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Saturday, July 31, 2021

Publix Mask Mandate Returns, Associates For Now, Customer Decision Pending - BocaNewsNow.com

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Publix is again requiring masks.

BY: STAFF REPORT | BocaNewsNow.com

BOCA RATON, FL (BocaNewsNow.com) (Copyright © 2021 MetroDesk Media, LLC) — Mega-supermarket chain Publix is again requiring all associates to wear masks, starting on August 2nd. The requirement comes as Florida COVID-19 cases are surging to unprecedented levels.

A mandate for customers may be near.

This is the official announcement from Publix issued on Saturday, July 31st, 2021:

“The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends people in areas of substantial- or high-transmission risk wear face coverings over their noses and mouths when in public, indoor spaces, regardless of vaccination status.

Effective August 2, Publix is requiring associates, regardless of their vaccination status, to wear face coverings over their noses and mouths while inside any Publix location. We encourage all to do their part to slow the spread of COVID-19. 

Customers and associates should remain physically distanced from others while inside any Publix store.

Thank you for your cooperation and understanding to help us all achieve the important goal of limiting the spread of COVID-19.”

Content copyright © 2021 Metro Desk Media, LLC. All Rights Reserved. We vigorously protect our intellectual property and journalistic product. Broadcast stations must credit BocaNewsNow.com on air. Print must refer to BocaNewsNow.com. Online must link to BocaNewsNow.com. We have agreements with several organizations. Contact news (at) bocanewsnow.com.

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Publix Mask Mandate Returns, Associates For Now, Customer Decision Pending - BocaNewsNow.com
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National Association of Realtors® Reports Pending Home Sales Fall 1.9% in June, 2021 - Sierra Sun Times

  • Pending home sales decreased 1.9% in June from the prior month and from one year ago.
  • Compared to the month before, contract signings rose in the Northeast and Midwest but fell in the South and West.
  • Compared to one year ago, only the Northeast region saw an increase in contract signings.

July 30, 2021 - WASHINGTON – Pending home sales declined marginally in June after recording a notable gain in May, the National Association of Realtors® reported. Contract activity was split in the four major U.S. regions from both a year-over-year and month-over-month perspective. The Northeast recorded the only yearly gains in June.

The Pending Home Sales Index (PHSI),* www.nar.realtor/pending-home-sales, a forward-looking indicator of home sales based on contract signings, fell 1.9% to 112.8 in June. Year-over-year, signings also slipped 1.9%. An index of 100 is equal to the level of contract activity in 2001.

"Pending sales have seesawed since January, indicating a turning point for the market," said Lawrence Yun, NAR's chief economist. "Buyers are still interested and want to own a home, but record-high home prices are causing some to retreat.

"The moderate slowdown in sales is largely due to the huge spike in home prices," Yun continued. "The Midwest region offers the most affordable costs for a home and hence that region has seen better sales activity compared to other areas in recent months."

June Pending Home Sales Regional Breakdown

The Northeast PHSI increased 0.5% to 98.5 in June, an 8.7% rise from a year ago. In the Midwest, the index grew 0.6% to 108.3 last month, down 2.4% from June 2020.

Pending home sales transactions in the South fell 3.0% to an index of 132.4 in June, down 4.7% from June 2020. The index in the West decreased 3.8% in June to 98.1, down 2.6% from a year prior.

Yun forecasts that mortgage rates will start to inch up toward the end of the year. "This rise will soften demand and cool price appreciation."

"In just the last year, increasing home prices have translated into a substantial wealth gain of $45,000 for a typical homeowner," he said. "These gains are expected to moderate to around $10,000 to $20,000 over the next year."

According to Yun, the 30-year fixed mortgage rate is likely to increase to 3.3% by the end of the year, and will average 3.6% in 2022. With the slight uptick in mortgage rates, he expects existing-home sales to marginally decline to 5.99 million (6 million in 2021). Yun added that, with demand easing and housing starts improving to 1.65 million (1.565 in 2021), existing-home sales prices are expected to increase at a slower pace of 4.4% in 2022 (14.1% in 2021) to a median of $353,500.

The National Association of Realtors® is America's largest trade association, representing more than 1.4 million members involved in all aspects of the residential and commercial real estate industries.


*The Pending Home Sales Index is a leading indicator for the housing sector, based on pending sales of existing homes. A sale is listed as pending when the contract has been signed but the transaction has not closed, though the sale usually is finalized within one or two months of signing.

Pending contracts are good early indicators of upcoming sales closings. However, the amount of time between pending contracts and completed sales are not identical for all home sales. Variations in the length of the process from pending contract to closed sale can be caused by issues such as buyer difficulties with obtaining mortgage financing, home inspection problems, or appraisal issues.

The index is based on a large national sample, typically representing about 20% of transactions for existing-home sales. In developing the model for the index, it was demonstrated that the level of monthly sales-contract activity parallels the level of closed existing-home sales in the following two months.

An index of 100 is equal to the average level of contract activity during 2001, which was the first year to be examined. By coincidence, the volume of existing-home sales in 2001 fell within the range of 5.0 to 5.5 million, which is considered normal for the current U.S. population.

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National Association of Realtors® Reports Pending Home Sales Fall 1.9% in June, 2021 - Sierra Sun Times
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Thursday, July 29, 2021

U.S. pending home sales decline in June as prices climb - Reuters

A "For Sale" sign is posted outside a residential home in the Queen Anne neighborhood of Seattle, Washington, U.S. May 14, 2021. REUTERS/Karen Ducey

July 29 (Reuters) - Contracts to purchase previously owned U.S. homes declined in June in step with a spike in home prices after rebounding strongly in the prior month.

The National Association of Realtors (NAR) said on Thursday its Pending Home Sales Index, based on contracts signed last month, fell 1.9% to 112.8. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast pending home sales would increase 0.3%.

Pending home sales for May were revised to show an increase of 8.3% instead of the 8.0% gain previously reported.

Pending home contracts are seen as a forward-looking indicator of the health of the housing market because they become sales one to two months later.

"Pending sales have seesawed since January, indicating a turning point for the market," Lawrence Yun, NAR's chief economist, said in a statement. "Buyers are still interested and want to own a home, but record-high home prices are causing some to retreat."

House prices have soared in the past year, with the median price for both new and existing homes now topping $360,000.

Compared with one year ago, pending home sales were down 1.9%.

Sharp drops in pending home sales in the South and West in June outweighed modest increases in the Northeast and Midwest.

"The Midwest region offers the most affordable costs for a home and hence that region has seen better sales activity compared to other areas in recent months," Yun said.

Home prices have surged nationwide in large part due to limited supply. Contrary to the run-up to the 2007-2009 financial crisis, the current boom does not feature a frenzy of speculators and buyers with low credit scores trying to flip homes.

Sales of new single-family homes fell for the third consecutive month in June, hitting a 14-month low. However, existing home sales rebounded moderately last month.

"With prices at record highs and mortgage rates still hovering near record lows, sellers are recognizing the favorable conditions," said George Ratiu, senior economist at Realtor.com.

The average contract interest rate for traditional 30-year mortgages declined to 3.01% - its lowest level since February - in the week ended July 23. read more

Reporting by Evan Sully; Editing by Paul Simao

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Kaufman County Deputy On Administrative Leave Pending Investigation Into Handling Of Troubled Teen - CBS Dallas / Fort Worth

KAUFMAN, Texas (CBSDFW.COM) – A Kaufman County Sheriff’s deputy has been placed on administrative leave pending an investigation into a viral video CBS 11 first reported on Wednesday, July 28.

The sheriff’s office has released 911 calls and body cam video of the incident in Forney showing the moments leading up to the deputy mounting a teen girl who authorities believed was suicidal.

“There’s a lady – young lady – African American lady – that is walking in the middle of the street,” a 911 caller said.

“She’s thrown herself out on the road — looks like a possible suicide,” said another caller.

Deputy Marlin arrived with his body cam rolling.

“What’s wrong? How come you’re crying,” he said on the video.

“Why are you here,” responded the teen.

“Just to talk to you. Make sure you’re okay,” he said.

As they walk, he puts his hand on 18 year-old Nekia Trigg’s shoulder, then grabs her arm.

“I don’t want you to hurt me,“ she said.

“If you keep pulling away I got a put you in handcuffs though,” Deputy Marlin said.

He continued to try and calm Trigg down and reassure her he doesn’t want to hurt her.

Kaufman County arrest

“You’re hurting me already,” Trigg said.

“Sit down okay,” said Deputy Marlin.

“You’re hurting me already,” Trigg said.

It appears Deputy Marlin’s body cam fell off during the struggled and fails to capture the rest of the incident.

This is about the time Trigg’s family arrives and starts to record what’s happening.

The Kaufman County Sheriff’s Office said Deputy Marlin used a technique on Trigg that they teach.

She was eventually handcuffed and led to the deputy’s cruiser.

The sheriff’s office says in the street Trigg’s mother Antanique Ray eventually struck Deputy Marlin and was arrested on assault on a public servant and interference with public duties, as well as two outstanding warrants.

She bonded out of jail Wednesday..

Trigg was taken to mental health facility for evaluation.

“This is my daughter,” said Ray on Thursday. “How can you expect me to walk up and look at this man straddled in a position — I’ve never seen a police straddled on top of a man or woman and my daughter is 18 years old.”

Outside the Kaufman County Jail Thursday night activists called for Ray’s charges to be dropped and the termination of Deputy Marlin.

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Kaufman County Deputy On Administrative Leave Pending Investigation Into Handling Of Troubled Teen - CBS Dallas / Fort Worth
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12 APS employees placed on paid leave pending Rep. Williams Stapleton corruption investigation - KOB

Rep. Williams Stapleton is among the 12 APS employees on leave with pay.  Other employees include administrators, teachers, and school and clerical staff. 

APS officials said it is possible that more APS employees will be placed on leave as the investigation proceeds.

"Placing employees on leave does not imply wrongdoing or guilt, nor is it punitive," said Monica Armenta, the executive director of APS communications. "It is a necessary step to protect the integrity of the probe and allow investigators to do their job."

MORE:

Editor's Note: Robles had told KOB 4 that 13 employees would be placed on paid leave. The number was changed when APS announced 12 employees were placed on paid leave. 

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12 APS employees placed on paid leave pending Rep. Williams Stapleton corruption investigation - KOB
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Orono driver suspected of killing 2 passengers out of jail as charges pending - Minneapolis Star Tribune

Orono police say they are awaiting the results of a blood test from the Orono driver who crashed his car over the weekend and killed two passengers before presenting their case to prosecutors for potential felony charges.

James D. Blue, 51, drove off North Shore Drive on Saturday around 11:20 p.m. near his home, striking trees before being thrown from his 2017 Bentley.

The crash killed passengers Sam Schuneman, 24, and Mack Motzko, 20, authorities said. Blue was treated for injuries at North Memorial Health Hospital in Robbinsdale and later discharged.

Blue was then booked into the Hennepin County jail about 4:50 p.m. Wednesday on suspicion of criminal vehicular homicide and released less than 4½ hours later without posting bail and with charges pending further investigation.

The County Attorney's Office said Thursday that neither Orono police nor the State Patrol has presented a case against Blue for consideration of charges.

Police Chief Correy Farniok said Thursday afternoon that "we are waiting to obtain State Patrol [crash] reconstruction, their report and toxicology results from the BCA" before sending a case to prosecutors.

"For a criminal vehicular homicide charge, we need the blood test," the chief said. "We are going for the felonies."

Messages were left Thursday with Blue seeking his response to the allegations. Farniok said Blue has secured legal representation, but the chief declined to identify the attorney.

Because of Blue's injuries, officers were unable to conduct field sobriety tests at the crash scene. A blood sample was taken from Blue at North Memorial about 1 a.m. Sunday, less than two hours after the crash, according to a search warrant affidavit. Tests results on that sample for alcohol or other substance impairment have yet to be disclosed.

Authorities have said high speeds and alcohol were factors in the crash that remains under investigation. Witnesses told authorities that Blue was driving "in excess of 100 mph in a posted 40 mph zone around a curve on a hill," according to a search warrant affidavit.

Blue told police at the scene of the crash that he was "guilty" and had been drinking at Maynard's Restaurant in Excelsior, the affidavit read.

The two deaths were among 16 on state roads since Saturday, the state Department of Public Safety (DPS) said Thursday. For the year, there have been 254 traffic fatalities so far in Minnesota, compared with 194 reported at this time last year.

Excessive speed, a suspected factor in Saturday's crash that killed Motzko and Schuneman, continues to be the largest contributing facto, according to the DPS. There have been 91 speed-related deaths in 2021, vs. 64 at this time in 2020, the agency said.

Motzko, of Orono, worked at the Minneapolis Golf Club while playing junior hockey for the Sioux Falls Stampede and the New Mexico Ice Wolves. He was an incoming recruit for the Penticton Vees, a junior hockey team in British Columbia.

Motzko was the son of Bob Motzko, head coach of the University of Minnesota men's hockey team.

Schuneman, who was living in Scottsdale, Ariz., is originally from Maple Grove and was recently home visiting family and friends. Visitation for Schuneman is planned for Friday from 4 to 8 p.m. at Gearty-Delmore Funeral Chapel in Plymouth. His funeral is 10:30 a.m. Saturday at Wayzata's Church of the Holy Name of Jesus.

Motzko's service will be held Monday at 1 p.m. at the St. Cloud Cathedral High School gym.

The families released a statement that read, "We understand that there has been a development in the arrest of James Blue, which we believe is a positive step in obtaining justice for Mack and Sam. At this time we have no further comment but will consider media requests to speak with family members at an appropriate time after services are completed."

Star Tribune staff writer Kim Hyatt contributed to this report.

Paul Walsh • 612-673-4482

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Orono driver suspected of killing 2 passengers out of jail as charges pending - Minneapolis Star Tribune
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U.S. pending home sales decline in June - Reuters

FILE PHOTO: A "For Sale" sign is posted outside a residential home in the Queen Anne neighborhood of Seattle, Washington, U.S. May 14, 2021. REUTERS/Karen Ducey

(Reuters) - Contracts to purchase previously owned U.S. homes declined in June in step with a spike in home prices after rebounding strongly in the prior month.

The National Association of Realtors (NAR) said on Thursday its Pending Home Sales Index, based on contracts signed last month, fell 1.9% to 112.8. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast pending home sales would increase 0.3%.

Pending home sales for May were revised to show an increase of 8.3% instead of the 8.0% gain previously reported.

Pending home contracts are seen as a forward-looking indicator of the health of the housing market because they become sales one to two months later.

“Pending sales have seesawed since January, indicating a turning point for the market,” Lawrence Yun, NAR’s chief economist, said in a statement. “Buyers are still interested and want to own a home, but record-high home prices are causing some to retreat.”

Compared with one year ago, pending home sales were down 1.9%.

Sharp drops in pending home sales in the South and West in June outweighed modest increases in the Northeast and Midwest.

Reporting by Evan Sully; Editing by Paul Simao

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Pending home sales drop in June — more evidence of a housing turnaround - CNBC

A real estate for sale sign shows the home as being "Under Contract" in Washington, DC, November 19, 2020.
Saul Loeb | AFP | Getty Images

Pending sales of existing homes in June as measured by signed contracts fell 1.9% from May, according to the National Association of Realtors.

Sales were also down 1.9% compared with June 2020. Pending sales are a forward-looking indicator of closed sales in one to two months.

"Pending sales have seesawed since January, indicating a turning point for the market," said Lawrence Yun, Realtors' chief economist. "Buyers are still interested and want to own a home, but record-high home prices are causing some to retreat."

Prices in May were up nearly 17% compared with May 2020, according to the latest reading from the S&P Case-Shiller national home price index. That is the largest annual gain on record. Prices in June could very well top that, given the still tight supply of homes for sale, especially on the low end of the market.

Prices are high because inventory has been so low. But that is starting to change. The number of newly listed homes in June rose 5.5% compared with June 2020, according to Realtor.com.

"With prices at record highs and mortgage rates still hovering near record lows, sellers are recognizing the favorable conditions," said George Ratiu, senior economist at Realtor.com.

Regionally, pending sales increased 0.5% in June compared with May and were up 8.7% from a year ago. In the Midwest, sales rose 0.6% monthly but fell 2.4% annually.

In the South, pending sales fell 3% monthly and 4.7% from June 2020. In the West sales decreased 3.8% monthly and 2.6% annually.

Mortgage rates moved slightly higher at the start of June, which only added to affordability issues. Rates then came down again by the end of the month. Yun is predicting mortgage rates will rise more steadily toward the end of the year.

"This rise will soften demand and cool price appreciation," he added.

Sales of newly built homes, which are counted by signed contracts, also fell in June, down 6% for the month and nearly 20% year over year, according to the U.S. Census.

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DraftKings plans sports betting bars in Detroit area, pending approval - WDIV ClickOnDetroit

DraftKings is planning to launch its own sports betting bars in the Detroit and Nashville markets, pending approval by state regulators.

DraftKings Inc. announced Thursday it is partnering with venue company Sports & Social to create new lounges that will provide “an upscale, premier sports and entertainment experience.”

“Today, so much of sports betting is focused on the mobile-technology aspect, however the in-person experience is an integral layer that we look forward to advancing alongside Sports & Social’s premier dining and entertainment offerings,” said Ezra Kucharz, chief business officer at DraftKings, in a Thursday news release.

DraftKings operates in 14 states with online and retail sportsbooks. Online sports betting was launched in Michigan earlier this year.

Sports & Social is described as an upscale gaming parlor and social lounge.

“By aligning with one of the fastest-growing entertainment concepts in the country, we now have the opportunity to bring our world-class products to life by offering engaging, interactive and fan-first destinations to skin-in-the-game customers,” Kucharz said in the news release.


More: Sports news and headlines in Detroit, beyond

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Audit: Thousands of iPad requests for remote learning left pending by DOE | amNewYork - AMNY

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As of March 25, 19, 425 iPad student requests for a Department of Education-issued iPad are “under review” or “unresolved” with 16,451 of those requests dating back to 2020, an audit from New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer reveals.

In mid-March last year, Mayor Bill de Blasio ordered a system-wide shutdown of public schools in order to mitigate the spread of the coronavirus forcing schools to transition to online classes essentially overnight. 

However, thousands of children were unable to log on to remote classes due to lack of internet connection at home or because they did not own an internet-accessible device like a desktop computer or laptop. 

In order to remedy this, the DOE decided to purchase hundreds of thousands of iPads and laptops with built-in internet access and ship them to students without a device across the five boroughs. Initially, the department prioritized students living in shelters or temporary housing, students with disabilities and multilingual students but eventually began to distribute devices on a rolling basis based on requests.

It took the DOE months to execute the Herculean task with some teachers and parents complaining throughout the pandemic that device requests were going unanswered. In order to get DOE iPad, families had to submit a request online or via the DOE helpdesk or 311. 

“The agency bungled the job,” Stringer told reporters during a press conference outside of Tweed Courthouse on Wednesday. “That’s more than 16,000 students who were ignored by our education system. It’s unacceptable.” 

The comptroller added the DOE had no explanation as to why thousands of requests were left unresolved for nearly a year. During the press conference, Stringer demanded the department identify all the students who did not receive a requested device and ensure they get “all the support and resources” they need in order to address any learning loss. 

Mayor de Blasio responded to reporters’ questions about the audit by questioning when the Comptroller gathered the information outlined in the report, stating device roll out “happened constantly.” According to DOE officials, 357,000 iPads were bought for distribution during the 2020 spring semester and another 104,000 Apple iPads were purchased during the 2020-21 school year. In addition, the department says it purchased 50,000 extra iPads in December of last year with the specific intention of fulfilling outstanding device requests. 

Stringer’s audit also found the DOE did not track the devices it issued from their own in-house inventories to make sure it is not giving iPads to students who already received one from their school and the department does not review device-related data. In addition, the auditors found the DOE does not have formal procedures for device tracking and distribution. 

“This is an audit in search of a problem based on outdated information. We did what no other school district was able to do – distributing half a million devices to students in need during a pandemic,” said DOE spokesperson Sarah Casanovas. “The requests identified in the Comptroller’s audit were resolved, there are zero unfulfilled device requests, and we continue to fulfill devices requests quickly as needed.”

A department spokesperson claims the more than 16,000 device requests mentioned in Stringer’s audit have been resolved since “they were either fulfilled or the device was not needed.” It remains unclear when exactly the device requests were filled between March to July.  The department is planning to prioritize device access this fall—with the help of $122 million in federal stimulus funds—when students return to classrooms and “ensure all students become fully fluent digital citizens.” 

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Wednesday, July 28, 2021

Alleged NYC hate crime attacker detained pending psych evaluation - New York Post

An unhinged man who allegedly targeted Muslims in a series of attacks was hit with hate-crime charges Wednesday — and held without bail pending a psychiatric evaluation.

Naved Durrni, 30, appeared before a judge in Queens criminal court on assault as a hate crime, criminal possession of a weapon and other charges for three alleged hate attacks in the borough.

Prosecutor Marisa Polito requested he be held on $30,000 bail and Durrni’s defense attorney asked he be given a psych evaluation.

Judge Edwin Novillo ordered him detained pending the evaluation.

At the hearing, Polito said Durrni assaulted three Muslims in Queens, most recently on Sutphin Boulevard in Jamaica on Sunday.

“Mohammad is a liar and Jesus tells the truth,” Durrni allegedly yelled at the woman, who was wearing a hijab.

He then shoved her to the ground and menaced her with a knife, prosecutors charged.

Naved Durrni is facing multiple charges for an alleged hate crime attack.
Naved Durrni is facing multiple charges for alleged hate crime attacks.
DCPI
Prosecutor Marisa Polito said Durni assaulted three Muslim people in Queens.
Prosecutor Marisa Polito said Durni assaulted three Muslims in Queens.
DCPI

He also spewed “Mohammad is a liar” to two separate Muslim couples on June 20, prosecutors said.

Durrni, who lives in Jamaica, Queens, turned himself in to police Tuesday after seeing his photo on the news.

“That type of hate will not be tolerated in Queens County, where our diversity is our greatest strength,” District Attorney Melinda Katz said after his arrest.

If convicted, he faces up to eight years in prison.

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Broward school board chair supports face mask mandate; final decision pending - WPLG Local 10

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. – The School Board of Broward County postponed the decision Tuesday on the use of facemasks in classrooms at Broward County Public Schools, but members were likely to vote on the issue Wednesday afternoon.

As the issue was being discussed, Rosalind Osgood, the school board chair, said she supports the facemask mandate. The first day of school for Broward is Aug. 18.

“There is no way in good conscience that I could bring anybody back into the school environment, on the bus, the cafeteria, and not have a mask mandate,” Osgood said.

Given the new evidence on the Delta variant, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention updated the guidance for fully vaccinated people to recommend universal indoor masking for all teachers, staff, students, and visitors to K-12 schools, regardless of vaccination status.

Broward County Steve Geller said the number of COVID cases has been roughly doubling every nine days.

A spokesperson for Miami-Dade County Public Schools said the district will be requiring K-12 students to wear face masks in school buses. The decision about an indoor mandate is pending. The first day of school in Dade is Aug. 23.

Government entities take on legal liability if they don’t mandate face masks under a CDC recommendation because should an employee or a student die from COVID the entity could be found liable.

Related story

    Assignment Desk Manager Kerry Weston contributed to this report.

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    Youngstown man with pending gun charge arrested again on firearms violations - WKBN.com

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    Youngstown man with pending gun charge arrested again on firearms violations  WKBN.com
    Youngstown man with pending gun charge arrested again on firearms violations - WKBN.com
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    Former Rocky Mount police officer to be held without bond pending trial in U.S. Capitol riot case - Roanoke Times

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    Former Rocky Mount police officer to be held without bond pending trial in U.S. Capitol riot case  Roanoke Times
    Former Rocky Mount police officer to be held without bond pending trial in U.S. Capitol riot case - Roanoke Times
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    GrowGeneration Boosts Michigan Exposure With Pending Acquisition of 4 Hydroponics Stores – New Cannabis Ventures - New Cannabis Ventures

    GrowGeneration Signs Asset Purchase Agreement to Acquire Nation’s Third-Largest Chain of Hydroponic Garden Centers

    HGS Hydro to Join GrowGen’s Portfolio, Expands Company’s Footprint in Michigan

    DENVER, July 28, 2021 /PRNewswire/ — GrowGeneration Corp. (NASDAQ: GRWG), (“GrowGen” or the “Company”) the nation’s largest chain of specialty hydroponic and organic garden centers, today announced the signing of an asset purchase agreement to acquire HGS Hydro, the nation’s third-largest chain of hydroponic garden centers, with six stores across Michigan and a seventh store slated to open in the fall of 2021. This transaction is expected to close before the end of fiscal year-end 2021. Founded in 2015 by Rocky Shaeena, HGS Hydro is the largest chain of hydroponic garden centers in the state of Michigan and generated approximately $50 million in revenue in 2020.

    When completed, the transaction will also bring the total number of GrowGen hydroponic garden centers in Michigan to 14 and the total number of stores to 65. The new GrowGen locations will include Shelby Township, Southfield, Sterling Heights, Hazel Park, Walled Lake, Albion, and Imlay City, Michigan.

    We are excited to add HGS Hydro to our portfolio of stores before year end, with its impressive leadership and commercial teams. The addition of HGS Hydro will propel Michigan to GrowGen’s second largest state behind California. Michigan is one of the fastest growing states for medical and recreational cannabis sales.

    Darren Lampert, GrowGen’s CEO

    We look forward to building on HGS Hydro’s experience as we continue to expand our commercial footprint. This acquisition represents our continued focus on purchasing ‘best of breed’ hydroponic operations in the U.S. and strengthening our management team with seasoned veterans from our industry.

    “The combination of HGS Hydro and GrowGeneration will further solidify GrowGen’s leadership position as the nation’s largest chain of hydroponic garden centers. As one of the pioneers of our industry, we are excited to bring our years of experience, insight, and relationships to the GrowGen team to assist in the Company’s continued growth and success,” said HGS Hydro’s CEO Rocky Shaeena.

    “At HGS Hydro, my biggest priority has always been serving our loyal customers and providing an abundance of inventory at all times. We have grown tremendously as a company in the past, and I believe merging with GrowGeneration will help us continue to grow with the best service and selection possible for our customers.” said Chris Kiryakoza, HGS Hydro’s COO.

    About GrowGeneration Corp:

    GrowGen owns and operates specialty retail hydroponic and organic gardening centers. Currently, GrowGen has 58 stores, which include 21 locations in California, 8 locations in Colorado, 7 locations in Michigan, 5 locations in Maine, 5 locations in Oklahoma, 2 locations in Nevada, 2 locations in Washington, 4 locations in Oregon, 1 location in Arizona, 1 location in Rhode Island,1 location in Florida, and 1 location in Massachusetts. GrowGen also operates an online superstore for cultivators at growgeneration.com and B2B ERP platform, agron.io. GrowGen carries and sells thousands of products, including organic nutrients and soils, advanced lighting technology and state of the art hydroponic equipment to be used indoors and outdoors by commercial and home growers.

    Original Press Release

    Get ahead of the crowd by signing up for 420 Investor, the largest & most comprehensive premium subscription service for cannabis traders and investors since 2013.

    Published by NCV Newswire
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    The NCV Newswire by New Cannabis Ventures aims to curate high quality content and information about leading cannabis companies to help our readers filter out the noise and to stay on top of the most important cannabis business news. The NCV Newswire is hand-curated by an editor and not automated in anyway. Have a confidential news tip? Get in touch.

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    More than 57,000 Missourians could be mandated to get vaccine pending White House decision - ABC17News.com

    Coronavirus

    COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

    The White House is strongly considering requiring federal employees to show proof of vaccination against COVID-19, or submit regular testing and wear a mask at all times.

    On Tuesday, Pres. Joe Biden said this was "under consideration," and is expected to announce the mandate Thursday.

    According to data from Missouri's Economic Research and Information Center, there were 57,100 federal workers in Missouri for the month of June. In Columbia there were 2,600 and in Jefferson City there were 800 federal workers.

    Federal employees are individuals who work for the federal government. This includes politicians, judges, and heads of departments such as Labor and State. Federal employees can also be civilians who work government jobs in areas like law enforcement and public health.

    Most governmental departments also have clerical workers, like administrative assistants, office clerks, and even some carpenters, welders, and custodial staff.

    The White House said if vaccines are mandated for federal workers, those who do not get the vaccine will have to submit regular COVID-19 testing and wear a mask no matter the transmission level in their area.

    The vaccine mandate for federal workers is just one option under consideration. The announcement is expected Thursday.

    Columbia / Health / Jefferson City / Local News / Missouri / News / President of the United States / Top Stories

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    SDSU requires COVID-19 vaccine, no longer pending FDA approval - Daily Aztec

    On July 27, the California State University (CSU) system declared that the COVID-19 vaccine will be required for students, faculty and staff, including auxiliary employees in order to access campus this fall. As outlined by the CSU, this requirement is not conditional on full approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, canceling all prior uncertainty surrounding the effective date. 

    Updates to San Diego State COVID-19 policies and what the university plans to do to ensure the safety of all of its students, faculty, staff and community members were shared in an email from President Adela de la Torre.

    SDSU will implement mandatory COVID-19 testing requirements for all students. However, the mandatory weekly testing will only be required for unvaccinated students with an approved medical or religious exemption on file with the university. 

    The CSU COVID-19 vaccination requirement does allow for students, faculty and staff to seek an exemption based on medical or religious justification. Exemption requests for students and non-represented faculty and staff must be submitted before August 16. Additional information on medical and religious exemptions can be found here.

    If an individual is in the process of being vaccinated, but will not be fully vaccinated by August 20, the first official day of the fall semester, they can complete a temporary waiver request. This will enroll the individual in a testing program until they are fully vaccinated.

    While details for faculty and staff are still being worked out, students on an approved vaccination exemption will receive weekly reminders about ways to get tested.

    For students living on campus in the fall, the university is requiring that all residents show a negative COVID-19 test prior to move-in and must upload a copy of their test results to the university’s HealtheConnect portal at least 48 hours before move-in. Tests must be taken no earlier than one week prior to their move-in date. This pre-arrival testing requirement applies to all on-campus residents, irrespective of vaccination status. 

    If a student tests positive for COVID-19 or neglects to upload proof of a negative COVID-19 test, they will not be permitted to move into on-campus housing during the move-in period. 

    All faculty and staff, including auxiliary employees with the SDSU Research Foundation, Associated Students and Aztec Shops, are required to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 under the updated CSU vaccine policy. The CSU is currently in the process of meeting and conferring with its labor unions. Once finalized, details for represented employees will be shared at a later date.

    All non-represented faculty and staff, including auxiliary employees, must submit their completed vaccination documentation to HealtheConnect by August 16. The upload process takes approximately ten minutes and is different from the self-attestation form, which most faculty and staff members have already completed.

    Due to the prevailing nature of COVID-19 and the importance of vaccination for individual and community wellness, the university will take action if any student does not comply with the COVID-19 vaccination or testing requirement. Students who miss their testing windows during the fall semester will be notified via their official SDSU email accounts. Students who remain uncooperative for more than five days after missing their testing window must meet with the Center for Student Rights and Responsibilities. 

    Due to the extremity of the ongoing public health concern surrounding the global pandemic, sanctions are possible for students who do not comply in the interest of individual and community safety.

    COVID-19 vaccination has remained the single most effective tool for both preventing spread and significantly mitigating symptoms or risk to individual health. Over the last month, 98% of cases requiring hospitalization in San Diego County have been among those who are not vaccinated.

    As of July 20, Student Health Services has offered all three vaccines available in the United States: Moderna, Pfizer and Johnson & Johnson, accessible to any faculty, staff or student by making an appointment through HealtheConnect.

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    WVU's Deskins discusses pending Viatris facility closure - West Virginia MetroNews

    MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — With the closure process of the Viatris facility in Morgantown slated to begin Saturday, a leader with West Virginia University’s Bureau of Business and Economic Research says the planned action shows the importance of economic diversity.

    Viatris, a company formed following the merger of Mylan Pharmaceuticals and Pfizer subsidiary Upjohn, will close the plant as part of an international business plan. Around 1,400 workers at the Morgantown facility will lose their jobs as a result of the action.

    John Deskins (File)

    John Deskins, the director of the Bureau of Business and Economic Research, said West Virginia has struggled with low labor participation rates and an image issue.

    “We already had plenty of challenges to begin with,” he said. “We already had plenty of things we need to do to improve our economic prosperity, so this is a step in the wrong direction.”

    Deskins added the state has to take steps to make the region more attractive to potential businesses, which will make West Virginia more resilient to economic changes.

    “If this loss were to happen in some of the areas that are very small and very rural, it could take decades to recover,” he mentioned.

    Mike Puskar and Don Panoz founded Mylan Pharmaceuticals in 1961, and the Morgantown facility opened four years later with a focus on manufacturing various supplements and generic medications.

    Johanna Puskar, Mike Puskar’s father, said the corporation’s culture changed after her father stepped down in October 2009.

    “The ones that knew my dad and worked for my dad, I feel really sorry for them because they have gone through Hell. They’ve been ripped off,” she said. “For the employees that did not work for my dad, I hope people tell them the stories about my dad.”

    Lawmakers have petitioned federal officials about keeping the facility open. State legislatures approved resolutions during this year’s regular legislative session asking Gov. Jim Justice and congressional delegates to seek another operator or investor.

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    DNR keeps 'quiet period' with water rights revisions pending - Alaskajournal.com

    Mum’s the word from Department of Natural Resources officials regarding their plan to fundamentally change the state’s water rights system.

    House Fisheries Committee chair Rep. Geran Tarr, D-Anchorage, said DNR representatives declined to attend a July 27 hearing on the agency’s proposed changes to in-stream flow reservations and other water regulations because she was told they are in a “quiet period” while they respond to public comments from the extended period that closed April 2.

    Tops among the changes first suggested by the Division of Mining, Land and Water in mid-January is adding new language to water reservation regulations stating that water reservation certificates currently issued to private parties would instead be held by DNR, which adjudicates water rights and reservation applications.

    Resource development advocates insist the change is needed so control of a public resource is kept within a public agency and to prevent opponents of a given project from attempting to impede development by chasing water rights.

    For their part, conservation groups insist the change would strip Alaskans of their rights to protect the fish — another public resource — in waters vulnerable to development.

    Alaska’s current system of water rights is generally viewed as one of the most open in the country; it allows anyone to apply for temporary water use authorizations as well as water reservation, or in-stream flow, rights to maintain sufficient stream flows for fish and other wildlife.

    Reviewing water reservation applications often takes DNR years in coordination with the departments of Fish and Game and Environmental Conservation, a situation Bob Shavelson, advocacy director for the Homer-based conservation group Cook Inletkeeper, said in the hearing is the result of traditionally pro-development state administrations prioritizing water rights, or use, authorizations over flow reservations to protect habitat.

    Currently, the Department of Fish and Game holds the vast majority of flow reservations; another handful is held by federal resource agencies such as the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

    The Nature Conservancy is one of the few private entities to hold water reservations. It secured four flow reservations near the Pebble deposit in 2017.

    DNR officials also said during the public comment period that they could not comment specifically on the proposed regulations. At the time, they cited a section from the Administrative Procedures Act that state’s agency officials proposing a regulatory action “shall make a good faith effort to answer, before the end of the comment period, a question that is relevant to the proposed action, if the question is received in writing or at least 10 days before the end of the public comment period.”

    The section of the APA goes on to state that common questions can be answered in a consolidated form on the Alaska Online Public Notice System.

    State officials have historically discussed proposed regulatory changes and officials in other agencies have as well during the Dunleavy administration.

    Water Section Chief Tom Barrett said more broadly that flow reservations are “significant” in that they can impact other water users in a January interview. He added that the state is not trying to withhold water rights for any one group, noting the DNR commissioner — who approves water reservations — currently has the discretion to discontinue them as well.

    According to such answers posted by Mining, Land and Water officials, the changes are meant to better distinguish water reservations from more traditional water right appropriations.

    “Traditional water right certificates are issued to persons for a specific beneficial use. Reservations of water are a reserved level or flow that is reserved for a specific public purpose, not the sole use or benefit of the applicant.”

    Barrett wrote via email to the Journal on July 27 that it’s unclear exactly when DNR leaders plan to finalize the water regulations but it probably won’t happen for several months.

    The proposed regulations are a continuation of an attempt by former Gov. Sean Parnell’s administration to overhaul the water reservation structure, according to Shavelson.

    House Bill 77, which drew strong public opposition and died in the Senate in early 2014, would have limited water reservations to public agencies among many other revisions to state resource policies.

    While development advocates have long advocated for changes to Alaska’s water use regulations and statutes, one of the state’s largest pro-development lobbying groups is against the current regulations proposed by the Dunleavy administration because they don’t go far enough.

    Natural resources attorney Eric Fjelstad testified on behalf of the Resource Development Council for Alaska that the new proposed language also gives the in-stream flow reservation applicant legal standing to manage the reservation, even if DNR is technically the certificate holder.

    “We think (in-stream flow reservations) should be a limited tool held by DNR and state subdivisions,” Fjelstad said.

    The state’s multilayered process for permitting large development projects addresses the concerns of many who are concerned about the impacts of development on water bodies and fish, notably salmon and the place for instream flow reservations is in a more subtle situation, according to Fjelstad.

    He suggested several small water withdrawals along a stream or river is a more likely scenario to result in cumulative damage to the watershed and its inhabitants.

    “If you don’t have that large project permitting you can have water withdrawals that aren’t accounted for,” he said.

    RDC Executive Director Marleanna Hall wrote in official comments to DNR that giving legal standing to private parties potentially managing in-stream flow reservations “an even more powerful tool for those who oppose development from Alaska. This provision should be removed from the regulations.”

    Shavelson contended the insistence by RDC and other development advocates that private parties should not be able to hold in-stream flow reservations as a means for protecting fish habitat is inherently hypocritical because developers, and other private groups, can hold water rights and temporary water use authorizations to divert water out of a lake or stream.

    “A Canadian mining company could hold rights to take water out of a salmon stream but Alaskans couldn’t hold the reservation to keep water in the stream and that’s the crux of it,” Shavelson said. “The DNR proposal really takes a government knows best approach to water reservations.”

    He urged lawmakers to amend the Alaska Water Use Act to mandate DNR to apply a corresponding water reservation sufficient to preserve fish and wildlife populations — which varies in each water body — to counter each water withdrawal authorization.

    “This would be the Alaska Legislature looking at the Water Use Act and making some simple but common sense changes,” Shavelson said.

    Elwood Brehmer can be reached at [email protected].

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    Tuesday, July 27, 2021

    Heber City Police chief placed on leave pending investigation - ABC 4

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    Heber City Police chief placed on leave pending investigation  ABC 4
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    Richmond man, released from jail with pending murder charge, murdered a second man he thought witnessed first killing - East Bay Times

    MARTINEZ — A Richmond man was convicted this month of two murders that occurred nine years apart, and now faces a likely sentence of life without the possibility of parole.

    But what makes the case of 39-year-old Antoine Saucer so rare is the fact that the second murder — the 2015 fatal shooting of 66-year-old Carl Roberts — occurred after Saucer had been released from custody with a pending murder case hanging over his head. The unique story of why this occurred centers on California’s system for handling people with mental illnesses who are charged with crimes.

    In 2006, Saucer was arrested and charged with murdering Burt Mascarenas, 33, in a shooting on the 600 block of Harbour Way in Richmond. Authorities couldn’t point to a clearcut motive in that killing, but said Mascarenas had joked that Saucer was a snitch because he was quickly released after an arrest at the time, which may have angered Saucer.

    But after his arrest, Saucer became one of the hundreds of statewide criminal defendants deemed mentally incompetent to stand trial. His attorney at the time declared a doubt about his competency; after the courts affirmed it, Saucer was transferred to a Porterville hospital, where doctors attempted to “restore” him so he could return to jail and face charges.

    It is a system fraught with problems, including unconstitutional delays that result in people spending months in jail after they’ve been found incompetent, a statewide hospital bed shortage, and complex legal issues that make it hard to predict how long someone will spend in a hospital against their will. The state penal code allows confinement for “two years or the maximum time of imprisonment for the most serious offense charged whichever is shorter,” but also lets attorneys seek a conservatorship for people deemed especially dangerous.

    At any rate, Saucer was released from the hospital in 2012 after doctors found he couldn’t be “restored to competency” and returned to Richmond. Three years later, he and Anthony Timmons, 24, were arrested and charged with murdering Roberts, whom prosecutors say Saucer believed to be an eyewitness to the Mascarenas killing.

    Saucer was arrested two months after Roberts’ Aug. 31, 2015 murder and returned to jail. His defense team again tried to get him found incompetent to stand trial, but after a years-long process, he was deemed competent and ordered to stand trial.

    Saucer’s July trial spanned for weeks, but jurors deliberated for roughly four hours before convicting him of both murders, as well as witness intimidation and other charges. His sentencing date has not yet been set. His trial was split with Timmons because both men implicated each other as Roberts’ shooter when police questioned them, which would have pitted them against one another if they’d been tried together.

    Saucer’s attorney, Paul Feuerwerker, argued to jurors that police had taken advantage of Saucer during his interrogation, telling him things like, “(Your daughter’s) gonna visit dad in prison,” and implying he’d bee freed if he admitted to being present at Roberts’ murder scene.

    “He decides, ‘Maybe if I just say I was there … I won’t have to go to jail, I’ll go home,” Feuerwerker told jurors during closing argument. He also painted a key prosecution witness, one of Sacuer’s ex-girlfriends, as a spurned lover who implicated him in Roberts’ murder out of spite.

    After trial, deputy district attorney Satish Jallepalli said he was glad the jury “saw through Saucer’s claims and saw the truth for what it was.” He said he was unsure of the specifics behind the decision to release Saucer years before Roberts was killed.

    “I know the families are happy that even though things got delayed for quite some time they got some justice in this case,” Jallepalli said.

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    Sen. Rob Portman has asked ex-President Donald Trump to back the pending infrastructure deal - cleveland.com

    WASHINGTON, D.C. - U.S. Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio has asked former President Donald Trump to support the infrastructure deal he’s been negotiating for weeks with the Biden administration and a bipartisan group of U.S. Senators.

    Portman said he told Trump the package was consistent with what he tried to achieve as President and that Trump should take some credit for initiating the discussion among Republicans by proposing a $1.5 trillion infrastructure package during his campaign.

    Trump posted a message on his official website on Monday to attack the pending deal. It said: “Who are these RINO Republicans that are so dedicated to giving the Radical Left Democrats a big and beautiful win on Infrastructure? Republican voters will never forget their name, nor will the people of our Country!”

    Portman said the deal he’s negotiating would comply with Trump’s wishes by not affecting tax cuts enacted in 2017 during Trump’s tenure, “despite what Democrats wanted to do and what the Biden administration had proposed.” Portman said the pending deal pulled core infrastructure out of the $2.65 trillion package that Biden initially proposed and moved forward with it on a bipartisan basis without raising taxes, which he said would hurt the economy.

    “I would hope that the President (Trump) at the end will be supportive,” Portman told reporters on Tuesday. “I’m going to try to keep him informed of what we’re doing, because I think it’s important that we continue to have this be bipartisan. It’s not a victory for one party or the other, in my view, it’s a victory for the American people.”

    Portman did not say when he talked to Trump or how Trump responded to Portman’s request. Portman’s press office did not immediately respond to a request for that information.

    Portman said he hasn’t heard any Congress members discussing Trump’s statement on the infrastructure package, and said he’s confident that, given the support for infrastructure improvements in Congress and around the country, negotiators will be able to wrap up remaining issues in the next few days.

    “It’s always tough at the end to resolve those final issues because they tend to be the toughest ones,” said Portman.

    He said one issue that’s still outstanding is how much money to provide for mass transit such as buses and commuter rail. Even though his group has offered “unprecedented investment in transit,” Portman said some Democrats oppose their suggestions “so we are trying to get to ‘yes’ on that.”

    Other unresolved issues include funding for water infrastructure, broadband, and the infrastructure bank, said Portman.

    “I think we have solutions and I hope within the next couple of days, we’ll be able to bring it all together,” Portman said.

    He said the package will include “an unprecedented amount of money for major bridges that are structurally deficient,” such as the Brent Spence Bridge over the Ohio River, which connects Cincinnati with neighboring areas in Kentucky.

    “It would be, I would think, at the top of any list, in terms of being able to compete for and receive federal funding,” Portman said.

    Portman said the bill would deliver a one-time supplemental appropriation of $579 billion “as a shot in the arm to our nation’s infrastructure, to get it up to speed.” He said White House claims that the bill would spend $1.2 trillion include money that would have been spent on infrastructure anyway, even without its passage. He said the money could be used to fund major highway projects in the Cleveland area or at the Port of Cleveland that could take as long as 20 years to complete.

    “That funding will go out over time, which is one reason this doesn’t have any impact on inflation because there will be hardly any money spent this year or next year,” said Portman. “This is not about shovel ready projects. This is about long term investments in hard assets, major infrastructure projects.”

    Portman also told reporters he was concerned that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s decision to reject two Republicans - Indiana’s Jim Banks and Ohio’s Jim Jordan - that House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy wanted to appoint to a bipartisan House of Representatives select committee to investigate the June 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol is “not the way to have a bipartisan effort that is viewed as legitimate by both sides.” He called her actions “unprecedented.”

    “Right now, our country is way too divided already and that just makes it worse,” said Portman. “I do believe that January 6 needs to be looked into and looked into in a way that is serious, nonpartisan, not just bipartisan, nonpartisan. We need the facts out there.”

    Read more:

    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi vetoes Jim Jordan’s membership on riot probe committee

    Rep. Jim Jordan selected to serve on committee to probe the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S Capitol

    Sen. Rob Portman is confident infrastructure deal will happen despite setbacks

    Proposal to crack down on ‘ghost guns’ triggers Rep. Bob Gibbs

    U.S. Rep. Anthony Gonzalez trumps Trump-backed challenger Max Miller in fundraising

    Ohio congressional candidate Max Miller’s tax records show he claims his principal residence is in Washington, D.C.

    Ohio’s Sen. Rob Portman discusses the road ahead for the infrastructure deal he helped negotiate with President Joe Biden

    Ohio company sues over U.S. Postal Service delivery truck contract: Read the complaint

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    GOP congressional candidate Max Miller is engaged to Emily Moreno, daughter of U.S. Senate candidate Bernie Moreno

    Ohio’s Rep. Mike Turner leads effort to reform the military justice system

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    Suspect in Aiken County shooting detained in Texas, pending extradition - WRDW-TV

    BELVEDERE, S.C. (WRDW/WAGT) - A man wanted for a fatal drive-by shooting this month in Aiken County has been detained in Texas and is pending extradition.

    The Aiken County Sheriff’s Office reports Jeremy Glenn Nobles, 26m of Warrenville was arrested in Texas around 4:20 p.m. today.

    The Harris County Sheriff’s Office acting on a top located a vehicle Noble was traveling in with another man. After a vehicle pursuit, Nobles was taken into custody without incident.

    Aiken County Sheriff’s Office investigators obtain arrested warrants for Nobles, charging him with murder and possession of weapon during violent crime.

    Nobles is charged with shooting 28-year-old Rebekah Clark in the head during a drive-by shooting on July 15. The incident occurred just outside of North Augusta on the 400 block of Audubon Circle.

    Authorities report investigation into the case is still on going.

    Nobles was taken to the Harris County Jail where he will be held pending an extradition hearing.

    Copyright 2021 WRDW/WAGT. All rights reserved.

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    Africa Nightclub liquor license suspension continued pending further background checks, applications - Valley News Live

    FARGO, N.D. (Valley News Live) - The Fargo City Commission voted Tuesday to continue the suspension of the Africa Bar and Nightclub’s liquor license suspension until further background checks on management and security personnel are completed and turned into the city.

    Today’s special hearing began at 11:30 a.m. and lasted over an hour and a half with emotional and explosive testimony from both sides.

    At least 10 Fargo Police Officers attended Tuesday’s meeting with some of them testifying their past communications and experiences at the Africa Nightclub, many incidents which were already covered at a June 29 hearing.

    Fargo Police say they have identified one person who was underage and was inside the club prior to the shooting and May 23 murder of the club’s security guard 28-year-old Dominique McNair. Chief David Zibolski says juvenile court charges will be forwarded, but at this time, detectives are waiting to do so as they don’t want to open up the homicide investigation to public records.

    Chief Zibolski says safety concerns remain high as disturbance calls continued even after the homicide. Zibolski stated his officers were dispatched to the nightclub on both June 27 and 28, which was just days before the club got suspended, for a loud party and disturbance.

    Africa Nightclub manager Daniel Omane told the commission that he feels like the club is being picked on. Omane stated through records he obtained there have been more calls for service involving disturbances at other Fargo bars like the Bismarck and the Windbreak.

    Omane went on to tell commissioners that guns have never been an issue at the club. Omane says on the night of the homicide, there was a there was a music video being shot in the parking lot adjacent from the club. McNair was allegedly watching it when ‘some guy out in the parking lot started shooting at people.’ Omane says yes, there were three security guards who were armed, but he stated none of them went outside or fired their guns. Omane stated the armed guards were inside protecting the patrons and employees.

    Omane says no laws of infractions have ever been broken at the club, the club is not a threat to public safety and stated Chief Zibolski was misrepresenting the truth.

    Omane told commissioners Africa Nighclub has changed management, removing Francis Brown, and Omane stated the club has put forth a new code of conduct for how security operates, which they’ve shared with police. Omane also told board members that all of the club’s security team is now on the payroll and there is no longer anyone who will be paid under the table.

    More needs to be done to crack down on other bars in town, Omane said, not just his club. City commissioners Tony Gehrig agreed that other bars in the city need to be looked at, but says that doesn’t mean the Africa Bar and Nightclub shouldn’t have any sort of repercussions for what’s been happening there.

    Commissioner Piepkorn says the club has squashed their rights to a second chance and told Omane the club has no reason to throw rocks at Chief Zibolski because the club has no one to blame but themselves for the situation they are in.

    The commission stated they want to have all of the owners, new management team and security guards background checked and to have that process expedited. Once the checks have been completed and as long as they come back clear, the board stated they could likely then call an emergency meeting to reinstate the club’s license.

    Chief Zibolski says he’s bringing forth more bars at Wednesday’s Liquor Control Board meeting that have had issues and will recommend actions to be taken against those establishments as well.

    Copyright 2021 KVLY. All rights reserved.

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    2024 NFL Free Agency: 6 pending free agents on defense who deserve to get paid | NFL News, Rankings and Statistics - Pro Football Focus

    • The consistently elite Chris Jones is primed for a big payday: While ranking behind Aaron Donald for most of his career, Jones has be...