Car hits train after chase, driver dies; traffic delays expected

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 04:25:05 GMT

Car hits train after chase, driver dies; traffic delays expected AUSTIN (KXAN) – Austin Police said the driver of a car that hit a train Friday morning in east Austin following a chase between police has died. Officials believed the chase was with a suspected drunk driver.According to police, officers attempted to stop the driver at East Seventh and Neches Streets at 2:36 a.m. but the driver took off. The driver then hit the train at the crossing of Seventh Street and Northwestern Avenue. That's just west of Pleasant Valley Road. According to Austin Travis County EMS, paramedics took the patient to the hospital. ATCEMS said the patient had critical injuries but later died.Austin Police said both directions of Seventh Street were closed as of 3 a.m.APD also said train crossings at 6th Street at Northwestern, 7th and Northwestern and Webberville and Northwestern would be blocked.CapMetro said it was expecting rails delays Friday morning due to the crash being on its tracks."Bus bridge will assist customers between MLK and Downtown stations," CapMet...

ALERT: Severe storms, flash flooding risk begins tonight

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 04:25:05 GMT

ALERT: Severe storms, flash flooding risk begins tonight AUSTIN (KXAN) -- Impactful weather bringing the threat for severe storms and, more significantly, flash flooding looks set to begin as early as late Friday afternoon and continuing through the weekend into early next week.FRIDAY (DAYTIME)Today starts with a mainly cloudy sky and a few pockets of light rain. Isolated storms are possible late afternoon through evening, but coverage will be few and far between to start. NEW BLOG: HOW TO PREPARE FOR FLASH FLOODING Our main concerns with any isolated severe storms would be large hail and damaging winds coming ahead of our main round of heavy and widespread rain much later at night.Slight risk (2 out of 5) for severe storms late Friday into early SaturdayA Flood Watch has been issued for all of Central Texas beginning 7 p.m. Friday through Saturday 8 p.m. with the potential this could get extended into Sunday. A Flood Watch means conditions are favorable for flash flooding or stream, creek or river flooding during the watch period.Flood...

Following up on the Texas bills that might make you say ‘huh?’

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 04:25:05 GMT

Following up on the Texas bills that might make you say ‘huh?’ AUSTIN (KXAN) – Last November, KXAN perused the new bills pre-filed by Texas legislators and pulled four that we thought were peculiar. With the end of the 89th legislative session nearing, we wanted to update you on how they are doing.Pregnant women can drive in High Occupancy Vehicle lanes In July 2022, an officer pulled over a pregnant woman for driving in an HOV lane without a passenger. She fought the citation because she argued her unborn fetus should count as another passenger.“I said, ‘Well, not trying to throw a political mix here, but with everything going on, this counts as a baby,’” Brandy Bottone told a Dallas station, referring to the recent Supreme Court decision to overturn Roe v. Wade.This story got national attention, and a few months later, two Texas lawmakers filed duplicate bills (HB 1744 and HB 521) to allow pregnant women to drive in HOV lanes with only their unborn fetuses.After Texas Rep. Briscoe Cain, R-Deer Park, filed HB 521, nearly 60 of Bricoe’s Re...

5 things to know this Friday, May 12

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 04:25:05 GMT

5 things to know this Friday, May 12 ALBANY, N.Y. (NEWS10) — The great Bob Marley once sang, "Sun is shining, the weather is sweet. Make you want to move your dancing feet." The tune could not fit this Friday any better—Meteorologists Matt Mackie and Jill Szwed went so far as to say, it will feel like summer! Get the latest, news, weather, sports and community events delivered right to your inbox! A small plane crashed Thursday afternoon at the South Albany Airport. Meanwhile, the CDTA finalized plans to expand its service into Warren County. The details top today's five things to know. 1. Small plane crashes at South Albany AirportThree people were injured after a plane crashed at the South Albany Airport in Selkirk on Thursday. The crash took place around 3:40 p.m. Small plane crashes at South Albany Airport 2. CDTA to officially take over Glens Falls busesBuses are busy work, and soon, Glens Falls’ bus system will get a hand. On Thursday, the Capital District Transit Authority (CDTA) formalized a merger with Gr...

MSD Plans $900M wastewater treatment plant upgrades

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 04:25:05 GMT

MSD Plans $900M wastewater treatment plant upgrades ST. LOUIS -- MSD has clear plans to upgrade its wastewater treatment plants. Customers will pay for part of the 900 million-dollar project. Incinerators at the Bissel and Lemay wastewater treatment plants are about 50 years old and can no longer keep up with state and federal emissions regulations. Project Clear says those incinerators need the new upgrade in order to reduce carbon emissions from landfills and trucks. Officials say the new upgrades reduce emissions by 70 percent. Construction on a new plant should start by the end of the year.

Biden mandates 90% cut in power plant emissions

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 04:25:05 GMT

Biden mandates 90% cut in power plant emissions ST. LOUIS -- The Biden administration has announced new regulations on power plants. The Environmental Protection Agency says it will limit carbon emissions from existing coal and gas plants by forcing them to cut their greenhouse gas output by as much as 90 percent or face closure. The new rule impacts plants that generate about a quarter of U.S. greenhouse gases. It is based on an e-p-a proposal to make two-thirds. Of passenger vehicles, electric or zero-carbon, by 2032. But some lawmakers claim America simply can't afford it. They say the rule could impact the reliability of America's electrical grid and lead to higher energy costs.

Opinion: Add a right to housing to the California constitution

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 04:25:05 GMT

Opinion: Add a right to housing to the California constitution Despite Gov. Gavin Newsom’s historic commitment to ending California’s housing crisis — and the administration’s arm-twisting to try to make local jurisdictions do the right thing — we have not made the progress that Californians need. Forty percent of the state’s households now spend more on housing than they can afford, and California is home to more than half of the nation’s unsheltered people.A new proposal in the Legislature, Assembly Constitutional Amendment 10, puts us on the precipice of significant change. If passed, the bill by Assemblymember Matt Haney, D-San Francisco, would give voters the opportunity to enshrine housing as a fundamental right in our state Constitution. The constitutional amendment would provide the state with a game-changing legal tool — and an ongoing obligation no matter who is in office — to ensure that every person has access to a permanent, stable home.Creating a fundamental right to housing is consistent with public will. ...

The 10 most expensive homes reported sold in San Jose in the week of April 24

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 04:25:05 GMT

The 10 most expensive homes reported sold in San Jose in the week of April 24 A house in San Jose that sold for $3 million tops the list of the most expensive residential real estate sales in San Jose in the past week.In total, 41 residential real estate sales were recorded in the area during the past week, with an average price of $2.2 million, $946 per square foot.The prices in the list below concern real estate sales where the title was recorded during the week of April 24 even if the property may have been sold earlier.10. $2.3 million, detached house in the 5400 block of Blossom Vista AvenueThe 1,312 square-foot single-family home in the 5400 block of Blossom Vista Avenue in San Jose has now been sold. The transfer of ownership was settled in April and the total purchase price was $2,325,000, $1,772 per square foot. The house was built in 1960. The house features 3 bedrooms and 2 bathrooms.Blossom Vista Avenue9. $2.4 million, single-family residence in the 6500 block of Pajaro CourtThe sale of the single-family house in the 6500 block of Pajaro Court, Sa...

A’s prized pitcher seeking second opinion for elbow pain

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 04:25:05 GMT

A’s prized pitcher seeking second opinion for elbow pain OAKLAND — The A’s expect to have news regarding a promising young pitching prospect on Friday.Mason Miller, the 24-year-old right-hander who has dazzled with a high-90s fastball and wipeout slider through four major league starts, received a second opinion on his injured right elbow on Thursday.A’s manager Mark Kotsay said the doctors were discussing their findings on Thursday afternoon. The A’s expect to have more information about the next step for Miller on Friday.The news came as a surprise given what Kotsay had said two days earlier, when the A’s thought Miller was out of the woods for any serious elbow damage.Miller, who exited a start last Sunday due to elbow soreness, had a “clean, structural MRI,” Kotsay told reporters in New York on Tuesday.Thursday, however, the team placed Miller on the 15-day injured list with forearm tightness, which can sometimes be the first step before elbow surgery.It’s been a tough go for Miller, who missed most of the 2022 season with a rig...

Study to trace California cannabis lineage, preserve oral history of legacy cultivators

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 04:25:05 GMT

Study to trace California cannabis lineage, preserve oral history of legacy cultivators Cal Poly Humboldt is part of a new study that will research cannabis across California. The interdisciplinary study aims to preserve oral histories and the legacy genetics of cannabis farmers, including those in Humboldt County.Dominic Corva. (Cal Poly Humboldt) One of the principal investigators is Dominic Corva, a cannabis studies program director at Cal Poly Humboldt. The study will start this year, coinciding with the launch of the university’s cannabis studies program.Corva said Humboldt is “the latest in the last 10,000 years of history, in terms of places that have become synonymous with the plant.”Corva said the most central, important part of the study is the community-based, participatory research. Legacy cultivation communities will decide where herbariums —traditional plant libraries that store genetics and seeds — will be built, and communities will take part in how they will preserve their genetics.“They get to own the process in so many ways — us researchers are ...