Larry Elder, a gubernatorial candidate in California’s Gavin Newsom recall election, said he would replace U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, a Democrat, with a Republican – if Elder becomes governor and Feinstein were to step down during his term. 

“God forbid Gov. Elder should replace Dianne Feinstein who nobody’s seen in weeks,” Elder told Mark Levin on his radio show Friday. “I’m told she has a worse mental condition than even Joe Biden. They’re afraid I’m would replace her with a Republican — which I most certainly would do and that would be an earthquake in Washington D.C.”

Feinstein, now 88 years old, has served in the Senate since the early 1990s and says she has no plans to step down despite some Democrats hoping she would. A New Yorker piece that came out last year reported House Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and others had been concerned about her memory and ability to focus, especially during the Justice Amy Coney Barrett confirmation hearings. Feinstein balked at the criticism. 

EX-CALIFORNIA DEMOCRAT LEADER GLORIA ROMERO ENDORSES LARRY ELDER FOR GOVERNOR

If Elder were to become governor and Feinstein were to retire, Republicans would be able to retake control of the Senate (currently split 50-48, with two independents caucusing with the Democrats to even the divide). Vice President Kamala Harris, as president of the Senate, breaks ties. 

Conservative radio talk show host Larry Elder speaks to supporters during a campaign stop outside the Hall of Justice downtown Los Angeles, Sept. 2, 2021. (Associated Press)

Elder, a conservative radio host himself, has emerged as the likely frontrunner in a sea of mostly Republican candidates who include former San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer; Kevin Kiley, a state Assembly member; businessman John Cox, who opposed Newsom in 2018; and reality TV star Caitlyn Jenner. (Another candidate, former U.S. Rep. Doug Ose, withdrew last month after suffering a heart attack.)

The recall election on Sept. 14 was once seen as an easy win for Newsom who needs 50% support from voters to shrug off his challengers, but polling over the summer showed a tightening race. The most recent poll, however, showed the Democrat widening his lead again in the final stretch. 

“They’re scared to death that a blue state like California, God forbid they should elect a common-sense conservative Republican who makes an appreciable difference in their lives,” Elder told Levin of Democrats.

The recall effort against Newsom was prompted mainly by critics opposing his handling of the coronavirus pandemic, including his past lockdown orders and mask mandates, which Elder has vowed to repeal if he wins. 

“This man that I’m going to defeat on Sept. 14, he shut down the state in the most severe way than any of the other 49 governors have,” Elder told a Northern California rally crowd in August. “When I get elected, assuming there are still facemask mandates and vaccine mandates, they will be repealed right away and then I’ll break for breakfast.”

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Elder has faced his own scrutiny in the race as well over a claim from his former fiancée that he pointed a gun at her once and statements he’s made about women. 

Elder has denied the allegation and says he respects women. 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/larry-elder-dianne-feinstein-republican-california-recall-election

Pete Buttigieg, now the secretary of transportation, appears alongside his husband Chasten in February 2020. The couple are now the parents of two children.

Alex Wong/Getty Images


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Pete Buttigieg, now the secretary of transportation, appears alongside his husband Chasten in February 2020. The couple are now the parents of two children.

Alex Wong/Getty Images

When Pete Buttigieg, the secretary of transportation, announced last month that he and his husband Chasten had become parents, the congratulations were many but the details were few.

At the time, they expressed their excitement but did not share any additional information about their new child, saying only “the process isn’t done yet.”

Now, the good news has doubled: On Saturday, the Buttigiegs announced they have welcomed not one but two children — a daughter and a son.

“We are delighted to welcome Penelope Rose and Joseph August Buttigieg to our family,” Buttigieg wrote on his personal Twitter account, alongside a black-and-white photo of the couple apparently in a hospital room, each holding a newborn.

Pete Buttigieg is the country’s first openly gay person to hold a Senate-confirmed position in the Cabinet. After his unsuccessful bid for president in 2020, he was sworn in as the secretary of transportation in February with Chasten at his side.

Now, the two are arguably the highest-profile same-sex couple in U.S. politics. Their birth announcements are a moment of visibility for same-sex marriage and parenthood.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/09/04/1034326643/twice-as-nice-pete-buttigieg-and-his-husband-announce-the-arrival-of-two-childre

(CNN)Hundreds of thousands of Louisiana residents still are enduring power outages in dangerous heat nearly a week after deadly Hurricane Ida struck — and long lines outside gas stations are underlining people’s struggle to stay cool and mobile.

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2021/09/04/weather/hurricane-ida-aftermath-louisiana-saturday/index.html

    Broadsided by floods and powerful tornadoes, the Philadelphia region was stunned by Ida’s deadly intensity.

    But to scientists, clues were abundant Ida might prove formidable when it made landfall near Port Fourchon, La., as a Category 4 hurricane on Aug. 29. The scene was set 1,100 miles away for it to make history here three days later. The Philadelphia region was already pumped full of water and primed by heat to make whatever remnant tracked its way even worse — a signature of climate change.

    » READ MORE: A timeline of Ida’s Philly destruction

    Consider that as Ida was forming in the tropics in late August, Philly’s weather had been much hotter and wetter than normal all month. The average temperature was 79.2 degrees — 2.3 degrees above normal. And 6.18 inches of rain had fallen, 144% over the average for the last 20 years.

    Climate experts and a growing chorus of political leaders agree climate change can make the impact of storms far more dramatic and even deadly.

    ”Ida fed on an extreme level of heat content in the Gulf of Mexico,” Michael Mann, a Penn State climate scientist and director of the school’s Earth System Science Center, said in an email. “That record heat is tied directly to human-caused warming. That heat favored the dramatic, rapid intensification of Ida. So in short, yeah — this is climate change.”

    » READ MORE: Philly’s summer temps have risen 3 degrees since 1970 — and nights have gotten even warmer

    Jessica Spaccio, a climatologist at the Northeast Regional Climate Center at Cornell, says there’s little doubt climate change contributed to Ida’s power.

    “To what degree is a harder question to answer,” Spaccio said. “But that it played a role is not a question. We are in a warming world. These storms are just so devastating. We definitely need to take climate change seriously and adapt.”

    “Some people say Ida would not have happened if not for climate change. Well, that’s not true,” said Sean Sublette, a meteorologist with Climate Central, a nonprofit comprising scientists and journalists. “But climate change was unquestionably a factor.”

    Sublette estimates that Philly likely got 10% more rain than it would have had if it weren’t for climate change. Warmer, wetter conditions do more than increase rainfall; they might be enough to push a hurricane’s wind speeds from a Category 3 to a much more destructive 4.

    “When we try to quantify how much rain came down as a result of climate change it is exceedingly difficult,” Sublette said. “It might have rained like hell anyway. But instead of a near-record flood, you got a record flood. So instead of getting an inch or two of flooding on the Vine Street Expressway, you get enough for people to jump in and float.”

    » READ MORE: Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New York had more tornadoes than Kansas in 2020

    Scientists also agree that events like Ida are not freak occurrences.

    “We’ve shown that these extreme floods are becoming more common in the past several decades,” said Dartmouth earth sciences researcher Evan Dethier, who lived in Philadelphia for several years. “There’s not really any reason for us right now to believe that they won’t continue to do so.”

    Weather is defined as a single meteorological event, perhaps spanning days or weeks. Climate spans decades or longer. So it’s overly simplistic to blame every bad day on climate change. What scientists look for are patterns.

    Scientists say the connection between warming and climate change is well understood. A warmer, moister atmosphere generates more energy for storms to feed on. Based on an Inquirer analysis of moisture in the air, as measured by the dew points, 2021 was likely the muggiest summer since 1995.

    Looking at data from the last 50 years, Augusts in Philadelphia are getting hotter, leading to a 1.8-degree increase in average temperatures. And more days are cresting 90 degrees.

    So, a rainstorm that might have dumped 5 inches without a changed climate might dump 6 inches. While that might not seem like much, it translates to millions of gallons of additional water flowing into regional waterways.

    » READ MORE: Protecting New Jersey’s back bays from climate change-fueled storms could cost $16 billion, federal report finds

    Precisely how climate change could contribute to tornadoes is trickier to establish, Sublette said. Cornell’s Spaccio said more research is needed.

    Though the United States has not experienced an increase in days of tornado outbreaks, on days when there are outbreaks, more tornadoes are spawned than in the past.

    That’s what happened here. On Wednesday evening, seven tornadoes struck the Philly region. Tornado ratings are based on the EF scale of 1 to 5, with 5 being the highest winds. The tornado that struck Gloucester County was an EF-3 with peak winds of 150 mph and carved a 12-mile path, well over a typical path of 1.5 miles. Though EF-3s are rare in the region, consider that one struck Bensalem Township on July 29.

    But even before Wednesday, tornadoes already were accelerating in Pennsylvania and New Jersey.

    As big as Ida may seem, consider it was only little more than a year ago that remnants of Hurricane Isaias dumped 9 inches of rain in some local areas, caused the Schuylkill to overflow, flooded Boathouse Row, ruined homes in the city’s Eastwick neighborhood, and even trapped a dredge barge at the I-676 ramp to I-76 in Center City, forcing the road to close.

    During Ida, the Schuylkill at 30th Street Station in Philadelphia rose to 16.28 feet. Flood stage is nine feet, and 14 feet is considered a major flood. The average flow at the location is 1,460 cubic feet per second. It reached a flow of 125,000 cubic feet per second on Thursday.

    Dozens of sewage and storm-water pipes overflowed, emptying untreated water directly into Philadelphia’s major waterways. So if you saw pictures on social media of people diving into the water and paddling around for fun, they were almost assuredly swimming in diluted sewage.

    During big storms, 60% of the city’s aging sewage lines are designed to bypass at-capacity water treatment plants and flow directly into the Delaware River and the Schuylkill, as well as creeks such as the Tacony.

    Philadelphia is not alone in its aging storm-water system. As climate change makes storms heavier, officials from around the region fear their systems won’t be able to keep up.

    The damage from more intense storms gets even more expensive because of development near waterways. Water runs over paved surfaces directly into streams and rivers instead of being absorbed into the ground. Aging storm systems were not designed to handle such heavy loads.

    Like other scientists, Dethier said he can’t “explicitly connect” the size of Ida to climate change. But the storm is part of the “dominant signal” researchers are seeing, given the sogginess of the Northeast this summer.

    “It’s sort of like the precursor to having a big event like this,” Dethier said. “Because if you get eight inches of rain, but it’s been really dry, you might be able to absorb it and it might result in a minor flood. But in this case, it’s sort of like the system was primed to have a big event. We had the rain from Ida that just pushed it over the top.”

    » READ MORE: Ida’s costs could reach $95 billion. On top of COVID-19, ‘it’s one more painful thing.’

    Another point of universal agreement: Preparing for more Idas will cost billions in infrastructure improvements. AccuWeather estimates Ida caused $95 billion in damage.

    As Gov. Phil Murphy toured an area of Gloucester County devastated by a tornado spawned during Ida, he said he hopes Congress approves the Biden administration’s infrastructure bill to pay for roads, bridges, and utility systems that can handle ever-bigger storms.

    “The world is changing,” Murphy said. “These storms are coming in more frequently, they’re coming in with more intensity. … We have got to get a leap forward and get out ahead of this.”

    Sen. Bob Casey, who also toured flood damage, agreed.

    ”I don’t think anyone should have any doubts in the aftermath of this storm about the gravity of the threat that we face from climate change,” Casey said.

    Staff writer Laura McCrystal contributed to this article.

    Source Article from https://www.inquirer.com/science/climate/ida-climate-change-philadelphia-flooding-tornado-20210904.html

    A Texas state judge temporarily shielded Texas abortion clinics from lawsuits by an anti-abortion group under a new state law, in a narrow ruling handed down on Friday.

    The temporary restraining order from state district judge Maya Guerra Gamble in Austin, in response to a Planned Parenthood request, does not interfere with the law.

    However, it shields clinics from whistleblower lawsuits by the nonprofit group Texas Right to Life, its legislative director and 100 unidentified individuals.

    A hearing on a preliminary injunction request was set for 13 September.

    The new Texas law, which took effect on Wednesday after the conservative-dominated US supreme court declined to block it, allows anyone anywhere to sue anyone connected to an abortion in which cardiac activity was detected in the embryo: as early as six weeks into a pregnancy, before most women even realize they are pregnant.

    In a petition filed late on Thursday, Planned Parenthood said about 85% to 90% of people who obtain abortions in Texas are at least six weeks into pregnancy.

    In her ruling, Judge Guerra Gamble said the new Texas law, known as SB8, “creates a probable, irreparable and imminent injury … for which plaintiffs and their physicians, staff and patients throughout Texas have no adequate remedy at law if plaintiffs, their physicians and staff are subjected to private enforcement lawsuits against them”.

    Elizabeth Graham, vice-president of Texas Right to Life, said: “We expect an impartial court will dismiss Planned Parenthood’s lawsuit. Until then, we will continue our diligent efforts to ensure the abortion industry fully follows” the new law.

    Helene Krasnoff, a Planned Parenthood spokeswoman, said the order “offers protection to the brave healthcare providers and staff at Planned Parenthood health centers throughout Texas, who have continued to offer care as best they can within the law while facing surveillance, harassment and threats from vigilantes eager to stop them.

    “But make no mistake: this is not enough relief for Texas. Planned Parenthood will continue … doing everything we can under the law to restore Texans’ federal constitutional right to access abortion.”

    Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/sep/04/texas-judge-temporarily-shields-clinics-anti-abortion-lawsuits-planned-parenthood

    The US supreme court voted 5-4 to allow a Texas law banning most abortions to remain in force. The law prohibits abortions once medical professionals can detect cardiac activity, usually around six weeks and before most women know they’re pregnant.

    Nine people share their reaction to the ruling and what they think it means for women’s rights.

    ‘Women’s rights are being stolen out from under us’

    We have all these yahoos down here screaming about their rights being taken away (guns, vaccines and maskless), but women’s rights are being stolen out from under us. Abortion should not be a political decision – it is a moral decision. No one has the right to tell me what I can do with my body. One day “I” will answer to my Lord, no one else will stand in place during my judgment day. It is very disheartening. Women’s rights are slowly being taken away. What will they take away next? Michelle, 52, Texas

    ‘How can I still be afraid of my voice not mattering?’

    It’s absolutely not right to have control over a woman’s body like this. I had one abortion when I was 22. My now husband and I had just started dating and we weren’t financially or emotionally ready to have children. If we were not allowed to have an abortion then, our relationship would not have survived. I would have been a single mother, trying to support a baby I wasn’t ready for and didn’t want. How do you think that child would have been raised? We now have two children and we are able to support them with love and everything they need to thrive. To this day my husband and I do not regret the extremely hard choice we had to make. We were both grieving for a while but, it was the right decision and it was my body, my choice.

    I had to have two C-sections with both of my sons as they were too large for me to give birth naturally. During my last C-section, I chose to get sterilized and my tubes tied. This was a difficult choice, but it was my choice for a healthy life. I decided for myself that day so no one could for me another day. I live in the USA, it’s 2021, how can I still be afraid of my voice not mattering? Kelsi, 30, Arizona

    ‘This law is deeply and blatantly misogynistic’

    Saying I’m appalled does not begin to cover it. I am speechless. I just want to emphasize what others have been saying: there are no laws dictating what men can do with their bodies. For there to be full equality under the law, there can be no laws dictating what a woman can do with hers. I will be boycotting Texas in every way I can. The unintended consequences of this law will be deadlier and more horrific than the unintended consequences of Prohibition. This law is deeply and blatantly misogynistic. All women everywhere should be protesting in the streets. Valerie, 69, New York

    ‘I spent my life fighting for abortion rights and now I feel defeated’

    I am outraged, sickened and terrified. I spent my life fighting for abortion rights, and now I just feel defeated. I’d leave this sick and evil country if I could, but I’m too old and too poor to be able to get out. I’ll stay and battle on, but the future looks increasingly bleak and dark.

    I fear for the lives and health of Texas women, and for the future of anyone in America who is not a white, straight, Christian, rightwing male. I am absolutely horrified and feel like a lifetime’s worth of work by so many people just went up in smoke. American women are in grave danger, and not just in Texas. Linda, 71, Maryland

    ‘This is not the country I fought for’

    This is Handmaid’s Tale stuff. When I was young, I was a Goldwater Republican, but I left the party after Newt Gingrich was elected speaker. They [the Republicans] see Trump as America’s Viktor Orbán, running a “soft” dictatorship. The abortion ruling is one more step in their plan to eliminate freedom. Their stance on gun control is to ensure that their followers will be armed to the teeth the next time they try to pull off an insurrection. As a retired disabled veteran of the Vietnam war, this is not the country I fought for. Back in 1968 it was a different country – Republicans were the good guys – I’m not sure I want to keep living here if this is the way things are going. Bill, 74, Georgia

    ‘The burden will be on the lower socioeconomic people’

    An absolute outrage. How dare a white male majority make choices about our bodies? I had two negative pregnancy tests when pregnant with my daughter, and didn’t get confirmation until I was 16 weeks pregnant. I am a social worker and know there are thousands of children who are languishing in the foster care system and will never be adopted. Who will care for these unwanted children? The burden, as usual in the USA, will be on the lower socioeconomic people. We are going backwards and it is beyond distressing. The wealthy will have access to abortions and other women will be forced to carry and bear children they don’t want or can’t support financially or emotionally. What a travesty. Allison, 50, Utah

    ‘I think the ban starts six weeks too late’

    I am thrilled, though I think the ban starts six weeks too late. I’m hopeful that the supreme court will at least acknowledge a state’s options to set its own standards here. My concerns are that so much of our country is comfortable with the murder of the most innocent lives among us. It’s hard to get anything right as a society when infanticide is acceptable. Michael, Kansas

    ‘Welcome back to the dark ages’

    This is utterly disgusting and abhorrent. Women of all ages should and must be able to make their own choice concerning their body. Welcome back to the dark ages. It’s OK to be against abortion but you don’t get to choose for others – it’s a matter of personal choice. I went through an abortion in my late 20s when I was living in Asia. My then boyfriend was immature and stupid and so was I. Anyway, it was a traumatic experience for many reasons and I wouldn’t go through it again, but that was my choice and I’m glad I had the option. Gally, 40, California

    ‘Saying it’s too complicated is such a lazy response’

    It’s cowardice supreme. Such a twisted law – pitting people against each other. The supreme court can’t even give a good reason for blocking it other than that it’s too complicated. That is such a lazy response. It’s a sad day for women. I can only imagine what other countries think of this. I worry that other states will take approaches like this and effectively ban abortion elsewhere too. Jeremy, 24, Minnesota

    Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/sep/04/texas-abortion-ban-guardian-readers

    President Biden has failed America – and the American people cannot and will not forget that, as untold hundreds of American citizens remain stranded in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan, Sean Hannity declared Friday in his “Opening Monologue.”

    While the U.S. has not had an official presence in Afghanistan for three days, Hannity claimed Friday was the 20th day of Americans being “held hostage … behind enemy lines.”

    Joe Biden has failed this country, and we will never forget it,” he said.

    Taliban leader Abdul Baradar is now seen as the de facto leader of that country, after Biden pulled all U.S. troops out as of Aug. 31.

    “Biden did nothing as the Taliban terrorists began what was a full-scale assault on our allies, and they began a march that led them to taking control of Kabul: April, then May, June, July, then August,” Hannity said.

    TALIBAN CALLS CHINA ITS ‘TRUSTWORTHY FRIEND’

    “And instead of fighting back at any point … as Donald Trump said he would, Biden ordered a full-scale retreat, abandoning base after base in the middle of the night, leaving weapons and aircraft and military gear, important biometrics data behind, all for the Taliban’s taking,” he continued. 

    “Instead of fighting back at any point … as Donald Trump said he would, Biden ordered a full-scale retreat.”

    — Sean Hannity

    “He has now armed them completely.

    “In private, Joe Biden knew his Afghanistan policies were rapidly collapsing,” Hannity went on, “but instead of being honest with we, the American people; instead of warning Americans that were there while we had control of Kabul, warning our allies while he had control, telling them we are going to — he goes on national TV and says no, everything is great”

    Hannity pointed to a clip of Biden being asked if a Taliban takeover was “inevitable.”

    “No, it is not,” the Delaware Democrat replied. “Because you have the Afghan troops, 300,000 well-equipped, as well-equipped as any army in the world. … It is not inevitable.”

    Hannity said Biden was proven wrong in time, and that new reportage from Reuters suggested Biden was lying.

    “According to a leaked phone call conversation and transcript from July, we know that Joe Biden also encouraged the Afghan president to lie,” he said.

    “Joe needed a political win, so perception was more important than the reality that we all know Joe knew and the rest of the world knew. And so in July, while engaging and encouraging [exiled Afghan leader] Ashraf Ghani to change perception, Biden abandoned Bagram Air Force Base in the middle of the night. In doing so, he left every American and every one of our Afghan allies in Kabul totally, completely defenseless — and in one month, the Taliban easily marched to the outskirts of Afghanistan’s capital city.”

    “Joe needed a political win, so perception was more important than the reality that we all know Joe knew and the rest of the world knew.”

    — Sean Hannity

    Hannity added the Washington Post previously reported Taliban leadership openly offered the U.S. control of Kabul, but Biden declined, and as the host described, ordered retreat.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    “But don’t worry, Biden was telling us, the American people, he planned for every contingency. He promised the United States would not leave any American behind. He said that over and over and over again,” he said.

    “On Thursday, August the 26th, a suicide bomber detonated a massive bomb at the gates of the airport. That killed 13 brave U.S. service men and women and more than 150 others. Yes, their blood is on Joe Biden’s hands,” the host said.

    “[A]ll of this could easily have been prevented.”

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/hannity-monologue-biden-afghanistan-americans-held-hostage

    The deaths of 11 people who lived in basement apartments during New York City’s catastrophic flooding this week have renewed attention on the oftentimes illegal dwellings, with city officials looking to bolster evacuation efforts for vulnerable residents in extreme weather.

    A record 3.15 inches of rain fell in one hour in the city Wednesday, all but stalling the city’s subway system and prompting dozens of water rescues. At least 13 people have been reported dead in New York City after the remnants of Hurricane Ida swept through the region.

    The rapid rainfall inundated residences away from the city’s coastline not prone to flooding, damaging scores of homes and turning at least six basement apartments into death traps.

    “The danger came from above,” as opposed to storm surge, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said during a press briefing Friday, while calling for more effective early warnings ahead of “wicked” weather that she said will undoubtedly become more frequent due to climate change.

    New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said Friday the city will be working on a “more severe kind of warning and more severe set of actions that will be a jolt to people.”

    “What we saw in some of these basement apartments on Wednesday was people need to be evacuated who are far away from the coast, because of the sheer intensity and speed, the amount of rain that came in such a brief period of time,” he said, calling this extreme weather “a whole new ballgame.”

    “We can say now that extreme weather has become the norm. We need to respond to it differently,” de Blasio told reporters.

    The mayor said the city would need to impose travel bans more frequently, instructing people to leave the streets and get out of the subways, and evacuate more New Yorkers ahead of future storms.

    To target those who live in basement apartments, changes could include cellphone alerts or door-to-door evacuations, the mayor said. But first, the city would need to create a database of what is conservatively estimated at more than 50,000 basement apartments, impacting at least 100,000 people, de Blasio said.

    “We need to have an absolute accounting of all of them and then we can apply these door-to-door techniques if we need to,” he said. “We’ve got to have a clear database to work from and certainly begin with knowing the areas, which we do know, where they are prevalent.”

    With many of the city’s basement apartments illegal conversions, oftentimes providing affordable housing to low-income New Yorkers and undocumented immigrants, the city would work with community organizations and other trusted messengers to reach residents, the mayor said.

    “We have an illegal basement problem and then we have a problem that so many people end up in illegal basements are fearful to communicate for fear they might be evicted or, worse in their mind, deported,” de Blasio said. “It’s just an extraordinarily challenging set of circumstances.”

    Five of the six apartments where 11 people died during the storm were illegally converted cellar and basement apartments, according to the city’s buildings department. Four of them were in Queens and one in Brooklyn. The lone legal basement apartment was in Queens, where a 48-year-old woman was found unconscious and unresponsive at a home near Corona.

    Those who died in the illegal conversions included a 43-year-old woman and a 22-year-old man at a basement apartment in Jamaica, Queens; a 50-year-old man, a 48-year-old woman and a 2-year-old boy at a cellar-level apartment in Woodside, Queens; and a 66-year-old man at a cellar unit in Cypress Hills, Brooklyn, based on statements from the city’s buildings department and New York Police Department.

    City officials encouraged basement apartment residents to call 311 or 911 to report issues without fear of being vacated, unless they are facing life-threatening danger.

    The risks posed to those living in basement apartments were raised in the city’s “stormwater resiliency plan,” released in May. It included an initiative to develop notifications for basement dwellings “to keep residents out of harm’s way” during extreme rain events, but the completion date wasn’t until 2023.

    When asked about that timeline Friday, de Blasio said, “Clearly we have to change that.”

    “This is a new deal we’re dealing with now, a new reality,” the mayor said. “We have to take the very muscular approaches that we have, the very forceful approaches like mandatory evacuation, like mandatory travel ban, and use those in ways we never had before, because events are just changing the paradigm constantly.”

    On Friday, New York Attorney General Letitia James called on the city to provide emergency housing vouchers to all New Yorkers living in unregulated basement apartments, as extreme weather events have become “the rule, not the exception” due to climate change.

    “We know that New York’s housing crisis has gone too far when tenants have to risk their lives just to have a roof over their heads,” James said in a statement. “To prevent these problems in the future, we must also ensure that basement units are safe for human occupancy and regularly inspected. Overcoming the twin threats of climate change and a housing crisis will not be simple, but we must ensure measures are in place to protect our neighbors and prevent a future catastrophe.”

    Queens Borough President Donovan Richards also pointed to the city’s affordable housing crisis in the wake of the deadly flooding while pushing for more infrastructure investments in neighborhoods that have been “historically left behind.”

    “The reason people are in basement apartments is because of the failure of New York City to really truly build out affordable housing,” he told Pix11 Friday morning. “I was a basement baby myself. … We lived in basements because it provided an affordable opportunity. So this was a failure on many levels, and we need to make sure we’re never back here again.”

    ABC News’ Mark Crudele contributed to this report.

    Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/US/calls-change-11-people-nyc-basement-apartments-died/story?id=79818549

    Mayor Bill de BlasioBill de BlasioFEMA has funds to cover disasters — for now Schumer calls for action on climate after Ida flooding 4 in 10 Manhattan employers delaying return to work plans due to delta variant: survey MORE (D) announced Friday that New York City was enacting new measures following massive flooding Wednesday night and into Thursday morning.

    “We have to handle this differently because we’ve now been shown an entirely different situation,” de Blasio said, noting that more than a dozen New Yorkers had died from the storm.

    “We’re going to in particular focus on a different kind of warning, a much more severe kind of warning and a much more severe set of actions, very physical actions, that bluntly will be a jolt to people and a shock to people that we even are talking about these things,” he added.

    Among the new measures are more frequent uses of travel bans that would require people to vacate streets, subways and other public places.

    De Blasio also said more evacuation efforts are needed for people living in basement apartments.

    “We understand there has to be a different kind of evacuation for folks in basement apartments and in some other areas of the city as well,” de Blasio said. “If we are seeing this kind of rain, we have to have an evacuation mechanism that can reach them. And again, this is a very forceful measure. It’s not just saying to people, you have to get out of your apartment. It’s going door to door with our first responders and other city agencies to get people out.”

    The city will be sending out messages and cellphone alerts to those living in basement dwellings to alert them about “the vulnerabilities they face in these kinds of rain events,” he said.

    The initiatives are a part of what de Blasio dubbed the “Climate Driven Rain Response.”

    More than 40 people have died in the Northeast as a result of the remnants of Hurricane Ida, which barreled into the region after making landfall in Louisiana. At least a dozen people have died in Louisiana due to the hurricane alone.

    New York City and New Jersey issued states of emergency and the National Weather Service issued its first flash flood emergency warnings for both New York City and New Jersey.

    Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/570811-de-blasio-announces-new-preventative-measures-following-extreme-flooding

    The idea that the ballot envelope’s holes were being used to weed out the votes of those who wanted Gov. Newsom, a Democrat, to be recalled rapidly spread online, according to a review by The New York Times.

    The Instagram video collected nearly half a million views. On the messaging app Telegram, posts that said California was rigging the special election amassed nearly 200,000 views. And an article about the ballot holes on the far-right site The Gateway Pundit reached up to 626,000 people on Facebook, according to data from CrowdTangle, a Facebook-owned social media analytics tool.

    State and local officials said the ballot holes were not new and were not being used nefariously. The holes were placed in the envelope, on either end of a signature line, to help low-vision voters know where to sign it, said Jenna Dresner, a spokeswoman for the California Secretary of State’s Office of Election Cybersecurity.

    The ballot envelope’s design has been used for several election cycles, and civic design consultants recommended the holes for accessibility, added Mike Sanchez, a spokesman for the Los Angeles County registrar. He said voters could choose to put the ballot in the envelope in such a way that didn’t reveal any ballot marking at all through a hole.

    Instagram has since appended a fact-check label to the original video to note that it could mislead people. The fact check has reached up to 20,700 people, according to CrowdTangle data.

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/03/technology/recall-election-california-rumors-newsom.html

    SOUTH LAKE TAHOE — As firefighters gain more ground on the Caldor Fire, officials are starting to discuss plans for allowing thousands of residents forced to flee the wildfire that has raged through the forests southwest of Lake Tahoe, engulfing several small communities in its wake, to return home.

    But the area will remain a hazy ghost town — save for a steady stream of firefighters, emergency personnel and wandering bears and coyotes — at least through Labor Day weekend.

    While nearly 6,000 residents on the eastern flanks of the fire near Omo Ranch and Fair Play have received the green light to return home, about 45,000 remain under evacuation orders, including all residents of South Lake Tahoe and those living along 25 miles of Lake Tahoe’s west and south shores from Tahoma to the California-Nevada border.

    Brian Newman, Cal Fire operations section chief, said Friday that it would be at least three or four days “at a minimum” until most evacuees would be allowed to come home, quashing any hope that residents and visitors would be able to return during the long holiday weekend.

    “We understand that this has an impact on their lives, but we’re doing our best to ensure that they have a home and a community to return to,” Newman said, adding that there was still much work to be done.

    SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, CA – SEPTEMBER 02: U.S.D.A Forest Service fire trucks are seen in a neighborhood off Pioneer Trail in South Lake Tahoe, Calif., on Thursday, Sept. 2, 2021. Crews were cutting a bulldozer line nearby to stop the path of the Caldor Fire. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group) 

    The famed lake, which is usually buzzing with boats by Friday afternoon of a long holiday weekend, instead was empty, with helicopters occasionally flying overhead and drawing water to throw on problem areas of the blaze. A line of black soot and ash lined the lake’s typically pristine waterline.

    In addition to ensuring that the fire is no longer a threat to nearby communities, utility crews must come through and inspect electricity, gas, sewer and water infrastructure, ensuring that they are all safe to resume operations.

    “They shut off electricity and natural gas because some of those utilities can be harmed or cause issues for fire crews,” Newman said. “Now we have to go back in and make sure that they’re not damaged so that when gas, for instance, is introduced back into the lines, there are no leaks that could cause life-safety issues for the public and for firefighters.”

    Pacific Gas & Electric Co. reported that 2,293 customers are without power due to the Caldor Fire and that the agency has identified 633 locations of damaged power lines, though they expect that number to rise when utility crews are allowed access to more areas along Highway 50.

    As of Friday, the Caldor Fire has scorched 212,907 acres, destroying at least 661 homes in the process. The blaze is 29% contained — nearly double the containment firefighters had established on Monday when evacuation orders were first issued for South Lake Tahoe.

    Crews on the western flanks of the fire — where all the containment lines are concentrated — are patrolling and mopping up any small spot fires, putting out smoking fuels and taking down any fire-weakened trees they come across to prevent any flare-ups or safety concerns after more evacuation orders are lifted along Highway 50.

    SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, CA – SEPTEMBER 02: Copperopolis firefighter Nic Johnston puts out hot spots after a controlled burn along Highway 89 in the Christmas Valley area near South Lake Tahoe, Calif., on Thursday, Sept. 2, 2021. More than 20,000 residents were evacuated due to the Caldor Fire. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group) 

    While almost all residents in the Tahoe basin will find their homes still standing, the same cannot be said for hundreds of people who own homes further west along Highway 50, especially those who lived around the Sierra-at-Tahoe resort and Grizzly Flats, where the blaze first erupted on Aug. 14. Many of those residents will be returning to rubble rather than the homes they fled from more than two weeks ago as the fast-moving wildfire raged through the forests of El Dorado and Amador counties. Cal Fire officials have only reported two homes damaged in the basin.

    At the evacuation center in Garderville, Nevada, most of the evacuees from around Lake Tahoe had already been moved to Reno by Friday to make room for residents who had evacuated on the Nevada side of the lake. Two U.S. Forest Service officers stood outside with fire maps, offering information to locals about when they could move back.

    “I’ve watched specials on the Paradise and Camp Fires, and I wasn’t going to let that happen to me,” said Paul Smith, 62, who fled from his home off the Kingsbury Grade in Nevada on Monday and was staying at a hotel in Topaz Lake. “I’m doing fine. I’m just getting sick of all this smoke.”

    GARDNERVILLE, ,NV – SEPTEMBER 02: Paul Smith, of South Lake Tahoe, heads out from at the Douglas County Community & Senior Center in Gardnerville, Nevada on Friday, Sept. 3, 2021. Smith evacuated on Monday as the Caldor Fire continues to burn near South Lake Tahoe, and is staying at a hotel near Topaz Lake, Nevada. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group) 

    Severe smoke conditions and harmful air quality are one reason officials are urging visitors to stay away from the areas around Lake Tahoe that still remain open, like Truckee and Incline Village on the north shore.

    “The smoke is a serious hazard, so we’re really asking people to avoid this area and recreate further away from these fires,” said Jennifer Chapman, public affairs officer for the Eldorado National Forest, which will be closed until at least Sept. 30 due to the fire.

    Once the blaze dies down, an emergency rehabilitation team will go into the burn zone of El Dorado to assess the impact to the forest’s trees and soil, she said.

    “The problem is that it’s a very large active wildfire with a lot of uncontained parts, and our main concern is safety and making sure firefighters have the room they need to do their work,” Chapman said.

    GARDNERVILLE, ,NV – SEPTEMBER 02: Oksana Cabristante and Tina Wadkins, from right,deliver donated food for animals in a shelter at the Douglas County Fairgrounds in Gardnerville, Nevada on Friday, Sept. 3, 2021. The Caldor Fire continues to burn near South Lake Tahoe, where the women work at the Pet Supermarket store. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group) 

    Oksana Cabristante, 27, of South Lake Tahoe, said she understands the need for a lengthy evacuation order and is prepared to go at least another week monitoring the situation at her home through the security camera next to the front door.

    She has been staying at a friend’s house in Gardnerville with her two young children, two dogs, two parrots and her husband, doing her best to keep her mind off of the dangers that still linger around her hometown.

    “I’m just trying to stay strong,” she said outside of an animal evacuation center at the Douglas County Fairgrounds after donating some pet supplies. “I know a lot of people aren’t as lucky as me to have a friend to stay with.

    “A lot of people come out here with nothing and, unfortunately, too many people will also end up going home to nothing.”

    SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, CA – SEPTEMBER 02: Emergency vehicles are seen along Highway 50 at Stateline Avenue as the Caldor Fire continues to burn near South Lake Tahoe, Calif., on Friday, Sept. 3, 2021. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group) 

    Source Article from https://www.mercurynews.com/2021/09/03/caldor-fire-when-residents-and-visitors-might-be-able-to-return-to-south-lake-tahoe

    The fact-checker behind USA Today’s botched report on President Biden‘s watch blunder is facing an intense backlash as critics accuse him of playing “the victim.” 

    USA Today was slammed over a “so-called” fact-check on Wednesday declaring accusations of Biden checking his watch during the dignified transfer ceremony in honor of the 13 U.S. service members who were killed in a terrorist attack outside the Kabul airport was “partly false,” insisting that it occurred “only after” the ceremony. 

    The next day, the paper issued a correction admitting that Biden did check his watch “multiple times” during the ceremony but changed its ruling from “partly false” to “missing context.”

    USA TODAY ISSUES CORRECTION ON ‘FACT CHECK’ AFTER CLAIMING BIDEN CHECKED WATCH ‘ONLY AFTER CEREMONY’ AT DOVER

    Daniel Funke, the USA Today reporter who authored the fact-check, took to Twitter on Friday offering a mea culpa. 

    “As many of you already know, this story has been corrected. Biden checked his watch multiple times during the ceremony. I regret the error,” Funke wrote. “Journalists and fact-checkers are human (yes, even me!) We make mistakes. When we do, we correct them and try to make it right.”

    After sharing a link to USA Today’s fact-checking guidelines explaining the “principles we try to uphold,” Funke added, “It’s easy to dunk on journalists when we get things wrong. I get it – to many, we’re just another name on a screen. But behind that screen is a person trying to do their best.”

    (Twitter)

    (Twitter)

    (Twitter)

    While some gave Funke credit for owning up to his “mistake,” his tweets renewed another round of backlash on social media among those who suggest his erroneous reporting was intentional. 

    DON LEMON: ‘STOP BEATING UP’ ON BIDEN ADMINISTRATION OVER AFGHANISTAN, ‘WE DON’T KNOW’ IF WE LEFT AMERICANS BEHIND

    “What you did wasn’t a ‘mistake.’ There were videos of him looking at his watch during the ceremony circulating since Sunday… But you intentionally ignored them and claimed there was no evidence at all,” NewsBusters news analyst Nicholas Fondacaro reacted. 

    “With all due respect, Mr. Funke, your ‘fact check’ carried a direct implication that grieving, gold star families had LIED with their first-hand testimony of the events. Keep your ‘we regret the error’ and apologize, unequivocally, directly TO THEM,” radio host Larry O’Connor told the reporter.

    “I’d have more sympathy if the ‘fact checking industry’ hadn’t viewed the Afghanistan crisis as a time to protect Biden instead of fact-checking the admin’s lies and obfuscation. We have unknown numbers of Americans stranded and they’re focused on conservative social posts,” GOP strategist Matt Whitlock tweeted.

    “Daniel figured out who the true victim is in the saga of the ISIS-K suicide bombing of U.S. service members,” Washington Examiner reporter Jerry Dunleavy quipped.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    “@dpfunke – appreciate we all make mistakes, but this is more: 1. You strived to minimize watch-checking which goldstar families complained of 2. Irrelevant Trump mention clouds context 3. ‘Missing context’ correction still tries to minimize that Biden checked watch multiple times,” New York Post columnist Miranda Devine wrote. 

    “You didn’t get something wrong. You purposefully and willfully fact checked Gold Star families instead of the President. You did exactly what you think you’re paid to do, which is protect Jos Biden and his party,” Spectator contributor Stephen Miller tweeted.

    Gannett, USA Today’s parent company, responded to Fox News’ request for comment with a statement from USA Today executive editor Jeff Taylor, which read, “We corrected the fact check story as soon as we realized it was erroneous and were fully transparent about the inaccuracies. Our mission is to report the facts as accurately as possible with no political agenda.” 

    Funke did not immediately respond to Fox News’ request for comment. 

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/usa-today-fact-checker-daniel-funke-biden-watch

    Feared Taliban co-founder Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar — who was once nicknamed “Baradar the Butcher” — will lead the new Afghan government, sources within the militant group told Reuters.

    The new Taliban-led government is yet to be announced almost three weeks after the militants seized control of Afghanistan.

    Baradar, who is currently in charge of the Taliban’s political office, is set to be joined by Mullah Mohammad Yaqoob, the son of late Taliban co-founder Mullah Omar, and Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanikzai, in senior government positions, according to sources.

    The Taliban’s supreme religious leader, Haibatullah Akhundzada, will also focus on religious matters and how to govern within the framework of Islam, a source added.  

    “All the top leaders have arrived in Kabul, where preparations are in final stages to announce the new government,” a Taliban official said.

    Baradar arrived in Kabul two weeks ago to start talks about the new government.KARIM JAAFAR/AFP via Getty Images

    Despite initially claiming to want to form a consensus government, the Taliban are now only considering one made up solely of Taliban members, according to sources.

    The new government is set to include 25 ministries and a consultative council of 12 Muslim scholars.

    Baradar, whose brutal history attracted the moniker “Baradar the Butcher”, arrived in Kabul two weeks ago to start talks about the new government.

    Baradar started the Taliban in 1994 with late leader Mullah Mohammed Omar.

    The Taliban are now only considering a government made up solely of Taliban members.
    AAMIR QURESHI/AFP via Getty Images

    He then became known for some of the Islamic militants’ most deadly tactics, including planting improvised explosive devices along streets their enemies would be on, calling the IEDs “flowers,” according to a 2010 profile in the Times of London.

    He has been living in Pakistan where he was arrested in 2010 but later freed in 2018.

    Baradar is the only surviving Taliban leader to have been personally appointed deputy by the late Taliban commander Mullah Mohammed Omar.

    Baradar was personally appointed deputy by Afghan Taliban’s deceased leader Mullah Omar, seen above.
    JAVED TANVEER/AFP via Getty Images

    Taliban fighters – who seized control of Kabul Aug. 15 — are currently battling forces in the Panjshir Valley, north of Kabul, still loyal to the toppled government.

    Meanwhile, in the wake of the deadly US withdrawal from Kabul earlier this week, the Biden administration has been pressuring Pakistan to help with terror groups including ISIS-K and Al Qaeda, Politico reports.

    Pakistan, however, has downplayed what a Taliban-led government could mean for Afghanistan.

    Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar arrives in Afghanistan, in Kandahar.
    Al Hijrat TV/AFP via Getty Images)

    The discussions are included in emails and unclassified cables obtained by the outlet. In one exchange with a State Department official, Pakistani Ambassador to the US Asad Majeed Khan questioned reports that Taliban fighters were hunting down enemies.

    The ambassador said the Taliban “were not seeking retribution, and in fact were going home to home to assure Afghans that there will not be reprisals.”

    The push to fight terrorist groups in Afghanistan comes after an ISIS-K suicide bomber killed 13 US service members and more than 170 Afghans in an attack outside Kabul airport a week ago.

    Taliban fighters – who seized control of Kabul Aug. 15 — are currently battling forces in the Panjshir Valley, north of Kabul, still loyal to the toppled government.
    MARCUS YAM / LOS ANGELES TIMES

    President Biden on Thursday visited the 15 injured service members at the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center outside Washington.

    With Post wires

    Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/09/03/taliban-co-founder-baradar-to-reportedly-lead-new-afghan-government/

    President Biden toured damage from Hurricane Ida in Louisiana Friday as the state struggles to restore power and rebuild after the Category 4 storm blew ashore over last weekend.

    After Air Force One touched down in New Orleans, Biden received a briefing on recovery efforts and inspected wreckage in the western suburbs of Reserve and LaPlace

    The tarmac welcome party at Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport included Democratic Gov. John Edwards and Republican Sens. Bill Cassidy and John Kennedy.

    A note card is seen in the back pocket of US President Joe Biden after he arrived at Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport.
    AFP via Getty Images
    President Biden is seen with notes in his back pocket while greeting La. Gov. John Bel Edwards.
    AP

    House Minority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.) and New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell, a Democrat, also welcomed Biden.

    Biden walked to the Marine One helicopter with a cheat-sheet of officials’ names and photos, including those of Cantrell and Jefferson Parish President Cynthia Lee Sheng sticking out of his pants pocket. He also appeared to have a script in his pocket.

    During a briefing with officials on recovery progress, Biden said, “there’s a heck of a lot more work to do and that’s why we’re here today.”

    President Joe Biden greets Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards on his arrival at Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport in Kenner, Louisiana on September 3, 2021.
    AFP via Getty Images
    President Joe Biden holds a briefing with local leaders on the impact of Hurricane Ida at the St. John Parish’s Emergency Operations Center in LaPlace, Louisiana on September 3, 2021.
    AFP via Getty Images

    “My message today is, I think what we’re all seeing — and I’m getting the same response from my Republican friends here that are in the Congress — is there’s nothing political about this. This is simply about saving lives, getting people back up and running. And we’re in this together,” he said.

    President Joe Biden stares at a fallen tree while speaking to a family affected by Hurricane Ida in LaPlace, Louisiana.
    AFP via Getty Images
    President Joe Biden walks by a tree uprooted during Hurricane Ida during his tour through the Cambridge neighborhood in LaPlace, Louisiana.
    MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images

    “I promise we’re gonna have your back until this thing gets done. And so, I’m mainly here to listen to see what’s on your mind.”

    Biden later gave handshakes and hugs while touring hurricane damage including uprooted trees and downed power lines in LaPlace, La., west of New Orleans — and used the destruction to press Congress to approve pending infrastructure bills.

    “I walk through the backyards here —  so many telephone lines are down, so many telephone poles are down, so many of the — of the way in which we transmit energy is lost because of the old wooden telephone pole,” Biden said.

    President Joe Biden talks to a boy while meeting residents devastated by Hurricane Ida in LaPlace, Louisiana
    MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images
    President Joe Biden speaks with residents whose homes were damaged by Hurricane Ida in LaPlace, Louisiana.
    MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images

    “We know for a fact if they’re underground they are secure. It costs more money. We’ve got to not just build back to what it was with the same old poles up. We got to build back better. We got to build back more resiliently.”

    Biden also called on home insurance companies to fully cover the costs of temporary housing in hotels.

    The president wrapped up his visit with a flyover tour of pummeled areas including Lafitte, Grand Isle, Port Fourchon and Lafourche Parish, where Parish President Archie Chaisson said 25 percent of the homes in his community of 100,000 were gone or had catastrophic damage.

    President Joe Biden walks to a home wrecked by Hurricane Ida in LaPlace, Louisiana.
    MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)

    At least 14 people were killed by Ida in Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama, while another 48 perished across the Northeast — including 13 people in New York City and at least 25 in New Jersey –when the storm’s remnants dumped record-setting amounts of rain, triggering flash flooding.

    The White House has not said whether Biden intends to visit the northeast to survey the storm damage there.

    After departing Louisiana, the president flew to Philadelphia, from where he planned to make the short trip to his home in Delaware to spend the long weekend. The White House said no public events were planned for Saturday or Sunday. 

    With Post wires

    President Joe Biden tours the Cambridge neighborhood damaged by Hurricane Ida in LaPlace, Louisiana.
    AP Photo/Evan Vucci

    Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/09/03/joe-biden-visits-louisiana-to-tour-hurricane-ida-damage/

    On Friday, some Silicon Valley technology companies began speaking out, too.

    Lyft’s chief executive, Logan Green, said the company would pay the legal costs of any drivers who faced lawsuits under the law. “TX SB8 threatens to punish drivers for getting people where they need to go — especially women exercising their right to choose,” he wrote on Twitter.

    Uber’s chief executive, Dara Khosrowshahi, said on Twitter that his company would also cover its drivers’ legal expenses.

    And Jeremy Stoppelman, the chief executive of Yelp, issued a statement. “The effective ban on abortions in Texas not only infringes on women’s rights to reproductive health care, but it puts their health and safety at greater risk,” he said. “We are deeply concerned about how this law will impact our employees in the state.”

    A couple executives tried to find a middle ground, cheering on democracy and opposing discrimination while remaining silent on the Texas law.

    Mr. Musk, who said he has moved to Texas and was investing a lot in the state through Tesla and SpaceX, was among them. “In general, I believe government should rarely impose its will upon the people, and, when doing so, should aspire to maximize their cumulative happiness,” he wrote on Twitter in response to Mr. Abbott’s comments. “That said, I would prefer to stay out of politics.”

    Hewlett Packard Enterprise, based in Houston, declined to comment on the ban, but said the company “encourages our team members to engage in the political process where they live and work and make their voices heard through advocacy and at the voting booth.”

    A spokesman for the company added that its medical plan allowed employees to seek abortions out of state, and would pay for lodging for such a trip.

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/03/business/companies-texas-sb8-abortion-law.html

    Mayor Bill de Blasio announced Friday that going forward he plans to emergency-evacuate tenants from illegal basement apartments vulnerable to the kind of flooding that swept through the city — rather than crack down on the illegal dwellings ahead of time.

    And even then, he said, officials won’t evict tenants from the substandard dwellings, effectively turning a blind eye to the hazardous housing — despite five of six basement apartments in which 11 people drowned when the remnants of Hurricane Ida lashed the Big Apple having been constructed illegally.

    During a news conference, de Blasio acknowledged that having an “absolute accounting” of the city’s estimated 50,000-plus illegal basement apartments — many of which potentially lack adequate escape routes — is “not something we thought of previously.”

    The mayor — under fire for failing to prepare before the deadly storm struck Wednesday night — said that “at least 100,000 people, and there’s a strong possibility there’s a lot more, are living in those apartments.”

    A man adjusts a water pump in a parking lot after the remnants of Hurricane Ida produced heavy rain and caused widespread flooding.
    ANGEL COLMENARES/EPA-EFE/Shutter

    Expressing concern more for illegal immigrants fearful of coming forward than for their safety in the illegal dwellings, the mayor said, “So many people who end up in the illegal basements are fearful to communicate, for fear they might be evicted or, worse in their mind, deported,” de Blasio said.

    “If we communicate, we can really convince people that they will not be evicted, that they will not be put in any harm because of their documentation status, at least we have the opportunity then to get people to safety when a situation like this occurs.”

    He added: “We need places for people to live. Obviously, we need them to be safe.”

    De Blasio acknowledged that having an “absolute accounting” of the city’s estimated 50,000-plus illegal apartments is “not something we thought of previously.”
    Matthew McDermott

    De Blasio also admitted a pilot program by his administration to bring illegal basement apartments up to code largely failed because it’s “very difficult, physically” and “very costly” to the property owners.

    “So we have to figure out a way forward,” he said. “I don’t think it’s realistic to say, ‘Let’s just have no one live in them,’ because I don’t know where all those folks are going to end up who need a place to live.”

    De Blasio, who has been criticized for ignoring the weather warnings ahead of Ida hitting New York said forecasts of future flooding could result in “travel bans” being announced as much as a day earlier or even “that morning,” after which “people will have to leave the streets, get out of subways, etc. — immediately.”

    In addition, Hizzoner said he was creating an “Extreme Weather Response Task Force” that would report back with other recommendations in 30 days.

    NYPD sources ridiculed de Blasio’s plan to have cops and other emergency workers go door-to-door to evacuate tenants from illegal basement apartments.

    “There are not enough first responders to handle 50,000 illegal apartments and do their regular duties, plus the extra duties the storm will normally bring,” a Manhattan cop said.

    Three boys explore a flooded area surrounding a park after the remnants of Tropical Storm Ida brought huge amounts of rain.
    Caitlin Ochs/Reuters

    A Bronx cop said, “If he knows where illegal apartments are, he should take care of that problem now before another drop of rain falls. Those apartments are death traps for a lot of reasons.”

    And a Brooklyn cop said the outgoing mayor’s plan “could be the dumbest thing this idiot has said in eight years,” adding, “Hopefully, there won’t be a storm in the next four months.”

    City Councilman Robert Holden (D-Queens) blasted de Blasio for “condoning illegal apartments,” saying it “sent a bad message” and “set a dangerous precedent.”

    Holden also said enforcement of building codes by de Blasio’s administration “has been a disaster” and he blamed Hizzoner mayor for the deaths of at least 11 people who drowned in their basement apartments Wednesday night.

    “The mayor has blood on his hands,” Holden said.

    Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/09/03/nyc-tenants-wont-be-evicted-from-illegal-basements-when-floods-come/

    The widespread destruction caused by extreme weather coast to coast, with Hurricane Ida spreading devastation from Louisiana to New York while record wildfires scorch California, prompted Joe Biden to level with America this week, saying it was “yet another reminder that … the climate crisis is here”.

    “We need to be much better prepared. We need to act,” Biden said in a speech on Thursday at the White House.

    The last week saw Hurricane Ida come ashore from the Gulf of Mexico as the fifth largest hurricane on record to hit the US.

    The massive storms spawned in its aftermath battered states on the Gulf coast and all the way up into the north-east, killing at least 48 so far in New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Connecticut after historic flooding, where officials admitted they were surprised by the tempest’s suddenness and ferocity.

    In Louisiana, many fewer were killed, just over a dozen at the most recent count, but almost a million people have been left without electricity, some indefinitely, because of the storm.

    Meanwhile, the Caldor wildfire in California has burned over 200,000 acres and is threatening more than 35,000 structures, edging close to the Lake Tahoe area and becoming one of few wildfires to rage from one side of the Sierra Nevada mountains to the other.

    While the US president first laid out details of emergency relief efforts being deployed around the country, he ended his speech by talking about how the natural disasters will continue to happen, more often and with greater intensity, because of the climate crisis.

    “This isn’t about politics. Hurricane Ida didn’t care if you were a Democrat or Republican, rural or urban,” he said. “It’s destruction everywhere. It’s a matter of life and death, and we’re all in this together,” he said, a day before he planned to fly to Louisiana to view the damage and returning via Philadelphia, which was flooded by the same vast storm system.

    Biden’s remarks were a notable departure from what Americans had become accustomed to hearing about the climate crisis under Donald Trump, who as recently as last year denied that natural disasters in the US were increasingly related to human-caused climate change.

    When pressed to consider the climate crisis as a main cause of the California wildfires last year, Trump responded: “I don’t think science knows.” He fluctuated between calling the phenomenon a hoax, making jokes about it and then sowing ambiguity and doubt throughout his election campaign and one-term presidency.

    “It’ll start getting cooler,” he said after the deadly wildfires. “You watch.”

    In contrast, Biden this summer released the most ambitious clean energy and environmental justice plans yet seen from the White House through his flagship “Build Back Better” infrastructure and budget proposals.

    Last month, the Senate passed a $1tn bipartisan infrastructure bill that includes investments in improving roads, bridges, the electric grid and public transit, among other things, to make them more energy efficient, sustainable and resistant to extreme weather.

    The bill still has to pass the House of Representatives and after good progress faces further contentious arguments on its details later this month. A related, massive $3.5tn budget bill that promises a 10-year cascade of federal resources for family support, health and education programs and an aggressive drive to heal the climate, can be passed without Republican support but needs every Democratic senator to vote for it and is currently in jeopardy.

    Biden on Thursday said that when Congress goes back into session this month, he plans to push the Build Back Better plan.

    “That’s going to make historic investments in electrical infrastructure, modernizing our roads, bridges, our water systems, sewer and draining systems, electric grids and transmission lines and make them more resilient to these superstorms, wildfires and floods that are going to happen with increasing frequency and ferocity,” he said.

    Despite his advocacy for his infrastructure bill, Biden has been coming under criticism after the White House announced this week that it will open tens of millions of acres in the Gulf of Mexico for oil and gas exploration. Environmental groups have filed a lawsuit against the federal government for the leases.

    “How does this align with [the] Biden Administration’s commitment to take ‘bold steps to combat the climate crisis?” tweeted environmental group Ocean Conservancy on Wednesday.

    Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/sep/03/climate-crisis-joe-biden-floods-wildfires-storms

    Leaders at two dating app giants in Texas — Match Group and Bumble — have moved to set up funds to aid people affected by the state’s new abortion ban. Here, abortion-rights supporters march near the Texas state capitol in Austin earlier this year.

    Sergio Flores/Getty Images


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    Sergio Flores/Getty Images

    Leaders at two dating app giants in Texas — Match Group and Bumble — have moved to set up funds to aid people affected by the state’s new abortion ban. Here, abortion-rights supporters march near the Texas state capitol in Austin earlier this year.

    Sergio Flores/Getty Images

    The dating-app company Bumble has created a special fund to help people affected by Texas’ new abortion ban. The CEO of Match, which owns Tinder, is creating a similar fund. Both companies are based in Texas and are led by women.

    “I’m not speaking about this as the CEO of a company,” Match Group CEO Shar Dubey said in a note sent to employees Thursday night. “I’m speaking about this personally, as a mother and a woman who has fervently cared about women’s rights, including the very fundamental right of choice over her body.”

    “I immigrated to America from India over 25 years ago and I have to say, as a Texas resident, I am shocked that I now live in a state where women’s reproductive laws are more regressive than most of the world, including India,” Dubey added.

    The Texas law bans abortions after about six weeks of pregnancy, which is earlier than most people would realize that they’ve become pregnant. It also extends enforcement powers to the general public.

    Match Group says its leader, not the company itself, is creating the fund, which would provide aid to any Match employees in Texas who are forced by the new abortion restriction to seek care outside the state. Dallas-based Match owns Tinder, Plenty of Fish and a dozen other apps.

    Dubey’s message came the day after Bumble, which is based in Austin, said it was setting up a fund to support reproductive rights.

    “Bumble has created a relief fund supporting the reproductive rights of women and people across the gender spectrum who seek abortions in Texas,” the company said as the state’s new abortion law took effect this week.

    “We’ll keep fighting against regressive laws like” the one in Texas, the company said, noting that it was founded by women and is led by CEO Whitney Wolfe Herd.

    Match Group CEO Dubey also called the Texas law regressive — a “big step back in women’s rights,” she said, noting that it does not allow exceptions to the ban for victims of rape or incest.

    Bumble’s tweet announcement of its fund has met with a mixed response. Some commenters asked the company to reconsider the move — but others said the company should move out of Texas altogether.

    Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/09/03/1033980404/texas-abortion-ban-bumble-match-funds

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2021/09/03/asia/kabul-afghan-women-protest-intl/index.html

    Amtrak said it would resume service along the Northeast Corridor, between Washington and Boston, on Friday, but it said trains between Albany and New York City would remain canceled.

    New Jersey Transit said all train lines except Pascack Valley and Raritan Valley would operate on a regular weekday schedule on Friday, with the Main-Bergen County Line temporarily suspended for a pedestrian fatality near Garfield unrelated to the storm. Bus service was running on a weekday schedule, but with some delays and detours.

    The Long Island Rail Road resumed full service by Friday, with some disruptions spilling into the morning. On the Metro-North Railroad, train service resumed Friday morning for the New Haven Line and the Harlem Line after workers cleared more than 10 inches of water and debris from several stations. The Hudson Line, which suffered the most damage, remained suspended.

    “Our crews have made extraordinary progress over the last 24 hours in extremely difficult conditions,” Catherine Rinaldi, president of Metro-North, said in a statement Thursday night. “I cannot thank our crew members enough for the heroic work they have been doing and will continue to do.”

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/03/nyregion/nyc-trains-amtrak-hurricane-ida.html