Chemical leak at CSU Dominguez Hills hospitalizes workers
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 02:07:53 GMT
Some type of chemical leak at Cal State Dominguez Hills in Carson sent two school workers to the hospital Thursday morning. Emergency crews were sent to the campus located at 1000 E. Victoria St. around 1:30 a.m., a Los Angeles County Fire Department spokesperson confirmed. A hazmat crew was called to CSU Dominguez Hills on Sept. 28, 2023. (KTLA)School security personnel as well as a cleaning official opened the door to the chemistry lab on the third floor and felt ill after inhaling a substance, the spokesperson said. Marijuana grow found by LAFD crews battling Northridge house fire The workers were taken to a local hospital in unknown conditions. The fire department remained at the scene to determine what the substance was.Parking pain hits some Los Angeles neighborhoods harder than others
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 02:07:53 GMT
A new study has found that parking tickets are significantly down in Los Angeles, though some neighborhoods remain popular for parking enforcement.The nonprofit media outlet Crosstown LA analyzed Los Angeles Department of Transportation data and found that from January to August 2023, about 1.17 million parking tickets were issued, "a 17% drop from the approximately 1.4 million citations written in the same period last year."The city is on track to issue about 1.75 million tickets in 2023, down from about 2 million last year. Though fewer tickets are being issued, some neighborhoods remain targets of parking enforcement.Downtown Los Angeles and Westlake took the top two spots. Another neighborhood, Venice, only finished seventh overall, but two blocks in particular were the most ticketed in all of Los Angeles."According to LADOT data, 1,589 citations were issued on the 1600 block of Irving Tabor Court, and 1,375 were written at 1301 Electric Ave.," Crosstown LA reports. As for the t...Christie calls Trump 'Donald Duck,' DeSantis knocks former president and other debate takeaways
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 02:07:53 GMT
Seven Republican presidential hopefuls gathered at the Reagan Library in California on Wednesday for the second of the party’s primary debates. The contest's dominant front-runner — former President Donald Trump — skipped the event again.With less than four months until the Iowa caucuses officially jumpstart the GOP nomination process, the pressure is building on Trump's rivals to show they can emerge as a genuine alternative. Here are some takeaways from the debate:DeSantis hits TrumpFlorida Gov. Ron DeSantis had an aggressive start, using his first answer to criticize Trump for skipping the debate and for adding to the national debt while serving as president.“Donald Trump is missing in action," DeSantis said. “He should be here on this stage tonight. He owes it to you to defend his record.”The Florida governor has been slow to attack Trump for most of the campaign. But as he’s struggled to make inroads against the former president, he’s started slowly sharpening his critiques of ...Larry Magid: EV range anxiety is real, but is it based on reality?
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 02:07:53 GMT
Like many electric vehicle owners, I have range anxiety. It rarely keeps me up at night, but it does occupy my thoughts before and during road trips like the one I just took from Silicon Valley to Yosemite Valley.Related ArticlesBusiness | Magid: Apple’s new iOS 17 increases safeguards for children and teens Business | Magid: Apple unveils new iPhones, ditches Lightning connector Business | Magid: Cleaning up your internet browser Business | Magid: Managing privacy on Facebook I drove a 5-year-old Tesla Model 3, which had a 264-mile range when I bought it, but now has only 232 miles, according to its display. That nearly 14% reduction in range is likely due to battery degradation, which is a factor in nearly all cars and devices that rely on rechargeable batteries, though some could be measurement error. The car’s range estimates are sometimes called “guestimates” because they are based on algorithms that are not ...Powerball ticket worth nearly $800,000 sold in East San Jose
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 02:07:53 GMT
SAN JOSE — A lottery ticket matching all five numbers from Wednesday night’s draw — just lacking the Powerball number — was sold at an East San Jose gas station, earning a lucky winner nearly $800,000 but getting them tantalizingly close to a jackpot worth 1,000 times that.The Powerball ticket was sold at the Quik Stop on 5 Stewart Avenue, just off of Alum Rock Avenue. The drawing took place Wednesday night, revealing the numbers 1, 7, 46 47 and 63, with a Powerball of 7.Related ArticlesCalifornia News | Powerball jackpot swells to $925 million after no winner snagged the prize Wednesday night California News | Monday night’s $785 million Powerball jackpot is 9th largest lottery prize. Odds of winning are miserable California News | Letters: Oil companies | Self-driving cars | Dyslexia skills | Lottery owes | Spending here | Pride flag bans California News | Scratchers ticket worth $2 million sold at East Bay gas stati...Wildfires can make your California red wine taste like an ashtray. These scientists want to stop that
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 02:07:53 GMT
By ANDREW SELSKY | Associated PressALPINE, Ore. — The U.S. West Coast produces over 90% of America’s wine, but the region is also prone to wildfires — a combustible combination that spelled disaster for the wine industry in 2020 and one that scientists are scrambling to neutralize.Sample a good wine and you might get notes of oak or red fruit. But sip on wine made from grapes that were penetrated by smoke, and it could taste like someone dumped the contents of an ashtray into your glass.Wine experts from three West Coast universities are working together to meet the threat, including developing spray coatings to protect grapes, pinpointing the elusive compounds that create that nasty ashy taste, and deploying smoke sensors to vineyards to better understand smoke behavior.The U.S. government is funding their research with millions of dollars. Wineries are also taking steps to protect their product and brand.The risk to America’s premier wine-making regions — where wildfires caused bi...Retail theft attempt at San Mateo Target ends in four arrests
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 02:07:53 GMT
SAN MATEO – Police on Wednesday announced the arrests of four people in connection with the attempted theft of nearly $2,000 worth of merchandise from a Target store in San Mateo.The news came a day after Target Corp. said it was closing three stores in the Bay Area due to organized retail theft and the threat the crime poses to employees and shoppers.Around 8:40 a.m. Monday, officers were called to the Target at the Bridgepointe Shopping Center for a report that a person had entered the store wearing a ski mask and carrying a backpack, while an accomplice parked a red Honda CR-V at the rear of the business, the San Mateo Police Department said in a news release Wednesday night.Officers arrived minutes later to find the Honda parked next to a delivery door. All three occupants – identified as a 32-year-old San Francisco resident, a 31-year-old Vallejo resident and a 32-year-old Hayward resident – were wanted on multiple warrants.As officers were detaining the trio, another suspect, ...Saratoga taking ‘swift action’ after group ‘Zoom-bombs’ council meeting with racist language
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 02:07:53 GMT
A group of people disrupted a Saratoga City Council meeting last week, making remarks that targeted racial and ethnic minorities and the LGBTQ community.A representative from the city of Saratoga said the comments were made by a group of participants who virtually joined the the council meeting on Wednesday, Sept. 20, via Zoom. A copy of the meeting recording was shared with the Santa Clara County Sheriff’s Office but had yet to be posted on the city’s website at press time.“The city of Saratoga values freedom of speech and the democratic process. However, hateful remarks and blatant disrespect towards the diverse members of our community and our city council, which is comprised of several different cultures and faiths, at our meetings are not acceptable,” Mayor Kookie Fitzsimmons said in an email. “We are taking swift action to ensure respectful discourse at city council and commission meetings as there is no place for racism, bigotry or discrimination in Saratoga.”Thi...Cal keeping quiet about QB situation ahead of Arizona State showdown
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 02:07:53 GMT
BERKELEY — Week 5 of the Cal football schedule has arrived and quarterback questions remain unanswered. Sam Jackson V and Ben Finley are continuing to vie for the starting job as the Bears seek consistency at the position.“We’re only going to be as good as our quarterback play,” Cal offensive coordinator Jake Spavital said.Finley started at Washington last Saturday but was picked off three times in the first half and ultimately knocked out of the game late in the third quarter with a sore lower back. Jackson, the starter when the season began, came on to direct Cal to three touchdowns but all of it came in garbage time as the Huskies rolled to a 59-32 victory.Jackson, more the dual-threat QB, has completed 57.4 percent of his passes for 426 yards with four touchdowns and two interceptions while rushing for 63 yards. The Bears are 2-0 in his two starts. Finley, a pocket passer with something of a gunslinger mentality, has completed 62 percent for 533 yards, with three TDs and four pi...A hidden climate danger threatens U.S. coastal communities
Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 02:07:53 GMT
By Todd Woody | BloombergA little-known climate threat lurks under our feet: rising groundwater that could release toxic chemicals from more than 132,000 contaminated sites in coastal areas of the US. In a first of its kind study, researchers estimated the number of polluted industrial sites and mapped them to areas likely to experience groundwater inundation due to rising seas.“A lot of people don’t realize that the ocean actually extends under the land in coastal areas, so as the ocean rises, it pushes up the groundwater toward the surface,” said Kristina Hill, an associate professor at the University of California at Berkeley and the lead author of the paper, which was published last week in the journal Earth’s Future.Factories, fuel stations, military bases and other industrial facilities have left surrounding soil contaminated with carcinogenic chemicals and heavy metals. Some became Superfund sites whose cleanup is overseen by the federal government. Far more are managed by i...Latest news
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