Newsom, Senate President Pro Tem Toni Atkins, D-San Diego, and Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon, D-Lakewood (Los Angeles County), said Wednesday that they would prioritize getting much of the stimulus money out to Californians this spring. The Legislature could vote on the stimulus package as soon as next week.

“We’re nearly a year into this pandemic, and millions of Californians continue to feel the impact on their wallets and bottom line,” Atkins said in a statement. The agreement will “provide the kind of immediate emergency relief that families and small businesses desperately need right now.”

Under the plan, the state would spend about $3.7 billion to provide direct $600 payments to low-income Californians. Taxpayers who claim the state earned income tax credit for the working poor — generally, those with incomes of $30,000 a year or less — would receive an additional $600 rebate. Noncitizens who pay taxes using an individual taxpayer identification number would be eligible if they made $75,000 or less last year, regardless of their filing status.

Californians enrolled in state welfare and social security programs would receive extra $600 grants in the coming months. Officials estimate the aid would reach more than 5 million households, some of which could receive multiple payments.

An additional $2.1 billion would be set aside to help small businesses adapt their operations for the coronavirus, nearly quadruple the amount of aid that Newsom proposed in his budget last month. The state previously made $500 million available in December to provide businesses with grants of between $5,000 and $25,000 with annual revenue of $2.5 million or less.

This second round of funding would include $50 million dedicated for small cultural institutions that have been unable to operate or are otherwise financially challenged by the pandemic. Those could include museums, art galleries, theater and dance companies, musical groups, zoos and botanical gardens.

Businesses that received Paycheck Protection Program loans from the federal government to keep their workers employed during the pandemic would also be able to deduct up to $150,000 of that money from their state taxes. State officials estimate that will cost about $2 billion.

Bars, restaurants, barbershops, manicure salons and others from the service industry that have been required to close down or limit their capacity during the pandemic would receive about $116 million in fee waivers over the next two years.

In a statement, Rendon said, “We are building an economic foundation for the recovery of jobs, small businesses and, indeed, our everyday lives.”

The plan would reverse more than $850 million in funding cuts that lawmakers made last year as they worked to close a budget deficit estimated at more than $54 billion, including $300 million each for the University of California and California State University and $128 million for the court system. State leaders had originally hoped that a federal bailout would allow them to restore about $11 billion in cuts and deferred spending last fall, but Congress has not yet approved funding.

Other measures in the aid package would expand welfare eligibility by exempting federal unemployment benefits from income calculations, extend subsidized child care for essential workers, provide $100 million in emergency financial assistance to community college students, and give $35 million in support to food and diaper banks.

Newsom proposed a record budget in January that would use a one-time windfall to put nearly $19 billion back into reserve accounts the state tapped into last year and leave a $15.6 billion discretionary surplus. He challenged lawmakers to take immediate action by the end of that month on his economic stimulus plans, including the $600 checks and small business funding, although a spending plan is not usually adopted until June.

Another early priority of Newsom’s, a $2 billion proposal that would give school districts up to $750 per student to reopen for in-person instruction, has been bogged down in disputes over when teachers receive coronavirus vaccinations and other safety measures.

Alexei Koseff is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: alexei.koseff@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @akoseff

Source Article from https://www.sfchronicle.com/politics/article/600-checks-for-low-income-Californians-at-heart-15958152.php

Timothy Wilsey, his wife Nicole and his 7-year-old son have been without power for 72 hours, and they have been forced to use their cars for warmth and to charge battery packs and phones, “their only lines of communication.”

The Euless, Texas, family said their apartment is currently only heated by candles.

“We are keeping busy by going old school and reading books and playing board games,” he told CNN by text message from Euless, a suburb of Dallas and Fort Worth.

Timothy says they’re only using their phones to quickly look at the news, so they can stay updated on the power outage situation, and to look for restaurants that may be open and serving food.  

“We are mostly laying under covers in bed,” Timothy said. “The only time we leave the bed is to go to the car to warm up or charge the phones and battery packs.”

They put the food they could save from their freezer on their patio so it would stay warmer, but have no other way to cook food. The food they do have is largely limited to beef sticks, beef jerky, chips and some cookies; as for things to drink, they have bottled water and some bottled tea, but that is it.

“Other they [sic] that we are hoping the restaurants are open and serving hot food,” he said. “Sorry, hard to type while your hands are cold.”

CNN wants to hear your story about what you’re experiencing during this extreme winter weather. Share your story with us here.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/us/live-news/snow-ice-storm-power-outages-updates-02-17-21/h_27a4f70bc1a4c58d80b534a820157fbc

Rush Limbaugh, the monumentally influential media icon who transformed talk radio and politics in his decades behind the microphone, helping shape the modern-day Republican Party, died Wednesday morning at the age of 70 after a battle with lung cancer, his family announced.

Limbaugh’s wife, Kathryn, made the announcement on his radio show. “Losing a loved one is terribly difficult, even more so when that loved one is larger than life,” she said. “Rush will forever be the greatest of all time.”

The radio icon learned he had Stage IV lung cancer in January 2020 and was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by then-President Trump at the State of the Union address days later. First lady Melania Trump then presented America’s highest civilian honor to Limbaugh in an emotional moment on the heels of his devastating cancer diagnosis.

“Rush Limbaugh: Thank you for your decades of tireless devotion to our country,” President Trump said during the address.

He told Fox News on Wednesday afternoon: “There aren’t too many legends around, but he is a legend.”

It was not clear exactly where Limbaugh died. He frequently broadcast his show from his home studio in Palm Beach, Fla.

Limbaugh is considered one of the most influential media figures in American history and has played a consequential role in conservative politics since “The Rush Limbaugh Show” began in 1988. Perched behind his Golden EIB (Excellence in Broadcasting) Microphone, Limbaugh spent over three decades as arguably both the most beloved and polarizing person in American media.

The program that began 33 years ago on national syndication with only 56 radio stations grew to be the most listened-to radio show in the United States, airing on more than 600 stations, according to the show’s website. Up to 27 million people tuned in on a weekly basis and Limbaugh has lovingly referred to his passionate fan base as “Dittoheads,” as they would often say “ditto” when agreeing with the iconic radio host.

In his final radio broadcast of 2020, Limbaugh thanked his listeners and supporters, revealing at the time that he had outlived his prognosis.

“I wasn’t expected to be alive today,” he said. “I wasn’t expected to make it to October, and then to November, and then to December. And yet, here I am, and today, got some problems, but I’m feeling pretty good today.”

Limbaugh helped boost Trump’s influence prior to the 2016 election simply by taking him seriously as a candidate when other established conservatives didn’t want the former reality television star anywhere near the Republican Party. Many of Limbaugh’s listeners eventually became Trump supporters and the radio legend continued to defend Trump throughout his presidency despite occasional disagreements.

In the heat of the 2020 presidential election, Limbaugh hosted Trump in October for what was an unprecedented two-hour “radio rally”, during which the president was virtually given control of the coveted golden microphone to answer questions from the host and his listeners.

Limbaugh, born in Cape Girardeau, Mo., on Jan. 12, 1951, began his radio career in 1967 as a “helper” when he was only 16 years old. He eventually graduated to disk jockey and worked at a small station roughly 100 miles south of St. Louis while attending high school.

“I was totally consumed,” Limbaugh told the New York Times in 1990, noting that his idol was a Chicago radio host named Larry Lujack. By 1971, Limbaugh was a morning radio host in Pittsburgh, where he was oddly told to cover a certain amount of “farm news” because the area was surrounded by many agriculture communities. In 2007 he explained to listeners how the young radio host managed to keep listeners despite the bizarre requirement.

Rush Limbaugh in his studio in an undated photo.
(mark peterson/Corbis via Getty Images, File)

“The last thing that the audience of my show cares about is farm news. If farm news came on, bam! They pushed the button and go somewhere else. So, we had to figure out, ‘Okay, how do we do this and protect the license?’ So I turned the farm news every day into a funny bit with farm sound effects and the roosters crowing and so forth, and I’d make fun of the stockyard feed prices or whatever it was, so that we could say, ‘We’re doing barn news,’ agriculture news. There was all kinds of things like that,” Limbaugh told listeners.

The tidbit offered a glimpse into Limbaugh’s early days, proving that he was a master of keeping audiences engaged from a young age. Limbaugh has said he realized America was the “greatest country ever” when taking trips to Europe and Asia in his late 20s and early 30s, an experience that helped shape his political views.

“I’m aware that the United States is young compared to countries in Europe and Asia that have been around for hundreds of years. They’re thousand-year-old civilizations,” he told listeners in 2013. “So, I go to Europe and say, ‘Wait a minute. Why is this bedroom so damned old-fashioned and doesn’t work? What the hell is this? They call this a toilet?’ So I started asking myself, ‘How is it that we, who have only been around 200 years, are light-years ahead of people that have been alive a thousand?’ So, I started thinking this. It was a matter of genuine curiosity to me, and not from a braggadocios standpoint.”

Limbaugh continued the trip down memory lane: “I was literally interested in how that happened, and then I started to think about all the other things that we led the world in: Manufacturing, technology, innovation, invention, creation, and it all led back to liberty and freedom and the pursuit of happiness and dreams coming true and working hard for whatever you want and being able to do what you love, not just have to dream about it.”

PHOTOS: RUSH LIMBAUGH THROUGH THE YEARS

From that point forward, Limbaugh believed that “American exceptionalism” shouldn’t be frowned upon, and his conservative views became more prominent.

“We stood for the concepts that are in our Declaration of Independence: Right to life, liberty, pursuit of happiness. We stood for that, and we were the beacon for it, and to this day that is why the oppressed of the world still seek to come into this country,” he said.

Limbaugh also credited National Review founder William F. Buckley Jr. for teaching him how to articulate conservative views.

Rush Limbaugh at a Pittsburgh Steelers game in 2012.
(George Gojkovich/Getty Images, File)

“He single-handedly is responsible for my learning to form and frame my beliefs and express them verbally in a concise and understandable way,” Limbaugh once said.

In 1987, the Federal Communications Commission repealed the Fairness Doctrine, a policy that had been in place since 1949 and mandated that both sides of controversial political issues receive equal time on radio programs. The decision by the FCC paved the way for Limbaugh to broadcast his conservative views without fear of being punished by the government, quickly leading to the now-prominent talk radio format that he pioneered.

After local radio gigs in Pittsburgh, Kansas City, Sacramento, Limbaugh landed at WABC in New York shortly after the Fairness Doctrine was repealed. It was there that he changed talk radio forever when “The Rush Limbaugh Show” became a cultural phenomenon for both the message and the way it was delivered.

“Unlike most radio talkers, who affect a casual, intimate style, Limbaugh sounds like he’s on a soapbox. He is intoxicated by words, especially those flowing from his own lips. His vocabulary is extensive; his diction tends to the grandiosely formal, though overblown to the point of self-parody. His nervous energy plays out through hands that never stop moving. They rattle the papers, slap the desk, punch the console. Whap! Whap! Whump! This muted percussion is often heard on the air, a rhythmic accompaniment to Limbaugh’s voice,” author Lewis Grossberger wrote in New York Times Magazine in 1990.

At one point after early struggles to find success in the radio business, Limbaugh temporarily left the industry and worked for the Kansas City Royals baseball team. Lucky for conservatives and “Dittoheads,” he eventually returned to radio.

“Thanks for all you’re doing to promote Republican and conservative principles. Now that I’ve retired from active politics, I don’t mind that you have become the Number One voice for conservatism in our country,” President Ronald Reagan once wrote in a letter to Limbaughthat was published by National Review in 2003.

“I know the liberals call you ‘the most dangerous man in America,’ but don’t worry about it, they used to say the same thing about me. Keep up the good work. America needs to hear the way things ought to be,” Reagan continued.

Limbaugh was eventually enshrined in the Radio Hall of Fame and the National Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame. He was a five-time winner of the National Association of Broadcasters Marconi Award for “Excellence in Syndicated and Network Broadcasting,” a No. 1 New York Times bestselling author and was named one of Barbara Walters’ 10 Most Fascinating People in 2008 and one of TIME’s 100 Most Influential People in the World in 2009.

Rush Limbaugh speaking in San Jose, Calif., in 2005.
(John Medina/WireImage, File)

While Limbaugh made his career on radio, a speech he delivered at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in 2009 is widely considered one of the most important moments of his career — an explanation of “who conservatives are” that caused the crowd to erupt with chants of “USA! USA!”

“We love people. When we look out over the United States of America, when we are anywhere, when we see a group of people, such as this or anywhere, we see Americans. We see human beings. We don’t see groups. We don’t see victims. We don’t see people we want to exploit. What we see — what we see is potential. We do not look out across the country and see the average American, the person that makes this country work. We do not see that person with contempt. We don’t think that person doesn’t have what it takes. We believe that person can be the best he or she wants to be if certain things are just removed from their path like onerous taxes, regulations and too much government,” Limbaugh told the crowd.

“We want every American to be the best he or she chooses to be. We recognize that we are all individuals. We love and revere our founding documents, the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence,” he continued. “We believe that the preamble to the Constitution contains an inarguable truth that we are all endowed by our creator with certain inalienable rights, among them life, liberty, Freedom and the pursuit of happiness.”

In 2001, Limbaugh was diagnosed with an autoimmune inner-ear disease that drastically affected his hearing.

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In 2003, Limbaugh checked himself into a treatment facility after becoming addicted to pain medication that he was prescribed following back surgery. Also in 2003, Limbaugh resigned from a brief role as ESPN’s “Sunday NFL Countdown” after making controversial comments about then-Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb, who the broadcasting legend said was overrated by media members who wanted to see a Black quarterback thrive.

Limbaugh is survived by his wife.

Fox News’ Charles Creitz, Yael Halon and David Rutz contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/rush-limbaugh-dead-talk-radio-conservative-icon

PHILADELPHIA (WPVI) — Philadelphia police say seven people were shot Wednesday afternoon near the Olney Transportation Center.

Police said the shooting happened at about 2:50 p.m.

Views from Chopper 6 showed a large police presence near the station on the corner of Broad Street and Olney Avenue.

WATCH: Philly Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw provides update on shooting at Olney Transportation Center

Philadelphia Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw said those injured range in age from 17 to 70.

The seven victims injured include:
– A 22-year-old man who was shot in the back

– A 21-year-old man who was shot in the right leg
– A 53-year-old man who was shot in the right leg
– A 36-year-old woman who was shot in the right thigh
– A 70-year-old man who was shot in the right thigh
– A 17-year-old girl who was shot in the right arm

– A 71-year-old man who was shot once in the stomach and multiple times in both legs

The victims were taken to area hospitals. The 71-year-old man was listed in critical condition but the others were listed in stable condition, police said.

One person was taken into custody and two guns were found at the scene.

An earlier version of this story said one person was dead following the shooting.

Source Article from https://6abc.com/shooting-philadelphia-police-olney-transportation-center-septa-station/10348270

Fauci, the head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and President Joe Biden’s chief medical adviser, agreed Wednesday that teachers should “absolutely” be prioritized among essential workers in vaccination efforts. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s guidelines say that getting teachers vaccinated offers an “additional layer of protection” but that vaccinations for teachers shouldn’t be required for reopening in-person learning. Instead, the CDC’s guidelines for schools have emphasized social distancing and masking.

“You should try to get as many teachers as you possibly can vaccinated as quickly as you possibly can,” Fauci said. “But to make it a sine qua non that you don’t open a school until every teacher is vaccinated, I think is not workable, and probably most of the teachers would agree with that … You don’t want to essentially have nobody in school until all the teachers get vaccinated.”

Earlier this month, CDC director Rochelle Walensky echoed Fauci’s take that teachers don’t need to be vaccinated for reopening safely. After Walensky’s remarks, before the CDC’s guidelines were released, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Walensky was speaking “in her personal capacity.”

CNN’s John Berman pressed Sanders on the issue Wednesday morning.

“I don’t understand why it’s a hard question to answer. It may be that you want every teacher to be vaccinated. It may be the answer is, yeah, teachers should, if they can, be vaccinated before they return to school, but it’s not necessary,” Berman said after Sanders didn’t directly answer his question.

“The president has been clear, the Vice President has been clear, and I think I was really clear just now. It is the administration’s position, the President and Vice President believe that teachers should be prioritized for vaccinations,” Sanders responded.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/02/17/fauci-vaccinate-teachers-school-reopening-469315

LAKEWOOD RANCH, Fla. – Following reports that Gov. Ron DeSantis reached out to a politically-connected developer and offered to set up an exclusive vaccination site for residents of Lakewood Ranch and other well-off neighborhoods in Manatee County, the governor threatened to pull vaccines from the area and move them to other parts of the state if residents continue to complain.

The vaccines are reserved solely for residents of two zip codes, according to the Tampa Bay Times, which cover most of the Manatee County portion of Lakewood Ranch and other wealthier neighborhoods that haven’t been hit as hard as other parts of the county.

DeSantis was asked about the criticism from the community that followed the Tuesday report during a press conference on Wednesday.

“I mean, if Manatee County doesn’t like us doing this, then we are totally fine with putting this in counties that want it,” DeSantis said. “And we’re totally happy to do that so anyone that’s saying that, let us know if you want us to send it to Sarasota next time, or Charlotte, or Pasco, wherever, let us know we’re happy to do it. But I think most people if we have an opportunity to bring vaccines and do it efficiently I think that they’re gonna want it.”

Florida Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried was quick to condemn the statements from DeSantis.

“There is no reason that Governor DeSantis should be rationing vaccines based on political influence,” Fried said in a press release. “This is troubling and potentially illegal. Vaccines should be distributed to counties based on need, capacity, and science. While I am disappointed in the Governor using vaccines as a political tool, I plan on working with the Biden Administration to ensure they do not penalize Floridians for his actions and continue to ramp up vaccine distribution to all communities, so that we can get our economy and state going again.”

DeSantis said Wednesday the vaccination site set up at Premier Sports Campus at Lakewood Ranch is meant to address the high concentration of seniors living in the area. DeSantis pushed back on the claims that he set up the site because the community’s developer and residents of the community support him politically.

“It wasn’t choosing one ZIP code over another,” DeSantis said. “We wanted to find communities that had high levels of seniors, living in there and this obviously has a high concentration.”

Manatee County Commissioner Vanessa Baugh told the Times the process of implementing the new vaccine site began when DeSantis called Rex Jensen, the developer of the master-planned Lakewood Ranch community.

“People need to look at the statistics. There have been other clinics and many people out east haven’t received the vaccines and are underserved. I see it as a win-win,” Baugh told the Bradenton Herald. “This is not a negative situation.”

About 3,000 senior residents will receive the vaccine over the next three days. The state recently set up similar community “pods” in The Villages and Sun City Center.

“If there’s going to be folks that are going to complain about getting more vaccines, you know, I’ll tell you what, I mean, I wouldn’t be complaining, I’d be thankful that we’re able to do it because, you know what, we didn’t need to do this at all,” DeSantis said.

Source Article from https://www.news4jax.com/news/local/2021/02/17/desantis-threatens-to-pull-vaccines-from-manatee-county-after-residents-question-site-placement/

The Biden administration announced on Wednesday a range of initiatives to expand testing capacity in the U.S. A COVID-19 testing site in Seattle is seen here on Saturday.

David Ryder/Getty Images


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David Ryder/Getty Images

The Biden administration announced on Wednesday a range of initiatives to expand testing capacity in the U.S. A COVID-19 testing site in Seattle is seen here on Saturday.

David Ryder/Getty Images

The White House plans to increase testing capacity in the U.S. through multiple channels, officials said in a media briefing on Wednesday.

The administration says it will spend $650 million to expand testing for K-8 schools and settings where people congregate such as homeless shelters, via new “hubs” created by the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Defense. Regional coordinating centers will work to increase testing capacity, partnering with labs and universities to collect specimens, perform tests and report results to public health agencies.

The plan could mean an additional 25 million tests per month, and it’s intended to aid President Biden’s effort to open schools for in-person learning.

HHS and DOD will also spend $815 million to increase domestic production of testing supplies and materials. That funding will go toward manufacturing of supplies including filter pipette tips, polymers used in antigen tests, and injected molded plastics to house testing reagents.

And in a third avenue, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will spend $200 million to expand genomic sequencing of the virus — an effort to prepare for the spread of variants of the coronavirus.

On the vaccine front, weekly vaccine allocations increased to 13.5 million from 11 million last week, said Jeffrey Zients, the White House COVID-19 response coordinator. Allocations to pharmacies would double to 2 million this week, compared to 1 million last week.

A chart from the White House shows steady increases in the average number of vaccine doses administered each day.

The White House


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The White House

The U.S. has administered an average 1.7 million shots a day over the most recent week. That’s up from 1.1 million four weeks ago.

Zients acknowledged that Johnson & Johnson will not have much vaccine available to distribute right away — assuming the company gets FDA authorization in the next few weeks.

“We’ve learned there is not a big inventory. There’s a few million doses to start with,” he said.

That means the Johnson & Johnson vaccine will help later, but will not play a major immediate role. The company has committed to delivering 100 million doses of its one-dose vaccine by the end of June.

While cases and hospitalizations “continue to move in the right direction,” CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said, she noted there are still more cases than there were at the peak of last summer. The number of U.S. deaths continues to fluctuate, averaging 3,076 a day from Feb. 9-15.

Immediate reaction to the news of increased funding for genomic sequencing of the virus was mixed: some experts hailed the investment, while others thought it too small to accomplish what’s needed.

“It’s a great step in the right direction. If our cases continue to come down, it will get us a lot closer to where we need to be,” said Nathan Grubaugh, assistant professor of epidemiology at the Yale School of Public Health, in an email to NPR.

“It won’t get us to 5% right away, but we won’t get there overnight anyways,” Grubaugh said. “This will help to build the operational infrastructure for a program. Once we get this running, we can seek additional funds to increase the capacity. I think that this is a great start.”

But Joe Derisi, professor of biochemistry and biophysics at the University of California San Francisco, says it’s not enough.

“I think the number should be closer to $1 billion,” he wrote in an email. “It isn’t just about sequencing, it is about going that last mile to make the data actionable on the ground with [public health] partners. That part is time consuming and difficult, and expensive in terms of labor. The sequence data alone is only partly useful,” said Derisi.

Jennifer Nuzzo, senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, said she’s glad the Biden administration is ramping up its surveillance for genetic variants.

“But ultimately, even this expanded goal puts the US well behind other countries,” she said in an email. She says that even if the U.S. were able to sequence 25,000 specimens per week, it would amount to about 5% of the total number of new cases that currently occur each week.

“By comparison, the United Kingdom is sequencing more than 20% of its cases. While I welcome every effort to expand sequencing in the US, the expanded sequencing targets may not be enough to sufficiently track where in the country the variants are turning up and to know whether their occurrence is increasing,” she said.

NPR’s Rob Stein contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/02/17/968677002/white-house-announces-expanded-covid-19-testing-manufacturing-and-virus-sequenci

The fall of a leader with authoritarian instincts is usually symbolised by toppled statues and looted palaces. For Donald Trump, perhaps inevitably, it was the demolition of a failed casino.

On Wednesday the former Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City, New Jersey, was reduced to rubble in 20 seconds by 3,000 sticks of dynamite. It had fallen into such disrepair that chunks of the building had been tumbling to ground.

The casino opened in 1984 during a decade of excess for Trump and other kings of capitalism. It hosted parties for countless Hollywood actors, rock stars and sportspeople. But after a string of bankruptcy filings, the New York property tycoon and reality TV host cut ties with it in 2009.

By the time it finally closed its doors in 2014, Trump Plaza was the worst-performing casino in Atlantic City, taking in as much money from gamblers in eight and a half months as the Borgata casino did every two weeks. A year later, Trump announced his world-changing run for US president, often citing Atlantic City as proof of his business acumen.

The Plaza’s end came at around 9am with a series of explosions. The building imploded and a huge cloud of dust consumed the beach and famed Atlantic City boardwalk.

There were cheers from a viewing party of people who had paid $10 to watch from their cars. Marty Small, the city mayor who had described the abandoned building as an eyesore, told the Associated Press: “I got chills. This is a historic moment. It was exciting.”

Small estimated the remaining pile of rubble was about eight stories high and would be removed by 10 June. Some of it could be used by environmentalists interested in building an artificial fishing reef off the coast of Atlantic City.

It was the final casino in Atlantic City to bear Trump’s name. The Trump Taj Mahal has been renamed as the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino while the Trump Marina is now called the Golden Nugget Atlantic City.

Michael Beschloss, a presidential historian, tweeted on Wednesday: “Metaphor alert: next to the bankrupt Trump Plaza and Casino, just imploded this morning, remains the Atlantic City convention hall where LBJ accepted Democratic nomination in 1964 and touted the Great Society.”

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/feb/17/trump-casino-demolished-atlantic-city-failed

Republican politicians hungered to be associated with Mr. Limbaugh. In 1992, President George H.W. Bush, then seeking a second term, invited him to the White House for an overnight visit. That year, when Bill Clinton defeated Bush, Republicans were divided and forlorn, and “all we had to hold us together was Rush Limbaugh,” said one of Bush’s top strategists, Mary Matalin.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/obituaries/rush-limbaugh-dead/2021/02/17/61bacd24-e04b-11e7-8679-a9728984779c_story.html

Anger over Texas’s power grid failing in the face of a record winter freeze is mounting, as millions of residents remained shivering, with no assurances that their electricity and heat – out for 36 hours or longer in many homes – would return.

“I know people are angry and frustrated,” said Houston’s mayor, Sylvester Turner, who woke up to more than 1 million people still without power in his city on Wednesday. “So am I.”

Between 2 and 3 million customers in Texas still had no power, nearly two full days after historic snowfall and single-digit temperatures created a surge in demand for electricity to warm up homes unaccustomed to such extreme lows, buckling the state’s power grid and causing widespread blackouts. Meanwhile, people’s water pipes are bursting and hours long lines have been wrapping around grocery stores as people search for food.

Jasmine Mabute lives in the Bridgeland suburb in north-west Houston. Like many Texans right now, a lack of power and heat isn’t her only concern. Her own water pipes burst on Tuesday, cutting off supply to her home.

“Yesterday my mom called – she’s in the Philippines right now – and she said ‘make sure you fill some pots up with water just in case the water goes out.’ In my head I was like ‘Why would the water even go out?’

“Funnily enough, I took a shower and 30 minutes later and my brother tried to wash his hands and he said that the water was out.”

There is also now an official “boil water” notice in Houston, with concern rising over the quality of drinking water. But people with electrical appliances are not able to boil water due to the lack of power.

The winter weather that has overwhelmed power grids is keeping its grip on the nation’s midsection as well.

At least 20 people have died across the country, some while struggling to find warmth inside their homes. In the Houston area, one family died from carbon monoxide poisoning from car exhaust in their garage; another perished after flames spread from their fireplace.

More than 100 million people live in areas covered on Wednesday by some type of winter weather warning, watch or advisory, as yet another winter storm hits Texas and parts of the southern plains, the National Weather Service said.

Utilities from Minnesota to Texas and Mississippi have implemented rolling blackouts to ease the burden on power grids straining to meet extreme demand for heat and electricity as record low temperatures were reported in city after city.

The weather has also threatened to affect the nation’s Covid-19 vaccination effort. Joe Biden’s administration said delays in vaccine shipments and deliveries were likely. After visiting Milwaukee on Tuesday, Biden said the weather was as “cold as the devil up there”.

The worst US power outages by far, however, have been in Texas, where officials requested 60 generators from the Federal Emergency Management Agency and planned to prioritize hospitals and nursing homes. The state opened 35 shelters to more than 1,000 occupants, the agency said.

The breakdown sparked growing outrage and demands for answers over how Texas, whose Republican leaders as recently as last year taunted California over its rolling blackouts, failed such a big test of a major point of state pride: energy independence.

Amber Nichols, whose north Austin home has had no power since early Monday, said: “We’re all angry because there is no reason to leave entire neighborhoods freezing to death.”

Some also blame the polar vortex, a weather pattern that usually keeps to the Arctic, but is increasingly visiting lower latitudes and staying beyond its welcome. Scientists say global warming caused by humans could be partly responsible for making its southward escapes longer and more frequent.

But the severe winter storm has, among some Republicans, been used to open up a new culture war around the expansion of renewable energy, which is a stated priority of Biden in order to address the climate crisis.

“This shows how the Green New Deal would be a deadly deal for the United States of America,” Greg Abbott, Texas’s Republican governor, told Fox News about an ambitious but not enacted plan to rapidly phase out fossil fuels. “It just shows that fossil fuel is necessary for the state of Texas as well as other states, to make sure that we’ll be able to heat our homes in the wintertime and cool our homes in the summertime.”

Abbott’s attack contradicts the operators of the Texas grid, which is overwhelmingly run on gas and oil, who have confirmed the plunging temperatures caused gas plants to seize up at the same time as a huge spike in demand for heating. Nevertheless, images of ice-covered wind turbines, taken in Sweden in 2014, were shared widely among conservatives on social media as proof of the frailty of clean energy.

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the Democratic congresswoman behind the Green New Deal platform, said that Abbott was “blaming policies he hasn’t even implemented for his own failures” while the renewable energy industry also hit back.

“It is disgraceful to see the longtime antagonists of clean power engaging in a politically opportunistic charade misleading Americans,” said Heather Zichal, chief executive of the American Clean Power lobby group.

Abbott seemed to have a more sobering view of the issue in the past day when he called for an investigation of the grid manager, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (Ercot). His indignation struck a much different tone than just a day earlier, when he told Texans that Ercot was prioritizing residential customers and that power was getting restored to hundreds of thousands of homes.

“This is unacceptable,” Abbott said.

As the politicians squabbled, travel remained ill-advised in much of the nation, with roadways treacherous and thousands of flights canceled. Some of the fatalities involve people dying in their cars in subfreezing temperatures. Many school systems have delayed or canceled face-to-face classes.

Authorities said a fire that killed three young children and their grandmother in the Houston area probably spread from the fireplace they were using to keep warm. In Oregon, authorities confirmed on Tuesday that four people died in the Portland area of carbon monoxide poisoning.

At least 13 children were treated for carbon monoxide poisoning at Cook Children’s Medical Center in Fort Worth and one parent died of the toxic fumes, hospital officials said.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/feb/17/texas-power-blackout-weather-cold

The winter storm expected to drop at least another 6 to 8 inches of snow across much of New Jersey will start in the pre-dawn hours Thursday and could linger into Friday afternoon, according to the latest forecasts.

Light snow could begin as early as 4 or 5 a.m., with steadier snow falling by 7 or 8 a.m., according to Jim Sullivan, chief meteorologist for WeatherWorks, a private forecasting company based in Hackettstown. Snow should be falling heavily in South Jersey by 8 or 9 a.m., while in North Jersey, moderate to heavy snow is likely to be accumulating no later than 10 or 11 a.m., Sullivan said.

The National Weather Service’s prediction issued in its morning forecast discussion matches up with Sullivan as the NWS says precipitation will begin in the “pre-dawn hours.”

The National Weather Service is calling for up to 8 inches of snow from a storm starting Thursday and continuing into Friday. Here’s the latest on timing.

Although the storm will overspread the state from southwest to northeast, Sullivan said snow could actually start first in North Jersey.

“It might be kind of weird — it might fill in across the northern half a little earlier than the southern half. It’s not really a uniform shield (of snow),” Sullivan said.

Snow totals in South Jersey are expected to be less — about 3 to 4 inches compared to 6 to 8 in northern and central Jersey, according to the National Weather Service.

That’s because snow in South Jersey and along the Jersey Shore could change to mixed precipitation fairly quickly, with warmer temperatures expected.

“Some mixing might start as early as the late morning, and in inland parts of South Jersey there could be sleet toward noon,” Sullivan said. “Down there, you might only have a couple hours of heavy snow before mixed precipitation moves in.”

NJ snow totals.National Weather Service

Mixed precipitation will kick in by mid to late afternoon further north, with the heaviest precipitation lessening in intensity from 4 to 7 p.m. south to north.

The storm, though, will still be far from over — with precipitation not winding down until sometime between 9 a.m. and noon Friday and lingering light rain or snow showers possible through the afternoon.

“It’s not going to stop, but it will become much lighter later tomorrow,” Sullivan said. “The end time is still unclear.”

AccuWeather is calling for higher amounts of up to 12 inches of snow in the northern half of the state, along with a narrow band of 3 to 6 inches along I-195 and 1 to 3 inches for South Jersey.

AccuWeather’s forecast for the winter storm expected to start Thursday calls for 6 to 12 inches for the northern half of New Jersey.

The National Weather Service has issued a winter storm watch for 17 New Jersey counties ahead of a storm. Those are likely to be upgraded to winter storm warnings as the system nears the state and the forecast becomes more refined.

Only Ocean, Atlantic, Cape May, Cumberland and coastal areas of Monmouth County are not under a winter storm watch.

Jeff Goldman may be reached at jeff_goldman@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @JGoldmanNJ.

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Source Article from https://www.nj.com/weather/2021/02/nj-weather-when-will-the-snow-start-thursday-latest-update-on-timing-track-for-winter-storm.html

SALT LAKE CITY — Wednesday’s snowstorm is prompting some schools and organizations to cancel or delay their activities. We are collecting a list of known cancellations, closures and delays below.

RELATED: UDOT advises drivers to stay off the roads until after 10 a.m. as snowfall hits Wasatch Front

The following is not an exhaustive list. Check with your school district or other organization and refresh this page for updates.

SCHOOLS CLOSED OR DELAYED

  • The American Academy of Innovation will be closed on Wednesday. In-person and online classes are canceled.
  • Blessed Sacrament Catholic School – We are closed today because of weather and road conditions.
  • Canyons School District – Wednesday is a remote-learning day for all students in the Canyons School District because of expected heavy snow and dangerous road conditions. “This means all schools and District Offices will be closed for the day, but instruction will continue in line with new state rules that allow school districts to treat “snow days” as remote-learning days,” a news release from the school district says.
  • Juan Diego Catholic Schools – Due to extreme weather and dangerous road conditions school has been cancelled at Juan Diego Catholic Schools. Schools closed include Juan Diego Catholic High School in Draper, Saint John the Baptist Catholic Middle School in Draper, Saint John the Baptist Catholic Elementary in Draper, Saint Andrew Catholic School in Riverton. School will resume Thursday.
  • Provo City School District Bus Service – Due to icy road conditions on the benches this morning, below bench pickup is needed to ensure the students on our buses will be safe. This affects the Southeast Bench, Northeast Bench, Oak Hills, and Sherwood Hills neighborhoods. For full details, please visit https://provo.edu/alert/below-bench-pickup-needed-today-2/./
  • Salt Lake Community College – Due to inclement weather, all SLCC departments and in-person classes are cancelled until 12:00 PM. Online classes can continue. Go to http://www.slcc.edu for information or call 801-957-INFO.
  • St. Francis Xavier School in Kearns is closed.
  • The University of Utah has canceled in-person classes before 11 a.m. on Wednesday. “Instructors who can move their in-person classes online are encouraged to do so and should communicate directly with their students about any changes,” an alert from the university says. “The delayed start will not impact online classes or campus employees already working remotely.”

The U’s health care system and hospitals will remain open, as will essential university functions, supported by mandatory on-campus employees. University-operated childcare facilities will provide updates directly to families.

  • Waterford School – Due to the snow, Waterford School will be closed today as well, Is this a good place to share the information?

SCHOOLS OPEN

  • Alpine School District – All schools will be on their normal schedule today, Wednesday, February 17, 2021.
  • Davis School District – All schools in the Davis School District will open as scheduled this morning. Our busses will be running on time and all parking lots should be clean by 7 a.m. As always, if parents feel conditions are too dangerous for their child, they have the option to keep them home. Our teachers will work with any student who is absent so they can complete any missing assignments.
  • Granite School District – All schools are open. That being said, we don’t know what your driveway and neighborhood look like. So as always, parents should exercise their discretion and make decisions in the best interest of their family whether to travel to school this morning or not. Schools will be flexible with absences and tardies. If you do decide to attend, please exercise caution, take your time and stay safe.
  • Jordan District schools will be open as scheduled today. We ask that you use caution in and around our schools and buildings as reports indicate snow showers may continue on and off throughout the day creating winter conditions on roadways and sidewalks.
  • Logan School District – It’s snowy outside so be careful on your way to school! Road crews have been out clearing the streets, and although we know some side streets won’t be plowed until later, the main roads are open and buses are running. Drive carefully and give yourself a little extra space and time while you’re traveling. As always, if parents choose to keep their children home, please contact the school office to excuse the absence.
  • Ogden School District – All schools will operate on their regular schedule today. Please plan to allow additional time for travel this morning. This will allow students to receive the meals they rely on and the safe location they depend on.
  • Tooele County School District – Dugway School will begin on a 2-hour delay (start time is at 10 a.m.) All other TCSD schools will be open and ready to receive students at the regular start time.
  • Utah Valley University – All UVU campuses are open. If weather conditions are unsafe where you are, contact your supervisor or professors for work/learn remote options. Find more by visiting http://uvu.info.
  • Weber State University will be holding all classes as scheduled today. Please budget extra time if you need to commute to campus. Drive safely Wildcats.

PUBLIC FACILITIES

  • Fourth Street Clinic – We are opening later than expected today due to the snow. The clinic will be open at 10 a.m. this morning
  • Midvale City Hall offices will open at NOON on Wed., Jan.17. The Justice Court will open virtually at 9am (hearings to take place as scheduled.
  • Holladay City Hall WILL NOT open until 11:00am. please call 801-272-9450 in advance to make sure staff is available. Virtual Justice Court hearings WILL NOT be delayed. The Justice Court will open virtually at 8am (hearings to take place as scheduled.)
  • Salt Lake County Library Branches will open at noon.
  • Utah Department of Workforce Services – Our offices in Salt Lake County, Park City and Tooele will have a delayed opening at 10 am today, due to snowy road conditions. All others will open at 8 am. Our services can also be accessed online at http://jobs.utah.gov.

OTHER

  • The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints’ offices in the Salt Lake City area will not open until 11 a.m. “Employees and service missionaries will not be expected to be at work before that time. Employees who are already working from home, will work a regular work day,” a news release from the Latter-day Saint church says.
  • Salt Lake City International Airport – Crews have been out clearing the snow on the airfield since early this morning. Passengers are reminded to check with their airline for possible delays or cancellations. Always a good idea to allow extra time. Safe travels!
  • Snowbird Ski & Summer Resort – After continued assessment, Snowbird will not open for skiing/riding today, February 17. With 4 feet of snow in 3 days, our teams are working hard around the clock to clear snow and perform snow safety work. There is no estimated time for lifting Interlodge or road restrictions.
  • Town of Alta Interlodge to remain in effect through the night and until further notice. Reminder: Interlodge for the town is not lifted until @MarshalMike1 and Alta Central send the notifications. Natural avalanches continue to occur. Stay inside. Stay safe.

Source Article from https://www.fox13now.com/news/local-news/cancellations-closures-and-delays-in-place-due-to-winter-storm

Senior editor of “Reason”, Robby Soave questioned whether the mainstream media and President Biden were “on the same side” Wednesday after critics slammed CNN and host Anderson Cooper for softball questions posed to Biden during a CNN town hall.

“When Donald Trump was president the mainstream media never shied from asking tough questions nor should it,” Soave said during an appearance on “Fox & Friends”. “I think the role of the press is to be adversarial to the government, to the administration.”

“It’s like Trump is still president in some ways,” Soave added.

CNN’S ANDERSON COOPER AGAIN INVITES GEORGE CONWAY ON AIR, AVOIDS JOHN WEAVER, LINCOLN PROJECT SCANDALS

The senior editor went on to explain that CNN’s viewers could call on the media channel to ask tougher, more provocative questions, but pondered whether they would rather consume positive coverage of Biden with a negative spin that portrays Donald Trump as a “moron.”

Soave said he would have liked to see questions asked about pressing issues and controversies facing the current administration, such as the alleged cover-up of nursing home deaths by New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo.

He added that CNN is “hopelessly compromised” on the issue due to the role of Chris Cuomo, the governor’s younger brother, on the network.

Chris Cuomo, host of “Cuomo Primetime,” has faced recent criticism for an alleged conflict of interest on CNN as coverage of his older brother regularly avoids discussing the nursing home scandal surrounding the NY governor.

For many months, Gov. Cuomo has found safe refuge on his younger brother’s show, oftentimes cracking jokes, reminiscing on family, and discussing NY’s accomplishments.

However, despite criticism and controversy surrounding the governor’s handling of the coronavirus pandemics, CNN’s omissions have grown more notable after a recent bombshell admission from one of Gov. Cuomo’s top aides.

CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

On Monday, Anderson Cooper was the first one to bring up the nursing home scandal since October, where he briefly confronted the NY governor before pivoting to another topic.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/cnn-anderson-cooper-softball-questions-biden-town-hall-soave

The resolution calling for $50,000 in debt relief was introduced earlier this month by Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York and Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts.

Such a move would have cost about $800 billion and deliver 36 million Americans out of debt, according to reports.

The Higher Education Act of 1965 authorizes the U.S. secretary of education to cancel student loans, meaning Biden could order the move, according to Warren and Schumer’s provision. However, Biden didn’t have an appetite for such a unilateral move considering the stakes of hundreds of billions of dollars that would need to be wiped off the books all at once for nearly 40 million people.

“Canceling student loan debt is the single most effective executive action President Biden can take to lift the economic prospects of tens of millions of young Americans,” Warren said recently.

All federally backed student loans have been in forbearance throughout the pandemic, and Biden extended the pause in payments and interest until Oct. 1.

Supporters of the loan cancellation plan say it would spark a wide swath of the economy, including new business, consumer spending, retirement savings, homebuying and other sectors. Critics, however, say the move would only bring a modest bump to economic activity in GDP. Republicans reportedly oppose the move.

Biden’s firm stance on the debt forgiveness came as no surprise.

In previous weeks, the White House had already signaled that Congress should pass legislation to achieve it as student loan matters typically fall under federal spending set by Congress.

“The President continues to support the cancelling of student debt to bring relief to students and families,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki tweeted recently. “Our team is reviewing whether there are any steps he can take through executive action and he would welcome the opportunity to sign a bill sent to him by Congress.”

Source Article from https://www.ajc.com/news/biden-rejects-proposal-to-cancel-50000-in-student-loan-debt/2JPANXMRVJFUZGKLS5ZSPMKJSE/

President Joe Biden served in the U.S. Senate for more than 30 years, and then served eight years as Barack Obama’s vice president. But until he moved in last month, he said Tuesday night, he’d never been inside the presidential “residence” area of the White House.

Biden made the disclosure during a town hall event in Milwaukee, hosted by CNN’s Anderson Cooper.

“I had been in the Oval Office a hundred times as vice president — more than that — every morning for the initial meetings but I had never been up in the residence,” Biden said.

“I had been in the Oval Office a hundred times as vice president — more than that — every morning for the initial meetings but I had never been up in the residence.”

— President Biden

Until becoming president, Biden said, he also hadn’t had the experience of having the White House staff fully available to address his every need.

“I was raised in a way that you didn’t look for anybody to wait on you,” Biden told the audience, adding that relying on the staff has made him feel “self-conscious” since moving into the White House.

“You’d never been in the residence of the White House?” Cooper asked, sounding surprised.

“I’d only been upstairs in the Yellow Room, the Oval upstairs,” Biden responded.

“I don’t know, I’ve never been there either,” Cooper joked.

Biden’s disclosure suggested that no president – whether Barack Obama or any other – had ever invited him into the area where the nation’s chief executive shares private time with his family.

It also appeared to add support to claims that Biden’s relationship with Obama, his former boss, wasn’t as close as both men have always publicly portrayed it to be.

Some reports have suggested that Joe Biden and Barack Obama are not as friendly with one another as they appear to be in public. (Associated Press)

“Don’t underestimate Joe’s ability to f— things up,” Obama reportedly once said privately about Biden, Politico reported last August.

Obama also withheld his endorsement of Biden for president until last April, after his former vice president had already been campaigning for months.

Later Tuesday, Cooper asked Biden if living in the White House for the past four weeks has been different than he expected it to be.

“You know, I don’t know what I ever expected it to be. It is different in that, um – [I don’t want to] get in trouble here – I said when I was running, I wanted to be president not to live in the White House but to be able to make the decisions about the future of the country.

“So living in the White House – as you’ve heard [from] other presidents who’ve been extremely flattered to live there — it’s a little like a gilded cage in terms of being able to walk outside and do things.”

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

He said the vice president’s residence was “totally different,” being on a larger property, with room for bicycling plus a swimming pool.

At the beginning of the discussion, Biden joked about living at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave.

“I get up in the morning, I look at Jill, and say, ‘Where the hell are we?’”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/snubbed-by-obama-joe-biden-says-white-house-residence-was-unseen-by-him-until-he-moved-in

“I stand my ground. If I had to take that vote again, I would vote to uphold my oath of office. And, if the party is to censure me because they felt that I needed to support the party, they can make that statement, but I will make the statement again that my obligation is to support the Constitution that I have pledged to uphold, and I will do that, even if it means I have to oppose the direction of my state party.”

Source Article from https://www.adn.com/politics/2021/02/17/local-alaska-republicans-censure-alaska-sen-lisa-murkowski-citing-impeachment-vote-and-other-issues/