Jonas Brothers add second Yankee Stadium concert this summer
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 09:36:30 GMT
The Jonas Brothers are going back to back at Yankee Stadium.The singing siblings from Wyckoff, N.J., will perform a second concert at the stadium in the Bronx this August, they announced Tuesday.The new show will take place on Aug. 13, a day after their first concert on Aug. 12.“New York!! We can’t believe the response to our show at @YankeeStadium, so we’re adding a second night,” the Jonas Brothers wrote on Instagram.Tuesday’s news comes exactly a week after the Jonas Brothers announced their first-ever concert at the home of the Yankees. At the time, the pop trio billed that concert as a “One Night Only” event.“We’ve been dreaming about this one our whole lives,” they wrote on Instagram last week.Following the initial announcement, Kevin, Joe and Nick Jonas visited Yankee Stadium and met Yankees stars including Aaron Judge and Gerrit Cole before a game against the Philadelphia Phillies.The concerts continue a busy stretc...TTC streetcar announcements temporarily offline
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 09:36:30 GMT
For the first time in years, Toronto streetcar riders will hear the voice of their driver, as automated stop announcements are temporarily offline.The TTC tells CityNews the issue is related to the Global Positioning System (GPS) used to inform the stop announcements and is affecting a majority of streetcar routes.Work to correct the problem is ongoing, but there is no estimate on when the system will be back online.Until then, drivers will manually call out all stops like they did pre-2014, when the new line of Flexity Outlook streetcars were first rolled out.EPA acts, finding cancer risk from sterilization chemical
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 09:36:30 GMT
The Environmental Protection Agency proposed Tuesday to limit the use of the chemical ethylene oxide after finding higher than expected cancer risk at facilities that use it to sterilize billions of medical devices each year.The EPA says its proposal will reduce ethylene oxide emissions from 86 medical sterilization facilities across the United States by roughly 80%. The companies will also have to measure the antimicrobial chemical in the air.“EPA’s number one priority is protecting people’s health and safety,” EPA Administrator Michael Regan said in a statement. “Together they would significantly reduce worker and community exposure to harmful levels of ethylene oxide.”But Darya Minovi, a senior research analyst with the Union of Concerned Scientists, called the action overdue by “almost a decade” and said it should have gone further to require monitoring at a facility’s property line so that people can know what is entering their neighborhoods. “I’m relieved and pleased that the ...Ford Motor Co. to spend $1.8B in Oakville to produce electric vehicles
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 09:36:30 GMT
Ford Motor Co. has revealed details of its plan to spend $1.8 billion an its Oakville Assembly Complex to turn it into an electric vehicle production hub.The automaker says it will start retooling the Ontario complex in the second quarter of 2024 and being producing electric vehicles in 2025.General Motors is already producing electric delivery vans in Canada, but Ford says this is the first time a full-line automaker has announced plans to produce passenger EVs in Canada for the North American market.Ford says the transformation of the Oakville site, to be renamed the Oakville Electric Vehicle Complex, will include a new 407,000 square-foot battery plant where parts from U.S. operations will be assembled into battery packs.The investment was first announced in 2020 as part of union negotiations with the company, with workers seeking long-term production commitments and the Detroit Three automakers eventually agreeing to invest in Canadian operations in concert with spending agreeme...Firm restarting oil pipeline involved in California spill
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 09:36:30 GMT
LOS ANGELES (AP) — An offshore pipeline involved in a 2021 oil spill that fouled Southern California beaches is being put back in service, the operator said.Amplify Energy Corp. said Monday that it received approval from federal regulatory agencies to restart operations and last weekend began the process of filling the pipeline, which is expected to take about two weeks.“Following the line fill process, the pipeline will be operated in accordance with the restart procedures that were reviewed and approved by the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration,” the Houston-based company said in a press release.The pipeline carries oil to shore from platforms in San Pedro Bay, near the Los Angeles and Long Beach harbors.Amplify Energy recently announced a settlement with companies associated with two ships it accused of dragging anchors and striking the pipeline during a January 2021 storm, leading to the spill of 25,000 gallons (94,600 liters) of crude oil months later.“The a...Gators launch ‘Florida Victorious’ to revamp, streamline NIL
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 09:36:30 GMT
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) — Three months after losing blue-chip quarterback Jaden Rashada over of a failed name, image and likeness deal worth nearly $14 million, the University of Florida is revamping and streamlining its fundraising collective.Florida Victorious formally launched Tuesday with hopes of raising money to fund NIL deals for student-athletes — and ultimately help the Gators get back to national prominence in football and men’s basketball. Florida was one of six Power Five programs (along with Boston College, Cal, Georgia Tech, Oklahoma and Stanford) to finish below .500 in both revenue-generating sports.Most alarming, the Gators endured consecutive losing seasons in football for the first time since 1978-79.Florida Victorious is tasked with supporting the program’s planned turnaround. The nonprofit organization will work closely with the school’s University Athletic Association to raise money that should assist all 19 sports, most notably football.A recent amendment...Jurors never heard of accomplice letter in death row case
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 09:36:30 GMT
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — Sixteen years after David Phillip Wilson was sentenced to death for killing a man during a 2004 burglary, the state of Alabama turned over a letter allegedly written by an accomplice saying she was the one that beat the victim with a bat until he fell.A federal judge last month ordered the Alabama attorney’s general’s office to turn over a copy of the letter, noting the jurors never got a chance to hear about it even though prosecutors possessed the letter before Wilson’s trial and believed it to be authentic. The judge said while it’s “plausible” Wilson might still have been convicted and sentenced to death, the letter must be turned over to determine its importance.“The jury was not told that an accomplice of petitioner’s who admitted entering (the victim’s) home also claimed that she beat the victim with a baseball bat while he was alive,” U.S. District Keith Watkins wrote in the March 27 court order.A portion of the letter was turn...First Capital REIT selling four properties for a total of $184 million
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 09:36:30 GMT
TORONTO — First Capital REIT says it has signed deals to sell four properties including the Hazelton Hotel in Toronto for a combined total of $184 million.The real estate trust says it is selling the Hazelton Hotel and a 50 per cent interest in the hotel’s restaurant, One Restaurant, to Hennick & Co. for $110 million.The other properties being sold include a residential condominium development site in Toronto, a residential development site at Montreal’s Wilderton Shopping Centre, and Carre Queen Mary, a small apartment building with retail space in Montreal.First Capital CEO Adam Paul says the successful continuation of the trust’s portfolio optimization plan first outlined last September remains a top priority.The trust expects the four transactions to be completed in the second and third quarters of 2023, subject to closing conditions.It says once the deals are complete it will have monetized approximately $360 million of the more than $1 billion of assets t...Free COVID testing will fade with US health emergency in May
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 09:36:30 GMT
WASHINGTON (AP) — When the COVID-19 public health emergency ends in the U.S. next month, you’ll still have access to a multitude of tests but with one big difference: Who pays for them.For the first time, you may have to pick up some or all of the costs, depending on insurance coverage and whether the tests are done at home or in a doctor’s office.But there’s still time to get some free tests before the May 11 change, and there could still be free ones available afterward. Some state and local governments may continue to distribute free home tests through clinics, libraries and community centers. And the federal government, for now, is still sending free tests through the U.S. Postal Service to households that haven’t already received two shipments.And don’t discount those old tests you haven’t used. The expiration date on the package may have been extended. The Food and Drug Administration’s website provides a list to check and see which tests ar...Gunmen kill 5 soldiers in Niger convoy ambush
Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 09:36:30 GMT
NIAMEY, Niger (AP) — Gunmen killed five soldiers and wounded others during a weekend ambush of a military convoy performing escort duties in northern Niger, the army said Tuesday. No one has claimed responsibility for Sunday’s attack, which occurred in the Agadez region on the road to Arlit town, the chief of staff for Niger’s army, Abdou Sidikou Issa, said in a statement. The convoy, which included four Toyotas mounted with machine guns, was leaving the a gold mining site when it was hit. Armed groups and people who come to steal gold frequent the area, according to local residents. Three of the wounded soldiers were evacuated to Niger’s capital, Niamey, and military reinforcements have been sent to the area, Issa said.Niger has been battling a jihadi insurgency linked to al-Qaida and the Islamic State group that’s killed thousands. While attacks by jihadi groups in the Agadez region have been rare in recent years, analysts said the insurgency could not be r...Latest news
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