Selasa, 28 Februari 2023

New York City wakes up to biggest snowfall of season - BBC

People visit Times Square during a snowfall on February 27, 2023 in New York CityAFP

A new coast-to-coast winter storm is forecast to pummel parts of California, the Midwest and US north-east this week.

Parts of the north-east could see up to 8in (20cm) of snow, the National Weather Service (NWS) said, with New York City getting 2-6in.

Further heavy snow is forecast on the other side of the country for California's mountainous areas.

It comes as 12 people were injured by tornadoes in Oklahoma.

"New York City will be on the southern edge of the heaviest snowfall and could mix with sleet at times, limiting snowfall amounts to the 2-6 [inch] range, but still likely the biggest snowstorm of the season," the NWS said in its latest forecast.

Snow began falling on Monday evening and is expected to turn into a mix of sleet and rain into Tuesday morning.

A travel advisory had been issued for New Yorkers from 18:00 (23:00 GMT) on Monday to 14:00 on Tuesday, urging people to use mass transit whenever possible and to allow extra time for their commutes.

The late February storm is the heaviest in New York City this season. New Yorkers, like much of the north-east, have had an unusually mild winter so far.

Several school districts in the city announced they will be closed on Tuesday because of the weather.

Winter storm warnings are also in effect for all of Connecticut and Rhode Island. Heavy snow across the north-east is expected to come to an end on Wednesday, the NWS said.

This winter storm comes at the heels of tornadoes and powerful winds that have hit central US on Sunday and Monday in states like Oklahoma, Missouri and Texas, where residents were urged to seek shelter.

A woman looks over her home that was destroyed in Oklahoma on Sunday
Reuters

In Oklahoma, seven tornadoes were reported to have hit the state late on Sunday. Footage emerged showing overturned cars and homes with collapsed roofs due to the strong winds.

A wind speed of 114mph (183km/h) was recorded in northern Texas near the border with Oklahoma - the equivalent of a Category 3 hurricane.

The NWS and experts have said that the weather pattern probably qualifies as a "derecho", a rare weather pattern characterised by extremely strong straight-line winds.

Parts of Michigan, where more than 158,000 people remained without power after a winter storm last week, were hit again with freezing rain and strong winds on Monday.

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Californians have already faced mass power outages, flooding and the closures of both motorways and beaches as a winter storm swept that US state.

More than 120,000 people - many of them in the Los Angeles area - lost electricity after days of fierce winds.

As of Tuesday morning, around 49,000 homes in California remained without power.

Yosemite National Park will remain closed until Wednesday because of severe winter conditions.

Residents of the state capital of Sacramento have been warned to avoid travel until Wednesday with rain and snow starting up again.

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Have you been affected by the winter storm that is hitting the US? You can get in touch by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk.

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If you are reading this page and can't see the form you will need to visit the mobile version of the BBC website to submit your question or comment or you can email us at HaveYourSay@bbc.co.uk. Please include your name, age and location with any submission.

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Senin, 27 Februari 2023

Tornadoes and severe winds strike central US as another round of rain and snow is set to pummel the West and North - CNN

CNN  — 

As severe storms prompted at least nine tornado reports in parts of the central US, a barrage of snow, rain and harsh wind is forecast Monday in places from the West Coast to the Great Lakes, including some still without power following a similar string of severe weather last week.

More than 300,000 US homes and businesses were without power as of Monday afternoon, according to PowerOutage.us. About two-thirds of the outages were in Michigan, which is bracing for another round of ice and snow to hit the region Monday. More than 66,000 outages were reported in California, and more than 10,000 each in Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky and Tennessee.

In Oklahoma, at least seven tornadoes and 12 injuries were reported in Sunday’s severe weather. Two tornadoes were reported in Kansas.

More than 100 other storm reports – including wind and hail – were recorded in parts of Oklahoma, Kansas and Texas as hurricane-force winds and severe thunderstorms tore through. A gust of 114 mph was recorded In Memphis, Texas – equivalent to sustained wind in a Category 3 hurricane.

“I got up and then the wind just threw me back. And I’m screaming,” Frances Tabler of Norman, Oklahoma, told CNN affiliate KOCO. “It was like a blizzard inside the house.”

Early Monday, flipped cars and downed trees littered neighborhoods where roofs had been torn from homes, CNN’s Ed Lavandera reported.

Homes in Norman, Oklahoma, were damaged by Monday's storms.

Preliminary survey information from the National Weather Service office in Norman has confirmed the tornado Sunday night was at least an EF-2. The survey team will continue to survey the path “where significant damage is reported to have occurred,” the weather service said, and more details about the wind speed, path length and tornado width will be available when the survey is completed.

In anticipation of severe winds and potential hail Sunday night into Monday, a unit at McConnell Air Force Base in Wichita, Kansas, relocated most of its aircraft to protect them and ensure they can still be deployed if needed, the base announced.

As the storm shifts north Monday afternoon, a slight risk for severe weather – possibly a few tornadoes and wind gusts – could impact cities including Indianapolis, Cincinnati and Columbus, Ohio. A tornado watch is in effect for southeastern Ohio, northeastern Kentucky and western West Virginia until 7 p.m. ET Monday, and a watch has been issued for parts of Ohio, eastern Indiana and far northern Kentucky, in effect until 6 p.m. ET, including Fort Wayne, Cincinnati, Dayton and Columbus.

In the West – where last week’s storms prompted rare blizzard warnings and road flooding in California – a separate system of rain and high-elevation snow will push from the Pacific Northwest down into California and into the Rockies through Monday.

Nine western states are under winter weather alerts Monday as heavy snowfall is forecast across the region, including up to 10 inches in Washington state’s Cascades by early Tuesday; 1 to 3 feet in high elevations and mountain peaks of western Oregon; and 1 to 3 feet in mountainous areas of the Rockies.

Fresh snow surrounds wind turbines Sunday near Mohave, California.

A blizzard warning remains in effect for the Sierra Nevada mountains in California, which could see between 2 and 6 feet of snow.

Part of Interstate 80 – from Applegate, California, to the Nevada state line – was closed Monday “due to whiteout conditions,” the state transportation department said in a tweet.

The National Weather Service warned that travelers in the areas under a blizzard warning could be “stranded in vehicles for hours,” as visibility could be near zero at times through early Wednesday.

Yosemite National Park was closed Saturday due to severe weather and will not reopen until at least Wednesday as the multiday blizzard warning remains in effect across Yosemite Valley, the park announced. The valley could see as much as 55 to 84 inches of snow by Wednesday, the park said.

The storm system impacting Oklahoma and Ohio is expected to push into the Northeast by Monday afternoon, where interior parts of the region could see widespread snowfall totals of 6 to 12 inches.

Meanwhile, the South is anticipating another week of unusually warm winter temperatures after steaming under record-breaking highs last week.

Dozens of daily high temperature records could be broken again in the coming days as areas of southern Texas and the Florida Peninsula could see temperatures into the 90s.

Southern Plains buffeted as tornadoes reported

As the National Weather Service reviews the severe weather reports from Sunday into Monday morning, it will work to determine whether the system can be classified as a derecho, which forecasters previously said was possible.

A derecho is a widespread, long-lived windstorm, which typically causes damage in one direction across a relatively straight path, according to the weather service. To be classified as a derecho, the stretch of wind damage should extend more than 240 miles and include wind gusts of at least 58 mph along most of its length, it says.

In total, more than 140 storm reports were made Sunday across the Southern Plains, mainly of wind across Kansas, Texas and Oklahoma. This also includes 14 hail reports in those states, with several hailstones reportedly 1.75 inches in diameter.

Nine tornadoes were reported in Oklahoma and Kansas, including the one in the Oklahoma city of Norman, where police warned of road closures, downed power lines and debris.

Twelve weather-related injuries were reported early Monday, the Norman Police Department said. None were critical, the department said after conferring with area hospitals.

Students on the campus of the University of Oklahoma in Norman were told to immediately take shelter Sunday evening as the area was under a tornado warning, which was later lifted.

Officials in Oklahoma are still assessing the damage, though the most concentrated impacts appear to be in Norman, Shawnee and possibly Cheyenne, said Keli Cain, public affairs director for the Oklahoma Department of Emergency Management and Homeland Security.

A United States Postal Service training facility in Norman was among the damaged buildings, according to a USPS spokesperson. No injuries were reported at the National Center for Employee Development, but some windows were blown out and power lines downed in the parking lot, the spokesperson said. No mail is processed or handled at the site.

Roughly a dozen families displaced by a tornado in Liberal, Kansas, are being accommodated and about 10 trailers were also damaged, City Manager Rusty Varnado said. At least one person was injured by broken glass, he said, noting the injuries are minor.

Hard-hit Great Lakes braces for another round

Freezing rain, snow and ice across the Great Lakes region and parts of the Midwest last week resulted in perilous travel conditions, road closures and significant power outages, disrupting daily life for many.

This week, the Great Lakes are poised to be hit all over again, including Michigan, where about 130,000 homes and businesses still did not have power early Monday after the prior storms damaged trees and utility lines.

Ice-covered tree branches lie on the ground Thursday after an ice storm in Ypsilanti, Michigan.

Utility company DTE, one of Michigan’s largest electricity providers, said 630,000 of its customers have been impacted by the storms so far. By Sunday night, power was restored to about 600,000 of their customers, the utility said.

Another round of mixed precipitation is expected to move into the region Monday, with those under winter weather alerts possibly seeing between 2 and 8 inches of snowfall.

As the storm moves east, winter storm watches are also in effect for parts of interior New York and New England through Wednesday afternoon. In total, these isolated areas can see up to 10 inches of snowfall.

With freezing rain and wind gusts up to 40 mph expected overnight Monday in the Finger Lakes, Long Island, New York City and Western New York areas, Gov. Kathy Hochul’s office warned that travel likely will be affected in the eastern part of the state Tuesday morning.

“State agencies are preparing emergency response assets and we are ready to assist local governments before, during and after the storm. I encourage everyone to keep an eye on the weather this week and stay safe,” the governor said in a release.

Schools in Hartford, Connecticut, and Providence, Rhode Island, will be closed Tuesday because of the expected winter weather.

Boston, which is under a winter weather advisory from Monday evening until Tuesday evening, is expected to get 2 to 5 inches of snowfall.

CNN’s Aya Elamroussi, Haley Brink, Rebekah Reiss, Tina Burnside and Keith Allen contributed to this report.

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Minggu, 26 Februari 2023

Student loans: Will law or politics win in Biden’s loan forgiveness lawsuits? - Yahoo Finance

As the U.S. Supreme Court is set to hear arguments this week on legality of the president’s student loan forgiveness plan, the Education Department (ED), borrower advocates, and supporters of cancellation remain confident the law is on their side and litigation should result in a victory.

“If the U.S. Supreme Court applies the law, then student loan debt will be canceled,” Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) said in a town hall sponsored by the Student Debt Crisis Center (SDCC). “What I’m afraid of is a Supreme Court that applies politics.”

However, opponents also argue politics on Biden’s administration.

“The Biden administration’s student loan bailout is a political gambit engineered by special interest groups,” Representative Virginia Foxx (R-NC), chairwoman of the Education and the Workforce Committee, said in a press release. "Abusing the HEROES Act for such a ploy is shameful."

If the highest court in the land strikes down the forgiveness plan, the Biden administration has shared no plan B beyond its already-announced 60-day extension of its payment pause for the millions of borrowers.

That means preparing for a worst-case scenario is necessary for borrowers.

Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States - August 31 2021: The US Supreme Court of the United States of America. The highest court determining the rule of law.
The Supreme Court of the United States of America (Credit: Getty Images)

Legal authority vs partisan politics

In the Texas case, Department of Education v. Brown, the Department of Justice (DOJ) argues that the HEROES Act expressly states that the Education Secretary has the authority to act in a national emergency — in this case, COVID-19 — to make sure borrowers are not left worse off with respect to their loans than they were before the emergency.

In the 8th Circuit case, Biden v. Nebraska, the DOJ argues that the state of Missouri lacks standing to sue based on potential harm the forgiveness program may bring to the Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority (MOHELA), a loan servicer in the state, because MOHELA is a separate entity from the state and harm to MOHELA is not harm to the state of Missouri.

“Our lawyers and team are confident in the legal authority,” Bharat Ramamurti, the deputy director of the National Economic Council, told reporters in an embargoed briefing in January, even after members of the press questioned this confidence considering the Biden administration didn’t anticipate Roe v. Wade getting overturned last summer.

“The arguments about the plaintiffs lacking legal standing seem strong, [but] the arguments on the merits are somewhat weaker,” Mark Kantrowski, author and student loan expert, told Yahoo Finance. “During the hearings we may get a sense as to the direction the Court will take based on the questions asked by the justices.”

Republican opponents believe the law is on their side to stop Biden’s loan forgiveness. Over 100 Republicans filed an amicus brief with the Supreme Court against Biden’s loan forgiveness plan.

“This exploits the original intention of the HEROES Act of 2003, oversteps the authority of Congress, undermines the will of the American people, and would send the country further into a debt spiral,” Representative Jeff Duncan (R-SC) said in the press release. “The Court should invalidate the Secretary of Education’s sweeping student loan forgiveness program since it trespasses on Congressional authority and violates the separation of powers.”

The fact that the lawsuits against forgiveness were filed in October and already made it to the Supreme Court worries some borrower advocates, who also echoed Sen. Warren’s concern of politics outweighing the rule of law.

“This is an extraordinary nearly unprecedented outcome for lawsuits that were filed just a few months ago,” Mike Pierce, a former senior regulator, attorney, and executive director of Student Borrowers Protection Center (SBPC), said at the SDCC town hall. “We’ve skipped through every step of the normal judicial process — no finding of fact by a trial court — to a rapid and hasty rush to get this policy in front of a conservative Supreme Court.”

“This is purely political in a way that many of the cases that come before the Supreme Court are not,” Pierce said. “A reminder that this just isn’t about student debt, it’s a test for democracy and we need democracy to work for the people.”

An unfavorable outcome for Biden is ultimately a bigger loss for more than 26 million borrowers who have already applied for cancellation.

In November, the Education Department (ED) stopped taking applications for student loan forgiveness after a Texas federal district court judge ruled the program is a violation of legislative power and the St. Louis-based 8th Circuit Appellate Court imposed an injunction in a separate case.

Shortly after, the Biden Administration asked the U.S. Supreme Court to reinstate the program. Last month, the DOJ filed its brief on behalf of ED with the Supreme Court.

As a result of the litigation, President Biden extended the payment pause on federal student loans until June 30, 2023. If litigation has not been resolved by then, payments will begin 60 days after that.

Advocates say that Biden has other alternatives for student debt cancellation if he loses in the Supreme Court. The administration announced its reform to income-driven repayment (IDR) plans that could help borrowers qualify for loan discharge sooner, but advocates argue more needs to happen with IDR reform.

In the meantime, borrowers should go to Federal Student Aid’s (FSA) website to make sure their accounts have updated contact information and find out who their loan service provider is, as this may have changed since the beginning of the pandemic.

Ronda is a personal finance senior reporter for Yahoo Finance and attorney with experience in law, insurance, education, and government.

Follow her on Twitter @writesronda Read the latest personal finance trends and news from Yahoo Finance. Follow Yahoo Finance on Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, Facebook, Flipboard, and LinkedIn

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When is Chicago mayor race 2023: Candidates make final push to secure voters ahead of Election Day - WLS-TV

CHICAGO (WLS) -- The final push is on in Chicago's mayoral election.

Because the number of politicians in the race probably guarantees no one will win the seat outright, candidates are focused on turning out their political bases to secure a spot in a runoff.

With just days before the election, many of the nine candidates were out vying for votes to guarantee one of the two top spots in Tuesday's mayor's race.

If no candidate has more than 50% on election day, there will be a runoff between the top two candidates.

RELATED: Chicago Mayoral Election: Latest poll shows Paul Vallas widening lead, no clear 2nd place candidate

Former CPS CEO Paul Vallas remains in a strong position with conservative voters.

He courted North Side voters Saturday at Ann Sather restaurant, not directly the controversy over his campaign's Twitter account "liking" offensive tweets.

"The issues are clear: crime, crime, crime and then schools and taxes," Vallas said. "So people want a problem solver."

Vallas' campaign later released a statement about the recent uproar surrounding its Twitter account.

"This kind of abhorrent and vile rhetoric does not represent me or my views," the statement said, in part. "We are working on identifying who is responsible for liking these tweets."

Meanwhile, it's still unclear how high early voter turnout and an uptick in mail-in voting will affect who wins.

Current Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot rallied with women voters Saturday as her campaign continues to struggle with criticism over high crime.

RELATED: Chicago mayor candidates offer split solutions for crime at forum, talk economic revival

U.S. Congressman Jesus "Chuy" Garcia met with supporters canvassing in Southwest Side neighborhoods. He's counting on the Latino vote and his reputation as a coalition builder to lure progressives.

"I also want to receive votes from everywhere in Chicago, that's why we've campaigned hard rebuilding a coalition in this moment is really critical," Garcia said.

Support for Cook County Commissioner Brandon Johnson has recently surged enough to possibly secure a runoff spot.

"I'm really grateful to be in this position," Johnson said. "I'm looking forward to leading the city."

Johnson and South Side Alderman Roderick Sawyer attended a mayoral forum in Hyde Park.

Sawyer will need a wave of support beyond the Black vote to make it past Tuesday's election.

"It doesn't matter whether you are from the Northwest Side or downtown or Roseland or Englewood -- every vote is important," Sawyer said.

RELATED: Chicago mayoral election 2023: Officials encouraged by high early voting returns so far

Other mayoral candidates, like State Representative Kam Buckner and Alderman Sophia King, need huge turnouts for them to win, while activist Ja'Mal Green hopes for a high youth vote to turnout and businessman Willie Wilson leans on his support from Black voters.

Election Day is Tuesday. If necessary, the mayoral runoff would be April 4.

Vallas' full statement on controversy over his Twitter account:

"I do not personally manage the campaign's Twitter account and was shocked when this was brought to my attention because this kind of abhorrent and vile rhetoric does not represent me or my views. While I had nothing to do with liking these posts, our campaign takes responsibility and apologizes, and we want it to be clear that we have already taken immediate steps to restrict access to the account to prevent anything like this from happening again," Vallas said. "We are working on identifying who is responsible for liking these tweets as many volunteers have had access to the account in recent years, including some who are no longer with the campaign, and will take immediate action in removing them from our campaign if they are still involved."

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Sabtu, 25 Februari 2023

Overnight Storm Leaves Thousands Without Power in Southern California - NBC Southern California

Thousands were without power Saturday morning following a night of downpours and strong winds in Southern California.

Utility repairs could take hours in some neighborhoods, leaving customers without power until Saturday night or Sunday.

Overnight winds toppled trees, sending some into powerlines. Crews will need to remove the trees before utility workers can restore power.

Both the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power and Southern California Edison were reporting multiple large outages that began Friday.

LADWP outages Saturday included one in East Hollywood affecting over 2,300 customers, one in Hollywood affecting more than 1,600 customers, one in Los Feliz affecting over 1,000 customers, and one in Toluca Lake affecting 874 customers, along with smaller scattered outages across Los Angeles County. The utility estimated that power would be restored by 10 p.m. in Toluca Lake, by 10:30 in East Hollywood, by 11 p.m. in Hollywood and by midnight in Los Feliz.

Several hundred customers were also without power in North Hollywood, Valley Village and Studio City, with restoration not anticipated until much later Saturday.

"Under current conditions, customers experiencing outages should expect crews to respond between 12-24 hours from the time the outages are reported," the LADWP tweeted Friday night. "Restoration may take longer depending on field conditions. TY for your understanding. Our crews won't stop until all are restored."

Click here for the LADWP outages map.

SCE's outage map showed 48 outages affecting more than 12,000 customers in Los Angeles County as of 9:15 a.m. Saturday, and 11 outages in Orange County affecting more than 600 customers.

As for the storm, rainfall is expected to decrease Saturday before the system moves out Sunday. More rain is expected early next week.

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Kamis, 23 Februari 2023

Ohio train derailment: Operators warned of overheated axle moments before wreck: NTSB - Fox News

The operators of the Norfolk Southern train involved in a toxic derailment in East Palestine, Ohio, earlier this month received a "critical audible alarm message instructing the crew to slow and stop the train to inspect a hot axle," according to a newly released National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) report Thursday. 

The preliminary report said after hearing the warning from the hot bearing detector on Train 32N, the train’s engineer "increased the dynamic brake application to further slow and stop the train." 

"The function of the HBD is to detect overheated bearings and provide audible real-time warnings to train crews," the report said.  

"Train 32N passed three HBD systems on its trip before the derailment," adding that at the third system, it recorded "the suspect bearing's temperature at 253°F above ambient." 

An undated aerial view of the train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio.

An undated aerial view of the train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio. (NTSB)

BUTTIGIEG VISITS OHIO TRAIN DERAILMENT SITE 20 DAYS AFTER WRECK

"After the train stopped, the crew observed fire and smoke and notified the Cleveland East dispatcher of a possible derailment. With dispatcher authorization, the crew applied handbrakes to the two railcars at the head of the train, uncoupled the head-end locomotives, and moved the locomotives about 1 mile from the uncoupled railcars," the NTSB wrote. "Responders arrived at the derailment site and began response efforts." 

About 15,000 pounds of contaminated soil and 1.1 million gallons of contaminated water have been excavated from the site of the derailment, Norfolk Southern said Monday.

Dozens of rail cars, including 11 carrying toxic chemicals, derailed as the train passed through the town on the Ohio-Pennsylvania border. Officials conducted a controlled release of vinyl chloride three days after the derailment to avoid an explosion. 

The NTSB said at the "time of the accident, visibility conditions were dark and clear; the weather was 10°F with no precipitation." 

Investigators wrote that the train had 149 railcars, 20 of which were "hazardous materials tank cars transporting combustible liquids, flammable liquids, and flammable gas, including vinyl chloride." A total of 38 cars derailed. 

EAST PALESTINE MAYOR ASKS FOR ANNUAL COMMUNITY HEALTH CHECKS, SHARES CONCERNS ABOUT RASHES, LONG-TERM EFFECTS

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, left, speaks with a U.S. DOT official at the site of the East Palestine, Ohio, train derailment on Thursday.

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, left, speaks with a U.S. DOT official at the site of the East Palestine, Ohio, train derailment on Thursday. (Fox News)

While the train's crew was decelerating after hearing the hot bearing detector warning, "an automatic emergency brake application initiated, and train 32N came to a stop," NTSB investigators said. 

Two days after the Feb. 3 derailment, responders extinguished the fire, but five cars carrying "115,580 gallons of vinyl chloride continued to concern authorities because the temperature inside one tank car was still rising," the NTSB said, leading to the controlled release. 

Four of the cars containing the chemical were reported by the NTSB to be connected to each other, while the fifth was located in another part of the train. 

"Responders scheduled a controlled venting of the five vinyl chloride tank cars to release and burn the vinyl chloride, expanded the evacuation zone to a 1-mile by 2-mile area, and dug ditches to contain released vinyl chloride liquid while it vaporized and burned," the report said. 

"NTSB investigators identified and examined the first railcar to derail, the 23rd railcar," the report also said. "Surveillance video from a local residence showed what appeared to be a wheel bearing in the final stage of overheat failure moments before the derailment. The wheel bearing and affected wheelset have been collected as evidence and will be examined by the NTSB."

This video screenshot released by the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board shows the site of the derailed freight train in East Palestine, Ohio.

This video screenshot released by the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board shows the site of the derailed freight train in East Palestine, Ohio. (NTSB/Handout via Xinhua via Getty Images)

"The vinyl chloride tank car top fittings, including the relief valves, were also removed and examined by the NTSB on scene," the report added. "The top fittings will be shipped to Texas for testing under the direction of the NTSB." 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP 

Investigators from the agency returned to the derailment site on Tuesday "to examine each [decontaminated] hazardous material tank car, document damage, and secure evidence for laboratory analysis." 

"Future investigative activity will focus on the wheelset and bearing; tank car design and derailment damage; a review of the accident response, including the venting and burning of the vinyl chloride; railcar design and maintenance procedures and practices; NS use of wayside defect detectors; and NS railcar inspection practices," the report concluded. 

Fox News' Paul Best contributed to this report.

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Rabu, 22 Februari 2023

Winter storm grounds nearly 1,000 flights, knocks out power for thousands - Fox Business

A massive winter storm has cut off power for thousands of Americans in the central and western U.S., forcing nearly 1000 flights to the ground in cancelations or delays.

The winter storm stretches from Michigan to California, bringing dense snowfall to much of the Midwest and Great Lakes areas. Minneapolis faces a staggering 18-24" in projected snowfall, and areas of Utah, Colorado and Wyoming will match that amount.

More than 900 flights across the U.S. were canceled as of early Wednesday morning, according to The Wall Street Journal. The Denver International Airport and Minneapolis-Saint Paul airport accounted for most of the cancelations. 

Meanwhile, more than 100,000 power outages have been reported in California alone, which is now feeling only the beginnings of the storm.

SOUTHWEST STOCK SINKS AS AIRLINE DELAYS, CANCELATIONS CONTINUE 

winter storm

A monster winter storm took aim at the Upper Midwest on Tuesday, threatening to bring blizzard conditions, bitterly cold temperatures and 2 feet of snow in a three-day onslaught that could affect more than 40 million Americans. (AP Newsroom)

winter storm

The storm has grounded flights across several states. (AP Newsroom)

BREAKING WEATHER NEWS | FOX WEATHER HOME OF AMERICA’S WEATHER TEAM

The National Weather Service has issued a warning to residents of over a dozen states.

"A prolonged major winter storm will spread a large swath of heavy snow from the West Coast to the Northeast," the NWS said in a statement, according to WSJ. "This will be extremely disruptive to travel, infrastructure, livestock and recreation."

winter storm

A weather forecast for the Twin Cities area in Minnesota. (Fox News)

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The storm is expected to spread and affect the Northeast and New England later Wednesday and Thursday.

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Russia says it will play by nuclear treaty rules despite suspending deal with U.S. - Reuters

  • Duma moves swiftly to suspend treaty on Putin's instructions
  • New START treaty is last surviving nuclear deal with U.S.
  • Minister says Russia may take more "countermeasures"

LONDON, Feb 22 (Reuters) - Russia will stick to agreed limits on nuclear missiles and keep informing the United States about changes in its deployments, a senior defence official said on Wednesday, despite the "suspension" of its last remaining arms control treaty with Washington.

Both chambers of Russia's parliament voted quickly in favour of suspending Moscow's participation in the New START treaty, rubber-stamping a decision that President Vladimir Putin announced on Tuesday when he accused the West of trying to inflict a "strategic defeat" on Russia in Ukraine.

But a top defence ministry official, Major-General Yevgeny Ilyin, told the lower house, or Duma, that Russia would continue to observe agreed limits on nuclear delivery systems - meaning missiles and strategic bomber planes.

RIA news agency quoted Ilyin as saying it would also continue to provide Washington with notifications on nuclear deployments in order "to prevent false alarms, which is important for maintaining strategic stability".

The assurances suggested that Putin's move would have little immediate practical impact, even if it casts doubt on the long-term future of a treaty designed to reduce nuclear risk by providing a degree of transparency and predictability to both sides.

The Kremlin leader has a long-track record of trying to wrongfoot and unsettle the West. Since invading Ukraine a year ago, he has repeatedly boasted about Russia's nuclear arsenal and said he would be willing to use it if the country's "territorial integrity" is threatened.

TREATY LIMITS

The 2010 New START treaty limits each country's deployed nuclear warheads to 1,550 - which Russia has also said it will continue to observe - and deployed missiles and heavy bombers to 700.

Security analysts say its potential collapse, or failure to replace it when it expires in 2026, could unleash a new arms race at a perilous moment when Putin is increasingly portraying the Ukraine war as a direct confrontation with the West.

Asked in what circumstances Russia would return to the deal, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said: "Everything will depend on the position of the West... When there's a willingness to take into account our concerns, then the situation will change."

Interfax news agency quoted Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov as saying: "We will, of course, be closely monitoring the further actions of the United States and its allies, including with a view to taking further countermeasures, if necessary."

Responding to a CNN report that Russia had unsuccessfully tested its Sarmat intercontinental ballistic missile earlier this week - a weapon capable of carrying multiple nuclear warheads - Interfax quoted Ryabkov as saying: "You cannot trust everything that appears in the media, especially if the source is CNN."

INSPECTION FREEZE

The suspended treaty gives each side the right to inspect the other’s sites – though visits had been halted since 2020 because of COVID and the Ukraine war – and obliges the parties to provide detailed notifications on the numbers, locations and technical characteristics of their strategic nuclear weapons.

Each has to tell the other, for example, when an intercontinental ballistic missile is about to be transported from a production facility. According to the U.S. State Department, the two sides have exchanged more than 25,000 notifications since the treaty came into force in 2011.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Tuesday that Russia's announced suspension was "deeply unfortunate and irresponsible". NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said it made the world more dangerous, urging Putin to reconsider.

Russia is now demanding that British and French nuclear weapons targeted against Russia should be included in the arms control framework, seen as a non-starter for Washington after more than half a century of bilateral nuclear treaties with Moscow.

Additional reporting by Lidia Kelly Editing by Gareth Jones and Peter Graff

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Thomson Reuters

Chief writer on Russia and CIS. Worked as a journalist on 7 continents and reported from 40+ countries, with postings in London, Wellington, Brussels, Warsaw, Moscow and Berlin. Covered the break-up of the Soviet Union in the 1990s. Security correspondent from 2003 to 2008. Speaks French, Russian and (rusty) German and Polish.

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