'SLATE' transportation job fair happening today
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:58:22 GMT
ST. LOUIS - The city of St. Louis is stepping up Wednesday to help find new jobs for workers recently laid off from trucking companies. Hundreds of workers in the area are impacted.The St. Louis Agency on Training and Employment, or 'SLATE, is located on Market and is the city agency charged with helping displaced workers. This is where the job fair is going to take place, starting later Wednesday morning.'Yellow Trucking' was one of the companies that recently shut down, leaving hundreds of St. Louis workers without jobs.A SLATES release said that Wednesday's job fair is for all job seekers interested in transportation and logistics careers. However, the release specifically mentions that the event is to help displaced workers from Yellow Trucking and DHL find new employment. State climatologist: Heat causing high evaporation rates, no rainfall to place it SLATE officials shared that it's been devastating to watch numerous companies over the past few weeks close their doors with ...Discounted Cardinals tickets available for series vs. Padres
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:58:22 GMT
ST. LOUIS - The Cardinals and Papa John's are teaming up to offer discounted tickets when the Cards host the San Diego Padres next week.A limited number of tickets are as low as $7, and field box tickets are as low as $17. That's for games next Monday through Wednesday, while supplies last. State climatologist: Heat causing high evaporation rates, no rainfall to place it For more information, click here.Aldermen discussing cutting red tape today
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:58:22 GMT
ST. LOUIS - St. Louis aldermen are looking into ways to give businesses a break and cut red tape.A special committee meeting Wednesday will hear ideas on reducing rules for small businesses. It's about streamlining the application process for liquor licenses. St. Louis County man found safe 11 weeks after disappearing The Institute of Justice has told aldermen that red tape and regulations hinder small businesses.Extreme heat alters workout schedules for high school sports
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:58:22 GMT
ST. LOUIS - It's been a brutally hot first week of back-to-school for so many students, teachers, and staff in the area.This is impacting students from the football field to the classroom. Parkway North athletic events like tennis and soccer matches were cancelled this week, and practices were moved indoors.Some metro east students returned to schools with little or no AC Granite City High School students are learning remotely for the rest of the week because of hot classrooms. The school is in the final stages of completing a summer HVAC project.The old system is still in use right now, but the high temperatures have put a lot of strain on it. St. Louis County man found safe 11 weeks after disappearing The heat is also impacting classrooms in Belleville and Cahokia Heights. With classrooms close to the 80s, volleyball players at Cahokia Heights High School say they had a two-hour practice in a gym with no AC.The heat is also playing a big role in the first week of high ...How to trade CFDs?
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:58:22 GMT
Trading is the buying and selling of financial assets in order to make a profit. Assets that can be traded are stocks, bonds, currencies, commodities, and derivatives. Traders use various strategies to generate profits, such as technical analysis, fundamental analysis, and market timing. Trading has become popular, especially in these times when the economic crisis is lurking and wages are incessantly fighting to maintain purchasing power.So how can you start trading?There are many instruments that are used in this type of operations, for example the purchase and sale of shares, the exchange of currency pairs or commodities and recently cryptocurrencies. However, there is one instrument that has slowly been growing in popularity: contracts for difference or CFDs. But what are CFDs?Contracts for differenceCFD stands for Contract for Difference. It is a financial instrument that allows you to trade on the price movements of the underlying assets without actually owning them. When you ...Opinion: Some of those most responsible for Maui wildfires won’t pay a cent
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:58:22 GMT
Maui faces devastating economic costs beyond its intolerable human loss and suffering from recent wildfires. Scorched homes and businesses reduced to rubble won’t be rebuilt quickly; cleaning up their remnants, some of them toxic, won’t be cheap. Rebuilding costs have been estimated at $5.5 billion.Who will pay for this? Most of us will, to varying degrees, but some of those most responsible — the fossil fuel companies that play a key role in such climate-related disasters — won’t.Extreme weather events always take their highest economic toll on the communities directly hit. Maui’s families, many of whom live paycheck to paycheck, have suddenly lost both jobs and homes. They’ll now struggle to meet their most basic needs. Even those who have some savings will have to figure out how to make them last through long delays for inspections, insurance payments and federal aid.Taxpayers will keep some emergency shelters and food supplies going and fund longer-term federal assistance. Over ...Opinion: Big Pharma’s playbook to bankrupt those who can’t afford drugs
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:58:22 GMT
America’s pharmaceutical giants are now suing to block the federal government’s first effort at drug price regulation. Last year’s Inflation Reduction Act included what on its face seems a modest proposal: The federal government would for the first time be empowered to negotiate prices Medicare pays for drugs — but only for 10 very expensive medicines beginning in 2026 (an additional 15 in 2027 and 2028, with more added in later years). Another provision would require manufacturers to pay rebates to Medicare for drug prices that increased faster than inflation.Those provisions alone could reduce the federal deficit by $237 billion over 10 years, the Congressional Budget Office has calculated. Those savings would come from tamping down on drug prices, which are costing an average of 3.44 times (sometimes 10 times as much) as what the same brand-name drugs cost in other developed countries, where governments already negotiate prices.Without any guardrails, drug prices in the U.S. for ...Here’s where California’s power grid is most at risk for high winds and fire threat
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:58:22 GMT
Wildfires swept by intense winds like those on Maui last week are something Californians have become very familiar with.Here’s how the state is trying to prevent more destruction:After years of study and debate, electrical utilities are shutting off power to high-risk areas across California during high heat and wind events. The Public Safety Power Shutoffs are being implemented but there is concern for the few who rely on electricity to survive around the clock. Some areas of the state have power outages longer and more frequently than many others.While wildfires can be started by a broad variety of causes (lightning, arson, smoking, etc.), electrical power lines were shown to be on the rise as an ignition source. Historically, electric utility infrastructure has been responsible for less than 10% of reported wildfires.RELATED: ‘This is hell’: Repeat outages mar PG&E’s wildfire safety shift from tree trimming to circuit breakersHowever, wildfires attributed to electrical infras...In aftermath of Hilary, San Bernardino Mountains resident remains missing as search of river continues
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:58:22 GMT
Searchers in the Seven Oaks area of the San Bernardino Mountains on Tuesday, Aug. 22, found a mobile home that might have belonged to the missing woman whose residence was swept away Sunday by the surging Santa Ana River, but there was no sign of her.The mobile home was located downstream and was filled with mud and debris, said Eric Sherwin, a spokesman for the San Bernardino County Fire Department.“It was destroyed,” Sherwin said.He estimated that 100 people were involved in the search for the woman and rescue of residents of the community north of Highway 38 in the wake of the pounding by Tropical Storm Hilary.The mobile home had been placed at Camp Seven Oaks.Meanwhile, after rescuers hoisted eight residents to safety Monday, authorities came up with a plan to extract the remaining 20 or so who declined to be reeled into a helicopter before being flown to a turnout on Highway 38. A hand crew built a landing zone for a helicopter in a nearby campground, allowing those to wished t...‘Senseless killing’ of California business owner over pride flag shocks LGBTQ community, residents
Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 06:58:22 GMT
Colorful flower bouquets threaded through the door handles, handwritten cards, and rainbow pride flags hanging in the awnings — this has been the scene for several days outside the Mag.Pi clothing store in Cedar Glen, a mountain community bordering Lake Arrowhead.Locals, members of the LGBTQ+ community and allies are mourning the death of the business owner, whom officials say was shot during a dispute over a pride flag hanging outside her shop.On Friday, Aug. 18, Laura Ann “Lauri” Carleton, 66, confronted Travis Ikeguchi, 27, of Cedar Glen, outside of the store, San Bernardino County sheriff’s officials said. According to witnesses, Ikeguchi tore down the pride flag hanging outside the shop, and Carleton confronted Ikeguchi in the street. During the conflict, Ikeguchi reportedly shouted homophobic slurs before shooting Carleton, and fled on foot. Carleton died at the scene.San Bernardino County sheriff’s deputies who responded to multiple 911 calls located Ikeguchi about a mile awa...Latest news
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