“Why was there not more law enforcement, National Guard already mobilized, what was known, who knew it, and when they knew it, all that, because that builds the basis so this never happens again in the future,” Cassidy said on ABC News’s “This Week.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2021/02/15/riot-commission/


Damage at a home in Ocean Ridge Plantation community on Feb. 16, 2021. (Photo: WWAY)


BRUNSWICK COUNTY, NC (WWAY) — A confirmed tornado ripped across portion of Brunswick County into Columbus County overnight.

At a 4:30 a.m. press conference it was announced that so far 3 people are dead. 10 others are injured, and several structures have been damaged.

A tornado warning was issued for southeastern Brunswick County near Grissettown around 11:39 p.m. A confirmed tornado was spotted near Honey Island, or 13 miles north of Shallotte at 12:00 a.m. At 12:07 p.m., an observed tornado was seen in the Delco area. The warning ended at 12:15 a.m.

Strong rotating winds detected on radar when tornado warning was issued on Feb. 15, 2021. (Photo: WWAY)

The National Weather Service in Wilmington says Brunswick County Emergency Management reports structural and house damage in the Windsor Circle area of Ocean Ridge Plantation off Highway 17.

Brunswick County EM is reporting that people are trapped in homes. No word on how many people and exactly where.

There are also several power lines down along Highway 17 near the Highway 904 intersection in the Grissettown area.

At 1:00 a.m., Leland Fire Department posted on Facebook that their units are responding as mutual aid to Ocean Isle Beach to assist with rescue operations underway.

“Please stay home and stay away from the area,” the department wrote.

As of 1:20 a.m., WWAY’s Tanner Barth was at the the Ocean Isle Plantation community. First responders are going house to house to check on people. He saw numerous houses are damaged, even some are ripped off the foundation. Many trees are snapped in half.

Wilmington Fire Department says their search & rescue teams (RRT-2 and USAR-11) have been deployed to aid in locating missing persons in Brunswick County.

Brunswick County Sheriff’s Office posted on Facebook around 1:40 a.m. that they were on the scene in Seaside area.

According to Brunswick Electric Membership Corporation, there are thousands of people across southern and central parts of the county without power.

Source Article from https://www.wwaytv3.com/2021/02/16/reports-of-people-trapped-in-homes-structural-damage-after-severe-weather-strikes-cape-fear/

At least four people have died amid a dangerous winter storm system sweeping across the nation, which has also left nearly five million homes and businesses in Texas without power and caused a series of frightening tornadoes in the Southwest.

One person was killed in Kentucky when they lost control of their semi truck along the I-64 and collided with a guard rail, police said. The victim, 43-year-old Angel Johnson, was not wearing a seat belt and was ejected out of the vehicle.

In Louisiana, a 50-year-old man died in Lafayette Parish after slipping and falling on an ice-covered sidewalk and striking his head. A 78-year-old man also died in Texas after falling down on his front lawn and becoming stuck out in the cold for several hours.

The youngest of the victims was claimed in Tennessee, after a 10-year-old boy tragically fell into a frozen pond and drowned, officials said. The boy’s sister, 6, also fell through the ice and is currently in the hospital in critical condition.

All four of the deaths have been linked to Winter Storm Uri, which has sent temperatures plunging across the Great Plains, causing widespread flight cancellations and closures of businesses.   

The record cold snap has seen caused arctic conditions in Texas, where wind turbines have frozen and wind chills have plummeted to a bitter -20F.

According to poweroutage.us, 4.38 million people in the Lone Star State alone are currently without power as of Monday night, while Oregon has seen more than 303,000 outages, and Louisiana more than 109,000.  

In Georgia and Florida, several homes and structures were damaged and at least four people were hurt, following a series of tornadoes that touched down across Monday afternoon.

TEXAS: 4.38 million people in the Lone Star State are currently without power as of Monday night (pictured: In order to save electricity, the promenade lights and screens are turned off in front of American Airlines Center which was to host the Nashville Predators and the Dallas Stars NHL hockey game)

TEXAS: Treacherous driving conditions brought on by the storm have left roadways largely deserted outside Dallas

TENNESSEE: A 10-year-old boy in Tennessee tragically died after falling into a frozen pond (above) and drowning. His sister, 6, is currently in critical condition, after also falling in

KENTUCKY: Snow falls at the United Parcel Service (UPS) WorldPort hub located at Louisville Muhammad Ali International Airport in Louisville

KANSAS: A man clears snow from a driveway in Prairie Village where temperatures are expected to drop to -9 degrees

FLORIDA: In Georgia and Florida, several homes and structures were damaged and at least four people were hurt, following a series of tornadoes that touched down across Monday afternoon (Park City, shown above)

A map from poweroutage.us showed that nearly 5 million people were without power in Texas, and several hundred thousand in Louisiana and Oregon

As nightfall threatened to plummet temperatures again into single digits in Texas, officials warned that homes in the state still without power would likely not have heat until at least Tuesday. 

‘Things will likely get worse before they get better,’ said Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo, the top elected official in the county of nearly 5 million people around Houston.

The toll of the worsening conditions included the delivery of new COVID-19 vaccine shipments, which were expected to be delayed until at least midweek. Massive power outages across Houston included a facility storing 8,000 doses of Moderna vaccine, leaving health officials scrambling to find takers at the same time authorities were pleading for people to stay home.

Temperatures nosedived into the single-digits as far south as San Antonio, and homes that had already been without electricity for hours had no certainty about when the lights and heat would come back on, as the state’s overwhelmed power grid began imposing blackouts that are typically only seen in 100-degree Fahrenheit

‘We’re living through a really historic event going on right now,’ said Jason Furtado, a professor of meteorology at the University of Oklahoma, pointing to all of Texas under a winter storm warning and the extent of the freezing temperatures.

State officials said surging demand, driven by people trying to keep their homes warm, and cold weather knocking some power stations offline had pushed Texas’ system beyond the limits.

‘This weather event, it’s really unprecedented. We all living here know that,’ said Dan Woodfin, senior director of system operations at the Electric Reliability Council of Texas. He defended preparations made by grid operators and described the demand on the system as record-setting.

‘This event was well beyond the design parameters for a typical, or even an extreme, Texas winter that you would normally plan for. And so that is really the result that we’re seeing,’ Woodfin said.

In Dallas, officials told residents to refrain from calling 911 to report power outages as the 911 call center became overwhelmed with power outage calls.

Elsewhere, frozen roads in Austin caused an 18-wheeler to careen out of control. A man nearly lost his life, jumping out of the way just seconds before a car lost control and crashed into a police cruiser, according to CBS. 

The blast of winter weather also made its way as far down at the Gulf of Mexico, with the sandy beaches of Galveston dusted in a shade of white on Monday.  

TEXAS: State officials said surging demand, driven by people trying to keep their homes warm, and cold weather knocking some power stations offline had pushed Texas’ system beyond the limits

TEXAS: As nightfall threatened to plummet temperatures again into single digits, officials warned that homes still without power would likely not have heat until at least Tuesday

TEXAS: A rare winter snowfall measuring at least half a foot hit central Texas as the State Capitol and Congress Avenue becomes nearly impassable

OKLAHOMA: James Derrick, who is homeless, peeks out of his tent during record breaking cold weather in Oklahoma City

TEXAS: A man shovels snow from under a car stuck on a hill in Austin on Monday morning with the help of friends

KENTUCKY: Plows clear snow and ice from Interstate 64 during a winter storm in Louisville, amid the dangerous storm

TENNESSEE: Peyton McKinney uses a laundry basket for a sled as she enjoyed the uncharacteristically snow condition on Monday

KENTUCKY: Louisville is seen in the distance as ice coats a sidewalk along the Ohio River

MISSOURI: A man crosses a street as temperatures drop below 0 degrees Fahrenheit Monday, in downtown Kansas City

TEXAS: Dan Bryant and his wife Anna huddle by the fire with sons Benny, 3, and Sam, 12 weeks, along with their dog Joey, also wearing two doggie sweaters, with power out and temperatures dropping inside their home after a winter storm brought snow and freezing temperatures to North Texas

The historic storm has caused a series of problems across the country.

In Vermont, firefighters scrambled to recuse a young man from frigid waters after he fell through the ice.

Roads in Tennessee roads were remarked to have turned into ‘ice rinks’ after frozen precipitation fell, causing a series of accidents across the state. 

Meanwhile, in Oklahoma, temperatures in part of the state dipped below 20 degrees for five days straight for only the third time ever. With another storm moving in, crews worked frantically to clear snow from the roads.

In Louisiana, the cold caused a transformer to blow, ripping a fireball through power lines.

Severe weather fueled by Storm Uri also damaged homes and other structures in Georgia and Florida, leaving at least four people hurt.

An ‘extremely dangerous’ tornado touched down in Georgia in Damascus on Monday afternoon, a small community in the southwest corner of the state. 

Early County Fire Department Capt. Bobby Wimberly said initial reports from units that responded indicated one person was injured and several homes destroyed.

‘We don’t know the full details yet, they’re still on scene,’ Wimberly told Weather.com at 5:30pm ET. 

Tornadoes also struck in Tallahassee and Panama City, where damage was reported at a park and at a resort. Officials said three people were transported to hospital after ceiling tiles fell at the Boardwalk Condo, amid the high winds.   

Another tornado also caused minor damage in Lake City, located in north Florida.

TEXAS: The Trinity River in Fort Worth is mostly frozen after a snow storm Monday that saw millions lose power

TEXAS:  The game lights and center screens are turned off at American Airlines Center which was to host the Nashville Predators and the Dallas Stars NHL hockey game

OHIO: A woman crosses Wooster Street as snow falls Monday night in Downtown Bowling Green 

TEXAS: A snow-covered Ann Richards Congress Avenue Bridge leads to downtown after a heavy snow on Monday 

TEXAS: Baylor University students enjoy their snow day without classes while posing near a fountain on campus

TEXAS: Homes in the Westbury neighborhood are covered in snow in Houston, Texas, on Monday 

The National Weather Service (NWS) said that ‘over 150 million Americans are currently under winter storm warnings, ice storm warnings, winter storm watches, or winter weather advisories as impactful winter weather continues from coast to coast’.

‘This impressive onslaught of wicked wintry weather across much of the Lower 48 (states) is due to the combination of strong Arctic high pressure supplying sub-freezing temperatures and an active storm track escorting waves of precipitation,’ the NWS added. 

Besides Texas, weather-related emergencies have also been declared in Alabama, Oregon, Oklahoma, Kansas, Kentucky and Mississippi. The NWS said record low temperatures were expected in much of the country.

‘Hundreds of daily low maximum and minimum temperatures have been/will be broken during this prolonged ‘polar plunge,’ with some February and even all-time low temperature records in jeopardy,’ the NWS said.   

MISSOURI: People clear snow off of cars on Monday in St Louis, Missouri, where the storm brought snow and brutally cold temperatures

OKLAHOMA: While en route to another call, the Oklahoma National Guard came across a single vehicle accident where a man and his dog collided with a barrier

In Texas, rotating power outages were initiated by the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) early Monday morning, meaning hundreds of thousands went without electricity for short periods as temperatures fell into the teens near Dallas and 20s around Houston.

‘We urge Texans to put safety first,’ ERCOT tweeted as it urged residents to reduce electricity use. The council manages the flow of electric power in the state. ‘Traffic lights and other infrastructure may be temporarily without power,’ the council said.

The council described the rotating outages as a ‘last resort to preserve the reliability of the electric system as a whole,’ adding that utility transmission companies are tasked with determining how to reduce demand on the system.

‘Every grid operator and every electric company is fighting to restore power right now,’ ERCOT President and CEO Bill Magness said in a statement.

Around 5,000 Oklahoma Gas & Electric customers were without power overnight, and Entergy Arkansas logged about 3,000 outages. Both states have much smaller populations compared with Texas.

Officials in Houston had warned people to prepare for outages and hazardous roads – conditions similar to what residents might see in the wake of a Category 5 hurricane.

‘There (have) been numerous reports of accidents from icing recently,’ National Weather Service (NWS) lead forecaster Bob Oravec said Monday. ‘I think there’s going to be a big threat today as the system pushes northeastward.’ 

More than 150 million people are still under winter weather advisories (depicted above)

Forecasters expect parts of Texas and Tennessee to get between 8 to 12 inches of snow through Tuesday 

Snow and ice is expected to arrive in several southern states by Tuesday night and into Wednesday night 

TENNESSEE: Accumulating ice between a tenth and a quarter of an inch was possible across eastern Louisiana, Mississippi, central Tennessee, Kentucky and over into the West Virginia and Ohio border region, forecasters said. A truck was seen sliding sideways on a road covered in ice in Tennessee 

Houston has opened up more warming facilities for its city’s homeless population. The city opened up one facility at the GRB Convention Center Sunday afternoon and now have more than 450 homeless sheltering there.

Officials said Monday that they still have the capacity for an additional 100 people. Each person entering the facility is being screened for COVID-19.

By midmorning, 3,000 flights had been canceled across the country, about 1,600 of them at Dallas/Fort Worth International and Bush Intercontinental airports in Texas.

At DFW, the temperature was 4F, about 3 degrees colder than Moscow. Accumulating ice between a tenth and a quarter of an inch was possible across eastern Louisiana, Mississippi, central Tennessee, Kentucky and over into the West Virginia and Ohio border region, Oravec said.

Officials said Bush Intercontinental Airport runways will remain closed until at least 1pm on Tuesday, as the region remains under the grip of subfreezing temperatures.  

The largest grocery store chain in Texas, H-E-B, also closed locations around Austin and San Antonio, cities that are unaccustomed to snow and have little resources to clear roads. The slow thaw and more frigid lows ahead was also taking a toll on Texas’ distribution of COVID-19 vaccines.

State health officials said Texas, which was due to receive more than 400,000 additional vaccine doses this week, now does not expect deliveries to occur until at least Wednesday.

This satellite image shows the storm moving over parts of the southern US and Midwest on Monday morning 

Temperatures have plummeted in several parts of the US, particularly in Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Missouri 

Several cities in the U.S. saw record lows as Arctic air remained over the central part of the country. 

In Minnesota, the Hibbing/Chisholm weather station registered -38F, while Sioux Falls, South Dakota, dropped to -26F.

In Kansas, where wind chills dropped to as low as -30F in some areas, Gov. Laura Kelly declared a state of disaster.

Most government offices and schools were closed for Presidents Day, and authorities pleaded with residents to stay home. Louisiana State Police reported that it had investigated nearly 75 weather-related crashes caused by a mixture of snow, sleet and freezing rain in the past 24 hours.

‘We already have some accidents on our roadways,’ Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear said during a morning news conference. ‘It is slick and it is dangerous.’ 

The storm arrived over a three-day holiday weekend that has seen the most U.S. air travel since the period around New Year’s. 

More than 1 million people went through airport security checkpoints on Thursday and Friday. However, that was still less than half the traffic of a year ago, before the pandemic hit with full force.

The southern Plains had been gearing up for the winter weather for the better part of the weekend. 

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott issued a disaster declaration for all of the state´s 254 counties. Abbott, Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt and Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson each activated National Guard units to assist state agencies with tasks including rescuing stranded drivers.

President Joe Biden also declared an emergency in Texas in a statement Sunday night. The declaration is intended to add federal aid to state and local response efforts.

Source Article from https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9264277/At-four-dead-winter-storms-sweeps-nation-leaves-5-MILLION-without-power.html

About half of Texas’ wind power generation capacity has been put on ice amid the state’s historic winter storm, according to a report.

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WINTER STORMS HIT CENTRAL US, CAUSING FLIGHT CANCELLATIONS, DELAYS

The Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) told the Austin American Statesman that roughly 12,000 megawatts of Texas’ wind generation capacity had been hampered as of Sunday due to frozen wind turbines. However, they also noted that unfrozen wind turbines are spinning at a higher rate than expected, helping to offset the losses.

ERCOT operates Texas’ electric grid and manages the deregulated energy market for 75% of the state,

“This is a unique winter storm that’s more widespread with lots of moisture in West Texas, where there’s a lot of times not a lot of moisture,” ERCOT senior director of system operations Dan Woodfin told the outlet. “It’s certainly more than what we would typically assume.”

It is estimated between 2.5 and 3.5 million people in Texas have been left without power amid the storm’s frigid temperatures. An ERCOT spokesperson did not immediately return FOX Business’ request for comment.

TEXAS POWER GRID HIT BY EXTREME STORM

According to the Energy Information Administration, renewable energy contributes nearly 1/5th of the net electricity generated in Texas. The state leads the nation in wind-powered electricity generation, producing almost three-tenths of the United State’s total output.

Reuters reported that wind generation ranks as the second-largest source of energy in Texas, accounting for 23% of state power supplies last year, behind natural gas, which represented 45%, citing ERCOT figures.

The Public Utility Commission of Texas first adopted rules for the state’s renewable energy mandate in 1999 and amended them in 2005 to require that 5,880 megawatts, or about 5% of the state’s electricity generating capacity, come from renewable sources by 2015 and 10,000 megawatts of renewable capacity by 2025, including 500 megawatts from resources other than wind. Texas surpassed the 2025 goal in 2009, predominantly because of the generating capacity provided by the state’s wind farms.

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On Monday, ERCOT warned of rotating outages as thousands of megawatts of power in the state has been lost due to the storm’s “sub-freezing conditions,” resulting in record-breaking electric demand.

“About 10,500 [megawatts] of customer load was shed at the highest point. This is enough power to serve approximately two million homes,” the agency said in a statement. “Extreme weather conditions caused many generating units – across fuel types – to trip offline and become unavailable. There is now over 30,000 [megwatt} of generation forced off the system.”

The rotating outages are expected to continue through at least Tuesday morning, Woodfin said during an ERCOT briefing Monday.

According to Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, the state’s Public Utilities Commission was working to have about 500,000 residential customer’s power restored as of 4 p.m., with more customers expected to have power restored late Monday evening.

Abbott received a waiver from the U.S. Department of Energy on Sunday to allow power generations to increase production.

“Due to the severe weather and freezing temperatures across our state, many power companies have been unable to generate power, whether it’s from coal, natural gas, or wind power,” Abbott said in a statement. “ERCOT and the PUC are working non-stop to restore power supply. The state has also deployed resources to assist Texans without power and to help essential workers continue to carry out their jobs. In the meantime, I encourage all Texans to continue to stay off the roads, and conserve energy as state agencies work with private providers to restore power as quickly as possible.”

In addition, Abbot is deploying the National Guard to conduct welfare checks and to assist local authorities in transitioning Texans in need to one of the state’s 135 local warming centers.

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According to ERCOT, consumers can reduce their electricity use by turning down thermostats to 68 degrees, closing shades and blinds to reduce the amount of heat lost through windows, turning off and unplugging non-essential lights and appliances, and avoiding use of large appliances such as ovens and washing machines.

Businesses should minimize the use of electric lighting and electricity-consuming equipment as much as possible and large consumers of electricity should consider shutting down or reducing non-essential production processes.

Source Article from https://www.foxbusiness.com/energy/texas-electric-grid-operator-says-frozen-wind-turbines-are-hampering-states-power-output-report

“There’s still more evidence that the American people need and deserve to hear,” Senator Chris Coons, Democrat of Delaware, said over the weekend on ABC’s “This Week,” adding that a commission would “make sure that we secure the Capitol going forward and that we lay bare the record of just how responsible” Mr. Trump was for the attack.

Establishing such a commission would most likely require legislation if it were modeled on the 9/11 Commission, which embarked on a 20-month investigation after President George W. Bush signed a law mandating the panel investigate what caused the Sept. 11 attacks and how to prevent a similar attack. The commission ultimately offered recommendations that led to the reshaping of congressional oversight and intelligence coordination.

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Ms. Pelosi said the panel would be assigned to “investigate and report on the facts and causes relating to the Jan. 6, 2021, domestic terrorist attack upon the United States Capitol complex” as well as “the interference with the peaceful transfer of power.”

A group of House Republicans wrote to Ms. Pelosi on Monday complaining that she had tapped General Honoré without input from their party and demanded that she answer questions about what she knew and what directions she gave ahead of the Jan. 6 attack. Republicans have already objected to Ms. Pelosi’s decision to install magnetometers outside the House chamber in response to concern about some lawmakers bringing firearms onto the chamber floor.

“It is easy to understand why we and our Senate counterparts remain skeptical that any of his final recommendations will be independent and without influence from you,” wrote the Republicans, including Representative Rodney Davis of Illinois, the top Republican on the House Administration Committee, and Jim Jordan of Ohio, the top Republican on the House Judiciary Committee.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/15/us/politics/pelosi-riot-commission.html

Fox News senior meteorologist Janice Dean slammed Democratic New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s performance at a press conference Monday in which he tried to downplay his administration’s withholding of data about nursing home deaths from state lawmakers.

“He’s a bully,” Dean told “The Story” host Martha MacCallum, adding the governor “cannot be empathetic at all.”

Both of Dean’s in-laws died in New York nursing homes last year after Cuomo signed an executive order ordering patients who had tested positive for COVID-19 to be brought to long-term care facilities rather than kept in hospitals.

Dean described Cuomo to “The Story” host Martha MacCallum as “a broken record” who passed blame rather than accepting accountability. 

CUOMO ADMITS NURSING HOME DATA DELAY WAS A MISTAKE, CREATED ‘VOID’ FOR ‘CONSPIRACY THEORIES’

Cuomo and his administration have been forced to play defense after the New York Post reported that one of Cuomo’s top aides admitted that nursing home death data was withheld from Democratic state lawmakers over fears that such information would be used against the administration in subsequent investigations.

The governor claimed Monday that the state legislature’s request for data on nursing home deaths had been “paused” while his administration “voluntarily complied with the DOJ request for information to very different things.”

However, Dean told MacCallum she had recently spoken with a high-ranking Justice Department official who denied having ever received any information from Cuomo’s administration.

Dean also took issue with Cuomo attempting to establish empathy with grieving families by mentioning th 2015 of his own father, former New York Gov. Mario Cuomo.

 “His father did not die in a nursing home alone because his son had an executive order to put over 9,000 COVID positive patients in nursing homes,” she said.

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Dean, who has called for an investigation into Cuomo’s handling of the COVID crisis, demanded that both New York and federal lawmakers seek answers.

“This is why we need an independent, bipartisan investigation,” she said. “He didn’t follow the science. You don’t put infected patients into nursing homes. That is the bottom line, governor.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/janice-dean-andrew-cuomo-bully-nursing-home-data-delay

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala has been named the new head of the World Trade Organization. An economist, she previously served as Nigeria’s finance minister and as managing director of the World Bank.

Fabrice Coffrini/AFP via Getty Images


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Fabrice Coffrini/AFP via Getty Images

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala has been named the new head of the World Trade Organization. An economist, she previously served as Nigeria’s finance minister and as managing director of the World Bank.

Fabrice Coffrini/AFP via Getty Images

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, a former two-time Nigerian finance minister, was appointed Monday to the be the next director-general of the World Trade Organization. She is the first African and the first woman to lead the body, which governs trade rules between nations.

“This is a very significant moment for the WTO,” David Walker, the WTO’s General Council chair, said in a statement.

Okonjo-Iweala said she was “honoured” to be selected to lead the organization, and vowed to take on global economic and health challenges brought on by the coronavirus pandemic.

“A strong WTO is vital if we are to recover fully and rapidly from the devastation wrought by the COVID-19 pandemic. I look forward to working with members to shape and implement the policy responses we need to get the global economy going again,” Okonjo-Iweala said.

“Our organization faces a great many challenges but working together we can collectively make the WTO stronger, more agile and better adapted to the realities of today,” she added.

Okonjo-Iweala takes over a beleaguered organization that is facing a slew of challenges that have hobbled the WTO in recent years, including how to best manage the increased friction between economic superpowers the United States and China.

Critics of the organization said it has failed to intervene over some of China’s most egregious economic offenses, which in turn has let the U.S. name its economic adversary a currency manipulator and impose or threaten billions of dollars in tariffs on goods from China.

There is also a fragile issue of determining whether the U.S. broke WTO rules when the Trump administration, citing national security concerns, unilaterally boosted tariffs on steel and aluminum in 2018, Politico reports.

Okonjo-Iweala’s ascension to the top of the WTO comes just months after the Trump administration moved to block her candidacy and instead throw its support behind another candidate, South Korea Trade Minister Yoo Myung-hee. She withdrew her candidacy earlier this month.

Upon word that Yoo was in effect clearing the field, the U.S. Trade Representative’s office issued a statement to express the Biden-Harris administration’s “strong support” for Okonjo-Iweala.

“[She] brings a wealth of knowledge in economics and international diplomacy from her 25 years with the World Bank and two terms as Nigerian Finance Minister,” the Feb. 5 statement read. “She is widely respected for her effective leadership and has proven experience managing a large international organization with a diverse membership.”

Okonjo-Iweala, an economist whose background is in international development, rose to become managing director of the World Bank. She also holds dual citizenship in the U.S. and Nigeria.

It was clear as early as October that Okonjo-Iweala was WTO members’ preferred choice to take over as director-general. However, the United States held up a procedural move that would have allowed for a consensus vote by backing her challenger.

All told, 26 nations voted to back Okonjo-Iweala then.

“One delegation could not support the candidacy of Dr. Ngozi and said they would continue to support South Korean Minister Yoo,” WTO spokesman Keith Rockwell said, according to The Wall Street Journal. “That delegation was the United States.”

The Journal added that the Trump administration felt that Yoo was a better fit for the job because of her extensive background in trade policy.

The vacancy was created in May when former Director-General Roberto Azevêdo of Brazil announced he was stepping down a year before his term was set to expire.

Okonjo-Iweala officially takes over the WTO’s top post on March 1. Her term is set to go through August 2025.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/02/15/968077810/ngozi-okonjo-iweala-makes-history-as-wtos-first-african-and-female-leader

A caravan of parents and their children descended on downtown Los Angeles Monday morning for a demonstration demanding the immediate reopening of schools.

“I want my kid to get an education,” parent Susanne Jacobson told KTLA. “He’s in eighth grade. He’s not ready for high school next year. He hasn’t had an education in a year. Distance learning is not working.”

A group called Students First Coalition of Los Angeles organized the car rally outside the Kenneth Hahn Hall of Administration building, where the L.A. County Board of Supervisors has its office. Participants honked and held posters with messages including, “Our kids deserve better.” Another poster read, “Let me go back to school!”

Some protesters emphasized the toll on children’s mental health.

“It’s actually not OK, kids could get mental breakdowns, I hear some kids get depression from it,” said Brody Moos, a fourth-grader.

Remy Moos, who’s in third-grade, complained of the discomfort of online school.

“My eyes are on the screen too much, and it kind of hurts my brain,” the student said.

Coalition leaders spoke to reporters during the rally outside building.

“We represent hundreds, if not thousands of schools here in Los Angeles County who have prepared to reopen our schools safely. And we want the opportunity to open our schools now,” said Tom Konjoyan, who’s head of the Village Christian School in Sun Valley and founded the coalition.

Earlier this month, the group penned an open letter to Gov. Gavin Newsom saying the state’s phased reopening framework “cannot stand,” and that “all schools should with proper and appropriate mitigation strategies in place be permitted to open immediately.”

According to the group, the missive as of Monday afternoon has been signed by more than 1,600 parents, 82 medical practitioners, 145 private school staffers, 42 private school administrators, 28 public school staffers and one public school administrator.

Los Angeles Unified School District Superintendent Austin Beutner has also pushed for the state to make reopening schools a priority. On Monday morning, he announced the district’s first COVID-19 vaccine site for eligible employees. Beutner again asserted that vaccinating all school workers is key.

“A clearly articulated plan to provide vaccinations to school staff in the nation’s second largest school district, combined with the leadership Los Angeles Unified has already shown in preparing its campuses, can be a model for other school districts across the country,” Beutner said.

Source Article from https://ktla.com/news/local-news/i-want-my-kid-to-get-an-education-parents-rally-in-downtown-l-a-to-demand-school-reopenings/

Mr. Kinzinger is unapologetic about his priorities.

“Central and northern Illinois deserve an explanation and deserve my full attention, and they’ll get it,” he said. “But to the extent I can, I will also focus on the national message because I can turn every heart in central and northern Illinois and it wouldn’t make a dent on the whole party. And that’s what I think the huge battle is.”

Mr. Kinzinger has drawn praise from Democrats, but he is not anyone’s idea of a progressive. His campaign website trumpets his longstanding opposition to the Affordable Care Act, and he is an opponent of abortion rights and increased taxes. He first won his seat in Congress with Sarah Palin’s endorsement.

Raised in a large central Illinois family — his father, who has 32 first cousins, ran food banks and shelters for the homeless in Peoria and Bloomington — Mr. Kinzinger was interested in politics from an early age. Before he’d turned 10 he predicted he would one day be governor or president, Ms. Otto said, and he won election to the McLean County Board when he was a 20-year-old sophomore at Illinois State University.

He joined the Air Force after the Sept. 11 attacks and served in Iraq and Afghanistan. Upon his discharge he joined the Air National Guard, where he remains a lieutenant colonel. In the 2010 Republican wave Mr. Kinzinger, then 32, beat a Democratic incumbent by nearly 15 percentage points and, two years later, with support from Eric Cantor, then the House majority leader, ousted another incumbent, 10-term Republican Don Manzullo, in a primary following redistricting.

But Mr. Kinzinger soon became dispirited by a Republican Party he believed was centered around opposition to whatever President Barack Obama proposed without offering new ideas of its own.

“His frustration level has been rising ever since he got to Congress and I think the Trump era has been difficult for him to make sense of and participate in,” said former Representative Kevin Yoder of Kansas, who was one of Mr. Kinzinger’s closest friends in Congress before losing a 2018 re-election bid. When loyalty to Mr. Trump became a litmus test for Republican conservatism, Mr. Yoder said, “that became a bridge too far for him.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/15/us/politics/adam-kinzinger-republicans-trump.html

This story will be updated regularly.

The sun came out Monday, but it didn’t do much to warm the millions of Texans who were struggling without power.

By about 3 p.m. Monday the high had risen to only 13 degrees — not nearly enough to clear the 4 inches of snow that fell Sunday at DFW International Airport.

And before people have had a good chance to steady themselves, more snow could be on its way to add to the slick conditions that have made even short trips from home treacherous, according to the National Weather Service.

Lows on Tuesday are expected to drop into the single digits again, and gusty winds will make it feel more like -15 degrees, according to Jason Dunn, a Weather Service meteorologist.

Dallas-Fort Worth was under a wind chill warning through noon Tuesday — the first warning of its kind ever in North Texas.

“The cold wind chills could cause frostbite on exposed skin in as little as 30 minutes,” the Weather Service said. “Avoid outside activities if possible.”

The next round of wintry weather is expected to move into Texas by Tuesday afternoon, crossing the Red River before driving south toward Dallas, Dunn said.

Areas north of Interstate 20 could get 3 to 5 more inches of snow.

“This should be mainly a freezing rain and/or sleet mix, which could result in additional significant icing especially south of the metroplex,” he said.

After a winter storm warning expired Monday morning, the National Weather Service issued a second for all of Dallas-Fort Worth. The warning, scheduled for 6 p.m. Tuesday to 6 a.m. Thursday, urged North Texans to avoid travel late Tuesday into Wednesday and warned more power outages were likely.

Gov. Greg Abbott on Monday deployed the National Guard across the state to perform welfare checks and help take those in need to warming centers.

To clear roads and help essential workers, Abbott also deployed resources including 3,300 state troopers and 3,300 patrol vehicles, as well as workers with the Texas Military Department, Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, Texas A&M Forest Service, Texas Department of Transportation and the Texas Emergency Medical Task Force.

Temperatures plunged into the single digits as far south as San Antonio, and officials in Harris County warned that the freeze could create problems on the scale of the hurricanes that slam the Gulf Coast every summer.

“We’re living through a really historic event,” said Jason Furtado, a professor of meteorology at the University of Oklahoma.

Disruptions

Most flights out of DFW International Airport and Dallas Love Field were stopped for a second day.

Fort Worth-based American Airlines canceled about 371 flights at DFW International Airport, which isits primary hub responsible for funneling most of its traffic through the central United States. The cancellations nearly matched the 386 flights the airline halted Sunday.

Area water utilities were already receiving dozens of calls about frozen pipes early Monday, and the number rose as temperatures stayed below freezing. Residents were encouraged to keep faucets running to lower the risk of freezing.

Grand Prairie was dealing with water main breaks that crews were having trouble fixing because of the extreme cold. However, neither break was causing major problems.

The power outages and dangerous road conditions forced many businesses to close Monday.

NorthPark Center and Golden Triangle Mall in Denton were closed all day, and the Galleria in Dallas shut down at noon. Many grocery stores such as Kroger and Central Market also planned to close early.

H-E-B, the state’s largest chain of grocery stores, closed locations around Austin and San Antonio, cities that have few resources to clear roads.

The severe cold was also causing problems for the state’s coronavirus vaccine distribution efforts. State health officials said Texas, which was set to receive more than 400,000 vaccine doses this week, now does not expect deliveries to occur until at least Wednesday.

Risky roads

The Texas Department of Transportation on Monday said nearly every roadway in North Texas had some snow accumulation after Sunday’s storm.

Crews worked Monday to treat icy patches and plow, but TxDOT strongly discouraged people from hitting the streets and warned that traffic signals could be affected by power outages.

“Use caution at these intersections, and treat them as a four-way stop until power is restored,” TxDOT said in a written statement.

Dallas Area Rapid Transit suspended all light-rail service Sunday night and will not resume rail operations until Thursday morning.

Trinity Railway Express service was suspended from Monday night through Thursday morning. DART buses were operating on a Saturday schedule, and 14 shuttle-bus routes were added. The Dallas streetcar was not running while DART operating on a winter-weather plan.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.dallasnews.com/news/weather/2021/02/15/one-down-one-to-go-another-winter-storm-could-dump-5-more-inches-of-snow-on-dallas-fort-worth/

​The North Carolina Republican Party is saying it will vote later Monday on whether to censure GOP Sen. Richard Burr for voting to convict former President Donald Trump at his Senate impeachment trial.

Burr was among seven Republicans who crossed the aisle and voted with ​all 50 ​Democrats to convict Trump on the one House charge of inciting an insurrection at the Capitol on Jan. 6.

But ​Trump was acquitted because the 57-43 margin fell far short of the 67 votes necessary to convict.

A spokesman for the North Carolina Republican Party said in a statement late Sunday that the central committee would meet Monday evening for the vote.​

After the impeachment trial came to a close on Saturday, North Carolina GOP Chairman Michael Whatley blasted Burr.​

“North Carolina Republicans sent Senator Burr to the United States Senate to uphold the Constitution and his vote today to convict in a trial that he declared unconstitutional is shocking and disappointing,” Whatley said ​in a statement.

Burr, who announced in 2016 that he would not seek re-election in 2022, defended his decision.

“The ​p​resident promoted unfounded conspiracy theories to cast doubt on the integrity of a free and fair election because he did not like the results … [and] when the crowd became violent, the President used his office to first inflame the situation instead of immediately calling for an end to the assault​,” he said Saturday.

​Burr voted to convict Trump along with Republican Sens. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, Susan Collins of Maine, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Mitt Romney of Utah, Ben Sasse of Nebraska and Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania.

The Louisiana Republican Party censured Cassidy on Saturday.

“The Executive Committee of the Republican Party of Louisiana has unanimously voted to censure Senator Bill Cassidy for his vote cast earlier today to convict former President Donald J. Trump on the impeachment charge,” the party said in a statement late Saturday.

Murkowski is the only one of the seven who will run for re-election in 2022.

With Post wires

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/02/15/state-gop-may-censure-sen-richard-burr-over-trump-vote/

(CNN)New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo on Monday defended his administration’s decision to delay releasing data on Covid-19 deaths in long-term care facilities as state lawmakers say they are considering repealing the governor’s emergency powers.

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    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2021/02/15/us/new-york-cuomo-covid/index.html

    A study by Israel’s largest healthcare provider on Sunday found that after participants received two doses of Pfizer’s coronavirus vaccine, they saw a 94% drop in symptomatic COVID-19 infections, according to a report. 

    Clalit, the health system that covers most Israelis, compared 600,000 people who received both doses of the Pfizer vaccine against a group of the same size who had matching medical histories and had not yet received the vaccine.

    The study found that people in the group were also 92% less likely to develop severe illness from the virus after receiving both jabs, according to Reuters.

    UK CORONAVIRUS VARIANT FOUND IN US COULD BE DEADLIER, SCIENTISTS SAY

    Dry ice is poured into a box containing the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine as it is prepared to be shipped at the Pfizer Global Supply Kalamazoo manufacturing plant in Portage, Mich., Sunday, Dec. 13, 2020. (AP Photo/Morry Gash, Pool)

    The data nearly matched Pfizer’s Phase 3 clinical trial which showed the vaccine to be 95% effective.

    “It shows unequivocally that Pfizer’s coronavirus vaccine is extremely effective in the real world a week after the second dose, just as it was found to be in the clinical study,” said Ran Balicer, Clalit’s chief innovation officer.

    Balicer added that the data shows the Pfizer vaccine, developed in partnership with Germany’s BioNTech, was even more effective “two weeks or more after the second shot,” the news organization reported.

    Israel has been conducting a rapid vaccine rollout and leads all countries with roughly 70.5 vaccine doses per 100 people, according to Bloomberg’s COVID-19 Vaccine Tracker.

    WHITE HOUSE DECLINES TO SAY WHETHER ISRAEL IS AN ‘IMPORTANT’ ALLY

    Meanwhile, a sharp decline in hospitalization and serious illness was also reported for the first time in people aged 55 and older, said researchers at the Weizmann Institute of Science, who have been charting national data.

    CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

    As of early Monday, Israel has reported more than 727,485 total coronavirus infections and at least 5,403 deaths from the virus since the start of the pandemic, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. 

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/health/israel-study-on-pfizer-vaccine-finds-94-drop-in-symptomatic-covid-19-cases-report

    “In order to prevent a total, statewide blackout, which could take several days if not one or two weeks to restore, the system is having to be very surgical on taking people off the system to reduce that demand on that limited supply,” Turner said. “Otherwise, it could be considerably worse and this situation could be prolonged.”

    The weather station at Bush Intercontinental Airport recorded an air temperature of 17 degrees Monday morning, the lowest reading since 1989.

    Video: Houston Chronicle Photo Staff

    Centerpoint said residents without power should not expect service to be restored before Tuesday at the earliest, leaving families to choose between bad options: Hunker down with layers of blankets or traverse icy roads to the homes of friends and relatives with electricity.

    Michele Whitebread in Spring Branch said she is not eager to drive several miles to her parents’ home, but plans to do so with her husband and five children Monday afternoon, after losing power at 5 a.m. Staying put and bundling up would have been an option, she said, if not for her youngest daughter, Maggie, who has born just four weeks ago.

    “My parents have power and we don’t,” Whitebread said. “The house can’t get too much colder with the newborn.”

    A failing fire alarm woke Jared Berry at his northwest Harris County home around 2 a.m. when it lost power. His wife’s humidifier was out, too.

    Hours later, after donning thermal underwear, he used a meat thermometer to see how cold his home was. The device stopped at 58 degrees.

    “We were able to boil water and make a cup of coffee in our French press,” Berry said.

    Running water was not available for Jamie Rangel at his west Houston apartment, along Interstate 10 and near Silbur Road. His power went out around the same time, too.

    “It’s just me. I have a lot of bottled water to drink,” Rangel said, expressing a lack of worry.

    He plans to subside off of cold sandwiches until the power comes back.

    Ryan Sullivan spent his morning huddled in a comforter as the temperature continuously dropped inside his Spring Branch-area home. He wishes he had planned better.

    “Honestly — we didn’t prepare well for this. I should have bought some groceries that I could cook without a stovetop,” Sullivan said. “I wasn’t thinking about losing power for the rest of the day.”

    As the indoor temperature reached 45 degrees, he contemplated using a novelty burner for s’mores to cook food for his girlfriend and roommate.

    Arwen Mallet’s two kids have been going in and out to play in the snow. The joy is waning, she explained.

    “I’m trying to discourage them from going outside because it’s too hard to warm them up afterward,” Mallet said.

    Her family’s home lost power around 3 a.m. near Memorial City Mall, just north of Interstate 10.

    Source Article from https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/houston-texas/houston/article/We-didn-t-prepare-for-this-700-000-in-15952157.php

    • Meena Harris sold clothes and books that used the name and face of her aunt, the vice president.
    • Biden transition lawyers reportedly told Harris she should stop profiting from her aunt’s name.
    • The Phenomenal Woman campaign has now stopped stocking products relating to Kamala Harris.
    • Visit the Business section of Insider for more stories.

    Lawyers for President Joe Biden told Meena Harris to stop using her aunt, Vice President Kamala Harris, in her business ventures, the Los Angeles Times reported.

    Harris, a 36-year-old businesswoman and author, has used the likeness of the vice president in a book and in her clothing lines.

    The cover of Harris’ 2020 children’s book, “Kamala and Maya’s Big Idea,” was emblazoned with her aunt’s face and name. (Maya is the name of Kamala’s sister, Meena’s mother.)

    Meena Harris’ company, Phenomenal Woman, previously sold swimsuits inspired by the vice president and sweaters with “Vice President Aunty” emblazoned on the front.

    But after Biden and Kamala Harris won the 2020 election, the transition team’s ethics lawyers told Meena Harris she was no longer permitted to use her aunt’s likeness in relation to her books or clothing, a White House official told the Los Angeles Times.

    Transition ethics lawyers told her she had permission to sell out of the products related to the vice president but not to restock them, Politico reported.

    The cover of Meena Harris’ 2020 book, “Kamala and Maya’s Big Idea.”

    Meena Harris


    “Some things can’t be undone,” another White House official told the Times. “That being said: Behavior needs to change.”

    Sabrina Singh, a spokeswoman for the vice president, told the Times: “It’s the White House’s policy that the vice president’s name should not be used in connection with any commercial activities that could reasonably be understood to imply an endorsement or support.”

    Meena Harris told the Times in a statement: “Since the beginning of the campaign, I have insisted on upholding all legal and ethical standards and will continue to strictly adhere to the ethics rules of the Biden/Harris White House.

    “With regards to Phenomenal, it was always our plan to remove the likeness of the vice president from the website before the inauguration, and refrain from using her likeness in any products or campaigns going forward.”

    Meena Harris at the inauguration on January 20.

    Drew Angerer / Staff / Getty Images


    Meena Harris has taken part in several other projects championing her aunt in recent weeks.

    According to the Times, Harris has started a production company that made a video praising her aunt’s achievements and also collaborated with Beats by Dre on a pair of headphones branded with “the first but not the last,” a quote popularized by Harris, the first female vice president.

    Read more: 7 reasons Trump isn’t going away

    Democrats had criticized Donald Trump throughout his four-year presidency for boosting his family’s business interests through the office of his presidency, and the Biden White House is keen to distance itself from that behavior.

    “We’ve been attacking the Trumps for years on all of the gross grifting,” a former advisor to Kamala Harris told the Times. “We ought to be much cleaner.”

    In an interview with Insider before the release of her second book, “Ambitious Girl,” Harris praised her aunt’s achievement.

    “For young girls to see someone who looks like them elected, to the second-highest office in the land, is really an incredible feeling that we’ve all been fighting for a very long time,” she said.

    Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/biden-lawyers-told-meena-harris-stop-using-kamala-brand-report-2021-2

    Right now, the heaviest snow totals will fall across our northwest counties, with lesser amounts in our far southeast counties. Significant icing will be possible over Allegheny, Washington, Westmoreland, Butler, Armstrong and Indiana counties, encasing trees and powerlines.

    Source Article from https://www.wpxi.com/weather/live-updates-winter-storm-warning-second-round-snow-ice-moving-into-western-pennsylvania/2BGYXLHGSZARDLNSOUAAF4NRUY/

    Nearly 60 percent of Americans believe former President TrumpDonald TrumpSix people who guarded Roger Stone entered Capitol during attack: NYT Cassidy pens column explaining vote to convict Trump Puerto Rico governor: Congress ‘morally obligated’ to act on statehood vote MORE should have been convicted during his second Senate impeachment trial, an ABC News-Ipsos poll taken shortly after the trial ended shows.

    Fifty-eight percent of Americans surveyed in the new poll, which was conducted from Feb.13 to 14 and is based on a nationally representative probability sample of 547 adults, said Trump should have been convicted by the upper chamber on charges that he incited the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol last month.

    The Senate acquitted Trump on Saturday by a 57-43 vote. A conviction would have required two-thirds voting to convict, or 67 votes.

    The poll found that support for the conviction was starkly partisan. Almost 90 percent of respondents polled who identified as Democrats said they believe the former president should have been convicted, compared to 64 percent of those identifying as independents and 14 percent of those identifying as Republicans who said the same.

    A majority of respondents agreed that the evidence brought against the former president during the trial was strong. Most polled also said they believed that senators voted during the trial based on what party they belonged to. 

    Fifty-six percent of respondents in the new poll said they thought the evidence against Trump in the trial was strong, while 37 percent said they thought it was weak.

    A closer look at the respondents’ respective political parties also showed a clear partisan divide regarding the evidence. In the poll, most respondents identifying as Democrats said they believed the evidence in the trial was strong, compared to a minority of self-identified Republican respondents who said the same.

    Seventy-seven percent of those polled also said they believed partisan ties played a role in how senators voted. By comparison, just 23 percent of those polled said they thought senators cast their vote based on the facts presented. 

    The poll said respondents identifying as Republicans and Democrats believed in “nearly equal numbers” that “the senators voted based on politics.”

    The poll was conducted using KnowledgePanel, which Ipsos described as the “largest and most well-established online probability-based panel that is representative of the adult US population.”

    It was conducted in Spanish and English and the data was “weighted to adjust for gender by age, race/ethnicity, education, Census region, metropolitan status, household income, and party identification,” the market research company said.

    “The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 4.8 percentage points at the 95% confidence level, for results based on the entire sample of adults,” the company added. “The margin of sampling error takes into account the design effect, which was 1.34.”

    Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/538859-nearly-60-percent-say-trump-should-have-been-convicted-in-impeachment