Fire under I-95 causes section to collapse, closing interstate in both directions

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 07:17:01 GMT

Fire under I-95 causes section to collapse, closing interstate in both directions PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A large vehicle fire under an elevated section of Interstate 95 in Philadelphia caused a huge portion of the interstate to collapse, closing the highway in both directions, authorities said.Video from the scene showed a massive slab covering an entire section of the northbound lanes collapsed onto the surface roadway in northeast Philadelphia. Officials said there were no immediate reports of injuries.Capt. Derrick Bowmer of the Philadelphia fire department said emergency crews responding shortly before 6:30 a.m. Sunday to an accident report found heavy fire from a vehicle or vehicles. Early reports indicated that the vehicle may have been a tanker truck, but officials said that hadn’t yet been confirmed. The fire was reported to be under control. Bowmer said the northbound lanes were gone and the southbound lanes were “compromised” due to heat from the fire. He also said runoff from the fire or perhaps compromised gas lines were causing explosions undergro...

Increasing international delegations as Saskatchewan sets sights on global markets

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 07:17:01 GMT

Increasing international delegations as Saskatchewan sets sights on global markets SASKATOON — Saskatchewan politicians have rapidly increased international travel since COVID-19 pandemic restrictions were loosened as Premier Scott Moe remains laser-focused on global markets.A Canadian Press analysis of publicly available data on out-of-province ministerial expenses shows a more than 33 per cent increase in spending on international trips for Moe and his ministers from 2018 to 2022.“This is how Saskatchewan creates wealth,” Moe said in April after a speech focused on the province’s international trade missions at the Saskatchewan Urban Municipalities convention in Saskatoon.“It is the recipe for success for us to attract investment.”Moe has been touting how his Saskatchewan Party government is planting the province’s flag in key markets around the world while arguing the federal Liberal government’s policies are harming industry.Jason Childs, an associate professor of economics at the University of Regina, said the province is pursuing its own export priorit...

In backrooms and on social media, battle rages over law to expand railway competition

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 07:17:01 GMT

In backrooms and on social media, battle rages over law to expand railway competition MONTREAL — A new rail shipping rule is poised to drive up inefficiency and consumer costs.Or it will drive them straight down. It depends who you ask.Set to come into effect with Ottawa’s federal budget bill, an obscure law has Canada’s two main railways fighting back over concerns about expenses and congestion, with the drama playing out in social media posts and a backroom lobbying push.At the centre of the tempest in a train yard is legislation that aims to expand what’s known as extended interswitching, a seldom-heard term that describes a critical practice in the rail industry.Interswitching refers to the transfer of cargo between two rail companies at a point where their tracks meet. Extended interswitching is when Company A must transport that cargo along its own tracks to a point where it meets Company B’s rails, and it’s currently required on request for distances of up to 30 kilometres.The practice seeks to spur competition, as someone shipping from a gra...

Fungi may offer ‘jaw-dropping’ solution to climate change

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 07:17:01 GMT

Fungi may offer ‘jaw-dropping’ solution to climate change (The Hill) - As planet-warming carbon emissions rise, a major solution to climate change is growing beneath our feet.A study published in Current Biology on Monday found that fungi gobble up more than a third of the world’s annual fossil fuel emissions.As such, fungi “represent a blind spot in carbon modeling, conservation, and restoration,” coauthor Kate Field, a professor of biology at the University of Sheffield, said in a statement.“The numbers we’ve uncovered are jaw-dropping,” Field added. Field’s team found that fungi pulled down 36 percent of global fossil fuel emissions — enough to cancel out the yearly carbon pollution from China, the world’s largest carbon emitter. China beats out its nearest polluting competitor, the United States, by a factor of two.Fungi are the broad biological kingdom that produces mushrooms — the fruiting bodies of far larger organisms that sprawl beneath the surface.  Massive sargassum seaweed bloom takes surprising turn ...

UFC champ Conor McGregor knocks out mascot in bizarre bit during NBA Finals

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 07:17:01 GMT

UFC champ Conor McGregor knocks out mascot in bizarre bit during NBA Finals MIAMI (AP) — Former UFC champion Conor McGregor knocked out the Miami Heat mascot in a midgame bit that went wrong.Burnie — more specifically, the man who occupies Burnie's costume — briefly sought medical attention Friday night after taking two punches from McGregor during a third-quarter stoppage of Game 4 of the NBA Finals between the Heat and the Denver Nuggets.The Heat said Saturday that the employee, who was not identified, received pain medication and was resting at home.McGregor was there as a promotional gimmick for a pain-relief spray — and was booed by many in the Miami crowd even before the bit started. The flame mascot was wearing oversized boxing gloves and a robe akin to what a fighter would wear entering the ring for a bout. McGregor hit Burnie with a left hook, knocking him down, then punched the mascot again after he hit the floor.McGregor then tried to “spray” the mascot with the pain-relief product, while several members of the Heat's in-game promotiona...

Weekend Break: Rhapsody Theater

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 07:17:01 GMT

Weekend Break: Rhapsody Theater Reading Marcella's mind? Check out today's Weekend Break with Marcella Raymond at Rhapsody Theater.Love the WGN Morning News? We love you, too. And you can have all the hijinks delivered to your inbox every weekday morning. Sign up and subscribe to our WGN Morning News newsletter.

Charging blunts benefits of electric ride-hailing, study finds

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 07:17:01 GMT

Charging blunts benefits of electric ride-hailing, study finds (Green Car Reports) -- Uber and Lyft have pledged to electrify their ride-hailing fleets by 2030, but a new University of Michigan study argues that it won’t make much of a difference.Replacing all current ride-hailing vehicles with EVs would eliminate tailpipe emissions, but the overall benefit to society would still be slight—just 3% per trip on average—according to the study, which was published June 1 in the journal Environmental Science & Technology.That’s due to other social costs associated with ride-hailing beyond emissions, including “increased traffic congestion, collision risk and noise due to Uber and Lyft drivers traveling to and from fast-charging stations,” a University of Michigan press release announcing the study results said.Tesla chargingThose results are based on modeling of more than a million Uber and Lyft trips using data collected from the Chicago area from 2019 to 2022. The models included trips taken on weekdays, weekends, and during differen...

Texas boaters, fishers: Is this wicked plant coming home with you?

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 07:17:01 GMT

Texas boaters, fishers: Is this wicked plant coming home with you? (NEXSTAR) — As summer heats up, more and more Texans are taking to the water for boating, fishing and swimming. But could you unintentionally be bringing a pesky — and hazardous — stowaway back home from the water?Hydrilla is among several noxious and invasive plants listed in the Texas Agriculture Code, which makes it illegal to sell, buy or plant it in the state. But you may be wondering just what the heck hydrilla is and why it's such a threat. Texas watermelons less sweet this year — here's why Hydrilla — known as Hydrilla verticillata — is an invasive aquatic plant that grows in freshwater, like lakes and streams. But even though it thrives in freshwater, the versatile plant can still grow in murky and shallow areas, according to Texas State University's Texas Invasive Species Institute. Hydrilla aquatic plant close-up (Getty Images)In addition to ecosystem dangers, hydrilla can also pose a hazard to swimmers. Back in 2018, an Austin-area man told KXAN News that getting caugh...

Jonathan Bernstein: Trump’s GOP rivals are right to seize the moment

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 07:17:01 GMT

Jonathan Bernstein: Trump’s GOP rivals are right to seize the moment With three Republicans formally declaring their candidacies for president this past week and Miami Mayor Francis Suarez moving closer to his own announcement, it’s increasingly clear that despite his status as the party’s standard-bearer and his sizable lead, former President Donald Trump isn’t scaring anyone off from challenging him.Neither is Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who while trailing Trump by double-digits is still far ahead of any other contenders in both polling and endorsements.Trump is regularly polling at slightly higher than 50% in national primary trial heats, and has the overwhelming bulk of high-profile endorsements. No wonder smart pundits are calling it a two-man race between Trump and the Florida governor, with Trump holding an overwhelming advantage.And yet former Vice President Mike Pence, former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum all jumped in last week and are among 10 major GOP candidates in the race so far ̵...

Real World Economics: When the game changes, the rules have to too

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 07:17:01 GMT

Real World Economics: When the game changes, the rules have to too Edward LottermanEven economists who generally disagree on other wide ranges of political and economic thought agree that establishing specifying economic “rules of the game” is an important task for government.Producers, consumers and everyone in between needs to know the laws and regulations that limit ways in which they can carry out economic activities. If there is not a common understanding and agreement on such rules, it is hard to not waste resources.Implicitly, this insight goes back at least as far as Adam Smith writing in the late 1700s.Ronald Coase, a 20th century, British-born University of Chicago professor took it a step further. He argued that even if one sets the rules in different ways, so long as all “participants” understood what they were, optimal efficiency was possible. This insight won him a Nobel PrizeOne example: Steam locomotives emit sparks that can start fires. We can make railroads responsible for putting out fires and paying damages, or we can pass that ...