Unemployment or recession fears aren’t stopping workers from making career moves
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 07:33:46 GMT
Sarah Foster | Bankrate.com (TNS)For more than a year now, workers have been told to strap in for a recession that could zap their historic career opportunities, harm their unprecedented amount of bargaining power and injure their job security.That downturn has yet to arrive. Now, workers may be learning to live with the uncertainty.One in 3 (or 33%) employed Americans are worried about their job security, according to Bankrate’s job seeker survey released in April. But a new analysis shows they’re also the ones most likely to make career moves.Nearly 9 in 10 workers who are worried about their job security (or 88%) say they will likely take at least one career action in the next 12 months, which includes quitting a job, asking for a raise, relocating for a job, negotiating for more flexibility and searching for a new position, the survey found. About two-thirds (or 67%) of those with no job security worries said the same.Illustrating the divide even more, 21% of workers who are wor...Great white shark called Jekyll tracked off Long Island coast
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 07:33:46 GMT
Tim Balk | New York Daily News (TNS)A great white shark named Jekyll isn’t hiding from beachgoers on Long Island.The 400-pound beast swam near the beaches of the Hamptons this week before heading farther out to sea, according to shark tracking data monitored by researchers.The juvenile 9-foot-long fish, first tracked in December off the Georgia coast, has been trawling near Long Island at least since last Friday, according to the shark-tracking organization OCEARCH.The group said Monday night that Jekyll’s recent movements marked the first time its researchers have tracked the shark near New York.OCEARCH tweeted that it is “excited to see where he spends his summer.”On Sunday, Jekyll was tracked near the village of Quogue in Southampton.Despite great whites’ notoriety, generated in part by the 1975 “Jaws” movie, they do not typically attack people on purpose. Their extremely rare human bites are believed to be accidents.A study from California State University, Long Beach, released ...WWE Hall of Famer ‘The Iron Sheik’ dies at 81
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 07:33:46 GMT
David Matthews | New York Daily NewsLegendary wrestler Hossein Khosrow Ali Vaziri, who performed as “The Iron Sheik,” died Wednesday. He was 81 years old.“It is with great sadness that we share the news of the passing of The Iron Sheik, but we also take solace in knowing that he departed this world peacefully, leaving behind a legacy that will endure for generations to come,” a statement posted to his Twitter account reads.“With his larger-than-life persona, incredible charisma, and unparalleled in-ring skills, he captivated audiences around the globe. He was a trailblazer, breaking barriers and paving the way for a diverse range of wrestlers who followed in his footsteps.”No other details of his death were given.Vaziri was born in Iran in 1942 and trained as a wrestler before moving to the United States in the 1960s. He went on to become an assistant coach for the 1972 and 1976 U.S. Olympic wrestling teams, where the U.S. won 12 medals.He entered the world of pro wrestling and soon...Gunman who opened fire after Virginia high school graduation targeted graduate, Richmond police say
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 07:33:46 GMT
By SARAH RANKIN and DENISE LAVOIE (Associated Press)RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — A gunman who opened fire minutes after a high school graduation in Richmond, Virginia, targeted an 18-year-old graduate he had a long-running dispute with, police said Wednesday.Shawn Jackson, 18, and his father, Lorenzo Smith, 36, were both killed Tuesday in the shooting, which sent hundreds fleeing in panic outside the state capital’s city-owned Altria Theater after the graduation ceremony for Huguenot High School. Five other people were wounded in the shooting.Richmond Interim Police Chief Rick Edwards said the shooting suspect, Amari Pollard, 19, knew Jackson and the two had been embroiled in a dispute for more than a year. Edwards said the nature of the dispute is still being investigated.“This was targeted at one individual … that’s what we know at this time,” Edwards said during a news conference Wednesday.Pollard was arraigned Wednesday morning on two counts of second...Man who died at Ramona motocross track identified
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 07:33:46 GMT
RAMONA, Calif. — Officials have identified the man who died Tuesday at a motocross track in Ramona.Patrick Michael Casey, 29, died after he lost control of the motocross bike he was riding and was ejected from the vehicle, the San Diego County Medical Examiner's Office said.The incident happened around 2:45 p.m. at Slayground Motocross Park, which is owned by Axell Hodges, a three-time gold medal winner in X Games Moto X competition.According to authorities, Casey crashed his motorcycle while performing a jump on the park ramps. Bystanders called 911 after the crash and paramedics were dispatched to the track. Medics found Casey pulseless and apneic. Despite life-saving measures, he was not able to be resuscitated and was pronounced dead at the scene.The “Slayground” was the site of the X Games Moto X competitions in 2021 and 2022. The 2023 X Games Moto X event will take place in Ventura.In Fargo, North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum jumps into crowded Republican race for president
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 07:33:46 GMT
FARGO, N.D. (AP) — North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, a former software entrepreneur who enacted a slate of laws this year advancing conservative policies on culture war issues, highlighted his small-town roots and business experience as he announced his candidacy for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination on Wednesday. Burgum, 66, joins a long list of contenders hoping to dent former President Donald Trump’s early lead in the race. The governor of the nation’s fourth-least populous state made the announcement in the The Wall Street Journal and kicked off his campaign in Fargo, near the tiny farm town of Arthur where he grew up.“It shouldn’t be a surprise that small-town values have guided me my entire life,” Burgum told the crowd. “And frankly, big cities could use more ideas and more values from small towns right now.” Burgum spoke under a sign declaring him “A new leader for a changing economy,” echoing a slogan he first used as his successful 2016 gubernatoria...Senate changes to judicial oversight bill contrary to bill’s goal: Lametti’s office
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 07:33:46 GMT
OTTAWA — Justice Minister David Lametti’s office says some Senate amendments to a judicial oversight bill would do the opposite of what the bill is trying to accomplish. Bill C-9 would amend the Judges Act to create a new process for the Canadian Judicial Council to review misconduct allegations that are not serious enough to warrant a judge’s removal.Lametti’s office said the proposed law is the product of extensive collaboration with judges from across the country.“Certain amendments proposed by the Senate are contrary to the intent of the legislation, which is to strengthen the oversight and efficiency of the judicial misconduct process,” Lametti’s press secretary Diana Ebadi said in a statement. “Minister Lametti believes that the purpose of C-9 is to reform the judicial misconduct process, which is outdated and at times has proven to be inefficient and costly. He is focused on improving and bolstering confidence in the process, for both...Rogers’ proposed TTC framework commits to consultations, but short on details
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 07:33:46 GMT
TORONTO — Rogers Communication Inc.’s proposal for providing wireless service on Toronto’s subway indicates the company’s competitors will be consulted in the design and planning of upgrades, but includes no specifics about the terms required for Bell and Telus to access the network.Rogers announced in April that it was buying the Canadian operations of BAI Communications, which owns the wireless network in Toronto’s subway, and planned to bring 911 coverage and 5G connectivity to the entire system.On Monday, the company said it had sent federal Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne a proposal in May outlining a plan to negotiate agreements with all carriers to join the network.The proposed framework comes after the minister penned a letter to the executives of Rogers, Bell Canada, Telus Communications Inc. and Quebecor Inc. calling on them to reach a deal that would allow any company to access the TTC’s wireless system after Rogers’ purch...Kentucky chemical weapons disposal program nearly done as US eliminates final stockpiles
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 07:33:46 GMT
RICHMOND, Ky. (AP) — A Kentucky facility built to dispose of deadly Cold War-era chemical weapons is nearing the end of its mission to destroy its 520-ton stockpile, a milestone that will likely mark the end of chemical weapons destruction projects in the U.S., officials said Wednesday.The facility at the Blue Grass Army Depot is weeks away from eliminating the last of a stockpile of 51,000 M55 rockets with GB nerve agent that have been stored at the depot since the 1940s. The GB nerve agent, also known as sarin, a colorless and tasteless toxin, can cause respiratory failure leading to death. It is outlawed under international rules of warfare.Another stockpile is being eliminated at an Army facility in Colorado, but that effort is expected to conclude before the Kentucky one. The two sites have the country’s last remaining chemical weapons that must be disposed of according to a 1997 worldwide treaty.Military and civilian officials gathered Wednesday at Eastern Kentucky Unive...Trudeau shows no interest in compromising with Meta, Google over online news bill
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 07:33:46 GMT
OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is showing no interest in compromising with Meta and Google over their online news bill that would make tech giants pay for journalism created by others that helps those companies generate revenue.Google says it wants to compromise with the Liberal government over the proposed legislation, known as Bill C-18, which would require tech giants to pay publishers for linking to or otherwise repurposing news content.But Trudeau says Meta and Google’s bullying tactics will not work with his government, which he says is ensuring those companies do not weaken Canada’s democracy by threatening its domestic media industry.Meta announced last week it will test blocking access to some news for some Canadian users of its social media platforms Instagram and Facebook — a move it is willing to make permanent should C-18 pass later this month.Google ran a similar test earlier this year, restricting access to news on its search engine for less than f...Latest news
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