Thousands allowed to bypass environmental rules in pandemic
By ELLEN KNICKMEYER, CATHY BUSSEWITZ, JOHN FLESHER, MATTHEW BROWN and MICHAEL CASEY Associated Press
Thousands of oil and gas operations and other sites have won permission to stop monitoring for hazardous emissions or otherwise break government rules because of the coronavirus outbreak. The findings come in an investigation by The Associated Press. The Trump administration announced the first nationwide, extended easing of environmental enforcement in March. Oil and gas companies had complained that the pandemic was complicating compliance with pollution rules. Facilities won permission more than 3,000 times to skimp on compliance during the sweeping government clemency. The Environmental Protection Agency says its clemency was not a license for increased pollution.
Author: Beaver County Radio
Zoom suffers outage as students start classes online
Zoom suffers outage as students start classes online
NEW YORK (AP) — Zoom is experiencing partial outages during the first day of school for thousands of students who are relying on the video conferencing technology to connect with educators. The company said Monday that it began receiving reports of disruptions around 9 a.m. Eastern time. It has identified the issue causing the problem and is working on a fix, it reported on its status page. Grade schools, high schools and universities are relying on Zoom and competing technologies like Microsoft Teams to reduce the chance of infection during the pandemic. Technical issues are occurring across the U.S., with the most reports on the East Coast, as well as in Europe, according to downdetector.com, which monitors self-reported outages.
Report Highlights Concerns in Religious Freedom Lawsuit
Andrea Sears
PHILADELPHIA — Creating a religious exemption to anti-discrimination laws could have far-reaching, negative effects – that’s the conclusion of a new report on a case soon to be heard by the U.S. Supreme Court.
The City of Philadelphia refused to renew its contract with Catholic Social Services, a child-welfare agency. It said the agency’s policy of refusing to license same-sex couples as foster parents on religious grounds violates the city’s nondiscrimination law.
CSS sued, saying denying a contract violates its rights to free exercise of religion and free speech. But Naomi Goldberg, policy and research director at the Movement Advancement Project, said creating a religious exemption for CSS could open the door to similar claims for a wide variety of services.
“The most broad way in which the court could rule,” said Goldberg, “could essentially create a constitutional right to discriminate for individuals, for businesses and for taxpayer-funded entities.”
Lower federal courts have ruled the city’s policy is neutral and doesn’t target CSS or its religious beliefs. The case has been scheduled for Supreme Court arguments on Nov. 4.
The report also said foster children could be harmed by creating a religious exemption for discrimination. Goldberg pointed out there are many lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender children who need foster care.
“What we could end up with are agencies that receive taxpayer funding to care for kids in state care who might force children to undergo things like conversion therapy,” said Goldberg, “or refuse to recognize their sexual orientation or gender identity.”
She added there is a shortage of foster families and said refusing to place children with qualified couples or individuals for religious reasons alone makes that shortage worse.
Goldberg noted that any entity receiving public funds is expected to live up to the terms of its contract.
“Considering all qualified families without regard to their religion or sexual orientation is a contract term that’s really important,” said Goldberg. “It speaks to the welfare of children.”
She said creating a religious exemption in government contracts would make it nearly impossible for state or local governments to set standards for provision of services.
President Trump announces plasma treatment authorized for COVID-19
Trump announces plasma treatment authorized for COVID-19
By JONATHAN LEMIRE and MIKE STOBBE Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump says the federal government has granted emergency authorization for treating COVID-19 patients with convalescent plasma. While Trump is calling the move “a breakthrough” and one of his top health officials says it is “promising,” other health experts say the therapeutic needs more study before it can be celebrated. The blood plasma is taken from patients who have recovered from the coronavirus and is rich in antibodies. It may provide benefits to those battling the disease, but the evidence has been inconclusive as to how it works or how best to administer it.
Harvick dominates at Dover for 7th Cup victory of the season
Harvick dominates at Dover for 7th Cup victory of the season
By DAN GELSTON AP Sports Writer
DOVER, Del. (AP) — Kevin Harvick regained the NASCAR Cup Series victory lead with his seventh, dominating Sunday at Dover International Speedway. A day after Denny Hamlin opened with doubleheader weekend with his sixth win to match Harvick, the Stewart-Haas racing driver one-upped his closest rival to claim NASCAR’s regular-season title. Harvick has 56 career Cup victories to tied Kyle Busch for ninth on the career list. Harvick swept the stages in the No. 4 Ford and won for the third time in seven races. He gave Ford its 700th Cup victory. Martin Truex Jr. was second and Jimmie Johnson, Dover’s career winner with 11, was third. Johnson’s No. 48 team gambled on a late two-tire pit stop that gave the seven-time champion a late surge.
Bucs Win Third Straight, Polanco’s Late Homerun Lifts Pirates To Sweep of Brew Crew
Polanco’s home run lifts Pirates to sweep of Brewers
JOHN PERROTTO Associated Press
PITTSBURGH (AP) — Slumping Gregory Polanco’s bat showed signs of life for a second straight day as his two-run home run in the eighth inning lifted the Pittsburgh Pirates to a 5-4 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers and a three-game series sweep. Polanco connected off David Phelps for his fourth homer of the season and finished 2 for 3 with a walk. It was Polanco’s second two-hit game in as many days, lifting his batting average from .085 to .151. The Pirates nearly doubled their season win total in one weekend. They entered the series with a 4-17 record, worst in the major leagues.
Takuma Sato wins his second Indianapolis 500
Takuma Sato has won his second Indianapolis 500 after Spencer Pigot crashed heavily exiting Turn 4, bringing out the caution with five laps remaining and forcing what had been a thrilling race to end under caution.
After dominating most of the race, Scott Dixon had been chasing Sato for about 15 laps and was starting to bite into a gap that had emerged in lapped traffic. But the race ended when Pigot spun into the outside wall, then crossed back across the track and slammed into the safety tires that guard the entrance to pit lane.
Pigot exited the car but was helped onto a stretcher. His car was left in pieces across the front stretch.
Dixon pulled up alongside Sato with Graham Rahal, his teammate, on the other side to finish third.
Briscoe calls shot at Dover to win Xfinity Series race
Briscoe calls shot at Dover to win Xfinity Series race
By DAN GELSTON AP Sports Writer
DOVER, Del. (AP) — Chase Briscoe called his shot at Dover International Speedway and won his sixth Xfinity Series race of the season. Briscoe won five of the first 13 races this season but was winless in the last seven. That streak ended at Dover not long after Briscoe called his wife and promised he would win Sunday’s race. He went out and delivered in what he called his best Ford of the season. Briscoe won for the eighth time in his career.
Capitals fire coach Todd Reirden after 2 postseason letdowns
Capitals fire coach Todd Reirden after 2 postseason letdowns
By STEPHEN WHYNO AP Hockey Writer
The Washington Capitals have fired coach Todd Reirden after a second consecutive first-round exit in the playoffs. General manager Brian MacLellan announced the move three days after the Capitals lost to former coach Barry Trotz’s New York Islanders in a five-game series. Washington opted to promote Reirden from the top assistant job and let Trotz leave rather than give him a raise after winning the Stanley Cup in 2018. Reirden likely would have left to seek a head coaching position elsewhere. Trotz’s Islanders reached the second round of the postseason for a second consecutive season.
Emergency postal aid stalls as WH rejects House-passed bill
Emergency postal aid stalls as WH rejects House-passed bill
By HOPE YEN, MATTHEW DALY and LISA MASCARO Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — Help for the U.S. Postal Service has landed in stalemate as the White House dismissed an emergency funding bill aimed at shoring up the agency before the November elections as “going nowhere.” But House Speaker Nancy Pelosi says the public is demanding action and the Senate can’t avoid acting on it “unless they do so to their peril.” The House approved the legislation in a rare Saturday session to provide $25 billion and block operational changes by Postmaster General Louis DeJoy that slowed mail delivery. More than two dozen House Republicans broke with the president in backing the bill, which passed 257-150.










