Tornado damage at Pfizer plant may hit drug supply
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:29:30 GMT
The fallout from a Pfizer factory being damaged by a tornado could put even more pressure on already-strained drug supplies at U.S. hospitals, experts say.Wednesday’s tornado touched down near Rocky Mount, North Carolina, and ripped up the roof of a Pfizer factory that makes nearly 25% of Pfizer’s sterile injectable medicines used in U.S. hospitals, according to the drugmaker.Pfizer said all employees were safely evacuated and accounted for, and no serious injuries were reported. The drugmaker is still assessing damage.The North Carolina plant produces drugs that are injected or through an IV.The plant makes drugs for anesthesia, medicines that treat infections and drugs needed for surgeries. The latter are used in surgeries or intensive care units for patients who are placed on ventilators, said Mike Ganio, who studies drug shortages at the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists.Pfizer bought the eastern North Carolina factory in 2015 as part of its acquisition o...Red Sox notebook: Does a pitching reunion at trade deadline make sense?
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:29:30 GMT
If the Red Sox decide to be buyers at the upcoming trade deadline, starting pitching is their most obvious need.Between the beginning and end of June, they placed Chris Sale, Tanner Houck, and Garrett Whitlock on the injured list. Corey Kluber was demoted to the bullpen before he, too, joined the ranks on the sidelines.In their absence, the Red Sox have made do with a skeleton crew. James Paxton, Brayan Bello, and Kutter Crawford comprise the current rotation; the rest of the games are being handled by the bullpen, anchored by Nick Pivetta, who’s thriving in a long relief role.But with no guarantee as to what they’ll get from Sale, Houck, and Whitlock at such times as they are able to return to action, if the Red Sox decide to make a genuine push for the playoffs, they’ll need to add another arm to the rotation.Perhaps an old friend?A homegrown (sort of) champion whose name is all over the trade rumors?Eduardo Rodriguez?It’s been nearly a decade since the Red...Florida rulings ease concerns about drag performers at Pride parades, drag queen story hours
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:29:30 GMT
By MIKE SCHNEIDER (Associated Press)ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Librarians who feared fines for hosting drag queen story hours and Pride parade organizers who worried about citations for including drag performers can breathe easier now that a judge has ruled that his injunction blocking Florida’s anti-drag law extends to all Florida venues, an attorney who is helping challenge the law said Thursday.A pair of orders that U.S. District Judge Gregory Presnell issued in the past month makes clear that drag performances in themselves are not lewd or lascivious behavior, said Gary Israel, one of the attorneys for an Orlando restaurant that filed a lawsuit challenging the new Florida law championed by Gov. Ron DeSantis as unconstitutional.“The state has a very weak hand in this litigation,” Israel said.In his first order last month, the Orlando judge granted a preliminary injunction temporarily halting enforcement of the law until a trial is held to determine its constitut...EPA loses Massachusetts court bid to toss lawsuit about stormwater pollution in the Charles, Mystic, and Neponset rivers
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:29:30 GMT
The EPA has lost its bid to toss a lawsuit about the federal environmental agency allegedly failing to protect three Boston-area rivers from stormwater pollution.A judge in U.S. District Court this week denied the Environmental Protection Agency’s motion to dismiss a suit filed by Charles River Watershed Association and Conservation Law Foundation — which aims to hold the EPA accountable for implementing stormwater runoff protections in the Charles, Mystic, and Neponset rivers.The groups sued the EPA last fall, accusing the feds of failing to regulate dangerous stormwater runoff in the three Boston-area rivers. The lawsuit seeks to curb stormwater pollution from commercial, industrial, and institutional properties.“Stormwater pollution is one of the greatest threats to urban rivers, including the Charles — polluted runoff degrades the river ecosystem and can cause rampant invasive species growth, toxic cyanobacteria blooms, and even fish kills,” said Ze...Serious crimes unit takes over case of two missing B.C. children named in Amber Alert
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:29:30 GMT
SURREY, B.C. — Police have released more information about the woman alleged to have abducted her two children, who are the subject of an Amber Alert.RCMP say Verity Bolton was spotted by closed-circuit TV emerging from a grocery store with a loaded cart in Kamloops two days before she was expected to give her children, who are from Surrey, back to their father after a vacation. Surrey RCMP say in a news release that its serious crimes unit has taken over conduct of the investigation. The woman was supposed to return her children, eight-year-old Aurora and 10-year-old Joshuah Bolton, on July 17 to their father, who has primary custody. Police issued an Amber Alert on Wednesday saying they have concerns about the mother’s mental health and are worried about the well-being of the children.A photo released by RCMP shows a blue 2012 Dodge Ram 2500 pickup, towing a white horse trailer, that the woman is believed to be driving, and anyone who sees the vehicle or the Boltons is ur...In a nod to Oppenheimer’s legacy, US officials vow to prioritize cleanup at nuclear lab
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:29:30 GMT
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — The price tag for cleaning up waste from the once top-secret Manhattan Project and subsequent Cold War-era nuclear research at Los Alamos National Laboratory has more than doubled in the last seven years, and independent federal investigators say federal officials will have to do better to track costs and progress.The Government Accountability Office in a report issued Wednesday said while some improvements have been made, the U.S. Energy Department hasn’t taken a comprehensive approach to prioritizing cleanup activities at the New Mexico lab.The report came as federal officials hosted a forum Thursday in Los Alamos to talk about cleaning up contaminated soil and groundwater and handling hazardous waste generated by decades of research that started with development of the atomic bomb during the 1940s.Ike White, who heads DOE’s Office of Environmental Management, said the release this week of the “Oppenheimer” film makes it a good time to talk about the...Australian castaway gives detailed account of his time at sea
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:29:30 GMT
MANZANILLO, Mexico (AP) — He quit his corporate job and moved to Mexico to pursue his dream of sailing solo across the ocean.Australian Timothy Shaddock, 54, bought his 30-foot catamaran two years ago in the Mexican Pacific resort of Puerto Vallarta. He needed a place to live and he liked the isolation.“Of course, living on a boat and sailing on a boat is two different things and that was more of a challenge,” Shaddock told The Associated Press after stepping onto land for the first time in months.As his training ground Shaddock chose the Sea of Cortez, a narrow finger of water between the Baja California Peninsula and the Mexican mainland. “I was aware and the only preparation that you can really do is take the boat out to sea and test the boat at sea,” Shaddock said. He would take short journeys, noting what was working on the boat and what wasn’t, but was conscious that, in late April, hurricane season was coming. “It was either now or I could not really wait one more year,” he s...See how an Alaska paddleboarder escaped a close encounter with a humpback whale
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:29:30 GMT
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — An Alaska man on a paddleboard escaped a close encounter with a humpback whale, not even getting wet during a tense few seconds caught on camera by friends and family as the giant creature surfaced right in front of him then glided under his board.“It’s just so massive. You’re puny against this whale,” Kevin Williams of Anchorage said Thursday, a week after his adventure with an adult humpback whale in Prince William Sound. Adult females can weigh up to 70,000 pounds (31,700 kilograms) and average about 49 feet (15 meters) in length, according to the Alaska Department of Fish and Game. Males are a little smaller.Williams said anyone who claims they wouldn’t be afraid in that situation is crazy.“If you have a whale that doesn’t know you were there and is that close, that’s not a good situation,” he said. One flick of the animal’s fin “or anything it does could be the end of my life.”Williams, his son Brian and a couple other friends were paddleboa...Toronto and GTA under severe thunderstorm watch, tornadoes possible near Barrie
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:29:30 GMT
Toronto and much of the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) are under a severe thunderstorm watch, with Environment Canada cautioning for possible tornadoes near Barrie.Strong winds and heavy downpours are possible in Toronto this evening, with thunderstorms forming later tonight. Halton-Peel, York-Durham and the City of Hamilton are also under a severe thunderstorm watch this hour.Severe thunderstorm warnings are issued when imminent or occurring thunderstorms are likely to produce or are producing one or more of large hail, damaging winds, and torrential rainfall.A tornado warning is in place for Barrie that includes Collingwood and Hillsdale.“Environment Canada meteorologists are tracking a severe thunderstorm that is possibly producing a tornado. Damaging winds, large hail and locally intense rainfall, are also possible,” Canada’s weather agency said.“This severe thunderstorm is located near Stayner, moving east at 45 km/h.”Barrie is now under a Tornado warn...Police say DNA technology has identified the killer in the unsolved death of a woman in 1981
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:29:30 GMT
CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — More than four decades after a young New Hampshire woman was killed, law enforcement officials have solved the crime through DNA analysis and the use of forensic genealogy technology, the state attorney general said Thursday. But solving the case doesn’t bring with it the satisfaction of seeing justice: The man responsible for killing 23-year-old Laura Kempton died from an overdose in 2005, Attorney General John Formella said.Formella told reporters at a news conference in Portsmouth, where the killing took place in September 1981, that the investigators’ conclusion was “bittersweet” but underscored their resolve.The conclusion of the investigation after so many years should “send a message to anyone who has been affected by a case that has gone cold in this state that we will never stop working these cases,” he said. “We will never forget about these victims.”A police officer found Kempton dead in her apartment after attempting to serve a cour...Latest news
- The U.S. is pushing Israel to pull back on its military campaign in Gaza
- Rare vase bought at Virginia Goodwill sells for over $100K at auction
- 2 Chicago men accused of killing man to leverage power in South Side street gang
- Austin police searching for endangered 47-year-old woman
- Pleasant weather, but a holiday weekend storm system is coming
- What to know about Austin Trail of Lights parking before heading out
- LIVE: Gov. Abbott signs border security bills into law at wall construction site
- Texas Longhorns flip nation's No. 2 safety recruit Xavier Filsaime from Florida Gators
- Year after year, most Texas police departments report zero hate crimes. Here’s why.
- Leander teenager dead after suspected fentanyl overdose