Madonna postpones upcoming Celebration tour due to ‘serious bacterial infection’
Published Sun, 24 Nov 2024 13:21:36 GMT
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Madonna has postponed her career-spanning Celebration tour due to what her manager called a “serious bacterial infection” and her ongoing recovery.Manager Guy Oseary wrote on Instagram Wednesday that the singer had spent several days in an intensive care unit after becoming ill on Saturday. He said the 64-year-old singer is expected to make a full recovery.The tour was set to kick-off in Vancouver on July 15.“Her health is improving, however she is still under medical care,” Oseary wrote.Live Nation confirmed the tour postponement, citing Oseary’s post.The Celebration tour is scheduled to make stops in Detroit, Chicago, New York, Miami, Los Angeles, Denver, Atlanta and Boston, among other cities and its first leg was slated to end on Oct. 7 in Las Vegas. Oseary said details about rescheduled dates would be shared soon.Sexual education in Massachusetts schools: State sends proposed framework to public comment
Published Sun, 24 Nov 2024 13:21:36 GMT
Education officials may be in for a mixed bag when it comes to public comment regarding a proposed revision to the state’s health and physical education framework, which hasn’t been updated in 25 years.The state Board of Elementary and Secondary Education voted Tuesday to release the framework, proposed by the Healey administration last week, for a 60-day public comment period. Members will decide in the fall whether to adopt the guidelines.Local school officials ultimately have the final say on how to implement the broad learning objectives outlined in the framework. Gov. Maura Healey is touting the guidelines as inclusive of “gay, queer, and trans students’ identities and needs.”Supporters argue the new framework is “grounded in science” and offers “medically accurate, age-appropriate” material, while opponents say the lessons are better suited to be taught outside the classroom.Such a curriculum could lead to decreased bullying and harassment, more classmates sticking up for peer...Ex-NFL player among 11 deaths caused by dangerous rip currents off Florida, Alabama beaches
Published Sun, 24 Nov 2024 13:21:36 GMT
By FREIDA FRISARO (Associated Press)FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — A former NFL quarterback, a firefighter from Georgia and two fathers who drowned while trying to save their children are among at least 11 recent victims of dangerous rip currents along Gulf of Mexico beaches stretching across Florida’s Panhandle to Mobile, Alabama.Many of the deaths have occurred on days with double red flags — which are posted at beach entrances and on lifeguard stations — that warn beachgoers of potential rip currents. Seven deaths since mid-June have occurred around Panama City Beach, including ex-NFL quarterback Ryan Mallett, 35, drowned Tuesday in nearby Destin after getting caught up in a strong rip current. Three people drowned off the coast of Alabama between June 20 and June 23, according to the Gulf Shores Police Department. The Gulf of Mexico’s white sandy beaches are a draw for tourists, and as the busy Fourth of July holiday approaches, officials are hoping b...Dozens in 16 states charged with health care fraud schemes, including $1.9B in bogus claims
Published Sun, 24 Nov 2024 13:21:36 GMT
By LINDSAY WHITEHURST and TOM MURPHY (Associated Press)WASHINGTON (AP) — The Justice Department has charged dozens of people in several health care fraud and prescription drug schemes, including one totaling $1.9 billion and a doctor accused of ordering fake ankle braces for a patient whose leg had been amputated, officials said Wednesday.The scheme involving the submission of nearly $2 billion in bogus claims is one of the largest health care fraud cases ever brought by the Justice Department, the agency said. It’s one of several announced as part of a crackdown in states around the country. In total, 78 people in 16 states were charged in a series of separate cases, which also included an alleged scheme to buy back HIV medication from patients and then resell the pills.The defendants targeted vulnerable people and used the money they made to buy exotic cars, jewelry and yachts, federal investigators said. The federal government seized millions of dollars in cash, autom...Smoke from Canada wildfires is increasing health risks in Black and poorer US communities
Published Sun, 24 Nov 2024 13:21:36 GMT
DETROIT (AP) — Smoky air from Canada’s wildfires shrouded broad swaths of the U.S. from Minnesota to Pennsylvania and Kentucky on Wednesday, prompting warnings to stay inside and exacerbating health risks for people already suffering from industrial pollution.The impacts are particularly hard on poor and minority communities that are more likely to live near polluting plants and have higher rates of asthma. Detroit, a mostly Black city with a poverty rate of about 30%, had the worst air quality in the U.S. on Wednesday, leading the Environmental Protection Agency to warn that “everyone should stay indoors.”“The more breaths you’re taking, you’re inhaling, literally, a fire, camp smoke, into your lungs,” said Darren Riley, who was diagnosed with asthma in 2018, a few years after arriving in Detroit.“Many communities face this way too often,” said Riley, who is Black. “And while this wildfire smoke allows, unfortunately, many people to feel this burden, this is a burden that far too l...Poor air quality from wildfires upends summer activities new reality sets in
Published Sun, 24 Nov 2024 13:21:36 GMT
Canadian wildfires triggered dangerous plumes of smoke and air pollution in parts of the country Wednesday, forcing many people to avoid the outdoors as poor air quality warnings cancelled some mail deliveries and curbed school recesses and sports training.A slew of disruptions followed special air quality statements from Environment Canada impacting large regions of central Canada, much of it stemming from forest fires over northeastern Ontario and Quebec.The agency said “high risk” conditions were not expected to improve in some areas until Thursday when air quality was still forecasted to pose “moderate risk” in much of Ontario. It all pointed to another day of a recommended moratorium on neighbourhood jogs and playground visits, especially for those with lung or heart disease, older adults and children who are at higher risk of adverse health effects.Ontario’s chief medical officer Dr. Kieran Moore suggested people get into the daily habit of checki...The largest US banks would survive a severe recession, the Fed’s ‘stress tests’ show
Published Sun, 24 Nov 2024 13:21:36 GMT
NEW YORK (AP) — The nation’s 23 largest banks passed the Federal Reserve’s so-called stress tests this year, a sign that the nation’s banking system remains resilient despite the recent banking crisis that led to the failure of Silicon Valley Bank, Signature Bank and First Republic Bank. The Fed’s report issued Wednesday did show some relative weakness among the midsize banks and “super regional” banks, with some getting a passing grade with a smaller cushion than usual. Those results could raise eyebrows among investors and policymakers. Fed policymakers also hinted that they could make the tests harder in future iterations, due to the banking crisis earlier this year.“We should remain humble about how risks can arise and continue our work to ensure that banks are resilient to a range of economic scenarios, market shocks, and other stresses,” said Michael Barr, the Fed’s vice chair for supervision, in a statement. The “stress tests” have be...Nursing homes accused of mistreating residents, misusing $83 million in lawsuit from New York AG
Published Sun, 24 Nov 2024 13:21:36 GMT
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — The operators of four nursing homes in New York misused more than $83 million in government funds and neglected residents, including some who were malnourished or were left to sit for hours in their own urine and feces, state Attorney General Letitia James said in a lawsuit Wednesday. The lawsuit filed in Manhattan accuses owners and operators of Centers Health Care of using Medicaid and Medicare funds to enrich themselves, their relatives and associates instead of for the care of the residents. James claims understaffing at the homes contributed to neglect.“Residents were left alone and on their own, often unaided and unsupervised, leading to dangerous falls and broken bones. Residents lived in squalor, surrounded by neglected food trays, vermin and the smell of human waste,” James said at a news conference held with residents’ relatives.The spokesperson for Centers Health Care did not immediately comment.The four homes in the lawsuit are Beth Abraham Center for...Collision conference working to amplify Indigenous voices in the tech space
Published Sun, 24 Nov 2024 13:21:36 GMT
The annual Collision conference taking place this week in Toronto is working to amplify Indigenous voices and start-ups in the tech space.Over 120 people have been invited through the Indigenous Attendee Program which aims to take an equitable approach to increasing the representation of Indigenous peoples in the technology.Community Manager for the Collision Conference, Katie Bolgar, said they have been building their presence within the Indigenous tech space for the past couple of years.“It’s really important for us to gently question our world that serves Indigenous tech space better,” said said Bolgar.The program, which provides free tickets and bursaries to cover travel and accommodation for up to 10 start-ups, was put in place to remove any barriers that exist for Indigenous groups.“I think we found we learned that representation was nowhere near what it’s supposed to be. Technically given that Toronto is our home so for us it was very much commun...Florida inmate gets 1 year and 3 months in federal prison for threatening to kill judge
Published Sun, 24 Nov 2024 13:21:36 GMT
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) — A Florida state prison inmate already serving a three-decade sentence will serve an additional one year and three months in federal prison for threatening to kill a federal judge and his family.Curtis Brown, 35, was sentenced Tuesday in Jacksonville federal court, according to court records. He pleaded guilty in December to threatening to murder a federal judge in retaliation for performing his official duties and to mailing a threatening letter.According to court documents, Brown was serving a sentence for drug trafficking in the Florida State Prison in Raiford in November 2021 when he sent a handwritten letter to a federal judge’s chambers. The letter stated that the judge’s “recent refusal to grant warranted relief” gave Brown no other choice but to use his federal stimulus money to pay for someone to kill the judge.The letter stated that if Brown could not get to the judge in time, then Brown would settle for a member of the judge’s family, prosecutors ...Latest news
- Who will replace Dianne Feinstein?
- Orioles, Maryland officials announce non-binding stadium agreement, but not a lease
- In Shawnee National Forest, a debate swirls around how to best protect trees amid climate change and wildfires
- Officials agree: Use settlement funds to curb youth addiction. But the ‘how’ gets hairy
- What happens when your 0% intro APR period ends?
- What happens to health programs if the federal government shuts down?
- As COVID infections rise, nursing homes are still waiting for vaccines
- How a government shutdown could affect travel
- Stock market today: Wall Street wavers, Treasury yields ease amid encouraging inflation report
- McCarthy’s last-ditch plan to keep the government open collapses, making a shutdown almost certain