Wu, Skipper look to move O’Bryant school to closed West Roxbury complex

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:50:25 GMT

Wu, Skipper look to move O’Bryant school to closed West Roxbury complex Boston’s mayor and school superintendent are proposing that one of the city’s largest high schools move into the vacant West Roxbury Education Complex, which officials closed four years ago for safety reasons.Under the proposal, the John D. O’Bryant School and Mathematics and Science would move from the Malcolm X. Boulevard campus it shares in Roxbury with Madison Park Technical Vocational High School to the West Roxbury site, which would house a “state-of-the-art” STEM facility for grades 7-12, Mayor Michelle Wu said.The plan would need approval from the Boston School Committee. The city is not seeking funding from the Massachusetts School Building Authority, Superintendent of Schools Mary Skipper said.“It can be scary to talk about such big changes,” Wu said. “As prospects happening in Boston, this is on the scale of a generational change that we haven’t seen in quite some time in the district.“But we really believe this is the scale of opening up opportunity that woul...

How LGBTQ+ homebuyers can find allies in the market

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:50:25 GMT

How LGBTQ+ homebuyers can find allies in the market Overwhelmingly, home buyers view finding the right home as the hardest part of the buying process. There’s so much to consider: What can I afford? How much space do I need? And the most harrowing question of all — what am I willing to give up?This question is even more loaded for LGBTQ+ buyers, who may face the added pressure of evaluating a new community for safety and comfort.Social attitudes have dramatically shifted from the days where queer and transgender buyers were concentrated in just one or two neighborhoods, points out Barbara Stone, a Realtor in Dallas, Texas. Today, the community is made up of buyers with a diverse set of needs and preferences, including families with children, professionals who need to be close to business hubs, rural homeowners and many more.Regardless of what that dream home looks like, LGBTQ+ buyers can seek out the resources available to them, the most valuable of which may be hiring a buyer’s agent who is experienced in working with the community....

NOAA outlook: Cooler-than-average June expected for San Diego

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:50:25 GMT

NOAA outlook: Cooler-than-average June expected for San Diego SAN DIEGO — For those ready for it to feel like summer in San Diego, you may have to wait a little bit longer for those warmer temperatures.As "June Gloom" continues to bring cooler, cloudier conditions to the region, the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is anticipating cooler-than-average temperatures for San Diego County for much of the month.According to NOAA's Monthly Temperature Outlook released on May 31, San Diego has a 40-50% probability of being cooler for the first month of meteorological summer.As far as precipitation, NOAA is forecasting equal chances of San Diego getting average, more-than-average and less-than-average levels of precipitation in June.For the week of June 5, the National Weather Service says that San Diego will see unseasonably cool weather, with highs in the 60s in the coastal and mountain regions. In the lower deserts, temperatures are expected to be in the upper 80s to lower 90s, where the average high is 100 this time of year, accor...

Enforcing minor crimes will return ‘accountability’ to Baltimore, new top prosecutor says

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:50:25 GMT

Enforcing minor crimes will return ‘accountability’ to Baltimore, new top prosecutor says BALTIMORE (AP) — Baltimore’s top prosecutor announced Thursday a new program that allows police to issue citations for minor crimes such as loitering, drug possession and public urination — a significant shift from the more progressive policies of his predecessor, who declined to prosecute such cases.The contrasting approaches exemplify an ongoing nationwide debate between supporters of criminal justice reform and those calling for a return to the country’s more traditional “law and order” approach.Baltimore State’s Attorney Ivan Bates, who took office in January, held a news conference Thursday afternoon to announce the change, repeating a campaign promise to address so-called “quality of life” offenses. Bates said the program is a response to repeated complaints from residents who are “sick and tired” of seeing drug dealers on their blocks, among other problems. He said it will deliver a “return to accountability” in Baltimore and improve public safety. However, it’s not clear whe...

‘Nothing but a scumbag’: Ontario Premier Doug Ford comments on Bernardo move

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:50:25 GMT

‘Nothing but a scumbag’: Ontario Premier Doug Ford comments on Bernardo move Ontario Premier Doug Ford didn’t hold back on Tuesday morning when critiquing the Correctional Service of Canada’s decision to move killer Paul Bernardo to a medium-security prison.“He’s nothing but a scumbag. This SOB needs to be in jail 23 hours a day, in a maximum security [prison]”, said Ford during the question period at Queen’s Park.“The crime was the most heinous crime in Canadian history — he tortured, he raped, and he murdered these two young girls, and the pain the family is going through again should never be seen.”Officials with the Union of Canadian Correctional Officers confirmed to CityNews last week that Bernardo had been transferred from Millhaven Institution just outside of Kingston to La Macaza Institution northwest of Montreal.Commissioner of the Correctional Service Anne Kelly ordered a review to ensure the move was appropriate and evidence-based, but Ford said, “No Canadians have confidence in your dec...

Belarus’ Sabalenka waits for a handshake from Ukraine’s Elina Svitolina at French Open, meets media

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:50:25 GMT

Belarus’ Sabalenka waits for a handshake from Ukraine’s Elina Svitolina at French Open, meets media PARIS (AP) — Aryna Sabalenka smacked a forehand winner to reach the French Open semifinals for the first time, then strode forward. Placing both hands atop the net tape, she leaned forward and stared directly at Elina Svitolina, her Ukrainian opponent.Sabalenka, the Australian Open champion whose nation, Belarus, helped Russia invade Ukraine to begin a war that now is in its 17th month, knew that Svitolina would not participate Tuesday in the usual postmatch handshake. Like other players from Ukraine, including Sabalenka’s first-round opponent at Roland Garros last week, Svitolina has avoided that traditional greeting after any match against someone from Russia or Belarus, for obvious reasons.Although not, apparently, obvious to the second-seeded Sabalenka in that moment; she explained — while speaking with the media after avoiding news conferences after the preceding two contests — that she went to the net out of “instinct.” Nor, apparently, obvious to some members of the crowd at ...

Ukrainian dam breach: What is happening and what’s at stake

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:50:25 GMT

Ukrainian dam breach: What is happening and what’s at stake KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — The dramatic rupture of the dam that upheld Ukraine’s largest reservoir released a torrent of water Tuesday, raising fears of widespread damage and flooding in areas where tens of thousands of people live.It’s not clear what caused the breach in the Kakhovka dam, which was already damaged. Ukraine accused Russian forces of blowing up the facility, while Russian officials blamed Ukrainian military strikes.WHY IS THE DAM IMPORTANT?The 30-meter-high (98-foot-high) dam and associated hydroelectric power station sit in Russian-controlled territory along the Dnieper River about 70 kilometers (44 miles) east of the city of Kherson — a flashpoint of Russia’s war in Ukraine. Together with the power station, the dam helps provide electricity, irrigation and drinking water to a wide swath of southern Ukraine, including the illegally annexed Crimean Peninsula.Ukraine’s vast agricultural heartland, which is partially fed by the Dnieper river, is cruci...

El Salvador prosecutors said ex-president approved 1989 massacre of Jesuits

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:50:25 GMT

El Salvador prosecutors said ex-president approved 1989 massacre of Jesuits SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) — Prosecutors in El Salvador say they have evidence that former President Alfredo Cristiani was present at a meeting that approved the 1989 massacre of six Jesuit priests and two others by soldiers. Prosecutors who announced the case against Cristiani last year presented formal charges against the former president at an arraignment hearing late Monday, saying the plot to kill the Jesuits during the country’s 1980-1992 civil war went all the way to the top. Cristiani, who left El Salvador in 2021 and whose whereabouts are unknown, has always denied knowledge of or involvement in the killings, which shocked the world. Prosecutors said that not only did Cristiani know about and approve the 1989 killings, he also held a phone call to reassure one of the priests before he was murdered. “The investigations reveal that former President Alfredo Cristiani was present at the meeting where the crime was coordinated and authorized,” the prosecutors wrote in a stat...

Sex harassment case involving Trudeau Foundation should be heard in N.L., lawyer says

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:50:25 GMT

Sex harassment case involving Trudeau Foundation should be heard in N.L., lawyer says ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — The lawyer representing a woman who alleges she was sexually harassed by a former Northwest Territories premier says her client would likely have to end her lawsuit if a judge determines the trial should be moved to Quebec.Kathryn Marshall, with the Toronto-based law firm Levitt Sheikh, argued in Newfoundland and Labrador Supreme Court today that the case should be heard in that province, because that is where the alleged misconduct took place.She says her client, Cherry Smiley, would have to bear the cost and emotional strife of starting over with a search for a new lawyer who can speak both French and English in a case that has already been difficult and slow.Smiley’s statement of claim alleges she was sexually harassed in June 2018 in St. John’s, N.L., by Stephen Kakfwi, who was her appointed mentor through a scholarship program offered through the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation.The statement of claim was filed with the Supreme Court of New...

Canadian company pleads guilty to shipping banned seal oil to US

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:50:25 GMT

Canadian company pleads guilty to shipping banned seal oil to US PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — A Canadian company has pleaded guilty to violating federal law by illegally selling seal oil capsules to American customers.The oil is made from the blubber of seals and sold as a nutritional supplement with a promise of containing healthy fats. The company, FeelGood Natural Health Stores of Whitby, Ontario, sold and transported capsules made from harp seals, the U.S. Department of Justice said Monday.The company’s actions are illegal under the Marine Mammal Protection Act, which makes it unlawful to transport or sell any marine mammal or byproducts for most commercial purposes. The act protects the harp seal throughout its range, including the North Atlantic and Artic oceans and the waters off New England.FeelGood shipped more than 900 bottles of the capsules worth more than $10,000 to the U.S. from 2019 to 2021, the Justice Department said.“The illegal importation of marine mammal products not only violates the Marine Mammal Protection Act but al...