Memphis; Tupelo, Starkville, Hattiesburg, Meridian and Jackson, Miss.; Tuscaloosa, Mobile and Montgomery, Ala.; and Monroe and Alexandria, La., are in the greatest-risk category. A lesser, but still formidable, Level 3 out of 5 enhanced risk covers Nashville, Little Rock, New Orleans, Birmingham and Huntsville, Ala.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/weather/2022/03/30/severe-storm-outbreak-south-tornado/

Pennsylvania State Police said six people were killed in Monday’s massive pileup on a snowy Interstate 81 near Minersville, Schuylkill County.

Police are not releasing any names at this time.

Police had said Monday that at least three people were killed. However, due to numerous burning vehicles they were not able to complete a search of the wreckage.

The new death toll number was announced Wednesday morning.

Up to 60 vehicles were involved in the crash that turned the stretch of road between the Tremont/Tower City exit and Highridge Park Road into a chaotic smoking scene. At least 24 people were taken to the hospital. Watch the video below to see aerial shots of the huge pileup.

I-81 reopens

I-81 fully reopened Wednesday around 1 a.m., more than 40 hours after the crash happened.

After towing all the vehicles away, crews had to re-mill the roadway.

The top layer of asphalt had to be removed because so many liquids, such as oil, fuel and antifreeze, had been spilled.

Pennsylvania State Police said the huge crash was caused by a snow squall.

“The snow came out of nowhere. I was just driving back and then could see only one car in front of me and then it went fully white, I couldn’t even see three feet in front of me,” said witness Lillie Weaver. “I was hearing loud bangs, explosions and then I saw the smoke. That was the one thing I could see was black smoke from the tractor-trailer.”

The Red Cross was called in to assist people stuck on the road.

Warning: harrowing first-person video captures crash

Mike Moye was involved in the crash and shot a first-hand account of what happened after he got out of his car, including burning tractor-trailers, a person almost getting hit, an out-of-control tow truck and more. Please note there is profanity and some may find the video disturbing. You can watch it below:

Second huge crash in central Pennsylvania this month

Monday’s crash is the second time this month there has been a big chain reaction crash on a central Pennsylvania road.

On Saturday, March 12, 70 cars, SUVs, trucks and tractor-trailers were involved in a huge crash on Route 581 in Lower Allen Township, Cumberland County. Crews at the scene told WGAL that a snowstorm may have played a role.

No one was killed in that crash, but some people were treated for injuries.

A man with a roadside assistance company took a three-minute walk through the wreckage. You can see that video below.

Stay with WGAL for updates on this developing story.

|| Download the WGAL app | Get breaking news email alerts ||


Source Article from https://www.wgal.com/article/six-people-killed-huge-crash-interstate-81-schuylkill-county-pennsylvania/39584931

  • Abramovich and Ukrainian officials were victims of a suspected poisoning in March, reports said.
  • The symptoms were so bad that Abramovich asked if he was dying, The New York Times reported.
  • The Russian oligarch was pictured at more peace talks earlier this week.

The Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich asked a scientist, “Are we dying?” after an apparent poisoning earlier this month, The New York Times reported, citing someone who was present.

The suspected poisoning is said to have taken place on the night of March 3 after Abramovich and Ukrainian peace negotiators attended talks between Ukraine and Russia in Kyiv, Ukraine, Bellingcat and The Wall Street Journal reported.

After the meeting, Abramovich and two members of the negotiating team, including Ukrainian MP Rustem Umerov, experienced symptoms that included red eyes, constant and painful tearing, and peeling skin on their faces and hands, the reports said.

Abramovich was also blinded for a few hours and had trouble eating, a person familiar with the matter told the Journal.

The symptoms were so bad that Abramovich asked a scientist who was inspecting him whether he was dying, the Times reported on Tuesday, citing a person who was present during the examination.

Bellingcat reported on Monday that experts examining the suspected attack concluded that the dosage and type of toxin was “likely insufficient to cause life-threatening damage, and most likely was intended to scare the victims as opposed to cause permanent damage.”

The conditions of Abramovich and the Ukrainian officials have since improved, the Journal reported, and Abramovich was pictured in another round of peace talks in Turkey on Tuesday. It’s unclear whether Umerov and the other negotiator were also present at the talks.

It’s also unclear who carried out the suspected attack. Bellingcat said the apparent victims did not know who might have been behind the attacks. The Journal, citing people familiar with the matter, reported that it could have been orchestrated by Russian hard-liners who wanted to sabotage the peace negotiations.

A US official downplayed the reports, telling Reuters that intelligence suggested the symptoms were caused by environmental factors.

Dmitry Peskov, the Kremlin’s spokesperson, told reporters on Tuesday that the reports didn’t “correspond to reality,” Agence France-Presse reported.

Russia has carried out poisoning attacks in the past, including on the former spy Sergei Skripal and Alexei Navalny, a critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/roman-abramovich-asked-are-we-dying-after-apparent-poisoning-nyt-2022-3

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signs the Parental Rights in Education bill at Classical Preparatory School in Spring Hill, Fla., on Monday, March 28, 2022.

Douglas R. Clifford/AP


hide caption

toggle caption

Douglas R. Clifford/AP

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signs the Parental Rights in Education bill at Classical Preparatory School in Spring Hill, Fla., on Monday, March 28, 2022.

Douglas R. Clifford/AP

It’s a bill that’s drawn nationwide controversy, dubbed by opponents as the “Don’t Say Gay” bill.

President Biden called it “hateful.”

It was ridiculed by the hosts of this year’s Academy Awards.

On Monday, it became Florida law, when Gov. Ron DeSantis signed the Parental Rights in Education bill.

Now, Florida teachers are wondering how the new law will affect them and their students.

Among its controversial measures, the law forbids instruction on sexual orientation and gender identity from kindergarten through third grade.

“We will make sure that parents can send their kids to school to get an education, not an indoctrination,” DeSantis said at the bill signing in Spring Hill, Fla., flanked by young children at Classical Preparatory School which, as a charter school, will not be affected by the law.

Opponents of the law, DeSantis said, “support sexualizing kids in kindergarten. They support injecting woke gender ideology into second grade classrooms.”

Teachers say students have other concerns

That’s news to teachers such as Paula Stephens, who teaches first grade at Eisenhower Elementary School in Clearwater, Fla.

Paula Stephens teaches first grade at Eisenhower Elementary School in Clearwater, Fla. “I see this as opening a door to putting a lot more restrictions in the classroom,” she says, “and it’s just worrisome to me.”

Paula Stephens


hide caption

toggle caption

Paula Stephens

Her first-graders aren’t focused on sexual orientation or gender identity. Their main concern, she says, is “Is it snack time?”

After all, Stephens says, teaching about sexual orientation and gender identity isn’t part of the firstgrade curriculum. But talking about families is part of her curriculum, and some of her students may have two moms or two dads.

“It makes me wonder,” she says, “when I talk about families in my classroom, am I going to be violating this law because the children were having discussions about what their family looks like?”

The law’s sponsors say that’s not the intent. But Stephens fears the law’s language is so vague that it will have a chilling effect, and she worries about what other topics might become a target.

“What’s next?” she asks. “If they’re going after this conversation now, where does this stop? … I’m very fearful that this law is going to just open it up for a lot more things to start being discriminated against.”

Some teachers view the law as ‘a blatant attack on education’

Beyond kindergarten through third grade, the Florida law also says that any instruction about sexual orientation or gender identity, in any grade, has to be “age-appropriate or developmentally appropriate in accordance with state standards.”

Opponents say the law will effectively muzzle any discussion of sexual orientation or gender identity, out of fear. Under the law, parents can sue the school district if they believe the school is in violation.

“Honestly, I feel like it’s just a blatant attack on education,” says Jorje Botello, who has taught eighth grade American history for 19 years at Osceola Middle School in rural Okeechobee, Fla. “A lot of these bills are written by people that have never set foot in a public education classroom.”

Jorje Botello, teaches 8th grade American history at Osceola Middle School in Okeechobee, Fla. “If I feel like I’m going to be watched by Big Brother all the time,” he says, “what’s the point?”

Jorje Botello


hide caption

toggle caption

Jorje Botello

Under the new law, he wonders, will it be considered age-appropriate to tell his students that the Revolutionary War hero, the Prussian General Friedrich Wilhelm Von Steuben, is widely believed to have been openly gay?

“When you look back in history,” Botello says, “there’s clear examples of how these different groups that are being attacked today actually helped form our country. … They’re a part of our story.”

Botello believes lessons like these can empower LGBTQ students, weaving them into America’s history. As a Mexican-American, he says, he knows how important that kind of representation is; growing up, he didn’t see himself in the history books.

Looking ahead to teaching under the new law, Botello says he’ll be more cautious.

“I know that I have to think a little harder when I navigate [these subjects] next year, now that this bill is gonna be in effect,” he says.

If the climate becomes too restrictive, Botello says, he might have to consider retiring.

“If I feel like I’m gonna be watched by Big Brother all the time,” he says, “like, what’s the point?”

Demonstrators gather to protest what opponents call the “Don’t Say Gay” bill on the steps of the Florida Historic Capitol Museum in Tallahassee on March 7, 2022.

Wilfredo Lee/AP


hide caption

toggle caption

Wilfredo Lee/AP

Demonstrators gather to protest what opponents call the “Don’t Say Gay” bill on the steps of the Florida Historic Capitol Museum in Tallahassee on March 7, 2022.

Wilfredo Lee/AP

Some teachers say their role is to help students feel OK with who they are

For Clinton McCracken, who has taught art for 21 years at Howard Middle School Academy of Arts in Orlando, this law feels like a hateful, personal attack.

As a gay man, he says, it tells him and his LGBTQ students that there’s something “inappropriate” about them: that their identity is taboo, or somehow dirty.

Clinton McCracken teaches art at Howard Middle School Academy of Arts in Orlando. The new law, he says, “tries to teach vulnerable youth that there’s something wrong with them, that there’s something bad about being LGBTQ.”

Dr. Bob Walker


hide caption

toggle caption

Dr. Bob Walker

McCracken points to a 2021 survey from the Trevor Project, a nonprofit suicide prevention organization for LGBTQ youth, which found that 42% of LGBTQ youth seriously considered attempting suicide in the past year.

“I can tell you as someone who grew up as a gay boy, how real that statistic is,” he says, “and how dangerous it is that these Republican legislators are playing with the safety of our vulnerable youth.”

McCracken is appalled when he hears DeSantis claim that schools are, in the governor’s words, “sexualizing” kids and “injecting transgenderism” into the classroom.

“This is a created culture war from him so that he can achieve his political ambitions. That’s all this is,” McCracken says. “So yeah, I’m not teaching kids how to be gay in my classroom, but I’ll tell you what I am doing. I am trying with all my power to teach kids to be OK with who they are.”

McCracken says the teachers he’s talked with say the new law won’t silence them.

“They’re going to teach just like they were teaching and they’re going to provide safe spaces in their classrooms just like they have been,” he says.

If that means parents sue their school districts, he says, then so be it: “It’s the right thing to do.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2022/03/30/1089462508/teachers-fear-the-chilling-effect-of-floridas-so-called-dont-say-gay-law

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy expressed skepticism Tuesday night about Russia’s announcement that it would significantly scale back military operations near Ukraine’s capital and a northern city.

“Yes, we can call those signals that we hear at the negotiations positive. But those signals don’t silence the explosions of Russian shells,” Zelenskyy said. “Of course we see the risks. Of course we don’t see any basis for trusting the words voiced by those or other representatives of the state that is continuing to fight for our destruction.”

Negotiations are expected to resume Wednesday, five weeks into what has devolved into a bloody war of attrition, with thousands dead and almost 4 million Ukrainians fleeing the country.

“Ukrainians are not naïve people,” Zelenskyy said. “Ukrainians have already learned during the 34 days of the invasion and during the past eight years of war in the Donbas that you can trust only concrete results.”

Ukraine’s delegation at the conference, held in Istanbul, has laid out a framework under which the country would declare itself neutral and its security would be guaranteed by an array of other nations.

___

KEY DEVELOPMENTS IN THE RUSSIA-UKRAINE WAR:

— Russia says it will scale back near Kyiv as talks progress

— Many in Mideast see hypocrisy in Western embrace of Ukraine

— After Russian forces pull back, a shattered town breathes

Pentagon may need more budget funding to help Ukraine

— UN chief launches effort for Ukraine humanitarian cease-fire

— Ukraine’s other fight: Growing food for itself and the world

— Go to https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine for more coverage

___

OTHER DEVELOPMENTS:

Ukraine’s U.N. Ambassador Sergiy Kyslytsya told the U.N. Security Council on Tuesday that the “demilitarization of Russia is well under way.”

Since the beginning of the invasion into Ukraine, Kyslytsya said the Russian occupiers have lost more than 17,000 military personnel, over 1,700 armored vehicles and almost 600 tanks.

He also said Russia also has lost 300 artillery systems, 127 planes and 129 helicopters, almost 100 rocket launchers systems, 54 air defense systems and seven ships.

Kyslytsya said that is “an unprecedented blow to Moscow, where the numbers of Soviet losses in Afghanistan pale in comparison.”

Earlier Tuesday, Russia announced it will significantly scale back military operations near Ukraine’s capital and a northern city, as the outlines of a possible deal to end the grinding war came into view at the latest round of talks.

Negotiations are expected to resume Wednesday, five weeks into what has devolved into a bloody war of attrition, with thousands dead and almost 4 million Ukrainians fleeing the country.

__

Ukrainian military officials said they distrust Russia’s announced withdrawal from around Kyiv and Chernihiv.

Earlier Tuesday, Russia announced it will significantly scale back military operations near Ukraine’s capital and a northern city, as the outlines of a possible deal to end the grinding war came into view at the latest round of talks.

“There are indications that the Russian forces are regrouping to focus their efforts on eastern Ukraine,” the Ukrainian general staff said in a statement late Tuesday. “At the same time, the so-called ‘withdrawal of troops’ is most likely a rotation of individual units and is aimed at misleading the Ukrainian military leadership” by creating the misconception that the Russians have decided not to try to encircle Kyiv.

Ukraine’s delegation at the conference, held in Istanbul, laid out a framework under which the country would declare itself neutral and its security would be guaranteed by an array of other nations.

Negotiations were expected to resume Wednesday, five weeks into what has devolved into a bloody war of attrition, with thousands dead and almost 4 million Ukrainians fleeing the country.

__

The U.N. food chief is warning that the war in Ukraine has created “a catastrophe on top of a catastrophe” and will have a global impact “beyond anything we’ve seen since World War II” because farmers from the country which was the breadbasket of the world are on the front lines fighting Russia and already high food prices are skyrocketing.

David Beasley, executive director of the U.N. World Food Program, told the U.N. Security Council Tuesday that his agency, which was feeding 125 million people before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, was already beginning to cut rations because of rising food, fuel and shipping costs for millions of families around the world. In war-torn Yemen, he said, 8 million people just had their food allotment cut to 50% “and now we’re looking at going to zero rations.”

The war in Ukraine is decimating the country, “turning the breadbasket of the world to breadlines” for millions of its people, Beasley said. But it is also devastating countries around the world like Egypt which is 85% dependent on Ukraine grain and Lebanon which was 81% dependent in 2020.

Ukraine and Russia produce 30% of the global wheat supply, 20% of the global maize supply and 75-80% of the sunflower seed oil.

__

Russia and Ukraine have traded accusations about the naval mines that have been set adrift in the Black Sea, threatening shipping.

The Russian military has alleged that the Ukrainian military has used old naval mines to protect the coast against a Russian landing and some of them have been ripped off their anchors by a storm and left adrift.

Russian Col. Gen. Mikhail Mizintsev reaffirmed Tuesday that “the threat of Ukrainian mines drifting along the coastline of Black Sea states remains.”

The Ukrainian Foreign Ministry responded in a statement Tuesday, accusing Russia of using Ukrainian mines it seized after the 2014 annexation of Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula and setting them adrift to “discredit Ukraine before international partners.”

The Turkish Defense Ministry said Saturday that a naval mine was spotted near the Bosporus and neutralized. It said the mine was of an old type but didn’t say to whom it belonged.

The conflicting claims by Russia and Ukraine couldn’t be independently verified.

__

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden on Tuesday said he wasn’t yet convinced that Russia’s announcement that it would scale back military operations near the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv will lead to a fundamental shift in the war.

During an appearance with Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong following bilateral talks at the White House, Biden said he was waiting to see what Russia offers in ongoing talks with Ukraine and how Moscow readjusts its troop presence.

U.S. and Western officials have expressed skepticism about Russia’s announcement earlier on Tuesday that it would dial back operations in an effort to increase trust in ongoing talks between Ukrainian and Russian officials in Turkey.

“We’ll see,” Biden said. “I don’t read anything into it until I see what their actions are.”

White House communications director Kate Bedingfield later expressed an even greater skepticism, saying the administration views any movement of Russian forces as a “redeployment and not a withdrawal” and “no one should be fooled by Russia’s announcement.”

___

KYIV, Ukraine — Russia announced Tuesday it will significantly scale back military operations near Ukraine’s capital and a northern city, as the outlines of a possible deal to end the grinding war came into view at the latest round of talks.

Ukraine’s delegation at the conference, held in Istanbul, laid out a framework under which the country would declare itself neutral and its security would be guaranteed by an array of other nations.

Moscow’s public reaction was positive, and the negotiations are expected to resume Wednesday, five weeks into what has devolved into a bloody war of attrition, with thousands dead and almost 4 million Ukrainians fleeing the country.

The apparent goodwill gesture comes as Russia’s troops have become bogged down and struggled to make major advances on the ground recently in the face of stiff Ukrainian resistance. Ukraine’s military said it had noted withdrawals around Kyiv and Chernihiv, though the Pentagon said it could not corroborate Russia’s claim.

__

KYIV, Ukraine — Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says that the talks with Russian negotiators have given some positive signals but warned Russia can’t be trusted.

Russia announced after Tuesday’s talks between Ukrainian and Russian delegation in Istanbul, Turkey that it will significantly reduce military operations near Ukraine’s capital of Kyiv and the northern city of Chernihiv.

The U.S. and others earlier expressed skepticism in Russia’s announcement.

In a video address Tuesday night, Zelenskyy said Ukrainian troops’ “courageous and effective actions” forced Russia to scale down its action around Kyiv and Chernihiv.

He said Ukraine will continue the negotiation process “to the extent depending on us” but emphasized mistrust in “the words coming from representatives of the country that continue fighting to destroy us.”

Zelenskyy said Ukraine’s negotiators won’t compromise “on sovereignty and territorial integrity.”

__

WASHINGTON — The Pentagon says it has detected “small numbers” of Russian ground forces moving away from the Kyiv area.

Spokesman John Kirby said Tuesday that the movement appears to be a repositioning of forces, “not a real withdrawal.” He said it was too soon to say how extensive the Russian movements may be or where the troops will be repositioned.

“It does not mean the threat to Kyiv is over,” he said. “They can still inflict massive brutality on the country, including on Kyiv.”

He said Russian airstrikes against Kyiv are continuing.

Asked whether the Pentagon assesses that Russian military campaign in Ukraine has failed, Kirby said the Russian forces have failed in their initial objective of conquering Kyiv but remain a threat to the country, including the eastern Donbas region where Russian forces now appear to be focusing more fully.

___

WASHINGTON — Members of the Ukrainian parliament visiting the U.S. Congress are urging their American allies to send more military supplies — air support, tanks and other equipment – to push the Russians out of their country.

As the Ukrainian legislators spoke Tuesday at a Capitol Hill press conference, one of their cell phones blared with the sound of an air raid siren going off in the country back home.

The Ukrainians spoke at a roundtable with members of the Congressional Ukraine Caucus, a longstanding group from the U.S. House focused Ukrainian issues.

___

MILAN — Italian Premier Mario Draghi has met with Italy’s president after a key coalition partner put in question support for Italy’s commitment to raise its military spending in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

A government official confirmed the meeting Tuesday evening, after Draghi met privately with the head of the 5-Star Movement, former Premier Giuseppe Conte. Conte reportedly has balked at Italy’s intention to raise military spending to 2% of GDP in line with other NATO members.

Draghi’s message to Conte was that it would be difficult to sustain the coalition agreement backing the current government if the 5-Star movement puts international commitments into question, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak publicly.

The official noted that while Conte was premier Italy increased its military spending 17%, from 21 billion euros to 24.6 billion euros.

Conte told reporters Monday that he did not want to put the government at risk but added ’’we are the largest party and we have a right to be heard.”

— Associated Press writer Colleen Barry contributed from Milan.

___

WARSAW — Poland’s government has decided to block imports of coal from Russia, part of an overarching strategy to reduce energy dependence that gained new urgency after Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.

Poland will impose financial penalties on any private entities importing Russian coal into Poland, with Polish customs officials carrying out checks, government spokesman Piotr Mueller said as he announced the new policy on Tuesday.

He added that Poland could no longer wait for the whole 27-nation European Union to embrace the policy.

Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the EU, the United States and some other powers imposed a range of economic sanctions on Russia. But Europe has historically been dependent on Russian energy sources.

And while Poland produces much of its own coal, it also relies on imports. Russian coal makes up 13% of the fuel used each year, according to Piotr Lewandowski, the president of the Institute for Structural Research in Warsaw.

___

HORDYNIA, Ukraine — A second front line in Russia’s war runs through the farmland in western Ukraine, far from the daily resistance against the invasion. It is an uphill battle for farmers to feed not only their country but the world.

Ukraine and Russia account for a third of global wheat and barley exports, leaving millions across North Africa, the Middle East and parts of Asia facing the potential loss of access to the affordable supplies they need for bread and noodles.

The war has raised the specter of food shortages and political instability in countries reliant on Ukrainian wheat, including Indonesia, Egypt, Yemen and Lebanon.

It is unclear how many farmers in Ukraine will be able to plant or tend to their harvests with the war raging, forcing many to the front lines. Damage to infrastructure also makes it difficult to get critical supplies and export products.

___

LONDON — Britain’s government has seized a superyacht owned by a Russian billionaire with ties to Vladimir Putin — the first vessel to be detained in the U.K. under sanctions imposed because of the war in Ukraine.

U.K. officials, including Transport Secretary Grant Shapps, boarded the vessel at Canary Wharf in east London on Tuesday. The name of the vessel’s owner was not made public.

The 58.5-meter (192-foot) yacht is bright blue and features an “infinite wine cellar” and freshwater swimming pool, according to the National Crime Agency. It is valued at 38 million pounds ($50 million).

The Phi, named after a mathematical concept, was in London for a “refit” but “won’t be going anywhere,” Shapps said.

The yacht is registered in St. Kitts and Nevis but carried Maltese flags to hide its origins, the crime agency said.

___

LVIV, Ukraine — Ukraine’s authorities have updated the death toll from the Russian strike on the regional government’s building in Mykolaiv to 12.

Mykola Ponasenko, a spokesman for the state emergencies service, said 12 bodies have been recovered from the debris of the nine-story regional administration headquarters in Mykolaiv, a key Black Sea port and shipbuilding center.

He said the search for more bodies was continuing. The authorities previously reported that seven people were killed by a Russian strike on the building on Tuesday.

At least 22 people have been wounded.

___

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden says he’s waiting to see how Russia adjusts its troop presence in Ukraine before assessing the intent behind them.

Speaking to reporters at the White House, Biden was asked whether the withdrawal was a sign that negotiations to rein in the month-long invasion might be showing progress, or an indication that Russia was merely trying to buy time to continue its assault on Ukraine.

“We’ll see,” he said. “I don’t read anything into it until I see what their actions are.”

As for the negotiations between Russia and Ukraine, Biden said the consensus of Western allies is to “see what they have to offer.”

___

LONDON — Western officials say Russia is building up troops in eastern Ukraine, but it’s too soon to say whether Moscow’s claim to be scaling back operations around Kyiv is true.

Officials familiar with the intelligence picture said Tuesday that Moscow is reinforcing troops in the Donbas in an attempt to encircle Ukraine’s best-trained and best-equipped forces, which are concentrated in the eastern region. Moscow has said gaining control of the Donbas is now its main military goal in Ukraine.

A Western official speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss intelligence said it’s clear that Russia’s “tactics and strategies are changing” but it’s not yet clear what that prefigures.

The British government also expressed skepticism about Russia’s claims to be scaling back and its commitment to ending the war through talks.

“We will judge Putin and his regime by his actions, not by his words,” said Max Blain, spokesman for Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

— Associated Press writer Jill Lawless contributed from London.

___

WASHINGTON — The White House is rejecting as “false” and “disinformation” assertions by Russia that the U.S. government is launching cyber operations against Moscow that include the theft of personal data and the spreading of false information about the Russian military.

The Russian Foreign Ministry made the assertions in a statement Tuesday. It alleged that the U.S. and other NATO members had trained Ukrainian hackers and blamed what it said was an effort by Ukraine to recruit international hackers.

Emily Horne, a spokesperson for the White House National Security Council, responded by calling the claims “false” and said the U.S. government has “not engaged in the activity described by Russia.” She says “Moscow’s statements to the contrary amount to disinformation.”

___

WASHINGTON — The U.S. will likely need to add more permanent or rotational forces in Europe in the wake of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the U.S. European Command leader told Congress Tuesday, without detailing when or how many.

Gen. Tod Wolters, who also serves as NATO’s supreme allied commander, said decisions will be based on what European nations do, particularly in response to the need to build four additional NATO battlegroups, which are being set up in Hungary, Slovakia, Romania and Bulgaria. The groups are an effort to protect and reassure nations on Europe’s eastern flank.

“My suspicion is we’re going to still need more,” Wolters told the Senate Armed Services Committee.

Questioned about early U.S. intelligence that suggested Russia would overwhelm Ukraine quickly, Wolters said that there may have been an “intel gap.” He said broader reviews of the U.S. response to the war will consider that element.

On Russia’s use of hypersonic weapons in Ukraine, Wolters said there have been “multiple” launches that appeared to be an attempt by Putin to demonstrate his military’s capabilities..

“I don’t think they were successful,” he said.

___

MOSCOW — The Kremlin-backed leader of the Russian province of Chechnya has called for storming the Ukrainian capital.

Ramzan Kadyrov’s statement came Tuesday as the Russian military announced after a round of talks with Ukrainian negotiators in Istanbul, Turkey that it would scale back its combat operations near the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv and the northern city of Chernihiv.

Speaking to about 10,000 troops in Chechnya’s regional capital of Grozny, Kadyrov said that “we need to complete what we have started and shouldn’t stop.” He said if Moscow had allowed his fighters to press the offensive, “I’m more than confident that we would have entered Kyiv and established order there.”

Kadyrov has posted numerous videos on a messaging app allegedly featuring himself and Chechen fighters on the outskirts of Kyiv and in the besieged Sea of Azov port of Mariupol. Those videos couldn’t be independently verified.

___

ISTANBUL, Turkey — The head of the Russian delegation in talks with Ukraine says that Moscow sees the latest meeting as a step toward compromise.

Vladimir Medinsky said on Russian RT television that Russia sees Ukrainian proposals made Tuesday during the talks in Istanbul as a “step to meet us halfway, a clearly positive fact.”

He added that the two parties have a long way to go to reach an agreement.

Medinsky said that Russia made “two big steps toward peace” during the talks, first by agreeing to reduce military activities around the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv and the northern city of Chernihiv. He said Russia agreed to a prospective meeting between Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy once a prospective peace treaty is ready for signing.

The Ukrainian delegation earlier Tuesday said it had laid out a possible framework for a future peace deal based on legally binding security guarantees that would provide for other countries to intervene if Ukraine is attacked.

___

THE HAGUE, Netherlands — In what appeared to be a coordinated action to tackle Russian espionage, at least four European allies expelled a total of dozens of Russian diplomats on Tuesday.

The expulsions come against a backdrop of relations between Russia and the West that have been plunged into a deep freeze following Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.

The Netherlands said it was expelling 17 Russians who it described as intelligence officers masquerading as diplomats. Belgium said it was ejecting 21 Russians. The Czech Republic gave one Russian diplomat 72 hours to leave the country. Ireland told four senior Russian officials to leave the country because of activities deemed not “in accordance with international standards of diplomatic behaviour.”

Poland last week expelled 45 Russians whom the government identified as intelligence officers using their diplomatic status as cover to operate in the country.

___

Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/russia-ukraine-business-religion-europe-united-nations-48a35c1e9b53a055974110dd2e5afa02

Internal White House records from the day of the attack on the U.S. Capitol that were turned over to the House select committee show a gap in President Donald Trump’s phone logs of seven hours and 37 minutes, including the period when the building was being violently assaulted, according to documents obtained by CBS News’ chief election & campaign correspondent Robert Costa and The Washington Post’s associate editor Bob Woodward.

The lack of an official White House notation of any calls placed to or by Trump for 457 minutes — from 11:17 a.m. to 6:54 p.m. — on Jan. 6, 2021 means there is no record of the calls made by Trump as his supporters descended on the U.S. Capitol, battled overwhelmed police and forcibly entered the building, prompting lawmakers and Vice President Mike Pence to flee for safety.

The 11 pages of records — which consist of the president’s official daily diary and the White House switchboard call log — were turned over by the National Archives earlier this year to the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack.

The records show that Trump was active on the phone for part of the day, documenting conversations that he had with at least eight people in the morning and 11 people that evening. The gap also stands in stark contrast to the extensive public reporting about phone conversations he had with allies during the attack.


White House records turned over to House show over 7-hour gap in Trump phone log on Jan. 6

05:30

The chairman of the Jan. 6 House select committee, Rep. Bennie Thompson, Democrat of Mississippi, called the reported gap in the log “concerning.”

“Obviously, there is not a second in the day that the president of the United States is not on record somewhere,” Thompson told CBS News on Tuesday after a White House bill signing event. He said the committee would see “if we can piece it together.”

“Having a record of what the president was doing on that day is absolutely vital to the work of the committee,” Thompson added.  

Thompson also said that the committee does not yet have any evidence that there were calls the president had made or received in that time period, but “if the Capitol of the United States is being overrun, somebody made some calls. And we just have to find them.”

The House panel is now investigating whether Trump communicated that day through backchannels, phones of aides or personal disposable phones, known as “burner phones,” according to two people with knowledge of the probe, who, like others interviewed for this report, spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive information. The committee is also scrutinizing whether it received the full log from that day.

The records show that former White House chief strategist Stephen K. Bannon — who said on his Jan. 5 podcast that “all hell is going to break loose tomorrow” — spoke with Trump twice on Jan. 6.

A spokesman for the committee declined to comment.

In a statement Monday night, Trump said, “I have no idea what a burner phone is, to the best of my knowledge I have never even heard the term.”

But former Trump national security adviser John Bolton said in an interview Tuesday, after the CBS News-Washington Post reporting had been published, that he recalls Trump using the term “burner phones” in several discussions and that Trump was aware of its meaning.

Bolton said he and Trump have spoken about how people have used “burner phones” to avoid having their calls scrutinized. 

A Trump spokesperson said that Trump had nothing to do with the records and had assumed any and all of his phone calls were recorded and preserved.

For more, read The Washington Post story co-written by Costa and Woodward. 

Ed O’Keefe and Arden Farhi contributed to this report.  

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trump-calls-seven-hour-gap-january-6/

The president’s signature ended more than 100 years of failed efforts by the federal government to specifically outlaw lynching. The bill, which makes lynching punishable by up to 30 years in prison, was passed by the House in February with only three lawmakers opposed, and passed the Senate without objection on Monday.

Legislation to criminalize lynching was first introduced in 1900, and again in subsequent years, but it was repeatedly blocked, including by Southern senators during the Jim Crow era. Lawmakers failed more than 200 times to get it passed. In 2005, the Senate formally apologized for that record.

“It failed again and again and again and again,” Vice President Kamala Harris said Tuesday, noting the history-making moment.

Ms. Harris sponsored the new law with Senator Cory Booker, Democrat of New Jersey, when she was still in the Senate. But she also praised Senator Tim Scott, Republican of South Carolina; and Representative Bobby L. Rush, Democrat of Illinois, who had spent years on the effort.

Both Mr. Biden and Ms. Harris gave credit to Ida B. Wells, a Black journalist who fought lynching in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and became one of the founders of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. One of her descendants spoke at the event Tuesday.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/29/us/politics/biden-signs-anti-lynching-bill.html




A week after a powerful tornado tore through the New Orleans area, southeast Louisiana could see more damaging winds and possibly tornadoes Wednesday afternoon, National Weather Service forecasters said. Wind advisories are in effect.

A low-pressure system is expected to move through the New Orleans and Baton Rouge areas, packing wind gusts of more than 70 mph, comparable to winds associated with a Category 1 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson scale. 

Embedded tornadoes and tornadoes strong enough to tear roofs from homes are also possible, though damaging winds are the bigger threat, forecasters said. Baton Rouge is more at risk for severe weather than is New Orleans. 








image via National Weather Service in Slidell


“We could see wind gusts in excess of 70 mph, which are certainly just as capable of producing damage as some tornadoes,” said Bob Wagner, a meteorologist with the Weather Service’s Slidell office. 

Residents should avoid elevated roadways and secure garbage cans and lawn furniture ahead of the system’s arrival, Wagner said. 











The window for severe weather in the Baton Rouge and New Orleans areas is between Wednesday at 7 a.m. and Thursday at 7 a.m.  








image via National Weather Service in Slidell


Severe storms are likeliest between 3 p.m. and 7 p.m. in the Baton Rouge area, and between 4 p.m. and 10 p.m. in most of the New Orleans area. Slidell and Boothville will see storms between 9 p.m. and 1 a.m. 

Before the storms arrive, areas in their path will see sustained winds of 25 to 35 mph, with some gusts of 50 mph, forecasters said. 

One to two inches of rain are also expected, though higher amounts are possible in some locations. Hail could also form. 

Any tornadoes that form are expected to notch an EF2 or greater on the Enhanced Fujita scale, with winds between 113 and 157 mph. That’s strong enough to tear off roofs, demolish mobile homes and uproot large trees. 

The severe weather event comes eight days after a tornado packing winds of 160 mph slammed into Arabi, destroying dozens of homes and businesses. The EF3 tornado also wreaked havoc in Terrytown, Gretna and New Orleans East, according to surveyors. 

To prepare for Wednesday, the Weather Service encourages residents to sign up for severe weather warnings and have a safe place to take shelter.



Source Article from https://www.nola.com/news/weather/article_fcb9a8aa-af80-11ec-a831-f797f0b28a00.html

One possibility, said Laurie L. Levenson, a criminal law professor at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles, is that prosecutors would have to prove that Mr. Trump knew for sure that Mr. Pence had no lawful basis to do what he was asking. Another possibility is that prosecutors would need to prove only that Mr. Trump had at least some reason to believe that his conduct might be unlawful and proceeded anyway, she said.

Because even though senior government officials were telling him there was no factual or legal basis for Mr. Pence to unilaterally reject some states’ electoral votes or otherwise slow down the certification, Mr. Eastman told Mr. Trump that he interpreted the law as giving Mr. Pence legitimate authority to take such a step.

Julie O’Sullivan, a Georgetown University criminal law professor, said in any criminal trial, it would ultimately be up to the jury to decide what Mr. Trump truly believed. Unless evidence emerges that he told someone at the time that he knew what he was saying was false, she said, that will be a challenge.

“The problem with Trump is defining his state of mind when it is so changeable,” she said. “He believes whatever he wants to think and it doesn’t necessarily have to be grounded in reality. That’s a tough argument to a jury, to say he knew any particular thing.”

Because the legal standard of proof is lower for deciding the crime-fraud exception applied in a subpoena dispute than it is for convicting someone of a crime.

Judge Carter concluded that Mr. Trump “likely knew that the plan to disrupt the electoral count was wrongful” using the “preponderance of the evidence” standard, under which a claim is considered established if it is more likely true than false. If the judge thought the evidence pointed to a 51 percent chance that Mr. Trump committed a crime and a 49 percent chance that he did not, that was sufficient to rule that the Jan. 6 panel could get certain emails.

Prosecutors would need to persuade a jury that the same evidence proved “beyond a reasonable doubt” — a much higher standard to meet — that the former president committed a crime. Moreover, rather than persuading one judge of that proposition, prosecutors would need to convince all 12 members of a jury, because guilty verdicts must be unanimous.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/29/us/politics/trump-jan-6-eastman.html

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2022/03/29/ukraine-russia-invasion-live-updates/7200444001/

The U.S. Capitol is seen across the National Mall as supporters of President Donald Trump begin to gather for a rally on January 6, 2021. Some of those supporters later attacked the Capitol. New records show a seven-hour gap in Trump’s phone call record around the time of the siege.

Samuel Corum/Getty Images


hide caption

toggle caption

Samuel Corum/Getty Images

The U.S. Capitol is seen across the National Mall as supporters of President Donald Trump begin to gather for a rally on January 6, 2021. Some of those supporters later attacked the Capitol. New records show a seven-hour gap in Trump’s phone call record around the time of the siege.

Samuel Corum/Getty Images

Trump White House daily diary and call log documents from the day of the attack on the Capitol, first reported by the Washington Post/CBS News on Tuesday, were obtained by the House Jan. 6 select committee in December through the National Archives, according to Rep. Pete Aguilar, D-Calif., a member of the committee who confirmed the details to NPR.

The documents illustrate more of what was originally reported in the press in February about gaps that existed in Trump’s call log on Jan. 6, 2021. The revelation of the diary and call log themselves are new and shed new detail, specifically a gap in the call log of more than seven hours.

“There’s a lot that we know and more that we are finding out each and every step of the way. So those what were publicly reported about the diaries and the call log are things that were produced during the Archives production, I believe in December,” Aguilar told NPR. “And so we’ve been mindful of this, and we’ve been asking individuals in interviews about that — about those gaps in time.”

He later added, “We’re aware of these, and they’re important parts of what we’re looking at.”

The documents reported by Washington Post/CBS reflect a call Trump had with then-Georgia GOP Sen. David Perdue at 11:06 a.m., with the next call listed at 6:54 p.m. through the White House switchboard to get Trump aide Dan Scavino on the phone.

Some details of phone calls from that day listed in the log, and some of those missing from the log, have also been previously reported.

For example, a call between Trump and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy and a call between Trump and Alabama Sen. Tommy Tuberville during the afternoon while the Capitol was under threat from the pro-Trump mob were revealed in the days and weeks after Jan. 6, but they are not reflected in the log.

The log shows a call to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., at 9:16am. McConnell’s spokesperson tells NPR the leader “declined the call” and he last spoke to Trump on Dec. 15, 2020, the day after the Electoral College met in state capitals to cast ballots confirming President Biden’s victory.

Members of the Jan. 6 committee have publicly stated for months that there is a gap in the details about what Trump was doing and who he was talking to before, during and after the insurrection. Their investigation has focused on talking to witnesses who can fill in that gap.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2022/03/29/1089509352/trump-white-house-phone-records-show-7-hour-gap-on-jan-6




The severe weather threat for Wednesday has increased for metro New Orleans and Baton Rouge, meteorologists said in their latest forecast. 

The biggest threat will be damaging winds, with gusts up to 70 mph, but tornadoes are possible, along with rain and hail.

The storms are expected to reach Baton Rouge around noon then move east, getting to New Orleans and the north shore around 4 p.m.

The storm system comes a week after two tornadoes touched down in Arabi and the north shore. The strong EF3 tornado that hit Arabi killed a man, injured about a dozen others and significantly damaged about 150 homes.

The tornado that hit Greta, Arabi and New Orleans East is the strongest tornado to hit metro New Orleans in modern times.

“We understand the anxiety lingering from last week,” the National Weather Service in Slidell tweeted Tuesday. “But all events are different!”

Here’s what to know about this week’s severe weather threat as of 10:30 a.m. Tuesday from the National Weather Service in Slidell.

Threats

The highest risk for significant severe weather is along and north of Interstate 10, including Baton Rouge, Hammond and part of the north shore.

Those areas have a moderate risk, which is a threat level of 4 out of 5. 

Slidell, New Orleans and the south shore are at risk for severe weather, but the threat level is lower – 3 out of 5, forecasters said Tuesday morning.








image via National Weather Service in Slidell


Here are the current threats for southeast Louisiana:

  • Sustained winds of 25 to 35 mph with gusts in excess of 70 mph in a severe thunderstorm 
  • Tornadoes will be possible, and a few could be strong (EF2+) and/or have a long track
  • Trees and powerlines could be damaged and lead to power outages
  • Rainfall of 1 to 1.5 inches with locally higher amounts possible.
  • Flash flooding possible in low lying areas and areas of poor drainage
  • Hail

Wind advisory in effect

A wind advisory is in effect Wednesday from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. South winds of 25 to 35 mph are expected, with gusts up to 50 mph.

The wind advisory covers all of southeast Louisiana, including New Orleans, the north shore and Baton Rouge.

The winds have the potential to know out powerlines and damage trees before the severe storms arrive.

Use extra caution when driving, especially on bridges and elevated roads.

Timing

The storm system will be moving east Wednesday. Here’s the current timing from the National Weather Service:

Baton Rouge: noon to 4 p.m.

New Orleans, Hammond, Covington: 4 p.m. to 8 p.m.

Slidell, Boothville: 8 p.m. to midnight

Watch versus a warning

A watch means a tornado is possible. A warning is issued when a tornado has been spotted in person or by radar.

Watches are usually issued for a large geographical area for a longer period of time, such as several hours.

Warnings are usually issued for a small geographical area for a short period of time, such as 30 minutes to an hour.

Safety tips








The wind blows the American flag above a house slab in Arabi on Friday, March 25, 2022. A tornado touched down in the area on Tuesday killing one person, knocking out power to thousands of residents and destroying houses. (Photo by Brett Duke, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune | The New Orleans Advocate)




There are things you can do now to prepare.

FURNITURE: Secure loose outdoor objects and bring in patio furniture.

PHONE: Charge your phone and make sure it is unmuted. Tornado warnings will be pushed to your phone when the threat is imminent. Turn on weather emergency alerts.

FLASHLIGHT: Test your flashlight and keep it in an easy accessible place. If you are sleeping as the storm moves through, put the flashlight next to your bed. Keep shoes near your bed as well.

SAFE PLACE: Prepare a safe place to go beforehand. Make sure everyone in your household knows where to go. Have a clear path to your safe place in case you are navigating in the dark.

Stay away from windows and go to an interior room on the lowest floor.

If you live in a mobile home, get to a safe place.

Live radar

Track the storms as they move through southeast Louisiana.



Source Article from https://www.nola.com/news/weather/article_cfdf7a62-af6c-11ec-8158-8b6f173fb84f.html

Many of the nearly four dozen companies that signed the petition this month have been relatively quiet on the recent wave of anti-LGBTQ legislation in the U.S. so far. Their signatures come as Disney faces sharp backlash for its initial silence on the Florida bill. 

“The current political climate across the country is so toxic when it comes to protections for our community and Florida is not immune,” said Nadine Smith, executive director of Equality Florida, in a press release about the petition. 

“It is vital that the businesses that uplift values of diversity and inclusion of the LGBTQ+ community by participating in our Pride celebrations, leverage their voices in a time when our community is under attack,” Smith said. 

Human Rights Campaign and Freedom for All Americans first published the petition in 2020 to address dozens of anti-LGBTQ bills introduced across the U.S. at the time.

The petition garnered support from around 44 companies by March of that year, including tech giants Google, Apple, Amazon and Microsoft as well as companies such as Hilton, American Airlines and Dow Inc. A year later, the petition had signatures from more than 55 companies.

Signatures tripled to more than 150 by the beginning of 2022 state sessions in January, according to Jessica Shortall, director of corporate engagement at Freedom for All Americans. 

The petition also saw an uptick in signatures during February and March this year. 

Several companies “with a major presence in Florida” added their names to the petition on Feb. 28, just days after the state House passed the “Don’t Say Gay” bill. Among the new signatories were United Airlines, Oracle and IHG Hotels & Resorts, which all represent tens of thousands of employees in Florida, according to Human Rights Campaign. 

Shortall said it wasn’t Florida’s bill alone that prompted companies to lend their support. Lawmakers in Alabama, Iowa, Texas and Arizona have all recently introduced or adopted anti-LGBTQ policies.

The Alabama state Senate made it a crime to provide gender reassignment medical services to transgender youth last month. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott in late February also instructed Child Protective Services to open child abuse investigations into parents who provide gender-affirming care to their transgender children, she added. 

At the beginning of March, Iowa became the first state to pass a ban on transgender student-athletes playing sports consistent with their gender identity. The Arizona House on Thursday passed a similar bill that seeks to ban transgender children from playing sports alongside their peers, just three weeks after the state Senate passed it. 

“So much attention has been on the Florida bill. But from around the end of February to March the Texas situation and countless other efforts to attack LGBTQ people have been ongoing,” Shortall said. 

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2022/03/29/businesses-oppose-floridas-dont-say-gay-bill-banning-talk-of-lgbtq-issues-in-public-schools.html

President Biden said Monday he wants to introduce a new tax levied on the wealthiest families in U.S. The idea is to make sure the richest Americans “pay their fair share,” he said — an issue that’s taken on added urgency in recent years given the wealth gap in the U.S. is roughly as wide as it was a century ago during the Gilded Age.

Under the proposal, the new tax — dubbed the “Billionaire Minimum Income Tax” — would apply to the almost 30,000 families in the U.S. with assets of more than $100 million. In other words, the tax isn’t solely targeting billionaires, of which there are about 700 in the U.S. 

These households would be subject to a new minimum tax of 20%,  ensuring they don’t pay lower tax rates than many lower- and middle-income Americans. 

Although the U.S. tax system is designed to be progressive, with the wealthiest citizens paying a greater share of their incomes than everyone else, some economic research has found that the country’s 400 richest families pay a lower tax rate than the middle class. That’s due to four decades of tax cuts for the rich, as well as preferential treatment for capital gains, such as the profits made from sales of stocks and bonds, which are taxed at a lower rate than income.

The new tax would work by targeting “unrealized gains,” or potential profits that exist on paper because the underlying asset has yet to be sold. Under the current tax code, gains are only taxed if they are realized, such as when you sell a stock and record a profit.


Analysis of Biden’s budget proposal for 2023 fiscal year

08:16

“The polling is good for any tax that can be labeled a ‘Billionaire Tax’ — people think, ‘That’s somebody else, and they ought to contribute more’,” said Steve Rosenthal, senior fellow at the Tax Policy Center. “And ‘hundred-millionaires’ probably aren’t too sympathetic as a class, either.”

The proposal suggests that the tax code should include unrealized gains when considering average tax rates, said Garrett Watson, senior policy analyst at the Tax Foundation. “And that there should be a minimum floor when you look at unrealized gains — and the minimum is 20%.”

Here’s what we know so far about the tax and how it would work:

Who would pay the Billionaire Minimum Income Tax?

While the proposal is labeled as a tax on billionaires, most of the families who would be impacted are in fact multimillionaires.

“The most important thing about the Billionaire Minimum Income Tax is that it’s really not on billionaires, it’s not a minimum tax and it’s not on income,” Rosenthal noted wryly.

There are almost 30,000 families in the U.S. with assets of more than $100 million, according to the Credit Suisse Global Wealth Databook 2021. The tax would also hit the nation’s roughly 700 billionaires, such as Jeff Bezos, Warren Buffett, Bill Gates and Elon Musk. 

Each year about 160 million families file taxes with the IRS, which means this tax would impact about 0.01% of all Americans. 

How much money would be raised by the tax?

The Biden administration is projecting that the tax would raise $361 billion over 10 years. 

Mr. Biden’s budget blueprint projects new revenue from sources such as the wealth tax would lead to lower federal deficits, more money for police, and greater funding for education, public health and housing.

Hasn’t this been proposed before? 

If it sounds familiar, that’s because Democratic lawmakers have issued similar proposals in recent years. 

Last fall, for example, Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden of Oregon unveiled his billionaires income tax. Under his plan, tradable asset such as stocks would be valued annually. Billionaires would be taxed on their gains during that period — whether they have sold the asset or not. 

Those ideas were floated in order to pay for Mr. Biden’s domestic spending plans, such as the Build Back Better Act. But those spending plans were put on hold after compromise talks with Democratic West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin collapsed.

How would the Billionaire Minimum Income Tax actually work?

Basically, families worth at least $100 million would be assessed on whether they are paying a tax rate of at least 20% on their full income, which the Biden administration says would include unrealized appreciation of assets. 

Rosenthal noted that the plan isn’t really a tax in the conventional sense, in which a portion of your annual income goes the IRS. According to the Treasury Department, payments would be treated as a prepayment that would be credited against taxes paid at a later date on unrealized capital gains; in other words, those wealthy families wouldn’t be taxed twice because the tax would act like a cash advance to the IRS against future capital gains taxes triggered when they sell stock or other assets. 

That’s an important point, Rosenthal noted, because it addresses what he calls “one of the great loopholes” in the tax system: Unrealized gains aren’t taxed when heirs inherit assets, enabling them to benefit from what’s known as the “step-up in basis” provision. With that, the baseline price of an asset is reset to its value upon inheritance, which is often higher. 

Think of a woman who buys stock at Apple at $1 a share and holds it until she dies. When her heirs inherit the stock, the new basis is Apple’s current trading price — currently about $175 per share. If they sell the stock immediately, the heirs pay tax on any profit they earn above the $175 per share price, not the $1 price paid by woman who bought the stock years earlier. 

“Unrealized gains held at death aren’t taxed when they are passed onto beneficiaries — they take their tax basis at fair-market value,” Rosenthal said. “Entrepreneurs like Bezos and Musk have been able to amass great fortunes in the stocks of companies they founded and developed.”

He added, “If they hold that until death, all that unrealized appreciation disappears. And that’s not right.”

What obstacles does the proposed tax face?

There are plenty of questions about whether the tax could be enacted, experts say. For one, it’s unlikely to get support from Republican lawmakers, and it’s unclear whether moderate Democrats would get behind the idea, they noted. 

Second, any bill would likely be challenged in court over its constitutionality.

“It’s a rather uncharted area,” Rosenthal said. 

With reporting by the Associated Press.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/biden-tax-how-billionaire-minimum-income-tax-works-cbs-news-explains/

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2022/03/29/ukraine-russia-invasion-live-updates/7200444001/

Trump then placed calls to Sen. Mitch McConnell (Ky.), the Republican leader, and Sen. Josh Hawley (Mo.), but it is unclear whether he reached them, according to the documents. A McConnell aide said Monday that McConnell declined Trump’s call. Hawley, a Trump ally, was the first senator to declare he would object to the certification, a decision that sparked other GOP senators to say they too would object.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2022/03/29/trump-white-house-logs/

Builder Emerson Claus and his foreman Rene Landeverde at the site of an apartment they are building in a suburb of Boston.

Chris Arnold/NPR


hide caption

toggle caption

Chris Arnold/NPR

Builder Emerson Claus and his foreman Rene Landeverde at the site of an apartment they are building in a suburb of Boston.

Chris Arnold/NPR

Emerson Claus has been building houses for 45 years. But he has never faced delays like he is now trying to get basic building materials. “I had a client ask me to add a door,” he says at a job site outside Boston. “We just waited six months to get it.”

“That’s a door in a frame,” Claus says, exasperated. “That’s kind of crazy.” He says appliances can be even worse. “A dishwasher, if you can find the model you want right now, you might wait a year for it.”

By one estimate, the U.S. is more than 3 million homes short of the demand from would-be homebuyers. Pandemic-related supply chain problems aren’t helping. They’re adding tens of thousands of dollars in cost to the typical house. But the roots of the problem go back much further — to the housing bubble collapse in 2008.

“What I call a bloodbath happened,” says Claus. It was the worst housing market crash since the Great Depression. Many homebuilders went out of business. Claus was building houses in Florida when the bottom fell out.

“A lot of my tradespeople found other work, went and got retrained for new jobs in law enforcement, all sorts of jobs,” says Claus. “So the workforce was somewhat decimated.”

A few years later, as Americans started buying more homes again, building stayed below normal. And that slump in building continued for more than a decade. Meanwhile, the largest generation, the millennials, started to settle down and buy houses.

And that’s the main reason we’ve ended up millions of homes short — builders for many years just weren’t building enough to keep up with demand. That lack of supply has pushed home prices to record levels — up nearly 20% last year alone.

Gradually, though, many homebuilding companies recovered. Claus is now the president of the Home Builders and Remodelers Association of Massachusetts. Before COVID hit, he had a crew of nine full-time workers again. That’s not counting the many subcontractor electrician, roofing and plumbing companies he works on homes with.

“We always need guys,” says Rene Landeverde, Claus’ foreman. He’s originally from El Salvador, and for the past 10 years he has helped Claus and other local builders find a lot of other workers to hire and train. “I’ve been bringing guys to companies, like maybe 200 guys in my whole construction experience.”

Hipolito Herrador is fashioning supports to hold up a portion of an existing house so an additional apartment unit can be built onto it. Some states and towns are changing their zoning rules to make it easier to add such “accessory dwelling units.”

Chris Arnold/NPR


hide caption

toggle caption

Chris Arnold/NPR

Hipolito Herrador is fashioning supports to hold up a portion of an existing house so an additional apartment unit can be built onto it. Some states and towns are changing their zoning rules to make it easier to add such “accessory dwelling units.”

Chris Arnold/NPR

But then the pandemic hit. Things shut down and some of those workers left. Now, with unemployment so low, Landeverde can’t find people to hire like he used to.

“It’s a lot harder,” he says. “They’ve been finding other work.”

Claus says that’s made it more difficult for builders to respond to the surge in demand for homes during the pandemic.

“If I had twice as many guys, I would still not have enough,” says Claus, who now has five employees. “And my subcontractors, they’re all hurting for people.”

There’s another very big roadblock to home construction.

“Land,” says Claus. “I was just trying to buy a piece of land to build five homes on it. Unfortunately, that land went to somebody else that may put one or two on it.”

Claus says he wants to build more attached townhouses, or smaller homes on less land. That’s what many first-time homebuyers can afford to buy. But in many places, zoning rules won’t let you buy land and divide it up — you can only build one house with a big yard.

Overly restrictive zoning is a big problem nationally, says Robert Dietz, the chief economist with the National Association of Home Builders. “In certain neighborhoods you simply cannot build townhouses.”

“You have to build single family units on lots that are bigger than the market wants,” Dietz says. “This is not a free market choice. It’s a government-imposed rule.”

He says that in many parts of the country, the classic NIMBY (not in my back yard) opposition stops higher-density units from being built. Existing homeowners who don’t want more traffic and more homes in their neighborhood keep what he says are outdated, exclusionary zoning rules in place.

So to make a profit, builders like Claus are left doing renovations or tear downs — buying an older home, knocking it down, and building a bigger, more expensive new one.

“We are seeing a lot of knockdowns,” Claus says. “But it doesn’t add to the housing stock. You’re replacing something, you’re not adding to it, so the net effect isn’t the best.”

Changes in zoning can make a big difference. Some states and towns have been changing the rules to allow in-law rental apartments to be built onto existing houses. These are called accessory dwelling units, or ADUs.

“Twenty percent of remodelers indicate in the last year they’ve undertaken an ADU project, and the typical one can cost anywhere between $100,000 and $200,000,” Dietz says.

That’s good for the supply of rental housing, which is also very tight. But Dietz says we also need a lot more homes for people to buy.

“That could be a townhouse,” he says. “It could be a single family detached home on a small lot that’s roughly 1,800 to 2,100 square feet, that’s appropriate for effectively a newly married couple that’s moving out of their first apartment and is getting into their their first rung of homeownership.”

Right now, Claus says that because of the restrictive zoning rules, he doesn’t have any new home projects lined up that will put a house like that in a place there wasn’t a home already.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2022/03/29/1089174630/housing-shortage-new-home-construction-supply-chain