Wet weather in California floods roads, leads to landslides and outages

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

Landslides closed roadways across California on Friday as the Golden State was hit with more rainy weather

The National Weather Service in Sacramento said that a large area of moderate-to-heavy rain was moving inland from the Bay Area early Saturday morning, with widespread urban and small stream flooding expected to develop.

“Cosumnes River at Michigan Bar has exceeded flood stage and will crest at 15.5 ft by 8 pm tonight!” it noted.

The agency’s Bay Area office tweeted that flood advisories there were in effect. 

OREGON, WASHINGTON HIT WITH DEADLY STORMS, FLOODING

“Peak gusts will be 30-50 mph with strongest winds over mountains. With saturated soils, even moderate winds could cause downed trees/branches, power outages, falling debris,” it cautioned early Saturday.

Northern California officials warned that rivers and streams could overflow, and urged residents to get sandbags ready.

Outage tracker PowerOutage.US showed that more than 16,000 customers were without power on Saturday morning.

Humboldt County also saw roadways begin to flood, according to the National Weather Service’s Eureka office. 

Landslides had already closed routes between Fremont and Sunol, as well as in Mendocino County. 

The California Highway Patrol reported that parts of eastern Sacramento roads were impassable at times on Friday due to flooding.

‘COLD-STUNNED’ SEA TURTLES RESCUED IN GEORGIA DUE TO ‘UNUSUAL EXTREME COLD WEATHER’

Crews cleared debris in Piercy into Friday evening.

The atmospheric river storm was expected to bring more precipitation through the day, with the potential for flooding and multiple feet of snow in the Sierra Nevada.

A winter storm warning was in effect into Sunday for the upper elevations of the Sierra – from south of Yosemite National Park to north of Lake Tahoe – where as much as five feet of snow are possible, according to the National Weather Service’s Reno office. 

Flood advisories were also in effect in western Nevada.

In addition, avalanche warnings were issued in the backcountry around Lake Tahoe and Mammoth Lakes south of Yosemite.

In Southern California, moderate-to-heavy rain was forecast on Saturday.

This marks the first of several storms expected to hit California over the coming week.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

 

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Joe Biden’s biggest successes and failures in his second year in office

Business Insider 

President Joe Biden

Challenges with inflation, COVID-19, and immigration persisted throughout Biden’s second year as president.
But he made progress on his legislative agenda in Congress, despite Democrats’ razor-thin majorities.
He has also rallied world leaders in support of Ukraine against Russian aggression.

As he ended his first year in office, President Joe Biden was asked by a reporter about a laundry list of problems facing the nation: high inflation, his stalled domestic agenda, COVID-19, and division throughout the nation.

“Why are you such an optimist?” Biden responded, drawing laughter.

A year later, some of those issues persist. Grocery prices are high, gas prices have fallen but have been volatile, and the White House is warning of another COVID-19 winter surge. Biden faces other setbacks, including increasing migrant arrests at the southwest border and failed efforts to to unravel former President Donald Trump’s controversial border policies.

But he has also made progress on his domestic agenda.

His second year in office was marked by historic legislative achievements despite Democrats’ razor-thin majority in Congress. The measures included bills to improve the nation’s infrastructure, reduce prescription drug costs and climate change, boost semiconductor manufacturing, and promote gun safety. He nominated, and the Senate confirmed, the first Black woman to the Supreme Court.

And he rallied world leaders in defense of Ukraine against Russian aggression.

Biden’s approval ratings, though still underwater, have ticked up slightly since the midterm elections, which exceeded expectations for Democrats when predictions of a so-called “red wave” of Republican victories fizzled.

Here are some of the highs and lows from Biden’s second year:

Success: Ukraine

President Joe Biden talks with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy outside the White House.

Russian President Vladimir Putin expected a swift and decisive victory when he ordered an invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. Instead, Russian forces are struggling and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said his country “is alive and kicking.”

“Against all odds and doom-and-gloom scenarios, Ukraine didn’t fall,” Zelenskyy told members of Congress during a historic visit to Washington, DC, in December.

Biden has led a multinational coalition to support Ukraine and impose sanctions on Russia while the US has provided billions in humanitarian and military assistance, including a Patriot missile battery in December to boost Ukraine’s air defense.

“I’ve spent several hundred hours face-to-face with our European allies and the heads of state of those countries, and making the case as to why it was overwhelmingly in their interest that they continue to support Ukraine,” Biden said during a joint news conference with Zelenskyy.

Biden faced criticism for calling Putin’s actions in Ukraine “genocide” and saying he “cannot remain in power.” Republicans blamed the war on Biden, calling him weak.

Biden could have “tried harder to prevent the war,” wrote Michael E. O’Hanlon of the Brookings Institute in October. But Biden helped lead an economic response that has “cut off most high-tech cooperation between the West and Russia” and “rightly decided that the United States should not directly enter the conflict and risk World War III,” O’Hanlon wrote.  

Conservative New York Times columnist Bret Stephens in September called the “staggering gains” by Ukrainian forces “a victory for Joe Biden, too.” Beyond military equipment assistance, he wrote, the US is providing “battlefield intelligence that enables them to maneuver, target, strike and evade in ways they otherwise couldn’t.”

Success: First Black woman to SCOTUS

President Joe Biden congratulates Ketanji Brown Jackson moments after the U.S. Senate confirmed her to be the first Black woman to be a justice on the Supreme Court in the Roosevelt Room at the White House on April 07, 2022.

Biden’s judicial nominations have promoted diversity on the federal bench, most notably with the historic confirmation of Ketanji Brown Jackson, the first Black woman to serve as a Supreme Court justice.

Jackson won bipartisan support with three Republicans — Sens. Susan Collins of Maine, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, and Mitt Romney of Utah — joining 50 Democrats to vote in favor of her confirmation.

Her swearing-in represented “a profound step forward for our nation, for all the young, Black girls who now see themselves reflected on our highest court, and for all of us as Americans,” Biden said in June.

Judicial nominations have been a priority for Biden, with more than 90 Article III federal judges confirmed, according to the Federal Judicial Center

The White House in November said 67% of his nominees were women and 66% were people of color.

Success: Pushing through some bipartisan legislation 

As a presidential candidate, Biden was greeted with skepticism by progressives when he touted the virtue of bipartisan dealmaking. But his second year in office ends with trillions of dollars pledged to infrastructure and semiconductor manufacturing. 

—President Biden (@POTUS) December 29, 2022

 

Even Republicans, such as former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, have conceded that many in the GOP underestimated the president, whom right-wing critics taunt as being too old. Instead, the leader some Democrats refer to as “Dark Brandon” continued to sign more deals into law, including the largest gun safety legislation in nearly 30 years and expanded benefits for veterans exposed to toxic environments such as burn pits.

In ceding the spotlight to Congress, Biden has found a way to fulfill a slew of campaign promises.

But it hasn’t been all kumbaya across Washington. Just as with COVID-19 relief, Democrats turned to a budget maneuver that allowed them to pass major priorities — including the largest investment in climate-related programs in US history and major expansion of Medicare’s power to lower drug costs — without a single Republican vote.  

Success (mostly): The midterms 

Supporters of then-Democratic Senate candidate John Fetterman celebrate on election night in Pittsburgh. Fetterman went on to a flip a seat to Democrats.

Midterms are supposed to humble a first-term president. 

But there was no “red wave” in 2022. In fact, Democrats expanded their Senate majority and the number of governorships they control. Republicans did retake the House, but their majority is so slim that it’s still an open question whether House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy will win enough far-right support to become Speaker of the House.

Like many items on this list, Biden can’t take sole credit. 

The Supreme Court’s reversal of Roe v. Wade galvanized a major segment of voters. And like his predecessors — outside of Trump — Biden had a limited presence on the campaign trail.

But he and the White House by all accounts appear vindicated in their branding of far-right Republicans as “ultra MAGA” and election deniers as a fundamental threat to democracy. And, no malarkey, Biden and his allies are delighting in how the fallout has left Trump weakened with GOP leaders calling for him to step aside.

Failure: Free community college, voting rights, and everything else Biden abandoned

President Joe Biden pauses as he speaks to reporters following a rare meeting at the Capitol with Senate Democrats where he implored them to partially kill the filibuster. His efforts failed.

The filibuster is still alive.

The survival of that procedural Senate hurdle meant a Democratic president was forced to accept that major campaign promises must be either broken or at least severely curtailed.

Candidate Biden stumped repeatedly for tuition-free community college. It was first lady Jill Biden, a longtime community college professor, that marked its demise.

“We knew this wouldn’t be easy,” Jill Biden told a summit of community college leaders in early 2022. “Still, like you, I was disappointed.

It was far from the only major policy that didn’t survive 2022. Democrats’ much-hyped push for voting rights ended in a failed effort to gut the filibuster.

Universal pre-K was included in a sweeping spending plan passed by House Democrats until their Senate colleagues cut that out too. The back-and-forth between the two sides at the Capitol — especially when it involved the views of Sens. Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema — helped kill another Biden pledge to help raise taxes on major corporations.

Even early successes, such as the expansion of the Child Tax Credit, which was credited for a large drop in poverty, weren’t renewed by a divided Congress.

Failure: Immigration

Border Patrol agents transfer Venezuelan and Nicaraguan migrants after they crossed the Rio Grande river from Ciudad Juarez in late December

Legal challenges have been an obstacle for Biden in his attempts to end controversial Trump-era immigration policies at the southern border, including Title 42. The 2020 policy allows the US to expel certain migrants to prevent the spread of COVID-19 and Biden has said the policy’s revocation is “overdue.”

The Department of Homeland Security had been planning a surge of resources for the border in anticipation of Title 42 lifting in December, allowing migrants to make long-delayed cases for asylum.

But the Supreme Court allowed the policy to remain in effect temporarily after Republican-led states argued the states would be harmed by a potential influx of migrants. 

Another Trump-era policy known as “Remain in Mexico” is still in effect after a federal judge in Texas paused the administration’s attempt to end it. The policy requires certain non-Mexican citizens to await immigration proceedings in Mexico instead of the US.

Migrants waiting across the border have described a desperate situation, living in encampments with tarp-covered tents in the cold. In December, El Paso’s mayor issued an emergency declaration after thousands of migrants crossed the Rio Grande into the city. 

The US Customs and Border Protection agency says it has stopped migrants 2.38 million times at the southwest border for the fiscal year ending in September, compared to 1.73 million for the previous fiscal year.

Republicans routinely call on Biden to visit the border, and some say Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas should be impeached for failures there. The GOP has already vowed to use their power in the House to probe the Biden administration’s handling of the border.

Failure: Inflation 

President Joe Biden arrives for an event focused on inflation and the supply chain at the Port of Los Angeles in June.

It was supposed to be “transitory.” It wasn’t.

The good news is that Americans are starting to feel relief as inflation has cooled for five months straight.

The bad news is that inflation still hit peaks not seen in 40 years and there’s still no guarantee disaster isn’t looming for the broader economy.

Biden and his team like to point out that the US is far from the only nation that faced record inflation as COVID-19 mostly receded and riddled the world with supply chain disasters. 

Some economists, including Clinton Treasury Secretary Larry Summers, argue that Biden made it worse last year by pushing for a $1.9 trillion pandemic relief plan that overheated the economy.

Over time, the administration ramped up pressure on large corporations that it blamed for exacerbating price hikes.

At the pump, gas prices soared as supply-chain issues and Putin’s invasion of Ukraine disrupted the global market.  Biden signed off on record releases from the nation’s strategic oil reserves — even though economists said such action wouldn’t provide much relief. Gas prices have since fallen back below their record highs.

The reality is that both issues are difficult for a White House or even Congress to tackle. That’s why now and next year the focus will be on the Federal Reserve, which has aggressively raised interest rates to keep inflation in check — a move the central bank is likely to continue in 2023.

Failure (still lingering): Afghanistan

A Taliban fighter stands guard as a woman walks by him in Kabul in late December.

Biden’s record in the war-ravaged country was mixed in 2022 after his chaotic troop withdrawal in 2021.

In August, he announced that “justice has been delivered” after a drone strike killed Ayman al-Zawahiri, the al-Qaeda leader who oversaw the September 11, 2001 attacks with group founder Osama bin Laden. 

The CIA operation in Kabul gave Biden an accomplishment to tout in Afghanistan. But the fallout from his handling of the withdrawal still lingers today. 

Thousands of Afghans who worked with the US during the 20-year war remain in the country, fearing retaliation from the Taliban, the militant Islamist group that seized control after the US withdrawal.

A $1.7 trillion federal spending bill that passed Congress in December includes a measure to provide more visas for Afghans who worked with the US, but it omits legislation to provide a pathway to permanent residency for them.

The Taliban has taken severe action against women, including banning female education, most jobs for women, and most freedoms.

Investigating the botched withdrawal is likely to be a priority for Republicans when they take control of the House. 

Anthony Cordesman, emeritus chair in strategy at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said Biden could have done better in handling the collapse of the Afghan government and forces.

“But he inherited a lost cause, a failed and corrupt Afghan government, Afghan forces that could not fight on their own, and a peace process where the previous President had already announced the U.S. would leave on a fixed date,” he wrote in an email. “The war was effectively lost before he took office.”

Read the original article on Business Insider

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After a big year for American manufacturing, will the momentum continue?

Just In | The Hill 

2022 was a revolutionary year for American manufacturing. Congress and the Biden administration took major steps on behalf of manufacturing, including passing and signing The CHIPS and Science Act, the Inflation Reduction Act and the Infrastructure Act now in its first year of implementation.

The CHIPS and Science Act takes the unprecedented action of dedicating billions of dollars to one industry (semiconductors) to build new factories in the United States, and the funds are in the form of grants, not loans. The Inflation Reduction Act appropriates approximately $357 billion to an enormous program to recreate the entire auto industry in a new form through electric vehicles, and to accelerate U.S. manufacturing of solar panels, wind turbines, batteries and critical minerals processing.

And the Infrastructure Act, signed late in 2021, dedicated roughly $1 trillion to modernizing our decaying infrastructure. This will require billions of dollars for manufactured inputs such as steel, cement and lighting, which the Infrastructure Act requires to be made in the U.S.

Taken together, these acts have a depth and breadth that has never been approached before. Individual actions along these lines have been taken in the past, but nothing as sweeping or consequential as this. The funds appropriated in these acts must be carefully spent, carefully monitored and adhere to the goals set by Congress. But a question remains: What should be done to make this revolution long-lived and successful?

The following steps need to be adopted:

1) We should expand the CHIPS Act vertically and horizontally to cover such key areas as semiconductor packaging, substrates and circuit boards, and downstream products including computers and phones. In addition, the CHIPS Act structure could be utilized to build up other manufacturers where there are supply chain gaps.

2) Next, we must recognize that our country’s manufacturing losses are in part the result of there being no central executive function in the U.S. government dedicated to manufacturing. No one person or department manages manufacturing policy, akin to the role of the secretary of Agriculture for farming. There is no continuing review of the manufacturing sector to identify and correct problems. Where steps are taken by one Cabinet department or another, best practices are not shared or promulgated across the government. As such, we need a secretary of manufacturing to oversee this sector.

3) To build up the U.S. manufacturing workforce, we need a manufacturing-specific immigration visa. Millions of potential immigrants want to come here to work and, where they are qualified, we should let them work in manufacturing. The Bureau of Labor Statistics perennially reports about 1 million unfilled manufacturing jobs. U.S. manufacturing CEOs continually say their number one problem is finding enough workers. We need to put into effect a workforce solution that will solve this problem. 

4) To assist start-ups and entrepreneurs in manufacturing, we should create a program that I would call MARCA (The Manufacturing Advanced Research and Commercialization Agency) at the Commerce Department that would develop and, where necessary, fund new manufacturing companies and ideas. This would be comparable to what DARPA (the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) and BARDA (The Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority) have done in their areas. MARCA would also promote and fund the commercialization of U.S. manufacturing inventions. Right now, many innovators and entrepreneurs have to go abroad to begin prototyping and early commercialization.

5) We need sustained ongoing funding and commitment to manufacturing, and one way to highlight this need and keep our eye on the ball is for Congress to undertake periodic passage of a “Factory Bill” similar to the process used for the Farm Bill and the Defense appropriations bill.

6) The U.S. trade representative and Commerce Department must develop a trade methodology to address outsize government subsidies given in competitor countries to their manufacturing industries. These cause enormous foreign build-up of capacity. In some years, just the growth in Chinese steel capacity, financed by the government, has exceeded the entire size of the U.S. steel industry.

7) We need to develop laws and regulations that limit U.S. companies from moving major plants to China (see Apple, Tesla and Hewlett-Packard, among many others). In addition to losing our trade secrets and other intellectual property, we lose the jobs and the wealth that these plants create.

8) We need to continue the China 301 tariffs. One benefit of these tariffs is that U. S. companies come to recognize that supply chains in China carry a serious risk of disruption, so they are building up supply chains in the United States or other allied countries. We need to promote such reshoring, near shoring and allied shoring. All these kinds of “shoring” are expensive, and the U.S. government needs to provide incentives to undertake them and disincentives to manufacturing abroad.

9) Finally, while all this is done, we need to ensure that industrial policy does not fetter the American imagination, entrepreneurship and research and development excellence. The MARCA (Manufacturing Advanced Research and Commercialization Agency) program referenced above will help on this. Without such market-based imaginative energy, many of our great manufacturing companies would never have been founded and new ones are much less likely to appear. 

One last question is whether Congress, future presidents and the American voter will see the need, over the long term, to make investments in manufacturing. Rebuilding the strength of our battered manufacturing sector is not a one-year project, no matter how revolutionary that year might be. The fact that many government officials now express the critical link between manufacturing and national security may help to achieve the right answer to this question.

Gilbert B. Kaplan is a senior fellow and chairman of the advisory board at the Manufacturing Policy Initiative at Indiana University. He was formerly under-secretary for international trade at the U.S. Department of Commerce.

​Finance, Opinion, manufacturing Read More 

Buffalo stores’ shelves are bare as people try desperately to restock groceries and essential items after deadly winter storm

Business Insider 

Residents enter a local corner store in Buffalo, New York, on December 26, 2022, as many major grocery stores remained closed.

Buffalo grocery stores are struggling to keep up with heavy demand after reopening in the wake of Winter Storm Elliott. 
Local outlets reported bare shelves and a lack of items including fresh produce, bread, and eggs. 
Response to the storm, and lack of access to essential items, has shed light on structural inequality in the city. 

As Buffalo emerges from a harrowing winter storm that has killed dozens of people and trapped several residents in their homes without heat, many are struggling to find basic necessities at grocery stores. 

With roads clearing and companies reopening, the surge of demand has left many stores in the Western New York city unable to keep shelves stocked, according to local outlets. The response to the storm, as well as a pronounced lack of access to essential goods among working class communities of color, also has exacerbated disparities in class and the racial divide in one of the nation’s poorest cities.

Shoppers at a Tops grocery store told WIVB Buffalo that they are struggling to find basic items like fresh produce, lunch meat, eggs, bread, and baby formula.

“We came out just to pick up a couple items. Unfortunately they ran out of lunch meat, brown beef, bread, but hopefully we can find everything we want,” Carl Phillips and Sandra Jackson told WIVB Buffalo. “There is some items left here, but not very much, you just grab what you can and be thankful.”

“There’s a lot of empty … especially the fresh stuff, produce, bread, but it seems like everything else is picking up,” Tony Pecoraro, another Tops shopper, told WIVB Buffalo.

WIVB Buffalo reporter Sarah Minkewicz shared photos of the empty shelves on Twitter. 

—Sarah Minkewicz (@SarahMinkewicz) December 28, 2022

 

Working class communities of color especially are having a difficult time finding groceries and essentials, as the storm has shed light on persistent structural inequality in the city, including inadequate housing, food desserts, and lack of government funding, according to The Washington Post. 

Of the 39 people reported dead from the storm, 31 hailed from Buffalo, a majority of which were people of color found outside or trapped in cars, the Post reported.

“This area is so heavily impacted by these systemic issues, and it’s largely because of poverty,” Al Robinson, a Christian leader in Buffalo who helped house residents displaced by the storm in his church, told The Washington Post. “And impoverished people happen to be people of color.”

Read the original article on Business Insider

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[World] New Year’s Eve: World celebrates arrival of 2023

BBC News world 

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Media caption,

Australia welcomes 2023 with Sydney harbour fireworks display

New year celebrations are in full flow in parts of the world where 2023 has already arrived.

The Pacific nation of Kiribati was the first to welcome in the new year, followed by New Zealand an hour later.

And thousands gathered in Sydney for the Australian city’s renowned fireworks display.

Image source, BIANCA DE MARCHI/EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock

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Sydney’s fireworks launched from its Harbour Bridge, Opera House and barges in its famous harbour
Image source, Getty Images

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Many also gathered to watch the fireworks under the trees in Sydney Botanic Gardens
Image source, Getty Images

Image caption,

People had gathered early to get a prime spot to watch the midnight fireworks over the Sydney Opera House
Image source, Getty Images

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The Hagley Park celebrations in Christchurch, New Zealand, were marked with fireworks and live music
Image source, Reuters

Image caption,

People gather to celebrate the clocks turning midnight in Seoul, South Korea
Image source, Reuters

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Revellers release balloons as they take part in New Year celebrations in Tokyo, Japan
Image source, Reuters

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Entertainers perform during a countdown event for the 2023 new year celebrations in Tokyo
Image source, Getty Images

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While there are still a few hours to go before Thailand marks the new year, people are already out on the streets to celebrate, like these women taking photos in front of illuminations at Tha Phae Gate in Chiang Mai
Image source, Getty Images

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Bottles of wine are pictured in the back of a tuk-tuk during celebrations in Bangkok, Thailand
Image source, Getty Images

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While many will celebrate Chinese New Year in three weeks’ time, several regions are also marking New Year’s Eve. Fireworks and a light show have attracted thousands of visitors to the West Tour Park in Huai ‘an, in East China’s Jiangsu province

 

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Mega Millions jackpot now 4th largest in game’s history

Just In | The Hill 

(NEXSTAR) – The current Mega Millions jackpot is now the fourth largest in the game’s history after yet another drawing produced no grand-prize winners.

Friday’s winning numbers — 15, 21, 32, 38, 62, and the Mega Ball 8 — went unmatched, continuing a 22-drawing trend that began in mid-October. The jackpot now stands at an estimated $785 million, with a cash option of $395 million.

That amount officially qualifies the jackpot as the fourth-largest in Mega Millions history, behind only three relatively recent jackpots that surpassed the billion-dollar mark.


18 states have never sold a Mega Millions jackpot-winning ticket

The current jackpot has been steadily growing since October, after two ticketholders in California and Florida matched all six numbers to share a $502-million prize. No one has managed to match all six numbers from any drawing since, though 41 players have won second-tier prizes worth $1 million or more, the Mega Millions lottery confirmed in a press release.

Friday’s press release also noted that January could be a lucky month for players, seeing as one of the game’s only billion-dollar prizes was claimed in January of 2021.

“Will history repeat itself with another billion-dollar January win?” the press release asked, after explaining that the jackpot could easily continue to accumulate throughout the month.

The Mega Millions prize had only ever swelled past the $1 billion mark three times: in Jan. 2021, when it reached $1.050 billion; in July 2022, when it rose to $1.337 billion; and in Oct. 2018, when a ticket holder in South Carolina claimed a $1.537 billion jackpot.

The next Mega Millions drawing is scheduled for Tuesday, Jan. 3.

​Nexstar Media Wire News Read More 

What will the weather be like on New Year's Eve and New Year's Day?



CNN
 — 

The year 2022 is finally coming to a close – but not before some rainy weather arrives on both the West and East coasts.

Here’s what you can expect from the weather on the last day of 2022 and the first day of 2023.

Americans along the East Coast, from Maine to Florida, will likely have a damp New Year’s Eve, with intermittent showers throughout the day. Heavier rain is forecast further south in Georgia and Florida than in New England.

In New york City, the heaviest rainfall is expected between 7 p.m. Saturday and 1 a.m. Sunday. Temperatures will hover around 50 through most of the afternoon into Sunday.

In Buffalo, New York, where a historic blizzard left 39 people dead, rain is also expected. The rain and melting snow have also sparked flood concerns. Additional rain in the area is expected early next week.

Luckily, the rainy weather likely won’t continue onto New Year’s Day. Sunday is forecast to be cloudy but not as rainy as Saturday. New Year’s morning might see record high minimum temperatures from Washington D.C. into Boston and over the southwest, according to a Friday update from the National Weather Service.

Relatively warm temperatures will prevail on New Year's Day in the northeast and over the southwest.

Just like New Yorkers, Californians can also anticipate a rainy New Year’s Eve. A strong storm will begin bringing widespread heavy rain to the West Coast Friday through Saturday, creating a flood threat for much of Northern and Central California.

Over the holiday weekend, Californians will also witness an “atmospheric river,” a long, narrow region in the atmosphere that can transport moisture thousands of miles, like a fire hose in the sky. This heavy rainfall will slide southward to Southern California on New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day, accompanied by gusty winds moving at 30 to 50 mph.

“We now expect shallow landslides to be likely with the heavy rain coming New Year’s Eve,” said the National Weather Service office in San Francisco.

A flood watch for more than 16 million California residents, including the entire Bay Area and Central Valley, is in effect though Saturday night. The flooding is most likely in rivers, creeks, streams and other flood-prone areas, according to the National Weather Service office in Sacramento. Rain could ease Saturday evening before the calendar turns to 2023.

Widespread rainfall accumulations of 2 to 4 inches are expected in Northern and Central California, but locally higher amounts of 5 to 7 inches are also possible for the foothills.

Northern California and the Central California coast have already received 2 to 4 inches of rain in the last week. The cumulative effect of multiple Pacific storm systems laden with moisture from a potent atmospheric river will make impacts such as flash floods and landslides more likely.

Southern California is also expecting strong wind gusts of 30 to 50 mph on New Year’s Day in addition to rain.

Whereas the coasts will see a rainy New Year’s Eve, the western mountains from the Sierra Nevada to the Rockies can count on snow for the new year. The snow follows several days of heavy and dangerous snowfall.

An eastbound stretch of Interstate-70 in Colorado reopened Thursday after a nine-hour closure left drivers stranded amid bouts of heavy mountain snow, widespread rain and gusty winds.

Severe weather that caused trees to fall on passing vehicles left five people dead in Oregon on Tuesday, including a 4-year-old girl, state police said.

Wind gusts in the state exceeded 100 mph in some areas, according to the National Weather Service.

source

Former Scientology members making attempts to serve trafficking suit against leader David Miscaviage

Scientology leader David Miscavige is nowhere to be found as attempts are made to serve the 62-year-old with a child trafficking lawsuit that names him as a defendant, according to public court documents and the Tampa Bay Times.

The court documents show process servers attempted to serve papers to Miscavige 27 different times over the past few months in the Clearwater, Fla. area and in Los Angeles to no avail.

A motion to serve Miscavige by default filed in Florida court on Dec. 13 read, “there is more than enough evidence to demonstrate that [Miscavige] has intentionally concealed his location and erected obstacles to evade personal services of process.”

The Church of Scientology’s Public Affairs Director Karin Pouw told Fox News Digital Miscavige is “not running from the law.” She declined to comment further on the pending lawsuit.

KIRSTIE ALLEY REMEMBERED BY CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGY AS ‘BELOVED MEMBER’ AND ‘CHAMPION FOR DRUG REHABILITATION’

David Miscavige (L), Chairman of the Board of the Religious Technology Centre and leader of the Scientology religion, addressing the crowd during the opening of the Church of Scientology's new church in the City of London, Sunday 22 October 2006.

David Miscavige (L), Chairman of the Board of the Religious Technology Centre and leader of the Scientology religion, addressing the crowd during the opening of the Church of Scientology’s new church in the City of London, Sunday 22 October 2006.
(Yui Mok/PA)

Former Scientology church members, husband and wife, Gawain and Laura Baxter and Valeska Paris filed the lawsuit after claiming they were forced into labor on Scientology boats as children after signing a one billion-year contract in exchange for little or no money. Paris reportedly left the church in 2009 and Gawain and Laura Baxter left in 2012.  

In addition to the trafficking allegations, Paris alleges she was the victim of repeated sexual assaults in her youth and that when her mother left Scientology, the then-17-year-old was locked in an engine room for 48 hours as punishment.

Gawain Baxter said his parents put him in a Sea Org nursery when he was two months old, according to the lawsuit. When he turned six, he was also forced to sign the one billion-year contract and sent to live in a Cadet Org dormitory with around 100 other children.

Children over six years old are considered to be, and are frequently told that they are, adults and that they should act and expect to be treated as adults. The lawsuit noted in background that the children must be referred to as “cadets” and not kids.

CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGY GOT TOM CRUISE A DIVORCE, HELPED HIM MARRY NICOLE KIDMAN, BOOK ALLEGES

The Church of Scientology in Los Angeles, California, U.S. on Tuesday, July 7, 2020.

The Church of Scientology in Los Angeles, California, U.S. on Tuesday, July 7, 2020.
( Bing Guan/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Miscavige’s last known address is the church’s international building in L.A., but similar to other members of Scientology’s extremist wing, the Sea Org, he does not have a publicly recorded address. When lawyers showed up to Scientology properties in search of the leader, security guards denied entry to the properties and reportedly said they were not aware of his location. 

The plaintiffs in the lawsuit have also hired a private investigator to help reach Miscavige, according to 

Court filings related to the recent lawsuit list his home as a Scientology property in a gated community known as the Hacienda Gardens in Clearwater. The 120-unit apartment complex hosts Scientology staff and was purchased by the organization in 2001, the Tampa Bay Times reported.

During the motion filed earlier in December, one of the plaintiff’s attorneys, Neil Glazer, said, “Miscavige cannot be permitted to continue his gamesmanship.” He is due in court on Jan. 20, 2023, but that meeting is pending unless he is served with the papers.

Court documents related to the suit stated lawyers have tried to locate him through two traffic tickets he received in the 1990s, but both of those citations list the Scientology Los Angeles center as his home.

Miscavige’s lawyers told the newspaper he is merely the target of a legal strategy due to his status within Scientology. They added that he does not live in Florida, which is why they can’t serve him there.

In this handout photo provided by the Church of Scientology, David Miscavige, Chairman of the Board Religious Technology Center and ecclesiastical leader of the Scientology religion, at the Church's global media center on Sunset Boulevard Dec. 14, 2016, in Hollywood, California.

In this handout photo provided by the Church of Scientology, David Miscavige, Chairman of the Board Religious Technology Center and ecclesiastical leader of the Scientology religion, at the Church’s global media center on Sunset Boulevard Dec. 14, 2016, in Hollywood, California.
(Church of Scientology via Getty Images)

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US Magistrate Judge Julie Sneed served a summons to Miscavige on behalf of the plaintiffs. Ten copies of the summons were sent to various Scientology properties in Florida and California in efforts to reach Miscavige. 

All were sent back as undelivered since nobody would sign for them, court documents showed.

Miscavige is one of five defendants named in the lawsuit. The remaining four are operating entities of the Church of Scientology.

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Former Pope Benedict XVI dies age 95



CNN
 — 

Dignitaries and religious leaders have been paying tribute to Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, who died Saturday in a monastery in the Vatican at the age of 95.

Benedict, who was the first pontiff in almost 600 years to resign his position, rather than hold office for life, passed away on Saturday, according to a statement from the Vatican.

“With sorrow I inform you that the Pope Emeritus, Benedict XVI, passed away today at 9:34 in the Mater Ecclesiae Monastery in the Vatican,” the Director of the Press Office of the Holy See, Matteo Bruni said.

The funeral of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI will be held on Thursday in St. Peter’s Square in the Vatican City at 9:30 a.m. local time, Bruni said. The funeral will be led by Pope Francis.

The former pope’s body will lie in state in St. Peter’s Basilica in the Vatican from Monday for the faithful to bid farewell, Vatican News reported Saturday. As per the wish of Pope Emeritus, his funeral will be “simple,” Bruni said.

The funeral of the former pope, pictured on December 25, 2007, will take place on January 5.

News of his death came days after Pope Francis asked the faithful to pray for Benedict, saying he was “very sick.”

“I want to ask you all for a special prayer for Pope Emeritus Benedict who sustains the Church in his silence. He is very sick. We ask the Lord to console and sustain him in this witness of love for the Church to the very end,” Francis said at his general audience on Wednesday.

His health had been in decline for some time.

Benedict stunned the Catholic faithful and religious experts around the world on February 11, 2013, when he announced plans to step down from his position as Pope, citing his “advanced age.”

In his farewell address, the outgoing pope promised to stay “hidden” from the world, but he continued to speak out on religious matters in the years following his retirement, contributing to tensions within the Catholic Church.

Benedict was a powerful force in the Catholic Church for decades. Born Joseph Ratzinger in Germany in 1927, he was the son of a policeman. He was ordained as a priest in 1951, made a cardinal in 1977, and later served as chief theological adviser to Pope John Paul II.

One of his most significant steps up came in 1981 when he took over as head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith, the Vatican office that oversees “the doctrine on the faith and morals throughout the Catholic world,” according to the Vatican.

Ratzinger became known as “Cardinal No” stemming from his efforts to crack down on the liberation theology movement, religious pluralism, challenges to traditional teachings on issues such as homosexuality, and calls to ordain women as priests.

He was elected pope in April 2005, following John Paul II’s death.

He was known to be more conservative than his successor, Pope Francis, who has made moves to soften the Vatican’s position on abortion and homosexuality, as well as doing more to deal with the sexual abuse crisis that has engulfed the church in recent years and clouded Benedict’s legacy.

The former pope, pictured on September 9, 2007, was known to be more conservative than his successor, Pope Francis.

In April 2019, Benedict discussed the sex abuse crisis in a public letter, claiming that it was caused in part by the sexual revolution of the 1960s and the liberalization of the church’s moral teachings.

In January 2020, Benedict was forced to distance himself from a book widely seen as undercutting Francis as he considered whether or not to allow married men to become priests in certain cases. The book, “From the Depths of Our Hearts,” argued in favor of the centuries-old tradition of priestly celibacy within the Catholic Church. Benedict was originally listed as co-author, but later clarified that he had only contributed one section of the text.

A year later, Benedict came under fire over his time as archbishop of Munich and Freising, between 1977 and 1982, following the publication of a Church-commissioned report into abuse by Catholic clergy there.

The report found that while in the post he had been informed of four cases of sexual abuse involving minors – including two that had occurred during his time in office – but failed to act. It also revealed Benedict had attended a meeting about an abuser identified as Priest X. Following the report’s publication, Benedict pushed back against accusations that he knew in 1980 that this priest was an abuser.

In a letter released by the Vatican amid the furor, Benedict wrote that he was “of good cheer” as he faced “the final judge of my life,” despite his shortcomings. He also issued a general apology to survivors of abuse.

Global leaders paid homage to the former pope, following his death. Justin Welby, the Archbishop of Canterbury and head of the Church of England, said he is “mourning” the former pope.

“Pope Benedict was one of the greatest theologians of his age – committed to the faith of the Church and stalwart in its defence,” Welby said in a statement Saturday.

“In all things, not least in his writing and his preaching, he looked to Jesus Christ, the image of the invisible God. It was abundantly clear that Christ was the root of his thought and the basis of his prayer.

“In 2013 Pope Benedict took the courageous and humble step to resign the papacy, the first Pope to do so since the fifteenth century. In making this choice freely he acknowledged the human frailty that affects us all,” he added.

Cardinal Timothy Dolan, Archbishop of New York, said he will remember the former pope with “love and gratitude.”

“Saddened to learn of the demise of His Holiness Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI,” European Parliament President Roberta Metsola tweeted Saturday.

“Europe mourns him. May he rest in peace.”

The leader of the Russian Orthodox Church, Patriarch Kirill, on Saturday told Pope Francis he had received news of Benedict’s passing with “sorrow,” according to the message shared on the official website of the Moscow Patriarchate.

“His Holiness’s many years of life marked a whole epoch in the history of the Roman Catholic Church, which he led in a difficult historical period, associated with many external and internal challenges,” Kirill said of Benedict.

Kirill added relations between the Russian Orthodox Church and the Roman Catholic Church had “developed significantly” during Benedict’s tenure, in an effort to “overcome the sometimes-painful legacy of the past.”

“On behalf of the Russian Orthodox Church, I express my condolences to you and the flock of the Roman Catholic Church,” he continued.

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak also paid tribute. “I am saddened to learn of the death of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI,” Sunak tweeted Saturday.

“He was a great theologian whose UK visit in 2010 was an historic moment for both Catholics and non-Catholics throughout our country.

“My thoughts are with Catholic people in the UK and around the world today,” Sunak added.

Global leaders have paid homage to the former German-born pope, pictured on September 12, 2006.

The Archbishop of Canterbury hailed the former Pope, pictured on November 30, 2005, as "one of the greatest theologians of his age."

Italy’s new Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni voiced her admiration for the former pope. “Benedict XVI was a giant of faith and reason. He put his life at the service of the universal Church and spoke, and will continue to speak, to the hearts and minds of men with the spiritual, cultural and intellectual depth of his Magisterium,” she tweeted Saturday.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said Saturday that the former pope “set a strong signal through his resignation.”

“Pope Benedict’s passing saddens me. My sympathy goes out to all Catholics,” von der Leyen said in a tweet, adding, “He had set a strong signal through his resignation. He saw himself first as a servant for God and his Church.”

Russian President Vladimir Putin, who is leading Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine, called the former pope “a staunch defender of traditional Christian values.”

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