Georgetown ISD to seek exception for armed guard legislation
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 22:30:30 GMT
GEORGETOWN, Texas (KXAN) – The Georgetown ISD Board of Trustees voted Monday night to seek a "good cause exception" to a new law requiring the presence of an armed, "qualified" security officer on each school campus during regular school hours. District leaders cited a lack of "available qualified personnel and a lack of available revenue" as reasons for the request. KXAN spoke with several districts earlier in August that said they were struggling to come up with the money and personnel to comply with the new law by the time it goes into effect Sept. 1.According to the resolution adopted Monday night, the Georgetown Police department provides Georgetown ISD with seven school resource officers (SROs). Those are commissioned peace officers including an SRO stationed at six of the district's secondary school campuses and a supervising sergeant of the SRO Unit. The resolution also said the SROs also serve as needed in other areas. They serve at other campuses as mutually agreed upon be...Affordable housing program launches in Austin
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 22:30:30 GMT
AUSTIN (KXAN) – A new City of Austin program to help small-scale real estate developers grow their businesses and create more affordable housing and job opportunities in the Austin area launched in July and will continue through October, organizers said Monday. The Austin Housing Finance Corporation said 20 participants were selected for the Austin Small Developer Training Program. It said the program, led by Capital Impact Partners and HousingWorks Austin, will provide small developers with training, mentorship, networking and potential pathways to financing for eligible real estate projects in Austin. The city said in April the money for the program came from the City of Austin Housing Finance Corporation.The Austin Small Developer Training provides opportunities to historically excluded and overlooked small-scale real estate developers, helping to create more affordable housing and job opportunities locally.The city said participants will learn ways to fi...Austin animal shelter seeking fosters for distemper dogs
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 22:30:30 GMT
AUSTIN (KXAN) — A deadly dog disease is on the rise in Austin.In August alone, the Austin Animal Center has recorded 39 positive test results for canine distemper virus.Some symptoms of this sickness include watery eyes, fever or vomiting.To help ease the burden, Austin Pets Alive! has taken 33 of these dogs — 15 of which have the canine distemper virus — into its own shelter.This partnership was put in place to avoid overcrowding while helping slow the spread of this deadly disease.Some of the critical puppies are fighting for their lives and in need of round-the-clock care while requiring IV fluids to help get them through the day.Yet, Austin Pets Alive! medical director Dr. Alexis Bardzinski says that the dogs’ odds of survival increase dramatically when they’re healing in a home."The distemper virus is very bad, there's a high chance that they're going to die,” she said. “But we do see success, which gives us the hope to try and go forth with treatment."Dr. Bardzinski added that...Opening day of the 2023 Dutchess County Fair
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 22:30:30 GMT
RHINEBECK, N.Y. (NEWS10) -- August 22 marks the opening day of the 2023 Dutchess County Fair. Now in its 177th year, the fair runs through August 27. Get the latest news, weather, sports and entertainment delivered right to your inbox! The gates open at 10 a.m. daily. The fair includes livestock shows, rides, a petting zoo, vendors, lots of food, and daily entertainment."We’re still one of the oldest and largest agricultural fairs in New York State," said Dutchess County Agricultural Society’s Chairman of the Board Tim Coon. "It’s all about promoting and educating the fairgoer. Not as many kids are growing up on farms these days. The numbers are decreasing, but they’re still doing a tremendous job of it." Everything happening at the 2023 Washington County Fair AgricultureGoat ShowHorse Shows4-H Rabbit & Cavy Showmanship4-H Hog Showmanship, Bred & Owned, Market Show4-H Dairy Showmanship4-H Canine Agility & Rally4-H Rabbit & Cavy Breed Show4-H Sheep ShowPoultry Sho...Breaking: Justice Center guard being held hostage
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 22:30:30 GMT
ST. LOUIS - Police have confirmed that prisoners have taken a 70-year-old guard hostage at the city Justice Center.Officers say there is no riot happening. It's unknown if anyone has been injured. The guard was unarmed. East St. Louis man gets shocking bill, calls FOX 2 to investigate Several police vehicles are on scene. Tucker is currently closed between Market and Clark, between the Justice Center and City Hall.FOX 2 will update this story with more information as it becomes available.Woman stabbed to death in West End neighborhood
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 22:30:30 GMT
ST. LOUIS - A woman was stabbed to death in the West End neighborhood of St. Louis.Officers made a quick arrest in the case. That attack happened Monday just before 3:00 p.m. on Goodfellow Boulevard at Delmar Boulevard. Missouri updates timetable for implementing new 235 area code She was taken to a nearby hospital, where she later died. The police did not reveal how the man they arrested was connected to the woman.Man shot in Gravois Park neighborhood overnight
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 22:30:30 GMT
ST. LOUIS - One man was injured overnight in a shooting in the Gravois Park neighborhood of south St. Louis.That shooting happened just before midnight on Iowa Avenue near Cherokee Street. Police said that the victim was shot several times but was alert when taken to the hospital. Missouri updates timetable for implementing new 235 area code No word on any arrests. FOX 2 will update this story with more information as it becomes available.“The Bitter Past” and two other mystery novels to read right now
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 22:30:30 GMT
“The Bitter Past,” by Bruce Borgos (Minotaur Books)“The Bitter Past,” by Bruce Borgos (Minotaur Books)As sheriff of a small Nevada town near Las Vegas, Porter Beck spends most of his time on trivial crimes — until a retired FBI agent is found tortured and murdered. Within hours, a gorgeous (of course) female FBI agent shows up and confides that the dead man had been gathering information on a KGB spy who stole secrets from a Nevada test site 60 years earlier. It seems the Russian, who was supposedly killed in a nuclear accident, may not be dead after all, and he’s living in Beck’s jurisdiction.So Beck has to find the aging Russian before the assassin does. He’s aided not only by the glamorous FBI woman but also his sister, a crack shot, and his father, the former sheriff, who is suffering from dementia. Beck’s suffering from his own ailment, an eye disease that makes it hard for him to see at night.“The Bitter Past” is the first in a series featuring ...From art galleries to yoga studios, Denver’s small businesses struggling to pay rent
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 22:30:30 GMT
Many small business around Denver are struggling to make rent each month in an economy that, despite producing low unemployment, faces uncertainty with still-high inflation and the prospect of interest rates rising even higher.Finding a way to pay the monthly bills is forcing small-business owners to consider all options: from cutting back staff and hours of operation, to changing a business’ focus and raising prices, to moving into a smaller space, and even to making the difficult decision of closing up shop.The historic Denver neighborhood of Bonnie Brae is an example of a retail area noticeably impacted by the strain of rising rents on small businesses.The Saucy Noodle, an iconic Italian joint established in 1964 at 727 S. University Blvd., shuttered its doors for good in August 2022. At the time, co-owner Erin Markham told The Denver Post that the family business was struggling to make rent under its new landlord, Otto Petty of Endurance Real Estate Partners, and was ̶...Airline close calls happen far more often than previously known
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 22:30:30 GMT
By Sydney Ember and Emily Steel, The New York TimesOn the afternoon of July 2, a Southwest Airlines pilot had to abort a landing at Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport. A Delta Air Lines 737 was preparing to take off on the same runway. The sudden maneuver avoided a possible collision by seconds.Nine days later, in San Francisco, an American Airlines jet was accelerating down the runway at more than 160 mph when it narrowly missed a Frontier Airlines plane whose nose had almost jutted into its path. Moments later, the same thing happened as a German airliner was taking off. In both cases, the planes came so close to hitting the Frontier aircraft that the Federal Aviation Administration, in internal records reviewed by The New York Times, described the encounters as “skin to skin.”And 2 1/2 weeks after that, an American flight to Dallas was traveling at more than 500 mph when a collision warning blared in the cockpit. An air traffic controller had mistakenly directed a ...Latest news
- German authorities detain Syrian man on suspicion of planning an explosives attack motivated by Islamic extremism
- Wimbledon to house Ukraine’s players, fund relief efforts
- For Arbor Day, plant a tree resilient to climate change
- UN fears more ‘displacement’ from Sudan despite cease-fire
- Líder opositor Juan Guaidó llegó a Miami tras salir de Colombia
- NextEra: Q1 Earnings Snapshot
- Forecast update: Why some areas will get snow and Denver only rain
- Florida surgeon general altered Covid-19 vaccine analysis to suggest higher risk for younger men, Politico reports
- Police release identity of man who barricaded himself in vehicle after carjacking
- WHO: Sudan fighters’ occupation of health lab poses ‘huge biological risk’