Migrants moved from YMCA to Daley College after delays
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:11:25 GMT
CHICAGO — The city has transferred three busloads of migrants from the city's North Side to the Southwest Side Tuesday evening.Migrants staying at the closed down YMCA in West Ridge were transferred to Daley College to make way for those staying at police stations. However, not all of the migrants are OK with this move.They have been housed at the YMCA at Touhy and Western since last fall. The YMCA shut down back in 2021, but has been set up to house the migrants who need shelter. Migrants move to Daley College further delayed Migrant children have been able to attend school in the neighborhood, but teachers, parents, and volunteers expressed their outrage over what they say would be entirely unnecessary and harmful decision to uproot the migrants families.The decision to transfer migrants from the YMCA to Daley College was postponed multiple times since Friday.Mayor Brandon Johnson released the following statement regarding the transfer of migrants on Tuesday:"To allow for a smoo...'Dead' woman knocks on inside of coffin at wake: 'It gave us all a fright'
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:11:25 GMT
(NEXSTAR) — A 76-year-old woman who was declared dead at a hospital in Ecuador astonished her relatives by knocking on her coffin during her wake, and the incident has prompted a government investigation into the hospital. Relatives left the coffin behind and rushed retired nurse Bella Montoya back to the hospital after the wake Friday in the central city of Babahoyo. Montoya was declared dead on Friday at Hospital Martín Icaza de Babahoyo, according to local outlet El Comercio. She had been initially diagnosed with a cerebrovascular accident and doctors weren't able to resuscitate her after she went into cardiorespiratory arrest, according to the Ministry of Public Health. The doctor on duty then pronounced her dead. These are the safest suburbs in 2023, study says. Did yours make the list? It wasn't until hours later when relatives were holding a wake for Montoya that they realized she wasn't dead.“There were about 20 of us there,” said her son, Gilberto Barbera, according to th...College World Series: Plucky underdogs, national powers collide in America's heartland for national title
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:11:25 GMT
AUSTIN (KXAN) — The field is set and eight teams will go at it for college baseball's ultimate prize beginning June 16 at the Men's College World Series in Omaha, Nebraska.With No. 8 Stanford's dramatic walk-off victory over Texas and Tennessee's triumph over Southern Miss on Monday night, there are five national seeds remaining and three others primed to make a Cinderella run to the championship. Fly ball lost in twilight gives Stanford berth in Men’s College World Series, ends Texas’ season Top-seeded Wake Forest and No. 2 Florida have played like the best teams in the country so far, but No. 5 Louisiana State, No. 7 Virginia and the No. 8 Cardinal also have aspirations of dogpiling in the middle of Charles Schwab Field Omaha.Oral Roberts, the last No. 4 seed from a regional to make the MCWS since Fresno State in 2008, is riding high after taking out Pac-12 tournament champion Oregon on their home turf — and perhaps there's still some magic left in the Golden Eagles. When Fresn...Orioles place Ryan Mountcastle on 10-day injured list with vertigo, designate top-20 prospect Noah Denoyer for assignment
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:11:25 GMT
Before Tuesday’s game against the Toronto Blue Jays, Orioles manager Brandon Hyde said first baseman Ryan Mountcastle was feeling “much, much better” despite being out of the lineup for the fifth time in six games with an undisclosed illness.Hours later, Baltimore placed Mountcastle on the 10-day injured list with vertigo, the sensation that the environment around oneself is moving or spinning. About 4:15 p.m. Tuesday, Hyde said Mountcastle was set to go through a full pregame routine and be available off the bench, with hopes he could be in Wednesday’s lineup. The roster move, which is retroactive to Saturday, came just before the game’s 7:05 p.m. first pitch.To fill Mountcastle’s place on the active roster, the Orioles selected the contract of Mark Kolozsvary, adding a third catcher to the roster. Baltimore designated right-handed pitcher Noah Denoyer — the organization’s No. 20 prospect according to Baseball America — to creat...Air quality alert issued for northern, southeastern Minnesota
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:11:25 GMT
The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency has issued a new air quality alert for the state.The agency said the two-part alert covers northern and southeastern Minnesota.In northern Minnesota, the alert is due to wildfire smoke drifting south from Canada. The alert is in effect from 6 p.m. Tuesday until 6 a.m. Thursday. The affected area includes Roseau, International Falls, Ely, Hibbing, Duluth, Two Harbors, Brainerd, Alexandria, Moorhead, Ortonville, and the tribal nations of Grand Portage, Fond du Lac, Leech Lake, Red Lake and Mille Lacs.In southeastern Minnesota, the alert is due to ozone in the lower atmosphere. The alert is in effective from noon Wednesday to 8 p.m. Wednesday. The affected area includes the Twin Cities, Rochester and the tribal nation of Prairie Island.Air quality is expected to reach orange in northern and southeast Minnesota, which is unhealthy for sensitive groups.Related ArticlesHealth | It’s been a spring without severe weather across Minneso...It’s been a spring without severe weather across Minnesota
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:11:25 GMT
Hear that?No thunder. No wailing tornado sirens. No beeping alerts streaming across the bottom of prime-time TV screens.That relative silence you hear is a sign of an exceedingly quiet spring, severe weather-wise, across Minnesota.While there’ve been some torrential rains and scattered reports of high winds or hail, overall it’s the quietest it has been in the region for more than a decade — and the eighth-quietest start to the severe weather season in National Weather Service records dating back to 1986.“Basically, we’ve been devoid of upper-level flow,” said Caleb Grunzke, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in the Twin Cities. “We haven’t had any troughs, large-scale troughs, that sweep through the area, that can bring us — like the systems that we saw last May, where they brought very significant severe weather events. … We just haven’t had that at all this year.”And 2022, you might recall, was a big year for big weather. There had been 438 severe thunderstor...Man sentenced for 2019 murder of Edwardsville couple
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:11:25 GMT
EDWARDSVILLE, Ill. - A Collinsville, Illinois, man appeared in Madison County Circuit Court on Tuesday to admit to the 2019 murder of an Edwardsville couple, and was sentenced immediately afterward.Michael Ladd, 79, and Dr. Lois Ladd, 68, were found stabbed to death inside their home in the 800 block of North Kansas Street shortly after 10:30 a.m. on March 18, 2019. The Madison County Medical Examiner determined they'd been killed the day prior.Investigators with the Illinois State Police and Major Case Squad of Greater St. Louis recovered evidence from the scene, including pieces of a latex glove, a boot print outside the bathroom window where the killer had entered the home, and bloody boot prints in the Ladds' bedroom.Zachary Capers was arrested the morning of the murders on an outstanding warrant for an unrelated incident. Police tie 12-year-old girl to overnight crime spree Investigators tied Capers to the murders shortly thereafter.The Madison County State's Attorney's Offic...Next-door neighbor heard the moment 22-year-old ran for their life in double shooting
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:11:25 GMT
ST. CHARLES, Mo. - An apartment complex in St. Charles sat quiet Tuesday afternoon after police arrested a 21-year-old man in connection to a double shooting that left one dead and one injured.Many residents at Metro on 5th remained fearful after a double shooting left a swarm of police there for hours. The gunfire erupted on the second floor of Building 21 in Clock Tower Square. As the homicide investigation continues, residents who live in the same building share what they heard Monday night."I heard three shots. I looked at my boyfriend and said, 'Did you hear that?'" said a long-time resident.She said she was returning home from a trip when she heard the gunshots go off. She was not the only one at the apartment complex who voiced the moments they heard gunfire go off. Police tie 12-year-old girl to overnight crime spree The shooting occurred just before 11 p.m. on Monday, and by early Tuesday, detectives had swarmed the scene. Residents said crime doesn't typically happen in ...City leaders move to the next stage of Behavioral Health Bureau
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:11:25 GMT
ST. LOUIS - On Tuesday, city leaders announced the next phase of the Behavioral Health Bureau. Officials said the bureau aims to improve access to mental health care and treat substance abuse.St. Louis Mayor Tishaura Jones along with members of the Department of Health, spoke at the press conference.“Addiction and lack of access to mental health care are the root causes of crime," Jones said. "We can work to address them before they result in a crisis or emergency room visit." Police tie 12-year-old girl to overnight crime spree “St. Louis, you have a number you can call. We have help," said Dr. Matifadza Hlatshwayo with the health department. "Give us time to grow, but there are resources in real time available now."According to the World Health Organization (WHO), mental health conditions and substance use disorders have increased globally by 13% in the last decade.Locally, the City of St. Louis has the highest rate of mental health-related emergency room visits in all age categ...No closures for Boulder Creek expected after boy drowns, sheriff’s office says
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:11:25 GMT
The Boulder Sheriff’s Office will not be instating closures to Boulder Creek at this time in the wake of the drowning of a 9-year-old boy on Sunday.At 4:52 p.m. Sunday, dispatchers received a report that a child had fallen out of his tube in Boulder Creek and was missing, according to a release issued by Boulder police.At about 5 p.m., first responders saw the child and pulled him from the creek near Broadway and Canyon Boulevard. CPR was administered before transporting the boy to Boulder Community Health’s Foothills Hospital where he was pronounced dead at 5:41 p.m.According to Carrie Haverfield, spokesperson for the Boulder Sheriff’s Office, the department’s policy regarding Boulder Creek is to only enact a tubing restriction when water levels have a sustained cubic feet per second level of 700 or above.“We look for sustained numbers, as typically you see fluctuations after rainstorms or in the overnight hours during spring run-off as the CFS numbers increase and decrease. We ar...Latest news
- Writers union ratifies its new contract with Hollywood and TV studios
- Flag football among new sports being considered for 2028 Olympics
- 11 Americans killed in Israel; Hamas ‘made a mistake of historic proportions,’ Benjamin Netanyahu says as Israel military orders ‘complete siege’ on Gaza
- Battenfeld: Massachusetts Democrats and liberals face blowback for comments on Israel
- Robbins: Coddled by Left, armed by Iran, Hamas stages massacre
- Lucas: Gov fumbles migrant hotel mess
- Harvard students called ‘morally repugnant’ for blaming Israel for attacks
- President Biden interviewed as part of special counsel investigation into classified documents
- Alabama library mistakenly adds children’s book to “explicit” list because of author’s name
- Casino industry spurs $329 billion in US economic activity, study by gambling group shows