Closing in on another heat record
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 10:08:45 GMT
AUSTIN (KXAN) -- Monday's high temperature at Camp Mabry is 107°. It's a new daily record. The former record was 106° in 1923. It's the 24th consecutive day for a triple-digit high. A new record in this category (27 days in 2011) will be set Friday and added to beyond that. July 2023 is the hottest July everAnd, another record was set with today's high. Unofficially, the average temperature in July 2023 is 90.7°, one-tenth of a degree higher than the 90.6° in 2022. Official records will be released by the National Weather Service Tuesday.Every city with a high Tuesday exceeding 100°An Excessive Heat Warning is in effect until 9 p.m. Tuesday for 11 of our counties, including Travis. This is for air temperatures at or above 105°. Blanco, Caldwell, Gillespie, and Hays Counties are under a Heat Advisory. This is for air temperatures up to 104° and heat index values up to 109°.Central Texas updated heat alertsIn addition, Lampasas County joins several counties in north Texas under a Red ...Feds: Anoka man with violent anti-government views sentenced on meth, illegal gun charges
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 10:08:45 GMT
An Anoka man who federal prosecutors say talked about joining a loosely organized anti-government extremist movement has been sentenced to nearly 6½ years in prison for illegal possession of a machine gun and distribution of methamphetamine.Darrian Mitchell Nguyen, 50, pleaded guilty to the charges in March and was sentenced last week in U.S. District Court in St. Paul. He’ll be on 10 years of supervised release after his prison term.Darrian Mitchell Nguyen (Courtesy of Anoka County Sheriff’s Office)According to court documents, the FBI began investigating Nguyen in April 2022 after a buyer was arrested for possession of meth in 2020 and became a paid informant. He told agents that Nguyen said he had amassed a cache of weapons to be prepared for violence and talked about joining the Three Percenters, a loosely organized anti-government extremist movement; federal officials noted they didn’t have information he had joined a militia group.The informant told FBI agent...Maplewood man, 62, sentenced to probation for fatally stabbing 30-year-old during fight
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 10:08:45 GMT
A 62-year-old man was sentenced to probation after pleading guilty to manslaughter in the stabbing death of a 30-year-old man during a fight last year in Maplewood.Kevin Dwayne Peterson, of Maplewood, told police he stabbed Richard Williams, of St. Paul, after Williams punched him several times outside an apartment building in the 300 block of East Larpenteur Avenue on July 29, 2022.Kevin Dwayne Peterson (Courtesy of Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office)Ramsey County prosecutors charged Peterson with two counts of second-degree murder on Aug. 10, a day after Williams died at Regions Hospital of stab wounds.Prosecutors and Peterson reached a plea deal on June 1, just over a week before a trial was set to begin. Prosecutors agreed to dismiss the murder counts in exchange for Peterson pleading guilty to an added charge of second-degree unintentional manslaughter. His attorney was allowed to argue for a downward departure from state sentencing guidelines.District Judge Joy Bartscher acc...John Shipley: Gene McGivern, a St. Thomas athletics mainstay, says goodbye
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 10:08:45 GMT
As he neared his last day of work as University of St. Thomas sports information director, Gene McGivern had one of those moments of clarity that seems obvious but typically escapes us as life happens.“I did a lot of things, and I met a lot of people,” McGivern said Monday, the day before he was set to finish a 27-year run as the Tommies athletics department’s Sports Information Director.An awful lot has happened at St. Thomas in that time, and in terms of the sports department’s narrative, it was, for McGivern, backended as the Tommies moved quickly from NCAA Division III athletics in the conference it helped found in 1920 to Division I athletics in four different conferences.As McGivern, 65, noted, “I didn’t get that soft landing toward retirement.”But it worked for McGivern, who has always been busy and always enjoyed being in the middle of it, whether he was running cross country at Iowa State, working for small newspapers, coaching distance runners at Augsburg or co-writing Den...Car falls into sinkhole in Schenectady
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 10:08:45 GMT
SCHENECTADY, N.Y. (NEWS10) -- The intersection of McClellan Street and Eastern Avenue in Schenectady was closed after a car fell into a sinkhole Monday afternoon. Get the latest news, weather, sports and entertainment delivered right to your inbox! Police said one person was inside the car. She was taken to a hospital with minor injuries. Repairs are underway.Drivers and pedestrians should avoid the area.Volunteer firefighters sue Clifton Park for tax benefits
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 10:08:45 GMT
CLIFTON, PARK, N.Y. (NEWS10) — A group of volunteer firefighters in Clifton Park is suing the town assessor to receive residential tax credits. It was respectful but quick. Monday afternoon, Art Hunsinger, on behalf of Clifton Park’s volunteer firefighters, served Walter Smead, the town’s assessor. "The law is very confusing, it definitely needs some clarification, there’s different interpretations of it, so if this gets it in front of a judge," Smead explained.MORE NEWS & WEATHER from NEWS10Let's break down the moving parts. There are four taxes for which a 10 percent credit can be applied to volunteer firefighters if approved by municipalities: school districtfire districttown countyThere are two main players involved in this disagreement: A group of Clifton Park volunteer firefighters, represented by Art Hunsinger Walter Smead, Clifton Park's Town AssessorAssessor Smead says his interpretation of the law is that firefighters don't qualify for any of the tax credits if t...Yellow trucking ceases operations nationwide; 500+ out of work in St. Louis
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 10:08:45 GMT
ST. LOUIS – A red light for Yellow Corp. After nearly a century of business in the United States, the freight carrier is shutting down operations amid a standoff with the Teamsters union.Employees in the St. Louis area—more than 500 people, according to the local Teamsters—hung up their work vests for the last time, after the trucking company that once was a dominant player in the field halted operations on Sunday and will file for bankruptcy, effectively laying off 30,000 employees across the country.Yellow drivers have tied their vests to the fencing outside the YRC Freight terminal in the Kosciusko neighborhood in south St. Louis.The Teamsters have been locked in a standoff with Yellow after telling the company it needed to renegotiate its multi-year contract. Overnight carjacking attempt in St. Louis foiled by disconnected battery Michael Peacock has been driving for Yellow for 15 years, and said he was caught off guard by the news.“I was an employee here. I was until midnight...Parson rejects mercy plea from man set to be executed for killing 6-year-old girl
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 10:08:45 GMT
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — Missouri Gov. Mike Parson said Monday that the state will proceed with this week's planned execution of a man who abducted and killed a 6-year-old girl nearly two decades ago, though the man's attorneys are still pressing claims he is mentally incompetent.Johnny Johnson, 45, is scheduled to receive a lethal injection Tuesday evening for the July 26, 2022, fatal beating of Casey Williamson in her St. Louis County hometown of Valley Park.Johnson's attorneys have asked the U.S. Supreme Court to halt the execution. They also asked that Parson grant clemency — reducing Johnson's sentence to life in prison — while asserting that Johnson's mental illness has left him incapable of understanding the connection between his actions and his execution. Close Thanks for signing up! Watch for us in your inbox. Subscribe Now Daily News ...Pete Buttigieg announces funding for St. Louis area's MetroLink system
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 10:08:45 GMT
EAST ST. LOUIS, Ill. - Tens of millions in funding to improve infrastructure is headed to the St. Louis area's MetroLink system. The Federal Transit Administration announced plans Monday to award nearly $28 million to Bi-State Development, which operates the MetroLink. The money is meant to help St. Louis recover from major flood damage to its MetroLink services last year. Overnight carjacking attempt in St. Louis foiled by disconnected battery The award is part of nearly $102 million in funding from President Joe Biden's bipartisan infrastructure law. U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg paid a visit to the Metro East to announce the award Monday evening. He will join U.S. Senator Dick Durbin and Congresswoman Nikki Budzinski at a MetroLink management facility in East St. Louis. Buttigieg and Illinois state officials also took a tour of the MetroLink light rail management facility and rode a train into Monday's news conference.Persistent segregation at Denver’s schools hurting Latinos, English learners, study finds
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 10:08:45 GMT
Denver’s schools are more segregated than they were 50 years ago when the district was forced to bus students to integrate its campuses, according to a study released Monday. Segregation reemerged in Denver Public Schools after busing ended 28 years ago, with Latino students — which make up more than half of the district’s students — and English learners — about a third of all DPS students — more likely to attend schools where the student population is mostly made up of students of color and those living in poverty, researchers found.DPS campuses that mostly serve students of color and those from low-income families also have fewer resources and graduation rates, according to the study, which was commissioned by the Latino Education Coalition. “While the results of this study are painful, I am not surprised,” Superintendent Alex Marrero said in a statement, adding, “It is vitally important that we leave no stone unturned in finding the root causes...Latest news
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