Miami fights to block new voting map ahead of November elections
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 00:29:44 GMT
The City of Miami is in the middle of a legal battle as officials seek to block a new voting map that could have significant implications for upcoming elections. According to reports from The Miami Herald, a federal appeals court has granted a temporary injunction, preventing the proposed boundary changes from being implemented in the November elections, at least for now.The contested voting map, which has been subject to scrutiny, is being challenged by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). The organization has requested alterations to the districts, and the court has granted them until Wednesday morning to submit their response to the temporary stay.The outcome of this legal dispute over the final voting map carries substantial weight, as it will dictate who can run for office and what races residents can cast their ballots for in the upcoming city elections. The city’s electoral landscape could be significantly shaped by the decision, making it a matter of crucial impo...Former head of New Mission School in Hyde Park charged with wire fraud, misusing funds for Caribbean vacations with friends
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 00:29:44 GMT
The former head of Boston’s New Mission School is facing a charge of wire fraud after authorities say she engaged in a scheme to defraud the city’s school system and used funds to finance trips to Barbados.Naia Wilson, 60, is accused of defrauding Boston Public Schools of approximately $38,806 by misusing the funds for her own personal use, according to the Office for acting U.S. Attorney for the District of Massachusetts Joshua S. Levy. The Boston resident acted as headmaster of the pilot school between 2006 and 2019Authorities said that between September 2016 and at least May 2019, Wilson would allegedly request checks from a school account that would be issued in the name of others.She would then fraudulently endorse those checks to herself before depositing them into her own bank account “without the nominee ever knowing or authorizing her to do so,” according to a news release from the U.S. Attorney’s office.“Additionally, Wilson allegedly re...More than 20 people displaced after fire in Chelsea
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 00:29:44 GMT
More than 20 people were forced out of their homes Monday after a fire broke out in an apartment building in Chelsea, the city’s fire chief said. Emergency crews responded to the area on Clinton Street Monday night. Later speaking on scene, Chelsea Fire Chief Leonard Albanese said crews responded around 9:30 p.m. to find heavy smoke on the building’s first and second floors. Albanese said firefighters were able to later knock down the fire, which left part of the building visibly charred.Albanese said everyone, including a bunny, was able to get out of the structure safely.Chatbots sometimes make things up. Is AI’s hallucination problem fixable?
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 00:29:44 GMT
By MATT O’BRIEN (AP Technology Writer)Spend enough time with ChatGPT and other artificial intelligence chatbots and it doesn’t take long for them to spout falsehoods.Described as hallucination, confabulation or just plain making things up, it’s now a problem for every business, organization and high school student trying to get a generative AI system to compose documents and get work done. Some are using it on tasks with the potential for high-stakes consequences, from psychotherapy to researching and writing legal briefs.“I don’t think that there’s any model today that doesn’t suffer from some hallucination,” said Daniela Amodei, co-founder and president of Anthropic, maker of the chatbot Claude 2.“They’re really just sort of designed to predict the next word,” Amodei said. “And so there will be some rate at which the model does that inaccurately.”Anthropic, ChatGPT-maker OpenAI and other major developers...Floods around Chinese capital kill at least 20, leave 27 missing as thousands evacuated
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 00:29:44 GMT
BEIJING (AP) — Torrential rain in areas around China’s capital, Beijing, killed at least 20 people and left 27 missing, the government reported Tuesday, as flooding destroyed roads, uprooted trees and knocked out power.Thousands of people were evacuated to shelters in schools and other public buildings in suburban Beijing and in the nearby cities of Tianjin and Zhuozhou. The severity of the flooding took the Chinese capital by surprise. Beijing usually has dry summers but had a stretch of record-breaking heat this year. Other areas, especially China’s south, have suffered unusually severe summer flooding that caused scores of deaths. Other parts of the country are struggling with drought.Muddy water surging down streets washed away cars in the Mentougou district on Beijing’s western edge.“The cars parked on the street floated and got washed away,” said a resident, Liu Shuanbao. “A couple of cars parked behind my apartment building disappeared in just on...Niger crisis deepens as European nations evacuate and coup leaders get support from other juntas
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 00:29:44 GMT
NIAMEY, Niger (AP) — France, Italy and Spain announced evacuations from Niger for their citizens and other European nationals Tuesday, concerned that they risked becoming trapped by a military coup that won backing from three other West African nations also ruled by mutinous soldiers.France’s Foreign Ministry cited recent violence that targeted its embassy in Niamey, the capital, as one of the reasons for its decision to offer evacuation flights to several hundred of its citizens and other Europeans. It said the closure of Niger’s airspace “leaves our compatriots unable to leave the country by their own means.”Spain’s Defense Ministry announced preparations to evacuate more than 70 nationals and Italy also said it was arranging a flight. The foreign office in Germany recommended that its citizens accept France’s offer to fly them out. The evacuations come during a deepening crisis sparked by the coup last week against Niger’s democratically elected president,...Truckers told not to report for work after Yellow Corp. bankruptcy: Unifor
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 00:29:44 GMT
TORONTO — Unifor says nearly 130 Canadian truck drivers were told not to report for work after the Teamsters Union said U.S. trucking giant Yellow Corp. was shutting down operations and filing for bankruptcy.The head of Unifor’s local chapter representing the truckers says 70 employees and 58 owner-operators for subsidiary YRC Freight Canada have been devastated by the news but left with little information.Yesterday, the Teamsters said the union received legal notice confirming Yellow was ceasing operations and filing for bankruptcy protection after years of financial struggles.The apparent shutdown has renewed attention around Yellow’s ongoing negotiations with unionized workers, a $700-million pandemic-era loan from the government and other bills the Tennessee-based outfit has racked up over time.Formerly known as YRC Worldwide Inc., Yellow is one of America’s largest less-than-truckload carriers and its closure would put 30,000 jobs at risk.Unifor president Lana Payne...Harold Brine was the last of 19 miners rescued after 1958 Nova Scotia mine disaster
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 00:29:44 GMT
HALIFAX — The last surviving miner rescued in October 1958 after one of Nova Scotia’s worst coal mine disasters has died.Harold Brine, who lived in Geary, N.B., was 91 years old.There were 174 men working in the No. 2 mine in Springhill, N.S., when the mine was jolted by a seismic shock wave that killed 75 miners.Brine, then 26 years old, was among 12 men who were rescued after spending six days trapped near the bottom of North America’s deepest coal mine.Another seven miners were rescued two days later, making headlines around the world.In a recent interview, Brine said the thought of being reunited with his wife and two-year-old daughter gave him strength as fellow miners worked around the clock to reach their trapped comrades. This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 1, 2023.The Canadian PressOxford school shooter was ‘feral child’ abandoned by parents, defense psychologist says
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 00:29:44 GMT
PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) — A teenager who killed four students at his Michigan high school in 2021 was like a “feral child,” deeply neglected by his parents during crucial years and mentally ill, a psychologist testified Tuesday at a hearing to determine if the mass shooter will get a life prison sentence.Ethan Crumbley’s lawyers also played disturbing videos from jail showing the 17-year-old in deep distress as deputies restrained him while he wailed. In one incident, his head is completely covered with a hood. No dates were disclosed. “Why didn’t you stop it? I’m sorry. … Stop it, God, why?” he said.A psychologist, Colin King, said the shooter was experiencing psychosis, a break from reality. He later predicted that the boy “absolutely” can be rehabilitated.“A number of my clients have had issues with the law,” said King, who has testified in many homicide cases. “Through psychotherapy and support, they’ve been able to make progress. … Ethan’s brain is sti...As climate change leads to more and wetter storms, cholera cases are on the rise
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 00:29:44 GMT
In early 2022, nearly 200,000 Malawians were displaced after two tropical storms struck the southeastern part of Africa barely a month apart. Fifty-three people died. Amid an already-heavy rainy season, the storms Ana and Gombe caused devastation across southern Malawi to homes, crops, and infrastructure. “That March, we started to see cholera, which is usually endemic in Malawi, becoming an outbreak,” said Gerrit Maritz, a deputy representative for health programs in Malawi for the United Nations Children’s Fund. Cholera typically affects the country during the rainy season, from December to March, during which time it remains contained around Lake Malawi in the south and results in about 100 deaths each year. The 2022 outbreak showed a different pattern — cholera spread throughout the dry season and by August had moved into Malawi’s northern and central regions. By early February of this year, cases had peaked at 700 per day with a fatality rate of 3.3 %, three times higher than t...Latest news
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