• 3 dead, 18 injured in bus rollover in San Diego County

    3 dead, 18 injured in bus rollover in San Diego County
    A charter bus rolled down an embankment off a San Diego County highway Saturday, Feb. 22, killing three people and injuring at least 18 others, authorities said.
    Emergency crews rescued several people trapped in the wreckage after the bus crashed around 10:20 a.m. on the southbound 15 Freeway south of the 76 Freeway, about 45 miles north of San Diego, the North County Fire Protection District said.
    The California Highway Patrol log said a person was still trapped at 11:16 a.m. and would not be a
  • Providence warns patients of potential disruption as Blue Shield negotiations drag on

    Providence warns patients of potential disruption as Blue Shield negotiations drag on
    Providence and Blue Shield California, currently embroiled in a contractual spat over how much the insurance company covers patient care, have until June 1 to ink a new deal before the old contract expires.
    The hospital system emailed its 110,000 patients earlier this week, warning that Blue Shield health insurance might flip to out of network with Providence hospitals, clinics and physicians.
    “We are diligently working with Blue Shield to resolve this negotiation and that you can continue
  • Corky: Credit where it’s due for the people who can do it all in the water

    Corky: Credit where it’s due for the people who can do it all in the water
    When I was a kid and learning to surf, I was always told that in order to be a “complete” surfer it was important to be able to do all things surfing and ocean related.  A total “waterman” was the expression that was used.
    At first, I thought this just meant being able to all things that had to do with riding a surfboard well.  You should be able to ride all size waves, from knee high to mountain high.  You should be able to surf in either direction equally
  • States want to make it harder for health insurers to deny care, but firms might evade enforcement

    States want to make it harder for health insurers to deny care, but firms might evade enforcement
    Shalina Chatlani | (TNS) Stateline.org
    For decades, Amina Tollin struggled with mysterious, debilitating pain that radiated throughout her body. A few years ago, when a doctor finally diagnosed her with polyneuropathy, a chronic nerve condition, she had begun to use a wheelchair.
    The doctor prescribed a blood infusion therapy that allowed Tollin, 40, to live her life normally. That is, until about three months ago, when it came time for reapproval and Medicaid stopped paying for the therapy. It
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  • Sealing homes’ leaky HVAC systems is a sneaky good climate solution

    Sealing homes’ leaky HVAC systems is a sneaky good climate solution
    Leslie Kaufman | Bloomberg News (TNS)
    There’s a hidden scourge making homes more harmful to the climate and less comfortable: leaky heating and cooling systems. Plugging those leaks may be the dull stepchild of the energy transition, but that doesn’t make it any less important than installing dazzling solar arrays and getting millions of electric vehicles on the road.
    The problem, however, is that energy efficiency pays back over time, but it comes with high upfront costs.
    “It
  • ‘Are nursing homes our only option?’ These centers offer older adults an alternative

    ‘Are nursing homes our only option?’ These centers offer older adults an alternative
    Anna Claire Vollers | (TNS) Stateline.org
    CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. — George Raines, a white-haired man in a red track suit and matching University of Alabama ball cap, cracked jokes as physical therapist Brad Ellis led him through a series of exercises designed to strengthen his legs.
    Raines, who is 79, pretended to be in pain, but his grin belied his tone of mock suffering. The men were in the therapy room at Ascension Living Alexian PACE in Chattanooga, Tennessee, where older clients spend the
  • When rogue brokers switch people’s ACA policies, tax surprises can follow

    When rogue brokers switch people’s ACA policies, tax surprises can follow
    Julie Appleby | (TNS) KFF Health News
    Tax season is never fun. But some tax filers this year face an added complication: Their returns are being rejected because they failed to provide information about Affordable Care Act coverage they didn’t even know they had.
    While the concern about unscrupulous brokers enrolling unsuspecting people in ACA coverage has simmered for years, complaints have risen in recent months as consumers discover their health insurance coverage isn’t
  • Sugar cravings could be caused by loneliness, study finds

    Sugar cravings could be caused by loneliness, study finds
    Ebony Williams | The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (TNS)
    If you’ve spent a lonely night at home eating chocolates and/or ice cream, you shouldn’t feel guilty. That’s because loneliness can cause an intense desire for sugary foods, a new study found.
    Published in JAMA Network Open, researchers linked brain chemistry from those who socially isolate to poor mental health, weight gain, cognitive decline and chronic diseases like Type 2 diabetes and obesity.
    Related ArticlesWhy takin
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  • Kathryn Scanlan published ‘Kick the Latch’ in 2022. It’s winning awards in 2024

    Kathryn Scanlan published ‘Kick the Latch’ in 2022. It’s winning awards in 2024
    Kathryn Scanlan’s slim novel “Kick the Latch” didn’t arrive with a massive media push when it was published in 2022, but both book and author continue to defy expectations.
    Over the course of a single week last month, the Los Angeles-based writer was the recipient of both the £10,000 Gordon Burn Prize and one of this year’s Donald Windham-Sandy M. Campbell Literature Prizes, which comes with an astounding $175,000 award.
    “It’s shocking. I
  • Inside author Kathryn Scanlan’s award-winning week

    Inside author Kathryn Scanlan’s award-winning week
    Kathryn Scanlan’s slim novel “Kick the Latch” didn’t arrive with a massive media push when it was published in 2022, but both book and author continue to defy expectations.
    Over the course of a single week last month, the Los Angeles-based writer was the recipient of both the £10,000 Gordon Burn Prize and one of this year’s Donald Windham-Sandy M. Campbell Literature Prizes, which comes with an astounding $175,000 award.
    “It’s shocking. I
  • Ex-Customs and Border Protection worker pleads guilty to wife’s death in Orange

    Ex-Customs and Border Protection worker pleads guilty to wife’s death in Orange
    A Covina man who worked for U.S. Customs and Border Protection pleaded guilty on Friday, April 19, to a federal charge for kidnapping his wife in 2016 in an incident that resulted in her death.
    Eddy Reyes, 38, who lived with his wife in Santa Ana before she vanished, entered his plea in downtown Los Angeles.
    The charge carries potential sentences of the death penalty or life in federal prison without parole. However, the government has agreed to not seek a sentence greater than 30 years in excha
  • In France and US, two wildly different takes on IVF

    In France and US, two wildly different takes on IVF
    Ariel Cohen | CQ-Roll Call (TNS)
    MONTPELLIER, FRANCE — In vitro fertilization, a procedure first used more than 45 years ago, has suddenly become the topic of political debate on both sides of the Atlantic — but for wildly different reasons.
    In France, President Emmanuel Macron’s government is eyeing policies to promote the use of assisted reproductive technology, including IVF, to increase the nation’s declining birth rate. But French feminist groups say the proposal und
  • Rep. Ilhan Omar’s daughter among students suspended at Columbia over pro-Palestinian encampment

    Rep. Ilhan Omar’s daughter among students suspended at Columbia over pro-Palestinian encampment
    Cayla Bamberger | New York Daily News (TNS)
    NEW YORK — The daughter of Rep. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, a vocal Democrat sharply critical of Israel, was among at least three students suspended Thursday over a pro-Palestinian encampment at Columbia University.
    Omar, who made history as one of the first two Muslim women elected to Congress and has been a sharp critic of the war in Gaza, grilled Columbia administrators Wednesday on protections for students protesting the war.
    “There&r
  • Disneyland’s Autopia cars to go fully electric by 2026

    Disneyland’s Autopia cars to go fully electric by 2026
    The gas-powered Autopia cars in Tomorrowland will become a thing of the past when Disneyland transforms the ride vehicles to fully electric power in an update that has been anticipated for decades but will still take several years to realize.
    Disneyland will convert Autopia from gas engines to fully electric power within 30 months, according to Disneyland officials.
    Sign up for our Park Life newsletter and find out what’s new and interesting every week at Southern California’s theme
  • Iran acknowledges drone attack by Israel and says it failed

    Iran acknowledges drone attack by Israel and says it failed
    Patrick Sykes, Arsalan Shahla and Ethan Bronner | (TNS) Bloomberg News
    Iranian state media confirmed an attack by Israel in the early hours of Friday and said the “sabotage” operation involving drones had failed.
    Israel launched a retaliatory strike on Iran following last week’s missile and drone barrage from Tehran, according to two U.S. officials, though media from both countries appeared to downplay the severity of the incident.
    An explosion was heard early Friday in Isfahan
  • 25 years later, a Columbine teacher reflects on why she stayed: “We take care of each other”

    25 years later, a Columbine teacher reflects on why she stayed: “We take care of each other”
    Twenty-five years ago, Michelle DiManna sat in the math office at Columbine High School grading papers and talking to a colleague when she heard students screaming in terror.
    Two heavily armed shooters had entered the Jefferson County school late in the morning on April 20, 1999, and proceeded to kill 12 of their classmates and a teacher, injuring dozens more in a tragedy that shocked Colorado and the nation.
    The shooting, which ended with the two killers taking their own lives, reshaped school
  • Fast food chains seek to satisfy the munchies on 4/20

    Fast food chains seek to satisfy the munchies on 4/20
    The origins of  the pot holiday called 4/20 are hazy. Some people say the numbers refer to a time of day, some say they refer to a police code and some say they’re derived from a Bob Dylan song.
    At any rate, the event has gone mainstream enough for a few fast food chains that serve what satisfies munchies to have a little fun with it.
    One of the biggest chains this year is KFC, which will open a pop-up “KFC Saucy Nuggets Dispensary” in Venice from noon to 6 p.m. on Saturda
  • In reversal, more areas allow high-speed police chases

    In reversal, more areas allow high-speed police chases
    Amanda Hernández | (TNS) Stateline.org
    During several years of efforts to refine policing tactics — ranging from mandating body-worn cameras to limiting or banning excessive use of force — many states and law enforcement agencies nationwide imposed more restrictive car chase policies to protect civilians and officers.
    Now, state legislators and some local and state agencies are turning back the dial, moving to relax the rules on high-speed vehicular pursuits largely because of
  • How 4/20 grew from humble roots to marijuana’s high holiday

    How 4/20 grew from humble roots to marijuana’s high holiday
    By GENE JOHNSON
    SEATTLE — Saturday marks marijuana culture’s high holiday, 4/20, when college students gather — at 4:20 p.m. — in clouds of smoke on campus quads and pot shops in legal-weed states thank their customers with discounts.
    This year’s edition provides an occasion for activists to reflect on how far their movement has come, with recreational pot now allowed in nearly half the states and the nation’s capital. Many states have instituted “social
  • Walmart, M.D.: Why the world’s largest retailer wants to be America’s doctor

    Walmart, M.D.: Why the world’s largest retailer wants to be America’s doctor
    Maria Halkias | (TNS) The Dallas Morning News
    Walmart, the largest U.S. employer with a workforce of 1.6 million, is slowly building a network of in-store clinics, believing it has a place in America’s health care system.
    Next week the largest U.S. retailer will open two health clinics in DeSoto and Fort Worth targeting seniors and families with services for comprehensive primary care, behavioral health and dental care.
    Ten clinics will be open this summer in Dallas, Fort Worth, Garland, M
  • Orange County gasoline prices cool this week

    Orange County gasoline prices cool this week
    Orange County drivers got a mild reprieve from gasoline price hikes this week.
    The average price of a gallon of self-serve regular gasoline in Orange County on Friday, April 19, decreased by a half-cent to $5.341, according to figures from the AAA and Oil Price Information Service. That’s the third drop in four days, following a 28-day streak of increases totaling 44 cents that boosted gas prices to their highest amount since Oct. 24.
    The streak of gains ended Tuesday when the average pric
  • Uber rolls out blue checkmark system for rider verification in select cities

    Uber rolls out blue checkmark system for rider verification in select cities
    Uber launched a pilot program Thursday in Chicago and other select cities around the U.S. to verify riders on the app for increased safetyfor drivers.
    The new safety feature meansriders using Uber will be verified on the app and have a blue checkmark badge added to their profile for drivers tosee, according to a news release. Most accounts will be verified automatically using details already on file, so users won’t have to take any additional steps to become verified.
    For accounts that are
  • Ukraine, Israel aid advances in rare House vote as Democrats help Republicans push it forward

    Ukraine, Israel aid advances in rare House vote as Democrats help Republicans push it forward
    By STEPHEN GROVES, LISA MASCARO and KEVIN FREKING
    WASHINGTON — With rare bipartisan momentum, the House pushed ahead Friday on a foreign aid package of $95 billion for Ukraine, Israel, Taiwan and humanitarian support as a robust coalition of lawmakers helped it clear a procedural hurdle to reach final votes this weekend. Friday’s vote produced a seldom-seen outcome in the typically hyper-partisan House, with Democrats helping Republican Speaker Mike Johnson’s plan advance overw
  • Ratepayers spend millions to save billions on utilities, but why do we have to?

    Ratepayers spend millions to save billions on utilities, but why do we have to?
    SOURCE: TURN
    Electric rates, gas rates, water rates — they go up. And up. And up.
    Policing these regularly scheduled consumer agonies — or rubber-stamping them, as critics often charge — is the job of the California Public Utilities Commission. This powerful regulator is charged with ensuring that rate hikes and policy decisions are fair and justified.
    Not sure the PUC is up to the task alone? Layers have been built in to the system to keep a watchful eye on the regulator that&
  • 8 California real estate battles worth watching

    8 California real estate battles worth watching
    It’s playoff season for basketball and hockey with sports fans glued to the big matchups.
    But that kind of emotion and energy isn’t just limited to athletic contests. For example, there are plenty of big real estate battles brewing across California this spring.
    Now, the property game rarely has clear winners and losers. And these contests aren’t often settled quickly.
    Still, in the spirit of the season of championship competition, here are eight real estate wars worth watching
  • Grand Prix of Long Beach party gets started with Thunder Thursday

    Grand Prix of Long Beach party gets started with Thunder Thursday
    Long Beach’s biggest annual party is underway.
    And it all began with Thunder Thursday. The free community event took place on the eve of the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach, with crowds swarming the Pike Outlets in the city’s downtown to enjoy motorsports demonstrations, live music and food.
    Race fans of all ages get close up views of race cars on Thursday, Apr. 18, 2024, at Thunder Thursday at the Pike Outlets in Long Beach. (Photo by Howard Freshman, Contributing Photographer)
    A you
  • Metropolitan Water District soaks taxpayers with higher property taxes

    Metropolitan Water District soaks taxpayers with higher property taxes
    In what may be an illegal tax increase, the board of the Metropolitan Water District just approved a two-year budget that doubles the property tax it collects in its six-county service area.
    MWD is a water wholesaler with 26 cities and water retailers as its customers. Through those entities, MWD supplies water to about 19 million people in Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego and Ventura counties.
    The new budget raises the wholesale rates by 8.5% in 2025 and then by 8.5% ag
  • Lakers vs. Nuggets: First-round scouting report, prediction

    Lakers vs. Nuggets: First-round scouting report, prediction
    SERIES SCHEDULE
    (Best-of-seven, all times PT)
    Game 1: Saturday at Denver, 5:30 p.m. (Ch. 7)
    Game 2: Monday at Denver, 7 p.m. (TNT)
    Game 3: Thursday at L.A., 7 p.m. (TNT)
    Game 4: April 27 at L.A., 5:30 p.m. (Ch. 7)
    *Game 5: April 29 at Denver, time TBD (TV TBD)
    *Game 6: May 2 at L.A., time TBD (TV TBD)
    *Game 7: May 4 at Denver, time TBD (TNT)
    *If necessary
    HEAD-TO-HEAD
    The Nuggets won the regular-season series, 3-0
    Oct. 24: Nuggets, 119, Lakers 107, at Denver
    Feb. 8: Nuggets 114, Lakers 106, at C
  • HOA Homefront: What to do with outdated election rules and candidate statements

    HOA Homefront: What to do with outdated election rules and candidate statements
    Q: Our HOA ballot package for the board election included 3 candidate statements that endorsed themselves as a slate, one of whom also criticized their opponent.
    In the past, candidate statements included bios, qualifications, and what they had done or will do, but did not mention opponents or endorse other candidates.  The nomination forms asked for candidate statements of qualifications.
    We emailed objections that equal access to election campaigning was not afforded to 2 candidates whose
  • 14-year-old aims to clean 5 beaches in 5 weeks; he’s no stranger to helping the environment

    14-year-old aims to clean 5 beaches in 5 weeks; he’s no stranger to helping the environment
    Ryan Hickman developed a passion for recycling before he was in elementary school; now a ninth-grader at San Juan Hills High, he’s educated thousands of his peers around the globe on why they should care about keeping plastics and other debris out of the ocean.
    “The trash ends up in the ocean, and animals are eating it,” the 14-year-old said. “Picking up a piece of trash may save a turtle’s life.”
    Ryan Hickman, 14, walks along the surt to collect trash on T-St

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