Elias: California’s new housing laws, green energy mandates in conflict

Published Sat, 16 Nov 2024 09:00:42 GMT

Elias: California’s new housing laws, green energy mandates in conflict California has a bunch of new housing laws, several taking effect in each of the last few years.Related ArticlesLocal Opinion | Elias: How Barbara Lee could become Democrats’ nominee for U.S. Senate Local Opinion | Elias: Newsom laying groundwork for possible 2028 presidential run Local Opinion | Elias: Dumb decarceration idea may rear head elsewhere in California Local Opinion | Elias: California GOP can expect more irrelevance if it doesn’t change They eliminate most single-family “R-1” zoning to allow more housing and permit more floors in any new apartment building or condominium structure if it contains an acceptable percentage of “affordable” or low-income units. One measure also allows more living units by mandating fewer or no parking spaces in buildings near mass transit stops on the flawed presumption that most people living there won’t ever want to own a vehicle.At times, the law...

Opinion: Rejected by a top-tier college? It won’t hurt chances for success

Published Sat, 16 Nov 2024 09:00:42 GMT

Opinion: Rejected by a top-tier college? It won’t hurt chances for success There is nervousness in the homes of ambitious American high school students awaiting the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision on affirmative action at the University of North Carolina and Harvard University. Will the justices upend preferences for certain racial and ethnic groups? Will they ruin the chances of many teenagers getting into a top school, which would bring them lifelong success?The answer to the second question is no, regardless of how the court rules.Affirmative action admission policies can help colleges achieve greater diversity on their campuses. But in the course of that public debate, we do college applicants great harm if we give them the false impression they will do better in life if they attend highly selective schools.Long-standing research shows that except for some low-income students, being admitted to the most selective colleges has no significant effect on whether those young people achieve their dreams for life.We’re all naturally fascinated with pecking orde...

Skelton: Buried fees in Newsom’s budget, but no major tax increase

Published Sat, 16 Nov 2024 09:00:42 GMT

Skelton: Buried fees in Newsom’s budget, but no major tax increase If you’re a California boater, Gov. Gavin Newsom wants you to pay the state more and get less in return.That’s one very small item tucked into the governor’s massive, revised $307-billion state budget proposal for the fiscal year starting July 1.It begs the question: How many other little goodies affecting people are buried somewhere in the sprawling budget proposal?Another example:Newsom deserves credit for this one. He wants to increase benefits for the aged, blind and disabled, who historically have gotten the shaft whenever a governor pulls out his budget-cutting knife.These mostly impoverished people are among the weakest politically in the state Capitol. Powerful unions or business groups aren’t fighting for them.But first about the slap at recreational boaters.OK, I admit to being biased because I’ve been hooked on powerboats since age 14.There are 2.6 million recreational boats in California and more than 4 million boaters, according to the state Division of Boating and Wate...

Searching for coronavirus, Marin County wastewater tests detect ‘tranq’ drug

Published Sat, 16 Nov 2024 09:00:42 GMT

Searching for coronavirus, Marin County wastewater tests detect ‘tranq’ drug Xylazine, a veterinary tranquilizer that is increasingly being mixed with fentanyl, heroin and other illicit drugs, has been detected in Marin County’s wastewater.Although xylazine, also known as “tranq,” use has been common on the East Coast for some time, this is the first positive evidence of its presence in Marin. Dr. Matt Willis, Marin County’s public health officer, made the announcement in a recent update on levels of COVID-19 infection in Marin.Since most people now rely on at-home antigen tests to determine if they’re infected, instead of a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test that must be processed through a lab, health officials have come to rely on wastewater testing to determine infection levels in their communities.“We have almost no visibility on transmission through test results,” Willis said. “We estimate that less than 5% of our cases are getting reported.”The amount of virus in Marin’s wastewater is fairly low — about the same as it was a year ago, although not as...

Authorities ID man killed in Highway 1 cliff crash

Published Sat, 16 Nov 2024 09:00:42 GMT

Authorities ID man killed in Highway 1 cliff crash SWANTON — A driver killed Friday afternoon when his vehicle went over a coastal Highway 1 cliff has been identified as a 28-year-old Texas man.The Santa Cruz County Coroner’s Office said the man was Connor Joseph Masarich, of Dallas.Masarich was northbound  on Highway 1 about a mile north of Scotts Creek Bridge when he allowed the 2017 Subaru Outback he was driving to travel off the road, according to the California Highway Patrol.The car overturned several times down a steep cliff and landed on the beach below, partially submerged in the water. Masarich was pronounced dead at the scene. Related ArticlesCrashes and Disasters | Mercury spill near Martinez train station now in isolated areas only Crashes and Disasters | San Jose: Tow truck driver killed while in Highway 101 lanes, suspect driver did not stop Crashes and Disasters | 3 in California family dead, 6 injured in crash on 10 Freeway Crashes and Disasters | San Jose: ...

San Jose woman killed in Watsonville motorcycle crash ID’d

Published Sat, 16 Nov 2024 09:00:42 GMT

San Jose woman killed in Watsonville motorcycle crash ID’d WATSONVILLE — The Santa Cruz County Coroner’s Office has identified the motorcyclist killed in a crash early this month on Carlton Road.Jacqueline Bischof, 30, of San Jose, was riding in the agricultural area around 3:30 p.m. on May 8 when her 2023 Honda CBR600RR racing bike went down for an unknown reason and slid into the path of a semi-truck. The California Highway Patrol had not determined a reason for the crash.Bischof, suffering from major injuries, died at the scene. Related ArticlesCrashes and Disasters | Mercury spill near Martinez train station now in isolated areas only Crashes and Disasters | San Jose: Tow truck driver killed while in Highway 101 lanes, suspect driver did not stop Crashes and Disasters | 3 in California family dead, 6 injured in crash on 10 Freeway Crashes and Disasters | San Jose: Pedestrian reportedly killed on Highway 101 in hit-and-run Crashes and Disasters | Sunnyvale woman d...

SpaceX hires ex-NASA official Kathy Lueders for key role on Starship program

Published Sat, 16 Nov 2024 09:00:42 GMT

SpaceX hires ex-NASA official Kathy Lueders for key role on Starship program Hawthorne-based SpaceX has hired Kathy Lueders, a former NASA associate administrator who recently retired from the space agency, to work on the company’s next-generation Starship program.Lueders is a general manager at Starbase, SpaceX’s launch facility in southern Texas, according to people familiar with the matter who asked not to be identified discussing personnel changes.SpaceX both builds and launches its massive deep-space Starship vehicle from the facility.The hiring was reported earlier by CNBC.Prior to joining SpaceX, Lueders spent roughly three decades at NASA, working on both the Space Shuttle and the International Space Station programs.She served as the manager of the Commercial Crew Program, which worked extensively with SpaceX to launch the company’s first human spaceflight missions to the ISS.She also served as NASA’s first female associate administrator for human exploration.Lueders left NASA at the end of last month. When she stepped down, she said on Twitter she ...

Erdogan Arrested and Expelled International Officials Observing Turkish Election

Published Sat, 16 Nov 2024 09:00:42 GMT

Erdogan Arrested and Expelled International Officials Observing Turkish Election The government of Recep Tayyip Erdogan swept up and jailed a team of international observers on hand to monitor election day activity in Turkey on Sunday, members of the team told The Intercept in a statement. The delegation had not been granted official observer accreditation by the Erdogan government, but were formally invited by the HDP, the leading Kurdish party and a key member of the opposition coalition. The election held on Sunday was the closest contest Erdogan has faced in the two decades he has been in power. Immediately, the opposition coalition, led by Kemal Kilicdaroglu, charged election irregularities, zeroing in on what Kilicdaroglu said was an extremely large number of objections to ballot boxes in Istanbul and Ankara — urban areas where the opposition dominated. “You are blocking the will of Turkey,” Kilicdaroglu said. Erdogan fell short of the 50 percent needed to avoid a runoff, officially winning more than 49.5 percent of the vote with fewer than 100,0...

UK sees record number of people off work due to long-term sickness

Published Sat, 16 Nov 2024 09:00:42 GMT

UK sees record number of people off work due to long-term sickness LONDON (AP) — The number of people in the U.K. not working because of long-term sickness has risen to a record high partly because of ongoing health problems related to the coronavirus pandemic, official figures showed Tuesday. The Office for National Statistics found that 2.55 million people were not able to work in the three months to March, which is over 6% of the country’s working population. That was up nearly 100,000 on the previous quarter.The agency said the pandemic is likely to be one of the main causes for the increase in the number of long-term sick over the past three years or so, including those suffering from long COVID symptoms such as post-viral fatigue. Many young people have also been unable to work because of mental health issues while those suffering from head and neck problems has potentially grown because of the increase in home-working since the coronavirus pandemic. There’s also a backlog of care following the pandemic that will take time to clea...

Auxiliary lane to ease I-95 bottleneck at Occoquan now open

Published Sat, 16 Nov 2024 09:00:42 GMT

Auxiliary lane to ease I-95 bottleneck at Occoquan now open The new auxiliary lane on southbound I-95 from Route 123 to Prince William Parkway. (Courtesy InsideNoVa/VDOT)This article was written by WTOP’s news partner, InsideNoVa.com, and republished with permission. Sign up for InsideNoVa.com’s free email subscription today.About a mile and a half of the southbound I-95 right shoulder was converted to a travel lane between the ramp from southbound Route 123 and the ramp to westbound Prince William Parkway.The auxiliary lane aims to make it easier for drivers to merge into and out of traffic between the ramps.Southbound I-95 averages about 80,000 vehicles a day in this area, VDOT said in a news release.“Our team is proud to provide transportation solutions for northern Virginia,” said Bill Cuttler, P.E., VDOT’s Northern Virginia Deputy District Engineer. “This auxiliary ramp will allow drivers to begin exiting one mile earlier, which will make a big difference for drivers caught in southbound congestion.”Construction on the I-95 ...