San Diego is priciest US city for night out, study shows

Published Thu, 31 Oct 2024 23:46:20 GMT

San Diego is priciest US city for night out, study shows SAN DIEGO -- Planning for a night out in San Diego? Well, you better be prepared to pay.America's Finest City was determined the most expensive U.S. city for a night out, according to a study conducted by Pricelisto. The consumer price transparency platform that shows pricing data of restaurants, fitness gyms, beauty salons, movie theaters and other activities, found the average cost for a night out in San Diego is $225.27. Snag tickets to the 2023 San Diego County Fair Concert Series According to Pricelisto, San Diego has the second most expensive pint of beer for $8 while placing third for the most expensive hotel stay at $167.28.Charlotte, North Carolina; Austin, Texas; Memphis, Tennessee; and Columbus, Ohio rounded out the top five most expensive U.S. cities, the study revealed.The report collected cost-of-living data from each U.S. city with a population exceeding 500,000 to find out the average price of a cocktail, cab fare for a three-mile journey, a bottle of wine, a pint ...

Dates for 'America's Air Show' in Miramar announced

Published Thu, 31 Oct 2024 23:46:20 GMT

Dates for 'America's Air Show' in Miramar announced SAN DIEGO -- The Miramar Airshow is now called "America's Airshow," according to local military officials. Aviation enthusiasts can catch the free event on Sept. 22-24 at Marine Corps Air Station Miramar.“This is not just the Marine Corps Air Station Miramar Airshow; this is the largest military air show in America. Come see ‘America’s Airshow’ and hear a story of innovation that spans a century of American military aviation,” Col. Thomas M. Bedell with MCAS Miramar stated in a press release Wednesday. Snag tickets to the 2023 San Diego County Fair Concert Series This year's air show features demonstrations from the Marine Corps' F-35B, Marine Air-Ground Task Force and the renowned Blue Angels. For upgraded seating options, tickets will be on sale July 14.Guests will also have the opportunity to learn about the history of the U.S. Marine Corps.

Coyotes file $2.3 billion claim against Phoenix over arena

Published Thu, 31 Oct 2024 23:46:20 GMT

Coyotes file $2.3 billion claim against Phoenix over arena TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) — The Arizona Coyotes appeared to have finally found an answer to their arena issues by working out a deal to build an entertainment district in Tempe.A snag with the city of Phoenix now puts that in doubt, adding another layer to the franchise’s long-running bid to find a permanent home.The Coyotes and the firm the franchise hired to develop a new arena project near Sky Harbor International Airport filed a $2.3 billion notice of claim against the city of Phoenix on Wednesday for alleged breach of contract.The claim, a precursor to a lawsuit, that was filed along with Bluebird Development is seeking damages from Phoenix for a legal filing by the city March 27. Phoenix asked in its legal filing to rescind Tempe’s recent zoning and land-use changes, along with prohibiting future residential considerations in an area the FAA says is incompatible with residential development.The city and Sky Harbor said the plan for the Tempe Entertainment District, which w...

Arkansas lawmakers OK restrictions on trans student pronouns

Published Thu, 31 Oct 2024 23:46:20 GMT

Arkansas lawmakers OK restrictions on trans student pronouns LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — A bill that would require parental approval for Arkansas teachers to address transgender students by the pronouns and names that they use is headed to Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders’ desk.The bill was approved Wednesday by the majority-Republican Senate on a 19-5 vote. It requires parental approval for teachers at public schools, including colleges and universities, to use a minor student’s pronoun that is “inconsistent” with the student’s biological sex or a name that’s not listed on the student’s birth certificate. It also would prohibit schools from requiring teachers to use the pronouns or name a student uses.The bill is among a wave of bills being considered in statehouses that would formally allow or require schools to deadname transgender students or out them to their parents without consent. Transgender students, who already are at high risk of bullying and depression, have said the measures would make schools feel even more unsafe.Supporters of t...

Kansas lawmakers OK bill on live deliveries during abortions

Published Thu, 31 Oct 2024 23:46:20 GMT

Kansas lawmakers OK bill on live deliveries during abortions TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Doctors accused of not providing enough care to infants delivered alive during certain kinds of abortion procedures in Kansas could face lawsuits and criminal charges under a bill that won final approval Tuesday in the state’s Republican-controlled Legislature. The legislation faces an uncertain fate in a legal and political climate that’s made Kansas an outlier on abortion policy among states with GOP-led legislatures. The bill applies not only to “botched” or “unsuccessful” abortions but also when doctors induce labor to deliver a fetus that is expected to die within minutes or even seconds outside the womb, which often occurs because of a severe medical issue. The Kansas House voted 86-36 to approve a proposed “born-alive infants protection” law similar to a proposed law that Montana voters rejected in November. The Senate approved the measure last week and it goes next to Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly, who vetoed such a bill in 2019.The Senate voted...

Man dead after being struck by falling tree in Markham

Published Thu, 31 Oct 2024 23:46:20 GMT

Man dead after being struck by falling tree in Markham York Regional Police say a man died after being struck by a falling tree in Markham on Wednesday.Officials were called to the 19th Avenue and Highway 48 area near Dickson Hill Road around 6 p.m.A duty inspector tells CityNews that a man was cutting a tree when it shifted and hit him. He was pronounced dead at the scene, the official said.It’s not being treated as suspicious.About 800,000 people in Ontario and Quebec were without power Wednesday after a messy mix of freezing rain and thunderstorms battered parts of both provinces.York-Durham and other regions in southern Ontario were under weather warnings, including a rainfall warning, for most of the day, but they were mostly lifted once the heavy rain subsided in the evening.

Arkansas House OKs social media age verification requirement

Published Thu, 31 Oct 2024 23:46:20 GMT

Arkansas House OKs social media age verification requirement LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — Arkansas children would need their parents’ OK to access social media sites under a bill Arkansas lawmakers advanced Wednesday, moving the state closer toward becoming the second to enact restrictions that critics say raise privacy and enforcement concerns.The majority-Republican House approved by an 82-10 vote the restrictions, which have the support of GOP Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders. The proposal goes back to the Senate, which approved an earlier version of the bill, for one more vote before it can head to Sanders’ desk.“It is a bill designed to create a level of protection for our young people,” Republican Rep. Jon Eubanks, the bill’s House sponsor, said before representatives approved the measure without any debate.The proposal is similar to a first-in-the-nation law that Utah Gov. Spencer Cox signed last month. Several other states are considering similar measures, touted by supporters as a way to protect children.Sanders last month a...

‘Explosion’ at Yorkdale Mall deemed vehicle mechanical issue

Published Thu, 31 Oct 2024 23:46:20 GMT

‘Explosion’ at Yorkdale Mall deemed vehicle mechanical issue Toronto police say an explosion heard in a parking lot outside Yorkdale Mall was nothing but a mechanical issue with a vehicle.Officers were called to the mall on Dufferin Street around 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday.No injuries were reported, but police confirmed that the bomb squad would respond after an explosion was heard underneath a vehicle.In an update, police said it wasn’t an explosion, and reports of a loud noise had come from a vehicle experiencing a mechanical issue.The scene has been cleared, authorities said. The mall was not evacuated following initial reports.POLICE INVESTIGATION: (UPDATE)Yorkdale Mall Parking Lot7:25pm– determined no explosion occurred– sound was mechanical issues with the vehicle#GO751908^se— Toronto Police Operations (@TPSOperations) April 6, 2023

City should permanently close landfill where women were found: First Nations leader

Published Thu, 31 Oct 2024 23:46:20 GMT

City should permanently close landfill where women were found: First Nations leader WINNIPEG — The leader of a First Nations advocacy group wants to see the Winnipeg landfill where the remains of two Indigenous women were found permanently shut down.“I think given the circumstance, that it should be. It’s not an isolated issue,” Grand Chief Cathy Merrick of the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs said in a phone interview Wednesday.“I know there are lots of (Indigenous women) that have been missing throughout time, and I’m pretty sure that some of those women are in the Brady landfill.”The Winnipeg homicide unit started an investigation after staff at the Brady Road landfill south of the city found the body of 33-year-old Linda Mary Beardy on Monday.The cause and time of her death have not been released.The landfill has been closed as police investigate. The city said contingency plans for garbage and recycling are in place.Merrick said the city should look at opening a new landfill that would include measures to help with police investi...

Coal use climbs worldwide despite promises to slash it

Published Thu, 31 Oct 2024 23:46:20 GMT

Coal use climbs worldwide despite promises to slash it The burning of coal for electricity, cement, steel and other uses went up in 2022 despite global promises to phase down the fuel that’s the biggest source of planet-warming gases in the atmosphere, a report Wednesday found.The coal fleet grew by 19.5 gigawatts last year, enough to light up around 15 million homes, with nearly all newly commissioned coal projects in China, according to a report by Global Energy Monitor, an organization that tracks a variety of energy projects around the globe. That 1% increase comes at a time when the world needs to retire its coal fleet four and a half times faster to meet climate goals, the report said. In 2021, countries around the world promised to phase down the use of coal to help achieve the goal to limit warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 Fahrenheit). “The more new coal projects come online, the steeper the cuts and commitments need to be in the future,” said Flora Champenois, the report’s lead author and the project manager for ...