McDonald's locations in Central Texas violated child labor laws, Dept. of Labor says
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:45:50 GMT
WASHINGTON (KXAN) – The Department of Labor said Tuesday investigators found four McDonald's franchise locations in the Austin area committed child labor violations.Investigators with the department's Wage and Hour Division found violations at locations operated by Marwen & Son in Cedar Park, Georgetown and Leander, according to the Labor Department's announcement. The Labor Department said investigators found the company employed 10 minors, 14- to 15-years-old, to work hours longer and later than permitted. According to the department, investigators also learned the employer allowed seven children to operate a manual deep fryer and oven, and two of the seven were allowed to use a trash compactor. Those are jobs which the department said are prohibited or considered hazardous for young workers. The department said it penalized Marwen & Son $21,466 for the violations.In Louisiana, the department said investigators discovered franchise owner CLB Investments employed ...Pedestrians scatter as fire causes New York construction crane's arm to collapse and crash to street
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:45:50 GMT
NEW YORK (AP) — A towering construction crane caught fire high above the west side of Manhattan on Wednesday morning, then lost its long arm, which smashed against a nearby building, dangled and then plummeted to the street as people ran for their lives on the sidewalk below.Four people suffered minor injuries, but no one died, according to New York City Mayor Eric Adams.“As you can see from the debris on the street, this could have been much worse,” the Democrat said, noting that the street at that hour of the morning is often filled with pedestrians, cars and buses.The fire atop the 54-story building was reported around 7:25 a.m. Photos and videos posted on social media showed flames bursting from the car of a crane hundreds of feet above 10th Avenue at 41st Street. The crane's arm, which was carrying a 16-ton load, snapped off after the fire had been burning for a period of time.The person operating the crane tried to put out the fire as it spread, but then had to flee to safety,...Vehicle fire in Queensbury cleared
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:45:50 GMT
QUEENSBURY, N.Y. (NEWS10) -- According to 511NY, a vehicle fire on I-87 Northway northbound before Exit 20; US 9; NY 149 that shut down two right lanes and the shoulder has been cleared. The cause of the vehicle fire is unknown at this time.Check out NEWS10's traffic tracker. You can plan your route and see traffic delays in real-time!Drivers should expect a normal commute following the clearance. Stick with NEWS10 as more information regarding the fire becomes available.More Metro East crime-fighting tools after recent shootings
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:45:50 GMT
EAST ST. LOUIS, Ill. - Bringing more crime-fighting tools to the Metro East will be the focus of an event later Wednesday morning in East St. Louis. This comes as the Major Case Squad is currently investigating two murder cases in the metro east.The Jackie Joyner-Kersee Center is where multiple high-ranking officials including the director of the Illinois State Police, Brendan Kelly, are set to appear in a matter of hours to announce that more resources are coming to this area to try and reduce crime. The announcement is certainly timely after the violence just Tuesday in the metro east. There are also new developments Wednesday morning in one of those Major Case Squad investigations.The Major Case Squad released an image of someone they are calling a person of interest in connection with the murder that happened early Tuesday morning at the Jackie Joyner-Kersee MetroLink Station. Rare bee found in Belleville, Illinois Our Bommmarito Automotive Group SkyFOX helicopter was flying o...Heat Advisory issued Wednesday through Friday evening
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:45:50 GMT
St. Louis weather from Meteorologist Angela Hutti:ST. LOUIS - Heat remains our main focus. We start the mornings warm, in the 70s to around 80 in metro St. Louis, and we heat up quickly. Afternoon top temperatures will push well into the 90s and close to 100 the rest of the week. Factor in the humidity and afternoon heat indices go to 105 plus. A Heat Advisory has been issued Wednesday through Friday evening. Drink plenty of water. Stay in an air-conditioned space and out of the sun during peak heating hours, Noon to 5:00 p.m. Take extra precautions if you work outside. St. Louis radar: See a map of current weather here This Wednesday, we are waking up to scattered showers and storms. The chance for scattered rain activity will hang around through the day. The clouds associated with that activity may help to keep highs Wednesday “only” in the mid 90s, still very hot. pot showers could hang around into early Thursday as well. So may see a good downpour, while others see not...Better cameras are solving, preventing St. Louis area crimes
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:45:50 GMT
ST. LOUIS – New camera technology on public transportation has improved so much that prosecutors recently claimed they could see suspects planning their crime.Metro’s Real Time Camera Center is equipped with nearly 1,0000 high definition video screens. “Security force multiplying technology,” Kevin Scott, Bi-State’s General Manager for Security, said. “We have worked over the last four years to put together a layered security dynamic here that ultimately makes our system safer.”Tuesday morning's shooting at the Jackie Joyner-Kersee Station in St. Clair County, Illinois, will likely come with plenty of evidence.“The video and audio is phenomenal,” St. Clair County Sheriff’s Department Chief of Investigations Sgt. Adam Quirin said of recent footage. He said this latest investigation involves, “…one of the trains that has enhanced video; so we should have very, very good video.” Stay of execution granted for Johnny Johnson Quirin responded to Tuesday’s shooting scene, which was just ...Teen lifeguards receive award after saving firefighter from drowning
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:45:50 GMT
SHREWSBURY, Mo. - Two teenagers received a lifesaving award in Shrewsbury on Tuesday for saving a firefighter at a local public pool. The rescue happened during a first responders' night back in June."I'm really proud of myself because it's not something I ever thought I would do, and I just think it's really cool to get something like this," said Lizzie Hancock.Hancock, James Trueman, and Jon Baeten received recognition for their heroic efforts."I saw somebody at the bottom. I swam down, pushed him up, gave him some rescue breaths," Trueman said.He said instinct took over as he yelled for Lizzy's help."It's really scary. Well, it's scary, but it's weird because we just are trained on it, so you just do it. You just act," Trueman said. Rare bee found in Belleville, Illinois "I jumped off my stand and ran over there, jumped in the water, put him in the tube, and swam him to the edge of the pool," Hancock said.Trueman said the other firefighters immediately took over and began givin...As witchcraft becomes a multibillion-dollar business, practitioners’ connection to the natural world is changing
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:45:50 GMT
Helen A. Berger, Brandeis University via Associated PressWitches, Wiccans and other contemporary Pagans see divinity in trees, streams, plants and animals. Most Pagans view the Earth as the Goddess, with a body that humans must care for, and from which they gain emotional, spiritual and physical sustenance.Paganism is an umbrella term that includes religions that view their practices as returning to those of pre-Christian societies, in which they believe the Goddess was worshipped along with the gods and the land was seen as sacred. Wicca focuses specifically on the practice of the British Isles.Witchcraft has also become a multibillion-dollar business. As a sociologist who has been researching this religion for more than 30 years, I have witnessed this growing commercialization: Witch kits are sold by large companies and in stores – something unheard of when I began my research in 1986.This surge in popularity has changed these communities in some subtle and not-so-subtle ways. Gro...Kidnapped woman found alive in Wheat Ridge
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:45:50 GMT
A 43-year-old woman was found alive in Wheat Ridge Wednesday morning after a forcible kidnapping Tuesday evening, authorities said.The Aurora resident has been transported to a hospital, Arapahoe County Sheriff officials said in a posting on Twitter. Her condition was not released.Jefferson County Sheriff SWAT officers have arrested Lance Foster as a suspect in connection to the kidnapping. He is suspected of stalking the woman and kidnapping her around 5:47 p.m. Tuesday, authorities said. A Colorado Bureau of Investigation bulletin said Foster, 43, is suspected of forcing Meise into a black 2008 Lincoln vehicle.#UPDATE Jessica Meise has been found alive in Wheat Ridge. She has been transported to a local hospital. Her condition is unknown at this time. The suspect, Lance Foster, was arrested by @jeffcosheriffco SWAT. He is in police custody. Follow for more updates. https://t.co/qrmNsTOTRc— Arapahoe Sheriff (@ArapahoeSO) July 26, 2023Denver author’s latest novel is the simple but powerful tale of a Yellowstone park ranger
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:45:50 GMT
Ren Hopper is a Yellowstone National Park enforcement ranger whose view of humans is just a little bit jaded. When a mother and father encourage their daughter to feed an apple to a gangly moose calf, Ren risks his life to save the child from the animal’s wrathful mother, then all but wishes the moose would turn on the parents. “What the hell has gotten into you?” Ren asks himself during a similar reverie. “Do you think you’re the last ranger that puts the animals first?”“That was the anger that frightened him. In his world lately, the life of a wolf, or a hawk, might be worth more than the life of a man,” writes Heller.Whatever his opinion of humans, Ren is overwhelmed with his love for the outdoors — the wilderness with its abundance of wildlife, the solitude. The author of “The Last Ranger” is Denver’s Peter Heller, so you know the book is filled with lyrical descriptions of Yellowstone. And fishing. Always fishing. Heller’s faith in fishing is almost Biblical. “He caught f...Latest news
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