Love Island’s Molly-Mae can’t control her laughter as mum rages about trolls – Mirror Online

Love Island star Molly-Mae Hague has met her match - her own mum, Debbie.

Molly was in hysterics as Debbie joked about all the nasty messages Molly has received since she first appeared on Love Island.

The blond beauty, who was runner-up alongside boxer boyfriend Tommy Fury , filmed her mum driving as she sat in the back chuckling away.

Debbie rages: "Podgy knees, fat, put on six stone since leaving the villa.

"Ugly, literally ugly, ugly, small hands, with no brain."

Fans were quick to brand Debbie as "savage" when she made an appearance on Love Island.

Molly captioned the clip: "She kills me. And you guys thought she was savage to me in the villa...this is just the way we are."

The 20 year-old has been the target of cruel online trolling that has often accused her of being fake with her feelings for Tommy.

The pair have shrugged off the accusations though, and their relationship seems to be going from strength to strength.

They've even moved in together in Tommy's native Manchester, and they even addressed the question of a larger brood on Molly's YouTube channel recently.

"We definitely both want children," Molly dished, "But obviously we're both only 20 years old."

Tommy jokingly chimes in: "We've been trying to make children most nights."

The hunk continues: "Yes we have, we've been snoodling in the bedroom, I want twins by the time I'm 22, simple as that.

"Molly wants six kids, I want eight."

Molly keeps insisting he's just joking about.

Still, it seems they're both serious about marriage, as they revealed in a recent interview with OK! magazine .

They lost out in the final to Amber Gill and Greg O'Shea, but that pairing didn't last as they became the quickest winning couple to call it quits in a record five weeks outside the villa.

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Love Island's Molly-Mae can't control her laughter as mum rages about trolls - Mirror Online

Royal Caribbean Announces Private Island in the South Pacific – Cruise Critic

(2.50 p.m. AEST) Royal Caribbean has announced the location of the lines newest private island destination 'Perfect Day at Lelepa', in Vanuatu. Set to open in 2022, Perfect Day at Lelepa will be the Southern Hemispheres first private island destination for cruise visitors.

The announcement of the new project was made by Vanuatus Prime Minister, Charlot Salwai, and Royal Caribbean International President and CEO Michael Bayley.

Salwai and Bayley said the destination will be created in partnership with the community of Vanuatu to showcase the natural beauty and diverse local culture of the island nation as well as provide employment and education opportunities.

Perfect Day at Lelepa will also be built with sustainability features designed to safeguard the islands ecosystems and will be the first carbon neutral private cruise island in the world, with standards for carbon neutrality audited and certified by an independent third-party expert.

We believe our destinations should be sustainably designed, Bayley said. That idea goes beyond simply protecting the ecological features of Lelepa and includes showing respect for the people and traditions that make this a special place.

Vanuatu Prime Minister Salwai said, Vanuatu is a true paradise for both our people and the visitors we welcome to our shores each year. Today marks a major step forward in our island nations close relationship with Royal Caribbean and one that will support sustainable growth for future generations. The Ni-Vanuatu people look forward to welcoming Royal Caribbean guests from around the world to enjoy extraordinary adventures and relaxation during their Perfect Day at Lelepa.

Bayley said, Anyone who has encountered the tremendous natural beauty of Lelepa can understand why it is the perfect setting for Perfect Day. Our guests who travel to the South Pacific are seeking authentic adventures and genuine relaxation, and they will find both here.

Perfect Day at Lelepa will have a different look and feel from Royal Caribbeans Perfect Day at CocoCay (pictured above). Bailey went on to say that guests around the world all have different definitions for their perfect day and all of them are right. He is confident the designers of the first Perfect Day in the South Pacific will create an experience that suits the destination.

Cox Architecture, a sustainable, design-focused contemporary architectural firm based in Australia, will serve as the lead architect on the Perfect Day at Lelepa project which is scheduled to open in three year's time.

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Royal Caribbean Announces Private Island in the South Pacific - Cruise Critic

The Ordinary Hosts an Oyster Extravaganza at Bowens Island in November – Eater Charleston

JAMES ISLAND Restaurateurs Mike Lata and Adam Nemirow of FIG and the Ordinary will host the Charleston Oyster Social on Sunday, November 24, on Bowens Island. The fundraiser will benefit Lowcountry Local First and the South Carolina Shellfish Growers Association. Participants include Binkys Oyster Bar, Bowens Island, Chubby Fish, Delaney Oyster House, FIG, Le Farfalle, The Grocery, Home Team BBQ, Leons Oyster Shop, the Macintosh, Nico, the Ordinary, Obstinate Daughter, and Rappahannock Oyster Bar. Tickets are available for $125.

EASTSIDE Food magazine the Local Palate and Breakthru Beverage hosts its annual Whiskey After Dark series on Wednesday, October 16, at 7:30 p.m., at the Cedar Room. There will be more than 100 whiskeys and fare from Rodney Scotts BBQ, Sam Jones BBQ, Southern Soul Barbecue, and Martins Bar-B-Que Joint. Tickets start at $65. A portion of proceeds will benefit Charleston Animal Society.

UPPER KING Pop-ups for a Purpose and Charleston Animal Society invites pet lovers to join them for a Rooftop Hop of King Street. On Friday, October 18, from 4:00 p.m. to midnight, participants will explore the tops of Uptown Social, Pour, and Stars, with discounts on food and beverages. Tickets are $20.

LOWER KING On Thursday, October 24, Charleston Grill will put out a special tasting menu from chef Michelle Weaver with pairings from wine distributor David McCarus from McCarus Beverage. Each course paired with Italian wine from Oliver McCrum. Look for courses like veal tenderloin and braised lamb with truffle risotto. The evening is $175 per person. Reservations can be made by calling (843) 577-4522.

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The Ordinary Hosts an Oyster Extravaganza at Bowens Island in November - Eater Charleston

Rock of Ages features Staten Island guitarist in off-Broadway run – SILive.com

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- As the lights go up at New World Stages in Manhattan for a Saturday matinee performance, Staten Island native John Barry props himself on stage, slings his guitar over his shoulders and gets into rockstar mode.

Its why the Princes Bay resident was a natural choice to be a substitute member of the Rock of Ages band. The production, which is celebrating its 10th anniversary in an off-Broadway setting, has let the Staten Islander grace its stage in recent months as part of the shows pit band.

Its amazing that they take the time to entertain a kid from Staten Island, Barry told SILive.com. Thats all I am. Im a dude from Staten Island who plays guitar and its an honor to be asked back every time they do.

He admits that the stereotype of knowing someone in the business helped land him the role, and after shadowing the guitarist he would fill in for for a few performances, he was ready to go.

Staten Island native John Barry featured in the "Rock of Ages" off-Broadway production at New World Stages October 5, 2019. (Staten Island Advance/ Victoria Priola)

Its a little nerve-racking to be honest with you, Barry said of watching the show from a seat in the audience before joining it. My goal is to be as true to the soundtrack as possible, and its really amazing how much work goes into it on the bands part backstage.

The Rock of Ages set has no orchestra area, so the musicians are center stage throughout the entire performance. Members of the pit band are essentially characters in the show, which is different for Barry since he has very little acting experience.

Being in theater, though, is in his blood.

I played in some pits in middle school and throughout high school, the Susan E. Wagner High School alumnus said. My aunt, Diane Zerega, is a music theater teacher at Wagner High School so theater has been in my life for as long as I can remember."

A STATEN ISLAND MUSICIAN ON THE RISE

Barry has always dreamed of shredding for a living.

During family trips to Broadway, he found himself focused on the guitar section of the orchestra in shows like The Sound of Music and Lion King.

But it wasnt until he went to the Berklee College of Music in Boston that he discovered how to turn his passion into a career.

Barry said that teacher William Levay at Barnes Intermediate School in Great Kills was a role model to him growing up.

Hes the reason I have long hair, he said.

When I was in middle school and [Levay] was, like, the biggest influence in my life, I wanted to be a teacher, Barry said. I wanted to do for kids what he had done for me.

While the musician wouldnt disclose how many shows he has left on the Rock of Ages run, he encouraged people to see it even if hes not performing.

Everyone in the cast, crew and the pit has been absolutely amazing, he said. Theyve been so welcoming and its a really nice vibe."

HOW TO SEE ROCK OF AGES

Performances of Rock of Ages take place at New World Stages, 340 W. 50th St., until Jan. 12. Show times are Monday at 8 p.m., Wednesday at 8 p.m., Thursday at 8 p.m., Friday at 8 p.m., Saturday at 2 and 8 p.m., and Sunday at 3 and 7:30 p.m.

For more information about tickets, call 212-239-6200 or go online.

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Rock of Ages features Staten Island guitarist in off-Broadway run - SILive.com

Sex offender with violent history moved from McNeill Island to Spokane – KREM.com

SPOKANE, Wash. A registered sex offender with a violent history identified was recently released from McNeil Island and is now living on the 1200 block of N. Lincoln street, according to Spokane police.

Shawn D. Botner is a level 3 sex offender who was recently released from McNeill Island. Botner has a violent history of sexual assault and predatory behavior, according to Sgt. Terry Preuninger with the Spokane Police Department.

Botner's classification level reflects the potential to reoffend.

Botner was convicted of attempted rape in 1992, when he stalked and attacked a female student, strangling her with an electric cord and dragging her into a restroom, Preuninger said.

In 2006 Botner was found to be in violation of his community custody agreement when Spokane police found him stalking a woman who worked at a local business and discovered he was in the Gonzaga area and on the centennial trail "engaging in predatory behavior."

He was found in possession of a bag containing women's clothing, sex toys, pornography, and a notebook containing hand written notes detailing plans for rape and murder, Preuninger said.

Botner was also convicted of Indecent Liberties in 1988 and Unlawful Imprisonment in 1991.

Spokane Police

RELATED: 'This is our last resort': McCluskey family suing Univ. of Utah for $56 million

RELATED: 'Their hands are tied': Spokane Co. responds to backlash over sex offender relocation

Editor's note: The below video is about limitations officials face when sex offenders are relocated to Spokane.

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Sex offender with violent history moved from McNeill Island to Spokane - KREM.com

Opponents Worried About Spaceport Camden’s Impact On Cumberland Island – WJCT NEWS

The FAA has yet to approve a new commercial spaceport in Camden County, Georgia.

Supporters of the new port include everyone from Georgia Governor Brian Kemp to former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich.

However, a vocal contingent of local residents is speaking out against the project.

In particular, they say theyre worried about the impact of launching experimental rockets over the environmentally sensitive Cumberland Island National Seashore.

Harriet Bluffs resident Steve Weinkle, who opposes the spaceport spoke out on First Coast Connect with Melissa Ross on Wednesday.

Cumberland Island is a national treasure. Its unique in that, it has a 10,000-acre wilderness area. Wilderness areas are accorded the highest level of environmental protection in the United States. Launching rockets over a wilderness is far more impactful than launching rockets over the Grand Canyon or launching rockets over the Statue of Liberty, Weinkle said.

Related: Listen to the full interview with Weinkle

Meanwhile, supporters of the Camden Spaceport say it would bring good-paying, high tech jobs to the communities of Kingsland and St. Marys.

According to a Tribune & Georgianstory published in March, the county has spent more than $6.5 million on Spaceport Camden and that cost could rise to well over $11 million.

Melissa Ross can be reached at mross@wjct.org, 904-358-6382 or on Twitter at@MelissainJax.

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Opponents Worried About Spaceport Camden's Impact On Cumberland Island - WJCT NEWS

Staten Island Railway delayed because of slippery tracks; wind advisory issued – SILive.com

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- As Staten Island is bracing for a wet and windy afternoon and night, the Staten Island Railway is experiencing delays in both directions ahead of Wednesdays rush hour.

SIR trains are delayed in both directions because of slippery rails caused by the inclement weather along the line, according to an MTA announcement.

Those commuting by car will not be any luckier when crossing the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge on Wednesday.

Due to high winds and road conditions motorists are asked to drive at reduced speeds of 20 MPH," MTA.info says.

The MTA also warned motorists that rain is causing dangerous, wet roadways along the span.

The National Weather Service issued a wind advisory for New York City, including Staten Island.

Winds are projected to reach between 20 and 30 mph with gusts in excess of 50 mph, according to the NWS.

The advisory will be in effect from 10 p.m. Wednesday to 6 p.m. on Thursday.

The NWS is advising residents to keep their electronics charged and turn their refrigerators and freezers to a colder setting, should a power outage occur because of the wind.

Earlier today, the NWS also issued a coastal flood statement for Staten Island, warning that minor coastal flooding could occur Wednesday night.

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Staten Island Railway delayed because of slippery tracks; wind advisory issued - SILive.com

How a Mexican Generals Exile in Staten Island Led to Modern Chewing Gum – Atlas Obscura

Two years before he died senile and broke, the disgraced Mexican General Antonio Lpez de Santa Anna lived in a modest residence in Staten Island. Known variously as the executioner of hundreds at The Alamo, the man who lost Texas, and His Most Serene Highness and The Eagle, Santa Anna was missing a leg and had recently been conned out of tens of thousands of pesos. He spent his exile moving among high society, plotting to get rich or return to Mexico, and chewing on something called chicle.

Santa Anna hoped that his supply of chicle, a natural latex harvested from trees in the same fashion as rubber, would make him rich. Hed pitched Thomas Adams, a local inventor, on developing this foreign substance into an inexpensive replacement for rubber. It never worked. But after he left for Mexico for the final time, dumping his chicle on Adams, it became something else: the first modern chewing gum.

Santa Anna was born in 1794 to an aristocratic family in Veracruz, Mexico. A conflicted character from as early as his mid-teens, he fought with the Spanish in Mexicos struggle for independence but had a change of heart a few years later. Santa Anna ultimately became a Mexican general and helped the rebels overthrow his former colonial comrades. Like many revolution-leading generals, his next act was as a populist dictator, becoming Mexicos eighth president after years of struggling to consolidate the countrys independence and years of infighting for political power.

To boost his image, Santa Anna pulled propaganda stunts that included staging a state funeral for an amputated leg hed lost in battle. (His wooden prosthetic was later captured by Americans as a war trophy and allegedly displayed by P. T. Barnumalthough that may have been one of the showmans many hoaxes.) Alongside his military victories, they made him immensely popular. His supporters praised him as Liberator of Veracruz, Hero of Tampico, and Founder of the Republic.

His habit of chewing chicle, though, was unremarkable. After all, chewing the waxy sap of the Yuctan Peninsulas abundant sapodilla tree was common in Santa Annas birthplace. Following ancient Maya tradition, chicleros had harvested the sapodilla trees resin under the zig-zag slash of a machete for centuries. Chewy, odorless, and tasteless, it was an ancient form of gum.

Santa Anna was president of Mexico no less than 11 times, flip-flopping on issues when it benefited him. To first gain power, he stood for freedom, but once installed, he told a U.S. ambassador, A hundred years to come my people will not be fit for liberty unenlightened as they are. Increasingly out of touch, Santa Anna began to lose public support.

The fatal blow to his reputation came with the loss of large swaths of territory to Texas and the United States. Still, his grandiose sense of self-importance persisted. Infamously captured at San Jacintothe battle in which Mexico lost Texas and was considered revenge for Santa Annas cruelty at the Alamohe proudly remarked to his captors that man may consider himself born to no common destiny who has conquered the Napoleon of the West.

Forced into exile in the mid 1850s, Santa Anna floated around Cuba, Colombia, and Jamaica. In the Danish West Indies, he met with U.S. Secretary of State William Seward. Misinterpreting this as American support, writes Jennifer P. Mathews in Chicle: The Chewing Gum of the Americas, he was convinced by a Colombian revolutionary that the U.S. intended to back him against the current ruler of Mexico. Blinded by ambition, Santa Anna invested personal funds into the ploy and voyaged to New York City.

Fatefully, he brought his supply of chicle with him.

In New York, he learned that it was a lie. When all was said and done, Santa Anna was caught up in costly litigation, defrauded of tens of thousands of pesos, and forced to lease an unimpressive home on Staten Island, which was then not even within New York City limits.

Living among the Islands modest agricultural and fishing community, Santa Anna pursued his most far-fetched machination yet: to replace rubber with chicle. Santa Annas interpreter had befriended local glass merchant and inventor Thomas Adams, a Civil War photographer who had settled down to raise seven children. Sharing his chicle supply, Santa Anna implored him to develop it into a cheap alternative to the costly rubber used in carriage tires. If it worked, theyd become rich.

Chicle did make Adams rich, but not as a replacement for rubber.

During the late 1850s, Adams and his son Thomas Jr. made many attempts to vulcanize chicle. They yielded nothing, and Santa Annas focus drifted. Near the end of his life, penniless, beaten, and sliding down a steep slope of physical decline, he was allowed to return to Mexico City. Two years later, the Napoleon of the West died, unaware that his lasting legacy would come from leaving his chicle in Staten Island.

Adams had sunk $30,000 into the rubber project, to no avail. But before he gave up, he noticed a girl buy gum at a drugstore.

In Chicle: The Chewing Gum of the Americas, Mathews explains that at the time, chewing gum was nothing like it is today. Made with a paraffin base, it was brittle after chewing and often contained impurities. In comparison, as Thomas Adams noted in his patent application, chicle gum contained nothing of an unwholesome character and it could be stretched, molded into form, or broken and instantly reunited.

Inspired, Adams and his sons boiled down some chicle and rolled up a batch of flavorless balls. First put on sale in 1859, they sold so quickly that Adams and his sons went all-in on chicle chewing gum. Together, the family founded Adams Sons and Company and sold Adams New York Gum - Snapping and Stretching for a penny a pop. They soon added flavors to their gum, and the company took off.

By the late 1800s, Adams Sons and Co. had turned into a conglomerate called American Chicle Company that employed more than 300 workers at the largest chewing-gum plant in the world, near the Brooklyn Bridge. Chewing gum became so popular that, in an article arguing against Prohibition, Nikola Tesla claimed excessive gum chewing was more dangerous than alcohol abuse.

Adams continued innovating. Under his direction, pharmacies received chewing-gum machines and New York subway platforms saw the installation of Americas first vending machines, which sold Adamss popular Tutti Frutti flavor. Chicle became the base of gum the world over, giving birth to the $19 billion industry we know today.

Eventually chicle was overfarmed, leading to the use of alternatives. While Adams and Santa Anna sought to replace rubber with chicle, in the end it was the other way around, when synthetic polymers (a kind of rubber) developed by a Staten Island chemist in 1909 became the base of choice for gum manufacturers.

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How a Mexican Generals Exile in Staten Island Led to Modern Chewing Gum - Atlas Obscura

‘SNL’ Parodies ‘Love Island’ and It’s Almost as Bizarre as the Real Thing – Thrillist

Is it, like, a requirement for every Saturday Night Live cast member to be able to do a really bizarre British accent? Cecily Strong proved herself worthy in last season's Great British Bake-Off sketch,starring her and Emily Blunt as two disastrous chavs, but this weekend half of SNL's cast showed off their impressions of people from all the places in the United Kingdom that you won't see on the brochures.

Part of the joy of being an American watching British dating showLove Island is getting to hear all the accents that aren't featured in Doctor Who or Downton Abbey. Truly, some of them sound like downright gibberish -- and this is coming from someone who just watched all five seasons of Peaky Blinders in under two weeks. "You've heard an English accent, you've heard an Irish accent," says the narrator of this fake-promo sketch. "Now, here are all the little weirdies in between."

Host Phoebe Waller-Bridge plays Essex-born Bellarosa, whose parents are a boxer and a pub, and she's up against Strong's Grace, a 22-year-old 41-year-old from Liverpool, and Chloe Fineman's Shiobhan is "from the part of Ireland where the soil is bones." Alex Moffat's character is from a part of England simply called "Murder-Suicide," and Aidy Bryant's catchphrase is just, "...Wot??" And absolutely none of them has anything resembling relationship standards."It turns out, they also have 100% pure grade trash," the show's announcer says, "just like us!"

Next week's host is Stranger Things' David Harbour, which is pronounced like it's spelled.

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'SNL' Parodies 'Love Island' and It's Almost as Bizarre as the Real Thing - Thrillist

Love Islands Amy Hart reveals starring on Love Island was an obsession and an ITV psychologist would get in – The Sun

LOVE Island's Amy Hart has revealed how ITV's 'welfare girl' had to force her to eat and would comfort her in bed after her split from Curtis Pritchard.

Amy bravely opened up about the heartache that caused her to sensationally quit the villa as she revealed her own struggles with mental health.

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Amy, 27, explained the lengths ITV went to in order to look after her in the villa, saying: "The welfare girl came in every single lunchtime apart from one day a week to check how much water we were having, how much wed eaten and how we were.

"And when it all went t**s up for me and I was lying in bed crying at lunchtime, she would get into bed with me and just stroke my head and talk to me and now I speak to her on the phone twice a week to check how I am.

Weve been given 18 months of sessions as mandatory from ITV and then we can have more if we want them afterwards. Im very unorganised and busy at the moment so I let my psyche sessions go and [my welfare rep] ended up phoning my manager and saying we need to get a date in Amys diary when shes free so they are really on it.

Speaking to Heat magazine for its Wheres Your Head At? campaign, the former British Airways stewardess said: "I lost a stone in my first six months in BA and when Curtis finished with me I wasnt hungry and wanted to control my [diet] again, but ITV stepped in and made me eat as the psyche was watching me all the time."

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Amy admitted she was desperate to star in the show, and trying to achieve her dream took over every aspect of her life.

"It started way before being in the villa," she said. "I applied for Love Island in October so I had this goal of Love Island, everything in my life was centred around love island.

"So, my Instagram, everything - I'd want the ultimate picture. I'd never been interested in the "Instagram life" before, but I was like "I need to get my Instagram good for Love Island," so everything...

"Borderline obsession I would say with getting on love island, because I thought: 'it is gonna solve all of my problems. I'm gonna get a boyfriend and my life's gonna be perfect after that'."

She sensationally quit the villa after Curtis kissed Jourdan Riane and admitted his head had been turned while Amy was away in Casa Amor. Curtis then moved on with Maura Higgins after she revealed her crush on him.

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Amy opened up about her struggle ahead of World Mental Health Day on October 10, telling Heat: "I have had mental health issues in the past but I was reluctant to accept it. I didnt admit that I had anxiety until a couple of years after I first started my job flying at British Airways.

"My previous anxiety issues manifested within food. I would order the biggest dinner youve ever seen and take one bite and start shaking, crying and saying I cant eat this anymore.

"I felt like wasnt in control of the rest of my life - I was convinced I was going to get sacked, so food was my control thing.

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Since leaving the villa Amy has been inundated with nightclub appearances and has been a panellist on Loose Women.

Meanwhile Curtis has landed a fashion deal with Debenhams as well as becoming an ambassador for Weight Watchers.

Maura has a lucrative fashion deal with Boohoo.com and has been signed up for Dancing on Ice.

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STRICTLY GLUM DANCING Kevin Clifton moans 'told you so' after he & Anneka get Strictly boot

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never been better Strictly spat backstage as Katya Jones makes 'dig' at ex-husband Neil

JOE BLOW Joe Swash slams 's***' holiday with Stacey Solomon and complains non-stop

Out of hand Love Island's Molly-Mae accused of photoshopping as fans spot her tiny hands

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STRICTLY 'FLING' Strictly's AJ Pritchard enjoyed a 'secret fling' with co-star Daisy Lowe

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Amy spoke to Heat after pledging support to Wheres Your Head At? To get help on mental health issues and find out how you can support our campaign so that mental and physical health are given equal treatment in the workplace please go to http://www.wheresyourheadat.org.

Got a story? email digishowbiz@the-sun.co.uk or call us direct on 02077824220.

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Love Islands Amy Hart reveals starring on Love Island was an obsession and an ITV psychologist would get in - The Sun

Oyster Creek. Three Mile Island. How the power grid can lose 2 nuclear plants in a year. – lehighvalleylive.com

The fission of uranium-235 ceased Sept. 20 at Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania and a year before, nearly to the day, at Oyster Creek Nuclear Generating Station in New Jersey.

As the steam generated by the heat of the atoms nuclei splitting dwindled to a wisp and the turbine generators fell silent, the regional power grid lost more than 1,400 megawatts of carbon-free electricity generation -- enough to power more than 1.1 million homes.

More nuclear power plant retirements may be on the horizon: PJM, the Pennsylvania-based coordinator of wholesale electricity in 13 states plus the District of Columbia, has already begun planning for the planned retirements of the dual-reactor, 1,813-megawatt Beaver Valley Power Station in Pennsylvania and the DavisBesse and Perry nuclear power plants that together generate 2,143 megawatts in Ohio.

PJMs grid, which covers Pennsylvania and New Jersey, had 183,454 megawatts of installed generating capacity available as of May 2019. The company puts the total capacity of the recently retired nuclear plants and the three planned for retirement at 5,387 megawatts, or about 3% of overall capacity. (PJM says its all-time highest power use was 165,563 megawatts in the summer of 2006.)

Had PJM identified reliability concerns with either Three Mile Island or Oyster Creek, it could have paid their operators to remain open, through what is called a "reliability must run," PJM spokesman Jeff Shields said. Or it could have outlined new power-transmission projects needed to offset the loss.

Neither step was necessary.

"And we also have a pretty healthy queue of replacement generation that's coming in, especially in Pennsylvania and Ohio with the shale gas," he said.

The grid counts 11,415 megawatts of new natural gas-fired electricity generation coming online in 2018 and 2019 and an additional 10,514 megawatts from gas expected to go in-service in 2020 through 2023. Operators of those future plants have signed what are called interconnection service agreements with PJM.

"That's sort of a stage at which the projects are likely to get built," Shields said of the agreements.

All told, new gas, wind and solar plants are projected to add 29,097 megawatts to the grid, as 19,037 megawatts of capacity are lost from retired coal, gas and nuclear plants, PJM says. That's a net increase of more than 10,000 megawatts.

The loss of more than 5,000 megawatts of carbon-free electricity from nuclear plants comes at a time when local and state leaders are looking to stem greenhouse gas emissions.

Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf on Thursday took a step toward capping greenhouse gas emissions from power plants, as part of an effort to fight climate change in a heavily populated and fossil fuel-rich state that has long been one of the nation's biggest polluters and power producers, The Associated Press reports.

The Democrat ordered his administration to start working on regulations to bring Pennsylvania into a nine-state consortium of Northeastern and mid-Atlantic states that sets a price and limits on greenhouse gas emissions from power plants, according to the AP; joining the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, however, could face pushback from the Republican-controlled Legislature, which is historically protective of Pennsylvanias influential coal and natural gas industries.

The good news is that new power plants, fueled by natural gas from the Marcellus Shale underlying Pennsylvania and neighboring states, are more efficient than the old fossil fuel plants they are replacing, PJM says.

"The gas generation, those generators are increasingly more efficient," Shields said. "They still do have carbon emissions. To that extent, that argument will continue.

"Basically we've seen emissions go way down in our footprint, and that's mostly explained by the replacement of coal for gas and renewables, although renewables are still making headway."

Kurt Bresswein | For lehighvalleylive.com

Materials are amassed Friday, Oct. 4, 2019, for construction of the new Pohatcong Solar Farm at Carpentersville Road and High Street in Pohatcong Township. The township land use board in July 2019 approved the project, which WFMZ-TV 69 reports will generate 10 megawatts for the regional power grid.

PJM projections show that if all three nuclear plants planned for retirement in Pennsylvania and Ohio go offline, carbon dioxide emissions would rise by about 3.7% above 2019 levels. Other emissions, sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxide, would drop, thanks to older fossil fuel plants shutting down. If those nuclear plants remain online and all or even half of the new gas plants open, all three pollutants would drop across PJMs territory.

Three Mile Island, the site of the United States worst commercial nuclear accident in 1979, was closed by operator Exelon Corp. because it was no longer profitable, according to the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission. Left with a single reactor, like Oyster Creek, TMI lost more than $100 million between 2012 and 2016, the commission says. It also lost out on valuable revenue from PJM in what are known base residual auctions.

Across all of PJM, 10,643 megawatts of nuclear capacity did not clear in this years auction for 2021-22, compared with 3,243 megawatts that failed to clear last year, according to Exelon.

This represents the largest volume of nuclear capacity ever not selected in the auction. Thats partly to blame on cheaper natural gas, as Pennsylvanias become the nations second-largest gas producer after Texas, state and federal analysts say.

Statewide, natural gas has replaced nuclear as the top source of electricity in Pennsylvania, the U.S. Energy Information Administration says.

From a cost perspective, PJM projects the closure of costly nuclear power plants to drive down the price of electricity as that trend toward natural gas continues.

As for the future of the nuclear plants recently shut down in Pennsylvania and New Jersey, Exelons Oyster Creek is set to become an interconnection station between the companys proposed 1,100-megawatt offshore Ocean Wind project and PJMs grid, nj.com reported last month.

At Three Mile Island, the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission on Sept. 26 certified cessation of power operations and the permanent removal of fuel from the Unit 1 reactor vessel that remained online after the 1979 partial meltdown that ended Unit 2s run. Decommissioning of both reactors is now underway, the commission says.

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Kurt Bresswein may be reached at kbresswein@lehighvalleylive.com. Follow him on Twitter @KurtBresswein and Facebook. Find lehighvalleylive.com on Facebook.

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Oyster Creek. Three Mile Island. How the power grid can lose 2 nuclear plants in a year. - lehighvalleylive.com

Silicon Island: The Future STEM Economy Of Puerto Rico – Forbes

September 20, 2017, is a day that will be forever remembered in Puerto Rican history. It's the day Hurricane Maria made landfall along the eastern coast of the island of Borinquen. The onslaught that followed devastated the island. A million people were left without running water for months, millions more were left without electricity some for over a year and the death toll numbering in the thousands will never be truly known.

This led to an economic fallout that caused hundreds of thousands to leave the island and worsened the economic reality of thousands more who stayed. According to a report from USA Today, some estimates had the total economic impact of the hurricane at over $100 billion. The report also claimed that over 40% of working Americans on the island of over 3 million inhabitants lost their jobs and have been unable to recover. Political turmoil both on the island and at the federal level have further worsened these losses.

However, with great hardship comes great opportunity. I believe Puerto Rico has the potential to unleash an economic and educational renaissance throughout the island unlike any time in its history if it focuses on the future and that future is STEM.

Jobs related to science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) are leading world economies and will continue to lead all economies into the future. It has been an emphasis on STEM that has allowed China to become an economic powerhouse at the world stage. Over 60% of the value in the top five of TechCrunch's Unicorn Leaderboard (via Forbes) comes from Chinese startups.

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the growth of STEM jobs in the United States alone between 2012 and 2022 is estimated to rise by 13%, However, according to research published by the Smithsonian Science Education Center, there were an estimated 2.4 million unfilled jobs in the sector in 2018.

I believe there is not only a need but an opportunity for Puerto Rico to transform itself into the future powerhouse of STEM jobs by focusing on education at all levels and harnessing the budding tech industry developing on the island.

In my opinion, it can be and should be done. In fact, a country not too much larger by population or dimension has already done it. Israel is only about twice as large both in land area and population in comparison to Puerto Rico, yet when it comes to STEM-related talent and proficiency, it competes with the European Union, the United States and China.

According to research published by Hacker Noon (via Forbes), Israel has almost 1,000 startups in the field of artificial intelligence (AI) alone, and in the last five years, the exits for these companies have averaged $121 million. A study conducted by the Hebrew University of Jerusalem found that Israel's focus on STEM education from early childhood through adulthood may have contributed to the rise in startups.

I believe Puerto Rico can do the same and that it already has the beginnings of infrastructure support through technology startups and STEM nonprofits.

CiencaPR is a nonprofit that was established in 2010 with an emphasis on promoting STEM throughout the island and creating future scientists. Parallel18 (P18) is a global accelerator for STEM startups that is already on its sixth generation of startups and recently announced a partnership with Google Launchpad to further augment its startup's global reach. The Puerto Rico Science, Technology and Research Trust leads many efforts across the island to stimulate the economy via STEM-related projects and has already invested upwards of $50 million. It's helped support CiencaPR and P18 as well.

Many co-working spaces are popping up across the island such as Piloto 151, which provides corporate services at a reduced cost for multiple STEM startups at the same time. These types of efficiency and groups are integral in supporting startups as they gain traction in the marketplace.

The space industry and NASA has had a foothold in the Puerto Rican STEM community since the inception of the Arecibo Observatory. This indelible piece of science has continued to push the boundaries of our understanding of the cosmos from the detection of the rotation of Mercury in 1967, to the discovery of the first exoplanet in 1992, to the discovery of the first repeating fast radio burst in 2016. NASA is continuing to push STEM on the island through partnerships with the Space Foundation in developing workshops for space entrepreneurship.

FourthBrainthe brainchild of Andrew Ng, previously at Google DeepMindis pushing the boundaries in AI as far as NASA is in space. It is looking to transform the island into a powerhouse for AI engineering education, and if anyone can do it, this group will.

From a legal perspective, the island is also ripe for disruption in STEM startups thanks to Law 101, and Act 20 and 22. Law 101 fosters research and development activity conducted at local universities in Puerto Rico, allowing qualified principal investigators or a co-principal investigator to seek tax exemptions for salaries earned from eligible R&D grants. Act 22 provides incentives to businesses to move to the island with exemptions on R&D and operational costs and Act 20 provides incentives for individuals.

The destruction that Maria brought and the political aftermath have left the Island of Enchantment picking up debris even to this day. But from the ashes of that calamity, there is an opportunity to reinvent itself for the future of its citizens if it leverages developing projects and focuses on future economies through STEM education and entrepreneurship. And from the ashes, a new island will emerge. An island of promise. An island of hope. An island of the future.

A silicon island.

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Silicon Island: The Future STEM Economy Of Puerto Rico - Forbes

Katie Price’s ex-toyboy Charles Drury ‘to star on Love Island and spill about their fling’ – Mirror Online

Katie Price might find her dirty laundry being aired on national television again as her tomboy ex-boyfriend Charles Drury has been lined up to star on the winter edition of Love Island.

While some might say the 41-year-old reality star has made a career out of airing her lifes ups and downs, she normally has her say on her own terms through the many, many reality TV shows that she has starred in.

But having 22-year-old fling Charles appearing on a weeks long reality show could result in him letting slip details of their whirlwind affair that The Pricey would not be able to control.

Last month, fans were shocked as Katies engagement to Kris Boyson came to a crashing end as she was photographed out and about with much-younger love interest Charles.

Then came some mud slinging as Katie publicly compared the penis size of the two men - before seemingly then ending her romance with Charles.

The builder has since made a number of cryptic messages via social media about being left heartbroken - and now ITV bosses are sniffing around to snap him up as a Winter Love Island contestant.

He was approached last year but was seeing someone at the time but now hes single, producers called him up and asked him to re-audition for the show, a source from the show blabbed to The Sun.

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"Nothings signed yet and hes not even sure if he wants to do it but theyre keen to meet him. Katie will be furious when she finds out hed have girls falling over him, and hes bound to talk about what dating Katie was like if he makes it into the villa, the source added.

Charles has left cryptic messages online hinting that his romance with Katie did not end on good terms.

He shared a post on Instagram Stories that read: You never really forget the ones who touched your heart; regardless whether its the ones who broke it or healed it.

He shared a second quote that read: Good things come to those who wait. But better things come to those who work for it."

Meanwhile, it is believed Katie unfollowed Charles on Social Media after he refused to sign a Non Disclosure Agreement that would have prevented him from discussing his romance with her.

Relations are believed to have nosedived after Katie used Charles to fix up her mansion before she took back on-off lover Kris Boyson.

And things turned terminal when Katie tried to get him to sign an NDA declaring he would not discuss their relationship in public or even with his friends.

He thought that was outrageous and told her that. She unfollowed him on Instagram and was furious, a source told The Sun.

Katie's representatives did not want to comment when contacted by Mirror Online.

We've also reached out to Love Island.

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Katie Price's ex-toyboy Charles Drury 'to star on Love Island and spill about their fling' - Mirror Online

Greece must act to end dangerous overcrowding in island reception centres, EU support crucial – UNHCR

Rows of tents outside Moria reception centre on the island of Lesvos, Greece. UNHCR/Gordon Welters

UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, is today calling on Greece to urgently move thousands of asylum-seekers out of dangerously overcrowded reception centres on the Greek Aegean islands. Sea arrivals in September, mostly of Afghan and Syrian families, increased to 10,258 - the highest monthly level since 2016 worsening conditions on the islands which now host 30,000 asylum-seekers.

The situation on Lesvos, Samos and Kos is critical. The Moria centre on Lesvos is already at five times its capacity with 12,600 people. At a nearby informal settlement, 100 people share a single toilet. Tensions remain high at Moria where a fire on Sunday in a container used to house people killed one woman. An ensuing riot by frustrated asylum-seekers led to clashes with police.

On Samos, the Vathy reception centre houses 5,500 people eight times its capacity. Most sleep in tents with little access to latrines, clean water, or medical care. Conditions have also deteriorated sharply on Kos, where 3,000 people are staying in a space for 700.

Keeping people on the islands in these inadequate and insecure conditions is inhumane and must come to an end.

The Greek Government has said that alleviating pressure on the islands and protecting unaccompanied children are priorities, which we welcome. We also take note of government measures to speed up and tighten asylum procedures and manage flows to Greece announced at an exceptional cabinet meeting on Monday. We look forward to receiving details in writing to which we can provide comments.

But urgent steps are needed and we urge the Greek authorities to fast-track plans to transfer over 5,000 asylum-seekers already authorized to continue their asylum procedure on the mainland. In parallel, new accommodation places must be provided to prevent pressure from the islands spilling over into mainland Greece, where most sites are operating at capacity. UNHCR will continue to support transfers to the mainland in October at the request of the government.

Longer-term solutions are also needed, including supporting refugees to become self-reliant and integrate in Greece.

The plight of unaccompanied children, who overall number more than 4,400, is particularly worrying, with only one in four in a shelter appropriate for their age.

Some 500 children are housed with unrelated adults in a large warehouse tent in Moria. On Samos, more than a dozen unaccompanied girls take turns to sleep in a small container, while other children are forced to sleep on container roofs. Given the extremely risky and potentially abusive conditions faced by unaccompanied children, UNHCR appeals to European States to open up places for their relocation as a matter of priority and speed up transfers for children eligible to join family members.

UNHCR continues to work with the Greek authorities to build the capacity needed to meet the challenges. We manage over 25,000 apartment places for some of the most vulnerable asylum-seekers and refugees, under the EU-funded ESTIA scheme. Some 75,000 people receive monthly cash assistance under the same programme. UNHCR is prepared, with the continuous support of the EU and other donors, to expand its support through a cash for shelter scheme which would allow authorized asylum-seekers to move from the islands and establish themselves on the mainland.

Greece has received the majority of arrivals across the Mediterranean region this year, some 45,600 of 77,400 more than Spain, Italy, Malta, and Cyprus combined.

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Greece must act to end dangerous overcrowding in island reception centres, EU support crucial - UNHCR

Grand Island woman sentenced to 10 years in prison for child’s death – WGRZ.com

BUFFALO, N.Y. A Grand Island woman will spend the next 10 years in prison for causing the death of a two-year-old child.

Brianna Valenti, 27, was sentenced in court Monday for First Degree Manslaughter.

Investigators say Valenti called 911 September 10, 2018, because her boyfriend's child, Raelynn Fuller, was unresponsive. The child was taken to Children's Hospital and remained in intensive care until she was taken off of life support 12 days later.

They say Valenti violently shook Raelynn causing the head trauma that killed her.

Valenti pleaded guilty to one count of Manslaughter in the First Degree, a Class B violent felony, on August 26, 2019. She pleaded guilty to the highest sustainable charge.

In addition to the 10 years in prison, Valenti will have to serve five years post-release supervision.

RELATED: Grand Island woman pleads guilty in toddler's death

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Grand Island woman sentenced to 10 years in prison for child's death - WGRZ.com

Jayapal talks Trump conduct, healthcare during Vashon Island town hall – Q13 News Seattle

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KING COUNTY, Wash. -- Rep. Pramila Jayapal was back in Washington state on Monday, speaking at a town hall on Vashon Island.

The meeting at the Vashon High School Theater was the 12th town hall she's done since taking office.

The big topic of Monday's town hall revolves around President Donald Trump's conduct, which Jayapal says is leading to a constitutional crisis.

"Recognize that this is a new moment," she said. "It is a moment where we see very clearly, the President has betrayed his values, betrayed the Constitution and betrayed our national security. And we can't allow it to continue."

Some of the questions people in the audience asked involved wages, immigration and healthcare.

"The cost of our healthcare system today, $35 trillion; over ten years, going up to $60 trillion... So if Medicare for All is what the Koch brothers say it costs, $3.2 trillion a year, that's $32 trillion over the next ten years. I say that's a hell of a deal, and you get all of your care covered," Jayapal said.

Another person asked if bipartisanship is still possible in Congress. She mentioned a number of amendments she passed with Republicans, including a bill dealing with adding more housing for homeless seniors.

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Jayapal talks Trump conduct, healthcare during Vashon Island town hall - Q13 News Seattle

Grand Island Fire Department observing Fire Prevention Week – Grand Island Independent

The National Fire Protection Association (NFPA), along with the Grand Island Fire Department, is promoting this years Fire Prevention Week campaign: Not Every Hero Wears a Cape. Plan and Practice Your Escape!

Fire Prevention Week is officially Oct. 6-12, but members of the Grand Island Fire Department will be visiting local elementary schools during the entire month of October to educate students about the need to create and practice a home fire safety plan.

NFPA statistics show that in 2017, U.S. fire departments responded to 357,000 home structure fires. These fires caused 2,630 deaths and 10,600 injuries. On average, seven people died per day because of a fire in a home during 2012 to 2016. In a typical home fire, occupants may have as little as one to two minutes to escape safely once the smoke alarm sounds, so pre-planning is extremely important.

During the month of October, the Grand Island Fire Department will provide a grade-specific safety message to local elementary school students. The Grand Island Fire Department is seeking elementary-aged students to help ensure their household members are better prepared in the event of a home fire. Specifically, third-grade students will work with family members to create a home escape plan. Escape plans should:

Identify two exits from every room and a path from each exit to the outside.

Show the locations of all smoke alarms in the home. There should be at least one on each level, in each bedroom, and near all sleeping areas.

Name a meeting place outside in front of the home where everyone will meet upon exiting.

In addition to creating a home escape plan, students should practice the plan with all members of the household at least twice a year. It is also crucial to make sure everyone knows how to call 911 from a mobile phone or neighbors phone once they are safely outside.

Grand Island Fire Chief Cory Schmidt said, People are at the most risk of dying from a fire while they are in their home, the place where they may mistakenly feel the most secure. The Grand Island Fire Department is working together with our local elementary-aged heroes to educate residents on the importance of creating and practicing a fire escape plan before a fire occurs.

NFPA and the Grand Island Fire Department offer these additional fire safety tips:

Practice the home fire drill twice a year. Conduct one at night and one during the day with all family members and practice using different ways out.

Push the smoke alarm button to start a fire escape drill so children will associate the audible alarm with the need to evacuate their home.

Teach children how to escape on their own in case adults are not available to help them.

Close doors behind you this may slow the spread of smoke, heat and fire.

Once you get outside, stay outside. Never go back inside a burning building.

Make sure the number of your home is clearly marked and easy for the fire department to find.

Test smoke alarms at least twice a month. A working smoke alarm cuts the risk of dying in a home fire in half.

Replace smoke alarms that are 10 years old or older.

For more information on the 2019 Fire Prevention Week campaign, Not Every Hero Wears a Cape. Plan and Practice Your Escape! visit http://www.firepreventionweek.org.

For more information on how to do this or about Fire Prevention Week, find the department at http://www.facebook.com/GI.FireDepartment or http://www.Twitter.com/GIFireDept, online at http://www.grand-island.com/fire, or call (308) 385-5444, ext. 220.

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Grand Island Fire Department observing Fire Prevention Week - Grand Island Independent

Monday evening fire engulfs apartment in east Grand Island – Grand Island Independent

Three adults were displaced and one person was transported following a fire Monday evening.

The Grand Island Fire Department was called shortly before 8:30 p.m. to 615 Yund St. in east Grand Island. Shift Commander Bryan Stutzman said upon arrival, the top apartment was completely engulfed in flames and one person was trapped.

It was blowing up and flames were coming out, he said. The guy was stuck inside and we pulled him out. We went up the landing and went inside the sliding glass doors to bring him out.

The complex at the aforementioned address has a top apartment and a bottom apartment. Stutzman said the top apartment had two adult occupants and the bottom apartment had one occupant, all of whom were displaced by the fire. Scanner traffic said the Red Cross was dispatched to assist these individuals.

Stutzman said one person was transported to CHI Health St. Francis with unknown injuries.

He added crews distinguished the flames but worked to put out hot spots in the top apartment.

Stutzman said the cause of the fire is yet to be determined as the state fire marshal was brought in to investigate the fire.

This is a developing story.

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Monday evening fire engulfs apartment in east Grand Island - Grand Island Independent

Neighbors fear the Treasure Island TOD has too little parking, but it actually has too much – Streetsblog Chicago

[This piece previously ran in the Chicago Reader]

Last month at the UNs Climate Action Summit, 16-year-old activist Greta Thunberg had a stern warning about global warming for world leaders and, by extension, city politicians and adults in general: The eyes of all future generations are upon you. And if you choose to fail us, I say: We will never forgive you.

One of the simplest things individuals can do to fight climate change is drive less, or not at all. Thats relatively easy in much of Chicago, where there are a wealth of alternatives to private car ownership: walking, biking, Divvy, e-scooters, CTA, Metra, Zipcar, taxis, and ride hailing. Its especially convenient to live car lite or car free if you live near a train station or express bus service.

Recently the City Council took an important step to address global warming by encouraging transit use and discouraging driving. Aldermen passed atransit-oriented development ordinancethat allows additional housing density and essentially waives the usual off-street car parking requirements for new developments within a quarter mile of rapid transit stops or a half mile ondesignated Pedestrian Streets.

The resulting transit-oriented development boom, which has mostly involved upscale projects, has been blamed for accelerating housing displacement ingentrifying neighborhoods like Logan Square. And its true the city needs to work harder topromote affordable TODacross Chicago, so that residents of all income levels can benefit from easier transit access.

But gentrification isnt much of an issue in already affluent communities like East Lakeview. Therefore, the TOD proposed by Glencoe-based Optima, Inc., for the shuttered Treasure Island supermarket location at 3460 N. Broadway sounds like a pretty good project. The site is a ten-minute walk from the Addison Red Line station, and a five-minute walk from express buses on Inner Lake Shore Drive.

The eight-story steel-and-glass building would include 246 apartments, a mix of studios, one-, two-, and three-bedroom units, with 107 car parking spaces and 129 bicycle spots. Its geared toward relatively wealthy Chicagoans, with rents ranging from $1,500 to $5,000, and amenities like a rooftop pool deck, basketball courts, and a dog park. But, as mandated by Chicagos currentAffordable Requirements Ordinance, Optima would also include 13 on-site affordable units, and pay $1.5 million into the citys fund to build low-income housing elsewhere.

Optima is seeking a zoning variance from the current B3-2 designation, which permits a five-story structure, to allow for the additional height. Alderman Tom Tunney (44th) would have to sign off on the change.

While the city typically requires a 1:1 ratio of car spots to apartments, because the supermarket site is located a half mile from the el, and this stretch of Broadway is a Pedestrian Street, the developer probably wouldnt have been required to include any car parking at all. So arguably 107 spaces is too many for such a transit-friendly location, surrounded by walkable retail, including a Jewel-Osco one block north. But some neighbors are griping that the proposal doesnt includeenoughcar spots.

The opposition groupBalance on Broadway, launched this summer, says it has collected over 1,250 signatures against the proposal. Quotes from neighbors listed on the website include Too tall, not enough parking, too dense, and Not only does it eliminate what little [on-street] parking there is, now we would have an eyesore!

BOB cofounder Mike Wilborn, 70, a retired insurance agency professional who lives nearby, says parking isnt one of the core organizers chief concerns. Rather, he says, they want the building to stay within the current zoned height limit of 50 feet (although there are plenty of high-rises nearby); with fewer units, which they say would mean less of an impact on traffic; and an architectural style that uses less glass to better fit in with existing structures on Broadway.

Wilborn says the BOB leaders dont have a problem with the proposed parking ratio of one car spot for every 2.3 apartments. We understand the TOD initiativethe city is trying to get more people on transit. Our feeling is that if we can get the height down, there will be fewer concerns about parking and congestion. However, he says hes talked with many other neighbors for whom parking is the primary worry.

One of them is Rhoda Bernstein, 68, a retiree who has lived for 41 years in a 1950s townhouse just east of Treasure Island on Stratford Place. She says its already difficult to find street parking near her home, so she rents a spot at the 555 Cornelia building, a 21-story condo tower half a block east of the proposed eight-story complex.

The developer thinks its going to be filled with millennials who dont drive, but I know plenty of millennialsmy friends children and grandchildrenwho drive all over the city all of the time, Bernstein says. Theyre going to be parking all over the neighborhood, which is already packed.

She argues this would create more demand for off-street parking, which would raise her garage rent, and make it impossible for people visiting her to find curbside spaces. I dont know why they think the people who live there wont have cars.

According to Peter Haas from Chicagos Center for Neighborhood Technology, U.S. Census statistics, and other data, such as late-night parking counts the group conducted at similar local buildings, indicate that parking demand would be far lower than neighbors like Bernstein think.CNTs eTOD Social Impact Calculatormapping tool allows users to analyze the financial, social, and environmental impacts of proposed development. Given the location and the mix of bedrooms, we calculate that . . . there will only be 0.17 car spaces used per unit, or about 42 spots, Haas says. So I think [107 spaces] is plenty of parking, if nottoomuch.

Audrey Wennink, transportation director for the Chicago-based Metropolitan Planning Council, who lives just down the street from the site, agrees. When people move into a unit they will do so knowing there is limited parking available. She noted that TOD buildings typically have clauses in the lease that prevent tenants from obtaining residential street parking permits.

Wennink added that, in addition to the Red Line and LSD express buses, the building would be near the Addison bus line, and right on the Broadway route. Theres a Divvy station just north of the property, and Optima plans to install a TransitScreen display in the lobby with CTA bus and train arrival times. All of that would incentivize car-free living.

Optima declined to comment. Staff from the 44th Ward and the 46th Ward offices (located across the street from the site) didnt return calls by press time.

I asked Bernstein about Greta Thunbergs argument that adults who dont take immediate action to fight global warming will leave a shameful legacy. I totally agree, she says, conceding that, in light of the climate crisis, it does make sense to build dense housing near transit with little or no car parking. But I dont consider a ten-minute walk to the Red Line close when its 25 below.

Of course, if we continue with business as usual, including car-centric development, freezing cold Chicago winters wont be a problem too much longer.

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Neighbors fear the Treasure Island TOD has too little parking, but it actually has too much - Streetsblog Chicago

Vashon Island woman finds poetry in grocery lists – KING5.com

VASHON ISLAND, Wash. We all make them. Then we leave them behind. Which makes Madisen Gatemen really happy.

She finds and collects, grocery lists.

"It's something so small that can have so much meaning. A grocery list tells you so much about somebody. "

It started when she worked at the Vashon Thriftway.

"People would come through the check stand and say 'Hey can you throw this away?' I'd say 'Sure.' And I'd kinda glance at it and be like, Hmm. I wonder what's on there."

What she found moved her: "It was so intimate and so vulnerable. And that, I think, is really beautiful in such a simple way. It's somebody's grocery list, you don't think about it.

Now she has more than 700. Written on takeout baskets. On sheet music. On guest checks. Each list, a little story.

One of my favorites is right there. Bananas, and mousetraps, said Gateman, pointing to the brief list. Another is headed: Larrys List. It reads like a to-do haiku: Pepper bacon? Coffee. Lemonade. Frozen Hashbrowns. String for weed whacker, read Madisen, This persons getting stuff done!

Larry's List

Anne Erickson - Evening

Some are strange, some are sad, like one that has a note scribbled on it: This is the last time we went grocery shopping together.

They're all revealing: "What they need. What they don't need. Their desires, their hopes, said Madisen.

She displays her lists on Vashon Island - recently at Snapdragon Bakery. She wants them to be seen and displaying them off-island is the main thing on her 'to do' list.

"They need to be touched, they need to be held and witnessed. They're important."

Some of Madisen Gateman's 700+ grocery lists

Anne Erickson - Evening

Meanwhile, Madisen Gateman has a message for the person who needed 'Bread, Roast Chicken, Ginger Ale and Duck Leashes':

She appreciates your work.

"Someone wrote this, carried it around all day, stuffed it in their pocket, maybe it fell out when they pulled their phone or their wallet out, and they probably never thought of it again. But I did.

Madisen would love to get more grocery lists. Send them to Madisen Gateman PO Box 516, Vashon, WA 98070

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Vashon Island woman finds poetry in grocery lists - KING5.com