Stillwater seeking input on school facility plans
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:19:44 GMT
Stillwater Area Public School District officials are planning a series of community meetings starting next week to gather input on how to best add capacity at the elementary and middle school levels and address issues in buildings that are more than 100 years old.The district is seeking ideas on how to best meet the needs of students and address continued student population growth in the communities serving Lake Elmo Elementary, Andersen Elementary in Bayport, Oak-Land Middle School in Lake Elmo and Afton-Lakeland Elementary in Lakeland. The two oldest schools in the district are Andersen Elementary, which was built in 1919, and Lake Elmo Elementary, which was built in 1920; district officials are looking at possibly building new elementary schools in Bayport/Baytown Township and Lake Elmo.“We want to really be able to clearly enunciate the why – why are we looking at doing this,” Superintendent Mike Funk said at a recent board meeting. “People need to understand if there’s go...NYS Budget could include streaming service tax
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:19:44 GMT
ALBANY, N.Y. (NEWS10)---If you subscribe to digital streaming services, there is a chance you could be spending more on them in the future."I casually call it the Netflix tax for a lack of a better term. That’s one of many steaming services just like Hulu. There’s many others," said Assemblyman John McDonald.The New York State Assembly is proposing a 4% state tax and a 4% local sales tax on digital streaming products. This money would go towards transit systems across the state."I know when this was proposed, it wasn’t really my cup of tea, on the other hand, I do believe you need to have a statement of values. Do I want more resources for upstate transit, absolutely," said McDonald.The Assembly isn’t the only body of the legislature proposing an added tax on something a lot of people use. In the Senate, a surcharge on ride sharing services has been proposed. In New York City, the money would go to the MTA. Outside of the city, it would go towards non-MTA transit funding."They are t...'Resilient AF' coming to Glens Falls this May
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:19:44 GMT
GLENS FALLS, N.Y. (NEWS10) - A new show at Charles R. Wood Theater is taking the stage for mental health awareness. A production of "Resilient AF: Rising to the Occasion" comes to the theater this May for National Mental Health Awareness Month. Get the latest, news, weather, sports and community events delivered right to your inbox! "Resilient AF," written, directed and performed by solo artist Kamakshi Hart, includes insight on how to face up to and handle generational trauma, and turn collective pain on community and family levels into compassion for a better future. The show uses tragedy and comedy alike to tell an intimate story about trauma.The show comes to Glens Falls as part of Mental Health Awareness Month. Hart's work was invited to the community by the Warren Washington Association for Mental Health, a Hudson Falls-based nonprofit serving those living with mental illness in the region."No longer is mental health a scary word. It is a prominent part of life. Mental healt...Schenectady official arrested on drug charge
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:19:44 GMT
SCHENECTADY, N.Y. (NEWS10) -- A Schenectady official has been arrested. According to the Schenectady Police Department, Floyd Slater, 52, of Schenectady was arrested on Thursday around noon. Get the latest, news, weather, sports and community events delivered right to your inbox! Slater is the City of Schenectady’s Director of Solid Waste. Police said he has been charged with fifth-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance, which is a felony. He has also been charged with official misconduct, which is a misdemeanor.The circumstances surrounding the arrest have not yet been released. Stick with NEWS10 for updates.Habitat for Humanity goes solar in Glens Falls
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:19:44 GMT
GLENS FALLS, N.Y. (NEWS10) - Last year, city resident Aubrey Constantineau and her two teenage children were given an immeasurable gift. Her family became the residents of 5 Hovey St. - one of three plots on the short stub road to become the site of a Habitat for Humanity home. Get the latest, news, weather, sports and community events delivered right to your inbox! On Wednesday, a crew came to the home where Constantineau has lived for a year, and equipped it with another gift - one that gives back. Buffalo-based solar energy company Solar Liberty equipped the house's roof with a full solar panel array. For Constantineau's growing family, it comes just in time."This will help save money," she said. "We have a little 7-month-old here now, and it's just going to really help with costs."Solar Liberty estimates that the panels could save the family as much as $500 per year. With two teenagers and a new baby at home, it's a huge help to the family. At the same time, when the solar pan...Republicans propose Raise the Age reform
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:19:44 GMT
ALBANY, N.Y. (WTEN) -- Public safety still on the minds of many New Yorkers with decisions still to be made about bail reform as we approach the budget deadline. But there is another public safety law some say has been overlooked: Raise the Age which some lawmakers say needs to change. Raise the Age took effect in 2018 and changed the age a child can be prosecuted as an adult from 16 to 18-years old in criminal cases. Republican lawmakers want to change the law for those who commit violent felonies. Hochul backs bail reform changes in budget Sponsor of the bill Assembly Minority Leader Will Barclay said his conference is not against public safety reform, "What we don’t like is the way Bail Reform and Raise The Age were passed. They were rammed through the legislature in the budget, with no input from DAs, no input from law enforcement and frankly, I don’t even know if they had input from public defenders." According to the states flowchart, when a 16 or 17-year old commits a viol...St. Louis man sentenced five years in crash that killed teenage girl
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:19:44 GMT
ST. LOUIS - A St. Louis man was sentenced to five years in prison over a crash that led to the death of a teenage girl in 2018. Kenderick Moore, 29, pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter, vehicle tampering and leaving the scene of a crash in a collision on Sept. 20, 2018. One passenger, 15-year-old Devonna Riggins, died in the crash. Trending: Major St. Louis hotel sits empty for nearly a decade Investigators say Riggins was a passenger in a vehicle that collided with the car Moore drove around 3:30 a.m. near West Florissant and Thrush avenues. Riggins died from her injuries the next day. Moore crashed a stolen car and drove away from the scene after the collision. He reached a plea deal Thursday that led to a five-year prison sentence. Moore will get credit for three years of jail time he has already served, according to the 22nd Judicial Circuit of Missouri's Office.Missouri House Republicans scramble for slice of governor’s I-70 money for other projects
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:19:44 GMT
On one end of the Missouri Capitol, House Republicans seem poised to divvy up the money Gov. Mike Parson wants to use widening portions of Interstate 70 on a bunch of smaller projects.Across the rotunda in the Senate, Appropriations Chairman Lincoln Hough is looking for ways to pour more money into the project to finance a statewide expansion of the highway.On Tuesday, House Budget Committee Chairman Cody Smith released his ideas for revising Parson’s $51.6 billion budget proposal. He chopped out one a one of the governor’s biggest priorities: $859 million to widen about 55 miles of I-70 in the Kansas City, Columbia and St. Louis regions.Smith, R-Carthage, didn’t kill the proposal outright, but said the appropriation can wait for the capital spending bill that includes other big-ticket, multi-year building projects. And he said House members may have ideas for substitute projects.One of those members is Rep. Don Mayhew, a Republican from Crocker who said Wednesday that he is prepari...Webster Groves man charged with child sex crimes
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:19:44 GMT
WEBSTER GROVES, Mo. - A Webster Groves man was charged earlier this month amid allegations of raping a child.According to a spokesperson for the Webster Groves Police Department, investigators were notified on March 3 of a possible sexual assault involving a minor. On March 6, police arrested Aaron Pratt for multiple child sex crimes. Close Thanks for signing up! Watch for us in your inbox. Subscribe Now Daily News SIGN UP NOW The St. Louis County Prosecuting Attorney's Office charged Pratt, 37, with one count of sexual exploitation of a minor, possession of child pornography, first-degree statutory rape of a person less than 12, and first-degree statutory rape of a person less than 14. Pratt remains jailed on a $200,000 bond.Law enforcement and prosecutors did not release any additional information o...Analysis: St. Louis among the worst places in the U.S. for air pollution
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:19:44 GMT
ST. LOUIS - Large tracts of the St. Louis metro area are awash in air pollutants 30 times smaller in diameter than a single human hair, according to analysis from The Guardian newspaper.Researchers from the University of Washington and Virginia Tech took modeling and data from the Center for Air, Climate and Energy Solutions, and applied that to metropolitan areas across the contiguous United States. According to the analysis, neighborhoods or regions with a higher population of persons of color suffer greater air pollution.Illustration courtesy of the Environmental Protection AgencyThe analysis uses publicly available data from 2011 to 2015 on the levels of "fine particulate matter," also known as PM 2.5. The Guardian says those years are the most recent on record that can be applied to a national model. Racial demographic data was used from the same time period for the sake of consistency.What is PM 2.5? The Environmental Protection Agency defines it as "fine, inhalable particles,...Latest news
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