Grosse Ile approves $1.3 million for sewer pipe cleaning At its May 13 meeting, the Gross Ile Township Board of Trustees approved $1.32 million for cleaning, televising and inspecting all sanitary sewer pipes over the next five years. Township Manager ... 05/20/2024 - 7:21 am | View Link
Ravenna township residents face big bills over long awaited sewer project In the 1980s, a pipe burst on Karen and Gary Hogan's property in Ravenna Township's Chinn allotment and carried raw ... And, worst of all, when the costly sewer is finally built, it will solve the ... 05/18/2024 - 10:30 pm | View Link
Township tackles sewer issues, approves apartments A larger-than-expected pipe helped unjam a planned apartment project being held up by sewer capacity issues in Thomson Township. Josh Evans, an assistant engineer with the township’s contracted ... 05/16/2024 - 2:10 pm | View Link
Towamencin talks spreading sewer bills, changing calculations Since a first vote to sell in May 2022, residents have mobilized to pass a “home rule charter” with provisions they claim make the sale illegal, while the pro-sale supervisors have voted to transfer ... 05/9/2024 - 1:31 am | View Link
Newberry Township supervisors vote no on sale of sewer system Background: Newberry Township considered a sale of its sewer system This article originally appeared on York Daily Record: Newberry Township supervisors vote no on sale of sewer system ... 07/19/2023 - 2:44 am | View Link
Football coach Billy Napier and UF’s administration thought they finally could move on from former signee Jaden Rashada and his representatives. Not so fast. On Tuesday, the 20-year-old sophomore already with this third school filed a lawsuit against Napier, mega-booster Hugh Hathcock and others seeking more than $10 million in damages.
In this Dolphins Deep Dive video, the South Florida Sun Sentinel’s Chris Perkins and David Furones discuss next week’s organized team activities sessions, what to expect and player observations.
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Mike Magner and Valerie Yurk | CQ-Roll Call (TNS)
WASHINGTON — The U. S. auto industry faces a triple threat on the road to cleaner cars and trucks: lagging consumer demand for electric vehicles, a potential glut of cheap electric vehicles from China and the possible rollback of Biden administration moves if Donald Trump becomes president again.
All of that is raising questions about whether the EV revolution in the United States could end before it really begins, especially if a victorious Trump follows through on promises to rescind regulations and financial incentives for zero-emission vehicles.
Still, many industry analysts are confident the transition will continue even in a new Republican administration because so many billions of dollars have been invested and the global market is shifting rapidly toward EVs in response to climate change.
A slower pace for EVs in America would further the lead for China, which dominates the global market at 60 percent of worldwide EV sales, according to the International Energy Agency.
“If we don’t continue to incentivize both the purchase of the vehicles domestically and the creation of the infrastructure, the charging stations, we run the risk of falling behind in the technology,” said Alan Taub, a former auto executive who now heads the Electric Vehicle Center at the University of Michigan.
The stakes are too high to let that happen, said Ellen Hughes-Cromwick, senior resident fellow in the climate and energy program at the left-center think tank Third Way and a former chief economist at both Ford Motor Co.
In this Dolphins Deep Dive video, the South Florida Sun Sentinel’s Chris Perkins and David Furones discuss the narratives surrounding the team that it looks to change in 2024.
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Brian Niemietz | New York Daily News
Online pharmaceutical brands Hims & Hers are introducing a weight-loss drug containing a compounded form of semaglutide, the active ingredient in Ozempic, for a fraction of the price.
Both brands, owned by the same company headquartered in San Francisco, plan to provide a one-month supply of the GLP-1 injections for $199.
That same dose of Ozempic reportedly retails for nearly $1,000.
At first, no one thought Nina White had a heart attack.
Every detail of that day 10 years ago, when she was just 51, is sharp in her memory. She thought the tightness in her chest was overexertion from multiple trips up the ladder to the attic in her Portsmouth home.