White House vows more federal aid to reduce homelessness in 5 cities and California
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 09:41:50 GMT
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Five major U.S. cities and the state of California will receive federal help to get unsheltered residents into permanent housing under a new plan launched Thursday as part of the Biden administration’s larger goal to reduce homelessness 25% by 2025.The All Inside initiative will partner the U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness and its 19 federal member agencies with state officials in California and local governments in Los Angeles, Chicago, Dallas, Seattle and the Phoenix metro area. The goal is for the federal government to provide “knowledge, resources and elbow grease” to population centers where nearly half the nation’s unhoused residents live, said Susan Rice, President Joe Biden’s domestic policy advisor. The administration will offer “tailored support” for two years to improve efforts toward housing unsheltered people in the participating communities, including embedding a federal official in each area, officials said.In addition, tea...Lawsuit: FBI failed to protect man slain amid Tennessee political scandal decades ago
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 09:41:50 GMT
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — The son of a key federal witness who authorities say was killed decades ago with the help of a former Tennessee governor’s administration during the state’s largest political scandal is suing the FBI, saying it failed to protect his father. Marrell Graham filed the federal lawsuit this week claiming that the United States’ actions led to the deprivation of “the loss of income, services, protection, care, assistance … counsel, and advice of his father.”Details surrounding the movie-like case were first revealed in 2021 after law enforcement officials spent more than 40 years chipping away at the case of Samuel Pettyjohn’s killing. Ultimately, officials unveiled a wild scandal showing that Pettyjohn, an ally of union boss Jimmy Hoffa, was gunned down in 1979 in downtown Chattanooga after testifying about corrupt officials selling prison pardons. The slaying took place during the early phases of Tennessee’s notorious “cash-for-cleme...Videos show gunman saying ‘kill me’ to rushing officers in New Mexico rampage that killed 3
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 09:41:50 GMT
SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — Videos released by police Thursday of this week’s deadly rampage in New Mexico recorded a voice said to be the shooter urging police to “kill me” and officers rushing toward the 18-year-old gunman before fatally shooting him outside a church. “He is yelling on the Ring footage, ‘Come kill me,'” Farmington Police Chief Steve Hebbe said of Beau Wilson, the high school senior who authorities say killed three older women during the attack.“He’s making a stand, he has opportunities to run off, he does not use those opportunities,” Hebbe said. “So yes it’s my belief that ultimately in his head, he has made the decision that he is going to stand and fight it out until he is killed.”At least six other people were wounded in Monday’s shootings, which sent waves of grief rippling through Farmington, a community of 50,000 people in the state’s northwest. The wounded included two police officers, who have been released from medical care as they recover. S...Mexico’s Supreme Court rules tourist train, other projects are not issues of national security
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 09:41:50 GMT
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexico’s Supreme Court ruled Thursday the government cannot simply decree that tourist trains or other public work projects are issues of “national security,” because that violates the public’s right to information. The ruling is the latest in a string of setbacks for President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who has sought to broaden the discretionary powers of the presidency.López Obrador has tried to rush through his Maya Train tourism project by exempting it from normal permitting and public reporting, claiming it is vital to national security.It is unclear whether Thursday’s ruling only affects the public’s right to get information on spending, costs and other data on such projects, or whether it also repeals the fast-track permitting process. López Obrador is already angry at the court for throwing out some of his planned electoral reforms, and has called for a change to make the Supreme Court an elected body. At present, slates of potential justices are sugges...Quebec Muslim groups sue government over prayer room ban in schools
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 09:41:50 GMT
MONTREAL — Quebec Muslim groups are taking the provincial government to court over its recently enacted prayer room ban in public schools, arguing that the order is discriminatory and violates the Charter rights to freedom of religion and association.Five Muslim organizations filed their case this week in Quebec Superior Court, seeking a judicial review of the ban and to have it declared unconstitutional. The groups are also seeking a judgment on how secularism and the notion of religious neutrality is interpreted by the government.“The plaintiffs request that a declaratory judgment concerning the interpretation to be given to the principles of laicity and religious neutrality of the state be rendered so that these principles cannot be used to order prohibitions of prayers or other religious practices in public places,” the filing reads.Education Minister Bernard Drainville ordered the ban April 19 after reports of at least two Montreal-area schools permitting students t...B.C. food bank gets $7M for warehouse as it struggles with abundance, not scarcity
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 09:41:50 GMT
NANAIMO, B.C. — The head of a Vancouver Island food bank says the problem it’s been grappling with in recent years isn’t scarcity — it’s abundance.Peter Sinclair, executive director of the Loaves and Fishes Food Bank in Nanaimo, B.C., said the group needs more space to deal with the volume of donations it receives, as it works to meet a “dramatic increase” in demand for its services.it is, however, the preferred problem for an organization that distributes food to those in need all over the island, much of it recovered from retailers who would otherwise dispose of it.The British Columbia government announced Thursday that it’s kicking in $7 million toward building a new 25,000-square-foot warehouse for Loaves and Fishes to enable the non-profit to scale up and expand its offerings. Sheila Malcolmson, minister of social development and poverty reduction, told a news conference that food price inflation has put intense pressure on both individuals a...GOP pauses Blinken contempt push after gaining access to classified Afghanistan cable
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 09:41:50 GMT
WASHINGTON (AP) — The chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee says he is pausing an effort to hold Secretary of State Antony Blinken in contempt of Congress now that the State Department offered to let him review a classified cable from U.S. diplomats in Kabul sent shortly before the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan.Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Texas, agreed Thursday to review the July 2021 communication that reportedly warned the U.S. about the potential fall of Kabul via a special dissent channel. State Department officials have used the classified messaging platform for decades to issue warnings or express contrarian views directly to senior agency officials.McCaul accepted the condition to view the document with the names of those who signed it redacted. The same offer was made to the top Democrat on the panel, Rep. Gregory Meeks of New York, but McCaul urged State to grant access to all other committee members also.The State Department did not immediately return a request for...Skilling: Cloudy, warm Thursday with possible showers Friday
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 09:41:50 GMT
Temps surged 13 degrees higher than yesterday's abysmal, April-level 61 degrees high. But even with a 74 degrees max at O'Hare, that temp was only 2 degrees above normal.Upper winds will continue importing smoke in the days ahead though in coming clouds will prevent us from seeing much (if any) sun Friday.We have some rain on the way. Showers should be reaching the city just after daybreak Friday and may fall over as much as 90% of the area at some point Friday. But model rainfall estimates are abysmally low---continuing the much drier than normal precipitation trend which has dominated the past two months. The meteorological spring season which began March 1 has seen just 71% of its possible rainfall—just 8.72" which is 2.51" below normal.May's been even drier recording a paltry 15% of its normal precipitation to date—just 0.39" versus the normal 2.52" to date—a May shortfall thus far of 2.51".The weekend looks to start cool with a bit of a temp rebound closer to normal Sunday.But ...Illinois Craft Beer Week: Kickoff, events and more
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 09:41:50 GMT
Illinois Craft Beer Week kicks off this Friday and if you happen to be a craft beer connoisseur, there are plenty of activities planned for those who enjoy themselves a good brew.Here is a day-by-day breakdown of what's happening across Illinois:Friday, May 19The 2023 Illinois Summer Drink Passport. (Credit: Illinois Craft Brewer's Guild)The Summer Drink Passport makes its return after a several years-long hiatus.According to the Illinois Craft Brewers Guild (ICBG), the passport is a physical booklet where craft beer enthusiasts can document their summer craft beer adventures.Those interested can snag a passport from participating breweries starting May 19, and ask bartenders at each establishment along the way for a 'Visa Sticker' to add to your passport.Those who visit 50 or more participating breweries from May 19 to Aug. 19 are eligible to enter a drawing for a gift card to the passport brewery of their choice. To enter, participants must fill out the authorization form on the f...District 207 taking high school students to new heights
Published Thu, 14 Nov 2024 09:41:50 GMT
For as long as she can remember, Julia Hamel dreamed of flying planes. But, never imagined she'd be doing it at 17."It kind of clears my mind of everything and just be me and do what I want to do," Julia Hamel, a Maine South High School student, said.Through district 207's career education plan, students like Julia are gaining credits for real world experience she hopes will set her on the right flight path to her dream job. ‘Faces of Parkinson’s’: Mother, daughter highlight patients battling degenerative disease using photography While she requests FAA clearance to fly, two Maine East students are doing the same, only on a much smaller set of wings."You're a bird. That's the best way I can put it. You're going anywhere you want," Hemil Patel, a junior at Maine East High School, said.This first year, drone technology class has students reaching higher elevations than they ever thought possible."It's something that gives you freedom," Ken Adtkins, Tech Education Teacher, Maine East...Latest news
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