JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – The latest update from the National Hurricane Center shows Eta will move through Northeast Florida as a Tropical Storm.

By Thursday morning, tropical storm conditions are possible, bringing showers and thunderstorms. Some of the storms could produce heavy rainfall and flooding, according to the NHS.

TRACKING ETA: Wind and rain will increase as Eta approaches from the southwest

The Florida Department of Transportation said early Tuesday morning, their crews will be following the storm closely. Those could include potential bridge closures, but at this time Fl511 expects minimal impacts. You can follow updates on road closures and more on their website.

The Clay County School District plans to announce if classes will be canceled after 1:30 p.m. News4Jax reached out to several other school districts to find out what their plans are but has not yet heard back.

Richard Nunn is tracking Eta and forecasting possible impacts on The Morning Show. Watch live here.

Source Article from https://www.news4jax.com/news/local/2020/11/11/eta-on-track-to-move-through-northeast-florida/

Cohen-Watnick is set to take over as the new acting undersecretary of Defense for intelligence and security, after Joseph Kernen resigned.

After being pushed out of the White House in 2017, following his tenure working for former national security advisor Michael Flynn, Cohen-Watnick rejoined the Trump administration earlier this year in a Pentagon role. Flynn was fired from his role and eventually pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI. Cohen-Watnick also worked for former Attorney General Jeff Sessions before Sessions was fired in 2018.

Replacing Jen Stewart, the chief of staff to the Defense secretary, is Kash Patel, a member of the National Security Council. Patel was a staffer for Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif., who worked to discredit the probe into Russian interference in the 2016 election and potential links between the Trump campaign and the Kremlin.

“I want to thank Dr. Anderson, Admiral Kernan and Jen Stewart for their service to the nation and the Department. Over their careers each has contributed greatly to the national defense and the future of the Department of Defense. We wish them the best in their next endeavors,” acting Secretary of Defense Christopher Miller said in a statement.

On Monday, Trump announced on Twitter that he has “terminated” Esper and replaced him with Miller, director of the National Counterterrorism Center. The announcement came about five months after he and Esper had a public break over how to handle civil unrest in America’s cities.

Esper, in an interview with the Military Times days before Trump fired him, warned of trouble if he were to be replaced.

“At the end of the day, it’s as I said — you’ve got to pick your fights,” Esper told the publication. “I could have a fight over anything, and I could make it a big fight, and I could live with that — why? Who’s going to come in behind me? It’s going to be a real ‘yes man.’ And then God help us.”

Here is the full statement:

“As announced yesterday, November 9, President Trump has designated the National Counter Terrorism Center Director, Chris Miller, as the Acting Secretary of Defense.  Mr. Miller took over those functions and responsibilities mid-day yesterday. Deputy Secretary of Defense David Norquist remains in his position and continues to execute his responsibilities. 

Today, Acting Under Secretary of Defense for Policy Dr. James Anderson, Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence and Security Mr. Joseph Kernan and Chief of Staff to the Secretary of Defense, Jen Stewart submitted letters of resignation. 

Dr. Anderson submitted his letter of resignation to the President this morning, effective today.  The Acting Secretary of Defense has delegated the responsibilities of the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy to Mr. Anthony Tata.  As such, Mr. Tata is the Senior Official Performing the Duties of the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy.  He previously was the Senior Official Performing the Duties of the Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Policy.  Dr. Thomas Williams will now perform the duties of the Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Policy.

As planned for several months, Under Secretary Kernan submitted his letter of resignation, effective today.  Current Acting Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operation and Low-Intensity Conflict Ezra Cohen-Watnick will be the new Acting Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence and Security.  Mr. Ralph Cacci will continue to perform the duties of the Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence and Security.

Also today, Ms. Stewart submitted her resignation from the position of Chief of Staff, effective today.  Mr. Kash Patel, currently on the National Security Council staff, has been named by Acting Secretary Miller as his Chief of Staff.

Acting Secretary of Defense Miller issued the following statement on these personnel changes:  ‘I want to thank Dr. Anderson, Admiral Kernan and Jen Stewart for their service to the nation and the Department.  Over their careers each has contributed greatly to the national defense and the future of the Department of Defense. We wish them the best in their next endeavors.'”

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/11/10/trump-loyalists-promoted-to-powerful-pentagon-roles-after-esper-firing.html

Biden vowed on Tuesday to work with Congress to “dramatically ramp up health care protections” and “get Americans universal coverage.” He also reiterated campaign pledges to tackle the prescription drug costs and expand coverage to the millions of uninsured people — a group that’s grown significantly during the pandemic and economic crash.

“I promise you this beginning on Jan. 20, the Vice President-elect Harris and I, we’re going to do everything in our power to ease the burden of health care on you and your family,” he said. “I will protect your health care like I protect my kids with my own family.”

Yet Biden’s health plans, including the creation of a public insurance option to compete with private insurance and more generous subsidies for middle class consumers, depend on the Affordable Care Act being in place. And though the majority of justices on Tuesday appeared unlikely to side with the Trump administration and red state arguments that the entire law should be struck down, the uncertainty will hang over health care markets possibly through spring. And if Republicans keep control of the Senate and the law is struck down, Democrats’ hopes for passing a replacement would be quashed.

Both Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris described the Obamacare lawsuit as an attempt to “overturn the will of the people” following multiple unsuccessful attempts by Republican lawmakers to repeal the law in Congress, and cited their election night win as evidence that the public does not want the ACA’s protections eliminated.

“Health care was very much on the ballot in 2020,” Harris said. “Each and every vote for Joe Biden was a statement that health care should be a right and not a privilege. Each and every vote for Joe Biden was a call to protect and expand the Affordable Care Act, not to tear it away in the midst of a global pandemic.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/11/10/biden-health-care-coverage-pandemic-435805

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Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick said Tuesday he is offering up to $1 million to “incentivize, encourage and reward” people for reports of voter fraud in Texas, even as there’s been no evidence of mass voter fraud and experts say it’s rare.

The Republican state leader’s crusade for proof of election problems in Texas comes as members of his own party dominated up and down the ballot.

Patrick said that anyone who provides information that leads to a conviction will receive at least $25,000. The money will come from Patrick’s campaign fund, according to spokesperson Sherry Sylvester.

“I support President Trump’s efforts to identify voter fraud in the presidential election and his commitment to making sure that every legal vote is counted and every illegal vote is disqualified,” Patrick said in a statement. “The delays in counting mail-in ballots in other states raises more questions about voter fraud and potential mistakes.”

He did not provide any evidence of mass voter fraud. His press release cited three recent arrests, including that of a social worker in Mexia, Texas, on counts of election fraud over allegations that the worker registered to vote 67 residents of a supported living center without their consent.

An unprecedented number of mail-in ballots during the coronavirus pandemic slowed ballot counting in a handful of states, including the key battleground state of Pennsylvania, where election officials were barred from processing them before Election Day. The Republican-controlled legislature shot down a request from Pennsylvania Secretary of State Kathy Boockvar that would’ve allowed election officials to start counting mail-in ballots before polls closed.

“These people want to delegitimize votes in order to appeal to their Trumpian base,” said Abhi Rahman, a spokesperson for the Texas Democratic Party. “We know that there’s a lot of work to do here in Texas and Dan Patrick is in our sights in 2022.”

Texas Republicans managed to stave off Democratic gains, particularly in down-ballot congressional and state legislative races where Democrats hoped to shrink the ruling party’s margin. President Donald Trump carried Texas by nearly 6 percentage points, according to Decision Desk HQ.

Patrick, in an October interview with “The Mark Davis Show,” claimed that Democrats were trying to “steal the election.”

“If the president loses Pennsylvania or North Carolina, Mark, or Florida, they’ll lose it because they stole it,” he said, without evidence.

Trump’s campaign has filed a barrage of legal challenges in key states — including Georgia and Wisconsin — in an attempt to close the widening gap between the president and Joe Biden, who was declared president-elect on Saturday.

Those lawsuits, however, have so far failed to pan out. Judges tossed out cases in Nevada and Michigan because the Trump campaign failed to prove allegations of fraud, NPR reported.

Yet some of Texas’ most prominent Republicans, including U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, jumped to the president’s defense in recent days, amplifying baseless conspiracy theories or spreading misinformation.

“The right standard is that every single vote that was legally cast should be counted, but any votes that were illegally cast shouldn’t be counted,” Cruz said on Fox News’ “Hannity,” though he offered no evidence of fraud.

Source Article from https://www.texastribune.org/2020/11/10/texas-dan-patrick/

A divided Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday escalated its running power struggle with Sheriff Alex Villanueva, voting to explore ways he could be removed from office, including through a change to the state’s constitution.

The 3-2 vote to build a playbook for removing Villanueva is the latest turn in a tumultuous two years of conflict — both in and out of court — between the county’s top law enforcement official and members of the powerful board who have attacked the sheriff for what they see as his distaste for accountability and his efforts to roll back critical reforms.

The motion, authored by Supervisors Mark Ridley-Thomas and Sheila Kuehl, directs county lawyers and other staff to examine ways to impeach Villanueva or strip him of some responsibilities. One avenue being explored is an amendment to the state’s Constitution that would shift all of California’s county sheriffs from elected officials to appointed positions. The board will receive a report on viable options in January.

Supervisors Kathryn Barger and Janice Hahn were opposed; Supervisor Hilda Solis cast the swing vote for the proposal.

Before Tuesday’s vote, Ridley-Thomas said in an interview that he is looking for institutional changes that would make law enforcement leaders more accountable, and that the actions of the current sheriff illustrate why these discussions are necessary.

“He has just made the case more compelling as to why it would be appropriate, but the conversation is structural,” said Ridley-Thomas. “I doubt that someone who can be terminated in the appropriate manner would be as belligerent as we’re seeing with the current sheriff.”

Ridley-Thomas will not see his measure through. Termed out of his seat on the county board, he was elected last week to a seat on the Los Angeles City Council.

Villanueva, who took office in December 2018, was elected by voters and is subjected to limited oversight from the board. He addressed supervisors Tuesday, touting his successes removing federal immigration officers from county jails, rolling out body cameras to deputies and implementing a policy prohibiting deputies from joining illicit cliques.

“I want to say that I have an open-door policy. I’d like to meet with each and every one of you personally,” Villanueva said.

In the motion, Ridley-Thomas and Kuehl criticized Villanueva’s attempts to block oversight and his failure to balance the Sheriff’s Department budget. It said the county had paid out more than $149 million in the last five years to settle lawsuits and satisfy judgments in cases in which deputies were involved in incidents that include civil rights violations, excessive force, sexual assault and killings.

“With a sheriff that is unwilling to demand accountability for deputy misbehavior, lawsuits will continue to be filed against the sheriff, and it is the county’s taxpayers who will continue to pay for the consequences,” the motion says.

Underscoring their point, the board on Tuesday voted to approve a $3.9-million payment to settle a wrongful death lawsuit brought by the family of Ryan Twyman, 24, an unarmed man who was killed by deputies in a hail of gunfire as he backed out of a South L.A. parking space in June 2019.

The Sheriff’s Department has said deputies had been trying to arrest Twyman for several weeks when they spotted his vehicle in the parking lot. Two months earlier, the agency said, investigators had found guns at his home, but Twyman, who was on probation, was not there.

The homicide investigation is pending. It’s one of several police shootings that Dist. Atty.-elect George Gascón said he had concerns with during his campaign.

A growing number of people — including two supervisors and a panel of civilian overseers, as well as dozens of activist and labor groups — have called on Villanueva to step down from his post, saying he has dragged his feet on important reforms, resisted oversight of the department and failed to hold deputies accountable. The Los Angeles County Democratic Party, which provided a critical endorsement that boosted Villanueva’s profile before his election, is set to vote Tuesday night on a resolution demanding his resignation.

“He took office and pretty quickly showed that he was a bully,” said Nick Greif, an elected member of the party who authored the proposed resolution. “To me, this is the bat signal to every aspiring Democrat who thought they could run for sheriff, saying, ‘Yes, please do.’”

Villanueva has said he has no plans to quit. The calls for him to do so are largely symbolic and highlight the fact that none of the sheriff’s critics have begun the arduous process set out for recalling elected officials from office.

Ridley-Thomas said he and others studied the recall option about a year ago.

“The history of recalls suggest that they are very costly and typically unsuccessful,” he said. He added later, “Those of us who are serious about the work are not interested in a fire drill — we’re interested in real results and the systemic change.”

Civil liberties advocates praised the board’s action.

“Sheriff Villanueva represents a clear and present danger to civil liberties,” Andres Kwon, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California and outspoken critic of the sheriff, said in a statement. “Today’s motion by the board is a step forward in validating the community’s call for Villanueva’s resignation and a charter amendment that would endow the board with the power to impeach and remove a sheriff for violating public trust.”

Barger and Hahn both criticized Villanueva’s leadership but said it should be up to the public to decide whether to recall him or vote him out when he’s up for reelection in 2022.

“That’s how democracy works,” Hahn said. Voters, she added, “don’t like politicians to take that power from them.”

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-11-10/supervisors-seek-sheriff-removal-options

Cal Cunningham, the Democrat challenging Senator Thom Tillis, Republican of North Carolina, conceded the race on Tuesday after a protracted vote count, as the incumbent appeared headed for a narrow victory in a crucial swing state that would bolster his party’s hold on the Senate.

Mr. Tillis, 60, had been one of the Democrats’ top targets this year, a decidedly unpopular first-term Republican in a fast-growing and increasingly competitive state. But he was able to capitalize on unexpected Republican strength in North Carolina to outrun Mr. Cunningham, who was damaged by late revelations of an extramarital affair.

With a vast majority of votes counted, Mr. Tillis was leading by just under 100,000 votes, according to Edison Research, in an election that drew more voters and political spending than any in the state’s history. Mr. Tillis took a lead on election night and never lost it, but because of an influx of mail-in ballots, the result was still not official on Thursday, long after most other races were called.

In a pre-emptive victory speech last week, Mr. Tillis said North Carolinians were “letting everybody know that the truth still does matter, letting everybody know that character still matters, and letting everybody know that keeping your promises still matters.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/10/us/politics/cal-cunningham-concedes-to-senator-thom-tillis-in-north-carolina.html

Joe Biden said Donald Trump’s refusal to concede the election was “an embarrassment”, vowing to move forward with the presidential transition despite resistance from the White House and Republican leaders.

Biden, answering questions for the first time since he was declared the winner of the 2020 election, intensified his criticism of the president, who continued to baselessly allege voter fraud, and said Trump’s denial would “not help his legacy”.

Though the situation at the White House has caused deepening alarm over whether the US would witness a smooth transfer of power that has been a hallmark of American democracy for generations, Biden promised his team was “going to get right to work” confronting the compounding crises facing the nation.

Pointing to unfounded claims of voter fraud, Trump, with the support of senior Republicans in Washington, has maintained that the election is not over and is contesting the results in several states, despite it being called for Biden on Saturday morning almost four days after the polls closed.

In a call with reporters on Monday, transition officials said the General Services Administration had yet to issue a letter of “ascertainment” that would recognize Biden as the president-elect and allow his team to begin the transfer of power.

Until the decision is made, Biden’s staff cannot meet with their counterparts in the White House and other federal agencies, begin to perform background checks for potential appointees or receive security briefings.

Biden insisted the delay “does not change the dynamic at all of what we’re able to do”. Receiving the intelligence briefings that are traditionally shared with the incoming president “would be useful,” he said, but added: “We don’t see anything slowing us down, quite frankly.”


Biden calls Trump’s behavior ’embarrassing’ as Pompeo dismisses election result – video

Biden was joined by the vice-president-elect, Kamala Harris, at a theater near his home in downtown Wilmington, Delaware, where they delivered remarks after the US supreme court heard the latest challenge to the Affordable Care Act.

The Democratic leadership have vowed to protect and expand the signature legislation from the Obama administration, in which Biden served as vice-president, during the worst public health crisis in more than a century.

The US recently surpassed 10m cases of coronavirus, as most states struggled to contain outbreaks during the latest wave of infections.

“In the middle of a deadly pandemic that’s affecting more than 10 million Americans, these ideologues are once again trying to strip health coverage away from the American people,” Biden said of the Republican state officials who brought the lawsuit that has ended up before the supreme court, aiming to invalidate the healthcare law.

Democrats made healthcare a central theme of the election, and a focus of the supreme court hearing last month for Judge Amy Coney Barrett, whose confirmation cemented a 6-3 conservative court.

The health coverage of millions of Americans hangs in the balance if the court rules in favor of Republicans, though Tuesday’s arguments indicated that the justices were skeptical of striking down the entire law.

“Each and every vote for Joe Biden was a statement that healthcare in America should be a right and not a privilege,” Harris said in her remarks. She added: “And Joe Biden won this election decisively.”



Kamala Harris and Joe Biden arrive to deliver remarks in Wilmington, Delaware. Photograph: Angela Weiss/AFP/Getty Images

Yet few Republicans have recognized Biden as the president-elect. On Tuesday, the secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, predicted, with a grin that may have indicated he was attempting humor, “a smooth transition to a second Trump administration”.

On Capitol Hill, where only a handful of Republicans, have acknowledged Biden’s victory, the Senate majority leader, Mitch McConnell, indicated that Trump would have until the 14 December deadline for the electoral college to cast its votes to pursue his legal challenges.

“Until the electoral college votes, anyone who is running for office can exhaust concerns,” McConnell told reporters on Tuesday. He added: “There will be, apparently, litigation. Those cases will be decided. And then the electoral college will meet. And then we’ll have the inauguration.”

Biden laughed off Pompeo’s comments and expressed confidence that Republicans would eventually recognize him as the president-elect. Though he had not spoken to McConnell yet, he anticipated that they would connect soon.

“The whole GOP has been put in a position, with a few notable exceptions, of being mildly intimidated by the sitting president,” Biden said.

Even as Republicans refuse to recognize Biden, world leaders are doing so. On Tuesday, Biden spoke with the British prime minister, Boris Johnson, the French president, Emmanuel Macron, and the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, according to the transition team. The Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu ,and Turkish president, Tayyip Erdoğan, have also congratulated Biden on the election, as have the leaders of Canada and Ireland. China and Russia have yet to speak up.

“I’m letting them know that America’s back,” Biden said, characterizing his conversations with America’s allies. “We’re back in the game.”

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/nov/10/joe-biden-trump-embarrassment-refusal-to-concede-election

(CNN)Chief Justice John Roberts twice saved Obamacare, and he appears ready to uphold it again. But Roberts is growing weary of it all.

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    Eleven counties moved back to more restrictive tiers in California’s coronavirus reopening system Tuesday, an unprecedented regression as the state contends with an increasingly worrying surge in infections.

    Among the backsliders were San Diego, Sacramento and Stanislaus counties, all of which moved into the purple tier — the strictest category of the state’s reopening roadmap.

    This week also marked the first time that no counties moved forward into a less restrictive tier, said California Health and Human Services Secretary Mark Ghaly.

    “We anticipate, if things stay the way they are, that between this week and next week, over half of California counties will have moved into a more restrictive tier,” he said Tuesday. “And so that certainly is an indication that we’re concerned and that we have to keep a close watch on what’s happening.”

    With the three new additions to the purple tier, nearly one-quarter of California counties now find themselves living under the most stringent coronavirus-related restrictions. The others are Los Angeles, Riverside, San Bernardino, Imperial, Monterey, Tulare, Madera, Sonoma, Tehama and Shasta counties.

    California’s system, which determines the extent to which businesses, schools and other public spaces can operate, is broken into four color-coded tiers: purple, followed by red, orange and yellow.

    Moving to the purple tier forces many businesses and organizations to either reduce capacity or move their operations outdoors.

    San Diego County restaurants, places of worship and movie theaters must cease indoor operations by 12:01 a.m. Saturday.

    Counties are placed into tiers based on two primary metrics: the average daily number of new COVID-19 cases for every 100,000 residents and the percentage of conducted tests that detect the coronavirus.

    The counties are at risk of regressing if their metrics fall in the defined range of a more restrictive tier for two straight weeks.

    “To advance back into the red Tier 2, Sacramento County needs to have lower daily case rates. The only way to do that is to do what we know works,” said Sacramento County’s health officer, Dr. Olivia Kasirye. “We all have a part in this.”

    The other counties that moved backward Tuesday were Amador, Contra Costa, El Dorado, Placer and Santa Cruz, which are now in red; and Modoc, Siskiyou and Trinity, now in orange.

    State officials have said the tiered system is deliberative by design — meant to give officials time to review and digest data before deciding whether wider reopenings or further restrictions are warranted.

    “This is exactly why we designed the tier status the way we did,” Gov. Gavin Newsom said during a briefing Monday. “It was about being more and less restrictive — not based upon political whim, but based upon the data, based upon the epidemiology, based upon the facts on the ground and, again, based upon local conditions in the 58 counties throughout the state of California.”

    As of Tuesday’s tier update, 13 counties are in the purple tier, 22 are in red, 17 in orange and six in yellow.

    “I think a number of counties are indeed experiencing quite high levels of cases — not necessarily the highest they’ve ever seen, but certainly compared to the lows we’ve been experiencing over the past couple months,” Ghaly said.

    During the most recent seven-day period that ended Sunday, Los Angeles County reported more than 13,000 cases, a 38% jump from the previous week and the highest number of weekly cases in more than two months.

    More Coverage

    Business owners in counties that now find themselves in the purple tier will have to adjust their operations to meet the stricter guidelines. For instance, restaurants will no longer be allowed to offer indoor dine-in service.

    At tiny Masullo Pizza in Sacramento, though, the new restrictions won’t be felt too hard.

    When word first came that indoor dining would be allowed at reduced capacity, the neighborhood favorite — with its open kitchen and communal tables — decided to play it safe and keep diners outside, said cook Paul Quiroz.

    “We’ve been really stringent,” he said, adding that the pandemic hasn’t hurt sales too badly so far. “We’ve been fortunate in that. We have a decent amount of business.”

    Not everyone has been so lucky. At Solfire Yoga in the core of Sacramento’s once-thriving midtown district, owner Ellen Moe said she has lost about 70% of her revenue since the pandemic started, but had just seen a minor uptick since being able to resume in-studio classes with 10% capacity at the end of September.

    The latest news, though, has her feeling like “every time we get a little momentum, we get shut down again.”

    The studio moved classes outside during the warm summer months, but “now it’s pretty chilly here in Sacramento,” she said. While she wants to keep her customers safe, Moe said she wished there was more help for businesses such as hers.

    “My business has been decimated,” she said.

    Randall Selland, who owns six restaurants in Sacramento — including Ella, a favorite of legislators in the nearby Capitol — said he was frustrated by what he sees as “no coherent message on how to get through this.”

    Ella has been closed since March because its overhead and location in an area with a large homeless population made it difficult to do outdoor dining, Selland said.

    Though his other establishments have invested in outdoor dining, fall temperatures hit hard in Northern California this week, and he thinks diners willing to brave the cold will be “few and far between.”

    He said he would like to see a more targeted approach to closures.

    “This blanket shutdown, I don’t think it’s right,” Selland said. “It should be a case-by-case effort. If you are not following the rules, you get shut down, instead of just going back and forth all the time.”

    While moving to a more restrictive tier will undoubtedly present challenges from a business perspective, Ghaly said he views the larger issues of public and economic health as intertwined.

    “We do think about it very broadly, and a number of us believe and see evidence that working to control the transmission of COVID — making sure that it doesn’t have the horrific impact in California that we’ve seen in other parts of the nation and other parts of the globe — is protecting not just our public health in the narrow sense, but our broad sense of public health, which includes our economic health,” he said.

    Officials have been striving to move through the state’s color-coded reopening system and toward economic recovery. But could rising coronavirus cases threaten Orange County’s progress?

    While the reasons for increased coronavirus spread — and the type of behaviors and venues driving those trends — can vary from county to county, Ghaly said this week that “almost each county that’s having increased transmission, they mention private household gatherings as a major source of spread.”

    Health officials throughout the state have been emphasizing that mantra for months, saying that residents’ choices on gatherings, as well as the precautions they do or don’t take when doing so, will play a major role in shaping how the pandemic plays out.

    “I implore all Californians to sort of look in the mirror, ask what you can do differently, how much more can you keep your mask on, how much more can you work with your own communities, your own family members, to plan events in a lower-risk way,” Ghaly said. “Each of those efforts makes a difference. We know that it does.””

    California already finds itself at a new crossroads. Coronavirus cases are beginning to trend distressingly upward in the state and are skyrocketing in many parts of the nation.

    The latest seven-day average for new cases statewide is 6,078, up from the 14-day average of 5,216.

    The state is fast approaching 1 million total cases and, as of this week, had officially recorded more than 18,000 deaths.

    Dr. John Swartzberg, an infectious disease expert at UC Berkeley, said he believes the coronavirus is likely to swamp California in December and that parts of the state economy will have to be shut down.

    Swartzberg said the virus is spreading through travel from states where it is out of control, and California will not be spared.

    “Within a month after Thanksgiving, the number of cases is going to be up significantly,” Swartzberg said. “California is going to be very worried, and we will start to see things close down.”

    The latest maps and charts on the spread of COVID-19 in California.

    Newsom said the increases in the state are “for obvious reasons: People are letting their guard down.”

    “They’re taking their masks off; they’re starting to get together outside of their household cohorts; they’re starting to see businesses reopen; and we’re starting — again — to see more people mixing,” he said. “As it gets colder, we’ll see more still. So this was anticipated. No one is surprised by this.”

    While a fall/winter wave was perhaps not unexpected, officials stressed that residents need to step up to keep it as mild as possible and continue to wear masks in public, wash their hands regularly, keep physical distance from those with whom they do not live and avoid gathering with others — or at least take precautions when doing so.

    “We don’t have the luxury of ignoring our individual and collective responsibilities if we want to see more children go to school and businesses remain open,” said L.A. County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer.

    “Recovery just doesn’t continue when you have thousands of new cases each day. And many of these cases stem from people taking risks that are, frankly, not appropriate. It isn’t that hard to play by the rules, especially since these rules are what keep some people alive and allow our economy to improve.”

    Times staff writer Maura Dolan contributed to this report.

    Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-11-10/california-coronavirus-cases-climb-more-counties-expected-stricter-reopenings

    Chicago’s travel order now separates states into a color-coded, three-tiered map, requiring a quarantine, or in some cases, a negative test result or the standard masks and social distancing.

    The city announced the changes Tuesday, categorizing states into one of three colors to determine which requirements are in effect for travelers: red, orange or yellow.

    In total, 44 states and territories are listed on the emergency travel order, designated as either orange or red states on the new map.

    Local



    Here’s a look at the new guidelines:

    Yellow: States with a rolling 7-day average less than 15 cases/day/100k residents.

    • No quarantine or pre-arrival test required. Maintain strict masking, social distancing and avoidance of in-person gatherings

    Orange: States have a rolling 7-day average between 15 cases/day/100k residents and the Chicago rolling 7-day average (currently 60) 

    • 14-day quarantine OR pre-arrival negative test no more than 72 hours before arrival in Chicago with strict masking, social distancing and avoidance of in-person gatherings

    Red: States have a higher 7-day rolling average of positive cases/day/100k Chicago residents. 

    • 14-day quarantine

    Based on current data, only six states are listed as “yellow” states, including New York, California, New Hampshire, Maine, Hawaii and Vermont.

    Thirty-one others and Puerto Rico are declared “orange states,” which require either a 14-day quarantine or a “pre-arrival negative test.” That includes the newly-added Michigan, Connecticut, Arizona, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Georgia, Maryland, Oregon, Washington and Louisiana.

    Another 12 states are listed as “red” states.

    Chicago Department of Public Health Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady said no matter a state’s color under the order, she would not recommend any unnecessary travel.

    “First and foremost, I would like people to avoid travel at this time if at all possible,” Arwady said in a statement. “But by creating a tiered system and using Chicago’s case rate as a category threshold, it allows us to be responsive to the changing dynamics of the pandemic. This measure is a response to increased rates of COVID-19 transmission in Chicago and across the nation, and it sets up measures to mitigate transmission in our city.”

    With both Chicago’s and Illinois’ coronavirus cases soaring to to record levels not even seen during the pandemic’s peak in the spring, questions have surfaced over whether the travel order, which requires a quarantine for travelers from certain states, remained effective.

    Data last week showed Chicago alone was averaging 59.7 new cases each day for every 100,000 residents, nearly four times the limit the city has set for states to be added to its emergency order.

    As of Tuesday, the city reported a positivity rate of 13%, with a seven-day average of more than 1,600 new daily cases “a higher rate than at any time during the pandemic,” officials said.

    The city said it hopes to simply educate travelers about the order, but those found in violation could be subject to fines of between $100 and $500 per day, up to $7,000.

    “The quarantine and pre-arrival testing requirements apply to people even if they have no COVID-19 symptoms,” the city’s health department said in a release.

    Exceptions can be made for travel for medical care, parental shared custody and business travel for essential workers. It also does not apply to an individual passing through states for less than 24 hours over the course of travel, including layovers at airport or people driving through a particular state. Daily commuters to and from neighboring states are also exempt.

    Previously, states were added to the quarantine list if they had “a case rate greater than 15 new COVID-19 cases per 100,000 resident population, per day, over a 7-day rolling average.” If they fell below that threshold, they could be removed as well.

    Chicago’s travel order, which began on July 6, was being evaluated every Tuesday, with any additions taking effect the following Friday. The order was not updated last week, however, due to the election, officials said.

    Health officials in both the city and across the state have been discouraging unnecessary travel as the pandemic enters a “second surge.”

    “Let’s be clear, travel will increase your chances of contracting and spreading COVID-19,” Illinois Department of Public Health Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike said.

    Ezike said that travel might be necessary at times, but those who do travel, should take necessary precautions.

    “Consider how you’re going to travel or your mode of transportation,” she said. “Obviously, when you fly, there are security lines as you go through the airport terminals. Think about a flight with layovers where it may be cheaper, but obviously that will pose more risks than a direct flight. Traveling by bus or train versus taking your own vehicle- obviously taking your own vehicle if that’s an option would be safer. Traveling by bus or train, you might not be able to maintain 6 feet of distance and sometimes that will be for extended periods of time during the journey. If you are driving your own personal car, think about planning out how you will do the stops for gas for food for bathroom breaks, think about hand sanitizer and washing your hands frequently.”

    Source Article from https://www.nbcchicago.com/news/local/how-chicagos-new-3-tiered-color-coded-travel-order-works/2367262/

    “We’re ready. The world is watching what’s taking place here,” Pompeo said. “We’re going to count all the votes. When the process is complete, there will be electors selected. There’s a process. The Constitution lays it out pretty clearly.”

    The international community “should have every confidence that the transition necessary to make sure that the State Department is functional today, successful today, and successful with the president who is in office on Jan. 20, a minute after noon, will also be successful,” Pompeo said, referring to the date on which the next president will be inaugurated.

    Pompeo, who served as CIA director at the outset of the Trump administration, also noted that he “went through a transition on the front end,” after the 2016 election. “I’ve been on the other side of this. I’m very confident that we will do all the things that are necessary to make sure that the government … will continue to perform its national security functions as we go forward,” he said.

    The decision by America’s top diplomat to deny Trump’s election loss came as news broke of several world leaders reaching out to make contact with Biden. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and British Prime Minister both tweeted that they spoke with the president-elect by phone. French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel reportedly called him, as well.

    Pompeo said Tuesday that he was “getting calls from all across the world” about the U.S. election, and that foreign observers “understand that we have a legal process” and “understand that this takes time.” But he refused to say explicitly whether he supported the baseless allegations of widespread voter fraud leveled by the Trump campaign.

    “I am very confident that we will count — and we must count — every legal vote,” Pompeo said, later flashing anger when asked whether Trump’s refusal to concede discredited State Department efforts to encourage free and fair elections around the globe.

    “That’s ridiculous,” he told a reporter. “And you know it’s ridiculous. And you asked it because it’s ridiculous.”

    Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/11/10/pompeo-smooth-transition-second-trump-administration-435754

    A demonstrator holds a sign in front of the U.S. Supreme Court, which heard arguments Tuesday on the future of the Affordable Care Act.

    Alex Brandon/AP


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    Alex Brandon/AP

    A demonstrator holds a sign in front of the U.S. Supreme Court, which heard arguments Tuesday on the future of the Affordable Care Act.

    Alex Brandon/AP

    With Obamacare once again on the chopping block at the U.S. Supreme Court, comments from the justices appeared to suggest Tuesday that a majority is inclined to leave the bulk of the Affordable Care Act in place.

    At least two of the court’s conservatives — Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Brett Kavanaugh — seemed to suggest they will vote to preserve the rest of the law, even if the individual mandate is found unconstitutional.

    It is the third time the ACA, also called Obamacare, is back before the Supreme Court. The first attempts to derail the law failed in the high court by votes of 5-to-4 and 6-to-3.

    On those occasions, Roberts provided the fifth vote to save the law on the grounds that the requirement that people either buy health insurance or pay a penalty — the so-called individual mandate — amounted to a tax and thus fell within the taxing power of Congress. But since that time, Congress zeroed out the penalty.

    The latest challenge to the law was brought by Texas, other GOP-run states and the Trump administration. They assert that because the penalty has been zeroed out, it raises no revenue, is no longer a tax and thus is unconstitutional. What’s more, they contend that the mandate was so interwoven with the rest of the law, the whole Obamacare statute — including protections for those with preexisting conditions — should be struck down.

    Roberts pushed back against that idea Tuesday, telling Texas Solicitor General Kyle Hawkins: “I think it’s hard for you to argue that Congress intended the entire act to fall if the mandate were struck down when the same Congress that lowered the penalty to zero did not even try to repeal the rest of the act. I think, frankly, that they wanted the court to do that. But that’s not our job.”

    Kavanaugh seemed to agree. He called the ACA a “very straightforward case” under which the “proper remedy would be to sever the mandate and leave the rest of the act in place.”

    Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/11/10/933462515/supreme-court-appears-likely-to-uphold-obamacare

    “Please, please let us double down on the work we have done,” Mr. Newsom said on Monday. “I’m not trying to take away any enthusiasm, I’m trying to be honest and forthright.”

    Speaking for the first time since the election was called, Mr. Newsom’s tone was a mix of optimistic and foreboding.

    [Track coronavirus case numbers by California county.]

    Case numbers, he said, had begun to rise across the state, as had hospitalizations. Although testing has ramped up, reaching almost 190,000 tests reported over the past day, the state’s average positivity rate over the past two weeks had risen to 3.7 percent after reaching a low of 2.5 percent early last month.

    Cold weather has arrived in some areas and holidays continue to approach, which officials have worried is leading to more in-person, indoor gatherings. Counties across the state were likely to be moved into more restrictive reopening tiers this week.

    [Read more about California’s tiered reopening plan.]

    Still, Mr. Newsom lauded California’s response and said that while he looked forward to working “hand in glove” with a Biden administration on the distribution of a coronavirus vaccine, the state was pressing ahead with its independent vaccine safety review.

    Earlier in the day, Mr. Biden announced that he had tapped a team of health experts, including three from the University of California, San Francisco, to help guide his Covid-19 response — a move Mr. Newsom celebrated as evidence of California’s deep pool of scientists and renowned researchers.

    But he emphasized that figuring out who should get what are expected to be extremely limited doses of a vaccine will still be difficult, nuanced work that requires an understanding of California’s specific underserved communities.

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/10/us/kamala-harris-senate-replacement.html

    The Vatican has taken the extraordinary step of publishing its two-year investigation into the rise and fall of ex-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, who was defrocked in 2019 after a Vatican investigation determined he sexually abused adults as well as children.

    Here are key findings from the report, based on documentation and interviews with witnesses, divided into the three papacies that are affected by the McCarrick case: St. John Paul II, Pope Benedict XVI and Pope Francis.

    VATICAN BREAKS SILENCE ON POPE FRANCIS’ GAY CIVIL UNION REMARKS

    POPE JOHN PAUL II (1978-2005)

    McCarrick had generally positive marks during his first two posts as bishop, in Metuchen, N.J. (1981-1986), and Newark, N.J. (1986-2000). But by the mid-1990s, rumors about his behavior were starting to fly, and John Paul passed McCarrick over as archbishop of Chicago in 1997 and New York in 1999.

    When the position of archbishop of Washington D.C., opened up, the then-archbishop of New York, Cardinal John O’Connor, warned the Vatican in an Oct. 28, 1999, letter that naming McCarrick there would be a mistake, the findings said.

    By that time, the allegations against McCarrick included: a 1994 letter by one priest to the Metuchen, N.J., bishop providing eyewitness testimony of McCarrick and other seminarians engaging in sexual acts during a fishing trip, and the priest’s own claims that McCarrick tried to fondle him. It also included anonymous letters sent to various U.S. cardinals that accused McCarrick of pedophilia with seminarians as well as claims that McCarrick slept with young men in his official residence as well as seminarians at his beach house. O’Connor cited that information and said the risk of scandal would be too great if McCarrick were moved to Washington.

    POPE FRANCIS SUPPORTS LAW FOR SAME-SEX CIVIL UNIONS IN NEW DOCUMENTARY: ‘THEY ARE CHILDREN OF GOD’

    John Paul tasked the Vatican ambassador to the U.S. to investigate. His report confirmed McCarrick bedded seminarians but didn’t find “certainty” that he had engaged in sexual misconduct. The findings didn’t explain what McCarrick and the seminarians were doing in bed together. Instead, they faulted the bishops who were asked to provide information to the ambassador, saying “three of the four bishops provided inaccurate and incomplete information.”

    The doubts, however, were enough to persuade John Paul to drop McCarrick as a candidate. That would have sealed his fate, but McCarrick made a last-ditch appeal that appears to have changed John Paul’s mind. The U.S. prelate sent a handwritten note via John Paul’s private secretary, then-Archbishop Stanislaw Dziwisz, on Aug. 6, 2000, swearing he “never had sexual relations with any person male or female, young or old, cleric or lay.”

    It struck a chord with the Polish pope, who had first-hand experience of priests being unfairly discredited by false accusations under communist rule, and he named McCarrick to the post.

    ___

    POPE BENEDICT XVI (2005-2013)

    Pope Benedict XVI finally took action against McCarrick in 2005 after the Vatican received documentation from the former Metuchen, N.J., seminarian who had written a detailed letter in 1994 to his then-bishop, the late Edward Hughes, about the abuse he endured by McCarrick. For the first time, the Vatican had a named victim making a detailed report of abuse, although the claims were dismissed by some as unreliable because the seminarian himself had gone on to abuse minors.

    Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano — then a top official in the secretariat of state who would go on to expose the McCarrick cover-up — called for an “exemplary measure” against McCarrick. Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, then Benedict’s secretary of state, “shared Vigano’s concerns.”

    But the report said Benedict ultimately decided against a canonical trial or sanction, in part because the Vatican’s in-house legal code didn’t provide ways to prosecute old cases of priests who slept with young men. “Instead the decision was made to appeal to McCarrick’s conscience and ecclesial spirit by indicating to him that he should maintain a lower profile and minimize travel for the good of the church,” the report said.

    US CARDINALS CRITICIZE POPE FRANCIS ENDORSEMENT OF SAME-SEX UNIONS

    The Vatican’s ambassador to Washington relayed the verbal request to McCarrick in 2006, and after McCarrick flouted it, the Vatican official in charge of bishops put it in writing in 2008. But McCarrick continued flouting the restrictions.

    Email correspondence provided by McCarrick’s former secretary shows he traveled widely during Benedict’s papacy after the restrictions were purportedly imposed, including to regular meetings at the Vatican, to Bosnia, Lebanon, Qatar, Ireland and throughout Asia — travel that continued under Francis, including to China.

    ___

    POPE FRANCIS (2013 to the present)

    According to the Vatican findings, Francis essentially continued in his predecessors’ path in regards to McCarrick. It said neither Francis nor any Vatican official lifted or modified Benedict’s flouted restrictions, never named McCarrick a “diplomatic agent” for the Holy See and never received any documentation about McCarrick before 2017. The summary didn’t say if Francis ever requested more substantial information after his then-ambassador to the U.S., Cardinal Carlo Maria Vigano, purportedly told him in 2013 that McCarrick was a sexual predator.

    Francis changed his tune after a former altar boy came forward to the New York archdiocese alleging McCarrick groped him when he was a teenager during preparations for Christmas Mass in 1971 and 1972. The allegation was the first solid claim against McCarrick involving a minor and triggered the canonical trial that resulted in McCarrick being defrocked.

    Francis commissioned the archival investigation after Vigano issued a blistering expose of the two-decade-long McCarrick cover-up in 2018, naming around two dozen U.S. and Vatican officials who he said knew of McCarrick’s misconduct but failed to effectively sanction him.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Vigano’s most explosive claim was that Francis lifted the sanctions imposed by Benedict and made McCarrick a trusted adviser. Vigano called on Francis to resign for having ignored what he said was his warning that McCarrick had “corrupted generations of priests and seminarians.”

    Many of Vigano’s central assertions were confirmed in the report Tuesday but not the ones involving Francis. “No records support Vigano’s account and evidence as to what he said is sharply disputed,” it said.

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/world/key-findings-vatican-report-ex-cardinal-mccarrick

    Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/health/2020/11/10/covid-news-minnesota-illinois-colorado-restrictions-fda-lilly/6228673002/