No end in sight for House-Senate squabble over climate policy committee
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:19:08 GMT
A legislative squabble between two Democrats leading a climate policy committee appears to have no end in sight after the House chair lobbed more bombs at his Senate counterpart during a Thursday morning hearing.Telecommunications, Utilities, and Energy Committee House Chair Jeffrey Roy accused Senate Chair Michael Barrett of refusing to work with him, blocking major offshore wind legislation during the previous legislative session, and leveraging internal rules to exert control over what ideas move forward.The dispute between leaders of the committee splashed into public view on Monday, offering a rare look at an intra-party quarrel over behind-the-scenes work. It led the two Democrats to schedule separate hearings this week, a split from the normal procedure of a joint committee, which consists of members from both branches.And if the chairs cannot come to an accord soon, it could spell disaster for hundreds of bills on climate change and renewable energy, which require House-Sena...Amid DeSantis fight, Disney drops $1 billion Orlando campus plans
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:19:08 GMT
Amid its political feud with Gov. Ron DeSantis, Disney is dropping plans to build a nearly $1 billion corporate campus at Lake Nona that would have brought 2,000 high-paying jobs to Orlando.In 2021, Disney paid $46.4 million for 58 acres in the neighborhood that it planned to turn into a complex for its creative team, Imagineering, and other jobs. The average salary of the positions was cited as $120,000.But in a memo to employees Thursday, Disney Parks Chairman Josh D’Amaro attributed the project’s cancellation to “changing business conditions,” without mentioning The Walt Disney Co.’s escalating battle with the governor.“Given the considerable changes that have occurred since the announcement of this project, including new leadership and changing business conditions, we have decided not to move forward with construction of the campus. This was not an easy decision to make, but I believe it is the right one,” his message read.D’Amaro said ...Two Boston city councilors blast Arroyo for Rollins election tampering connection
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:19:08 GMT
Two Boston city councilors are blasting Ricardo Arroyo for “eagerly” welcoming U.S. Attorney Rachael Rollins’ attempts to influence the outcome of last year’s election for Suffolk District Attorney, while another councilor is calling the attacks politically motivated.Councilor-at-Large Erin Murphy said the alleged ethical violations revealed in Wednesday’s Department of Justice report were “disturbing.”She called for “swift and appropriate consequences” for Councilor Arroyo, and joined Council President Ed Flynn in saying that city constituents “have a right to more ethical representation.”Arroyo, in his own statement, said that the bombshell report, while “sad and unfortunate” did not point to any wrongdoing on his part.“Attempts to influence the outcome of an election by a federal official with as much power as U.S. Attorney Rachael Rollins are outrageous,” Murphy said in a Thursday statement. “According to the federal report, residents of Suffolk County had their election tampere...Magnitude 5.1 quake rattles Greek island of Crete but no early reports of damage or injuries
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:19:08 GMT
ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Greek authorities say an earthquake with preliminary magnitude 5.1 has shaken the southern island of Crete. There were no immediate reports of damage or injuries.The Athens Geodynamic Institute said the quake struck just before 10 a.m. local (1900GMT) Thursday on the island’s southern coast, at a depth of nearly 9 kilometers (5.6 miles).Earthquakes are common in Greece, and Crete is one of the country’s most quake-prone areas. Severe damage and injuries are rare. In 1999, an Athens quake killed 143 people.The Associated Press3 former officers indicted in beating of Georgia jail detainee
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:19:08 GMT
WOODBINE, Ga. (AP) — A grand jury in Georgia has indicted three former sheriff’s officers in the beating of a Black jail detainee that was recorded by security cameras. The indictment handed down Wednesday in coastal Camden County charges ex-deputy Ryan Biegel and former jail officers Braxton Massey and Mason Garrick with misdemeanor counts of battery and simple battery as well as a felony count of violating their oath of office.The charges stem from the September beating of Jarrett Hobbs, who was jailed after a traffic stop. Security camera video showed the white officers rush into Hobbs’ cell and begin punching him in the head and neck. Another camera recorded Hobbs being hurled against a wall and pinned to the floor.The Georgia Bureau of Investigation began looking into the beating after Hobbs’ attorneys obtained the video footage. In November, all three men were fired after being arrested on the same charges contained in the indictment. The indictment means a grand j...Man wanted after approaching children and offering candy to go with him
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:19:08 GMT
Toronto police are searching for a man in connection with a suspicious incident at a North York school.Investigators say around noon on Friday, May 12, a group of children were playing on school property in the area of Pleasant Avenue and Cactus Avenue, near Bathurst Street and Steeles Avenue West when a man approached four young boys and offered them candy if they went with him to his van.Police say no van was seen and the children ran and reported the incident to their teacher.The man is described as having dark skin, in his teens or early 20s with curly black hair.He was last seen wearing a black shift, dark pants and running shoes. He was riding a black mountain bike and carrying a peach coloured backpack.Emissions from wildfires hit record high in 2021 as climate change drives fire threat
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:19:08 GMT
OTTAWA — Emissions from wildfires hit a new record in 2021, producing more greenhouse gases than the oil and gas sector and heavy industry combined.With a total estimated carbon footprint of 270 million tonnes, wildfire emissions were the single biggest source of greenhouse gases that year.But they were not included when Canada tallied its total emissions for the year, because wildfires aren’t considered to be directly under human control.Rebecca Hornbrook, an atmospheric chemist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Colorado, says wildfire emissions are in many ways part of the natural carbon cycle and shouldn’t be viewed the same way we see emissions from the burning of fossil fuels.But she says the increased number of wildfires, and their growing intensity in a world impacted by climate change, are cause for concern.Hornbrook says the air pollution from wildfires is something everyone should be watching for, noting the major fires burning in Alberta are a...Ecuador lawmakers denounce president’s disbanding of National Assembly, argue it wasn’t legal
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:19:08 GMT
QUITO, Ecuador (AP) — Ecuadorian lawmakers who were ousted when President Guillermo Lasso dissolved the National Assembly denounced the move Thursday and argued it wasn’t legal because the country wasn’t facing any urgent crisis.The conservative president, who had sparred with the left-leaning assembly over his pro-business agenda since taking office in 2021, disbanded the chamber Wednesday just as it tried to oust him on mismanagement allegations in an impeachment trial.Lasso was making first use of a 2008 constitutional provision that allows the president to dissolve the assembly during times of political crisis, with the requirement that new elections be held for both lawmakers and the president.However, a lawsuit filed Thursday by the assembly’s former head, Virgilio Saquicela, argues that Lasso’s move violated the constitution because the country was not experiencing any social upheaval. Instead, Lasso’s detractors have argued, the president chose to disband the cha...Police officers neglected duty in Saskatchewan toddler’s death: complaints commission
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:19:08 GMT
PRINCE ALBERT, Sask. — An investigation has found that officers who responded to a domestic violence call in Saskatchewan didn’t check on the well-being of a toddler and instead took the Indigenous mother to a police station in the hours before the child was killed.The Public Complaints Commission report into last year’s death of 13-month-old Tanner Brass says two Prince AlbertPolice Serviceofficers neglected their duty. The boy’s father, Kaij Brass, has been charged with second-degree murder and his trial is scheduled for next year.“The circumstances on the morning of Feb. 10, 2022, amount to a tragic and potentially avoidable incident,” the report found.“(Tanner) was, at all relevant times, vulnerable and in danger while inside the residence with (his father).”Kyla Frenchman, the toddler’s mother, has called for the officers to be fired, alleging she was racially profiled when she called for help. The report found she went willingly to the police station because women’...Why the Supreme Court tiptoeing past a key social media shield helps Big Tech
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:19:08 GMT
Google, Twitter, Facebook and other tech companies fueled by social media have dodged a legal threat that could have blown a huge hole in their business models.The U.S. Supreme Court delivered the reprieve Thursday by rejecting one lawsuit alleging social media platforms should be held liable for enabling a lethal attack on a Turkish nightclub and tossing another case back to a lower court. Those moves, coming three months after the Supreme Court heard oral arguments in the cases, preserve a law known as Section 230 that shields social media services from being held responsible for the material posted on their platforms. Without the protection consisting of a mere 26 words tucked inside a broader reform of U.S. telecommunications adopted in 1996, Google, Facebook and other tech companies probably wouldn’t have been able to have grown as large as they are now. And their future prospects would dim if their platforms were stripped of their legal immunity.But just because the Supr...Latest news
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