitation since Jan. 1.A storm that brought significant rain and snow to parts of the state earlier this week did little to change the course of the drought. And warmer than usual temperatures have led to the snow melting and evaporating faster than normal, state officials said.Nearly all of California and much of the U.S. West is in severe to extreme drought, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor. Last July, California Gov. Gavin Newsom asked people to cut their water use by 15% compared to 2020 levels but so far consumption is down just 6%.The persistence of the drought has prompted state officials to call on cities and other local water suppliers to step up their conservation plans. Local governments may act by further restricting when people can water their lawns and wash cars, limit the use of water for decorative or ornamental purposes and step up enforcement against people who let sprinklers run onto sidewalks or engage in other wasteful behavior.Meanwhile, federal officials announced Friday that municipal and industrial users that rely on water from the Central Valley Project will get less than planned. The project is a 400-mile system of reservoirs, canals and dams that stores and delivers water in the central part of the state.About 70 of the project's 270 contractors receive water for household and business use in the agricultural region that includes the greater Sacramento and San Francisco Bay Area. They had been told to expect 25% of their requested supply earlier this year, but the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation now says they will only get what's needed for critical activities such as drinking and bathing. A lot of urban water use goes to outdoor landscaping.Farmers who rely on water from the federal project were told earlier this year not to expect any water.
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — California is experiencing one of the driest starts to spring in decades, data showed Friday, and absent a heavy dose of April and May showers the state’s drought will deepen and that could lead to stricter rules on water use and another devastating wildfire season.
New readings showed the water in California's mountain snowpack sat at 38% of average. That’s the lowest mark since the end of the last drought in 2015; only twice since 1988 has the level been lower.
State officials highlighted the severity of the drought as they stood at a snow measuring station south of Lake Tahoe, where the landscape included more grass than snow.
“You need no more evidence than standing here on this very dry landscape to understand some of the challenges we’re facing here in California,” said Karla Nemeth, director of the California Department of Water Resources. “All Californians need to do their part.”
About a third of California’s water supply comes from the snow as it melts and trickles into rivers and reservoirs. April 1 is when the snowpack typically is at its peak and the date is used as a benchmark to predict the state's water supply in the drier, hotter spring and summer months.
| STATS | California reservoirs well below average
There's about 11 inches worth of water sitting in snow in the Sierra Nevada along California's eastern edge, according to the state Department of Water Resources. It's the lowest reading since the depth of the last drought seven years ago, when California ended winter with just 5% of the normal water levels in the mountains.
The numbers mark a disappointing end to California's winter, which began with heavy December storms that put the snowpack at 160% of the average. But there has been little precipitation since Jan. 1.
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A storm that brought significant rain and snow to parts of the state earlier this week did little to change the course of the drought. And warmer than usual temperatures have led to the snow melting and evaporating faster than normal, state officials said.
Nearly all of California and much of the U.S. West is in severe to extreme drought, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor. Last July, California Gov. Gavin Newsom asked people to cut their water use by 15% compared to 2020 levels but so far consumption is down just 6%.
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You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.
The persistence of the drought has prompted state officials to call on cities and other local water suppliers to step up their conservation plans. Local governments may act by further restricting when people can water their lawns and wash cars, limit the use of water for decorative or ornamental purposes and step up enforcement against people who let sprinklers run onto sidewalks or engage in other wasteful behavior.
Meanwhile, federal officials announced Friday that municipal and industrial users that rely on water from the Central Valley Project will get less than planned. The project is a 400-mile system of reservoirs, canals and dams that stores and delivers water in the central part of the state.
About 70 of the project's 270 contractors receive water for household and business use in the agricultural region that includes the greater Sacramento and San Francisco Bay Area. They had been told to expect 25% of their requested supply earlier this year, but the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation now says they will only get what's needed for critical activities such as drinking and bathing. A lot of urban water use goes to outdoor landscaping.
Farmers who rely on water from the federal project were told earlier this year not to expect any water.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/sacramento-river-cats-season-opener-set-for-tuesday/39613962
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WILL ALSO GO IN. >>T I ALSO TIME TO PLAY BALL. RIVERCATS OPENING NHTIG IS LESS THAN AEE WK AWAY. IN FIVE DAYS THE TEAM WILL HAVE THE FIRST GAME OF THE SEASON AGAINST THE SUGAR LAND SPACE COWB
Sacramento River Cats’ season opener set for Tuesday
It’s almost time to play ball!
Updated: 2:23 PM PDT Apr 1, 2022
It’s almost time to play ball! The Sacramento River Cats’ opening night is set for April 5. The River Cats, a Triple-A affiliate of the San Francisco Giants, will take on the Sugar Land Space Cowboys at Sutter Health Park in West Sacramento beginning at 6:35 p.m. This year the River Cats are expected to play at least 150 games, including 75 at home. The River Cats said this season there will be 25 nights that feature fireworks, and weekly promotions like “Toyota Family Value Tuesdays, Wet Nose Wednesdays, Thirsty Thursdays, Orange Fridays Presented by SMUD, Sutter Health Fireworks Saturdays, and Sunday Fundays.”Theme nights will include princess and pirate nights and a July 3 “Independence Eve Extravaganza.” Click here for more details on how to get tickets.
WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. — It’s almost time to play ball! The Sacramento River Cats’ opening night is set for April 5.
The River Cats, a Triple-A affiliate of the San Francisco Giants, will take on the Sugar Land Space Cowboys at Sutter Health Park in West Sacramento beginning at 6:35 p.m.
This year the River Cats are expected to play at least 150 games, including 75 at home.
The River Cats said this season there will be 25 nights that feature fireworks, and weekly promotions like “Toyota Family Value Tuesdays, Wet Nose Wednesdays, Thirsty Thursdays, Orange Fridays Presented by SMUD, Sutter Health Fireworks Saturdays, and Sunday Fundays.”
Theme nights will include princess and pirate nights and a July 3 “Independence Eve Extravaganza.”
Click here for more details on how to get tickets.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/weekend-train-rides-return-sacramento/39613298
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Weekend train rides return this weekend in Sacramento
A popular attraction is back starting Saturday in Sacramento – the California State Railroad Museum is hosting weekend train rides again.
There are five trains a day, starting at 10 a.m. that run every 90 minutes until 4 p.m.
People can ride in open air gondolas with bench seating, or in cushioned enclosed coach cars.
It's a six mile, 50-minute trip.
Officials say people who go will get an authentic and historic train experience.
"Everything we operate and run is vintage from either the 20s or up through the 50s and is preserved as it would have been at that time period," said Tim Schroepfer, CEO of the California State Railroad Museum Foundation.
People can also check out the museum while they grab a railroad ride.
"Come to the museum you get to learn about the history, you get to look into the past and imagine your future and then come ride the railroad, have a wonderful time with your family and feel and hear and smell what it was like for passengers back in the 20s, 30s and 40s on a railroad," Schroepfer said.
Tickets for coach are $15 for adults, $8 for kids ages 6-17, and 5 and under ride free.
First class tickets are $25 for adults and $18 for kids.
You can buy tickets here.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/10-people-accused-taking-millions-california-edd-fraud-arkansas/39613794
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10 people accused of taking millions in California EDD fraud — from Arkansas
Ten people have been indicted in Arkansas for filing $2.7 million in false claims with California’s Employment Development Department.
One person, identified as Madison Clark, worked for a contractor for Bank of America, Tele Tech, a company that helped process some of the accounts for the bank.
Clark answered consumer questions and claims for the company.
But from January through August 2021, according to a Department of Justice press release, Clark and nine others came up with a scheme to get the funds.
When a cardholder claimed a transaction was not authorized, Bank of America could give so-called provisional credit to the card in the dollar amount.
Clark allegedly accessed the bank’s systems to reissue debit cards, remove the fraud blocks, and add that provisional credit to the cards.
The cards were then used by Clark and others named in the indictment.
All ten are charged with conspiracy to commit bank fraud, as Bank of America is named as the victim in the indictment.
If convicted, they could face up to 30 years in prison.
| WATCH | KCRA 3 Investigates EDD fraud documentary Easy Money
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https://www.kcra.com/article/arabi-louisiana-tornado-maria-burke-death/39614352
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22-year-old with muscular dystrophy dies a week after being injured in Louisiana tornado
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Updated: 3:33 PM PDT Apr 1, 2022
THIS IS WDSU NEWS AT 10. IT ISAY D THREE OF RECOVERY EFFORTS IN SAINT BERNARD OF FOLLOWING THE TORNADO THAT HIT TUESDAY NIGHT TONIGHT THE STORY OF A GIRL WITH SPECIAL NEEDS WHO IS INJURED WHEN THE TWISTER. RIPPED THROUGH THEIR HEOM WDSU NEWS REPORTER SHAY O’CONNOR JOINS US LIVE FROM A DONATION DRIVE TTHA WILL TAKE PLACE TOMORROW FOR RESIDENTS LIKE THE GIRLS’ FAMILYND A OTHER FAMILIES WHO ARE IN NEED SHAY. THAT’S WHY I SELL ENGINEER THAT STUFF THE TRUCK EVENT THAT YOU WERE WE WERE TELNGLI YOU ABOUT EARLIER ACTUAYLL MADE ITS WAY HERE TO CAMP. HOPE I’M TOLD STARTING ON TOMORROW CLOTHES FOOD SUPPLIES AND OTHER ITEMS WILL BE GIVEN OUT TO PEOPLE IN NEED INCLUDING THE FAMILY. I INTERVIEWED EARLIER THE SURVIVORS WHO TELL ME THAT THEY’LL BE HERE, TOO. THE HOUSE IS FLY. YOU KNOW THAT’S COMING FOR TTHA WAY AND I MAK ITE TURN IT TOO TIGHT IN AIR A FEW THE HOUSES HERE IN THE GROUND RIGHT THERE, YOU KNOW BY THE TIME BECAUSE ME AND MY WIFE FLYLL A OVER AND THEY GO RUN IT IN A ROOM MY DAUGHTER BECAUSE I KNOW MY DAUGHTER’S TROUBLEUE TSDAY NIGHT JAMES BURKE AND HIS WIFE DAYA WERE IN THE LIVING ROOM OF THEIR HOME WATCHING TV WHENHE T EF3 TORNADO HIT LITERALLY LIFNGTI THE HOME UP FROM ITS FOUNDATION LEAVING IT ON THE THREE BURKE YSSA ONCE HE SAW HIS WIFE WAS OKAY. HIS ONLY THOUGHT WASO T CHECK ON HIS SPECIAL NEEDS DAUGHTER TOLD A LOT OF THISNG IN AROUND HER AND IT OVER HER AND THAT’S WHY I STARTED PICK HIM UP AND PULL IT UP, YOU KNOW THEIR DAUGHTER MARIA 22 YEARS OLD WASEV SERELY INJURED FROM THE TORNADO RIGHT NOW. SHE’S IN ICUT A A NEARBY HOSPITAL. MARIA HAS MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY. SHE’S BEEN IN A WHEELCHRAI SINCE VEFI YEARS OLD AND USES A VENTILATOR AND TRACHAC MHINE 24/7 JUST EAT NOW IS A RESULT OF THE TORNADO. ETH FAMILY SSAY SHE NOW ALSO HAS INTERNAL BLEEDING AND THEY THINK IT’S FROM THINGS EITHER FALLING ON HER OR THE FALL THAT SHE TOOK WITHIN YOU KNOW, THE THE BEDROOM. THEY HAVEN’T YET FIGURED OUT WHY HER LEG IS HURTING HER FAMILY SAYS SHE’S ALREADY HAD TO HAVE SURGERY SINCE TUESDAY NIGHT SEVERE WEATHER AND HER LEFT LUNG WAS INJURED. THANKFULLY SHE’S ALERT ANDIT WH YOU KNOW HER CONDITION THAT SHE HAS IT’S VERY VERY DANROGEUS, IT’SOU Y KNOW, LIFE-THREATENING FRIDAY HER MOM AND DAD WERE OUT AT WHAT USEDO TE B THEIR HOME ALONG PROSPERITY ASSESSING THE DAMAGE AND SALVAGING THEIR CLOTHES. DESPITE IT. ALL JAMES SS,AY HE’S COUNTING HIS BLESSINGS. I BELIEVE THAT GOSH THEY WOULD ALWAYS YOU KNOW, IT JUST NO QUESTION ABOUT IT. I’M TOLD THAT MIAAR IS ON THE TRACK TO HEALING BUT EVEN BEFORE SHE CAN COME BACK HOME. SHE’LL NEED SOME MACHINES MACHINES THAT WERE ACTUALLY LOST DURING THE TORNADO LIKE A VENTILATOR SO TO FIND OUT HOW YOU CAN HELP MARIA AND HER FAMILY, PLEASE VISIT OUR WEBSITE WDSU.COM REPORNGTI L
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22-year-old with muscular dystrophy dies a week after being injured in Louisiana tornado
A woman with muscular dystrophy who was injured during a tornado in New Orleans last week has died, according to her family. Maria Burke and her parents were inside their home when it was lifted from its foundation and carried into the street. According to Maria's family, she was supposed to be discharged from the hospital Thursday, but her condition worsened on Wednesday. Maria died on Wednesday after dealing with issues with her lungs and internal bleeding since the tornado, according to the family. Maria had used a wheelchair since she was 5 years old and used a ventilator and trach machine to breathe.Maria's family spoke with New Orleans sister station WDSU about the night that she was hurt during the tornado. Maria's family said that due to her muscular dystrophy, the injuries she sustained during the storm were very dangerous.
NEW ORLEANS —
A woman with muscular dystrophy who was injured during a tornado in New Orleans last week has died, according to her family.
Maria Burke and her parents were inside their home when it was lifted from its foundation and carried into the street.
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According to Maria's family, she was supposed to be discharged from the hospital Thursday, but her condition worsened on Wednesday.
Maria died on Wednesday after dealing with issues with her lungs and internal bleeding since the tornado, according to the family.
Maria had used a wheelchair since she was 5 years old and used a ventilator and trach machine to breathe.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/migrants-march-from-mexico-as-us-lifts-covid-ban/39612202
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Migrants march from south Mexico during annual protest as US lifts COVID-19 restrictions
Some 500 migrants from Central America, Venezuela and elsewhere fought with Mexican police, National Guard and immigration officers in southern Mexico Friday in one of the first such marches this year.
The migrants described the march as a traditional annual protest related to Holy Week, and those at the front carried a white cross, as others have done in previous years.
However, this year the protest came two weeks early and some participants said they would go far beyond the usual short march and try to reach the U.S. border.
In a clash with National Guard officers and immigration agents, the migrants used the cross they were carrying as a battering ram to break through the Guard lines, shattering the wooden cross.
The officers, who had riot shields, batons and what appeared to be an irritant spray, detained some marchers. The two sides exchanged blows and many migrants left behind knapsacks in the melee.
Some managed to break through and disappear down dirt roads and paths, but many of the rest of the marchers took refuge in a church just a few miles outside of Tapachula.
The migrants set out from the southern Mexico city of Tapachula, near the border with Guatemala, early Friday. Migrants have complained they have been essentially confined to Tapachula by the slow processing of their asylum cases and that they are unable to find work in the border state of Chiapas that would allow them to support their families.
“They are practically holding us prisoners; they do not allow us to leave this state because we are not regularized here," said Venezuelan migrant Noreydi Chávez. "They require us to get a visa, but we never get any answers. We fill out paperwork, but they never process it."
Reynaldo Bello, a migrant from Peru, joined the march with his wife and baby because the family had been living in a park and going hungry while waiting for their immigration paperwork to be processed.
The march came as the administration of U.S. President Joe Biden announced it would end a policy that allows turning back asylum seekers on grounds of protecting the country against the coronavirus pandemic.
Migrants have been expelled more than 1.7 million times from the U.S. under the policy, known as Title 42 for a public health law, which was invoked in March 2020.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control said Friday it would end the authority effective May 23.
Near the height of the omicron variant in late January, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had extended the order to this week.
Luis García Villagrán, an immigration activist with the Center for Human Dignification, said Mexican immigration authorities had largely shut off most visa processes in Tapachula and told migrants the only path to regularize their stay in Mexico was through the much lengthier procedure of applying for asylum or refugee status.
A migrant march in the same area was broken up in January, and similar efforts were dissolved by police and immigration agents in 2021 and 2020. The marches are significantly smaller than caravans in 2018 and 2019 that brought thousands of migrants to the U.S. border.
The caravans began several years ago as a way for migrants who did not have the money to pay smugglers to take advantage of safety in numbers as they moved toward the U.S. border. However, Guatemala and Mexico became more aggressive in breaking up the caravans.
The Mexican government has tried to appease the United States by stopping caravans of walking migrants and allowing reinstatement of the so-called “Remain in Mexico” policy.
But Mexico has been unable to stanch the flood of migrants stuffed by the hundreds into trucks operated by smugglers who charge thousands of dollars to take them to the U.S. border, trips that all too often turn deadly.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/vehicle-mpg-requirement-by-2026/39614086
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New vehicles must average 40 mpg by 2026, up from 28 mpg
New vehicles sold in the U.S. will have to average at least 40 miles per gallon of gasoline in 2026, up from about 28 mpg, under new federal rules unveiled Friday that undo a rollback of standards enacted under President Donald Trump.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said its new fuel economy requirements are the strongest to date and the maximum the industry can achieve over the time period. They will reduce gasoline consumption by more than 220 billion gallons over the life of vehicles, compared with the Trump standards.
They're expected to decrease carbon dioxide emissions — but not as much as some environmentalists want — and raise new vehicle prices in an industry already pressed by inflation and supply chain issues.
For the current model year, standards enacted under Trump require the fleet of new vehicles to get just under 28 miles per gallon in real-world driving. The new requirements increase gas mileage by 8% per year for model years 2024 and 2025 and 10% in the 2026 model year.
Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, whose department includes NHTSA, said the rules also will help strengthen national security by making the country less dependent on foreign oil and less vulnerable to volatile gasoline prices. Gasoline nationwide has spiked to an average of more than $4.22 per gallon, with much of the increase coming since Russia, a major oil producer, invaded Ukraine in late February. It cost $2.88 per gallon just a year ago, according to AAA.
Gas prices also have helped to fuel inflation to a 40-year high, eating up household budgets and hitting President Joe Biden's approval ratings.
"Transportation is the second-largest cost for American families, only behind housing," Buttigieg said. The new standards, he said, will help keep the U.S. more secure and preserve "the freedom of our country to chart its future without being subject to other countries and to the decisions that are being made in the boardrooms of energy companies."
But auto dealers say more stringent requirements drive up prices and push people out of an already expensive new-car market. NHTSA projects that the new rules will raise the price of a new vehicle in the 2029 model year by $1,087.
Trump's administration rolled back fuel economy standards, allowing them to rise 1.5% per year, which environmental groups said was inadequate to limit planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions that fuel climate change. The standards had been rising about 5% per year previously.
But the new standards won't immediately match those adopted through 2025 under President Barack Obama. NHTSA officials said they will equal the Obama standards by 2025 and slightly exceed them for the 2026 model year.
The Obama-era standards automatically adjusted for changes in the type of vehicles people are buying. When they were enacted in 2012, 51% of new vehicle sales were cars and 49% SUVs and trucks. Last year, 77% of new vehicle sales were SUVs and trucks, which generally are less efficient than cars.
Some environmental groups said the new requirements from NHTSA under Biden don't go far enough to fight global warming. Others supported the new standards as a big step toward reducing emissions, with the American Lung Association calling for even stronger standards to drive a transition to all new vehicles having zero emissions by 2035.
"Climate change has gotten much worse, but these rules only require automakers to reduce gas-guzzling slightly more than they agreed to cut nine years ago," said Dan Becker, director of the Safe Climate Transport Center at the Center for Biological Diversity.
Officials said that under the new standards, owners would save about $1,400 in gasoline costs during the lifetime of a 2029 model year vehicle. Carbon dioxide emissions would drop by 2.5 billion metric tons by 2050 under the standards, the NHTSA said.
Automakers are investing billions of dollars to develop and build electric vehicles but say government support is needed to get people to buy them. The companies want government tax credits to reduce prices as well as more money for EV charging stations to ease anxiety over running out of juice.
John Bozzella, CEO of the Alliance for Automotive Innovation, a large industry trade group, said increased regulations will require supportive government policies. Regulators should consider safety, consumer buying preferences, improved fuel economy and the transition to electric vehicles, he said in a statement.
NHTSA sets fuel economy requirements, while the Environmental Protection Agency develops limits on greenhouse gas emissions. NHTSA officials said their requirements nearly match rules adopted in December by the EPA, so automakers don't have to comply with two rules.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/fact-check-scta-unions-claim-of-teachers-being-forced-to-pay-dollar12k-more/39614528
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Fact Check: SCTA union's claim of teachers being ‘forced’ to pay $12K more
A major sticking point between the Sacramento City Unified School District and the Sacramento City Teachers Association is health care.
A major sticking point between the Sacramento City Unified School District and the Sacramento City Teachers Association is health care.
A major sticking point between the Sacramento City Unified School District and the Sacramento City Teachers Association is health care.
Sacramento City Unified students are out of the classroom for an eighth day on Friday as the teacher strike grinds on.
A major sticking point between the district and the Sacramento City Teachers Association is health care. KCRA 3 Investigates has been digging into claims from the district and the unions.
Currently, the district is offering to cover 100% of the cost of Kaiser Permanente health care coverage. For employees who choose to keep HealthNet coverage, the district will pay up to the Kaiser premium level.
Previously, the district paid for 100% of HealthNet costs. That means for teachers who choose to keep the plan, they could end up paying more going forward if they don't make the switch.
“Bottom line, we just cannot accept that any teacher right now in this shortage would be forced to pay up to $12,000 more than they have in the past,” SCTA President David Fisher told KCRA 3.
How does California's Office of the Patient Advocate rate both plans?
Fisher told KCRA that some employees are hesitant to switch to Kaiser because the system doesn’t have as many specialists.
We checked with the California Office of the Patient Advocate. The agency rates health plans and medical groups for Californians.
In its Health Plan Report Card for 2021-22, Kaiser scored higher or equal for overall quality of medical care, along with care for asthma, lung disease, diabetes, heart, maternity, behavioral and mental health. HealthNet scored higher for how patients rated overall experience.
What's the difference in cost between HealthNet and Kaiser?
The difference in cost to the district between the HealthNet plan and a Kaiser plan for a family is $12,139.92, according to SCUSD.
As part of its negotiations, SCUSD is now offering to pay for 100% of the difference between Kaiser and HealthNet rates for 2022-23. That would change to 50% of the difference for the 2023-24 school year.
SCUSD is also offering a $3,000 stipend for employees who switch from HealthNet to Kaiser.
And again, SCUSD will pay 100% of the Kaiser plan.
How many employees are on HealthNet now?
The district says there are 941 certificated staff enrolled now at HealthNet, representing about 43% of SCTA members.
Asked why this has been a big sticking point when the majority of union members aren't on the HealthNet plan, Fisher said that the other teachers "are not going to sell out the other 43%."
| RELATED | Fact Check: Sacramento City Unified teachers aren’t the highest paid, but health benefits top the list
--Daniel Macht contributed to this story.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/jacksonville-kidnapping-child-dies/39614716
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Florida 5-year-old dies after alleged kidnapper leads cops on chase, crashes into pond
A 5-year-old died Thursday night as authorities pursued a kidnapping suspect in Jacksonville, Florida.
First Coast News reports a woman armed with a knife abducted the girl around 8 a.m.
The driver and alleged kidnapper has been identified by police as Pamela Tereza Cabrera, 32.
The Jacksonville Sheriff's Office said Cabrera and the child knew each other, but their exact relationship is unclear.
An officer responding to the scene spotted a vehicle driven by Cabrera that matched the description of the suspect and a high-speed chase ensued, spanning 30 miles. According to News4Jax, speeds reached 90 mph.
Authorities say Cabrera tried to exit but crashed into a retention pond.
Officers jumped into the water, pulling Cabrera from the water and took her to the hospital.
Crews could not locate the child. A dive team came out to help.
"The child was, unfortunately, located at the bottom of the pond, deceased," Officer Christian Hancock said.
Hancock said Cabrera will be arrested and charged with traffic homicide.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/will-smith-resigns-from-academy-membership/39614596
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Will Smith resigns from film academy over Chris Rock slap
Will Smith resigned Friday from the motion picture academy following his Oscars night slap of Chris Rock and said he would accept any further punishment the organization imposed.
Smith in a statement released Friday afternoon said he will "fully accept any and all consequences for my conduct. My actions at the 94th Academy Awards presentation were shocking, painful, and inexcusable."
Film academy president David Rubin said Smith's resignation was accepted. "We will continue to move forward with our disciplinary proceedings against Mr. Smith for violations of the Academy's Standards of Conduct, in advance of our next scheduled board meeting on April 18."
"I betrayed the trust of the Academy. I deprived other nominees and winners of their opportunity to celebrate and be celebrated for their extraordinary work," his statement said. "I am heartbroken. I want to put the focus back on those who deserve attention for their achievements and allow the Academy to get back to the incredible work it does to support creativity and artistry in film.
"Change takes time and I am committed to doing the work to ensure that I never again allow violence to overtake reason," Smith concluded in the statement.
The resignation came two days after the academy's leadership board met to initiate disciplinary proceedings against Smith for violations against the group's standards of conduct.
On Sunday, Smith strode from his front-row Dolby Theatre seat onto the stage and smacked Rock, who had made a joke at the expense of Smith's wife, Jada Pinkett Smith. Moments later, he went on to win the best actor award for his role in "King Richard."
Rock, who was about to present Oscar for best documentary, declined to file charges when asked by police. He has only briefly addressed the attack publicly, saying at one comedy concert in Boston this week that he was still "kind of processing what happened."
Smith shocked the theater crowd and viewers at home when he took the stage after Rock joked: "Jada, I love you. 'G.I. Jane 2,' can't wait to see it."
Pinkett Smith, who suffers from the hair loss condition alopecia, had a closely shaved head similar to that of Demi Moore in the original movie.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/authorities-investigate-bomb-threat-south-sacramento-sams-club/39614815
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Authorities investigate bomb threat at south Sacramento Sam's Club
Authorities investigate bomb threat at south Sacramento Sam's Club
THIS IS KCRA 3 NEWST A 6:00 P.M. GULSTAN: AND THANKS FOR JOINING US AT 6:00 P.M. THAT BREAKING NEWS COMING OUT OF SOUTH SACRAMENTO, WHERE A SAM'S CLUB HAS BEEN SURROUNDED BY SHERIFFS PATROL VEHICLES. WEAVE H SEEN AT LEAST 10 OF THESE SHERIFFS UNITS, WE HAVE SEEN SOME CRIME TAPE, AS WE GET A LOOK HERE FROM LIVE COPTER 3, A LOOK YOU'LL ONLY SEE HERE ON KCRA 3. AND EDIE, I LTOOKS RIGHT NOW, USUALLY, AS YOU KNOW, I MEAN, THESE SAM'S CLUBS ARE JAMMING DURING A FRIDAY AND THE PARKING LOT IS ETYMP RIGHT NOW. EDIE: WE'RE NOT SEEING A LOT OF CARS THERE AT THIS POINT. WE CAN ALSO TELL THINK IS THE SAM'S CLUB THAT IS JUST EAST OF HIGHWAY 99 NORTH OF CALVINE ROAD AND SO AGAIN, WE HAVE CALLSN I TO THE SHERIFFS DEPARTMENT TO FIND OUT MORE INFORMATION ABOUT EXACTLY WHAT'S GOING ON THERE, BUT WITH THAT KIND OF POLICE PRESENCE, WE WANTED TO MAKE SURE WE LET TURLIN KNOW THAT -- WE LET YOU KNOW THAT THERE'S SOMETHING TO AT LEAST WARRAN
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Authorities investigate bomb threat at south Sacramento Sam's Club
A Sam's Club in south Sacramento has been evacuated as authorities investigate a bomb threat.It happened at the Sam's Club on Power Inn Road, the Sacramento County Sheriff's Office said. Two K-9 units are helping in the search for explosives.Authorities are asking people to avoid the area as they investigate. The California Highway Patrol is helping with traffic control.LiveCopter 3 footage shows a large police presence in the parking lot. No other details were released.This is a developing story, stay with KCRA 3 for the latest.
SACRAMENTO, Calif. —
A Sam's Club in south Sacramento has been evacuated as authorities investigate a bomb threat.
It happened at the Sam's Club on Power Inn Road, the Sacramento County Sheriff's Office said.
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Two K-9 units are helping in the search for explosives.
Authorities are asking people to avoid the area as they investigate. The California Highway Patrol is helping with traffic control.
LiveCopter 3 footage shows a large police presence in the parking lot.
This content is imported from Twitter.
You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.
No other details were released.
This is a developing story, stay with KCRA 3 for the latest.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/former-us-womens-national-team-goalkeeper-arrested-on-dwi-child-abuse-charges/39613862
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Former U.S. women’s national team goalkeeper arrested on DWI, child abuse charges
Former U.S. women’s national team star goalkeeper Hope Solo was arrested after she was found passed out behind the wheel of a vehicle in North Carolina with her 2-year-old twins inside, police said.
A police report said Solo was arrested on Thursday in a shopping center parking lot in Winston-Salem and charged with driving while impaired, resisting a public officer and misdemeanor child abuse. She has been released from jail and has a court date of June 28, the report indicated.
According to an arrest warrant, a passerby noticed Solo passed out behind the steering wheel for more than an hour with the vehicle's engine running and the two children in the backseat. A responding officer could smell alcohol, and the warrant said that Solo refused a field sobriety test and her blood was drawn instead.
Rich Nichols, a Texas-based attorney who represents Solo, released a statement Friday but didn't respond to specific questions on the charges and said his client wouldn't respond, either.
“On the advice of counsel, Hope can’t speak about this situation, but she wants everyone to know that her kids are her life, that she was released immediately and is now at home with her family, that the story is more sympathetic than the initial charges suggest, and that she looks forward to her opportunity to defend these charges,” Nichols said.
Solo was dismissed from the national team following the 2016 Olympics in Brazil after calling the Swedish team “cowards” for taking a defensive stance against the defending gold medalists, ending a laudable playing career that was also marred by controversy.
She was suspended for 30 days in early 2015 after she and husband Jerramy Stevens were pulled over in a U.S. Soccer-owned van and Stevens was charged with DUI. She was also benched after publicly questioning coach Greg Ryan’s decision to start Briana Scurry against Brazil during the 2007 World Cup, comments many saw as a slight against Scurry.
Solo was also involved in an altercation with family members in 2014 that resulted in Solo’s arrest, although charges in that case were eventually dropped.
Solo made 202 appearances with the national team, with 153 wins and an international-record 102 shutouts. She won a World Cup title and two Olympic gold medals with the team.
During the 2015 World Cup championship run, she allowed just three goals in seven games with five shutouts.
She was elected to the U.S. Soccer Hall of Fame in January. The induction ceremony is set for May 21.
Solo married Stevens, a former tight end for the Seattle Seahawks and Tampa Bay Buccaneers, in 2012. The couple have twins, Vittorio Genghis and Lozen Orianna Judith Stevens, born on March 4, 2020.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/modesto-residents-could-face-fines-water-waste-under-new-restrictions/39614747
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Modesto residents could face up to $500 fines for water waste under new restrictions
Stricter watering restrictions are now in effect in the city of Modesto. Ongoing water waste may lead to fines of up to $500 per incident, as the state copes with an ongoing drought.
A city spokeswoman told KCRA 3 the restrictions which were implemented on Friday are due to 30-percent cutbacks to treated surface water in Modesto. This means odd numbered addresses water on Wednesdays, Fridays and Sundays. Even numbered addresses water on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sundays. Under the restrictions, no one is allowed to water Monday and daily from 12 to 7 pm.
The restrictions also impact washing vehicles.
“Car washing will be permitted during outside of the prohibited hours with a positive shutoff nozzle. Hosing of the sidewalks will be permitted if done for health reasons, for maintenance or for construction. Residents are encouraged to reduce the amount of runoff,” the city said in an email.
Modesto resident Brittany Duran said it makes sense, but wonders why much of the region’s water is continually sent to Southern California.
“It makes sense because I think we are in a drought, I get it, we haven't had a lot of rain like we used to that we need,” Duran said. “But also we send water elsewhere that we probably shouldn't because it's our water, we need it here."
The restrictions come the same day that officials trekked into remote survey sites across the Sierra to record the snow depth, and more importantly, the water content of the Sierra snowpack – where California gets a large majority of its water. New readings showed the water in the snowpack sat at 38% of average. That’s the lowest mark since the end of the last drought in 2015; only twice since 1988 has the level been lower.
| WATCH BELOW | California drought deepens as wet season is anything but
The city spokeswoman said Modesto strives to educate the community so more water may be saved. There are also “robust water conservation rebate program” for residents who opt-in to install water conservation measures at their home and property.
However, for anyone who waters outside hours, a warning will be first given. Then, if restrictions are continuously ignored, that’s when the citations will be issued.
Lodi and Tracy also have restrictions in place. Stockton does not.
The Modesto city spokeswoman added that if the drought continues then stricter restrictions may be added.
-The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/some-401-k-s-will-soon-let-you-invest-in-crypto/39609687
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Some 401(k)s will soon let you invest in crypto
Curious about cryptocurrencies? Some employers may soon offer you the option to invest in bitcoin and other digital currencies through your 401(k).
There is increasing discussion at financial service firms about how they could best provide a relatively safe crypto option in 401(k)s and other employer-sponsored retirement plans.
For instance, Fidelity Investments, one of the largest plan providers, is seeing growing interest in the idea from plan sponsors. "We believe retirement investors increasingly view digital assets, and bitcoin in particular, as an investment worthy of consideration for long-term investing," said Dave Gray, Fidelity's head of workplace products and platforms.
But many plans are not there yet. The Plan Sponsor Council of America recently asked its members — employers that sponsor a qualified savings plan — if they were or are considering adding crypto to their menu of investment choices. Only about 2% said yes. "Plan sponsors are overwhelmingly not considering, and will not consider, cryptocurrency a prudent investment option in a retirement plan," the organization said.
That question was asked soon after a March 10 blog post from an official at the U.S. Department of Labor was published, warning fiduciaries "to exercise extreme caution" before adding a cryptocurrency option to their plans. The Labor Department oversees employer retirement plans to ensure they meet minimum standards of protection for plan participants set by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, or ERISA.
"At this early stage in the history of cryptocurrencies ... [the DOL] has serious concerns about plans' decisions to expose participants to direct investments in cryptocurrencies or related products, such as NFTs, coins, and crypto assets," wrote Ali Khawar, acting head of the DOL's Employee Benefits Security Administration.
While the DOL did not explicitly ban plans from doing so, it said it will investigate any plans offering crypto or related products. "The plan fiduciaries ... should expect to be questioned about how they can square their actions with their duties of prudence and loyalty in light of the risks described above."
If your plan ever does offer crypto, which is an extremely volatile asset class, you might want to proceed with caution. Taking risk, of course, is necessary to generate growth in your retirement savings over time. But you also need to make sure your nest egg is not so exposed to a high-risk asset that your hard-earned savings are at risk of getting wiped out. The risk you take has to be balanced with your time horizon, your risk tolerance and a risk-return analysis of the assets you choose.
One option will soon come to market
A small player in the 401(k) provider universe — ForUsAll — said it will be launching a cryptocurrency investment option for clients in the second quarter of this year.
ForUsAll, which primarily services small- to mid-size employers, said over 120 of its 400 clients to date have signed up for the new option, which will be available to participants through a self-directed account on Coinbase.
While there is extreme volatility in cryptocurrencies and a risk of theft and loss in that space, ForUsAll believes the guardrails it is placing around its crypto option will comply with ERISA standards and allay the Labor Department's concerns.
For instance, participants may only invest 5% of their current 401(k) balance and 5% of their contributions going forward (as well as 5% of their employer matches) to their crypto account. Participants will get automatic notices whenever the value of their crypto investments exceed 5% of their total 401(k) portfolio. But it will be up to them to decide whether to reallocate.
However, before opening an account, participants must go through ForUsAll's educational materials about crypto investing and take an interactive quiz to demonstrate that they understand its risks and the importance of not taking excessive bets on crypto with their retirement savings, ForUsAll Chief Investment Officer David Ramirez said.
What's more, they will only be able to select from a curated list of cryptocurrencies vetted by ForUsAll to ensure they are of institutional investing quality. "There will be nothing overly speculative, such as meme coins like Doge or Shiba Inu," said Ramirez.
He admits a crypto option may not be right for every employer plan.
"For employers that don't have employees who are sufficiently sophisticated investors, this may not be appropriate," he said.
But for those that do, ForUsAll believes its crypto option will provide individuals a safer way to invest in a space where institutions and finance professionals are already investing for both diversification and growth potential.
"It's designed to be a lot easier to invest in crypto currencies prudently," Ramirez said.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/federal-judge-finds-orr-violated-rights-immigrant-children-custody/39614831
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Federal judge finds Office of Refugee Resettlement violated rights of immigrant children in custody
UC Davis Immigration Law Clinic joins class-action lawsuit to protect rights of immigrant children in federal custody.
UC Davis Immigration Law Clinic joins class-action lawsuit to protect rights of immigrant children in federal custody.
UC Davis Immigration Law Clinic joins class-action lawsuit to protect rights of immigrant children in federal custody.
Three organizations, including the UC Davis Immigration Law Clinic are demanding the U.S. Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) make immediate changes as they work to make progress for the rights of immigrant children in federal custody.
The organizations sought a class-action lawsuit [Lucas R. v. Azar] against the U.S. government in 2018. The case alleges the ORR, which is responsible for the custody and release of unaccompanied immigrant children, violated the rights of the children in federal custody, as ordered by the 1997 Flores settlement agreement.
The allegations against ORR include:
- Prolonged detention of some children on grounds that their parents or other guardians were unfit, while not granting either parties opportunities to be heard.
- ORR stepping up children to restrictive placements without granting an appeals process.
Several children mentioned in the suit spent months in medium-secure facilities. Data from November 2017 to March 2020 suggested an average stay of more than 183 days in those facilities, versus an average of 52.6 days in shelter facilities.
After that, the average length of time in ORR custody before their release was the following:
- 176.5 days for minors who spent time in a staff-secure facility
- 185.9 days for minors who spent time in a juvenile detention center
- 236.3 days for minors who spent time in an RTC
- 246.3 days for minors who spent time in a therapeutic staff-secure facility
- 327.2 days for minors who spent time in OON placements
At least one minor was in congregate care for more than four years (1,570 days).
"That's particularly harmful to minors because there are specific processes that are intended to benefit minors who may have been abused, abandoned or neglected by one or both of their parents in their country of origin," said Brian López, an immigration attorney in Sacramento.
The federal judge found that ORR's policy of moving children to restrictive facilities, including juvenile detention centers, without an appeals process negatively impacted their mental health.
The Office of Refugee Resettlement will now have to provide "clear and convincing" data when deciding to send a minor to a more restrictive placement.
López adds that through this class-action suit, kids will have an opportunity to challenge determinations that were made by ORR and which could result in prolonged detentions.
Per the order, family members – including siblings, aunts, uncles, and grandparents – of immigrant children will also be able to appeal denied sponsorship applications and be represented by counsel.
"Hopefully, this means that they're going to have more access to resources that will help them come out of immigration detention facilities," López said.
Both parties were ordered to submit a proposed preliminary injunction by Friday, April 1, 2022. They're also negotiating two remaining claims, which are set for trial on Nov. 1, 2022.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/gamestop-wants-to-make-shares-more-affordable-for-meme-stock-lovers/39609906
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GameStop wants to make shares more affordable for meme stock lovers
The "apes" bullish on GameStop may soon be able to buy their favorite stock at a much lower price.
The meme darling of the Reddit crowd wants to initiate a stock split, a move that will drastically reduce the cost of one share, the company said late Thursday in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing.
To do so, GameStop will have to ask shareholders at its upcoming annual meeting for approval to increase the number of its class A shares from 300 million to 1 billion.
If investors say yes, a single share will become much cheaper — because the total value of the company stays the same. It's just divided across more shares. Shares of GameStop initially rallied on the news but they finished Friday down 1%, lowering their year-to-date gain to 11%.
Stock splits are a popular move for some companies whose shares rise to high prices, and they make it easier for smaller investors to buy in. Amazon and Google owner Alphabet, whose shares are trading in the quadruple digits, both recently announced stock split plans. And Tesla, which split its stock in August 2020, is considering another split now that its stock is back above $1,000 a share.
GameStop is trading at about $164 a share. Based on that current price, an individual share should cost about one-third less — or around $50 — after a split because GameStop is looking to multiply the number of its shares by 3.33.
The company has been busy making moves that investors are closely watching. GameStop chairman Ryan Cohen, a co-founder of online pets supplies retailer Chewy, recently bought more shares. Gamestop has also been making investments in NFTs and other cryptocurrency and blockchain initiatives, and it recently hired two former Amazon executives to serve as its CEO and chief financial officer.
Several other meme stocks dipped Friday despite the GameStop split news. Shares of movie theater chain AMC were down about 5% in late morning trading. So was the stock of Hycroft Mining, a small gold and silver miner that has surged after AMC bought a stake in it.
Shares of Bed Bath & Beyond, another retailer that Cohen has recently invested in, fell slightly too.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/sarah-palin-announces-run-in-alaska-us-house-race/39614832
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Sarah Palin announces run in Alaska US House race
Sarah Palin on Friday shook up an already unpredictable race for Alaska's lone U.S. House seat, filing paperwork to join a field of at least 40 candidates seeking to fill the seat that had been held for 49 years by the late-U.S. Rep. Don Young, who died last month.
Related video above: Sarah Palin resumes court battle with Times after COVID-19
Palin filed paperwork Friday with a Division of Elections office in Wasilla, said Tiffany Montemayor, a division spokesperson. The paperwork was being processed by the division, she said.
The field includes current and former state legislators and a North Pole city council member named Santa Claus. The deadline to file was 5 p.m. Friday. A final list of official candidates was not yet available.
“Public service is a calling, and I would be honored to represent the men and women of Alaska in Congress, just as Rep. Young did for 49 years,” Palin said in a statement on social media. “I realize that I have very big shoes to fill, and I plan to honor Rep. Young’s legacy by offering myself up in the name of service to the state he loved and fought for, because I share that passion for Alaska and the United States of America.”
Palin is a former Alaska governor and was the 2008 Republican vice presidential nominee. She has kept a low profile in Alaska politics since leaving office in 2009, before her term as governor ended.
Young, a Republican, had held Alaska's House seat since 1973 and was seeking reelection at the time of his death last month at age 88.
A special primary is set for June 11. The top four vote-getters will advance to an Aug. 16 special election in which ranked choice voting will be used, a process in line with a new elections system approved by voters in 2020.
The winner will serve the remainder of Young's term, which expires in January. The division is targeting Sept. 2 to certify the special election.
Others who filed Friday include Republican state Sen. Josh Revak; Democratic state Rep. Adam Wool; independent Al Gross, an orthopedic surgeon who unsuccessfully ran for U.S. Senate in 2020; and Andrew Halcro, a former Republican state lawmaker who is running as an independent. They join a field that includes Republican Nick Begich, who had positioned himself as a challenger to Young; Democrat Christopher Constant, an Anchorage Assembly member; and John Coghill, a Republican former state lawmaker.
Revak, who previously worked for Young's office and was a statewide co-chair for Young's reelection bid, said he felt a “strong calling and a duty" to step forward.
He said he was “heartbroken” by the filing timeline, coinciding with a period he said should be focused on remembering Young.
Young lied in state at the U.S. Capitol on Tuesday. A public memorial was held in the Washington, D.C.-area on Wednesday and a public memorial is planned in Anchorage on Saturday.
Revak said he also plans to run in the regular primary for U.S. House. Palin filed paperwork to run in the special and regular primaries as well, Montemayor said.
The August special election will coincide with the regular primary. The regular primary and November general election will determine who represents Alaska in the House for a two-year term starting in January.
Gross also plans to run in both the special and regular elections. His campaign announced a leadership team that includes several Republicans and independents, as well as Democrats, including former Gov. Tony Knowles.
“We are building a campaign that embodies all of Alaska,” Gross said in a statement.
Wool said he has privately discussed a run for years. He said he looked at the candidates running in the special primary and “wasn't that impressed. Many of them have never won an election, don't have any statewide recognition and politically aren't aligned certainly not with me or what I would think the majority of Alaskans are looking for.”
Wool, from Fairbanks, said he considers himself moderate. He said he has yet to decide whether to run in the regular primary.
Halcro, who has a podcast on which he talks politics, said during the campaign he plans to play up his intent to only run to fill the remainder of the term. He said if the person who wins the special election also is in the November general election, he expects they would spend a fair amount of time campaigning. He said if elected, he would be focused on congressional work.
Meanwhile, a man who years ago legally changed his name to Santa Claus and serves on the North Pole city council also filed with the state Division of Elections for the special primary. Claus, who said he has a “strong affinity” for Bernie Sanders, is running as an independent.
He said he is not soliciting or raising money. He said the new elections process “gives people like me an opportunity, without having to deal with parties, to throw our hat in the ring.”
“I do have name recognition,” he said with a laugh.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/south-carolina-women-advance-to-title-game/39614918
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South Carolina women top Louisville, advance to title game
Aliyah Boston had 23 points and 18 rebounds to back up her AP National Player of the Year award and carry South Carolina to the NCAA championship game with a 72-59 victory over Louisville in the semifinals on Friday night.
Brea Beal matched her season high with 12 points and helped hold Cardinals star Hailey Van Lith to nine points on 4-for-11 shooting as the Gamecocks (34-2) delivered another stifling defensive performance.
The Dawn Staley-led Gamecocks will face the Connecticut-Stanford winner on Sunday night at Target Center. Staley will try to win her second national championship, eight months after the Hall of Famer led the U.S. Olympic team to a gold medal in the Tokyo Games.
“You see happy tears, happy tears, right now,” Boston said in her postgame TV interview. “I’m just thanking God we have one more game.”
Destanni Henderson scored 11 points with 3-for-6 shooting from 3-point range and had four assists for South Carolina, which improved to 13-0 this season against AP-ranked opponents.
“Just going to live in the moment for right now,” Henderson said.
Emily Engstler led Louisville with 18 points and nine rebounds as the Cardinals went 1 for 8 from 3-point range and were never able to find a rhythm in the half court against the No. 1 overall seed in this tournament.
Kianna Smith and Olivia Cochran each scored 14 points for the Cardinals (29-5), who were the only team in this Final Four without a title. This was their fourth trip to the national semifinals in coach Jeff Walz's 15 seasons.
“I've never been prouder of a group,” Walz said. “They've absolutely been a joy to coach.”
The Cardinals, one of the three No. 1 seeds in this Final Four, made it out of the Wichita Region without any trouble. Van Lith, the relentless sophomore guard with the perpetually flopping blond pigtails, hit the 20-point mark in each of their first four tournament games.
Van Lith met her match with Beal, who had a four-inch height advantage and shadowed her all over the court as she often does to the opponent’s most dangerous player. Van Lith, whose first basket came on a knifing drive for a layup with 1:43 left in the second quarter, had two jumpers blocked by Beal and three turnovers in the first half.
The Gamecocks, who were the wire-to-wire No. 1 team in the AP poll this season, squeezed their first four tournament opponents in the Greensboro Region to a bleak average of 41.2 points on their way to a fourth Final Four in the last seven years.
Engstler, the tough-as-nails transfer from Syracuse, helped Louisville keep Boston from getting too comfortable in the paint while Olivia Cochran helped with the muscle. Physical play can come with a price, though, and with 4.2 seconds left in the third quarter Boston drew Engstler’s fourth foul on a putback layup and stretched the lead to 57-48 with the and-one free throw.
Engstler fouled out with 4:56 to go and had her head buried in her clenched hands on the bench as her teammates tried to console her.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/us-man-abducted-in-afghanistan-appears-in-newly-posted-video/39611572
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US man abducted in Afghanistan appears in newly posted video
An American man kidnapped in Afghanistan two years ago is seen in a video pleading for his release so that he can be reunited with his family, according to a recording posted Friday by The New Yorker magazine.
The video of Mark Frerichs marks the first time that the Navy veteran and civilian contractor has been seen by the public since his abduction in Kabul on Jan. 31, 2020. Frerichs, of Lombard, Illinois, is believed to be held by the Taliban-affiliated Haqqani network, and U.S. officials across two presidential administrations have tried unsuccessfully to get him home.
Frerichs appears by himself in the video, sitting upright before a dark curtain and wearing what appears to be traditional Afghan clothing. In the video, which he says was recorded last Nov. 28, he says he has patiently awaited his release and adds: “I'd like to ask the leadership of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan: please release me. Release me so that I may be re-united with my family. Thank you."
Videos of hostages are sometimes released to show proof that they are alive and to facilitate negotiations for a release, though it was not immediately clear if that was the case here.
The video was posted Friday by The New Yorker, which says it obtained it from an unidentified individual in Afghanistan.
An FBI spokeswoman in Washington declined to comment on the video's authenticity, but a sister of Frerichs, Charlene Cakora, said in a statement Friday that she was grateful to the Taliban for releasing the video and described it as "public confirmation of our family’s long-held belief that he is alive after more than two years in captivity.”
She appealed to President Joe Biden and Secretary of State Antony Blinken to step up efforts to get Frerichs released.
“We consider this to be an important indicator of the Taliban’s interest in seeking to arrange for Mark’s immediate release. President Biden and Secretary Blinken, we urge you to take bold and decisive action to bring Mark home," she added.
The Taliban has made clear to U.S. officials that it seeks the release of a convicted drug lord named Bashir Noorzai, but the U.S. government has not moved forward on any sort of prisoner trade or exchange that could get Frerichs home.
The video of Frerichs surfaced on the same day that the State Department announced the release from Afghanistan of U.S. citizen Safiullah Rauf and Anees Khalil, a lawful permanent resident. The State Department said that they were now in Qatar before traveling home but offered no additional details about their activities in Afghanistan.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/calrecycle-director-explains-proposal-doubles-recycling-refunds/39614969
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Q&A: CalRecycle director explains proposal that doubles recycling refunds for Californians
A lot of California families recycle their bottles and cans at recycling centers to make ends meet. There is now a move to double the money Californians can get for recycling.
The California Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery or CalRecycle, a state agency that oversees California's waste management and recycling, said the new plan could bring people an extra $100 million in bonus recycling credits, and hopes to increase recycling in rural and underserved communities.
Californians can currently get 5 cents for each container under 24 ounces and 10 cents for containers over that weight when they bring it into a certified recycling center. The proposal would double that amount.
The director of CalRecycle, Rachel Wagoner, joined KCRA 3 live to discuss the proposal.
Q: So, the proposal is to double recycling refunds, can you explain how this is going to work?
Wagoner: The administration put forward today a budget proposal that will go before the legislature to spend $330 million of a surplus that we’ve accumulated over the last couple of years because consumers are buying a lot more beverage containers and these dollars will go toward increase access to recycling centers and then provide a temporary short-term double your refund. What we’re really trying to do here is get as many of those bottles and cans that people have been buying during the pandemic, we’re trying to get those back into the recycling system so we can make them into new bottles and cans.
Q: Some people would like to recycle, but there aren't any recycling centers where they live or work. In the meantime, you've built up a half-billion-dollar surplus. What's the plan to better serve rural communities that don't have easy access to a recycling center?
Wagoner: $100 million will go to this temporary double credit. We're giving grants for automated reverse vending machines to retailers and universities and schools to install these vending machines, and then we are going to contract to provide mobile recycling in some of our recycling deserts primarily in rural areas. So the goal of this is to very quickly use these dollars to deploy access to the recycling system and get as many bottles and cans back into the system and get those dollars and cents back to consumers.
Q: Just last month, you were at the state Capitol for a hearing. Lawmakers were critical of the agency you lead. The bottom line is that fewer people are recycling their cans and bottles these days. What are you doing to turn those numbers around, and is just paying people more for their bottles and cans going to change things?
Wagoner: Well, I’m really hopeful because we are looking to very specifically target those areas of the state that don’t have recycling access right now and provide some new technologies and new options that this is really going to help us move those numbers up. We’ve been hovering around 70% for the last several years and want to get to that statutory goal of 80% and beyond. We want to get as many bottles and cans back into the system. Californians are doing a great job. We hit record levels and of numbers of beverage containers in 2021. We are up to almost 19 billion containers back in 2021, but we want to do even better. So we want to get all of those bottles and hands back into the system. So we need to provide access to the system and provide that opportunity for Californians to get their money back.
Read more on Friday's proposal here.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/uconn-advances-to-ncaa-title-game/39615254
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UConn tops Stanford 63-58, advances to NCAA title game
Paige Bueckers scored 14 points and UConn advanced to the national championship game with a 63-58 win over defending champion Stanford on Friday night.
The Huskies will face South Carolina for the national championship on Sunday night. The Gamecocks beat the Cardinals 72-59 in the first game of the Final Four.
It's UConn's first trip to the championship game since 2016, when the Huskies won the last of four straight championships. Since then, the team has suffered heartbreaking defeats in the national semifinals, losing twice in overtime.
UConn (30-5) will be seeking its 12th national championship, and the Huskies have never lost in an NCAA title game.
They had to work to get to the finals. Leading by 52-44 with 1:26 left, Stanford made a furious rally thanks to a few costly UConn turnovers.
Cameron Brink's layup with 18.4 seconds left got the Cardinal within 60-58. UConn was able to work seven seconds off the clock before Christyn Williams was fouled with 11 seconds left. The senior guard calmly swished both free throws to restore a two-possession lead.
Ashten Prechtel completely missed a tough contested 3-pointer from the wing with 5.4 seconds left and the Huskies held on for the win.
Haley Jones led the Cardinal with 20 points.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/california-corporate-diversity-law-ruled-unconstitutional/39615341
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California corporate diversity law ruled unconstitutional
A Los Angeles judge ruled Friday that California's landmark law mandating that corporations diversify their boards with members from certain racial, ethnic or LGBT groups is unconstitutional.
The brief ruling granted summary judgment to Judicial Watch, a conservative legal group that sought a permanent injunction against the measure that was signed into law last year. The ruling didn't explain the judge's reasoning.
The measure requires corporate boards of publicly traded companies with a main executive office in California to have a member from an "underrepresented community," including LGBT, Black, Latino, Asian, Native American or Pacific Islander.
The lawsuit argued that violated the state's constitutional equal protection clause.
The decision "declared unconstitutional one of the most blatant and significant attacks in the modern era on constitutional prohibitions against discrimination," Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton said in a statement.
Messages seeking comment from the state weren't immediately returned Friday evening.
However, in its court filings, the state argued that the measure didn't "discriminate against, or grant preferential treatment to, any individual or group on the basis of race, sex, color, ethnicity, or national origin in the operation of public employment, public education, or public contracting."
No companies have been fined, however, and the state argued that no tax dollars actually had been used to enforce the measure.
The law requires corporations to include at least one member of an underrepresented community on their boards of directors by Dec. 31 of last year, either by adding a seat or filling a vacant one. By Dec. 31 of this year, each corporation must include a minimum number of such members based on the total size of the board.
A "Diversity on Boards" report issued in March by the secretary of state found that about 300 out of some 700 corporations had complied. However, half of the corporations didn't file the required disclosure statement.
A related Judicial Watch lawsuit in Los Angeles is challenging another state law requiring a woman director on corporate boards.
That three-year-old law was on shaky ground from the get-go with a legislative analysis saying it could be difficult to defend and then-Gov. Jerry Brown saying he was signing it despite the potential for it to be overturned by a court.
The state defended the law as constitutional, saying it was necessary to reverse a culture of discrimination that favored men and was only put in place after other measures failed.
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Associated Press writer Brian Melley in Los Angeles contributed to this story.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/sacramento-county-fair-return-cal-expo-covid-19-cancellations/39615285
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Sacramento County Fair to return to Cal Expo after 2 years of COVID-19 cancellations
The Elk Grove Western Festival is once again canceled this year due to COVID concerns
The Elk Grove Western Festival is once again canceled this year due to COVID concerns
The Elk Grove Western Festival is once again canceled this year due to COVID concerns
The Sacramento County Fair is returning this May after being canceled the last two years due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The annual event will be held on the grounds of Cal Expo from May 26 to May 30. Cal Expo CEO Rick Pickering told KCRA 3 California’s improving situation in dealing with the virus is why the fair is returning. The theme this year is “BIGGER," but for Pickering, it is also about just being able to come together.
"We expect people will want to come out and eat together, be seen together,” Pickering said. "Part of the celebration is coming together, people coming back out of COVID. We're looking forward to more than 100,000 people from the region."
This year, there will be a dinosaur exhibit, tribute band performances and the return of 4-H and FAA. But some things will be a little different, such as more hand washing and hand sanitizing stations.
"As much as people want to be out and interact with each other, I think we're all more conscious of the handwashing and hand-sanitizing, keeping some level of distance,” Pickering said.
But other big events in our region, such as the Elk Grove Western Festival, are not returning this year. Festival Board President Ken Johnston said he and his team had COVID-19 concerns, as did sponsors and entertainment acts.
Johnston said that delayed the permitting process. Pulling the plug on the May event for a third year in a row was a tough pill for him to swallow.
"It's really a hard decision to make and get everything in place to where you feel you can put on a real safe and fun event,” Johnston said. "At this late date, it's hard to get all those things in place and to have the entertainment."
Instead, Johnston said organizers are taking this extra time to focus on their 2023 event.
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20220402
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https://www.kcra.com/article/crisis-in-ukraine-april-2-2022/39615603
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The Latest: Retreating Russian forces creating 'complete disaster' with mines, Zelenskyy says
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy warned his people early Saturday that retreating Russian forces were creating “a complete disaster” outside the capital as they leave mines across “the whole territory,” including around homes and corpses.
He issued the warning as the humanitarian crisis in the encircled city of Mariupol deepened, with Russian forces blocking evacuation operations for the second day in a row. Meanwhile, the Kremlin accused the Ukrainians of launching a helicopter attack on a fuel depot on Russian soil.
Here's the latest on the Ukraine-Russia conflict as of 6 a.m. (Eastern):
- A Ukrainian official said there were casualties after at least three Russian ballistic missiles were fired late Friday at the Odesa region on the Black Sea, but he did not give specifics.
- The secretary of Ukraine's national security council has denied that the country was responsible for a reported attack on a Russian fuel depot.
- The mayor of Kyiv said the bombardment of satellite towns near the Ukrainian capital was ongoing despite Russian promises of scaling back troops from the region.
- NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg says Russia does not appear to be scaling back its military operations in Ukraine.
- The U.N. refugee agency says more than 4 million people have now fled Ukraine following Russia’s invasion, a new milestone in the largest refugee crisis in Europe since World War II.
Ukraine denied responsibility for the fiery blast, but if Moscow’s claim is confirmed, it would be the war’s first known attack in which Ukrainian aircraft penetrated Russian airspace.
“Certainly, this is not something that can be perceived as creating comfortable conditions for the continuation of the talks,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said, five weeks after Moscow began sending upwards of 150,000 of its own troops across Ukraine’s border.
Russia continued withdrawing some of its ground forces from areas around Kyiv after saying earlier this week it would reduce military activity near the Ukrainian capital and the northern city of Chernihiv.
“They are mining the whole territory. They are mining homes, mining equipment, even the bodies of people who were killed,” Zelenskyy said in his nightly video address to the nation. “There are a lot of trip wires, a lot of other dangers.”
Ukraine’s military said it had retaken 29 settlements in the Kyiv and Chernihiv regions.
Still, Ukraine and its allies warned that the Kremlin is not de-escalating to promote trust at the bargaining table, as it claimed, but instead resupplying and shifting its troops to the country’s east. Those movements appear to be preparation for an intensified assault on the mostly Russian-speaking Donbas region in the country's east, which includes Mariupol.
Zelenskyy warned of difficult battles ahead as Russia redeploys troops. “We are preparing for an even more active defense,” he said.
He did not say anything about the latest round of talks, which took place Friday by video. At a round of talks earlier in the week, Ukraine said it would be willing to abandon a bid to join NATO and declare itself neutral — Moscow’s chief demand — in return for security guarantees from several other countries.
The invasion has left thousands dead and driven more than 4 million refugees from Ukraine.
Video: Ukraine war destruction takes its toll
Mariupol, the shattered and besieged southern port city, has seen some of the worst suffering of the war. Its capture would be a major prize for Russian President Vladimir Putin, giving his country an unbroken land bridge to Crimea, seized from Ukraine in 2014.
On Friday, the International Committee for the Red Cross said it was unable to carry out an operation to bring civilians out of Mariupol by bus. City authorities said the Russians were blocking access to the city.
“We do not see a real desire on the part of the Russians and their satellites to provide an opportunity for Mariupol residents to evacuate to territory controlled by Ukraine,” Petro Andryushchenko, an adviser to Mariupol's mayor, wrote on the Telegram messaging app.
He said Russian forces “are categorically not allowing any humanitarian cargo, even in small amounts, into the city.”
Around 100,000 people are believed to remain in the city, down from a prewar 430,000. Weeks of Russian bombardment and street fighting have caused severe shortages of water, food, fuel and medicine.
“We are running out of adjectives to describe the horrors that residents in Mariupol have suffered,” Red Cross spokesperson Ewan Watson said.
On Thursday, Russian forces blocked a 45-bus convoy attempting to evacuate people from Mariupol and seized 14 tons of food and medical supplies bound for the city, Ukrainian authorities said.
Zelenskyy said more than 3,000 people were able to leave Mariupol on Friday.
He said he discussed the humanitarian disaster with French President Emmanuel Macron by telephone and with the president of the European Parliament, Roberta Metsola, during her visit to Kyiv.
“Europe doesn’t have the right to be silent about what is happening in our Mariupol,” Zelenskyy said. “The whole world should respond to this humanitarian catastrophe.”
Video: Kyiv keeps guard up as displaced find shelter
Elsewhere, at least three Russian ballistic missiles were fired late Friday at the Odesa region on the Black Sea, regional leader Maksim Marchenko said. The Ukrainian military said the Iskander missiles did not hit the critical infrastructure they targeted.
Odesa is Ukraine’s largest port and the headquarters of its navy.
As for the fuel depot explosion, Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov said two Ukrainian helicopter gunships flew in extremely low and attacked the civilian oil storage facility on the outskirts of the city of Belgorod, about 25 kilometers (16 miles) from the Ukraine border.
The regional governor said two workers at the depot were wounded, but the Rosneft state oil company denied anyone was hurt.
Oleksiy Danilov, secretary of Ukraine’s national security council, said on Ukrainian television: “For some reason they say that we did it, but in fact this does not correspond with reality."
Later, in an interview with Fox, Zelenskyy refused to say whether Ukraine was behind the attack.
On the outskirts of Kyiv, where Russian troops have withdrawn, damaged cars lined the streets of Irpin, a suburban area popular with young families, now in ruins. Emergency workers carried elderly people on stretchers over a wrecked bridge to safety.
Three wooden crosses next to a residential building that was damaged in a shelling marked the graves of a mother and son and an unknown man. A resident who gave her name only as Lila said she helped hurriedly bury them on March 5, just before Russian troops moved in.
“They were hit with artillery and they were burned alive,” she said.
An Irpin resident who gave his name only as Andriy said the Russians packed up their equipment and left on Tuesday. The next day, they shelled the town for close to an hour before Ukrainian soldiers retook it.
“I don’t think this is over,” Andriy said. “They will be back.”
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https://www.kcra.com/article/belle-of-the-ball-free-prom-dresses-2022/39616001
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Heartwarming: Hundreds of girls receive free prom dresses at 'Belle of the Ball' event
About 650 high school students received a gifted prom dress Saturday at the "Belle of the Ball" event at Boston's Hynes Convention Center.
The prom dresses, many of them brand new, are donated to junior and senior students in Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Rhode Island who likely would not have been able to afford them.
"I actually was really grateful to take it because I was worried about how I was going to get a prom dress," said Darlene Rosario, a senior at Lawrence High School. "I was glad that I was able to find the dress that I wanted in my size."
"Prom is in a month, time is coming up and we're just trying to find a dress," said Katy Ucles, a fellow Lawrence High senior. "I saw another girl wearing the same dress I liked, so I was like: 'Nooo!' But then I found the dress, so I'm happy."
Saturday marked the 18th year of the Belle of the Ball Boutique Day, which was sponsored by Jordan's Furniture, Anton's Cleaners and Enterprise Bank.
"They're learning a lesson, as well. It's not just handed to them," said Eliot Tatelman, president of Jordan's Furniture. "We're asking them to bring it back because, next year, somebody else could wear it, which is so cool."
"You just realize that this is an important part of their lives. I mean, I never knew that until my daughter went through that years ago," said Arthur Anton, chief operating officer of Anton's Cleaners.
All of the girls who attended Saturday's event got to accessorize their dresses with free shoes, and personal stylists were among the 400 volunteers available to help them. The girls then got the chance to walk the runway while wearing their newfound prom dresses.
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20220402
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https://www.kcra.com/article/new-hampshire-farmers-fertilizer-costs/39616033
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'We're just trying to cover our costs': Farmers struggle with rising price of fertilizer
Russia's invasion of Ukraine helps drive fertilizer costs higher
Russia's invasion of Ukraine helps drive fertilizer costs higher
Russia's invasion of Ukraine helps drive fertilizer costs higher
Sanctions against Russia are affecting many of the country's top exports, including fertilizer, creating a worldwide shortage and driving up prices for farmers.
Farmers said the cost of commercial fertilizer has increased while supplies have decreased.
Phil Ferdinando, of J&F Farms in Derry, New Hampshire, said he's paying more than $1,000 per ton for commercial fertilizer, double the price he paid last year.
"Last year cost us $30,000," he said. "It's going to cost us probably over $60,000 this year."
Ferdinando plants a variety of vegetables on his 300 acres. While many farmers are using less fertilizer use this year, he said that's a risky move.
"You don't want to cut back much on fertilizer, because you won't get as good a crop," he said.
Agricultural suppliers said Russia's invasion of Ukraine has led to the problem.
"One of the issues is a lot of the ingredients — pot ash, which is one of the ingredients in fertilizer — is sourced from Russia," said Tom Osborne, of Osborne's Agway in New Hampshire. "So that certainly is causing a lot of the spikes in cost."
Osborne said the rising costs of fertilizer and fuel are forcing many of his customers to switch to manure and compost. But for larger farms, that's not an option.
"We plant about 300 acres of land, and I have enough manure for about 25," Ferdinando said.
Ferdinando said he'll bite the bullet and pay the premium price for fertilizer this spring, but he hopes his customers will be understanding come harvest time.
"Things are going to be more expensive this summer, and I hope they support us, because it's not our doing," he said. "We're just trying to cover our costs."
The USDA expects that the price of fertilizers will continue to increase for the rest of the year.
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20220402
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https://www.kcra.com/article/dangers-of-sleeping-pills-and-how-to-avoid-them/39616253
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The dangers of sleeping pills and how to avoid them
The stories of sleeping pills gone wrong are legendary.
But aside from tales of sleepwalking, the use of sleeping pills can also be deadly. Up to half a million "excess deaths" in the United States were due to use of sleep medications called sedative-hypnotics, a 2010 study found.
People with prescriptions for those sleep aids, which include zolpidem and temazepam, were over four times as likely to die from accidents and health conditions stemming from use compared with those who did not use such drugs, the study said. Even people who took fewer than two sleeping pills a month were three times more likely to die than those who didn't.
If you are using or thinking of using a prescription or over-the-counter sleep aid, what do you need to know to do so safely? Dr. Jing Wang, an assistant professor of pulmonary, critical care and sleep medicine at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City, is answering your questions.
This conversation has been lightly edited for clarity.
Q: When someone comes to you with insomnia or another sleep disorder, begging for help to go to sleep, do you give them a sleeping pill first thing for immediate relief?
Dr. Jing Wang: No, definitely not. We really try very, very hard not to do that. When someone comes in with insomnia, we take a really thorough medical and sleep history. It's very important that the person shares personal details so we can identify what the source of the insomnia could be. Is it behavioral, or is it medication or medical illness-related?
I will ask them, "What's your daytime schedule? What do you do in the evenings?" to try and find their physical and emotional stressors. Is this person on a screen all the time at work and home?
Then we home in on how that person gets ready for bed: "Do you have routines? Do you have a regular bedtime?" Frequently, insomnia is perpetuated by what we do in response to not being able to sleep. People get very creative in ways that may not be helpful: They get on the phone scrolling, checking emails or answering work messages, or sleep with the TV on. Both of these expose you to blue light, which sends a signal to the brain to wake up. Occasionally, you'll get people saying I get up and work out, which is definitely not what you want to do!
Q: When might a sleep aid be advised?
Wang: Our first-line approach is to introduce patients to a form of cognitive behavioral therapy called CBTI, which is specifically for insomnia. It educates patients about healthy sleep behavior, such as regular bedtime and wake schedules, keeping screens and blue lights out of the bedroom, doing relaxing things before bed, and so on. It's all about the associations that our brain makes with our sleep environment and how our behaviors or activities affect that.
If we have someone who is clearly struggling from a very acute onset of insomnia, and there is an identifiable factor or change in their life, then we might have a discussion about a short-term trial of a sleep aid for a few weeks or a month or so, and only with regular checkups.
And we set clear expectations about short-term use, because we don't want to just prescribe a sleep aid and have the person on it for the next 30 years. We want to get to the root of the problem in a healthier way by fixing what's triggering the insomnia.
Q: Why is the long-term use of a sleep medication not healthy?
Wang: It depends, as people have different responses and may be susceptible in different ways. Some of these sleep aids can become addictive, so the person feels they cannot sleep without it. They can be dangerous if mixed with alcohol or certain pain medications. Some cause daytime sleepiness and can interfere with driving and other motor activities.
Sedative sleep aids have been associated with hallucinations and dissociative behaviors. People have driven cars, cooked food, sleepwalked and made phone calls, all without any recollection when they woke. After waking, people can be susceptible to drowsiness and confusion, like a hangover effect.
Q: Let's talk about over-the-counter medications. Is that a problem?
Wang: Any medication is a double-edged sword: It has its uses but always has side effects.
One of the strongest pieces of counseling I always do with patients is to tell them to really try to avoid over-the-counter sleep aids. They can have unpredicted side effects, such as making you hyper instead of drowsy. There's potential for interaction with prescription sedatives, which patients may also be on. And there's always a potential of misuse or overuse because they think, "Oh, it's over-the-counter so it's safe."
Take melatonin. Some people have reported taking 30 or even 60 milligrams of melatonin and that could be dangerous; we just don't know yet. It's not really regulated, so non-melatonin substances can be mixed in the pill or tablet. You could get headaches, one of the known sort of side effects from melatonin. Or you could take it at the wrong time and interfere with your circadian rhythm.
Antihistamines, for example, create dry mouth, dizziness and a kind of hungover feeling the next day. They may also have anticholinergic effects, like urinary retention, blurred vision, constipation and nausea. Chronic, regular use of these agents have in some studies been linked to increased risk of dementia.
Finally, using over-the-counter sleep aids can potentially delay seeing their sleep problems as a concern and seeking care: "There's no reason for me to see the sleep doctor or talk to my physician about my sleep problems. I can just keep using an over-the-counter agent."
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https://www.kcra.com/article/a-boy-fell-from-a-ride-in-florida-an-investigation-is-underway-but-who-regulates-these-parks/39615463
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A boy fell from a ride in Florida. An investigation is underway, but who regulates these parks?
Questions always arise when tragedy strikes.
So when a 14-year-old boy fell to his death last week on an amusement park ride in Orlando, Florida, there were questions about who should be held responsible and how the incident happened in the first place.
Tyre Sampson fell from the Orlando FreeFall drop tower, which takes riders up and then drops them nearly 400 feet at speeds that reach more than 75 mph, according to ICON Park, where the incident happened.
There were also questions about whether Tyre was too big for the ride. "My son was 6'5, 340. So, he's a big guy," said Tyre's father, Yarnell Sampson.
His death is being investigated by the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services along with the Orange County Sheriff's Office and ICON Park.
In an effort to gain a better understanding of the larger issue of regulation in the amusement park industry, CNN examined safety reports and spoke with experts about park operations and why they don't have federal oversight.
Who regulates amusement parks?
Typically, state agencies have oversight, according to Randy King, a safety consultant based in Houston, Texas, who has over 30 years of experience in the safety and amusement park industry.
When it comes to standardization of safety at parks, the industry relies on ASTM International, an organization that develops and publishes standards for a number of industries including amusement parks, he said.
Additionally, "almost everyone in the amusement industry" belongs to the International Association of Amusement Parks and Attractions (IAAPA), a trade group representing amusement parks, according to King.
The ASTM committee handling amusement parks meets twice a year, according to the organization's website. The IAAPA releases a safety report annually for parks and holds expos and training for member organizations.
What's the history behind the regulation system?
A state's department of agriculture normally regulates amusement parks or at least fixed (or immovable) rides, according to Martin Lewison, an associate professor at Farmingdale University in New York who was dubbed by The New York Times as "Professor Roller Coaster."
That's because parks began as traveling businesses that would turn up at U.S. agricultural fairs — farmers would show up with a prized pumpkin or cow and then a showman brought the rides, Lewison said.
"It was always the agricultural institutions that were in charge of these sorts of events and that led to a modern-day regulatory structure where — in most states — some branch of the state department of agriculture has oversight over fixed rides," he said.
As the size of the amusement park industry ballooned in the last century, some elements came under federal supervision. But the industry balked at the oversight.
"(The) industry pushed back for many years on federal oversight on fixed amusement rides," Lewiston said.
In the early 1980s, Congress determined that the federal Consumer Product Safety Commission was only responsible for traveling rides.
The so-called "Roller-Coaster Loophole" did not sit well with some lawmakers. In 2001, then U.S. Rep. (now Sen.) Edward Markey of Massachusetts called for oversight to be restored to the CPSC. Markey initially began his crusade to close the loophole in 1999, and has been looking to close it since.
"The reason there is no national clearinghouse to prevent ride injuries is clear — since 1981, the industry has escaped routine product safety regulation through a loophole in the law," he said.
So, why aren't amusement parks federally regulated?
King and Lewison say the answer to this is simple: The industry would not benefit from federal oversight.
"It could make things worse," King said, adding that getting the federal government involved does not make things better.
To that point, Lewison said involvement from the feds would cost the industry too much.
"They would have to now deal separately with a federal regulatory agency that would suddenly become responsible for every fixed-site amusement ride in the United States," he said.
There are thousands of fixed amusement rides across the country, many of which are family entertainment centers with go-karts and/or a kiddy roller coaster.
"The industry obviously doesn't want that extra cost of dealing with a new set of rules and regulations because a lot of these companies are small companies that don't make a huge amount of profits. There's only so many Six Flags and Disneys out there," Lewison said.
"So for them, it's fairly easy to accommodate additional costs. But for many small businesses, which is the majority of the industry, any additional costs can be devastating in terms of their bottom line," he said.
Both King and Lewison told CNN they thought state agencies were doing a great job regulating amusement parks.
"Safety culture is already heavily built into the industry," Lewison said.
How often do people die on amusement park rides?
It's very rare for someone to die, let alone get injured on a ride at an amusement park. The safety record of the amusement park industry is amazing, Lewison said, and ride designers are serious about their work and safety.
"The amusement industry operates with the understanding that one injury is one too many and there is an impressive effort made by industry safety professionals to enhance safety at our facilities," said Jim Seay, president of the Baltimore-based Premier Rides and a member of the IAAPA safety committee.
"Ride fatalities are extremely rare which is why, like a plane crash, they are covered widely in the news," Seay said. "Statistically you are safer riding the rides at an amusement park than most other forms of recreation and even the drive to the park although that doesn't stop the efforts of industry safety experts to focus on making the industry even safer."
The odds of being seriously injured on a fixed-site ride in the U.S. is 1 in 15.5 million, the IAAPA said.
In other words, there are more chances of a person dying by bee stings or from a dog attack than being injured on an amusement park ride, according to statistics from the National Safety Council.
A 2020 IAAPA North American Ride Safety Report – in which it surveyed 162 facilities — said a majority (60%) of injuries came from family and adult rides.
The report also said there were 341 ridership-based injuries, though the report also added that the number is significantly lower than 2019 (1,294) because of the COVID-19 pandemic's effect on the amusement industry in 2020.
"These sorts of accidents are extraordinarily rare," Lewison said. "You're still more likely to die falling off a chair than dying on an amusement ride."
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https://www.kcra.com/article/biden-says-sub-will-enhance-us-security/39616684
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Biden says submarine he commissioned will enhance US security
In a public ceremony delayed two years by the pandemic, President Joe Biden on Saturday commissioned the USS Delaware, a nuclear attack submarine, saying it would enhance national security, though he made no reference to the global turmoil from Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
"As the commander in chief, I believe it is our sacred obligation as a nation to prepare and equip those troops that we send into harm’s way and to care for them and their families when they return home,’’ he told a crowd of invited guests and dignitaries assembled on a sunny but chilly spring day on a restricted part of the dock in Wilmington.
This latest Navy ship to carry the Delaware name, the president said in brief remarks, “is part of a long tradition of serving our nation proudly and strengthening our nation’s security ... not just us, but our allies and partners around the world as well. In fact it’s already been doing that for some time.’’
In April 2020, with the coronavirus pandemic spreading across the United States, the Delaware was commissioned while underwater, a first for a Navy vessel. Since then it has been in training.
After the ceremony, the president took a private tour of the Delaware. He did not respond to questions from reporters about Ukraine.
First lady Jill Biden is the submarine's sponsor, a role meant to bring a vessel luck. During her remarks, she exclaimed: “Officers and crew of the USS Delaware, man our ship and bring her to life.” The crew responded, “Aye aye, ma’am” and, as she applauded, sailors in dress uniforms ran behind the crowd, then down onto the submarine and lined up on the deck.
Saturday's commissioning comes amid the war in Ukraine and after Biden announced a budget blueprint that proposes spending $795 billion on defense, which would mean an increase for the Pentagon.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said the proposal would at best “leave our armed forces simply treading water” because of inflation. But some progressive Democrats complained that was too much funding after the withdrawal of U.S. forces from Afghanistan last summer.
With a crew of 136 sailors, the Delaware is the 18th Virginia-class fast attack submarine, which is designed to seek and destroy enemy submarines and surface ships, and can fire Tomahawk cruise missiles, the Navy says.
The ship is 377 feet long, can dive to depths greater than 800 feet and operate at speeds in excess of 25 knots submerged. The submarine is also designed to operate for more than three decades without needing to refuel, according to a Defense Department news release.
This is the first time in a century the name “Delaware” has been used for a Navy vessel, according to a Defense Department statement, and marks the seventh naval ship named after the state which Biden represented in the Senate for 36 years before his tenures as vice president and president.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/rocklin-womans-warning-others-fender-bender-robbery/39615368
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Rocklin woman's warning for others after fender bender robbery
A harrowing ordeal on the the highway prompts a theft victim to organize a personal safety session in Sacramento.
A harrowing ordeal on the the highway prompts a theft victim to organize a personal safety session in Sacramento.
A harrowing ordeal on the the highway prompts a theft victim to organize a personal safety session in Sacramento.
Sacramento police are investigating recent fender bender robberies where thieves purposefully rear end victims with the intent to rob them.
A Rocklin woman, who was a victim of one of these crimes, is sharing her story in hopes it helps others avoid being a target of the thieves.
Rindy Merrifield was headed home on Business 80 on March 10 after running some errands in Sacramento when a driver bumped her car from behind.
She didn't think much of it – not worried the bump did any damage to her SUV.
The small car behind her then bumped her car again, but again, Merrifield wasn’t concerned and kept driving along the highway.
“He pulled beside me, told me to pull over,” Merrifield said. “So I thought, OK, maybe he did do some damage, and that's why he wants me to pull over.”
She found a place to stop off the exit near Cal Expo, and got out of her car to speak with the other driver.
“I just came around and I looked and I said, ‘...no damage. Just go on your way,’” said Merrifield. “That's when he said, ‘You know, I really think we should exchange insurances because that's the right thing to do.’”
Merrifield went to the passenger side door where she says the other driver pushed me away, grabbed her purse, and swatted away her arm – preventing her from retrieving her purse.
At that moment she described her fight-or-flight reaction to the situation.
“It was just, ‘How dare you… take my purse!’ and I was bound and determined to get it back or hurt him enough that I could get it,” Merrifield said.
She followed after the other driver – repeatedly slamming his own car door on his legs as he was getting away. Her efforts did not stop the thief who escaped with Merrifield’s purse and all its contents including credit cards, cash, car keys and her cell phone.
That was the last Merrifield saw of the suspect.
Sacramento police tell KCRA 3, a day later on March 11 a similar fender bender type robbery happened involving a different victim.
Later that same day, detectives arrested Hau Nguyen and Phung Nguyen and charged them for that crime.
On April 1, police received an arrest warrant for Phung Nguyen for charges related to the March 10 robbery – Merrifield’s case.
According to Sacramento police, Nguyen’s whereabouts are not known and he is considered wanted by law enforcement.
California law indicates drivers are required to stop and exchange information after a crash.
In a statement to KCRA 3, Sacramento Police Department said:
"...We encourage community members concerned with their safety to seek a well-lit populated area to conduct the exchange. Additionally, we encourage all community members to contact 911 any time they feel unsafe when dealing with a similar situation."
Meanwhile, Merrifield is determined to warn others using her own experience as an example.
“Knowing that I was so naïve and trustworthy and not watching my surroundings, I didn't want anyone else to go through that,” Merrifield said.
That’s why she organized a personal safety seminar scheduled to take place Saturday, April 2 at 10 a.m. at 8200 Sierra College Blvd., Ste B in Roseville.
She assembled law enforcement and safety experts to speak to a community group about how to handle situations just like the fender bender robbery she endured.
She also plans to organize other safety sessions in the near future.
“It may never happen again… but I'll be ready or I'll be ready to teach other people so it won't happen to them," she said.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/us-sends-home-algerian-man-held-nearly-20-years-at-guantanamo-bay/39616965
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US sends home Algerian man held nearly 20 years at Guantanamo Bay
An Algerian man imprisoned at the Guantanamo Bay detention center for nearly 20 years has been released and sent back to his homeland.
The Department of Defense announced Saturday that Sufyian Barhoumi was repatriated with assurances from the Algerian government that he would be treated humanely there and that security measures would be imposed to reduce the risk that he could pose a threat in the future.
The Pentagon did not provide details about those security measures, which could include restrictions on travel.
Barhoumi was captured in Pakistan and taken to the U.S. base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in 2002. The United States eventually determined he was involved with various extremist groups but was not a member of al-Qaida or the Taliban, according to a report by a review board at the prison that approved him for release in 2016.
U.S. authorities attempted to prosecute Barhoumi in 2008 but the effort was dropped amid legal challenges to the initial version of the military commission system set up under President George W. Bush.
In the final days of Barack Obama's presidency in January 2017, a federal judge in Washington declined to intervene in the Pentagon's decision not to repatriate Barhoumi, whose lawyer said he had expected his client to be released and that the prisoner’s family had begun making preparations for his return, including by buying him a car and a small restaurant for him to run.
The Justice Department said then-Defense Secretary Ash Carter rejected the release of Barhoumi on Jan. 12, 2017, “based on a variety of substantive concerns, shared by multiple agencies,” without going into detail.
Barhoumi, who lost four fingers in a land mine explosion in Afghanistan, offered to plead guilty to any charges in 2012 in hopes he could receive a fixed sentence and return to his elderly mother, according to his attorney, Shayana Kadidal of the Center for Constitutional Rights.
“Our government owes Sufyian and his mother years of their lives back,” Kadidal said. “I’m overjoyed that he will be home with his family, but I will dearly miss his constant good humor and empathy for the suffering of others in the utterly depressing environment of Guantánamo.”
The effort to resettle prisoners languished under President Donald Trump. The Biden administration is attempting again to reduce the number of men held at Guantanamo as part of a broader effort to close the facility.
Barhoumi's release brings the total held at the U.S. base in Cuba to 37 men, including 18 who have been deemed eligible for repatriation or resettlement in a third country.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/general-motors-recalls-more-than-680-000-vehicles-due-to-windshield-wipers-defect/39617028
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General Motors recalls more than 680,000 vehicles due to windshield wipers defect
General Motors is recalling more than 680,000 SUVs due to a defect in their windshield wipers.
The 2014 to 2015 Chevrolet Equinox and GMC Terrain vehicles are being recalled because the the windshield wipers could fall, due to the chance of its ball joints corroding or wearing away.
The action covers 681,509 units, according to a release by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, which added that an estimated 1% of cars have the defect.
"General Motors is voluntarily recalling certain 2014-2015 model year Chevrolet Equinox and GMC Terrain vehicles to replace the front windshield wiper-modules in these vehicles," said Daniel Flores, a GM communications manager.
The NHTSA said owners will receive notification letters on May 2. Dealers will repair or replace the windshield wipers at no cost to the SUVs' owners.
GM issued the same recall in 2017 for the 2013 Chevrolet Equinox and GMC Terrain, saying at the time that ball joints in the compact SUVs' windshield wipers "may experience high corrosion."
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https://www.kcra.com/article/how-they-became-cultural-icons/39617017
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Wander around a supermarket and you'll bump into all sorts of characters: Tony the Tiger, Toucan Sam, Cap'n Crunch and Buzz Bee in the cereal section. Mr. Clean, Brawny Man and the Charmin Bear among the household items.A few aisles later, chances are you'll spot Betty Crocker, Kool-Aid Man, Elmer the Bull, Pillsbury Doughboy, Energizer Bunny and more.And, of course, the characters aren't just in stores. Colonel Sanders, Ronald McDonald and the Burger King are synonymous with fast-food chains. The Michelin Man sells tires. Geico Gecko, Aflac Duck and Flo from Progressive offer insurance.Why have brands flooded us with cheesy, or sometimes racially-stereotyped, spokespeople and mascots for so long? What's their purpose?Distinctive characters are tools brands use to create emotional connections with consumers and signal their personalities and key attributes — reliability, purity or humor, for example.A recognizable character at the store can also be a visual shortcut for consumers who have endless choices, marketing experts say. In the complex insurance industry, for example, likeable and familiar characters can be used to convey information in a simple way.Characters and mascots "are valuable as a memory prompt. They're easy to process. You don't have to commit any cognitive resources to reading product information, brand names or prices," said Akshay Rao, a marketing professor at the University of Minnesota. "You don't have to give it a first thought, let alone a second thought."Plus, polling shows that consumers like advertising mascots. In a joint Harris Poll- Ad Age online survey of 1,000 U.S. adults last year, 79% said they enjoy seeing mascots, such as Tony the Tiger, Ronald McDonald or Mr. Clean."When you have a character that's well established and a mental shortcut, you'd be hard pressed to walk away," said Britt Nolan, the president and chief creative officer at Leo Burnett, the agency that developed Tony the Tiger, Pillsbury Doughboy and other iconic characters.Human charactersThe rise of brand characters can be traced to the Second Industrial Revolution in the late 19th century, when food and consumer goods became mass-produced.Prior to the 1870s, food and other household products were grown on family farms or available from a local grocer. There were no big national brands like we know today or national distribution networks.Factory production — and railroads to transport goods — opened up the possibility for consumers to get packaged foods and products from distant factories.But manufacturers needed ways to convince shoppers that these new factory-made products were safe.Human characters served as a substitute for the personal connections consumers were used to having with their foods, said historian Susan Strasser, author of "Satisfaction Guaranteed: The Making of the American Mass Market."Early brand characters were often grandmothers, cooks in white caps and aprons or young girls. This imagery was meant to be "connected with tradition, so that it wasn't so jarring to be getting these factory-made products," she said, as well as "cleanliness, so you wouldn't worry if something was going to kill you."For example, although the Quaker Oats founders were not Quakers, in 1877 they chose a Quaker character to represent the brand and project values of honesty and purity. (He's known among company insiders as "Larry.")Other early brand characters were sometimes based on racist stereotypes of Black people and Native Americans, such as Aunt Jemima pancake mix, Uncle Ben's rice, Rastus for Cream of Wheat and Land O'Lakes' Native American maiden.Many of these characters have been discontinued in recent years. There have also been calls to retire Miss Chiquita of Chiquita Brands' bananas and other outdated mascots.The influence of televisionBrands soon turned to so-called "spokescharacters" and animals to distinguish their products.Bibendum, created in 1898 and known today as the Michelin Man, was one of the earliest examples. The character was inspired by a stack of tires that resembled a human torso.Dogs, cows, bears, bulls and other animals also started to appear as mascots for brands, especially for snacks and foods that were aiming to appeal to kids.The rise of television in the 1950s and early 1960s propelled these kinds of characters into the cultural mainstream. Advertisers had a captive audience watching these personalities develop during commercial breaks on popular series."You see a lot of characters appear when television advertising was new," Nolan said. "TV advertising was trying to figure out how to be both informational and entertaining at the same time."Cigarettes and cereal boxesBut it takes time and investment to build a brand character. That's harder today than it was when everyone was sitting at home watching TV commercials."Character development tends to be video-based and rely on a certain level of saturation," Nolan said. "That doesn't make sense for as many advertisers as it used to. You no longer own the consumer's attention."Instead, many brands have turned to celebrity spokespeople, partnerships and social media influencers instead of launching new mascots.There are also pitfalls involved with using characters, and they have been deployed for harmful purposes in the past. Cigarette makers used characters such as Joe Camel and the Marlboro Man before reaching a sweeping settlement with states in 1998 that banned characters in tobacco advertising.Public health experts have called for food and drink makers to end the use of mascots and brand characters to market candy, cereals and sugary drinks.In Chile, the government went as far as banning mascots such as Tony the Tiger and the Trix Rabbit from appearing on cereal boxes.One popular European grocery chain, Lidl, in 2020 removed characters from its cereal brands in the UK to limit "pester power" — children nagging their parents to buy sugary cereals emblazoned with their favorite characters.
Wander around a supermarket and you'll bump into all sorts of characters: Tony the Tiger, Toucan Sam, Cap'n Crunch and Buzz Bee in the cereal section. Mr. Clean, Brawny Man and the Charmin Bear among the household items.
A few aisles later, chances are you'll spot Betty Crocker, Kool-Aid Man, Elmer the Bull, Pillsbury Doughboy, Energizer Bunny and more.
And, of course, the characters aren't just in stores. Colonel Sanders, Ronald McDonald and the Burger King are synonymous with fast-food chains. The Michelin Man sells tires. Geico Gecko, Aflac Duck and Flo from Progressive offer insurance.
Why have brands flooded us with cheesy, or sometimes racially-stereotyped, spokespeople and mascots for so long? What's their purpose?
Distinctive characters are tools brands use to create emotional connections with consumers and signal their personalities and key attributes — reliability, purity or humor, for example.
A recognizable character at the store can also be a visual shortcut for consumers who have endless choices, marketing experts say. In the complex insurance industry, for example, likeable and familiar characters can be used to convey information in a simple way.
Characters and mascots "are valuable as a memory prompt. They're easy to process. You don't have to commit any cognitive resources to reading product information, brand names or prices," said Akshay Rao, a marketing professor at the University of Minnesota. "You don't have to give it a first thought, let alone a second thought."
Plus, polling shows that consumers like advertising mascots. In a joint Harris Poll- Ad Age online survey of 1,000 U.S. adults last year, 79% said they enjoy seeing mascots, such as Tony the Tiger, Ronald McDonald or Mr. Clean.
"When you have a character that's well established and a mental shortcut, you'd be hard pressed to walk away," said Britt Nolan, the president and chief creative officer at Leo Burnett, the agency that developed Tony the Tiger, Pillsbury Doughboy and other iconic characters.
Daniel Acker/Bloomberg/Getty Images
It’s harder to create an iconic character like the Pillsbury Doughboy today.
Human characters
The rise of brand characters can be traced to the Second Industrial Revolution in the late 19th century, when food and consumer goods became mass-produced.
Prior to the 1870s, food and other household products were grown on family farms or available from a local grocer. There were no big national brands like we know today or national distribution networks.
Factory production — and railroads to transport goods — opened up the possibility for consumers to get packaged foods and products from distant factories.
But manufacturers needed ways to convince shoppers that these new factory-made products were safe.
Human characters served as a substitute for the personal connections consumers were used to having with their foods, said historian Susan Strasser, author of "Satisfaction Guaranteed: The Making of the American Mass Market."
Early brand characters were often grandmothers, cooks in white caps and aprons or young girls. This imagery was meant to be "connected with tradition, so that it wasn't so jarring to be getting these factory-made products," she said, as well as "cleanliness, so you wouldn't worry if something was going to kill you."
For example, although the Quaker Oats founders were not Quakers, in 1877 they chose a Quaker character to represent the brand and project values of honesty and purity. (He's known among company insiders as "Larry.")
Daniel Acker/Bloomberg/Getty Images
Early brand characters like "Larry," the made-up guy on Quaker Oats packages, were humans.
Other early brand characters were sometimes based on racist stereotypes of Black people and Native Americans, such as Aunt Jemima pancake mix, Uncle Ben's rice, Rastus for Cream of Wheat and Land O'Lakes' Native American maiden.
Many of these characters have been discontinued in recent years. There have also been calls to retire Miss Chiquita of Chiquita Brands' bananas and other outdated mascots.
The influence of television
Brands soon turned to so-called "spokescharacters" and animals to distinguish their products.
Bibendum, created in 1898 and known today as the Michelin Man, was one of the earliest examples. The character was inspired by a stack of tires that resembled a human torso.
Dogs, cows, bears, bulls and other animals also started to appear as mascots for brands, especially for snacks and foods that were aiming to appeal to kids.
The rise of television in the 1950s and early 1960s propelled these kinds of characters into the cultural mainstream. Advertisers had a captive audience watching these personalities develop during commercial breaks on popular series.
"You see a lot of characters appear when television advertising was new," Nolan said. "TV advertising was trying to figure out how to be both informational and entertaining at the same time."
Cigarettes and cereal boxes
But it takes time and investment to build a brand character. That's harder today than it was when everyone was sitting at home watching TV commercials.
"Character development tends to be video-based and rely on a certain level of saturation," Nolan said. "That doesn't make sense for as many advertisers as it used to. You no longer own the consumer's attention."
Lane Turner/The Boston Globe/Getty Images
Characters have lined the cereal section of supermarkets for decades.
Instead, many brands have turned to celebrity spokespeople, partnerships and social media influencers instead of launching new mascots.
There are also pitfalls involved with using characters, and they have been deployed for harmful purposes in the past. Cigarette makers used characters such as Joe Camel and the Marlboro Man before reaching a sweeping settlement with states in 1998 that banned characters in tobacco advertising.
Public health experts have called for food and drink makers to end the use of mascots and brand characters to market candy, cereals and sugary drinks.
In Chile, the government went as far as banning mascots such as Tony the Tiger and the Trix Rabbit from appearing on cereal boxes.
One popular European grocery chain, Lidl, in 2020 removed characters from its cereal brands in the UK to limit "pester power" — children nagging their parents to buy sugary cereals emblazoned with their favorite characters.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/rare-nasa-lunar-dust-collected-by-neil-armstrong-on-the-apollo-11-mission-up-for-auction/39617191
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Rare NASA lunar dust collected by Neil Armstrong on the Apollo 11 mission is up for auction
Most people want to get rid of dirt, but this special sample of lunar dust is out of this world.
Particles of lunar dust collected by Neil Armstrong in 1969 during the Apollo 11 mission are up for auction this month.
Bonhams, the auction company in charge of the sale, estimated the sample to be worth between $800,000 and $1.2 million.
It's the only known lunar dust sample from Apollo 11 that can legally be sold, making it difficult for the auction house to estimate its value, according to Bonhams specialist Adam Stackhouse.
To determine the price range, Stackhouse looked at the other few lunar dust samples that have been sold as well as the significance of the historic event from which it originated.
"I think this estimate gives it a sense of importance," he said, "but it's really difficult to say where it will sell."
The auction is not until mid-April, but people are already expressing interest, according to Stackhouse.
A controversial past
This particular Apollo 11 relic created some bad blood between its owner and NASA.
Armstrong brought the bag of lunar dust back to Earth, but NASA lost the bag after a loan-out to a museum. It became part of seized property when a space museum director was convicted of fraud and theft.
It ended up being auctioned off by the U.S. Marshalls Service to Illinois resident Nancy Lee Carlson in 2015 for $995.
She sent the bag to NASA for help identifying where it came from, Stackhouse said. Once NASA realized the significance of the bag, the space agency refused to return it to Carlson, he said.
Carlson sued NASA and won, forcing agency officials to return the bag.
Auctioneer Sotheby's sold the bag separately for $1.8 million in 2017.
Carlson is now looking to sell five metal pieces with lunar dust on top that are still in a container from NASA, Stackhouse said.
The auction company independently tested the material to confirm it indeed came from the moon, Stackhouse said.
Bonhams is selling the piece of space history on Carlson's behalf, but she didn't share with Stackhouse why she was interested in offering it for auction.
Officials at NASA did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Other items up for sale
If you don't have $1 million lying around, the auction house will be selling other space memorabilia — albeit still expensive.
One item is a fragment of Sputnik I, the first artificial satellite the Soviet Union launched into the Earth's orbit in 1957. It's valued at $80,000 to $120,000.
Bonhams will also be selling a map of the moon signed by 15 Apollo astronauts, including Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin. It's valued at $20,000 to $30,000.
If you're interested in attending the auction, it will be held April 13 at Bonhams New York gallery.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/why-this-recent-change-just-made-it-harder-to-buy-or-sell-an-apartment/39616310
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Why this recent change just made it harder to buy or sell an apartment
New rules rolled out earlier this year by mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are creating a bottleneck in the real estate market for those seeking to buy or sell condo or co-op apartments, according to agents and condo associations.
The new rules are intended to address concerns about aging building infrastructure in the wake of the collapse of Champlain Towers South condominium in Surfside, Florida, last year. In order to protect buyers and lenders, the rules ask condo and co-op boards to disclose any known significant deferred maintenance issues that may impact the safety and structural integrity of the building and the financial plans for addressing them, according to Fannie Mae.
"Freddie Mac's requirements are designed to help ensure residential buildings with aging infrastructure are safe for its residents and that condos and co-ops needing critical repairs have a plan to do so," a Freddie Mac spokesperson said.
But many condo and co-op associations are refusing to fill out the form. That's preventing buyers and sellers from closing deals.
Condo associations say they find the required documentation burdensome and are worried the discussion of reserve funds and building integrity puts them at risk of liability, said Nancy T. Polomis, a Minnesota attorney who represents condo boards. Critics also object to the one-size-fits-all form that applies to all buildings with five or more attached units without distinctions for the type, location, or age of a building, she said.
"It seems like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac took a big chunk to deal with a small bite problem," Polomis said.
While lenders and condo boards are in a standoff, it is sellers and buyers who are suffering, as their deals fall apart because their lenders won't close the loans without the completed forms.
Freddie and Fannie guarantee or buy mortgages from lenders, making the loan less of a risk to issue. If the loan doesn't meet the new requirements and the mortgage giants won't back it, the lender often won't issue the loan.
"If I were a homeowner trying to sell my condo and this was preventing me from doing so, I would be furious," said Polomis. "I'd be upset with my association, but the association board has a fiduciary duty to do what is best for the entire association. Everyone is doing a dance of balancing the risk and liabilities."
Buyers and sellers in a bind
The temporary rules, which went into effect at the beginning of January for Fannie Mae and at the end of February for Freddie Mac, are expected to become permanent. And they are already having an impact on the market, said Chris Muellenbach, a broker with Compass.
"The condo associations are outright refusing to fill out the addendum," said Muellenbach. "It is happening regularly and it will continue to happen."
An $850,000 condo in Milwaukee was perfect for a couple Muellenbach was working with. But the building's board would not complete the additional form, preventing the buyers' loan from closing and threatening to derail the sale.
That left the buyers with two options: pay cash for the property or find a lender that is going to hold the loan. Banks, credit unions, and private lenders may offer loans that aren't guaranteed by the mortgage giants, but they often carry a higher interest rate.
Muellenbach's buyers opted to purchase with cash and complete the transaction. But most buyers can't afford to do that.
"If you are struggling to buy a $140,000 condo, you don't have the resources for that," he said.
Muellenbach said he is reaching out to smaller local lenders who have better firsthand knowledge of area buildings than large national mortgage companies located in other parts of the country.
"There is a small handful of local banks here that will close the loan for people buying condos," he said.
But ultimately it is the sellers who will feel it most, he said, because the new rule cuts deeply into the pool of potential buyers for their apartments.
"I feel for the sellers because of the money they have to leave on the table," said Muellenbach. "The number of potential buyers has decreased significantly. If they can't get a conventional loan on the place, you're losing out on a lot of buyers."
Condo associations request delay
The rules are causing such confusion that a national organization representing condo associations has requested the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), the government regulator that oversees Fannie and Freddie, pause the rules for a year.
"Creditworthy borrowers have been denied credit to purchase homes and refinance mortgages in condominium and cooperative projects with no safety, soundness, structural integrity, or habitability concerns because of the temporary guidelines," wrote the Community Associations Institute in a letter to FHFA.
Dawn M. Bauman, CAI's senior vice president of government and public affairs, said the rules may have the unintended effect of pushing more cash buyers, including investors, into the condo market at a time when inventory is very low.
"Condos are an affordable housing option in many markets, especially for first-time homebuyers, people with moderate income levels and seniors," said Bauman. "People coming in with all-cash offers are not the people who need affordable options."
An FHFA spokesperson said the agency is committed to ensuring and prioritizing the financial and physical safety of borrowers and occupants of condominiums and cooperatives.
"The tragic June 2021 collapse of the Surfside condominium project demonstrated the need to strengthen measures to protect borrowers and occupants of condominiums and cooperatives and reduce the risks to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac," the spokesperson said.
The policy changes that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac implemented earlier this year increase standards for condos and the amount of relevant information needed from building managers in an effort to reduce the negative financial impacts to borrowers when a building's reserves are not adequately funded, also to minimize the potential loss of life due to major deferred maintenance, the spokesperson said.
FHFA said it is working with the mortgage giants to minimize industry disruptions related to the questionnaires so that condominium associations, lenders, and others more clearly understand the policy changes as it considers appropriate permanent policies.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/9-year-old-hospitalized-stockton-shooting-police-say/39617542
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9-year-old hospitalized after Stockton shooting, police say
9-year-old hospitalized after Stockton shooting, police say
ANNOUNCER: THIS IS KCRA 3 MORNIN NS.G GOOD MORNING, I'M LETICIA ORZ.DA NOW TO THE LATEST ON THE STRIKE SCHOOL DISTRICT. PARENTS AND STUDENTS ARE HEADING INTO THE WEEKEND, NOT KNOWING WHETHER SCHOOLS WILL BE BACK OPEN ON MONDAY, AS THERE IS STILL NO DEAL BETWEEN THE UNIONS AND THE SCHOOL DISTRICT. THE DISTRICT HAS SENT THE UNIONS A LETTER, ASKING TEACHERS TO GO BACK TO WORK SO CLASSES CAN REME. LETECIA: A QUICK EVACUATION. THE BOMB THREAT AT A SOUTH SACRAMENTO SAM'S CLUB. WHAT POLICE ARE SAYING ABOUT THEIR ARSECH F THEOR SUSPECT. A SAM'S CLUB THERE IS SET TO REOPEN TODAY AFTER RECEIVING A BOMB THREAT YESTERDAY. DEPUTIES SEARCHED FOR THE SUSPECT WHILE OPSHPERS AND EMPLOYEES WERE FORCED TO EVACUATE. INVESTIGATORS SAY AROUND 5:00 YESTERDAY AFTERNOON, AN EMPLEEOY IN THE STORE WAS HANDED A NOTE WARNING OF AN EXPLOSIVE INSIDE THE STORE. DEPUTIES SEARCHED RFO THE SUSPECT WHILE THE EMPLOYEES QUICKLY CALLED 911 AND WERE FORCED TO EVACUATE ALONG WITH THE SHOPPERS BUT FIRST, A LIVE LOOK OUTSIDE. A NICE SHOT. GORGEOUS DAY AADHE METEOROLOGIS AT: LIVVIE EW HERE. CURRENTLY 53 AND 52 IN FAIRFIELD. 51 IN YUBA CITY AND GDOO MORNING. 55 DEGREES. A LITTLE CHILLY STILL THOUGH IN TRUCK KEY IN ETH UPPER 20'S THEN LOW 30'S THEN A FEW HIGH THIN WIYSP CLOSUD OTHER THAN THAT. ENJOY A LOT OF SUNSHINE THEN A LITTLE BIT OF A NTHOR LIGHT NORTH BREEZE WILL START TO DEVELOP AS THE DAY GUESS ON AND FEELINGT I SLIGHTLY AND MAY GET UP TO 15 MILES PER HOUR HERE. NOTICEABLE BUT NOT IMPACTFUL. SO MOSTLY SUNNY SKIES THEN A BIT BREEZY WITH HHSIG IN UPRPE 70'S TO LOW 80'S THEN THE FOOTHILLS A BEAUTIFUL DAY. THEN MOSYTL SUNNY SKY THEN RANGE IN THE 70'S THEN MID TO UERPP 80'S TODAY AND FEW CLOUDS WILL TRAVEL BY PLEASANT CONTINUES AND NEAR 60R O JUST ABOVE MID TO UPPER 70'S AS YOU GO TO THE LOWER ELEVATIONS THIS AFTERNOON THEN, LOOK AHEAD TO A COOLDOWN TO START THE WORKWEEK T
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9-year-old hospitalized after Stockton shooting, police say
A 9-year-old girl is in the hospital after a shooting in Stockton, authorities said.It happened in the Weston Ranch neighborhood in south Stockton, the Stockton Police Department told KCRA 3. It's unclear how she is doing. No other details were released. Saturday's shooting happened a week after a drive-by shooting in Stockton hospitalized three people, including a 9-year-old. Two people were arrested in connection for that shooting.This is a developing story, stay with KCRA 3 for the latest.
STOCKTON, Calif. —
A 9-year-old girl is in the hospital after a shooting in Stockton, authorities said.
It happened in the Weston Ranch neighborhood in south Stockton, the Stockton Police Department told KCRA 3.
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It's unclear how she is doing.
No other details were released.
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Saturday's shooting happened a week after a drive-by shooting in Stockton hospitalized three people, including a 9-year-old. Two people were arrested in connection for that shooting.
This is a developing story, stay with KCRA 3 for the latest.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/hooked-on-fishing-not-violence-sacramento-nonprofit-hopes-teach-young-adults-patience/39617479
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Hooked On Fishing Not On Violence: Sacramento nonprofit hopes to teach young adults patience
Sacramento's Southside Park can be a very quiet kind of place on Saturday mornings – which is exactly how a Sacramento nonprofit organization wants it.
Timothy Poole has been bringing people to the fishing lake at the park since 2002, but he made it official just a few years ago. His nonprofit, Hooked On Fishing Not On Violence, hopes to teach kids to fish on their weekends, while also mentoring them.
"Hooked On Fishing Not On Violence is a program we brought to Sacramento because of all the violence," Poole said. "We became a nonprofit in 2016. We’ve touched over 727 young kids. We’ve touched maybe 200 families."
Poole hopes to teach kids patience while being outdoors.
"The patient part is just waiting for the fish to hit the hook. And if he never hits the hook, it’s okay," Poole said.
"I believe fishing has taught me patience. It’s taught me like self-control. Like, you have to wait. Everything’s not going to like come to you," said 17-year-old Darius Jacobs.
Jacobs said he also finds that being around adults a generation or two older than him helps him see a different way of living.
"They have an enjoyment. They can go out by themselves... and spend their free time out here, just fishing, just enjoying it," Jacobs said.
"In order to move forward in life, you have to wait sometimes," Poole said. Which is his advice to young adults in Sacramento.
Learn more about the program here.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/kansas-returns-to-ncaa-championship-game-for-first-time-since-2012-after-beating-villanova-in-final-four/39617529
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NEWS. NOW AHEAD OF THE BIG GAME TOMORROW AND HOPEFULLY MONDAY’S CHAMPIONSHIP. THE CITY OF LAWRENCE IS BLOCKING OFF PART OF MASS STREET. THAT’S RIGHT AHEAD OF ANY POTENTIAL CELEBRATIONS, RIGHT? CAMBONYS OSBORNE AUGUSTINE LIVE IN LAWRENCE TO TELL US WHAT DRIVERS NEED TO KNOW GOING INTO THIS WEEKEND. HEY MARTIN, YEAH, GOOD MORNING CODY WITH THE CONSISTENT SUCCESS OF KU’S BASKETBALL PROGRAM THE CITY OF LAWRENCE. HAS HAD PLENTY OF PRACTICE ABRBSOING ALL THE PEOPLE ATTH WERE THAT WILL POUR INTO MASTERY SHOULD KU WIN THAT GAME ON SATURDAY. SO WITH THAT IN MIND. INKTH TOMORROW MORNING AT 6:00 DAN UNTIL TWO HOURS BEFORE TIP OFF. THAT’LL BE AUTBO THREE O’CLOCK TOMORROW AFTERNOON THE CITY WILL CLOSE MASS STREET FROM H6T STREET TO 11TH STREET THEN AT THAT TIME AGAIN AROUND THREE IN ETH AFTERNOON. THE MASTERYLO CSURE WILL EXTEND SOUTH TO SOUTH PARK STREET 6TH STREET WILL REMAIN OPEN ALL DAY FOR THREE TRAFFIC NINTH AND 11TH STREETS WILL REMAIN OPEN FOR THREE TRAFFIC UNTIL TWO HOURS PRIOR TO TIP UP AGAIN ABOUT THREE IN THE AFTERNOON. SO IKUF THIS GAME ON SATURDAY THE CITY WILL HEAV PEOPLE POURING INTO MASTERY. THEY’VE SEEN THIS BEFORE THEY KNOW WHAT TO DO BACK IN 2008 THE VIDEO YOU'R’ SEEING HERE BY SOME ESTIMATE SOME 80,000 PEOPLE POURED INTO MASS STREET AFTER THE JAYHAWKS WON THE NATNALIO CHAMPIONSHIP THAT YEAR IF YOU’RE PARKED UNMASTERY TOMORROW MORNING AFTER 6:00 AM YOUR CAR’S GONNA BE TOWED. IT’LL BE TAKEN TO THE COMMUNITY CENTER PARKING LOT AT 11TH AND VERMONT. THIS IS A COURTESY TOE. YOU’LL JUST BE ABLE TO PICK UP YOUR CAR THERE. HES I ASKING THAT THERE BE NO ROOFTOP ACTIVITIES NO ROOFTOP PARTIES HERE ALONG MTEASRY. WE SEE THAT ALL THE TIME THOUGH. THEYSK A THAT NOT HAPPEN HOUR FOR SAFETY REASONS AND THE CITY DOES WARTHN AT ALL PARKING LAWS WILL BE ENFORCED. REPORTING LIVE IN LAENWRCE MARTIN AUGUSTINE CAMEOS NIGHT NEWS. ALL RIGHT, I LIKE MARTIN W
Kansas returns to NCAA championship game for first time since 2012 after beating Villanova in Final Four
Updated: 5:26 PM PDT Apr 2, 2022
David McCormack muscled his way to 25 points, Ochai Agbaji was nearly perfect from the field and added 21 points, and hot-shooting Kansas raced to a big early lead before withstanding every Villanova run for a 81-65 victory Saturday night that sent the Jayhawks back to the national title game.Christian Braun also had 10 points, including a key 3-pointer to ward off a comeback late in the game, as the Jayhawks (33-6) exacted a measure of revenge for a Final Four beatdown by the Wildcats four years ago in San Antonio.Now, they hope to follow a familiar pattern against Duke or North Carolina on Monday night. The last three times that the Jayhawks and Wildcats have met in the tournament, the winner has gone on to cut down the nets.Playing without injured guard Justin Moore, Villanova (31-7) watched the lone No. 1 seed to reach the semifinals score the game's first 10 points and eventually build a 19-point cushion. And despite big nights from Collin Gillespie, Brandon Slater and Jermaine Samuels, the short-handed and undersized Wildcats never made it all the way back.Gillespie, playing in his 156th game for the Wildcats, hit five 3-pointers and finished with 17 points, while Slater hit four 3s and had 16 points. Samuels finished with 13 points in the final game of his college career.
NEW ORLEANS — David McCormack muscled his way to 25 points, Ochai Agbaji was nearly perfect from the field and added 21 points, and hot-shooting Kansas raced to a big early lead before withstanding every Villanova run for a 81-65 victory Saturday night that sent the Jayhawks back to the national title game.
Christian Braun also had 10 points, including a key 3-pointer to ward off a comeback late in the game, as the Jayhawks (33-6) exacted a measure of revenge for a Final Four beatdown by the Wildcats four years ago in San Antonio.
Now, they hope to follow a familiar pattern against Duke or North Carolina on Monday night. The last three times that the Jayhawks and Wildcats have met in the tournament, the winner has gone on to cut down the nets.
Playing without injured guard Justin Moore, Villanova (31-7) watched the lone No. 1 seed to reach the semifinals score the game's first 10 points and eventually build a 19-point cushion. And despite big nights from Collin Gillespie, Brandon Slater and Jermaine Samuels, the short-handed and undersized Wildcats never made it all the way back.
Gillespie, playing in his 156th game for the Wildcats, hit five 3-pointers and finished with 17 points, while Slater hit four 3s and had 16 points. Samuels finished with 13 points in the final game of his college career.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/ariel-roblin-education-editorial/39613559
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Ariel Roblin: We should celebrate our high school students' decisions about what to do next
A recent survey of high school students found the likelihood of attending a four-year school sank nearly 20% in less than a year, down to 53% in 2021. A third of these high schoolers said the pandemic's financial impact made it less likely that they will attend a 4-year college.
So many students are saying they plan to pursue different routes: working, apprenticeships, trade school, joining the military, travel, or community colleges.
Our state's free community college program is one of California's best-kept secrets. And with 98% of families saying that financial aid would be necessary to pay for college, it's a really smart option right now. Some students even defer their four-year college experience for studying abroad via their community college.
But, there is still a social stigma surrounding anything less than a four-year degree.
Education helps you succeed in life and as Americans, we have the freedom to pursue the careers and life we want, and we should celebrate every type of education we have access to. Supporting our students as they graduate from some of the most difficult years of their lives makes an impact. Whatever road our graduates choose, the response to what they plan to do to next should be, "that's fantastic."
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https://www.kcra.com/article/california-peregrine-falcon-finds-partner-mates-death/39617675
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California peregrine falcon finds partner after mate's death
A peregrine falcon whose longtime mate died this week amid the breeding season appears to have found a new partner to help her hatch two eggs.
Grinnell, one of a beloved pair of peregrine falcons who made their longtime home atop the bell tower at the University of California, Berkeley, was found dead Thursday. Less than 24 hours later, his partner Annie had mated with a new untagged male falcon, Cal Falcons, a group that monitors the birds, said on Twitter Friday.
“When a mated Peregrine dies during the breeding season, the most likely outcome of the nest is abandonment,” Cal Falcons tweeted. “In rare cases, a new mate can come in, establish a bond with the remaining individual, and adopt the chicks.”
While peregrine falcons typically mate for life, those who lose a partner will seek a replacement after a mate dies.
The new falcon also appeared interested in incubating Annie’s eggs and performed multiple courtship displays with Annie after spending the night in her gravel nest, the group said.
“Although these two eggs still might not make it, this is an encouraging development,” they said. “We will be keeping our eyes out for prey deliveries and incubation in particular, as those two behaviors will be an indication of a potentially successful nest.”
Grinnell was found dead on a street and was likely hit by a car, the group said. Grinnell and Annie had been nesting atop the university’s 307-foot-tall Campanile since late 2016 and produced 13 chicks.
Grinnell was attacked by other falcons last fall and spent nearly three weeks in a wildlife hospital recuperating, while other rivals courted Annie. But he returned and observers felt that the couple was bonding again.
A few hours before he died, Grinnell was seen defending the nest against another peregrine falcon. Cal Falcons said it’s possible that the new falcon is the one that Grinnell fought, though an injury on the bird’s left foot appears to be older.
In February, Annie vanished from her nest and was briefly presumed injured or dead before returning nearly a week later. Her disappearance made local headlines.
The falcon researchers said they had never seen a female vanish suddenly during peak breeding season and then suddenly return.
Peregrine falcons are considered the world’s fastest birds. They can reach 200 miles per hour (322 kilometers per hour) during a hunting dive known as a stoop. The American birds were declared endangered in 1970 because of ingesting prey that was poisoned by DDT and other pesticides. The chemical caused the falcons to produce thin-shelled eggs that couldn’t survive until hatching. However, recovery programs brought the bird back from potential extinction.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/californians-warned-about-risk-british-columbia-oysters/39617687
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Californians warned about risk from British Columbia oysters
At least 34 people statewide have contracted norovirus in the past few weeks in California after eating raw oysters harvested in British Columbia, Canada, state health officials said Saturday.
The state Department of Health issued a warning not to eat raw oysters imported from British Columbia where officials have closed multiple growing regions for sanitary contamination.
In California, people who ate oysters at nine restaurants throughout the state between March 11 and March 19 reported getting ill. Illnesses associated with oysters from British Columbia have also been reported in other U.S. states, the department said.
Despite issuing multiple recalls of oysters from British Columbia, the health department said it has continued receiving reports of people getting ill. It advised restaurants and retailers to check their inventory and shellfish tags to ensure that potentially contaminated raw oysters are not available for purchase, and to discard any leftover contaminated oysters.
Canada has reported more than 270 cases of gastrointestinal illness linked to the consumption of raw oysters.
Norovirus is contagious and causes inflammation of the stomach and intestines. Symptoms include vomiting, diarrhea and fever.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/look-back-sacramentos-yearslong-journey-getting-soccer-stadium/39616858
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Look back at Sacramento's yearslong journey in getting a soccer stadium
It has been nearly a decade of ups and downs for Sacramento Republic FC fans. City leaders and team investors have promised several soccer stadiums since the teams beginning.
Where it all began
The Sacramento Republic FC ended their inaugural season in 2014 with a USL Pro Championship win.
The team set a new USL Pro record for attendance that season, with more than 158,000 fans attending games at Hughes Stadium and Bonney Field during the regular season.
The next year, then-Mayor Kevin Johnson already had fans imagining a huge Railyards stadium.
| WATCH BELOW | Mayor Johnson: 'We have a Super Bowl level ownership team'
In 2016 – more than a thousand fans came out when Major League Soccer came to town. Team and city leaders were so optimistic, they brought out the hard hats.
Then a letdown for fans in 2017 when the MLS picked Nashville for its next franchise slot.
Renewed hope and an MLS bid
Two years later, the MLS came to town to announce the Sac Republic FC would be the 29th team to join the league.
That's also when plans for a stadium privately funded by investor Ron Burkle gave fans renewed hope.
In 2019, investors boasted doubling the size of downtown with a 20,000 seat state-of-the-art stadium, which would become the largest infill project west of the Mississippi River.
The stadium and MLS play was supposed to start in 2022.
| WATCH BELOW | Sacramento construction to ramp up for new MLS stadium
Pandemic woes
In 2020, the big hits started coming with the COVID-19 pandemic delaying the MLS timeline.
The MLS announced that because of the pandemic, several clubs' expansions to the league would be extended, saying the Sac Republic FC team would now join the MLS in the 2023 season in the new downtown stadium that Burkle promised.
Lead investor backs out
In Feb. 2021, Burkle, the city's lead investor for the MLS expansion, pulled out of the deal. MLS, in a statement, said the investor cited COVID-19 as a reason for withdrawing.
Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg expressed disappointment in the decision, but said it did not mean the city was starting from scratch. The plans for the stadium and infrastructure remain approved, he said.
At the time, Sac Republic CEO Kevin Nagle in a statement to KCRA 3 said he has invested too much time, money and effort to give up on the expansion now. He remains committed to helping make it happen.
| WATCH BELOW | City officials, leaders remain hopeful after main investor pulls from Sacramento MLS expansion
Days later, the president of the team announced he was stepping down.
Ben Gumpert had been with the team since 2017 and was a huge factor in helping the club push for an expansion bid in MLS.
"After over four years of life-changing learnings, challenges, tears, laughs, smiles, setbacks, celebrations, and foundational friendships, today I announce that I will be stepping down from my role as president & COO of Sacramento Republic FC," a statement from Gumpert reads in part.
| WATCH BELOW | Sac Republic FC president steps down after investor pulls out of expansion deal
After three years as general manager, Todd Dunivant was promoted to president. KCRA 3's Michelle Dapper talked exclusively with Dunivant, who now oversees both the sporting and business operations.
"I'm passionate about it. I believe in it. I believe in the mission and this city," Dunivant told KCRA 3.
Around the same time, the MLS backed out too. Sacramento was no longer on its list of expansion cities.
The hunt was on for a new lead investor to bring a soccer stadium and MLS bid to Sacramento.
New stadium renderings released
That brings us to where we are today – the scaled-down version of the stadium was released on April 1, 2022 – and it was no April Fools' Day joke.
The new stadium design comes from an architectural firm, MANICA, which has developed projects like Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, the Chase Center in San Francisco and even Wembley Stadium in London.
The new stadium can seat 12,000-15,000 people, but it could expand to 20,000 seats as needed.
The project is almost entirely privately funded by Republic FC Chairman and CEO Kevin Nagle, and other investors.
There are still some contractual things that need to be worked out but their hope is to be wrapped up in the next 90-120 days thus moving the project forward.
| WATCH BELOW | Sacramento Republic FC reveals rendering of downtown stadium at Railyards
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https://www.kcra.com/article/run-for-ukraine-families-loved-ones-war-zone-call-peace/39617608
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Run for Ukraine: Families with loved ones in the war zone call for peace
Dozens gathered at the state Capitol on Saturday for a Run for Ukraine. Families with loved ones in the war zone came out to call for peace and raise money for people caught in the middle of the violence.
"Sacramento is the largest city in the nation that has the most amount of Ukrainian immigrants," said Elina Basaraba, organizer of Run for Ukraine. "The devastating war that is happening in Ukraine right now is what brought all of us here."
Basaraba organized the run with the goal of sending bulletproof vests to those trapped in the war zone. Each vest costs $250.
"The more people that can donate, the more vests and the more lives that we can save," she said.
Besides supplies, she wants Ukrainians to know they are not alone during this difficult time.
Runners said coming together helps raise awareness in Northern California.
"I think people take for granted, like, the country we live in. Coming as a refugee to the states what my parents went through like it's just freedom here. We could do whatever we want here. Which is like other countries don't really experience that," said Roxy Treshchuk, runner.
More events are being planned to rally the community to get involved.
"We are showing how we support and how we are caring about our friends and family in Ukraine. And pray for Ukraine," said Mariia Loffler, who has family in Ukraine.
The organizer of Run for Ukraine said she will continue to hold events with the goal of raising $50,000 over the next couple of weeks.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/they-fell-in-love-sacramento-greyhound-bus-stop-35-years-ago-theyve-been-together-ever-since/39617633
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They fell in love at a Sacramento Greyhound bus stop 35 years ago. They've been together ever since
When Tiffany Woods met Bridgette, she was at a crossroads.
It was February 1987 and Tiffany was 23. She'd got married two years previously. Now her marriage was on the rocks and divorce seemed imminent. Tiffany was training to become a police officer, but her heart wasn't in it.
Tiffany, who is trans, had also yet to come out. For much of her life up to that point, she had tried to quash her identity.
Tiffany wasn't sure where she was heading next. For now, she was simply focused on lining up at Sacramento Bus Station to catch the Greyhound bus back home to San Francisco.
Travelers were starting to deposit their bags in the bus hold. Tiffany wasn't paying attention, but then a young woman further up the line reached over to hand Tiffany a luggage tag.
"You're going to need one of these to check your bag in," said the stranger, smiling.
"Oh thanks," said Tiffany, breaking out of her reverie.
The woman with the extra luggage tag was Bridgette. Then 18, she was living and working in San Francisco, and on her way back there after a weekend visiting her parents in Sacramento.
Bridgette and Tiffany started chatting – first about the luggage tags, then about the journey ahead.
The person in between them, sensing this conversation wasn't going to come to an end anytime soon, asked if they'd like to switch places so they could stand together. Why not, figured Tiffany and Bridgette, and they switched.
"We were just talking back and forth. And we were waiting for a long time in that line," Bridgette, who has asked only to be referred to by her first name for personal reasons, tells CNN Travel.
The two were enjoying each other's company. When they eventually boarded the bus, sitting together seemed the obvious next step.
Journeying from Sacramento to San Francisco by car usually takes around an hour and a half. But with the Greyhound's multiple stops, and the inevitable traffic, the bus was on the road for several hours.
Tiffany and Bridgette talked the whole way.
Tiffany describes the interaction as one of "those conversations where you meet a stranger and you spend several hours with the stranger as if you've known them your whole life – and you also assume you're never going to see them again, so your defenses are down."
The two talked about everything, but also kept some things private. Tiffany didn't mention she was still married. Bridgette added a few years to her age, telling Tiffany she was 21.
A couple of hours into the journey, a woman sat across from the pair, charmed by their obvious connection, cut in with a question:
"How long have you two been together?" she asked.
Tiffany and Bridgette turned to one another and laughed. Then Tiffany turned back to the woman, and told her they'd been together since kindergarten. Without skipping a beat, Bridgette named the fictitious teacher who'd taught the imaginary class where they'd supposedly met.
"We just started playing off each other like we had been together since kindergarten," recalls Tiffany. "I guess we just had that chemistry."
The bus eventually pulled into the steel surrounds of the San Francisco Transbay Terminal, where a friend of Tiffany's was waiting to pick her up.
Bridgette had been planning to catch the Bay Area Rapid Transit train to her aunt's house, where she was living at the time.
The bus's late arrival meant she'd missed the last train, so Tiffany offered Bridgette a ride home.
En route they detoured to a pizza restaurant, then a bar and exchanged phone numbers. When Tiffany eventually dropped Bridgette home, she kissed her goodnight.
"That was very sweet," recalls Bridgette. "And the rest is history, as they say."
Openness and communication
Bridgette and Tiffany both had vague plans to travel back to Sacramento the following weekend. Sometime during the week, they connected on the phone and arranged to travel there together.
Bridgette planned to stay with her parents for the weekend, so she suggested Tiffany could crash there too. Tiffany agreed, and so less than a week after they'd met waiting for the bus, Tiffany was introduced to Bridgette's parents.
"I spent the weekend with her. We went to her parents' home then to her sister's high school play. She introduced me to her friends afterwards," recalls Tiffany.
Since that weekend, she adds "we've never not been together."
That Friday evening, the two were curled up on the couch in Bridgette's parents living room. It was 3 a.m., and everyone else was asleep. They'd been drinking champagne. The fire was crackling in the fireplace.
"She was stroking my hair and she's like 'Oh, what's your favorite color?'" recalls Tiffany. "And I said: 'Purple.'"
That was an unconventional choice for a cis, heterosexual man in 1987, suggests Tiffany. By telling Bridgette this fact about herself, she was hoping to incite a deeper conversation.
"I think I have gender issues," she said.
The next morning, feeling slightly hungover, Tiffany panicked, and tried to backtrack on what she'd said.
"It's okay, we'll figure it out. You're fine. You're okay. You're perfect the way you are. We'll figure it out together," was Bridgette's response.
"Nobody had ever said that to me before," recalls Tiffany today.
It was everything she'd ever hoped for.
"Because there wasn't any expectation of the relationship or anything, there was such an openness, there weren't any consequences – there was just a complete trust of whatever the natural understanding of each other was. And as that relationship grew, that just stayed there," says Bridgette.
"We clearly always had, I think, the soul mate connection," says Tiffany.
Growing together
As February slipped into March, Bridgette and Tiffany continued to get to know one another. Their relationship was deepening, but Tiffany wasn't sure how to bring up the fact that she was still married.
She hadn't mentioned it right away, and now it had become a secret.
Eventually, Bridgette found out. It was fraught.
"I was very angry," says Bridgette. It took a while to work through. She says today that this memory "is one of the little scars."
"I took complete ownership of it," says Tiffany.
Tiffany and her ex-wife, who were already separated, got a divorce. By September 1987, Tiffany and Bridgette had moved into a small apartment in San Francisco.
The two started building a life together, working through what they wanted from their careers, families and for themselves.
Becoming a cop, Tiffany had decided, was not for her.
"I was going to be a police officer, because I couldn't ever see a path of transition," she recalls. "And so that's what we did as trans folks in the 70s, 80s, 60s, we kind of went into hyper masculine professions."
But the unconditional, supportive relationship she had with Bridgette allowed her to reevaluate. Together, Tiffany and Bridgette started looking into how Tiffany could be herself.
"If you don't figure out your gender identity and your issues in a healthy way and start to build a healthy foundation, then it's always going to be a struggle," says Tiffany now.
In the late 1980s, there was no internet to turn to. There was also a lack of trans representation in the media or public eye.
"It was so different, there wasn't resources, there was so much stigma, there still is now," says Tiffany. "I mean, now we've come a long way – we're still having obviously backlash of the trans visibility – but at that point, I was just trying to figure out if this was even a reality."
But as the new decade drew in, the two found a new sense of belonging as they immersed themselves in San Francisco's LGBTQ+ community.
"We just found a lot of kindred spirits and a place and belonging and a purpose," says Tiffany.
It was a turning point, but the impact of the AIDS epidemic on their community, as well as the "double life" that Tiffany, who hadn't come out to her family, says she was living at the time, was tough.
When she decided to fully transition, Tiffany stopped talking to her family altogether.
"Fear is a huge barrier," she says. "I was afraid of rejection. So I rejected them first, because then I could control the rejection. But I also, I didn't give them the opportunity to affirm me or support. That's the flip side of that."
A spontaneous wedding
Bridgette had always wanted to get married. Tiffany had been less sure – she'd already been married and it had ended badly.
But by 1996, the two were in agreement that it was the right thing for them both.
Backed by the enthusiasm of their gay friends, who were unable to marry at that time and told Bridgette and Tiffany they should "get married for us," the two tied the knot on December 28, 1996.
Tiffany and Bridgette weren't sure how the minister would react if they both dressed in a traditionally feminine way, so Tiffany wore a men's tuxedo with soft make-up and a ponytail.
But afterward, the couple's housemates, who were drag queens and experts in styling, helped Tiffany get ready for the evening celebrations. Then the newlyweds went out for food and cake with their close friends.
A few years later, with the dawn of the new millennium, Tiffany and Bridgette decided to have children.
Bridgette had always wanted kids, but Tiffany had taken longer to come to that decision.
"I figured the kids would reject me, because I didn't know how to have those conversations – you know, at that time, there wasn't a lot of trans parents," she says.
The two decided the first step was to rebuild the relationship with Tiffany's family.
"We wanted to change the narrative and create a new path that's healthy for our family – also, knowing that we needed the support of our families, navigating a world as a trans woman and perceived as a lesbian couple," says Tiffany.
After the years of silence, there was some hurt there, but Tiffany's family were excited to support Tiffany and Bridgette through parenthood. The old wounds gradually healed.
Today, Bridgette and Tiffany have three teenage children.
Tiffany's fears of rejection from their kids proved unfounded, as Bridgette always said they would be. They give her, Tiffany says, "nothing but unconditional love."
'Things happen for a reason'
Today, Tiffany and Bridgette say they're focused on doing their best to make a difference in the world and raising their children to do the same.
Bridgette has her own company, while Tiffany works for the California Department of Public Health as the state's transgender health specialist.
Tiffany is also on the executive board for the California Democratic Party, and is the LGBTQ Caucus co-chair.
Today, whenever they see a Greyhound bus on the road, the two think of their serendipitous meeting. They've not been on a Greyhound together since, but they enjoy road trips together from time to time.
Tiffany and Bridgette say they're both proud of where they are today, and how they've grown together over their 35 year relationship.
"Anything is possible, you just have to believe you can make things work," says Bridgette.
"Don't be afraid to take chances," agrees Tiffany. "I think we all meet each other for a reason, things happen for a reason. And we may not understand what the reason is, but be open to them. And don't let fear hold you back."
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https://www.kcra.com/article/west-sacramento-police-help-identifying-home-burglar/39614364
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West Sacramento police ask for help in identifying home burglar
The West Sacramento Police Department is asking for help in identifying a burglary suspect who attempted to rob a home last week, authorities said.
The attempted burglary happened in the 800 block of River Crest Drive on Sunday around 1:40 a.m., the West Sacramento Police Department said in a release. The man reportedly broke a window at a home, but did not enter.
Authorities said the man is about 200 pounds and is between 5'10 and 6'2. He was seen on surveillance video wearing a black zip-up sweatshirt with a Mineshaft Saloon, Nevada City logo on the front and back.
If anyone recognizes this suspect or has additional information to share with the West Sacramento Police Department regarding this case, please contact non-emergency dispatch at 916-327-3375.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/north-carolina-takes-down-duke-81-77-advances-to-ncaa-championship-game/39617763
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North Carolina takes down Duke 81-77, advances to NCAA championship game
Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski’s remarkable career came to thrilling and sudden close Saturday night after Caleb Love made a key 3-pointer and three late free throws to lift archrival North Carolina to a thrill-a-minute 81-77 victory over the Blue Devils.
This was the 258th, most consequential and maybe, just maybe, the very best meeting between these teams, whose arenas are separated by a scant 11 miles down in Tobacco Road.
The Tar Heels (29-9), of all teams, pinned the 368th and final loss on the 75-year-old Coach K, exactly four weeks after they ruined the going-away party in his final home game at Cameron Indoor Stadium.
That loss hurt. This one stopped the coach’s last-gasp, storybook run one win away from a title game and a chance at his sixth championship. When it was over, after playing through the nip-and-tuck stretch run without a timeout, Krzyzewski walked calmly to halfcourt and shook the hand of Carolina's rookie coach, Hubert Davis.
On Monday, Carolina will play Kansas for the title. The Jayhawks beat Villanova 81-65 earlier in the undercard.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/scusd-support-staff-discuss-how-they-make-ends-meet-on-current-contract/39617539
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HOW THIS "RUN R FOUKRAINE" SAYS IT WILL HELP FAMILIES *OVERSEAS. >> THE STRIKE CONTINUES FOR TEACHERS AND STAFF OF THE SACRAMENTO CITY UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT. NOW THE STRIKE HAS ENTERED IT'S SECOND WEEKEND. NEGOTIATIONS BETWEEN THE DISTRICT AND THE TWO UNIONS REPRESENTING WORKERS ARE STILL UNDE.RW IN ADDITION TO TEACHS,ER THE UNION FOR SUPPORT STAFF IN THE DISTRICT IS ALSO PUSHING FOR A NEW CONTRACT. KCRA'S ERIN HEFT IS LIVE OUTSIDE THAT MEETI.NG ERIN, CAN YOU TALK ABOUT SOME OF THE CHALLGEENS THEY SAY THEY'RE FACI?NG ERIN: EARL WARREN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL IS ONE OF MANY CAMPUSES THAT REMAINS CLOSED DURING THE STRI.KE SOME OF THE SCHOOL SUPPO SFFRT TELL ME THEY WORK TWO OR EVEN THREE JOBS, JUST TO TGE BY. >> I'M A CROSSING GUARD FORHE T DISTRICT. ERIN: THIS IS JIM RILE >> I'M ALSO AN INSTRUCTIONAL AID WITH THE DISTRICT FOR OV 2ER YEARS, HE WORKS THREE PART TIME JOBS HERE AT EARL WARREN ELEMENTARY. >> AND THEN I GO TO THE CROSSWALK DUTY REPORTER: AND HE MAKES $16.75 AN HOUR, A DOLLAR 75 OVER MINIMUM WAGE >> I'M LUCERKI THAN MOST TO BE ABLE TO GET THOSE THREE POTIONS.SI ERIN: OTHER SUPPORT STAFF WITH SEIU LOCAL 1021, SAY THEY HAVE TO GET CREATIVE OUTSIDE THE DISTCTRI >> YOU DO WHAT YOU HAVE TO DO TO MAKE ENDS MEET AND TO LIVE THIS IS KATIE SANTORA, SHE COOKS AT JOHN F KENNEDY HIGH, BUT THAT'S JUST THE START TO HER DAY. >>ET OFF WORK AND FIVE DS OUT OF THE WEEK, FIVE, SIX DAYS OUT OF THE WEEK I HAVE TO COME TO WHOLE FOODS AND WORK AS A SHOPPER FOR ANOTHER FOUR HOURS AT THE DISTRICT SHE MAKES JUST UNDER $19 AN HOUR ING A WE COOK THE NEED NOODLES. ERIN: SHE'S NOW WO 1RK2 HOURS A DAY, 5 TO 6 DAYS A WEEK FOR 8 YEARS >> IS THAT SUSTAINABLE FOR YOU? >> IT'S TIRING, BUT YOU KNOW YOU DO WHAT YOU HAVE TO DO ACCORDING TO SEIU, MOST OF THE SUPPORT STAFF AT SAC CITY UNIFIED, WORK TWO JOBS, IF NOT MO. >> I DON'T KW NOHOW THEY DO IT, ON THESE LOW BARELY ABOVE POVERTY WAGES, THEY'RE MANAGING TO GET AROUND TOWN AND COORDINATE TWO SCHEDULES ANDRY T TO RAISE A FAMILY AT THE SAME TIME, IT'S JUST NOT SUSTAINABLE ERIN: THEIR UNION IS NEGOTIATING HIGHER WAGES AND SALARIES, ALSO FOR THE DISTRICT TO WORK THEIR UNION MEMBERS FOUR HOURS A DAY SO THAT THEY QUALIFY FOR BENEFI.TS >> RIGHT NOW, IT'S SUPER COMMON OUR MEMBERS WORKING 3.75, 3.75, 3.75, AND ENTH THEY GET A SECOND JOB, I DON'T KNOW HOW THEY DO !IT ERIN: WE SPOKE TO THE DISTRICT WHO EXAIPLNED NEGATIONS ARE ONINGO ERIN: THEY HOPE TO HAVE A DEAL SO. >> WE HAVE SO MUCH HOPE RIGHT NOW, IT'S SO CLOSE, IT CAN BE SO CLOSE, WE'VE SEEN SO CLOSE BEFORE ERIN: MINUTES AGO THEIR UNION RESUMED NEGOTIATIONS WITH THE DISTRICT, AND SAY EYTH FEEL THERE'S A LIGHT AT THE END OF THE TUNNEL. LIVE IN SACRAMENTO, ERINEF H KCRA 3 NEWS. ERIN: WE WILL CONTINUE TO FOLLOW THE VERY LATEST ON THIS STRIKE. YOU CAN FIND THE UPDEDAT PROPOSAL
'I have three jobs': SCUSD support staff discuss how they make ends meet on the their current contract
“Our members have a huge concentration of people living barely above the poverty line”
Updated: 7:41 PM PDT Apr 2, 2022
SEIU Local 1021 represents thousands of support staff at Sacramento City Unified School District. Most of their members work two or more jobs to make ends meet, according to the union.“Our members have a huge concentration of people living barely above the poverty line," said vice president of SEIU Local Chapter 1021, Dan Schallock.“We have people that are literally unable, in this economy and with everything that’s happening, to pay their rent, to be able to put food on their table,” Schallock said.At SCUSD according to SEIU, most of their members make $20 or less an hour; many members take on additional jobs to make ends meet.KCRA 3 met with several SEIU members Saturday morning on day 11 of the teacher and staff strike.“At 8 a.m., I’m student safety in front of the school, until just before the bell rings, and then I go to the crosswalk duty," said Jim Riffle. Riffle has been with the district for over 25 years. He works three part-time jobs at Earl Warren Elementary School, where he currently makes $16.75 an hour.The current California minimum wage is $15 an hour.Another SEIU member, Katie Santora, works as a food service lead in the district.“I get off work and five days out of the week, five or six days out of the week, I have to come to Whole Foods and work as a shopper for another four hours,” Santora said.Santora has worked 12 hours a day, five to six days a week since 2014.“Housing is expensive, gas, oh my gosh gas, food prices, all that stuff is going up but our pay is not, it’s unfair,” Santora said.Santora is paid $18.98 an hour for her work at SCUSD.SEIU Local Chapter 1021, in addition to negotiating for higher wages and salaries, during the strike, is also requesting the district work their union members four or more hours a day, to ensure they are eligible for benefits.“Right now it’s super common, our members working 3.75, 3.75, 3.75, and then they get a second job, I don’t know how they do it,” Schallock said.KCRA 3 spoke with SCUSD on the specifics involved in their discussions with SEIU during ongoing negotiations.SCUSD responded, “Negotiations with both SCTA and SEIU are expected to continue this weekend.” | FACT CHECK BELOW | Sacramento City Unified teachers aren’t the highest paid, but health benefits top the list Related CoverageFact Check: SCTA union's claim of teachers being ‘forced’ to pay $12K moreShe's become the face behind the Sacramento schools' strike Sac City Unified strike: What the district offered the teachers' union and a history of strifeAffected by the Sac City Unified strike? These 3 businesses are offering children activitiesHere is where Sacramento City Unified students can get meals during teacher strike
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — SEIU Local 1021 represents thousands of support staff at Sacramento City Unified School District. Most of their members work two or more jobs to make ends meet, according to the union.
“Our members have a huge concentration of people living barely above the poverty line," said vice president of SEIU Local Chapter 1021, Dan Schallock.
“We have people that are literally unable, in this economy and with everything that’s happening, to pay their rent, to be able to put food on their table,” Schallock said.
At SCUSD according to SEIU, most of their members make $20 or less an hour; many members take on additional jobs to make ends meet.
KCRA 3 met with several SEIU members Saturday morning on day 11 of the teacher and staff strike.
“At 8 a.m., I’m student safety in front of the school, until just before the bell rings, and then I go to the crosswalk duty," said Jim Riffle.
Riffle has been with the district for over 25 years. He works three part-time jobs at Earl Warren Elementary School, where he currently makes $16.75 an hour.
The current California minimum wage is $15 an hour.
Another SEIU member, Katie Santora, works as a food service lead in the district.
“I get off work and five days out of the week, five or six days out of the week, I have to come to Whole Foods and work as a shopper for another four hours,” Santora said.
Santora has worked 12 hours a day, five to six days a week since 2014.
“Housing is expensive, gas, oh my gosh gas, food prices, all that stuff is going up but our pay is not, it’s unfair,” Santora said.
Santora is paid $18.98 an hour for her work at SCUSD.
SEIU Local Chapter 1021, in addition to negotiating for higher wages and salaries, during the strike, is also requesting the district work their union members four or more hours a day, to ensure they are eligible for benefits.
“Right now it’s super common, our members working 3.75, 3.75, 3.75, and then they get a second job, I don’t know how they do it,” Schallock said.
KCRA 3 spoke with SCUSD on the specifics involved in their discussions with SEIU during ongoing negotiations.
SCUSD responded, “Negotiations with both SCTA and SEIU are expected to continue this weekend.”
| FACT CHECK BELOW | Sacramento City Unified teachers aren’t the highest paid, but health benefits top the list
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https://www.kcra.com/article/crisis-in-ukraine-april-3-2022/39618189
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Residents of Ukraine’s besieged southeastern coast awaited possible evacuation Sunday as the country’s president said Russia’s obsession with capturing a key port city had left it weakened and created opportunities for his military.Two loud explosions were heard in Odesa on the Black Sea early Sunday and black smoke was seen rising above the city, Ukraine’s largest port where its navy is headquartered.“Odesa was attacked from the air. Some missiles were shot down by air defense,” the city council said in a brief statement on the Telegram messaging app. It said fires were reported in some areas but gave no indication what was hit in the attack.Here's the latest on the Ukraine-Russia conflict as of 5:20 a.m. (Eastern):The Russian military says it has struck an oil processing plant and fuel depots around the strategic Black Sea port of Odesa. The regional governor in Kharkiv said Russian troops have continued shelling the city in northeast Ukraine.Carla Del Ponte, former chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, has called for an international arrest warrant to be issued for Russian President Vladimir Putin, calling him a war criminal in an interview published Saturday in Swiss newspaper Le Temps.The secretary of Ukraine's national security council has denied that the country was responsible for a reported attack on a Russian fuel depot. The U.N. refugee agency says more than 4 million people have now fled Ukraine following Russia’s invasion, a new milestone in the largest refugee crisis in Europe since World War II.With Mariupol to the east of Odesa squarely in Russia’s crosshairs, Ukraine insists it has gained a leg up elsewhere in the country, leading to troops retaking territory north of the capital of Kyiv as Russian forces departed.“Ukraine has gained invaluable time, time that is allowing us to foil the enemy’s tactics and weaken its capabilities,” President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said late Saturday.Inside Mariupol, though, surrounded by Russian forces for more than a month and brutalized by some of the war’s worst attacks, conditions remain dire and prospects for escape uncertain.About 100,000 people are believed to remain in the Sea of Azov city, less than a quarter its prewar population of 430,000, and dire shortages of water, food, fuel and medicine persist.Many still in Mariupol await fulfillment of promises to help them reach safety. Among those trying to get residents out was the International Committee of the Red Cross, which still hadn’t reached the city on Saturday, a day after local authorities said it had been blocked by Russian forces.Some residents escaped on their own, including Tamila Mazurenko, who reached Zaporizhzhia, a city still under Ukrainian control that has served as a hub for other evacuations.“I have only one question: Why?” she said of her city’s ordeal. “Our normal life was destroyed. And we lost everything. I don’t have any job, I can’t find my son.”Mariupol is in the mostly Russian-speaking Donbas region, where Moscow-backed separatists have fought Ukrainian troops for eight years. Its capture would create an unbroken land corridor from Russia to Crimea, which Moscow seized from Ukraine in 2014.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As Ukrainian troops moved cautiously to retake territory north of Kyiv, the country and its Western allies said Russia is building strength in eastern Ukraine. Where Russian troops recede, Ukraine said it would continue its attacks, shelling and targeting them as they pull out.“Peace will not be the result of any decisions the enemy makes somewhere in Moscow. There is no need to entertain empty hopes that they will simply leave our land. We can only have peace by fighting,” Zelenskyy said.Though the geography of the battlefield morphed, little changed for many Ukrainians more than five weeks into a war that has sent more than 4 million people fleeing the country as refugees.Zelenskyy alleged that as Russian troops have shifted, they’ve left mines around homes, abandoned equipment and even the bodies of the dead. Those claims could not be independently verified, but Ukrainian troops were seen heeding the warning.In Bucha, northwest of Kyiv, Associated Press journalists watched as Ukrainian soldiers, backed by a column of tanks and other armored vehicles, used cables to drag bodies off of a street from a distance for fear they may have been booby-trapped. Locals said the dead — AP counted at least six — were civilians killed without provocation by departing Russian soldiers.Video: Refugees fleeing Ukraine arrive in PolandIn towns and cities surrounding Kyiv, signs of fierce fighting were everywhere in the wake of the Russian redeployment. Destroyed armored vehicles from both armies lay in streets and fields along with scattered military gear.Ukrainian troops were stationed at the entrance to Antonov Airport in the suburb of Hostomel, demonstrating control of the runway that Russia tried to storm in the first days of the war.Inside the compound, the Mriya, one of the biggest planes ever built, lay wrecked underneath a hangar pockmarked with holes from the February attack.“The Russians couldn’t make one like it so they destroyed it,“ said Oleksandr Merkushev, mayor of nearby Irpin.The head of Ukraine’s delegation in talks with Russia said Moscow’s negotiators informally agreed to most of a draft proposal discussed during face-to-face talks in Istanbul this week, but no written confirmation has been provided. However, Davyd Arakhamia said on Ukrainian TV that he hopes that draft is developed enough so that the two countries’ presidents can meet to discuss it.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Even as flickers of hope emerged for Ukraine in some places, Zelenskyy said he expects towns where Russian forces depart to endure missile and rocket strikes from afar and for the battle in the east to be intense. In his evening address Saturday, he called for his people to do whatever they can to ensure the country’s survival, even acts as simple as showing each other kindness.“When a nation is defending itself in a war of annihilation, when it is a question of life or death of millions, there are no unimportant things. ... And everyone can contribute to a victory for all,” the president said. “Some with weapons in their hands. Some by working. And some with a warm word and help at the right moment. Do everything you can so we stand together in this war for our freedom, for our independence.”
Residents of Ukraine’s besieged southeastern coast awaited possible evacuation Sunday as the country’s president said Russia’s obsession with capturing a key port city had left it weakened and created opportunities for his military.
Two loud explosions were heard in Odesa on the Black Sea early Sunday and black smoke was seen rising above the city, Ukraine’s largest port where its navy is headquartered.
“Odesa was attacked from the air. Some missiles were shot down by air defense,” the city council said in a brief statement on the Telegram messaging app. It said fires were reported in some areas but gave no indication what was hit in the attack.
Here's the latest on the Ukraine-Russia conflict as of 5:20 a.m. (Eastern):
- The Russian military says it has struck an oil processing plant and fuel depots around the strategic Black Sea port of Odesa.
- The regional governor in Kharkiv said Russian troops have continued shelling the city in northeast Ukraine.
- Carla Del Ponte, former chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, has called for an international arrest warrant to be issued for Russian President Vladimir Putin, calling him a war criminal in an interview published Saturday in Swiss newspaper Le Temps.
- The secretary of Ukraine's national security council has denied that the country was responsible for a reported attack on a Russian fuel depot.
- The U.N. refugee agency says more than 4 million people have now fled Ukraine following Russia’s invasion, a new milestone in the largest refugee crisis in Europe since World War II.
With Mariupol to the east of Odesa squarely in Russia’s crosshairs, Ukraine insists it has gained a leg up elsewhere in the country, leading to troops retaking territory north of the capital of Kyiv as Russian forces departed.
“Ukraine has gained invaluable time, time that is allowing us to foil the enemy’s tactics and weaken its capabilities,” President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said late Saturday.
Inside Mariupol, though, surrounded by Russian forces for more than a month and brutalized by some of the war’s worst attacks, conditions remain dire and prospects for escape uncertain.
About 100,000 people are believed to remain in the Sea of Azov city, less than a quarter its prewar population of 430,000, and dire shortages of water, food, fuel and medicine persist.
Many still in Mariupol await fulfillment of promises to help them reach safety. Among those trying to get residents out was the International Committee of the Red Cross, which still hadn’t reached the city on Saturday, a day after local authorities said it had been blocked by Russian forces.
Some residents escaped on their own, including Tamila Mazurenko, who reached Zaporizhzhia, a city still under Ukrainian control that has served as a hub for other evacuations.
“I have only one question: Why?” she said of her city’s ordeal. “Our normal life was destroyed. And we lost everything. I don’t have any job, I can’t find my son.”
Mariupol is in the mostly Russian-speaking Donbas region, where Moscow-backed separatists have fought Ukrainian troops for eight years. Its capture would create an unbroken land corridor from Russia to Crimea, which Moscow seized from Ukraine in 2014.
As Ukrainian troops moved cautiously to retake territory north of Kyiv, the country and its Western allies said Russia is building strength in eastern Ukraine. Where Russian troops recede, Ukraine said it would continue its attacks, shelling and targeting them as they pull out.
“Peace will not be the result of any decisions the enemy makes somewhere in Moscow. There is no need to entertain empty hopes that they will simply leave our land. We can only have peace by fighting,” Zelenskyy said.
Though the geography of the battlefield morphed, little changed for many Ukrainians more than five weeks into a war that has sent more than 4 million people fleeing the country as refugees.
Zelenskyy alleged that as Russian troops have shifted, they’ve left mines around homes, abandoned equipment and even the bodies of the dead. Those claims could not be independently verified, but Ukrainian troops were seen heeding the warning.
In Bucha, northwest of Kyiv, Associated Press journalists watched as Ukrainian soldiers, backed by a column of tanks and other armored vehicles, used cables to drag bodies off of a street from a distance for fear they may have been booby-trapped. Locals said the dead — AP counted at least six — were civilians killed without provocation by departing Russian soldiers.
Video: Refugees fleeing Ukraine arrive in Poland
In towns and cities surrounding Kyiv, signs of fierce fighting were everywhere in the wake of the Russian redeployment. Destroyed armored vehicles from both armies lay in streets and fields along with scattered military gear.
Ukrainian troops were stationed at the entrance to Antonov Airport in the suburb of Hostomel, demonstrating control of the runway that Russia tried to storm in the first days of the war.
Inside the compound, the Mriya, one of the biggest planes ever built, lay wrecked underneath a hangar pockmarked with holes from the February attack.
“The Russians couldn’t make one like it so they destroyed it,“ said Oleksandr Merkushev, mayor of nearby Irpin.
The head of Ukraine’s delegation in talks with Russia said Moscow’s negotiators informally agreed to most of a draft proposal discussed during face-to-face talks in Istanbul this week, but no written confirmation has been provided. However, Davyd Arakhamia said on Ukrainian TV that he hopes that draft is developed enough so that the two countries’ presidents can meet to discuss it.
Even as flickers of hope emerged for Ukraine in some places, Zelenskyy said he expects towns where Russian forces depart to endure missile and rocket strikes from afar and for the battle in the east to be intense. In his evening address Saturday, he called for his people to do whatever they can to ensure the country’s survival, even acts as simple as showing each other kindness.
“When a nation is defending itself in a war of annihilation, when it is a question of life or death of millions, there are no unimportant things. ... And everyone can contribute to a victory for all,” the president said. “Some with weapons in their hands. Some by working. And some with a warm word and help at the right moment. Do everything you can so we stand together in this war for our freedom, for our independence.”
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https://www.kcra.com/article/2-people-struck-by-lightning-outside-a-spring-training-game-florida/39618083
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2 people were struck by lightning outside a spring training game in Florida
Two people were rushed to the hospital after being struck by lightning Saturday while leaving a New York Yankees spring training game in Florida, police said.
A man in his 60s and a woman in her 20s were struck in the parking lot of Raymond James Stadium in Tampa. They were taken to a hospital and were stable, Tampa Police spokesperson Jamel Lanee' said in a statement.
No other details were released.
The Tampa Bay area was under a slight risk of severe weather Saturday, the National Weather Service said. Possible tornadoes, strong winds and hail were forecast, the NWS said.
The odds of being struck by lightning in a given year are about 1 in 500,000, according to2013 data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Florida is considered the nation's "lightning capital," with more than 2,000 lightning injuries over the past 50 years, the CDC explained.
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These are the stars who could score big at the Grammys
Several Grammy Awards performers such as Billie Eilish, Olivia Rodrigo and Jon Batiste have a chance to carve their names in the show's history books Sunday.
Through her song “Happier Than Ever,” Eilish could become the first artist ever to win record of the year three times in a row, and the only artist along with Paul Simon to take home the award three times. She’s in position to join Adele as the only artists to ever win three major categories — record, song and album of the year — twice. She previously won for “Bad Guy” and “Everything I Wanted.”
Trevor Noah returns for a second time as Grammys host. The ceremony shifted from Los Angeles to Las Vegas because of rising COVID-19 cases and the omicron variant in January, with organizers citing “too many risks” to hosting the performance-filled show at the time.
If Eilish wins in all her seven nominated categories, she’ll be the woman with the most Grammys won in a single year (H.E.R., Doja Cat and Rodrigo could do the same). But that might be a tough feat with Eilish facing some stiff competition for the show’s top prize — album of the year — which was expanded to 10 nominees.
Eilish is up for best music film with her concert documentary “Happier Than Ever: A Love Letter to Los Angeles.” But in that same category includes Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson’s “Summer of Soul,” which recently won an Oscar for best documentary.
Even if Eilish comes away with six wins, she’ll be tied with Beyoncé and Adele — which is not bad company to be in.
Rodrigo has an opportunity to join Eilish and Christopher Cross as the only artists to win all four major categories (best new artist, album, record and song of the year). The 19-year-old “drivers license” singer could be following Eilish’s remarkable record by becoming the second-youngest album of the year winner with “Sour.”
The only person who could win the most Grammys in one night is Jon Batiste, who enters the awards with a leading 11 nominations. If Batiste wins in eight categories, he will tie Michael Jackson and rock band Santana for the record.
Batiste, a multi-genre performer and Oscar winner, might have a hard time pulling that off with the competition in record and album of the year categories. He could pull away in the jazz, American roots music and classical fields.
H.E.R., who won song of the year last year for “I Can’t Breathe,” could go back-to-back. She’s nominated this year for the soulful “Fight for You,” whose poignant lyrics from the “Judas and the Black Messiah” soundtrack were written by H.E.R., producer D’Mile and singer Tiara Thomas. It won an Academy Award for best original song last year.
The awards will be without several big names: Drake and The Weeknd both decided to not take part in the Grammys, at all. Ye, who changed his name from Kanye West, said he was told that his act was pulled from the show.
It might be a bittersweet moment for the Foo Fighters following the recent death of its drummer Taylor Hawkins. The rock band could extend their record for most best rock album wins with five for “Medicine at Midnight.”
Cardi B and Megan Thee Stallion will battle to see who becomes the first woman to win best rap performance as a solo artist. Stallion, who won the award with Beyoncé last year, is nominated for her song “Thot S(asterisk)(asterisk)(asterisk),” while Cardi B is up for her crossover hit “Up.”
Mickey Guyton was the first Black woman to be nominated in best country solo performance last year, and now she’s back in the category again. If she wins, she would be the first Black woman to get that award.
In rap, Jay-Z could extend his record as the most awarded rapper of all time with 23 wins. He’s up for three nomination — two in the best rap song category for his songwriting on DMX’S “Bath Salts” and Kanye West’s “Jail.” He’s also up for album of the year for his guest appearance on West’s “Donda.”
A healthy dose of performers will hit the stage at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, including Silk Sonic, H.E.R., Chris Stapleton, Cynthia Erivo, Jack Harlow, Nas, Leslie Odom Jr. and Brothers Osborne.
Artists competing with Eilish for album of the year include Rodrigo, Jon Batiste, Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga, Justin Bieber, Doja Cat, H.E.R., Taylor Swift, Lil Nas X and Kanye West.
On the production side, Serban Ghenea could tie Al Schmitt as the engineer-mixer with the most Grammys won with 20. He’s won a total 18 trophies in his career and enters the awards with five nominations for his work on Doja Cat’s “Planet Her” and Lil Nas X’s “Montero.” Ghenea also could extend his record as the engineer-mixer with the most album of the year wins at five.
Although 80-plus awards will be handed out — roughly 10 during the live telecast and the rest during the pre-ceremony — viewers are most likely watching for the performances.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/disney-branded-hand-sanitizers-recalled/39617101
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PLACE FOR THE REST OF THE YEAR. THESE DAYS, MOST OF US HAVE HAND SANITIZER IN JUST ABOUT EVERY SPOT FROM OUR NEWSROOM, CARS, KITCHENS, BACKPACKS AND SPORT BAGS. CAN THERE BE SUCH A THING AS USING TOO MUCH OF THE STUFF? DONNA PITMAN LOOKS FOR ANSWERS. DONNA: BY NOW, WE ALL KNOW SOAP, WATER, AND TWENTY SECONDS IS BEST WHEN WE CAN GET TO A SINK, WE TURN TO THIS. HAND SANITIZER. WITH MORE KIDS IN SPRING ACTIVITIES AND HEADING INT SUMMER COULD THEY USE TOO MUCH? ,> THESE ALCOHOL-BASED HAND SANITIZERS CONTA EITHER ISOPROPYL ALCOHOL, RUBBING ALCOHOL OR ETHYL ALCOHOL. THERE HAVE BEEN STUDIES GOING BACK AT LEAST 15 YEARS THAT WHEN YOU USE IT APPROPRIATELY ON YOUR HANDS ONLY THE ALCOH DOES NOT INCREASE YOUR BLOOD ALCOHOL LEVEL. DONNA: DOCTOR ROBYN LIVINGSTON IS AN INFECTIOUS DISEASE PHYSICIAN AT CHILDREN’S MERCY. SHE SAYS HAND SANITIZER, THE ALCOHOL IN IT DOES NOT GET INTO , A PERSON’S BLOOD STREAM. THOUGH THERE CAN BE SKIN IRRITATON. SOMETIMES WHEN YOU USE ONE WITH A FRAGRANCE ADDED, IT COU CAUSE THAT. STAY AWAY FROM ANY WITH A FRAGMENT -- FRAGRANCE. YOU CAN ALWAYS BUY ALCOHOL-BASED HA RUB, THAT WILL FORM -- FUNCTION AS A MOISTURIZER. DONNA: GOOD TO KNOW FOR THOSE MOMENTS OPEN WATER AREN’T AT THE READY. DONNA PITMAN KMBC 9 NEWS. CODY: DR. LIVINGSTON REMINDS US HAND SANITIZER DOES EXPIRE.
Disney-branded hand sanitizers are being recalled. Here's what to know
Updated: 6:21 AM PDT Apr 3, 2022
Two lots of Disney-branded hand sanitizer featuring Mickey Mouse and baby Yoda from The Mandalorian have been voluntarily recalled by Best Brands Consumer Products, according to a company statement shared by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).FDA testing detected the presence of benzene in The Mandalorian branded product and methanol in the Mickey Mouse version. The company was notified of the results in late February.Benzene is a carcinogen, and substantial exposure can cause leukemia, blood cancer of the bone marrow, and life-threatening blood disorders, the FDA said.Substantial exposure to methanol can cause serious health problems, including nausea, vomiting, headache, blurred vision, coma, seizures, permanent blindness, permanent damage to the central nervous system, or death. The FDA noted "young children who accidentally ingest these products, and adolescents and adults who drink these products as an alcohol (ethanol) substitute, are most at risk for methanol poisoning."The affected lots of hand sanitizer had already been taken off the market for "unrelated commercial reasons" and the company has received no complaints from customers about the Disney-themed products, according to Best Brands. Both lots were produced by a third-party manufacturer, according to the company statement.The company warned customers to stop using and discard any items they have from lot 20E21, with an expiration date of Sept. 30, 2022, of The Mandalorian hand sanitizer, that contains 68% ethyl alcohol and is available in green and blue 2.11 fl oz bottles.The Mickey Mouse hand sanitizer from lot 20D21, with a June, 30, 2022, expiry, in blue, 2.11 fl oz bottles should also be discarded.Customers who experience problems with the product can also report their experiences to the FDA's MedWatch Adverse Event Reporting program.
Two lots of Disney-branded hand sanitizer featuring Mickey Mouse and baby Yoda from The Mandalorian have been voluntarily recalled by Best Brands Consumer Products, according to a company statement shared by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
FDA testing detected the presence of benzene in The Mandalorian branded product and methanol in the Mickey Mouse version. The company was notified of the results in late February.
Benzene is a carcinogen, and substantial exposure can cause leukemia, blood cancer of the bone marrow, and life-threatening blood disorders, the FDA said.
Substantial exposure to methanol can cause serious health problems, including nausea, vomiting, headache, blurred vision, coma, seizures, permanent blindness, permanent damage to the central nervous system, or death. The FDA noted "young children who accidentally ingest these products, and adolescents and adults who drink these products as an alcohol (ethanol) substitute, are most at risk for methanol poisoning."
The affected lots of hand sanitizer had already been taken off the market for "unrelated commercial reasons" and the company has received no complaints from customers about the Disney-themed products, according to Best Brands. Both lots were produced by a third-party manufacturer, according to the company statement.
The company warned customers to stop using and discard any items they have from lot 20E21, with an expiration date of Sept. 30, 2022, of The Mandalorian hand sanitizer, that contains 68% ethyl alcohol and is available in green and blue 2.11 fl oz bottles.
The Mickey Mouse hand sanitizer from lot 20D21, with a June, 30, 2022, expiry, in blue, 2.11 fl oz bottles should also be discarded.
Customers who experience problems with the product can also report their experiences to the FDA's MedWatch Adverse Event Reporting program.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/estelle-harris-dies-at-93/39617849
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Estelle Harris, ‘Seinfeld’ and ‘Toy Story’ actor, dies at 93
Estelle Harris, who hollered her way into TV history as George Costanza's short-fused mother on "Seinfeld" and voiced Mrs. Potato Head in the "Toy Story" franchise, has died. She was 93.
As middle-class matron Estelle Costanza, Harris put a memorable stamp on her recurring role in the smash 1990s sitcom. With her high-pitched voice and humorously overbearing attitude, she was an archetype of maternal indignation.
Trading insults and absurdities with her on-screen husband, played by Jerry Stiller, Harris helped create a parental pair that would leave even a psychiatrist helpless to do anything but hope they'd move to Florida — as their son, played by Jason Alexander, fruitlessly encouraged them to do.
Harris' agent Michael Eisenstadt confirmed the actor's death in Palm Desert, California, on Saturday evening.
Viewers of all backgrounds would tell her she was just like their own mothers, Harris often said.
The career-defining role came after decades on stage and screen. Born April 22, 1928, in New York City, Harris grew up in the city and later in the Pittsburgh suburb of Tarentum, Pennsylvania, where her father owned a candy store. She started tapping her comedic talents in high school productions where she realized she "could make the audience get hysterical," as she told People magazine in 1995.
After the nine-season run of "Seinfeld" ended in 1998, Harris continued to appear on stage and screen. She voiced Mrs. Potato Head in the 1999 animated blockbuster "Toy Story 2" and played the recurring character Muriel in the popular Disney Channel sitcom "The Suite Life of Zack & Cody," among other roles.
She had stopped pursuing show business when she married in the early 1950s but resumed acting in amateur groups, dinner theater and commercials as her three children grew ("I had to get out of diapers and bottles and blah-blah baby talk," she told People). Eventually, she began appearing in guest roles on TV shows including the legal comedy "Night Court," and in films including director Sergio Leone's 1984 gangland epic "Once Upon a Time in America."
Her "Seinfeld" debut came in one of the show's most celebrated episodes: the Emmy Award-winning 1992 "The Contest," in which the four central characters challenge each other to refrain from doing what is artfully described only as "that."
Harris would go on to appear in dozens more episodes of the "show about nothing." She seethed over snubbed paella, screeched about George's hanky-panky in the parental bed and laid out the spread for screen husband Frank's idiosyncratic holiday, Festivus.
"Estelle is a born performer," Stiller told The Record of Bergen County, N.J., in 1998. "I just go with what I got, and she goes back at me the same way."
Still, Harris saw a sympathetic undertone to her character, often saying Estelle fumed out frustration at her bumbling mate and scheming slacker of a son.
Viewers, she told an interviewer in 1998, "just look at her as being funny, cute and a loudmouth. But it's not how I play her. I play her with misery underneath."
She is survived by her three children, three grandsons, and a great grandson.
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'A senseless violent act': Police say 6 dead, at least 9 injured in Sacramento shooting
Warning: Some of the details below are graphic.
Police in California say six people are dead and at least nine others have been injured after a shooting in downtown Sacramento.
The Sacramento Police Department says the shooting happened early Sunday morning.
Video posted on Twitter showed people running through the street as the sound of rapid gunfire could be heard in the background. Video showed multiple ambulances had been sent to the scene.
Police provided few details about the circumstances surrounding the shooting but said in a tweet that a “large police presence will remain and the scene remains active.” Phone messages seeking comment were left with the Sacramento police.
Residents were asked to avoid the area, which is packed with restaurants and bars that leads to the Golden One Center, where the Sacramento Kings play basketball.
Phone messages seeking comment were left with the Sacramento police.
Berry Accius, a community activist, said he came to the scene shortly after the shooting happened.
“The first thing I saw was like victims. I saw a young girl with a whole bunch of blood in her body, a girl taking off glass from her, a young girl screaming saying, ‘They killed my sister.’ A mother running up, ‘Where’s my son, has my son been shot?’“ he said.
Kay Harris, 32, said she was asleep when one of her family members called to say they thought her brother had been killed. She said she thought he was at London, a nightclub at 1009 10th Street.
Harris said she has been to the club a few times and described it as a place for “the younger crowd.”
Police have the streets around the club closed, with yellow police tape fluttering in the early morning breeze. She has spent the morning circling the block waiting for news.
“Very much so a senseless violent act,” she said.
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Police in Sacramento say six people are dead and at least nine others have been injured after a shooting in downtown Sacramento.The Sacramento Police Department says the shooting happened early Sunday morning and 9th Street to 13th Street is closed between L Street and J Street. KCRA 3 has been told the gunfire broke out around 2 a.m. and no arrests have yet been made. KCRA 3 is on the air now with coverage of the shooting. See the latest updates in the video above.Video posted on Twitter showed people running through the street as the sound of rapid gunfire could be heard in the background. Video showed multiple ambulances had been sent to the scene.Police provided few details about the circumstances surrounding the shooting but said in a tweet that a “large police presence will remain and the scene remains active.” Phone messages seeking comment were left with the Sacramento police.Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg tweeted that "words can't express my shock & sadness this morning" and called gun violence "the scourge of our city, state and nation." --The Associated Press contributed to this report.
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Police in Sacramento say six people are dead and at least nine others have been injured after a shooting in downtown Sacramento.
The Sacramento Police Department says the shooting happened early Sunday morning and 9th Street to 13th Street is closed between L Street and J Street.
KCRA 3 has been told the gunfire broke out around 2 a.m. and no arrests have yet been made.
This content is imported from Twitter.
You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.
- KCRA 3 is on the air now with coverage of the shooting. See the latest updates in the video above.
Video posted on Twitter showed people running through the street as the sound of rapid gunfire could be heard in the background. Video showed multiple ambulances had been sent to the scene.
Police provided few details about the circumstances surrounding the shooting but said in a tweet that a “large police presence will remain and the scene remains active.” Phone messages seeking comment were left with the Sacramento police.
Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg tweeted that "words can't express my shock & sadness this morning" and called gun violence "the scourge of our city, state and nation."
This content is imported from Twitter.
You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.
--The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Biden cites economic gains, but voters see much more to do
Seven months before he faces a critical test from voters in the midterm elections, President Joe Biden is turning his focus to kitchen-table issues as he struggles to get credit for a recovering economy.
Since Biden took office last year, job growth has been vigorous and steady — as he told the country Friday after the March jobs report showed the addition of 431,000 jobs and the unemployment rate falling to a low 3.6%. But those same remarks were also tempered by his recognition that food and gas prices are too high and inflation is at its worst level in a generation.
For Biden, convincing Americans of the progress made in the economic recovery only serves as a salient reminder of how much further the country has to go.
“Our economy has gone from being on the mend, to being on the move,” Biden said, even as he acknowledged Americans are not ready for a victory lap. “I know that this job is not finished: We need to do more to get prices under control.”
At times, Biden’s bifurcated messaging — like the state of the economy itself — can seem like a jumble of contradictions. It leaves voters to piece together their own opinions — potentially to the president's political peril.
Record wage gains of 5.6% over the past year, for example, run up against consumer prices that have risen at 7.9% annually. Biden's announcement this past week of plans to release a million barrels of oil daily from the U.S. strategic reserve over the next six months was a recognition of the harm that inflation can have not just on the economy but his own policy ambitions.
The economic discontent is reflected in Biden's standing in public opinion polls.
Roughly 7 in 10 people in the United States describe the economy as being in poor shape, while nearly two-thirds disapprove of Biden’s economic leadership, according to a March poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.
Administration officials and Biden allies happily point to the job creation data as a sign of accomplishment but they are also perturbed by the lingering economic malaise that threatens him with a historically inhospitable environment for a president’s party in a midterm year.
They have advised Biden to spotlight his work to bring down gas prices and forthcoming efforts to try to curtail an increase in food prices from the war raging in the world’s breadbasket of Ukraine.
It is not just the family budget he is targeting. Biden’s latest message to voters is that he can bring the nation’s finances under control too.
His annual budget request highlighted a $1 trillion decrease in the deficit over 10 years, an effort to claim the mantle of fiscal steward even as the reduction was driven by the expiration of COVID-19 relief programs that are no longer necessary and a new plan for a minimum tax on the nation’s billionaires.
“Responsible fiscal accountability is always a priority with voters," said Democratic pollster John Anzalone, who advised Biden's 2020 campaign. “I think people want fiscal accountability. And I don’t think that’s changed over the years.”
Biden aides also hope he can spend more time focusing on other ways that government is working to make concrete changes in peoples’ lives, with infrastructure investments and the improving economy.
Rep. Annie Kuster, D-N.H., said Wednesday after meeting with Biden that his messaging over the past month has clearly targeted moderate voters.
“The State of the Union was spot on in terms of what constituents in our districts, purple districts, are talking about right now,” she said outside the White House. She noted Biden's pivot to addressing mental health issues after the pandemic, while also emphasizing that the president plans to run on infrastructure and job creation.
Voters have interpreted the pandemic, the recession, the burst of government spending, the swift recovery and the inflation that followed with a sense of pessimism.
The University of Michigan’s survey of consumer sentiment included a partisan breakdown of numbers that shows growing anxiety among the Democrats whom Biden needs to turn out in 2022. Democrats’ expectations for the economy have been dropping since July, while independents' expectations for the economy are at the lowest level since 2008 when the country was mired in the Great Recession.
Oil and gasoline prices have been a driver of this skepticism. Crude oil prices started the year at roughly $76 a barrel, spiked to about $124 on March 8 after the Russian invasion of Ukraine and appeared to settle just below $100 on Friday after Biden had announced the release from the reserves.
Desmond Lachman, a senior fellow at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, called the market reaction to Biden’s release of petroleum “muted” and noted that “in the short term we are subject to the whims of outside developments like the Russian invasion.”
University of Michigan economist Justin Wolfers, whose work is separate from the sentiment survey, noted there is evidence that the public’s perception of inflation may be worse than actual inflation. That’s because gasoline, food and other items where prices are openly displayed are key drivers of higher prices, possibly giving inflation an outsize psychological impact.
Wolfers has done academic work on the impact oil prices have on gubernatorial elections, but he noted that historical comparisons might not work after the financial and cultural impact of a pandemic that has scrambled expectations.
“Were I Biden, I’d be using some version of a ‘better off than you were four years ago,’” Wolfers said. He said voters need to remember June 2020, when the world was gripped by the pandemic, the government was providing misleading information about the pandemic, the economy was terrible and “you also didn’t know whether you were going to die.”
“How do you feel now? That would be the argument,” he said.
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https://www.kcra.com/article/sacramento-activist-berry-accius-describes-shooting-scene-says-gun-violence-is-a-citywide-issue/39619097
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Sacramento activist Berry Accius describes shooting scene, says gun violence is a ‘citywide issue’
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Updated: 9:26 AM PDT Apr 3, 2022
WHAT CAN YOU TELL US? LYSÉE: WE'RE HERATE NINTH AND K,O S WE'RE FACING, YOU'RE LOOKING DOWN K STREET TOWARDS ETH THEATER, WHERE WE HEARD SOME OF THIS HAD HAPPENED. LEAST ONE OF THE VICTIMS WAS LOCATED IN THAT AREA. WE'RE JOINED HERE WITH BARRY, A LOCAL COMMUNITY ACTIVIST. SO BARRY, TELL ME, WHEN DID YOU GET HERE, AND WHAT DID YOU SEE WHEN YOU GOT HERE? >> AROUND 20, 2:45. THE FITRS SCENE I SAW WAS BLOOD ALL OVER, SCREAMING SHE LOST HER SISTER. JUST A MOTHER RUNNING UP, TRYING TO FIND OUT IF HER SON WAS ONE OF THE VICTIMS. AND TH LISTENING TO SOME OF THE, YOU KNOW, WITNESSES TKAL ABOU TTHE STORY AND KNOWING THAT WHAT THE MOTHER WAS SAYING HER SON, AS SHE WAS DESCRIBING HIM TO ME, KNOWING THATER HON S WAS ONE OF THE VICTIMS. JUST TRAGIC O ALL KINDS OF BENDS. DON'T KNOW WHAT YOU CAN SAY IN THIS MOMENT. WHEN I GOT HERE AT FIRST, I THOUTGH IT WAS JUST THREE DEAD, A FEW INJURED. AS YOU KEPT ON BEATING AROUND, KEPT ON HAVING CONVERSATION WITH PEOPLE,HE T NUMBER JUST KEPT ON GOING UP, AND NOW IT'S SIX DEAD. SOMETHING THAT YOU NEVER WANTO T KEWA UP TO, THERE'SO S MYAN DIFFERENT ISOLATED SITUATIONS, AND SOMETHING LIKE THIS IS JTUS MIND-BOGGLING. ANOTHER COWARDLY ACT OF SENSELESS ACT OF VIOLENCE TT SHOULDN'T HAVE HAPPENED. LYSÉE: HOW DID YOU FIRST LEARN OF TS? >> JUST INFORMATION. LEAKS, CAME DOWN AND TALKED TO ONE TOFHE COUNCILMEMBERS AS I WAS DRIVING DOWN HERE, AND AS ACTION, JUST TRYGIN TO GIVE SOME COMP TO THE FAMILIES, JUST TRY TO HELP THEM AS MH UCAS I CAN. BUT YOU REALLY CAN'T HELP ANYBODY IN A MOMENT LIKE THIS. YOU KNOW, TRYO T GET SOME MEDICAL ATTENTION FOR SOME OF THE INDIVIDUALS THAT WERE HURT, BUT EVE THE MEDICS WERE IN THEIR MOMENT DEALING WHIT THEIR STUFF THAT THEY HAD TO DRIVE THEMSELVES TO, YOU KNOW, THE HOSPIT, DAL JUST REMEMBERING ONE OF THE VICTIMS COMING AND RUNNING, AND STILL HAVGIN HER CAR. STILL HAVINGER H CAR IN DRIVE AND SAYING HER SISTER, SHE HELD HER SISTER FOR THE LTAS TIME. AND JUST LTEISNING TO THAT, AND JUST HER CALM, AND THEN FINALLY RHE BREAKDO.WN IT JUST WAS, LIKE, IT WAS HEARTBREAKING. HOW DO YOU COMFORT SOMETHING KELI THAT? HERE WE ARE AGAIN, A MONTH AFTER FIVE PEOPLE DYING, WE'RE HERE AGAINIT WH SIX, AND MAYBE THE TOTAL WILL BE MORE. I HAVE TO ASK OUR CITY OFFICIALS, WHAT ARE WE GOING TO DO ABOUT THIS BEGUN VIOLENCE? THE GUNIO VLENCE WE'VE CONTINUED TO SAY, THERE'S AN ISSUE, HAVE CONTINUED TO SAY TTHA WOULD SPREAD OUTSIDE OF THESE SO-CALLED POVERTY-STRICKEN COMMUNITIESHA TT YOU LACK THE INVESTMENT OF, THAT IT WOULD COME INTO THESE AREASHAT T YOU'VE INVESTED IN,ND A HERE WE ARE. WE'RE HERE IN THIS MOMENT, AND HERE IN THIS MOMENT THAT I HOPE WOULD REALLY CHALLENGE THE CITY TO DO SOMETHING ABOUTHE T ILLEGAL GUNS IN OUR COMMUNITIES, THE ILLEGAL GUNS THAT ARE NOW VICTIMIZING PEOPLE THAT ARE JUST REALLY HERE HAVING A GOOD TIME. YOU DON'T EXPECT SOMETHING LIKE THISO T HAPPEN. YOU DON'T WANT SOMETHING LIKE THIS TO HAPPEN ANYWHERE, BUT NOW IT'S RIGHT HE,ER DOWNTOWN, AND WHAT ARE WE GOING TO DO ABOUT THIS? ARE WE GOING TO HAVE ANOERTH MOMENT THAT IS A NATIONAL ATTENTION OR ARE WE REALLY GOING TOO D SOMETHING TO PREVENT THESE ISSUES? THIS HAS BEEN A LONG-TERM FIGHT. I HOPE THAT THEY FINLYALEE S WHAT WE WERE SAYING HAS COME TO LIGHT, UNFORTUNATELY, BUT IT'S SOMETHG THAT WE COULD HAVE PREVT.EN LYSÉE: WERE YOU ABLE TO GET ANY INFORMATIONN O WHAT MAY HAVE HAPPENED LEADING TO T SHOOTING? >> I JUST KNOW THAT BASICALLY FROM MY KNOWLEDGE OF JUST SEEING WHATT I IS, THIS WAS SOMETHING TH WAT RANDOM. IT DEFINITELY WASN'T A RANDOM SITUATION. BUT NO ONE DESERSVE ANYTHING KELI THIS AT THIS PARTICULAR TIME. NO ONE DESERVES THIS KIND OF OUTCOME, RIGHT? THERE WASN'T A FIGHT, THERE WAS A FIGHT THAT PRECEDED. THE FIGHT HAD NOTHING TO DO WITH ISTH ACTUAL TRAGEDY. THAT WAS JUST A PRECURSOR. THAT WAS SOMETHING TOTALLY SEPATERA. HERE'S WHAT WE'RE DEALING WITH THAT SIX PEOPLE ARE DD. BECAUSE SOME COWARD OR COWARDS DECIDED TO TAKE WHATEVER KIND OF BEEF OR REVENGE OR ISSUE THEY HAD WHIT WHATEVER KIND OF PERSON OR PERSONSND A MAKE IT A SITUATION THAT IS NOW AFFECTING MORE THAN JUST THE PEOPLEHA T THEY KILL. THE VICTIMS THAT HADO T SEE THIS TRAUMA, BECAUSE AFTER THIS BECOMES A NEWS STORY FOR US, IT'S SOMETHING THEY HAVE TO LIVE FOR IN A LIFETIME. AND AGAIN, WE HAVE TO ASK OURSELVES AND OUR COMMUNITY, WHAT ARE WE GOING TO DO ABOUT IT? I HOPE THAT AFTER TS,HI WE JUST DON'T START, BECAUSE WHAT USUALLY HAPPENS, WE START PICKING W WE'RE GOING TO TARGET,EC BAUSE WE SEE CTAINER GROUPS, CERTAIN INDIVIDUALS, CERTAIN DEMOCRAT GPHRAS COMING TO DOWNTOWN, AND NOW WE SAY NO, WE DON'T WANT THOSE PEOPLE THERE. THIS CANNOT BE THAT MOMENT. WE HAVE TO BE FOCUSED AND TARGETED ON WT'SHA HAPPENING. WHAT'S HAPPENING IS GUN VIOLENCE THAT HAS SPREAD THROUGHOUTUR O CITY. THIS IS A CITYWIDE ISSUE WITH N VIOLE
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Sacramento activist Berry Accius describes shooting scene, says gun violence is a ‘citywide issue’
Sacramento community activist Berry Accius described Sunday’s deadly shooting in downtown Sacramento as another “senseless act of violence” in the city. Six people were killed and 10 hurt after a shooting broke out around 2 a.m., police said. Accius said that after getting tipped off about the shooting he arrived between 2:30 to 2:45 a.m. and tried to comfort family members of the victims.One woman with blood “all over her” was screaming that she had lost her sister, Accius said. Another woman was trying to find out if her son was one of the victims. It seemed that was the case based on witness accounts, he said. Accius called the shooting “mind-boggling” and "tragic."“It’s something that you never want to wake up to,” Accius said.He recalled seeing one of the victims running “and still having her car in drive and saying she held her sister for the last time.” Accius appealed to city leaders to take action, referencing another deadly shooting at a church in the county last month that killed five people. “Here we are again,” he said. “I just have to ask our city officials, what are we going to do about this gun violence? The gun violence that organizations like myself have continued to say, there’s an issue. Have continued to say that would spread outside of these so-called poverty-stricken communities that you lack the investment of. That it would come into these areas that you’ve invested in. Then here we are.”
Six people were killed and 10 hurt after a shooting broke out around 2 a.m., police said.
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Accius said that after getting tipped off about the shooting he arrived between 2:30 to 2:45 a.m. and tried to comfort family members of the victims.
One woman with blood “all over her” was screaming that she had lost her sister, Accius said.
Another woman was trying to find out if her son was one of the victims. It seemed that was the case based on witness accounts, he said.
Accius called the shooting “mind-boggling” and "tragic."
“It’s something that you never want to wake up to,” Accius said.
He recalled seeing one of the victims running “and still having her car in drive and saying she held her sister for the last time.”
Accius appealed to city leaders to take action, referencing another deadly shooting at a church in the county last month that killed five people.
“Here we are again,” he said. “I just have to ask our city officials, what are we going to do about this gun violence? The gun violence that organizations like myself have continued to say, there’s an issue. Have continued to say that would spread outside of these so-called poverty-stricken communities that you lack the investment of. That it would come into these areas that you’ve invested in. Then here we are.”
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'A very vivacious young man': Sergio Harris, a father of three, killed in Sacramento shooting
A 38-year-old father of three has been the first person identified as killed during the mass shooting in downtown Sacramento early Sunday.
Sergio Harris was one of the six people killed, his family confirmed with KCRA 3.
Twelve others were injured in the shooting that happened around 2 a.m. on K Street.
Sergio Harris' mother, Pamela Harris, was at the shooting scene Sunday morning waiting to see if her son was a victim.
"My son was a very vivacious young man," Harris said. "Fun to be around, liked to party, smiling all the time. Don't bother people. For this to happen is crazy. I'm just to the point right now, I don’t know what to do. I don’t even feel like this is real. I feel like this is a dream."
Harris told KCRA 3 that she had just had dinner with her son Saturday night.
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Public officials are expressing messages of condolence and outrage over the nation’s latest mass shooting after six people were killed and 10 others hurt early Sunday morning in downtown Sacramento. Here’s what elected leaders and organizations in Sacramento are saying after the shooting. Gov. Gavin Newsom released a statement and tweeted that "we cannot let gun violence be the new normal."Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg tweeted that "words can't express my shock & sadness." He spoke alongside other city leaders later Sunday morning and said that "this morning our city has a broken heart.""This is a senseless and unacceptable tragedy and I emphasize the word unacceptable," he said. "Thoughts and prayers of course are appropriate for the victims and their families and the people who are fighting for their lives in the hospital. But thoughts and prayers are not nearly enough. We must do more, as a city, as a state and as a nation. This senseless epidemic of gun violence must be addressed."He called gun violence "a sickness." See more of his comments in the video below. Sen. Alex Padilla said he was "horrified and deeply saddened." Retired Sacramento Police Chief Daniel Hahn called the shooting an "all too familiar tragedy." In a thread on Twitter, Hahn said, "we must address the root causes" and come together with solutions to stop repeating cycles of violence. City Council member Katie Valenzuela tweeted, "we must also have a conversation about what more we can do to prevent this crisis from continuing to take the lives of our neighbors, families and young people." In an emotional reaction later, she talked about getting a call "that no elected officials wants to get.""So I’m heartbroken and I’m outraged. I’m outraged. Our community deserves better than this," she said. "I know this is a national epidemic. This is not unique to Sacramento but we can stop it here. We can stop it here. I believe that we have the tools to do this. … Enough is enough. I will travel anywhere I need to travel and I will talk to whoever I need to talk to to get these guns off these streets and give our youth what we need so they can be successful and they don’t get shot down on K Street when they’re out trying to have a good time.” See more of her reaction in the video below. The shooting broke out near the Golden 1 Center downtown. The Sacramento Kings said, "our community grieves."Sacramento Vice Mayor Angelique Ashby called for people who may have seen the shooting to send in video to police. "I hate being here today but there’s nowhere else I would be because I love Sacramento," she said. Congresswoman Doris Matsui, D-Sacramento, said in a statement that she was "devastated for the victims and their loved ones." "Our city is suffering from an indescribable pain and sadness at the senseless loss of our community members," she said. "Too many lives have been taken. Many many more will forever be altered. Gun violence continues to plague our city and nation, and we must all renew our resolve to build a world free from gun violence. I stand with our community responders and police officers as they respond to this terrible tragedy."
Public officials are expressing messages of condolence and outrage over the nation’s latest mass shooting after six people were killed and 10 others hurt early Sunday morning in downtown Sacramento.
Here’s what elected leaders and organizations in Sacramento are saying after the shooting.
Gov. Gavin Newsom released a statement and tweeted that "we cannot let gun violence be the new normal."
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Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg tweeted that "words can't express my shock & sadness."
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He spoke alongside other city leaders later Sunday morning and said that "this morning our city has a broken heart."
"This is a senseless and unacceptable tragedy and I emphasize the word unacceptable," he said. "Thoughts and prayers of course are appropriate for the victims and their families and the people who are fighting for their lives in the hospital. But thoughts and prayers are not nearly enough. We must do more, as a city, as a state and as a nation. This senseless epidemic of gun violence must be addressed."
He called gun violence "a sickness." See more of his comments in the video below.
Sen. Alex Padilla said he was "horrified and deeply saddened."
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Retired Sacramento Police Chief Daniel Hahn called the shooting an "all too familiar tragedy." In a thread on Twitter, Hahn said, "we must address the root causes" and come together with solutions to stop repeating cycles of violence.
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City Council member Katie Valenzuela tweeted, "we must also have a conversation about what more we can do to prevent this crisis from continuing to take the lives of our neighbors, families and young people."
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In an emotional reaction later, she talked about getting a call "that no elected officials wants to get."
"So I’m heartbroken and I’m outraged. I’m outraged. Our community deserves better than this," she said. "I know this is a national epidemic. This is not unique to Sacramento but we can stop it here. We can stop it here. I believe that we have the tools to do this. … Enough is enough. I will travel anywhere I need to travel and I will talk to whoever I need to talk to to get these guns off these streets and give our youth what we need so they can be successful and they don’t get shot down on K Street when they’re out trying to have a good time.” See more of her reaction in the video below.
The shooting broke out near the Golden 1 Center downtown. The Sacramento Kings said, "our community grieves."
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Sacramento Vice Mayor Angelique Ashby called for people who may have seen the shooting to send in video to police.
"I hate being here today but there’s nowhere else I would be because I love Sacramento," she said.
Congresswoman Doris Matsui, D-Sacramento, said in a statement that she was "devastated for the victims and their loved ones."
"Our city is suffering from an indescribable pain and sadness at the senseless loss of our community members," she said. "Too many lives have been taken. Many many more will forever be altered. Gun violence continues to plague our city and nation, and we must all renew our resolve to build a world free from gun violence. I stand with our community responders and police officers as they respond to this terrible tragedy."
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Tiger Woods says "it will be a game-time decision" on whether he plays at next week's Masters
Five-time Masters champion Tiger Woods said "it will be a game-time decision" on whether he will compete at the 2022 Masters, which begins Thursday at Augusta National in Georgia.
"I will be heading up to Augusta today to continue my preparation and practice," Woods wrote on Twitter Sunday. "It will be a game-time decision on whether I compete."
The 15-time major winner, who suffered serious leg injuries in a single-vehicle crash in February 2021, has not played an official tournament since the 2020 Masters in November of that year.
Woods' only appearance in competitive golf since the crash was in December 2021 alongside son Charlie at the PNC Championship at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Club Orlando, Grande Lakes in Florida, where Woods and his son finished second.
The 46-year-old told Golf Digest in November last year he would "never" again compete on the PGA Tour full time, but would instead "pick and choose" events.
"You practice around that, and you gear yourself up for that," he said. "And you play. I think that's how I'm going to have to play it from now on.
"It's an unfortunate reality, but it's my reality. And I understand it, and I accept it."
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Video: Hear the 70+ shots fired during Sacramento mass shooting
Video: Hear the 70+ shots fired during Sacramento mass shooting
Wait, thank you, thank you. Mhm.
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Video: Hear the 70+ shots fired during Sacramento mass shooting
Video sent to KCRA 3 from 916 Times shows an altercation before dozens of shots are fired. We want to warn viewers the video is disturbing. KCRA 3 counted at least 76 gunshots ring out.The shooting happened early Sunday morning in downtown Sacramento. Six people were killed and at least 12 others are injured.Leer en español.It's unclear if the fight is connected with the shooting. Editor's note: There are two places in the video where the audio has been censored for expletives. Related content:Gov. Gavin Newsom, Mayor Darrell Steinberg and more officials react Sacramento activist Berry Accius describes shooting scene, says gun violence is a ‘citywide issue’ 'A very vivacious young man': Sergio Harris, a father of three, killed in Sacramento shooting
SACRAMENTO, Calif. —
Video sent to KCRA 3 from 916 Times shows an altercation before dozens of shots are fired. We want to warn viewers the video is disturbing. KCRA 3 counted at least 76 gunshots ring out.
The shooting happened early Sunday morning in downtown Sacramento. Six people were killed and at least 12 others are injured.
Advertisement
It's unclear if the fight is connected with the shooting.
Editor's note: There are two places in the video where the audio has been censored for expletives.
Related content:
- Gov. Gavin Newsom, Mayor Darrell Steinberg and more officials react
- Sacramento activist Berry Accius describes shooting scene, says gun violence is a ‘citywide issue’
- 'A very vivacious young man': Sergio Harris, a father of three, killed in Sacramento shooting
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https://www.kcra.com/article/virginia-woman-won-lottery-after-trashing-ticket/39619417
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A woman in Buckingham county Virginia mistakenly threw out a winning lottery ticket worth $110,000 Mary Elliott picked number is important to her family, but says the ticket was already in the trash when she noticed her numbers matched the winnings one. So she went dumpster diving, she fished it out of the trash and found the bar code no longer works because of a coffee stain. Luckily though officials were able to authenticate it. So she actually had to go in person like to the lottery officials and say, look, here's my ticket and they were able to, can you imagine? Yeah, that's a reason not to drink coffee. I'm just saying, I don't know if I know that's big enough for me. That's crazy talk. But no. Yeah, I would have gotten into the trash to Absolutely if I knew it was a winner to how she, it's interesting to me how she remembered like the numbers were the winning. Like how did she all of a sudden understand that her winning ticket was the winning ticket to because those numbers were important to her. So she probably recognized them all. You're right. Exactly. Well, I'm glad she got it. Okay. What mary Elliott you go girl
Virginia woman realizes she won the lottery after already trashing her ticket
Updated: 12:15 PM PDT Apr 3, 2022
Sometimes you don't know what you have until it's gone -- or, in this case, thrown away.Mary Elliot of Buckingham County, Virginia, panicked after realizing she had won a state lottery game on February 24 but had already tossed the ticket in the trash."When I saw I'd won, I couldn't stop shaking to save my life!" she said in a Virginia Lottery statement on Tuesday.She immediately began fishing through her garbage in search of the Cash 5 EZ Match game, which she found riddled with coffee stains. In fact, the ticket was in such bad condition, the barcode wouldn't scan to confirm her win.Luckily, officials at Virginia Lottery's Prize Zone West in Henrico were able to verify that Elliot had matched all five winning numbers in the lottery drawing, and awarded her the $110,000 top prize.Cash 5 EZ Match is a rolling jackpot lottery game. The odds of matching all five numbers to win are 1 in 749,398, Virginia Lottery said.
BUCKINGHAM COUNTY, Va. — Sometimes you don't know what you have until it's gone -- or, in this case, thrown away.
Mary Elliot of Buckingham County, Virginia, panicked after realizing she had won a state lottery game on February 24 but had already tossed the ticket in the trash.
"When I saw I'd won, I couldn't stop shaking to save my life!" she said in a Virginia Lottery statement on Tuesday.
She immediately began fishing through her garbage in search of the Cash 5 EZ Match game, which she found riddled with coffee stains. In fact, the ticket was in such bad condition, the barcode wouldn't scan to confirm her win.
Virginia Lottery
Mary Elliot’s ticket was covered in coffee stains and wouldn’t scan.
Luckily, officials at Virginia Lottery's Prize Zone West in Henrico were able to verify that Elliot had matched all five winning numbers in the lottery drawing, and awarded her the $110,000 top prize.
Cash 5 EZ Match is a rolling jackpot lottery game. The odds of matching all five numbers to win are 1 in 749,398, Virginia Lottery said.
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