‘We are at the breaking point:’ BMC doctors rally for wage increase, benefits in new contract
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 13:09:29 GMT
Hundreds of Boston Medical Center residents gathered along the street outside the hospital Thursday afternoon, demanding a living wage and critical benefits in their new contract.“We should not have to sacrifice ourselves to provide the great care that we do to our communities,” said Dr. Taha Khan, a resident physician in pediatric neurology. “We should be able to pour from a full cup. Our ask is very simple. Boston Medical Center needs to pay us enough and provide the benefits we need to live and work in one of the most expensive cities in this country.”The Committee of Interns and Residents union representing the hospital’s 750 resident physicians has been in negotiations with the hospital since April, representatives said, and returned to the bargaining table with a proposal Thursday night.That proposal, Psychiatry resident and bargaining committee member Dr. Anisah Hashmi said, includes a salary increase catching up with inflation and a living stipe...Jose Quintana solid in debut but Mets’ bats fall short in loss to White Sox
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 13:09:29 GMT
The Mets got a solid debut on the mound but a no-show performance at the dish.Jose Quintana donned the Mets’ uniform for the first time on Thursday afternoon but received virtually no help from his offense in their 6-2 loss to the Chicago White Sox. Quintana returned from a rib lesion and gave Buck Showalter’s squad a decent performance.The southpaw tossed five innings allowing two runs on six hits while striking out three. The 34-year-old allowed the two runs in the first two innings of the game with Eloy Jiminez’s RBI single and Elvis Andrus’ sac-fly in the second.However, Quintana’s counterpart was just slightly better as Michael Kopech kept the Amazin’s bats at bay in the afternoon matchup.Kopech tossed 5.2 innings allowing just one run on two hits while striking out five. The Mets did work four walks against the 27-year-old, however, Omar Narvaez’s fifth-inning solo homer — his first as a Met — was the only damage they could...Boston board says alleged North End shooter can’t hold liquor license
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 13:09:29 GMT
The Boston Licensing Board is weighing whether Monica’s Trattoria should remain open, given the status of its current manager, who is facing an attempted murder charge in connection with last week’s North End shooting.Patrick Mendoza is on the run from police, and did not appear as requested at a Thursday Licensing Board meeting that was convened to review his “character and fitness” as licensee and manager of record at the North End restaurant.His absence is grounds for revoking, suspending or modifying his liquor license, according to Licensing Board Chair Kathleen Joyce.William Ferullo, an attorney for the restaurant, urged the board to follow “its own precedent,” and allow for a replacement manager to be appointed, which he said has been granted in the past when managers get sick, become incapacitated or take a vacation. This would allow the restaurant to remain open, he said.“I would have to take issue with this,” Joyce said. “This is really unprecedented. We do have precedents...Missing Las Vegas dog found in El Cajon
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 13:09:29 GMT
EL CAJON, Calif. -- Talk about a dog's journey! A pup from Las Vegas miraculously wound up 335 miles west of his home in El Cajon, animal officials said.Ryder, a 9-year-old Chihuahua-terrier mix, went missing from his owner's yard in Las Vegas on July 3, Nina Thompson with the San Diego Humane Society (SDHS) said in a press release Thursday. Fourteen days later, the dog was brought in to the Humane Society's El Cajon campus as a stray by a person who said they found the dog outside a Ross store in El Cajon. SpaceX rocket launch seen in San Diego skies "Luckily, the dog had a microchip, and the Lost & Found team immediately called the number to locate Ryder’s owners," Thompson said.Ryder's dog owners were ecstatic and very surprised on how Ryder ended up in California, according to SDHS. Debbie Ferris, Ryder's dog mom, along with his "aunt" Darlene Hardee and Ryder's best dog friend Blondie, made the drive to reunite with their pup Thursday afternoon in El Cajon.Snyder fined $60 million by NFL for sexually harassing employee, financial improprieties
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 13:09:29 GMT
Washington Commanders owner Dan Snyder sexually harassed a team employee and oversaw team executives who deliberately withheld millions of dollars in revenue from other clubs, and he has agreed to pay a $60 million fine, the league announced Thursday.The NFL released a 23-page report detailing the findings of an independent investigation into Snyder’s conduct just minutes after its owners unanimously approved the sale of the Commanders to Josh Harris for a record $6.05 billion. The fine represents 1 per cent of the sale price; Snyder bought the team, then known as the Redskins, for $800 million.The investigation was led by former Securities and Exchange Commission chair Mary Jo White and conducted by her law firm, Debevoise & Plimpton. The league had pledged to make the findings of the probe public.Investigators concluded that Washington withheld $11 million in revenue that should have been shared with other teams, an amount the report suggests may have been far greater. W...Unoccupied homes destroyed in large Richmond Hill fire
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 13:09:29 GMT
Multiple unoccupied homes have been destroyed following a significant fire in a Richmond Hill subdivision.First responders in York Region were called to the subdivision in the Bethesda Side Road and Leslie Street area around 7:30 p.m. on Thursday.York Regional Police said the fire started in one of the homes under construction and then rapidly spread in the complex.As a result, four unoccupied homes caught fire inside what authorities called a new subdivision.Fire crews continued to tend to the flames. No injuries have been reported.New York police officer indicted, accused of using stun gun 7 times on handcuffed man
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 13:09:29 GMT
MOUNT VERNON, N.Y. (AP) — A police sergeant in a New York City suburb has been indicted on federal civil rights charges, accused of using his stun gun multiple times on a handcuffed man in mental crisis who was being involuntarily taken for medical treatment, prosecutors announced Thursday.Sgt. Mario Stewart, a commander on the force in Mount Vernon, fired his Taser at the man seven times in two minutes, according to the indictment. He is charged with violating the person’s constitutional rights by using excessive force. “Stewart’s alleged conduct not only betrayed his duty as an officer to protect those under his charge but also violated the law,” U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said.Kevin Conway, Stewart’s attorney, said his client was doing his duty and did not violate anyone’s rights or commit a crime.“He merely was discharging his duty in responding to a mental health call for an individual who was in an agitated mental and physical state,” Conway said.The sergeant and othe...Crowd favourite Tommy Fleetwood shares British Open lead, McIlroy is among the survivors
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 13:09:29 GMT
HOYLAKE, England (AP) — The British Open showed again Thursday that even after 163 years, golf’s oldest championship can still deliver a few surprises.It started with Christo Lamprecht, the South African amateur as tall as a flag stick and almost as thin, making three birdies over his last six holes and posting a 5-under 66 to become the first amateur in 12 years to share the 18-hole lead at the Open.Curiosity about the 22-year-old amateur turned to glee at the site of the local hero, Tommy Fleetwood, running off three straight birdies on the back nine at Royal Liverpool to join him atop the leaderboard. Emiliano Grillo of Argentina became the third to post 66 by holing a birdie putt from 50 feet on the last hole.Not to be overlooked was Jordan Spieth hitting a shank; Rory McIlroy missing a 3-foot putt; Justin Thomas going bunker-to-bunker-to-rough — each shot farther away from the flag than the previous one — in making a 9 on the 18th hole to post his highest round in a major...The Gaslight Anthem were labeled ‘Bruce Springsteen copycats.’ Now the Boss is on their new single
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 13:09:29 GMT
LOS ANGELES (AP) — For years, a common critique of the beloved New Jersey rock band The Gaslight Anthem was to label them “Bruce Springsteen” copycats. Now they’ve released a song with the Boss.“History Books,” the title track from the band’s first album in nine years, is big-hearted freeway rock, made ascendent by frontman Brian Fallon and Springsteen’s tremulous harmonies.“There’s a definitely a little wink in there,” Fallon tells The Associated Press about the song and his band’s long-held comparisons to the Boss, which once escalated to the point where he wrote to his fans, “My name isn’t Bruce.”“Some people kind of wrote us off. It’s like ‘Now write this off,’” he says. “We’ve got the approval of the guy! What are you going to say? You can’t say anything!”If there is an intersection where Green Day, Social Distortion, and the Replacements’ various styles of melodic punk meets Springsteen, it is found in The Gasli...Undue influence? Anonymous donations to World Health Organization’s new foundation raise concerns
Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 13:09:29 GMT
Nearly 40% of the money raised by the WHO Foundation in its first two years came from anonymous sources, worrying some that donors may be trying to influence the World Health Organization and its role in shaping global health policy with their gifts.The foundation, launched in 2020 to help raise private sector funds for the WHO, said it received $66 million in direct gifts through 2022, with $26 million coming from donors who chose not to be publicly named. Anil Soni, WHO Foundation CEO, told The Associated Press the foundation’s board, which includes a representative from the WHO, knows the donors’ identities and that the foundation will not accept a gift if there is a conflict of interest. “They want to be anonymous because they’re otherwise solicited or even targeted because they’re seen to be a source of wealth,” Soni said in an interview. “And I respect that.”The foundation, which is based in Switzerland, is not required to disclose its donors. Some global health practiti...Latest news
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