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Monday, February 28, 2022

Charges pending against man who stole and crashed ambulance in Ogdensburg - NNY360

OGDENSBURG — Charges are pending against a man who stole an ambulance at Claxton-Hepburn Medical Center and eventually crashed it into a Ogdensburg home’s garage Monday afternoon.

Ogdensburg Police Chief Mark T. Kearns said that a man had been at the Emergency Room at CHMC and that police were dispatched there after he had become combative. Before police could get there, the man allegedly stole an Ogdensburg Volunteer Rescue Squad ambulance at approximately 3:17 p.m.

“He stole an ambulance, left down Mansion Ave. southbound at a high rate of speed and he went through a garage at the intersection of Cedar and Mansion,” said Chief Kearns.

The subject was brought back to CHMC for evaluation and charges are pending, according to Chief Kearns said that his name will be released once charges have been filed.

Chief Kearns said that both the garage and ambulance sustained significant damage.

City police had been at the hospital for a previous incident regarding a different man who had been involved in a brief standoff at the intersection of State Highways 37 and 68.

“Ultimately we were able to have a peaceful surrender from the individual and brought him up to Claxton-Hepburn for precautionary medical treatment and while our officers were at the hospital with him, they called on the radio saying they had a combative male in the Emergency Room can you send another officer up here,” said Chief Kearns, who stated that the next transmission was of the stolen ambulance.

OVRS Chief of Emergency Services Kenneth J. Gardner said that they were still gathering information on the incident and did not have a comment at this time.

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Charges pending against man who stole and crashed ambulance in Ogdensburg - NNY360
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Despite 3-month slump, pending home sales look just right - HousingWire

My 2022 forecast sales range is slightly lower than what I was looking for last year; it’s between 5.74 million and 6.16 million. The recent existing-home sales data at 6.5 million surprised me so much that I believe some of the December closings fell into January, and if you take the two-month average, it looks a bit more like the trend sales data we saw toward the end of 2021.

Make no mistake, existing home sales have been outperforming my estimates, with a few sales prints over 6.2 million as mortgage buyers became more active toward the end of the year, which breaks from the seasonal patterns.

As you can see above, existing home sales had a nice fall and winter, which shouldn’t be surprising. Our best sales data have come in the fall and winter the last two years and even in the previous expansion. 

2022 Pending home sales

Now looking ahead, the recent pending home sales data look about right to me after an outperforming second half of 2021. Unlike the surge in make-up demand we saw at the end of 2020, this recent outperforming data should moderate just due to traditional demand limits with the housing market at record low inventory levels. The question is, where do we find the sales base in 2022 to work from?

Last year we had a few sales print above 6.2 million, so I anticipated a few prints under 5.84 million. We only got one print. That was a big clue that housing was doing much better than I thought. This year, we should see a print or two below 5.74 million. However, if the sales trend is between 5.74 million and 6.16 million, demand is stable. So far this year, this is what I see in the purchase application data as well.

Even if I make COVID-19 adjustments, demand is only stable and not growing. Remember, with the MBA purchase application data, it’s very seasonal — volumes typically fall after May. Last year and the year before, we saw growth in this data line in the second half of the year, which isn’t normally the trend. We might need to keep an eye on this later in the year.

However, I genuinely believe that all the COVID-19 adjustments I have made with this data line don’t need to happen anymore. We can be more mindful that the year-over-year data aren’t working from the surge in make-up demand we saw in 2020 and spilling into the first two months of 2021.

Of course, the main issue we have in the U.S. housing market is the inventory crisis, as we have started 2022 with fresh new all-time lows in inventory. Inventory is always very seasonal, and we should see the total inventory increase in the upcoming months. If this doesn’t happen in a meaningful way, we might have to think of creative ways to create more inventory. I hope higher mortgage rates do their thing and make more days on the market than in the past.


I hope that the seasonal inventory push will happen again in 2022 and that higher mortgage rates will create more days on the market so that we don’t start 2023 at fresh new all-time lows. This is critical. The U.S. has lagged a lot of countries over the year in home price growth, and my fear for 2020-2024 has always been that we would see five years of unhealthy home price growth. So far, this fear is playing out.

Active inventory listings are at crisis levels, pushing home prices well beyond my five-year cumulative home-price growth level in just two years.

It has been tricky trying to find proper trends in housing data after COVID-19 made some of the year-over-year data too extreme to take seriously. However, starting in March, I believe that the purchase application data will be back to normal, and the April reporting of March housing data will be more in line with traditional housing data.

The rule of thumb for the rest of the year is that if existing home sales get above 6.16 million, you should view that as a beat, while if they’re trending below 5.74 million with several prints under that level, then we have housing softness. The upside of that housing softness, if it occurs, is that it should create more days on the market and give this housing sector a much-needed breather. As I have stressed time and time again, this is a very unhealthy housing market due to a lack of inventory in a time when the most prominent housing demographic patch ever recorded in history needs to find shelter.

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Despite 3-month slump, pending home sales look just right - HousingWire
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Tax reform legislation pending in state House - WHOP

Talk of tax reform will be prevalent in the second half of the 2022 session of the Kentucky General Assembly.

State Representative Jason Petrie of Elkton filed tax reform legislation Friday that would gradually move Kentucky toward a system similar to Tennessee, where there is no state income tax.

Representative Myron Dossett supports House Bill 8 and says it would expand the sales tax base without taxing groceries or medicine and he believes Kentucky could be without an income tax within five to eight years.

Representative Walker Thomas also supports the tax reform measure, believing it’s long overdue.

Thomas also notes the Senate has legislation pending that would rebate most working Kentuckians 500 to $1,000 from their 2020 income taxes to help families dealing with inflation.

Meanwhile, Senator Whitney Westerfield returns to Frankfort Tuesday following a mild bout with COVID-19 and says his online consumer protection bill will be heard again in committee as the big tech companies fight back.

Lawmakers are set to be in Frankfort for a full five-day workweek.

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Tax reform legislation pending in state House - WHOP
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Sunday, February 27, 2022

Two projects in New Madrid pending on the outcome of the rural jobs act - The Missouri Times

  

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — As the legislative session nears its halfway point, one southeast Missouri city is eagerly awaiting the outcome of a rural jobs bill. The city of New Madrid has been in competition with two other states on projects.

“We have two projects in New Madrid teed up and ready to go when the legislature approves the rural jobs program,” Richard McGill, the city administrator of New Madrid, said. “We are competing with Tennessee on one and with Ohio on the other, and frankly, this program is the final piece we need to compete and put people to work right now.”

The bill, deemed the Missouri Rural Workforce Development Act, has been filed by both Sens. Justin Brown and Denny Hoskins. It would provide an incentive for those making capital investments in a fund to be distributed to rural areas of the state. Participants would be eligible for a tax credit covering 15 percent of an investment annually for four years beginning two years after an investment is made capped at $25 million per year.  

The site in New Madrid, Missouri that is waiting on the passage of the rural jobs act to break ground.

“Time and time again, capital investors tell us that the availability of state tax credits are one of the most critical factors when considering business start-up and expansion proposals,” Brown previously said. “More often than not, they’ll pass by states that don’t come to the negotiating table with their own stake in the game. Investors want to know that state governments are willing to share in the investment and become partners in job creation.”

“We are very grateful for the Department of Economic Development. Their hard work and guidance helps make projects like ours happen. Starting a new business requires many facets of collaboration, including access to capital that commercial banks cannot supply. We implore the Missouri Legislature to pass the proposed rural jobs bill, as positive legislation like this can help supply the final key to maximizing the jobs created by important business projects like ours and others,” said Michael D. Harrelson, Circular SynTech LLC senior vice president of development and operations

Brown’s SB 675 has been referred to the Agriculture, Food Production and Outdoor Resources Committee; Hoskins’ SB 905 was first read last week. 

Only 11 other states have this type of incentive, including Ohio which is competing with New Madrid for a 120 job factory development.  

In rural Ohio, the program has landed more than 50 companies and thousands of jobs. For example, Global Cooling makes lab-grade freezers, one of the few that could hold all of the vaccines on the market. Thus far, the rural jobs program has bolstered Global Cooling to now over 200 jobs at their Athens, Ohio, factory. 

In the proposal, investors who have put at least $100 million in small communities across the country, including $30 million in Missouri, would be eligible to apply with the Department of Economic Development (DED) to receive credits. Recipients would be required to distribute 60 percent of their investment commitments within two years and 100 percent within three years. 

The bill requires 70 percent of investments to be made in rural small businesses with 250 or fewer employees. Agriculture is the state’s top industry, employing nearly 400,000 Missourians and bringing around $88 billion annually. Missouri ranks No. 2 in farms among U.S. states.

“The project in New Madrid is exactly the kind of rural job growth we are looking for in Missouri. While Kansas City and St. Louis are important, rural Missouri is also extremely vital to the state,” Hoskins said. “I look forward to supporting this bill and helping economic development in rural Missouri.”

Rural fund programs would have to submit annual reports to DED and could apply to exit the program six years after an initial investment. DED could recapture credits from investors who do not keep up with the requirements the legislation would create. 

Missouri would receive $166 million in private capital investments in the first three years of the program’s life cycle, increasing revenue through income, sales, and property taxes, according to a study of the program’s effects. Of Missouri’s 114 counties, only 11 boast populations above 90,000 people, according to the center.

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Two projects in New Madrid pending on the outcome of the rural jobs act - The Missouri Times
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German Tesla plant may need to find new water supply pending hearing - Driving

Elon Musk laughed off the idea the plant would consume too much water, but a court will hear an environmental group's case

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Tesla may lose the water supply contract for its long-delayed German plant if environmental groups win a court case challenging a license granted to its water supplier at a hearing next week.

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The Frankfurt Oder administrative court will hear on March 4 a complaint filed by local groups claiming the Brandenburg environmental ministry carried out insufficient checks before granting the license to the Wasserverband Strausberg-Erkner (WSE) utility.

If the groups win, WSE said it must cancel its contract with Tesla, and negotiations will begin again on where the plant could source its water — likely a lengthy process with no guaranteed solution.

A spokesperson for the court said a decision was expected the day of the hearing. Tesla declined to comment on the case.

A further delay would put another spanner in the works for the facility just as a broader approval process reaches its final stages.

Elon Musk had hoped to have the plant – key to his ambitions to conquer the European market where Volkswagen currently holds the upper hand with a 25-per-cent share of electric vehicle sales to Tesla’s 13 per cent – up and running six months ago.

Article content

  1. Toyota ranked third-worst company for lobbying against climate policies: report

    Toyota ranked third-worst company for lobbying against climate policies: report

  2. Tesla reverses decision to accept bitcoin, citing 'insane' energy use

    Tesla reverses decision to accept bitcoin, citing 'insane' energy use

Following delays, he said in October last year that he hoped to have it operational by December. The company has not further updated its timetable for the launch.

The groups bringing the complaint, Gruene Liga and Nabu, fear the 1.4 million cubic meters of water a year Tesla needs for the plant – akin to the usage of a 30,000-person town – will drain the region of drinking water. Municipally-run WSE has itself flagged concerns over water supply.

While the Tesla plant does not use a particularly large quantity of water – others such as BASF’s battery plant a few hours away use more – the region’s reserves are finite, WSE spokesperson Sandra Ponetsky said.

“We are a relatively water-rich country,” she said. “But we need help from other regions… Which supplier has the capacity to just magic that much water out of a hat in such a short time period?”

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German Tesla plant may need to find new water supply pending hearing - Driving
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Saturday, February 26, 2022

Red Sox: Chris Sale’s pending opt-out raises contract questions - BoSox Injection

Did the Red Sox make a mistake with Chris Sale’s contract?

The MLB imposed deadline for the new CBA is fast approaching and while players are getting in some work on their own time, nothing will compare to being able to use team facilities. For the Red Sox, their efforts are being led by Chris Sale as he’s been able to open up the doors to his Alma Mater to get his guys ready for 2022.

The season isn’t all Sale must think about in 2022 though as he has a big contract opt-out coming as soon as the final out is made. Much like J.D. Martinez and even more so Xander Bogaerts, who also has an opt-out after this season, The Condor has a big decision to make. Stay with the Red Sox, who have seen the highest of highs and lowest of lows during his time here, or pack his bags and head elsewhere.

When I started thinking about the possibility of Sale leaving after this season I decided to take a deeper look at his contract and decide if the cash Dave Dombrowski splashed has been worth it or not. It’s a tough decision to make as I’ll be taking a look at both the actual numbers while also factoring in subjective opinion.

Dombrowski signed Sale to a contract extension in March of 2019 and his new deal wouldn’t go into effect until 2020. A fresh 5-year/$145M deal and a new outlook on his future with the Red Sox would motivate the newly minted World Series champion as the regular season approached. The Boogeyman was coming off of a season that saw him battle injuries as the Fall Classic approached, still, he had earned every penny coming to him.

His elbow and shoulder would plague him as 2018 came to a close with a mystery stomach ailment mixed in during the Postseason. He was the heavy favorite to win the Cy Young that year until he missed a majority of the second half thanks to those issues. The southpaw went into 2019 reportedly healthy and ready to rock and prove to the baseball world that he was still the menace we knew him to be.

Unfortunately for everyone involved, the Red Sox stumbled massively out of the gates and never got going in their championship defense. They would finish fourth from the bottom of the league and Sale would miss over a month of time once again due to his elbow. Anyone watching him pitch knew something was off and even at times when he was healthy it didn’t seem right.

I had heard more than a few times that his style of pitching would ultimately be more of a when and not an if in regards to Tommy John, and that thought became a reality in 2020. The lefty tried to get his arm right by any means not related to surgery but after setbacks and speed bumps, it was inevitable and he went under the knife.

We wouldn’t see him take the mound for the Red Sox again until the summer of 2021 in front of a jam-packed Fenway Park, and he looked like his old self. Sale would finish the season with a 5-1 record, 3.16 ERA, and a 4.33 SO/W mix. He would also pitch the game of his life in the Postseason but the Red Sox offense couldn’t find their way to reward him for his efforts.

Now that we’ve done the walk down memory lane it’s time to look at the numbers. Since signing his extension on March 22, 2019, the veteran has spent a total of 254 days on the IL between his elbow, shoulder, and eventually Tommy John. He also missed a week of time due to COVID in 2021 just to add a miserable cherry to the setback sundae.

In those 254 days, he has earned a whopping $37.4M all while not being able to take the ball. Obviously, that’s the way the world works and you can’t predict an injury, but we should go back to the overarching contract terms when eyeballing his stays on the IL. When he signed his deal he was one of the best pitchers in all of baseball but he was entering his age 30 season and had just missed a month of time when the Red Sox needed him the most in 2018.

As I was combing through the contract terms nothing really stood out to me until I got to a section that until today I actually didn’t know about. Mixed in with all of the usual bonuses and escalators for awards and performance is a line about deferred years. We all love to make fun of the Mets for Bobby Bonilla but Sale’s contract may take the cake. His deal has $50M deferred at $10M/year between 2035-2039.

That’s right, well beyond his playing years he’ll be cashing massive checks from John Henry and the fellas. Again, I’ll never begrudge a player for getting the best deal humanly possible for them and their family but Dealin’ Dave really got loose with this one. Deferring money is common practice in contracts like Sale’s but $50M that far down the road for a guy who will be long retired is mind-boggling to me.

The other thing that Dombro did that had me scratching my head at the time was the actual extension itself. We didn’t have to worry about inking him to another deal until after the 2019 season but the former President of Baseball Ops jumped the gun before it was necessary. Had he waited then things may look different as far as the contract is concerned. Then again Dombrowski wasn’t long for the Red Sox world so it doesn’t really matter.

The lefty deserved the extension and has been a driving force in Boston even when he’s not on the mound, but the structure, size, and amount of his contract are easy to question. While I’d much rather have him in our uniform than that of another team, I think a different route with the terms could’ve been taken and the Red Sox could’ve saved some cash in the long run. With three years left to make his mark, I wouldn’t be surprised to see him go into full assassin mode.

Boston has a problem in the not-so-distant future with key players in their system being able to walk when this coming season concludes. During one of the recent workouts at FGCU, Sale was heard saying he wasn’t going anywhere, which should be reassuring. When they’re allowed to meet again, I hope he and Chaim Bloom sit down and the two can map out the future and the plans both have regarding the team. If the Red Sox want another banner at Fenway Park, they’ll surely need Chris Sale to help them get it.

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Red Sox: Chris Sale’s pending opt-out raises contract questions - BoSox Injection
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CHARGES PENDING AFTER STUDENT FOUND WITH AIRSOFT BB GUN AT SCHOOL - wccsradio.com

CHARGES PENDING AFTER STUDENT FOUND WITH AIRSOFT BB GUN AT SCHOOL | WCCS AM1160 & 101.1FM

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CHARGES PENDING AFTER STUDENT FOUND WITH AIRSOFT BB GUN AT SCHOOL - wccsradio.com
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Friday, February 25, 2022

The Richmond Planet license plate could soon be at DMV, pending General Assembly approval - WWBT NBC12 News

RICHMOND, Va. – A former Black community newspaper will be commemorated in a special license plate if Virginia House lawmakers give the bill its final stamp of approval.

Sen. Joseph D. Morrissey, D-Richmond, introduced Senate Bill 753,which will authorize the issuance of a special license plate celebrating The Richmond Planet newspaper. Lawmakers in the Senate passed the bill unanimously. The House Transportation committee unanimously approved the measure Thursday, and it will now be considered by the entire House.

The Planet was founded in 1882 by 13 formerly enslaved men, most who were Virginia public school teachers, according to the Library of Congress. A Black flexed bicep with shockwaves emanating from the arm served as the masthead design. The same symbol and the title of the newspaper will be incorporated into the license plate.

Edwin Archer Randolph, the first Black man to graduate from Yale Law School, served as The Planet’s first editor, according to the Library of Congress. Two years later, John Mitchell Jr. assumed power and led The Planet for the next 45 years. Mitchell was considered the “fighting editor” for his fight against injustice through his work.

Reginald L. Carter launched the effort to have the special plate. He was in search of a license plate for his personal vehicle, but Carter said he was uninterested with the available options. He came across the idea of creating a new plate in celebration of Black excellence. Carter described the process as “tedious but not impossible.”

Carter said he also worked on other projects in his hometown of Tappahannock. He worked to remove a Confederate statue, which the town council later voted to contextualize, and memorialize a lynched man from Essex County with a highway marker.

Mitchell’s family supports the idea.

“His great, great nephew, who’s also named John Mitchell, is on the board for The Richmond Planet Foundation,” Carter said. “They’re in full support of the plate, so I couldn’t have asked for a better family or representative to develop a plate after.”

The Planet covered local, national and worldwide news. It fought for all things Black– equal rights, education, voting and segregation, according to Black Virginia, a project by University of Richmond students which highlighted the newspaper’s importance. The paper also offered advice and positive news.

The Planet was bought in 1938 by The Baltimore Afro-American, according to the Library of Virginia.

Journalist Hazel Trice Edney previously worked for the Richmond Afro-American and Richmond Free Press newspapers. Edney said she conducted an independent study at Harvard University to compare the “fighting editor” styles of Mitchell and Raymond Boone, who established the Richmond Free Press in 1992. Boone was known as a “crusader of justice” and had a strong voice in the Black community.

“To have him on a license plate established in the former capital of the Confederacy and around the commonwealth of Virginia says that we do understand the fight that John Mitchell undertook,” Edney said.

The distribution and approval of the use of the new license plate is based on the ability to acquire and submit at least 450 prepaid applications, according to the bill impact statement. Carter set up an email where application and preorder inquiries were sent.

Dream for a Purpose, a marketing agency, designed the plate.

The JXN Project, an organization to preserve and explain the pivotal role of the Jackson Ward neighborhood as one of the nation’s first historically registered Black urban neighborhoods, supports Carter’s endeavor.

“We felt a responsibility to help Reggie and his campaign become the first license plate of its kind,” Sesha Moon, executive director and director of research of The JXN Project, stated in an email.

Carter worked tirelessly to collect signatures traveling throughout the state, according to Moon. He recruited Morrissey to introduce the legislation.

Mitchell’s great, great nephew, Carter and Morrissey spoke in support of the bill during the Senate hearing. Morrisey reported earlier in the month that Carter had 497 prepaid orders for the plate.

The estimated cost is expected to be just over $16,000 and will require 218 staff hours, according to the bill impact statement. Revenue from the cost of the plates—$10 for a standard plate and $20 for personalized—and future sales will cover the cost of implementation.

The plate can stay in production if 200 plates are issued within five years for the Department of Motor Vehicles to continue the issuance of plates, according to Virginia’s Legislative Information System.

“My end goal is contextualization,” Carter said. “You can’t tell American history without telling African American history, and you can’t tell Virginia’s history without telling The Richmond Planet’s history or John Mitchell’s history.”

Capital News Service is a program of Virginia Commonwealth University’s Robertson School of Media and Culture. Students in the program provide state government coverage for a variety of media outlets in Virginia.

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The Richmond Planet license plate could soon be at DMV, pending General Assembly approval - WWBT NBC12 News
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Thursday, February 24, 2022

Pending Red Wolves agreement with East Ridge causes concern for soccer tournaments - WTVC

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Pending Red Wolves agreement with East Ridge causes concern for soccer tournaments  WTVC
Pending Red Wolves agreement with East Ridge causes concern for soccer tournaments - WTVC
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9 Rams among PFF's top 200 pending free agents - Rams Wire

If the Rams are going to keep their Super Bowl team together for the 2022 season, they’ll have plenty of work to do. With limited cap space and a boatload of key free agents set to hit the market, there are plenty of hurdles on their path to repeating with the same group next season.

Pro Football Focus put the Rams’ free-agent class into perspective with its ranking of the top 200 players set to hit the market. Of those 200, nine of them were members of the Rams, including two in the top 20 and four in the top 55.

Von Miller was the highest-ranked among the Rams’ free agents, coming in at No. 4. Odell Beckham Jr. was 19th, followed by Darious Williams at No. 36 and Austin Corbett at No. 53. Williams’ ranking feels a bit high after the up-and-down season he had, but his performance in 2020 was fantastic.

Elsewhere on the list, Brian Allen is PFF’s 67th-best free agent, and Sony Michel is 80th – also the fourth-best running back who will be available next month. Sebastian Joseph-Day, who missed most of the season, was ranked 85th.

Backups Ogbonnia Okoronkwo and Joseph Noteboom were ranked 153rd and 162nd, respectively, with PFF seeing Okoronkwo as a rotational edge rusher and Noteboom as a potential starting left tackle.

Unsurprisingly, Davante Adams was PFF’s top-ranked free agent, followed by Terron Armstead at No. 2 and Chris Godwin at No. 3. It seems unlikely that any of those three will actually become free agents, either because their teams will sign them to extensions or hit them with the franchise tag.

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9 Rams among PFF's top 200 pending free agents - Rams Wire
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Wednesday, February 23, 2022

Full List of Patriots' Pending Free Agents for 2022 - NBC10 Boston

Patriots

Full List of Patriots' Pending Free Agents for 2022

Full list of Patriots' pending free agents for 2022 originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The New England Patriots have some difficult decisions to make this offseason as 18 of their players are set to become free agents.

Thirteen of those players -- including defensive stalwarts J.C. Jackson and Devin McCourty -- will hit the open market as unrestricted free agents unless they sign a contract extension before March 16. Four will be restricted free agents and one will become an exclusive rights free agent.

Perry: Catching up with Mr. INT J.C. Jackson with franchise tag looming

The Patriots also have the option to franchise tag a player before March 8. Jackson is considered a likely candidate for the $17.2M tag or a contract extension, but the Pro Bowl cornerback recently told our Phil Perry the organization has yet to contact him about a potential deal.

Here's the full list of Pats players scheduled to become free agents.

Devin McCourty, FS

Age: 35

2021 stats: 3 INT, 10 passes defended, 60 tackles

J.C. Jackson, CB

Age: 26

2021 stats: 8 INT, 1 TD, 23 passes defended, 1 forced fumble, 58 tackles

Dont'a Hightower, LB

Age: 32

2021 stats: 1.5 sacks, 64 tackles

Ja'Whaun Bentley, LB

Age: 26

2021 stats: 1 sack, 3 forced fumbles, 109 tackles

Jamie Collins, OLB

Age: 32

2021 stats: 1 INT, 1 sack, 30 tackles

Trent Brown, OT

Age: 29

Ted Karras, C

Age: 29

James White, RB

Age: 30

2021 stats: 10 carries, 38 yards, 1 TD; 12 catches, 94 yards

Brandon Bolden, RB

Age: 32

2021 stats: 44 carries, 226 yards, 1 TD; 41 catches, 405 yards, 2 TDs

Matthew Slater, WR

Age: 36

Brian Hoyer, QB

Age: 36

2021 stats: 227 yards, 1 TD, 0 INT

Nick Folk, K

Age: 37

2021 stats: 36-for-39 FG, 42-for-47 XP

Brandon King, FS

Age: 29

2021 stats: 10 tackles

Jakob Johnson, FB (RFA)

Age: 27

2021 stats: 4 catches, 43 yards

Jakobi Meyers, WR (RFA)

Age: 25

2021 stats: 83 catches, 866 yards, 2 TDs

Gunner Olszewski, WR (RFA)

Age: 25

2021 stats: 2 catches, 31 yards; 26 punt returns, 309 yards; 18 kick returns, 416 yards

Terez Hall, LB (ERFA)

Age: 25

Troy Fumagalli, TE (RFA)

Age: 27

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Full List of Patriots' Pending Free Agents for 2022 - NBC10 Boston
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Patent Pending in Canada? Do This Now to Avoid Higher Costs Later. - JD Supra

Canada is considering changes to its Patent Rules that could significantly increase costs to patent applicants whose applications are waiting for review by the Canadian Intellectual Property Office (CIPO). However, in many cases, applicants can avoid those costs if they act now.

When it comes to allowing patent applicants to defer and/or reduce costs, Canada’s patent system has been very favorable to applicants. Canadian patent applicants can often defer payment of examination fees for up to four years, and there is no limit on the number of claims that a single patent application can file for the basic filing fee. Canadian patent applications also can receive an unlimited number of office actions without having to pay additional fees. In comparison, U.S. patent applicants must: (1) pay the examination fee at the time of filing; (2) pay extra for any claims over 20; and (3) if the second Office Action is a rejection, (in most cases) pay a fee to request continued examination.

Canada’s system will change significantly when the country’s new Patent Rules come into effect, which is expected in late spring or early summer 2022. Under the proposal:

  • The CIPO will levy an additional fee on patent applications with more than 20 claims: (1) at the time of the request for examination (“RE”); and (2) at payment of the issue fee (only for additional claims that exceed the number presented at the time of RE). This fee (which is proposed as $100 CAD per claim over 20) will apply to new applications and currently pending applications for which examination requests have not yet been filed.
  • Applicants will need to file a Request for Continued Examination and pay a fee (proposed as $816 CAD) to continue examination after a third rejection, and every second rejection thereafter.

The fees proposed above will be reduced by 50% for small entities. In addition, the amounts and rules are subject to change since the proposal is not yet final.

To reduce the financial impact of the expected fees, businesses and individuals with patent applications pending in Canada should immediately:

  • Review all applications for which an examination request is not yet filed. For any applications that have over 20 claims, consider requesting examination now.
  • If considering adding claims to a pending patent application, do it now before the extra claim fees take effect.

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Patent Pending in Canada? Do This Now to Avoid Higher Costs Later. - JD Supra
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Charges pending in rollover crash on I-229 - KELOLAND.com

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Charges pending in rollover crash on I-229  KELOLAND.com
Charges pending in rollover crash on I-229 - KELOLAND.com
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Arrest warrant pending for former Krabloonik musher - The Aspen Times

A dogsled from Krabloonik takes the track cutting across the Slot run on Snowmass on Thursday, Feb. 25, 2021. (Kelsey Brunner/The Aspen Times)

The Pitkin County Sheriff’s Office is awaiting approval from the district attorney’s office on an arrest warrant for a former Krabloonik Dog Sledding musher after an investigation into an allegation of animal cruelty documented on video in late January.

County Investigations Sergeant Brad Gibson confirmed in a phone call Tuesday afternoon that he had submitted the arrest warrant request to the district attorney’s office on Feb. 15 and was still awaiting approval on the warrant as of about 3:40 p.m. Tuesday.

The warrant for Paul Staples is for one charge of misdemeanor animal abuse in a Jan. 30 incident that was documented on video, Gibson said. In the video, Staples kicks a dog, pins the dog to the ground, “uses a hamper fist” and “stomps” on the dog and “lifts (the dog) into the air slightly before slamming (the dog) into the ground,” according to a report filed by Gibson and Community Resource Officer Tara Alibrandi.



Gibson and Alibrandi worked “hand in hand” on the investigation, Gibson said.

The video is approximately six minutes long and was recorded on a dog sled tour reserved under the “Amari Cooper Group.” It also was posted on Facebook.



About two minutes into the video, a team of dogs pulling a guest in a sled begins to turn early when “the lead dogs change direction too soon,” the report states. Staples approaches a dog named Nicolai and “kicks the dog with his right leg,” the report states.

Staples then “pushes Nicolai to the ground on the dog’s right side and then puts his total weight against Nicolai’s left side, pinning the dog to the ground,” the report states. “Staples tells the dog several times, ‘I thought we were done with this,’ and ‘We don’t do that.’”

Around 2 minutes and 48 seconds into the video, “Staples uses a hammer fist with his right hand and stomps on a dog (presumed to be Nicolai) with his right foot,” according to the report.

About a minute later in the video, Staples returns to Nicolai, “flips the dog onto its right side again, kneels, and places all of his weight on Nicolai’s right side.”

Staples also “lifts Nicolai into the air slightly before slamming Nicolai into the ground” and can be heard “yelling at Nicolai again and again, ‘No! No!’ and ‘I’m really getting tired of this (or it), Nicolai!’” the report states.

Krabloonik co-owner Danny Phillips fired Staples after he learned of the incident, Phillips told Alibrandi in an interview included in the report.

Staples worked for Krabloonik for about five years. Nicolai, the dog, had been on Staples’ team for about three years. Nicolai had a history of fighting with other dogs and “was placed on Staples’ team because Staples is Krabloonik’s most experienced musher,” according to the report.

“Staples said his behavior in disciplining the dog was both excessive and something he had not done before,” the report states. “Staples said if he were watching his own employee do the same he would deem it unacceptable.”

Gibson first received information about the incident on Feb. 2 from Snowmass Village Police Chief Brian Olson. On Feb. 3, Olson confirmed that it occurred in Pitkin County.

Though the Krabloonik facilities are located within Snowmass Village, the case falls under the authority of the Pitkin County Sheriff’s Office because the incident occurred outside of town limits during a tour near the West Snowmass Creek trailhead at the end of Snowmass Creek Road.

The investigation involved a site visit as well as interviews with Staples, Phillips, Aspen Animal Shelter’s Seth Sachson (who at the time was the last remaining member of the Krabloonik Best Practices Review Committee), former musher Trevor Ohlstein, and Dan Hanks, who is the vice president of the United States Federation of Sleddog Sports.

Editor’s note: This story is one of several articles in a series on Krabloonik. For more reporting, see this week’s edition of the Snowmass Sun.

kwilliams@aspentimes.com

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Tuesday, February 22, 2022

Bronx judge who replaced lenient jurist freed 2 accused teen shooters pending trial - New York Post

The Bronx judge who replaced a notoriously lenient colleague in handling juvenile cases just allowed two accused teenage shooters — including one charged with murder — to go free pending trial, The Post has learned.

Bronx Supreme Court Justice Naita Semaj-Williams appears to already be following in the footsteps of Acting Supreme Court Justice Denis Boyle, who transferred to adult trials and hearings after he made headlines for cutting violent teens loose on bail, law enforcement sources said.

Prosecutors from the Bronx District Attorney’s Office had asked for both 17-year-old boys to be held on bail, but Semaj-Williams ruled they should be freed — one on supervised release and the other on his own recognizance — at their respective hearings on Feb. 9.

“Crime will never go down with judges like this,” a Bronx cop griped to The Post.

One of the cases involves Braulio Garcia, 17, who was arrested on Jan. 14, along with 16-year-old Jonathan Aponte, in connection with the New Year’s Day death of a good Samaritan who jumped onto Bronx subway tracks to save another man. Both have been charged with murder, manslaughter, robbery, gang assault and other crimes.

Bronx Supreme Court Justice Naita Semaj-Williams
Prosecutors from the Bronx DA’s Office asked for both teens to be held on bail, but Semaj-Williams ruled they should be freed.
YouTube/BronxNet

Garcia was arraigned on an indictment for second-degree murder Feb. 9 — and ordered released with supervision by Semaj-Williams, over the objection of prosecutors.

He’s expected to be sprung following a hearing Friday, after the New York City Sheriff’s Office works out the terms of his supervised release, including ankle monitoring, the DA’s office said.

In the other case, Semaj-Williams even walked back another jurist’s decision to set monetary bail.

Judge Michael John Hartofilis had ordered 17-year-old Sharif Mitchell held on $30,000 bail or $60,000 bond at his Feb. 8 arraignment in Bronx Criminal Court on attempted murder and other charges.

But at his hearing in the youth part the next day, Semaj-Williams modified those conditions, releasing Mitchell on his own recognizance despite prosecutors’ protests.

According to the state Office of Court Administration, Boyle's transition to adult cases was made at his own request.
According to the state Office of Court Administration, Denis Boyle’s transition to adult cases was made at his own request.
Robert Kalfus

The teen is accused of shooting a 19-year-old man four times on the 2 train platform at the Bronx Park East station at around 3 p.m. on Jan. 10, according to a criminal complaint.

“Another teenager with a gun firing into a crowd indiscriminately on a subway platform walks,” said the Bronx cop. “We are lucky no one died.”

According to sources, Semaj-Williams, 41, a former civil court judge, replaced Boyle in the youth part, presiding over criminal cases involving younger defendants.

Boyle, 67, a veteran jurist with 30 years on the bench, had requested the transfer, the state Office of Court Administration said earlier this month.

Several decisions over the course of his tenure had garnered outrage from New York’s Finest.

Last month, for instance, Boyle drew heat when a teen rapper accused of shooting an NYPD cop was freed after posting the $250,000 bond set by the judge — even though Bronx prosecutors wanted him locked up without bail.

Camrin Williams, 16, is charged with assault and gun possession for wounding the cop during a scuffle on Jan. 18.

State court officials repeatedly defended Boyle, saying he used his discretion as permitted under the law and chiding critics for “cherry-picking” cases to criticize.

The officials didn’t immediately return a request for comment Tuesday on the two decisions by Semaj-Williams.

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Seahawks Open Contract Negotiations With Pending Free Agent S Quandre Diggs - Sports Illustrated

Set to become an unrestricted free agent on March 16, the Seahawks have engaged in contract negotiations with Pro Bowl safety Quandre Diggs hoping to re-sign him to a multi-year contract.

Per a league source, Seattle plans to make keeping its secondary intact a top priority heading in free agency next month and has bookmarked money in the budget to retain Diggs and cornerback D.J. Reed if possible. The team also would like to bring back cornerback Sidney Jones if all three players fit into the budget.

At this stage, it remains unknown where negotiations stand between Diggs' representatives and the Seahawks and whether or not those discussions have been positive. The 29-year old safety just played out the final season of a four-year extension he previously signed with the Lions, earning $6.15 million in 2021. If he doesn't agree to a long-term deal or receive the franchise tag, he will be free to sign with any team on March 16.

In late January, Diggs told John Boyle of Seahawks.com that there was "no question" he wanted to return to the Seahawks, but he made it clear he wanted to be adequately compensated after making his second consecutive Pro Bowl and receiving All-Pro votes last season.

"If we can make it work and it works out for both sides, and I feel fairly compensated knowing that I'm a two-time Pro-Bowler, [received] All-Pro votes, and one of the best, if not the best free safety in the NFL - I have to be compensated as well, and I feel like I did everything the right way to be compensated as well. If it works out and they say they want to do it, let's get it done," Diggs said.

Coming off arguably the best season of his career with 94 tackles and a team-high five interceptions, even after suffering a fractured fibula in the season finale that required surgery, Diggs could push for as much as $11-12 million per year annually. Last offseason, the Seahawks extended fellow safety Jamal Adams on a record-breaking four-year, $70 million extension and signing Diggs to such a deal would put the team at close to $30 million per year on safeties alone.

However, that cost may be well worth the value Diggs provides Seattle's defense on the field and in the locker room. Since being acquired from Detroit in a midseason trade in 2019, he has produced 13 interceptions in only 38 regular season games and opponents have struggled to connect on seam and post routes with him turning center field into a no-fly zone. He's also been a reliable tackler with 158 combined tackles in that span and brought great leadership to the locker room.

With the franchise tag window opening on Tuesday and closing on March 8, the Seahawks have two weeks to attempt signing him to a multi-year deal with the tag as an alternative to extend the negotiating window and prevent him from hitting free agency. General manager John Schneider has only used the tag twice in 12 prior offseasons, but at an estimated $13.5 million per OverTheCap.com, he may be willing to use it to ensure the ball-hawking safety returns if a deal isn't reached quickly.

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Monday, February 21, 2022

With criminal investigation still pending, Deshaun Watson fails to delay testifying in civi case - NBC Sports

Indianapolis Colts v Houston Texans
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With his criminal case unresolved and his civil cases developing to the point at which it otherwise would be time to question him under oath in a deposition, Texans quarterback Deshaun Watson has a problem. Anything he says while testifying in the civil cases can be used against him in the criminal case.

As a result, the lawyers handling the 22 civil cases went to court on Monday, squabbling over whether Watson’s deposition will be delayed until the criminal case is resolved. Radio host Mike Meltser, an attorney, posted updates from the proceedings on Twitter.

Attorney Tony Buzbee, who represents the women who have sued Watson for sexual misconduct during massage therapy sessions, wants to proceed with the questioning of Watson, regardless of the status of the criminal cases. Attorney Rusty Hardin, who represents Watson, wants to delay the process until after the criminal process has ended. Hardin said in court that he expects a grand jury to conclude its work by April 1.

The presiding judge found a middle ground. For those plaintiffs who have filed criminal complaints, Watson will testify after April 1. For all other plaintiffs, he’ll testify when Hardin is available. (Hardin currently is handling a trial in a different case.)

That’s not ideal for Watson. The things he says while being questioned in the cases filed by plaintiffs who haven’t made criminal complaints could be used by the prosecutor in the other cases, if the prosecutor so chooses. Moreover, Watson’s testimony could prompt the prosecutor to exercise the broad discretion inherent to the job in a way that results in an attempt to secure an indictment on one or more felony charges.

The timeline also makes it harder to trade Watson before other teams begin making decisions about who their quarterbacks will be for 2022. The best seats could be filled before the criminal process ends.

There’s one more important point to keep in mind. Watson doesn’t have to settle all of the cases at the same time. He could try to settle the cases that don’t include criminal complaints, if he wants. However, Buzbee and his clients now have even more leverage, since settlement of those claims becomes the ticket to delaying being questioned under oath until April 1, at the earliest.

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Dartmouth PD: Charges pending in reported road rage - Boston 25 News

DARTMOUTH, Mass. — The Dartmouth Police department says charges are pending in their investigation of a reported road rage incident.

Police say they identified a man, soon after posting a video of the encounter on the department’s Facebook page.

The man’s name was not released.

In the video posted to the Dartmouth Police Department’s Facebook page, you can see the man yelling at someone, before punching a window, shattering the glass.

The man was identified about two hours after the video was posted.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates as more information becomes available.

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Three pending free agents that should interest Islanders - Eyes on Isles

We're a ways away from free agency on July 1, but with nearly $15 million in cap space on the opening of free agency frenzy, the New York Islanders are going to be in a position to make a big-time acquisition.

Now, assuming every player who is approaching free agency actually makes it there, who are some of the players that should interest the Islanders?

The single largest need for the Islanders is a top-line winger. They've needed one since 2009 and still need one today to play alongside Mathew Barzal. That's the focus of this piece. Top-end offensive talent.

Filip Forsberg | Nashville
Stats: 37GP, 25G, 16A, 41Pts

Turning 28 in August, Forsberg is at the peak of his powers in the NHL. His 41 points in 37 games put him on pace for 91 points on the year. On points alone, he's what the Islanders are looking for. More specifically though, he scores, a lot.

Since entering the league in 2014-15, he's put up 203 goals in 534 games. That's 0.38 goals per game. Making Forsberg a 30 goal scorer over his entire NHL career.

This year he's been putting them in from just about everywhere as evidenced by his finishing heat-map from Hockey Viz. Perfect for the Isles. (Unless he's really attached to that mustache of his.)

Johnny Gaudreau | Calgary Flames
Stats: 20G, 43A, 63Pts

Only six players have more points than Johnny Gaudreau since 2014-15. McDavid, Kane, Crosby, Marchand, Draisaitl, and Ovechkin. That's it. That's the list. That alone should convince you the Islanders need to be in on Gaudreau if he becomes a free agent.

For seven years now Johnny Gaudreau has been one of the better players in the NHL. That's the type of player Lou Lamoriello has been trying to add to his team for years now. So if Gaudreau makes it to the open market (there's no guarantee he will of course), expect Lou to make a strong play for him.

Tomas Hertl | San Jose Sharks
Stats: 49GP, 22G, 18A, 40Pts

Hertl has been a top player on a pretty bad team. Since 2018-19, Hertl has had 92 goals and 193 points in those 224 games played. It's a drop-off from Gaudreau but Hertl is still a good player that can play down the middle and on the wing.

With a 53% win percentage over his carer, Hertl can be that right-handed faceoff man on the top line and then let Barzal take over center duties the rest of the shift. He'd also be a hell of a backup top-six center.

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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...