Cooper City man safe after crashing car into canal

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 03:39:49 GMT

Cooper City man safe after crashing car into canal A driver managed to escape his sinking vehicle after a canal crash in Cooper City.The car wound up in the water near Flamingo and Griffin Road on Monday afternoon.The man was able to get out unharmed, his vehicle however was submerged.

Stormy weather causes ceiling collapse in Hallandale Beach apartment

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 03:39:49 GMT

Stormy weather causes ceiling collapse in Hallandale Beach apartment A resident called the Hallandale Beach Police Department and Broward Sheriff’s Office Fire Rescue after coming home to her ceiling on the floor.Stephanie Conte found debris all around inside her home around 6 p.m. on Monday. She said that Fire Rescue told her the cause for the collapse was structural. Though she was told not to stay there, she said she has no other choice. “Kitchen area is hanging, this has been hell,” said Conte. After days of on-and-off wet weather, shards of damp drywall littered nearly all the surfaces in the main part of her apartment — leaving the beams exposed after part of her ceiling came down.And she’s left to deal with the damage.“I know I need things, I need my clothes for work, everything’s all over my computer.”Cleaning this up, working with her landlord and the prospect of more summer rain, will make the next few days a challenge for Conte. “I have no place to go, it happened too late in the day, I don&#...

Act now to address the silent epidemic of chronic kidney disease

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 03:39:49 GMT

Act now to address the silent epidemic of chronic kidney disease Chronic kidney disease should be a health and policy priority in Europe1Around 30-40 percent of Europeans are predicted to be at risk of chronic kidney disease (CKD), many of whom may not realize it.1,2 In fact, according to a new Economist Impact report – one of the deliverables in a broader project, designed and conducted by Economist Impact, which was funded and initiated by AstraZeneca – CKD has a higher prevalence in the EU than the estimated 52 million for diabetes and 17 million for cancer.1Given the high numbers — up to 100 million Europeans are estimated to already be affected by CKD — awareness is crucial if early detection is to improve patient outcomes.1 And not just within medical communities either. Policymakers, many of whom may not recognize the urgency of CKD, must increase their understanding of what Belgian MEP Hilde Vautmans recently called “the most neglected chronic disease”.3 For example, the EU noncommunicable diseases initiative Healthier Together,launched i...

Brussels seeks EU budget top-up — but it’s a hard sell

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 03:39:49 GMT

Brussels seeks EU budget top-up — but it’s a hard sell BRUSSELS — The EU Commission will ask countries for tens of billions of euros to cover gaps in its long-term budget left by the unforeseen crises of COVID, inflation and war.But the EU executive is likely to hit stern opposition from national governments, as many are already having to make savings within their own budgets and are unwilling to pay up for anything other than Ukraine-related causes.“Clearly we are stretching the limits of what we can finance in the [Multiannual Financial Framework] as it stands,” EU Budget Commissioner Johannes Hahn said earlier this month, referring to the EU budget’s formal name.The Commission will on Tuesday unveil a mid-term review of the budget. It wants additional cash for a host of items including €50 billion in financial support for Ukraine, €15 billion for migration and neighbourhood policy, €10 billion for investments in key strategic sectors, some more money for running EU machinery and an as-yet-unspecified amount for repaying EU debt...

Why Berlin will slam the brakes on France’s car war with China

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 03:39:49 GMT

Why Berlin will slam the brakes on France’s car war with China When it comes to fighting off China’s electric vehicle invasion, Europe’s carmaking superpowers are split straight along the Rhine.Germany’s big three automakers — Volkswagen, BMW and Mercedes-Benz — see the prospect of antagonizing Beijing with an all-out trade war over clean cars as an unthinkable nightmare, while executives at their partially French state-owned rivals Renault and Stellantis have much to gain from pulling up the drawbridges and protecting domestic industry with tariffs. That’s the strategic calculation the European Commission’s trade defense team has to weigh up as it decides whether to declare war on China’s EVs.As POLITICO reported this month, the French government and its proxies in French industry and the EU College of Commissioners are pushing Brussels — which steers trade policy for the 27 member countries — to launch anti-dumping measures against insurgent Chinese e-carmakers. This means Europe would be able to impose duties against Chinese vehicles it reck...

What genocide? Volkswagen’s morally expensive bet on China

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 03:39:49 GMT

What genocide? Volkswagen’s morally expensive bet on China BERLIN — The blowback came in the form of cake.An annual meeting of Volkswagen shareholders in Berlin in May was disrupted by protesters, one of whom hurled the creamy confection at the assembled executives, forcing Chairman Hans Dieter Pötsch to flinch out of the way.Among the subjects of their ire: A car plant some 3,500 miles away in the Chinese region of Xinjiang, where Beijing has carried out a campaign of mass detention, reeducation and forced labor that the United States has described as genocide of the Uyghur ethnic minority.One topless woman in the room waved a banner with the words “End Uyghur Forced Labor” before the protesters were escorted away. Outside, other activists held up signs saying “Camps, forced labor, family separations: VW major shareholders in Lower Saxony must not remain silent about crimes against Uyghurs.”Volkswagen denies it has ever utilized forced labor in Xinjiang. But it has been less willing to grapple with the broader accusation: that by maintaini...

Multiple bear sightings reported in Cohasset, elsewhere on South Shore

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 03:39:49 GMT

Multiple bear sightings reported in Cohasset, elsewhere on South Shore Multiple people in Cohasset recently experienced a bear scare as a black bear was spotted in town. One woman told 7NEWS she was shocked to find a bear on her porch. She said the bear was looking for food in her birdfeeder. Elsewhere, a family dog walked right up to a bear before his owner pulled him back.“I looked to the side out the window and a bear had decided to climb up on my porch,” said Jen Connell.“Just yesterday we were all sitting right outside right at that table by that bird feeder having a cookout for Father’s Day,” she said.The bear Connell saw is likely the same bear that has been making its way across the South Shore in recent days. Vincent Dunn was reading the paper outside his home in Cohasset on Monday when he said he realized his dog Lars was about to have a close encounter with the bear.“I yell to my wife and daughter…‘There’s a black bear in the yard,’” Dunn said.Dunn said he walked up to his dog, grabbed his collar and walked him away from...

Max Scherzer gives best performance as a Met in blowout victory over Astros

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 03:39:49 GMT

Max Scherzer gives best performance as a Met in blowout victory over Astros HOUSTON — A series that looked like a clash of the titans before the season started looked more like a race to the bottom by the time it began. The Mets came into Houston to face the defending World Series champion Astros this week having lost 11 of their last 14 games, but the Astros came in riding a similar streak, losing nine of their last 12.How the mighty have fallen.Still, the Astros can’t be discounted. So if this series is a litmus test of sorts, then the Mets have passed the first part. Behind a dominant performance by Max Scherzer, the Mets defeated the Astros, 11-1, on Monday at Minute Maid Park.Scherzer (6-2) held the Astros to only a single run — a solo shot by Yainer Diaz in the seventh inning — on four hits over eight innings. Before Diaz’s home run, Scherzer hadn’t allowed a runner past second base. He walked only one and struck out eight, lowering his ERA by 41 points to 4.04. It was his most efficient start of the year and the fi...

Man arrested in fatal stabbing at City Heights park

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 03:39:49 GMT

Man arrested in fatal stabbing at City Heights park SAN DIEGO -- San Diego police have launched a homicide investigation after a 65-year-old woman was attacked and fatally stabbed at a City Heights park Monday morning, authorities said.Around 8:30 a.m., the woman was approached by the suspect while she was exercising at a park in the 3600 block of Central Avenue. The suspect then stabbed her multiple times before fleeing south through the west alley of Central Avenue, according to SDPD Lt. Steve Shebloski. Police are asking the public's help in identified this man, who is the suspect in a fatal stabbing in a City Heights area Monday morning. (Courtesy of San Diego Police Department)The woman, who was identified as a resident of the neighborhood, was later pronounced dead on the scene after officers and medical personnel attempted live-saving measures.Around 5:30 p.m., the suspect, identified as 23-year-old Hamala Siliveinusi Patafalai, was arrested at his residence in the 3000 block of 39th Street, police said. Patafalai was arrested...

Tribal activists see ‘green colonialism’ in Nevada mine Biden hails as key to clean energy

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 03:39:49 GMT

Tribal activists see ‘green colonialism’ in Nevada mine Biden hails as key to clean energy OROVADA, Nevada (AP) — Just 45 miles (72 kilometers) from the Fort McDermitt Indian Reservation where Daranda Hinkey and her family corral horses and cows, a centerpiece of President Joe Biden’s clean energy plan is taking shape: construction of one of the largest lithium mines in the world.As heavy trucks dig up the earth in this remote, windswept region of Nevada to extract the silvery-white metal used in electric-vehicle batteries, the $2.2 billion project is fueling a backlash. “No Lithium. No mine!″ proclaims a large hand-painted sign in Hinkey’s front yard.The Biden administration says the project will help mitigate climate change by speeding the shift away from fossil fuels. But Hinkey and other opponents say it is not worth the costs to the local environment and people. Similar disputes are taking place around the world as governments and companies advancing renewable energy find themselves battling communities opposed to projects that threaten wildlife, groundwater an...