L.A. City Council votes to more closely monitor driverless vehicles The Los Angeles City Council voted Tuesday to bolster its ability to monitor and potentially regulate driverless vehicles in the city. 06/12/2024 - 8:53 am | View Link
L.A. City Council Finally Ends Covid Vaccination Requirement For Municipal Employees Council members Curren Price and Katy Yaroslavsky were absent during the vote. More from Deadline Democrat Ruben Gallego Headlines L.A. Fundraiser For Arizona U.S. Senate Campaign Slamdance Film ... 06/11/2024 - 11:07 am | View Link
L.A. City Council to consider actions for concerns with driverless cars As concerns remain about the operation of driverless vehicles in Los Angeles, the City Council Tuesday will consider taking steps ... Click to follow The L.A. Local wherever you get podcasts. The U.S. 06/11/2024 - 3:25 am | View Link
City Council president accuses outside police agencies of dumping homeless people in L.A. Last week was not the first time a homeless person was relocated from a neighboring city and dumped in Los Angeles, city council President Paul Krekorian told NBC News. In an interview Monday, ... 06/10/2024 - 3:08 pm | View Link
Does the L.A. City Council have too many meetings? Some members want big changes Some L.A. councilmembers pushed this week for a ballot measure to reduce the number of required council meetings from three to one. The idea will receive more study. 06/8/2024 - 4:01 am | View Link
Ryan Feltner knew it the nanosecond that Jack Suwinski clobbered his hanging 2-2 curveball.
He’d made a big mistake.
The Rockies’ right-hander contorted on the mound in frustration while Suwinski watched his two-run homer soar 459 feet to right to stretch the Pirates’ lead to 4-1 in the seventh inning. Pittsburgh went on to win, 5-2, in front of a Friday night crowd of 31,717 at Coors Field.
The Rockies have lost four straight in LoDo for the first time all season.
“I thought all of my pitches were generally working,” Feltner said.
New home listings statewide increased nearly 24% in May compared to May 2023, creating a more balanced housing market, according to the latest market trends report from the Colorado Association of Realtors.
“Over the past decade, Denver has averaged around 1.5 to 2 months of inventory, a moderate seller’s market,” said Denver-area realtor Cooper Thayer.
In 2022, Denver experienced an extreme seller’s market with only two weeks of inventory.
“Last month, for the first time since November 2012, there was 3.3 months of inventory in Denver, as over 1,700 new listings hit the market and only 1,013 sales closed,” Thayer said.
“The current level of inventory is a strong indication that we are experiencing a balanced market for the first time in over a decade.”
Buyers and sellers are better matched in negotiating power, Thayer said.
“More than ever, sellers are providing concessions in transactions to assist with interest rate buydowns for buyers.
By AARON BEARD (AP Sports Writer)
PINEHURST, N. C. (AP) — Tiger Woods was unable to find the right mix of quality shots and timely breaks at Pinehurst No. 2 to extend his first U. S. Open appearance in four years into the weekend.
He’s heading home. And he’s uncertain if he’ll be back.
The three-time U.
By DOUG FERGUSON (AP Golf Writer)
PINEHURST, N. C. (AP) — The U. S. Open is a new experience for Ludvig Aberg, not that anyone would notice the way his machine-like game gave him the 36-hole lead Friday.
Pinehurst No. 2 is not.
Aberg was a 19-year-old from Sweden about to start his college career at Texas Tech when he came to this Donald Ross gem for the 2019 U.
Senator Ron Johnson (Q-Moscow) has a new concern regarding the investigation into the January 6 insurrection. He is worried that the FBI is doing SWAT raids on "grandmas and grandpas" who just happened to be near the Capitol:
The lawmaker appeared on Fox Business fuming over federal authorities prowling for January 6 rioters — claiming "grandmas and grandmas" are enduring SWAT treatment.
"We've had this massive dragnet, this massive manhunt for grandmas and grandpas that show up on January 6, never enter the Capitol, just happened to be in Washington, D.
Fox's Laura Ingraham fantasizes about 50 years of MAGA rule following Felon45's return to the Capitol this Thursday. Here's Ingraham saying the quiet part out loud during a portion of her opening:
INGRAHAM: So it's time for everyone now in the GOP to acknowledge that Trump was right. He was right about the economy.