Metro Transit planning another round of service cuts and route changes

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:18:31 GMT

Metro Transit planning another round of service cuts and route changes ST. LOUIS - Metro Transit is planning another round of bus service cuts and route changes due to driver shortages.The changes will mainly affect weekend service. A few routes will also end service at earlier times on week days. Baby killed in buggy crash in Missouri Ozarks The changes are aimed at reducing unplanned bus cancellations. The transit agency has made several rounds of bus service cuts since 2021 to try to deal with driver and mechanic shortages.Earlier this year, the agency also trimmed its para transit van service.

House fire in Cahokia Heights, Illinois

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:18:31 GMT

House fire in Cahokia Heights, Illinois CAHOKIA HEIGHTS, Ill. - A late night fire damaged a home in Cahokia Heights, Illinois on Melvin Drive near Theodore Lane.Everyone inside got out safely. The fire also melted the siding on the house next door. Revisting Mike Shildt’s comments on his Cardinals departure The Illinois state fire marshal is investigating the cause. FOX 2 will update this story with more information as it becomes available.

How a dinner party at Jeff Green’s “nice” house in Miami galvanized Nuggets in NBA Finals Game 3

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:18:31 GMT

How a dinner party at Jeff Green’s “nice” house in Miami galvanized Nuggets in NBA Finals Game 3 MIAMI — Kale salad was the underdog champion for most memorable dish. What that says about the menu as a whole is in the eye of the beholder.“Some good food,” said Jeff Green, the host of a Denver Nuggets dinner party in south Florida.“Man, the food was phenomenal,” fellow journeyman Ish Smith confirmed to The Post.But interjecting from an adjacent locker room stall was a straight-faced DeAndre Jordan: “The food was trash.”Steak. Chicken. A risotto. The kale salad. It was an NBA Finals meal, not an offseason meal. Dieting matters this time of year, and as Smith pointed out, “back in the day” there wasn’t as much nutritional science being presented to pro athletes. “The older guys didn’t have the knowledge to eat better.”Just as important as a balanced meal: Good company.The Nuggets’ first night in Miami was spent at Green’s house, where he and his family had organized a team dinner. If the timi...

Walters: Despite California’s immense wealth, millions remain in poverty

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:18:31 GMT

Walters: Despite California’s immense wealth, millions remain in poverty As if it needed one, California received a new reminder Tuesday that, despite its trappings of sybaritic wealth, it’s home to millions of families that struggle each day to put roofs over their heads and food in their bellies.United Ways of California issued updated calculations of real world poverty, revealing that 34% of the state’s families lack enough income to meet basic living costs, primarily because those costs – particularly for housing – are extraordinarily high.The estimate is based on 2021 data, but there’s no reason to believe the situation has improved significantly, if at all, since then.The federal government’s official poverty number is based strictly on income, and California’s rate is not particularly high by that methodology. But the U.S. Census Bureau also has an alternative measure that includes the cost of living and it generally places California at or near the top in poverty among the states.United Way’s methodology is similar to the Census Bureau’s alternat...

Opinion: COVID death rate points to ongoing U.S. public health failure

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:18:31 GMT

Opinion: COVID death rate points to ongoing U.S. public health failure Many immunocompromised and older people are still terrified of COVID. As a transplant infectious disease doctor on the front lines, I understand why.In the first five months of 2023, COVID caused more than 37,000 deaths in the United States, a typical toll from the flu in an entire year. Scientists estimate an annual U.S. COVID death rate of at least 100,000, dwarfing other infectious diseases. And the virus continues to evolve: The highly transmissible XBB.1.16 subvariant (Arcturus), currently making up about 15% of cases nationally, is expected to be the dominant strain by summer. Wastewater surveillance is also showing an uptick in the virus in New York City and elsewhere.Meanwhile, the federal public health emergency ended last month, and across the country the pandemic has moved to back of mind. It’s not surprising that the most vulnerable feel left behind.Yet at the same time, health professionals are optimistic about today’s anti-COVID arsenal. Biomedical advances have revolu...

Employee accused of raping resident at Bay Area memory care facility denied release from jail

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:18:31 GMT

Employee accused of raping resident at Bay Area memory care facility denied release from jail A judge has rejected a Marin County rape suspect’s request to be released on his own recognizance as the case proceeds.Michael Andre Shipe, 65, of Novato is charged with sex crimes against a resident at Cogir of San Rafael Memory Care. Shipe was an employee at the center, which specializes in services for dementia patients and also offers hospice care.Michael Andre Shipe of Novato was booked on May 10, 2023, on allegations he raped a patient at a San Rafael care home where he worked. (Marin County Jail photo) The alleged crimes were reported in September. San Rafael police arrested Shipe last month after receiving DNA test results that linked him to a sperm sample collected during the investigation.Shipe’s bail is set at $200,000. His public defender, Hayden Brown, filed a motion for Shipe to be released during the litigation. Judge Geoffrey Howard held a hearing on the motion on Wednesday.Brown argued that Shipe is at the “lowest risk level” of fleeing prosecution or committin...

Full closure of Highway 9 in Ben Lomond set to begin next week

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:18:31 GMT

Full closure of Highway 9 in Ben Lomond set to begin next week BEN LOMOND — Repair work stemming from recent winter storms will continue next week along Highway 9 in Ben Lomond.Caltrans officials have advised that a full closure of the roadway at a slip-out dubbed “Jaye’s Slide” has been scheduled from Monday, June 12 to Monday, June 26.The closure will occur near the slide, which is at Park Way and Shadowbrook Road at the north end of Highlands County Park, according to a Caltrans release.Related ArticlesTransportation | ‘We pay taxes, too,’ says opponent of Los Gatos beach traffic ‘solution’ Transportation | Southbound Highway 17 set for single-lane closure Wednesday, Thursday Transportation | San Jose redesigning roads in hopes of curbing sideshows: Roadshow Transportation | San Jose motorcyclist dies after collision with truck Transportation | Tips for renewing a California driver’s license if you’re 70 or older: Roadshow A de...

How often are sharks near surfers, swimmers? Study ‘shocks’ California researchers

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:18:31 GMT

How often are sharks near surfers, swimmers? Study ‘shocks’ California researchers A new study shows just how close ocean users, such as surfers, swimmers and stand-up paddleboarders, are to young sharks that share the space in the sea – and the results may just change people’s perception of the species.The two-year research study, conducted by Cal State Long Beach Shark Lab, used video and photos from 1,500 drone flights over Southern California beaches.The results were published in the journal PLOS, a first-of-its-kind report that documents just how close juvenile white sharks get to people in the ocean environment.Sharks come close to surfers and stand-up paddlers more than researchers previously believed, a new study showed. (Photo courtesy of Carlos Gauna/Shark Lab) The research was conducted by graduate student Patrick Rex, who used aerial surveys of nearshore ocean waters, finding that although there were always people in the water, juvenile white sharks were seen at two major “aggregation” sites, areas where groups of juvenile white sharks gather befo...

Downtown Disney transformation eyes Thanksgiving 2024 opening as construction begins

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:18:31 GMT

Downtown Disney transformation eyes Thanksgiving 2024 opening as construction begins Construction has finally begun in Downtown Disney on a dirt lot that has sat empty for more than a year as Disneyland pushes forward with plans to reopen the long dormant west end of the outdoor shopping mall in time for the Christmas 2024 shopping season.Disneyland has begun vertical construction on the former AMC Theatre lot in Downtown Disney where work is expected to be complete by late 2024.SEE ALSO: Discounted Disneyland tickets for California residents return this summerBulldozers and excavators are busy on the former AMC lot where work crews have installed cement slabs, rebar supports, steel frames and concrete block walls for new Downtown Disney buildings, according to WDW News Today.PHOTOS: Downtown Disney District Construction Goes Vertical at Disneyland Resorthttps://t.co/79T456qprg— Disneyland News Today (@dlnt) June 2, 2023Disneyland resort president Ken Potrock said at the OC Forum in May that the Downtown Disney transformation would be done in 18 months. That w...

How P-22 and Nick Cave inspired the queer mountain lion in novel ‘Open Throat’

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:18:31 GMT

How P-22 and Nick Cave inspired the queer mountain lion in novel ‘Open Throat’ “They say there is a cougar that roams these parts,” Nick Cave sings in “Hollywood,” the final track from his 2019 album “Ghosteen.” The cat, in Cave’s telling, has “a terrible engine of wrath for a heart … but at night lays trembling in my arms.”When author Henry Hoke heard that song, it took him back to his days in Los Angeles, where he went to graduate school and later taught at the California Institute of the Arts. He was a regular visitor to Griffith Park, which was once home to a beloved Angeleno: P-22, the wild mountain lion who captivated not just residents of Southern California, but also animal lovers across the world (and the Los Angeles Public Library, which issued a limited-edition card featuring P-22 on it).“I thought, ‘Well, at some point, I’m going to run into this cat. It’s going to have to happen,’” Hoke recalls in a telephone conversation from New York, where he now lives. “It didn’t, but just the idea that there was this big cat just out of sight in the park was ...