Carousel of Progress Fails to Open, Now Temporarily Closed at the Magic Kingdom – wdwnt.com

There may be a great, big, beautiful tomorrow aboard the Carousel of Progress, but today, things arent looking too hot for John, Rover, and the rest of the family. The Carousel of Progress attraction failed to open earlier today at the Magic Kingdom during park open, and has since remained temporarily closed for the remainder of the day.

The attractions status has since been updated on the My Disney Experience app to reflect the downtime. Fans of the rotating show have noticed a number of issues with the attraction as of late, including faulty speakers and missing music tracks, and even more serious issues with the various animatronics, such as Johns hand falling off mid-show back in February.

Well continue to check on the status of this beloved Tomorrowland attraction, and hope that its back up soon to offer the crowds a welcome respite from the heat as well as a dose of Disney history.

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Carousel of Progress Fails to Open, Now Temporarily Closed at the Magic Kingdom - wdwnt.com

Evacuations in progress as Falling Star fire burns inside of subdivision – KULR-TV

LAUREL- Evacuations are in progress as a large fire burns near Laurel and Park City inside of one subdivision and immediately adjacent to another.

The fire, referred to as Falling Star, is 500 to 1,000 acres according to Stillwater Co. DES and being pushed by winds.

Over 100 buildings are threatened and Stillwater Co. DES said in an update Sunday their objective is to focus on moving the fire around the subdivision.

By nightfall, fire will likely reach and may cross the Valley Creek Road to the west according to the update.

Losses are currently unknown at this time, and larger air response with numerous ground resources are to move fire around the subdivision.

People are being asked to stay away from the Benedict Gulch area to let fire crews have room to work and travel.

This is a developing story, please check back for updates.

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Evacuations in progress as Falling Star fire burns inside of subdivision - KULR-TV

Firefighters stop forward progress of Templeton vegetation fire, threatening several homes – KSBY San Luis Obispo News

UPDATE (2:32 p.m.) The vegetation fire in Templeton has grown to 20-30 acres and is threatening five homes, according to CAL FIRE officials.

Fire crews say there were initially 20 structures threatened. Forward progress of the vegetation fire has stopped.

Seven fire agencies are responding to the fire, including CAL FIRE SLO, CAL FIRE San Benito Monterey Unit, San Luis Obispo City Fire Department, Paso Robles Fire and Emergency Services, Templeton Fire Department, U.S. Forest Service and Atascadero State Hospital, according to firefighters.

This story is developing. Please check back later as updates become available.

UPDATE (2:19 p.m.) The vegetation fire in Templeton has reached at least 20 acres, according to CAL FIRE SLO officials.

First responders say they are currently investigating the cause of the fire.

ORIGINAL STORY (1:36 p.m.) CAL FIRE SLO crews are battling a vegetation fire that broke out Saturday afternoon in Templeton.

According to PulsePoint, the fire was initially reported shortly before 1 p.m. in the area of the 3200 block of Neal Spring Road.

CAL FIRE SLO did not immediately respond to calls from KSBY News.

KSBY is sending a crew to the scene to get more information.

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Firefighters stop forward progress of Templeton vegetation fire, threatening several homes - KSBY San Luis Obispo News

Upddate: Fire On J-59 Near Lake Don Pedro, Forward Progress Stopped – MyMotherLode.com

CAL Fire C404 helicopter based in Columbia Air Attack Base

Update at 12:25 p.m.: CAL Fire report that crews have stopped the forward rate of spread on the Bonds Fire burning along J-59 near Lake Don Pedro at an acre. All Columbia aircraft have returned to base. A small crew will remain on scene to achieve full containment and then mop up. The cause of the fire has yet to determined and is under investigation.

Original post at 11:55:Lake Don Pedro, CA CAL Fire ground and air resources are battling a grass fire on J-59 near Lake Don Pedro.

The fire is in the vicinity of Bonds Flat Road, just before the Seven Legends entrance on the west side of the roadway, according to the CHP. CAL Fire dispatch has dubbed it the Bonds Fire and reports that it is one acre in size and burning at a moderate rate of spread. No structures are threatened. An update will be provided as soon as new information comes into the newsroom.

Written by Tracey Petersen.

Report breaking news, traffic or weather to our News Hotline 532-6397. Send Mother Lode News Story photos tonews@clarkebroadcasting.com. Sign up for our FREE myMotherLode.com Daily Newsletters by clicking here.

Fire information is located under the Community tab or keyword: fireLocal Burn Day information is here. If you see breaking news send us a photo at news@clarkebroadcasting.com.

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Upddate: Fire On J-59 Near Lake Don Pedro, Forward Progress Stopped - MyMotherLode.com

T.J.s Forecast: A little chilly as we progress into our first week of August – KSN-TV

A cold front has been working through the region and were going to reap the rewards. Lowered humidity and cooler temps will hold thanks to northerly flow.

This will keep our temperatures well below average as we progress into the start of our first full week of August. Ill go as far as to say chilly for some of us.

Lows will be in the 50s across Western Kansas with Northern Kansas also falling below 60. In Wichita, well be pretty close but I think well stay near 60. Isolated showers and storms are possible as some of this cold front stalls to our west.

This boundary is allowing the winds to switch to more of a SE direction. Because of that lift or convergence, we could see more storms develop in Colorado later on this evening. Some of these could work into Kansas late this evening into the overnight.

The bulk of the severe activity will remain west of us but we could see a rogue stronger storm with gusty winds and smaller hail possible. Monday will remain mild with highs in the 80s for many of us with some spots possibly still in the upper 70s.

That stalled front will hang out, continuing to be a focal point for more storms as we head through Monday. A few could linger early in the day but they will be widely scattered.

A better chance arrives late Tuesday into Wednesday. Winds will be out of the south to the southeast for all of us at that point which will help bring more moisture and warmth our way. Those 2 ingredients will fuel the potential for storms with some isolated severe storms on the table Tuesday.

Moisture will linger into Wednesday which looks to keep us just a little more stable. The severe threat will still need to be monitored as it does for the latter half of the workweek. NW flow aloft will keep impulses tracking into Kansas.

High pressure does try and build in by the weekend meaning drier and much hotter conditions. Highs will surge back into the mid and upper 90s by this time next weekend with a good deal of sunshine.

Have a great night!

-T.J.

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T.J.s Forecast: A little chilly as we progress into our first week of August - KSN-TV

Tyler Perry Gives Progress Report On Producing His Shows During Pandemic, Shares His Hope For The Industry & The Country – Deadline

Tyler Perrywas one of the first Hollywood producers to come upwith a comprehensive plan to safely restart TV production back in April. Now he is the first to have completed a full season of a primetime scripted series filmed during the pandemic using COVID-19 safety protocols. It is Season 2 of his BET show Sistas, which recently wrapped production at the Tyler Perry Studios in Atlanta and will be ready for a fall debut.

In the break between finishing Sistas on July 25 and starting Season 2 of BETs The Oval, whose cast members will begin arriving at the studio Thursday, Perry discussed with Deadline how filming and testing went; addressed challenges they faced; and what advice he has for producers who are apprehensive about heading back into production before a coronavirus vaccine is widely available, outlining daily testing or quarantine bubbles as crucial to a successful restart.

As we have reported, Perry employs a quarantine bubble model, sequestering cast and crew on the lot for the duration of a shoot. In May, he sent out a 30-page document to his casts outlining the plan in great detail.

Perry said he and his team followed that document to the letter, and it worked. (You can watch a behind-the-scenes video of the process and the accommodations on Sistas below.) He will use the exact same protocols for The Oval and two other shows he has lined up at the studio one after the other through September: Bruh and Ruthless, both for BET+.

All of the hard work and months of planning paid off. Production went extremely well on the second season of Sistas, and now were preparing for The Oval, said Michelle Sneed, president of production and development at Tyler Perry Studios. Of course, there is always a learning curve when embarking on a new project and even more so when filming it in the middle of a pandemic. However, one of the most valuable lessons I learned is to trust the process and the people you have in place to do their job.

There were 360 people cast, crew and 10 extras inside the bubble who worked on Season 2 of Sistas for the duration of the shoot. That was down 80-100 people from the regular production team that worked on Season 1 as Perry had to scale back because of the amount of housing available on the premises.

However, my crew stepped up and they were amazing, Perry said.

Still, production was intense. We were shooting an enormous amount of pages a day, he said. Moves that wouldve taken 10-15 minutes took 45, but it was fine. It flowed, it completely flowed.

Actors were flown in from New York and Los Angeles on Perrys private plane.

We checked in 160 on Thursday [July 9] with the actors, four days before they started working. They were tested before they got on the plane, Perry said.

Everybody cast and crew was tested on that Monday [July 13]. The crew check-in was Tuesday, July 14, with everyone staying in their rooms until test results came back.

We had four positives in our initial check-in before anyone was allowed to leave their room, Perry said. We had those people leave and got them the help they needed. The positive tests did not involve cast; two of them were extras, two were crew.

Everyone then was tested every four days for the duration of the shoot with no positive results as the quarantine bubble held up. The production used PCR tests, which are the most accurate available so far. All through pre-production, test results were coming the next day. But then came the nationwide spike in cases, and test results began to take longer, 36-48 hours, which led to a delay in the start of production pushed from July 14 to July 15. That issue since has been resolved. The labs that we are using now give the results back within 24 hours, Perry said.

Perry admits that he was worried heading into the endeavor.

My biggest concern was, I have several crew members who have preexisting conditions that I asked personally to sit this one out but they said no, they wanted to work, they needed to work, Perry said. I couldnt legally stop them from working, so my biggest concern was making sure that they were safe and that the actors who did not wear masks were safe. Because masks one hundred percent help cut down on the spread. Every time an actor had a mask off, and every time I looked at the people with preexisting conditions, they were my biggest concern.

Everyone on the set of Perrys shows is required to wear a mask except for actors when they are filming scenes.

In April, Emmy-nominated hairstylist Charles Gregory Ross, who had worked with Perry in the past, died of COVID-19. His passing had a profound impact of Perry and his approach to resuming production. It also helps him understand other producers who are apprehensive about getting their shows up and running amid the pandemic.

After losing a crew member to COVID that was on another production at the very beginning of this thing, clearly I understand the nervousness, I understand the trepidation, and they should enter with extreme caution, Perry said. But I tell you, if you cant test everyone every day, I dont know how you do this unless its a quarantine bubble. I dont know another way, because COVID could be among you and spreading and you not know it.

As of now, only Perrys shows are filming at his studio one at a time. But with his Camp Quarantine model showing results, he is ready to open the lot to outside productions.

There is still another 200 acres of open land, several other camps can be set up here just like the one we set up; camps can be set up in no time we set up ours in a month, month and a half, Perry said. There are many, many more housing opportunities for other camps for sure.

Already, there is interest. I have had several phone calls when it will be available and what we could do; there are some conversations that are happening, Perry said.

He admits that he did not have to jump in, develop the safety guidelines and start production amid the pandemic, but he felt an obligation to do it.

I could just go and sit somewhere and wait for a vaccine but what wouldve happen with all of those people and their lives and their livelihoods if I didnt do this? he said. The level of thank yous that I got from the crew privately as I was passing through because Im there with them the entire time, Im going to the food truck or going to grab a drink at the truck bar they tell me just how much they appreciate having the opportunity to work and work safely.

Perry is prepared to use the current production setup for months or even years.

We are set up for the long haul, we could be here for a year and a half, two years, five years if we needed to, he said. But my hope is that there is a vaccine by this time next year. I know the hope is it will be by the end of the year, but even if its by the end of the year, by the time they ramped up production and by the time it got to the masses, to say another year is safe.

Along with his work on restarting production at his studio, over the last few months Perry has been active in his community and a leading voice of the Black Lives Matter movement. In April, he donated $21,000 to 42 out-of-work servers $500 each at Houstons on Northside Parkway, a favorite restaurant of his. A few weeks later, Perry anonymously picked up the tabs at 44 Atlanta-area Krogers during the stores designated shopping hour for seniors and at-risk patrons. He did the same for 29 Winn-Dixies in his hometown of New Orleans.

Following the death of George Floyd, which triggered nationwide protests, Perry wrote a essay on racial injustice, featured on the cover of People. He provided travel for Rev. Al Sharpton, Eric Garners mother Gwen Carr and members of Floyds family to Floyds funeral. He also paid all funeral expenses for Rayshard Brooks, who was fatally shot by an Atlanta police officer, and for Secoriea Turner, an 8-year-old girl who was fatally struck by gunfire.

Last week, Perry, donated 1,000 Kroger gift cards to Southeast Atlanta residents, teaming with the Atlanta Police Department to distribute the $50 cards.

What is happening in the country right now with all the protests, and with even Secoriea, the 8-year-old killed in Atlanta. All of that has been on my mind, Perry said. So when I gave those gift cards to the neighborhood around the studio and asked the police to pass them out, my hope was to bring some unity in the community, to bring understanding that all cops are not bad cops and we need them, as well as all Black people are not bad people, and that kind of mentality and that kind of thinking that is blanketed is wrong. My hope is that everybody would come from their corners and just have some conversations. Thats my hope for the country; lets have some conversations that we could at least hear each other.

As for the industry, my hope is that the industry could get back to work, Perry said. There are so many people who need to work. Its my hope that everybody could go back to work. I dont know how that happens without daily testing or quarantine bubbles.

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Tyler Perry Gives Progress Report On Producing His Shows During Pandemic, Shares His Hope For The Industry & The Country - Deadline

Stimulus negotiations: ‘Productive’ meetings don’t mean progress – CNN

The somewhat positive tone sought to obscure a cold reality, according to people briefed on the talks: the two sides remain nowhere near a deal.

What to watch: Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and White House chief of staff Mark Meadows will be back on Capitol Hill for meetings. Senate Republicans hold their closed-door conference lunch at 12:45 p.m. ET, with a leadership news conference afterward.

The area where there was at least some progress on Monday was on the education piece of the broader proposals. Republicans have put $105 billion on the table, split between K-12 and colleges, with a chunk of the funds directed explicitly toward the costs associated with schools that are reopening. Democrats remain wary of tying anything to reopenings amid the pandemic and have pressed for more topline money.

But the negotiators did a deep dive into the numbers on Monday, which is a key step toward starting to lay the groundwork for what is actually needed for an agreement.

As Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer put it: "By going to these specific numbers and what each side thinks they can do with their dollar allocation, it really helps us understand that and move together in a better direction. That's what we spent time doing."

Again, that seems like a fairly pro forma part of any negotiation, but getting to a more granular level has been something that's been missing from the talks up to this point.

The tell

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi laid out an unvarnished read of the current state of the negotiations in a private call with her caucus on Monday afternoon, according to two people on the call.

As Pelosi ticked through the biggest priorities for any agreement -- from education, to Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, to unemployment benefits to state and local funding, Pelosi made clear there has been little or no progress toward an agreement on any of them.

She reiterated that funds for the Postal Service and money for election protection remains "a big fight for us."

But, according to one of the people, she also expressed clear confidence that White House negotiators would start moving her way. (On state and local funding, she noted that while GOP negotiators haven't moved off their proposal of no new money, they soon would do just that. They "just don't know it yet" Pelosi told her members.)

Pelosi's comments underscore the view among Democrats right now -- that they hold the cards and that it's only a matter of time before the Trump administration, cognizant of the need to avoid an economic collapse with potentially massive electoral consequences, will come their way.

And yet: There is still no tangible evidence that will actually occur. On the federal unemployment enhancement, one of, if not the, central flash points in the talks, Pelosi and Schumer made clear that the White House has not moved off its longer-term proposal of cutting down to $200-per-week the original $600 flat rate.

"They're sticking to their position," Schumer told reporters on Monday. "And we're sticking to ours," Pelosi quickly followed.

The negotiators

President Donald Trump is more or less absent from the current talks, save for tweets and verbal jabs directed at Pelosi and Schumer, though Mnuchin and Meadows have made clear he's briefed regularly.

That has left all eyes, both from Democrats and Republicans, on Meadows and Mnuchin. It's a dynamic, several people involved tell CNN, that nobody has quite figured out yet.

Mnuchin is known as the deal maker in the administration. He's been crucial to locking in several deals with Pelosi, including the prior emergency coronavirus relief packages. He regularly cites those deals and his relationship with Pelosi, both publicly and privately, as something that underscores his integral role in the administration, people who speak to him say.

But that deal making has regularly rubbed Senate Republicans the wrong way, and the trust in him remains fairly low, multiple Senate Republicans tell CNN. Still, at a time of fractured partisan politics, he's one of the few people in town that can claim negotiating success.

Then there's Meadows, the former GOP congressman whose career was spent primarily blowing up deals and creating major headaches for his leadership in his role as leader of the conservative House Freedom Caucus.

While he was the incoming chief of staff for the original $2.2 trillion relief bill, he wasn't a key negotiator. That was left to Mnuchin and since departed White House legislative affairs director Eric Ueland, a former long-time Senate staffer who played a central role at the time.

How the Meadows-Mnuchin team works through the current complex dynamic remains an open question to, well, just about everyone.

Schumer, in the closed door meeting, joked about the public perception of the two, according to one source -- nothing that Mnuchin was there to make deals and Meadows was there to blow things up. His point, the source said, was trying to figure out who was playing which role this time around, noting that it was Mnuchin who should bring Meadows along toward a deal. The answer to whether that ends up being the case will go a long way to determining when -- and if -- a deal is possible at all.

The timeline

Pelosi, on the call with her members, made clear that the goal for Democratic negotiators is to reach an agreement this week. But she acknowledged the reality of the current state of play, noting, according to the person on the call, "I don't know if that's possible."

In other words, negotiators are already looking toward next week as the likeliest timeline -- which is two weeks after the deadline that was supposed to spur action: the expiration for the federal unemployment benefit enhancement.

The urgency

Sen. John Cornyn, a Texas Republican and member of McConnell's leadership team, underscored a dynamic that is about to become much more relevant if things continue apace with no progress.

"I can't see how we can go home and tell people we failed," Cornyn told reporters Monday night. "I think that's going to be a lot of pressure on everybody to come up with something."

A missing piece of the cloistered last week of talks has been members up for reelection, particularly those in tough races, and their desire (and political need) to reach an outcome. That's not exclusive to Senate Republicans. It applies to House Democrats as well. If, and when, more of those members start making the case Cornyn made on Monday, the overall dynamics may start to shift.

The wild card

The focus, up to this point, has been entirely on the top four negotiators. That's about to shift.

McConnell, this afternoon, will lay out a Senate floor process that will include several votes on extending unemployment benefits and potentially other policy issues for the latter half of this week, likely starting Wednesday.

It's something the Kentucky Republican teed up last week as a backstop of sorts -- should no progress be made by the negotiators, he'd start a process moving on the floor. It's not a process that will lead to an outcome in and of itself, but it will be designed to force Democrats onto the record on specific policy issues and, perhaps, spark talks amongst members. It's a political exercise to a degree, but in the absence of any other major progress, also an effort to kick something, anything, into gear.

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Stimulus negotiations: 'Productive' meetings don't mean progress - CNN

OR Parent Making "Significant Progress" With Virtual Events – SGB Media

Emerald Holding Inc., the parent of Outdoor Retailer, Surf Expo and other trade shows, saw second-quarter revenues collapse as it was forced to cancel 60 events and postpone 14 others due to COVID-19. But company officials said its making significant progress with an ongoing organizational restructure and its virtual events are seeing a strong response.

On a conference call with analysts, Brian Field, interim president and CEO, said the company hosted more than 140 webinars and built an internal library of over 300 podcasts. It also hosted a small number of virtual trade shows, with several more scheduled in the second half of the year.

These virtual shows have many of the same features found at our live events, including keynote speakers, awards and virtual booths, allowing our exhibitors to load their products and host virtual meetings with buyers, said Field. While the feedback weve received from our customers is enthusiastic, they also note that they do not replace the value found in face-to-face in traditional, in-person shows and theyre outspoken in their desire to return to live events once the medium is safe. That said, we believe that there is an emergent hybrid model, whereby virtual shows will complement live events over the year.

The virtual shows also arent as lucrative. Emerald projects a modest revenue opportunity in the $5 million to $10 million range at a strong contribution margin.

Said Field, In the near-term, the more important value of these events is our ability to engage with our exhibitors year-round, and to provide them commercial solutions, particularly in todays environment. These platforms also serve as meaningful new customer acquisition vehicles as well. Over this past quarter, our webinar and virtual event products have generated over 50,000 new customer prospects. Our team will continue to innovate in the digital space as well as explore new products and services, as we continue to expand the value that we provide to our customers.

Organizational Restructure Expected To Drive EfficienciesField also said the COVID-19 disruption is enabling Emerald to streamline and unify many processes across the organization. He said, When I first joined Emerald, a little over a year ago, it was clear to me that the companys challenges were largely the result of poor execution, a lack of accountability and a siloed organizational structure, all of which we have aggressively addressed. As we execute upon our strategic initiatives, we are trying to transform the company and how we operate, building the foundation for future growth and improved profitability.

For instance, marketing was previously handled individually at the brand level, and the company was unable to scale the benefits or best practices that exist across portfolios or leverage customer insights and data across shows and products. Brand marketing and marketing operations functions have been reorganized into central teams to deliver more marketing plans; use common processes, technology and data; and reduce marketing spend with 25 percent less staff.

Sales teams have also been repositioned around specific roles for lead development, account management and customer success. Said Field, This structure moves us away from generalist selling to a structure designed to improve sales velocity on the front end of the process, with greater up-selling, product utilization, deeper customer satisfaction, and higher retention on the back end with our customer success roles.

Emerald also announced the first phase of a unified technology initiative, called Smart Tech, which will be completed in August, with the goal of having customer data in one centralized hub. Field said this will provide a deep understanding of our customers interests and behaviors, what events they attend, what they do with those events, who they interact with, the content they read online, the webinars they view, among many other touchpoints.

In other areas, Emerald has reduced its cost structure by more than $15 million year-to-date with opportunities to reduce costs further. Field said this is helping Emerald to conserve capital over the near-term as a buffer against COVID-19 and is expected to improve its profitability over the long-term.

Emerald also raised $400 million through the issuance of convertible preferred stock, the final portion of which is scheduled to close later this month. Said Field, We believe this capital raise provides us with liquidity and flexibility to make the right decisions for the business during an uncertain time. While we remain confident that the exhibition industry will return to its former health and vitality over time, we simply do not know how long that will take. This equity raise provides the capital bridge to when the events industry returns to a more normal state.

In the second quarter, Emerald reported revenues of $7 million compared to revenues of $103.0 million for the second quarter of 2019. The decrease primarily reflected an $84.6 million reduction from the cancellation of 20 second quarter events due to COVID-19, most notably Outdoor Retailer Summer Market, HD Expo, RetailX and the Couture Collection Show, as well as an $8 million decline due to the postponement of eight second-quarter events to the second half.

Discontinued events representing $1.1 million of second-quarter 2019 revenues also impacted the second quarter 2020 results. The G3 Communications acquisition, which closed in Q419, contributed $1.6 million of revenue in the latest quarter. Organic revenues for the quarter declined 36.5 percent.

Net income came to $9.9 million compared to $11.4 million a year ago. The company recorded $48.2 million of Other Income during the quarter as a result of the confirmation of event cancellation insurance claims related to events canceled in the first half.

Adjusted EBITDA was $33.2 million, compared to $36.5 million, adjusted for show scheduling differences, including COVID-19 related postponements. The decrease was mainly due to the COVID-19 related cancellations offset by insurance claims.

Asked about the potential for Emerald to lose exhibitors or attendees should show cancellations extend into 2021, Field cited the virtual events as critical to retention, including as in-person events should return. Field suspects exhibitors or attendees will continue to have apprehensions about attending live events because of corporate travel restrictions or fears of flying or large gatherings.

Said Field, One of the things that weve done to help satisfy those customers, who perhaps want to, but are afraid, is to look at our virtual offerings as those companion elements to the show. So, now theyre not going to be as robust certainly, as a live event. Theyre not going to have a wide variety of discovery and that sort of serendipitous encountering of new colleagues and new products that they might see on a typical live event show floor. But theyll still have the ability to interact, browse new products online, schedule appointments, find some learning as well some of those key elements of a live show that isnt necessarily the full live show itself. So, of course, no one knows having never gone through this before, if theyre going to come back the third, fourth, fifth nth time, but this is certainly one of the pieces of the plan that we have in place to ensure that theres as much customer continuity as possible, while were going through this time.

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OR Parent Making "Significant Progress" With Virtual Events - SGB Media

Coronavirus Risks Wiping Out Years of Public Health Progress in Americas-WHO Director – The New York Times

SAO PAULO The new coronavirus is interrupting vaccination programs and frontline care for other diseases which risked wiping out years of health progress in the Americas, the World Health Organization's regional director said on Tuesday.

The official, Carissa Etienne, said at a weekly press briefing that the pandemic was reducing frontline care for chronic conditions such as diabetes and infectious diseases such as HIV and tuberculosis.

"These services are severely disrupted or, worse yet, halted entirely," she said. "The Americas are at risk of losing years of health gains in a matter of months."

Supply of drugs is also a worsening problem, Etienne said. Eleven countries within the Americas have less than three months supply of antiretrovirals for HIV and others are running short of tuberculosis medication, she said.

Etienne urged governments to increase spending on health to at least 6% of gross domestic product (GDP), saying the current average of 3.7% was not enough.

"Countries must adapt and commit to simultaneously providing these essential primary care services while at the same time mitigating the effects of COVID-19," she said. "This is not an either or choice."

(Reporting by Stephen Eisenhammer; Editing by Chris Reese and Grant McCool)

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Coronavirus Risks Wiping Out Years of Public Health Progress in Americas-WHO Director - The New York Times

Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation Receives $5 Million Charitable Gift to Accelerate Progress in World-Class Cardiovascular Prevention Research…

MHIF Establishes the Nolan Family Center for Cardiovascular Health to drive its commitment to changing the trajectory of heart disease

MINNEAPOLIS Aug. 3, 2020 The Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation (MHIF), an internationally renowned cardiovascular research organization, announced today a $5 million charitable donation from the Stuart Nolan family to support cardiovascular disease prevention research and education that aims to change the trajectory of heart disease for future generations. In honor of the gift matching the largest donation ever made to the foundation MHIF is establishing the Nolan Family Center for Cardiovascular Health.

My personal connection to cardiovascular research started with the care and treatment I received more than 30 years ago at the Minneapolis Heart Institute, which continues to allow me to live a full life, said Stuart Nolan, a long-time supporter of MHIF. My children have reached the age at which I had my first heart attack, raising the importance of understanding genetic and other risk factors that affect their heart health and underscore the importance of this work to my family. I have great faith in Dr. Miedema and his team of dedicated MHIF researchers who have shown a sincere commitment to furthering research to define the prevention and management of cardiovascular risks that affect many families.

At a time when wellness and overall health is as important as ever, this gift will accelerate progress and innovation in research and education around how to prevent cardiovascular disease, which continues to be the number one cause of death for people around the world. This research will also address some of the challenges around health disparities by further defining and understanding risk factors, as well as identifying the best care pathways for addressing care in racial and ethnic minorities where heart disease outcomes are significantly worse than other populations.

Our commitment to impactful, cardiovascular disease prevention research isnt new, but this inspiring gift from the Nolan family will propel our efforts to change the paradigm from heart disease to optimal health, said Michael Miedema, MD, MPH, director of the Nolan Family Center for Cardiovascular Health at MHIF and director of cardiovascular prevention at the Minneapolis Heart Institute. The ultimate goals of cardiovascular prevention research are to identify the optimal methods to accurately assess cardiovascular risk, as well as determine the best interventions to stop the evolution to heart disease. The research is all about determining who to treat and how to treat them, which gives our patients the best chance to avoid the tragic heart attack or the unwanted bypass surgery.

Mr. Nolan formerly served as MHIFs chairman of the board and is the current chairman of Minneapolis-based StuartCo, a residential property management company that he founded in 1970. He has received recognition for his ongoing commitment to giving back to the community.

Dr. Miedemas leadership in the field of cardiovascular disease prevention includes serving on the executive review committee for the 2018 American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association (ACC/AHA) Cholesterol Guidelines and serving as a member of the 2019 ACC/AHA Committee for the Primary Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease. He also serves as an associate editor for the prevention section of ACC.org.

Over its 38-year history, MHIF has led groundbreaking research and education across a wide spectrum of prevention-related topics, including coronary artery calcium testing, blood pressure, cholesterol and statin use, nutrition and lifestyle behaviors, risk factors and screening for specific populations, premature heart disease and genetic disorders. New cutting-edge research planned for the Nolan Family Center for Cardiovascular Health will focus on risk prediction and optimal prevention therapies, including:

We are grateful to the Nolan family for a gift that drives the MHIF vision of creating a world without heart and vascular disease, said Kristine Fortman, PhD, MHIF CEO. This significant gift will accelerate our impact in preventive cardiovascular research, including supporting the infrastructure for the research, staff and fellows to lead an accelerated pace of clinical studies.

The Nolan family is creating a legacy in partnership with a respected research team, whose passion for discovery will advance our mission of achieving long and healthy lives for all without the burden of cardiovascular disease, said Scott Sharkey, MD, president and chief medical officer at MHIF. At this moment in our history, an unprecedented pandemic has emphasized the importance of a healthy lifestyle; we are thankful to be able to drive this important research that will benefit our patients and their families now and for generations to come.

About Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation

The Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation (MHIF) strives to create a world without heart and vascular disease. To achieve this bold vision, it is dedicated to improving the cardiovascular health of individuals and communities through innovative research and education.

Scientific Innovation and Research MHIF is a recognized leader across all specialties of heart and vascular research. Each year, MHIF leads more than 200 research studies with more than 2,200 patients and publishes more than 200 articles to share learnings from research. MHIF research has improved the standard of care for patients around the world, including through the development of protocols like Level One, which continues to significantly improve outcomes and survival for heart attack patients.

Education and Outreach MHIF provides more than 10,000 hours of education each year putting its research into practice to improve outcomes among health care providers. This commitment extends to patients and caregivers through a number of community health and education events to raise awareness of heart care and research, engaging individuals in their own health.

The Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundations work is funded by generous donors and sponsors and engages in cutting-edge research initiatives with its physician partners from the Minneapolis Heart Institute at Abbott Northwestern Hospital and at 38 community sites across Minnesota and western Wisconsin. For more information, please visit mplsheart.org.

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Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation Receives $5 Million Charitable Gift to Accelerate Progress in World-Class Cardiovascular Prevention Research...

AUDIO: KAPPA Ethanol Crop Progress Report For The Week Of August 3 – KTIC

The first crop progress report of August shows a corn and soybean crop that is still strong and in one case improving. Row crops are also quickly entering important stages of production. Winter wheat harvest continues to lag in Northern states. While oat harvest is is almost to the halfway point. Pasture and range condition looks to be holding rather than the deteriorating, like it was just a few weeks ago. Finally moisture levels continue to increase in several Midwestern states.

Starting in the corn crop, first up is silking. Nationwide 92% of the crop has reached the silking stage. That is up 10% from a week ago and is 5% ahead of the five year average. States like Nebraska almost have the whole corp silking or silked at 94%. That is up 3% from the five year average. Kansas corn is keeping close pace with its 5 year average at 90% silking. Iowa corn is now rated 95% silked, up 3% from the 5 year average.

Corn entering the dough stage is moving right along, up 17% week to 39% across the country. That is 6% ahead of the 5 year average. Nebraska corn is now 43% in the dough stage, up 12% from the 5 year average. Iowa is just ahead of Nebraska at 44% in the dough stage. Kansas is ahead of both Iowa and Nebraska at 53% in the dough stage. That is 12% ahead of the Kansas 5 year average.

As for corn and soybean condition some may be surprised to not see a decrease for this week. Nationally the corn crop condition remained unchanged at 72% good to excellent. Iowa was again one of the few major corn producing states to see a decline of 4% to 73% good to excellent. Nebraska corn improved another 2% to 77% good to excellent. Kansas corn improved 1% to 61% good to excellent. After an 11% increase last week Illinois corn slowed down and only improved 2% this week to 74% good to excellent.

Now for soybeans we start with soybeans that are blooming and that would be about 85% of the national soybean crop. That is just ahead of the 5 year average of 82%. Nebraska has 95% of its soybeans blooming. That is up 8% from the 5 year average. Kansas soybeans are now 79% in the bloom stage. That is up 9% from the five year average. Iowa soybeans have the end in sight for blooming now 91% complete. That is up 5% from the Iowa 5 year average.

Just like corn in the dough stage soybeans setting pods really increased week to week. Nationwide 59% of the soybean crop has put on pods. In Iowa 70% of the soybeans have put on pods. That is up 13% from the 5 year average. Nebraska has 64% of the soybean crop putting on pods. Kansas has 55% of its soybean crop putting on pods. That is a full 20% ahead of the 5 year average.

Breaking away from corn this week is the soybean condition rating. Which nationwide improved 1% to 73% good to excellent. Illinois remained unchanged week to week at 76% good to excellent. Kansas improved 1% to 68% good to excellent. Iowa and Nebraska both declined in soybean condition ratings. Nebraska soybeans dropped 1% to 79% good to excellent. Iowa soybeans dropped 3% to 73% good to excellent.

Oat harvest is about to cross the halfway mark at 49% complete. That is 6% higher than the 5 year average for oat harvest. Nebraska farmers have harvested 92% of the oat crop. Well ahead of the 5 year average of 81%. Iowa has harvested 85% of their oat crop. Similar to Nebraska Iowa has left its 5 year average for oat harvest behind at 74%.

Like soybeans nationally the oat crop improved 1% to 62% good to excellent. Iowa oats are rated 73% good to excellent. Nebraska oats are rated 61% good to excellent.

The sorghum crop is quickly coming along and looking fairly decent. Nationally the sorghum crop is rated 55% good to excellent. That is a 2% increase week to week. Nebraska soybeans top the nations crop condition rating at 64% good to excellent.

Winter wheat harvest is now over the three quarter mark, but slowing down. According to NASS 85% of winter wheat harvest is complete. That trails the 5 year average by 3%. Nebraska is soon to join the likes of Texas and Kansas at 96% complete. Northern states like Montana continue to slow the overall progress of wheat harvest with only 20% of the corp harvested. That compares to the 5 year average of 52% harvested. Washington is also well off pace at 33% harvested, compared to 48% on the 5 year average.

Pasture and range conditions were mixed this week as compared to last weeks gain. Nebraska pasture declined 1% to 59% good to excellent. Kansas pasture and range improved 1% to 53% good to excellent.

Soil moisture though continues to increase across much of the Midwest with recent rains. Nebraska topsoil moisture improved 4% to 63% adequate to surplus. Kansas topsoil moisture improved 11% to 81% adequate to surplus. Nebraska subsoil improved 2% to 64% adequate to surplus. Kansas subsoil improved 8% to 77% adequate to surplus.

You can see all of the NASS crop condition numbers here: https://downloads.usda.library.cornell.edu/usda-esmis/files/8336h188j/70795w747/6t054476d/prog3220.pdf

Clay Patton audio report:

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AUDIO: KAPPA Ethanol Crop Progress Report For The Week Of August 3 - KTIC

After years of hype, 5G making progress in the US – USA TODAY

The world's largest tech show will be an all-digital experience due to COVID-19 concerns. Video Elephant

FOSTER CITY, Calif. Given all the time that most of us have spent at home recently, its easy to lose sight of advances in technologies like 5G that are generally more useful when were out and about.

However, just as municipalities around the country have used reductions in traffic to speed up road improvement projects and other infrastructure enhancements, so too have several of the U.S.-based telco carriers been working to bring 5G to life sooner than originally anticipated.

Just last week, AT&T announced that it had achieved nationwide coverage for its 5G network, joining T-Mobile, who reached that important goal last December. In both cases, the companies are using whats called low-band frequencies to achieve these nationwide networks. The reason this matters is that cellular signals which are transmitted at these lower frequencies (600 MHz for T-Mobile and 850 MHz for AT&T) are able to travel long distances. This means you can create a bigger network with fewer cell towers.

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The problem is that the width of the lanes used to transmit data at those frequencies are very narrow, which means that the speeds you can get while using them are not much different from 4G. Needless to say, thats certainly not what we were led to believe 5G was going to be able to do.

You can get significantly faster 5G download speeds using a technology called millimeter wave (mmWave), which transmits data at much higher frequencies (such as 39 GHz) and, most importantly, offers significantly wider lanes for data traffic. The problem with mmWave is that the signals dont travel far (think, roughly a city block), and theyre highly susceptible to interference, including things like windows, walls, and even other people.

If you can get mmWave 5G service (which all three major US carriers have enabled, but only in a few cities around the country), it can deliver download speeds that are 50x faster than 4G. The huge caveat, however, is that you have to be outside, not moving, with few people around and located in the right section of the cities where the service is turned on.

In real-world tests of Verizons 5G network, which only uses mmWave, a measurement company called Open Signal found that people were actually only getting 5G service 0.4% of the time. If youve spent a lot of money on a 5G phone, thats probably not going to make you very happy.

The most interesting near-term options for 5G are around whats called mid-band spectrum, which means radio frequencies in the roughly 2.5-3.5 GHz range. Thanks to its acquisition of Sprint, right now T-Mobile is the only U.S. carrier that is using these frequencies, although both AT&T and Verizon have talked about using them at some point in the future.

The quality of 5G service when using these mid-band frequencies turns out to be a very solid compromise of good coverage (although not quite as wide as the low-band frequencies) with traffic lane sizes that should accommodate a very respectable 10x speed increase over 4G.

In addition to basic frequency developments, the carriers have also been working on other enhancements to their 5G networks. AT&T, for example, announced about a month ago that they have turned on a technology called DSS (Dynamic Spectrum Sharing), which allows 4G and 5G phones to use the same frequencies. Practically speaking, that means AT&T can use some of its huge range of 4G coverage to also carry 5G signals, which can lead to both better coverage and faster download speeds.

T-Mobile, for its part, is moving aggressively towards deploying whats called 5G SA (Standalone) Mode. Basically, this means all aspects of the networkboth the wireless connection to the cell tower and the internal core network that carries the data to and from various websites are optimized for 5G. Practically speaking, this will translate into another feature thats been long-promised for 5G reductions in whats called latency, or lag time. Up until now, all 5G networks have been in NSA (Non-Standalone) Mode, which mixes together 5G radio connections with 4G core networks.

Practically speaking, this means that response times for 5G phones havent been any better than 4G phones. 5G SA-based networks, however, can offer a 40% improvement in latency, which, for an application like mobile gaming, could mean the difference between being able to shoot a monster or getting eaten by one.

In addition to network improvements, there have been a number of new 5G phones brought to market recently across a much wider range of price points, from $500 to well over $1,500. In addition to current offerings from Samsung, LG, and OnePlus, next week Samsung is widely anticipated to introduce several more 5G-capable phones. Apple will also be bringing the first 5G-capable iPhones to market in October based on hints from its recent earnings call.

From a pricing plan perspective, the good news is that most carriers are not charging any kind of premium for 5G, although their range of plan options for 5G phones are typically limited to somewhat pricier unlimited plans.

The bottom line is that we are much closer to a good quality 5G experience in the US than weve ever been. After years of hype around the subject, its nice to see some of the early promises start to come to life. Plus, the good news about wireless network enhancements is that many of them will quietly improve over time, which will bring better performance to the 5G phones you can buy today or in the near future without you having to do anything.

Thats a concept I think we can all get behind.

USA TODAY columnist Bob O'Donnell is the president and chief analyst of TECHnalysis Research, a market research and consulting firm that provides strategic consulting and market research services to the technology industry and professional financial community. His clients are major technology firms including Microsoft, HP, Dell, Samsung and Intel. You can follow him on Twitter @bobodtech.The views and opinions expressed in this column are the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of USA TODAY.

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After years of hype, 5G making progress in the US - USA TODAY

Negotiators Report Progress in COVID-19 Aid Talks – Voice of America

WASHINGTON - Lawmakers participating in rare weekend talks on a huge coronavirus relief measure reported progress Saturday, as political pressure mounted to restore a newly expired $600-per-week supplemental unemployment benefit and send funding to help schools reopen.

``This was the longest meeting we had and it was more productive than the other meetings,'' said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. ``We're not close yet, but it was a productive discussion now each side knows where they're at."

Schumer spoke alongside House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., after meeting for three hours with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and White House chief of staff Mark Meadows.

Schumer said the officials would meet Monday and their staffs would meet Sunday.

The Democratic duo is eager for an expansive agreement, as are President Donald Trump and top Republicans like Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky. But perhaps one-half of Senate Republicans, mostly conservatives and those not facing difficult races this fall, are likely to oppose any deal.

Prior talks yielded little progress. The administration is willing to extend the $600 jobless benefit, at least in the short term, but is balking at other Democratic demands like aid for state and local governments, food stamp increases, and assistance to renters and homeowners.

Food aid, vote by mail

Pelosi mentioned food aid and funding for voting by mail after the negotiating session was over. She and Schumer appeared more upbeat than they have after earlier meetings.

``We have to get rid of this virus so that we can open our economy, safely open our schools, and to do so in a way that does not give a cut in benefits to American workers,`` Pelosi said.

Mnuchin said restoring the $600 supplemental jobless benefit was critically important to Trump.

``We're still a long ways apart and I don't want to suggest that a deal is imminent, because it is not,`` Meadows said afterward. ``There are still substantial differences, but we did make good progress."

The additional jobless benefit officially lapsed Friday, and Democrats have made clear that they will not extend it without securing other relief priorities. Whatever unemployment aid negotiators agree on will be made retroactive but antiquated state systems are likely to take weeks to restore the benefits.

A step back

Republicans in the Senate had been fighting to trim the $600 benefit, saying it must be slashed so that people don't make more in unemployment than they would if they returned to work. But their resolve weakened as the benefit expired, and Trump abruptly undercut their position by signaling he wants to keep the full $600 for now.

On Friday, Trump used Twitter to explicitly endorse extending the $600 payment and to criticize Schumer.

Washington's top power players agree that Congress must pass further relief in the coming days and weeks. At stake beyond the $600-per-week jobless benefit is a fresh $1,200 direct payment to most Americans, and hundreds of billions of dollars in other aid to states, businesses and the poor, among other elements.

Democrats hold a strong negotiating hand exploiting GOP divisions and they are expected to deliver a necessary trove of votes.

The COVID package will be the fifth legislative response to the pandemic and could well be the last one before the November election. The only other must-pass legislation on the agenda is a stopgap spending measure that should advance in September.

More flexibility

Since May, Republicans controlling the Senate had kept the relief negotiations on pause, in a strategy aimed at reducing its price tag. But as the pandemic surged back over the summer and as fractures inside the GOP have eroded the party's negotiating position Republicans displayed some greater flexibility.

Even with signs of progress in the talks, the list of items to negotiate remains daunting.

Democrats, for example, are pressing hard for a boost in food stamp benefits. Republicans added $20 billion for agribusinesses but nothing for greater food stamp benefits in their $1 trillion proposal. Meadows played a role in killing an increase in food aid during talks on the $2 trillion relief bill in March.

``Traditionally we've had a partnership between farms and families, and they've consistently broken that,'' said Senator Debbie Stabenow of Michigan, the top Democrat on the Senate Agriculture Committee.

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Negotiators Report Progress in COVID-19 Aid Talks - Voice of America

Progress stopped on Concow Fire in Feather River Canyon – Action News Now

UPDATED 3:38 p.m., Sunday, August 2, 2020 - The forward progress on the Concow Fire has stopped, said an official from the CAL FIRE Butte Unit. A total of two acres of vegetation was burned at Highway 70 and Big Bend Road.

Fire assets are being released from the fire at this time.

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FEATHER RIVER CANYON, Calif. - A fire is burning in the Feather River Canyon on Highway 70 at Big Bend Road in Butte County.

The Concow Fire was called in close to 2:30 in the afternoon on Sunday, Aug. 2, 2020.

A representative from the CAL FIRE Butte Unit told Action News Now that a full wildland response has been initiated.

So far the fire has burned two to three acres.

Check back for new information, which will be posted in this article.

(The photo was taken by Meghan Brown)

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Progress stopped on Concow Fire in Feather River Canyon - Action News Now

Ag Progress Days going online this year – Sunbury Daily Item

The Daily Item

STATE COLLEGE The coronavirus pandemic will not stop Penn States 2020 Ag Progress Days scheduled for Aug. 9-12 from providing educational activities, research tours and commercial interactions, even as the event shifts to a virtual format due to COVID-19 restrictions, organizers in the College of Agricultural Sciences said this past week.

The global COVID-19 pandemic has presented serious challenges to our agricultural producers, our food supply chains, our businesses, our livelihoods, and our health, said Jesse Darlington, Ag Progress Days manager.

But as Pennsylvanias land-grant university, it is Penn States mission to help our states farmers, families and communities to navigate these challenges, whether we all can be together in one place or not.

Darlington noted that instead of attending in-person events on the show grounds at the Russell E. Larson Agricultural Research Center at Rock Springs, visitors to the Ag Progress Days website at http://apd.psu.edu will find live, interactive webinars, virtual tours of the research center, and video presentations highlighting some of the latest research, educational programs, and best practices in agriculture, natural resources, health and nutrition, and other topics.

Website visitors also can connect with hundreds of our commercial exhibitors to learn about the goods and services they offer and, in some cases, view product demonstration videos and arrange virtual meetings with company representatives, he said.

The Marketplace section of the website features registered Ag Progress Days vendors, offering enhanced exhibitor profiles and the opportunity for attendees to connect with participating vendors virtually. From a map of exhibitor booth space or from the exhibitor list, visitors can find contact information, product images, show specials, product videos and other information.

Over the four-day period, at least 46 live webinars will provide virtual attendees with valuable and engaging content addressing a wide range of topics. Viewers watching the live webinars will be able to ask questions of the presenters, and the sessions will be recorded for future viewing. The webinars are free, but registration is required.

The interactive sessions will cover issues related to dairy, livestock and poultry production and animal health; business management; field and forage crop production; nutrient management; food demonstrations with healthy recipes; food safety and home food preservation; forestry and wildlife; household and landscape pest management; recommendations for beginning farmers; drinking water quality and pond management; and other topics.

Another live, online session hosted by Rick Roush, dean of the College of Agricultural Sciences, and Russell Redding, Pennsylvania secretary of agriculture will take the form of a town hall meeting. The topic of the hour-long forum, to be held at 2 p.m. Aug. 10, will be the impact of COVID-19 on Pennsylvania agriculture, lessons learned and next steps in recovering from the pandemic. A link to register to view the town hall can be found on the Ag Progress Days website.

Among the on-demand attractions of the online expo are virtual tours of the Russell E. Larson Agricultural Research Center curated by Penn States Pasto Agricultural Museum, which is located at the center giving viewers a glimpse of some of the field studies conducted at the 2,000-acre facility.

Virtual tour locations will feature American Chestnut Foundation efforts to restore the American chestnut to Eastern forests; experiments on vegetable and small-fruit production in high tunnels; Penn States Deer Research Center; research on stream riparian buffers; best practices for woodlot management; and dairy beef feedlot management.

In addition, the Pasto Museum will highlight its I Remember Ag Progress Days oral history project.

Website visitors will be able to hear friends of the museum and former Penn State faculty members and extension educators discuss their memories of past events and how Ag Progress Days has evolved over the last half-century.

Many other on-demand videos and recorded webinars also will be available from the website, featuring topics typically covered at Ag Progress Days DAYS.uding home gardening, invasive species such as spotted lanternfly, youth activities, and more.

We hope Ag Progress Days attendees enjoy this online content, which will be available long after the show dates of Aug. 9-12, and that they find it interesting and valuable enough that they return often to explore the website to the fullest, Darlington said. We also encourage everyone to mark Aug. 10-12, 2021, on their calendars, when we plan to return to Rock Springs for Ag Progress Days 2021.

We are making critical coverage of the coronavirus available for free. Please consider subscribing so we can continue to bring you the latest news and information on this developing story.

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Ag Progress Days going online this year - Sunbury Daily Item

Governor Cuomo Announces Progress of Technology SWAT Partnership in Assisting New Yorkers During COVID-19 Pandemic – ny.gov

"The collaboration between tech industry leaders and our dedicated public employees helped New York meet the technical and operational demands of the response to the pandemic while also saving millions in taxpayer dollars," Governor Cuomo said. "Their assistance during these challenging times had a positive impact on millions of New Yorkers, and the continued support and services will be critical as we battle a public health emergency and build back our economy even stronger than before."

TheNew York State COVID-19 Tech 'SWAT' Team, in coordination with state-ledinternal technical teams, developed 40 projects during the COVID-19 public health crisis thatresultedin nearly 50 million interactions between the public and state governmentand an estimated costsavingsofapproximately $14 million, according to theprogress reportissued by the state's Office of Information Technology Services.

In March, at Governor Cuomo's direction, ITS solicited volunteers to help develop technological solutions to support and accelerate New York State's coordinated, decisive, and rapidly evolving response to the COVID-19 outbreak. The response from the private sector was unprecedented, with nearly 7,300 volunteers representing 3,500 organizations answering the call to service.

ITS worked with the Governor's Office and the state Department of Financial Services to formally establish volunteer teams of highly trained civic-minded technical professionals to work alongside state staff and assist inNew York's response during 30- to 90-day sprints. The team also coordinated the deployment of critical contributions of technical equipment and software to support COVID-19 activities.

TheCOVID-19 Tech 'SWAT' Teamhas since assisted State agencies with operations, analytics and other technological applications that allowed themto continue to deliver critical services during the pandemic. During that timeframe, 19 projects were developed pro-bono, delivering a combined 25,000 hours of volunteer support and saving taxpayers approximately $14 million.

In addition, the state developed 21 priority projects managed and led entirely by internal government teams at ITS, the office of Digital and Media Services, and other internal agency teams. New Yorkers frequently relied on these initiatives online, with digital projects yielding 49 million service interactions and 342 million page views across 60 million users.

Pro bono tech projects developed during the COVID-19 response include:

ITS Interim Chief Information Officer and Director Jeremy Goldberg said, "Under Governor Cuomo's leadership, New York State has moved with urgency, professionalismand resilience to tackle COVID-19 head-on. As part of that effort, we've received unprecedented assistance from civic-minded technologists across the state and nation to support our response. We thank them for their skills and their generosity and applaud our dedicated government technology staff in supporting New Yorkers during this time of need."

Superintendent of Financial Services Linda A. Lacewell said,"Under Governor Cuomo's leadership, New Yorkers have bravely flattened the curve.This progress report is a testament to what can be achieved when government and industry both step up and work together to deliver creative and innovative solutions to build New York back better."

Head of Government Affairs for Google NY Angela Pinsky said,"When New York put out the call for help, Google was eager to answer. As we continue to navigate the crisis of the pandemic together, the Governor's Office, ITS, and all of the agencies have remained organized, directed, and clear visioned in structuring these innovative and novel public-private collaborations. We were honored to be able to provide the technological expertise and resources of our Google.org Fellows to help our fellow New Yorkers during this critical time."

President of US Regulated Industries at Microsoft Toni Townes-Whitley said,"The leadership shown by New York State with the Coronavirus State Technology SWAT Team has helped New Yorkers through the first phases of this pandemic. Microsoft is pleased to have played a supporting role, not only helping New York deliver a mobile Covid self-assessment tool to its citizens, but also accelerating technology innovation to support them through each phase of the crisis."

NYS Tech SWAT initiative was made possible by deep internal partnership across various state teams, including the critical work of the Chamber Digital Strategy & Social Media team, Department of Health, Department of Labor, Department of Motor Vehicle Services, and Department of Agriculture and Markets. Tech SWAT partners included Apple, Accenture, Acquia, Armanino LLP, Castlight, Cisco, Codecademy, Dell, Google, H2R Product Science, HPE, LinkedIn, Ludia Consulting, Mastercard, Microsoft, Square, Tata Consultancy Services, and Unisys.

To download the full report highlighting the Tech SWAT program and its associated projects, visit the program websitehere.

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Governor Cuomo Announces Progress of Technology SWAT Partnership in Assisting New Yorkers During COVID-19 Pandemic - ny.gov

Forward progress stopped on 10-acre brush fire near homes in Sunland – KTLA Los Angeles

Firefighters were working to protect homes in Sunland after a brush fire broke out Friday in the hills south of Big Tujunga Canyon Road, officials said.

The blaze sparked around 1 p.m. above the 8100 block of Ellenbogen Street. It covered about 10 acres by 2 p.m., the Los Angeles Fire Department said in a series of alerts.

Shortly after 3 p.m., fire officials announced that forward progress had been halted and the fire was 40% contained.

The nature of the terrain made it difficult for flames to spread, but that could change if wind kicks up. The winds had been around 10 mph, according to LAFD.

Firefighters said they were defending homes along Rhodesia Avenue to ensure none are damaged.

However, no evacuations were ordered, LAFD spokesperson Margaret Stewart said.

Aerial video from Sky5 showed the blaze charring a hillside surrounded by residences. There was one structure within the area that was burning, but officials appeared to have protected it from the flames.

So far, no structures have been damaged, officials said.

Crews from LAFD and the Angeles National Forest were battling the fire both on the ground and in the air.

A man was detained for questioning; however, there was no confirmation the blaze was suspicious is nature, LAFD said. Its cause remains under investigation.

No injuries were reported.

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Forward progress stopped on 10-acre brush fire near homes in Sunland - KTLA Los Angeles

Progress Reported In Talks To Extend Enhanced Unemployment – CBS New York

Man Seen In Chokehold Video Arrested AgainA man whose arrest sparked outrage earlier this summer has been arrested for a second time since the incident.

Long Island Sound Raft RescueSuffolk County police rescued a group of men from a raft Sunday on the Long Island Sound.

Party Boat Fined After Illegal GatheringThe operators of a party boat in New York City were charged after allegedly hosting an illegal gathering.

Video Shows Apparent Party Under Kosciuszko BridgeSnapchat video shows what appears to be a large party under the Kosciuszko Bridge in Brooklyn.

Men Seen Opening Fire On Harlem StreetPolice are searching for two men seen on video opening fire on a car on a Harlem street.

Tri-State Braces For Tropical Storm IsaiasTri-State Area emergency management officials have been closely monitoring the storm for several days, and preparations are now underway for its arrival tomorrow. CBS2's John Dias reports.

New York Weather: Pleasant MondayCBS2's Vanessa Murdock has the latest weather forecast.

Negro League Stadium In Paterson, N.J. Getting New Lease On LifeThis year marks what would be the 100th anniversary of the creation of the Negro baseball leagues, and one bit of history is being restored in New Jersey. CBS2's Steve Overmyer reports

New York Weather: All Eyes On IsaiasCBS2's Vanessa Murdock has the latest on the approaching tropical storm. Here's your 11 p.m. forecast.

SpaceX Crew Dragon Safely Returns To EarthThe capsule splashed down softly in the Gulf of Mexico on Sunday, completing its historic journey to the International Space Station. CBS2's Mark Strassmann reports

NYC Shootings Surpass Total For All Of 2019The situation is getting so dire the Brooklyn borough president and district attorney are calling for more drastic measures to stop the gun violence. CBS2's Hazel Sanchez reports

Mother Of Man Killed In Freeport Boat Accident Speaks To CBS2Police are still investigating what led to two boats colliding, resulting in the death of 25-year-old Jorge Soto and injuries to six others. CBS2's Cory James reports

Tracking Isaias: CBS2 Has The LatestCBS2's Vanessa Murdock has what you need to know about Tropical Storm Isaias as it makes its way up the coast toward the Tri-State Area.

New York Weather: Thunderstorms Possible Into MondayCBS2's Vanessa Murdock is tracking some potentially inclement weather that could impact the Tri-State Area during the overnight hours. Here's your 9 p.m. forecast

N.Y. Continues To Make Good Progress In Battle Against CoronavirusThe state is reporting a new low for hospitalizations and no new deaths in New York City. CBS2's Jessica Moore reports

Will There Be More Coronavirus Relief Out Of Washington?New York Sen. Chuck Schumer is among those fighting for more aid for those out of work due to the pandemic. CBS2's Jessica Moore reports

25-Year-Old Man Killed In Freeport Boat CrashPolice in Nassau County are still investigating what led to the two-boat collision that also injured six other people. CBS2's Dave Carlin reports

Florida Has 1-2 Punch Of ProblemsAlready overrun by the coronavirus pandemic, Florida is also dealing with Tropical Storm Isaias. CBS2's Manuel Bojorquez reports

Tracking Isaias: Vanessa Murdock With The LatestThe tropical storm is expected to threaten the Tri-State Area starting Tuesday.

Police Looking For 5 Men Suspected In Armed Robbery, Home Invasion Against 72-Year-Old Bronx WomanPolice said five men knocked on a 72-year-old woman's door and pushed their way in when she answered.

3 Homeless Men Arrested For Fighting With Knife And Sticks At East Village Park, Police SayThree homeless men were arrested overnight after they were found fighting with a knife and sticks at a park in the East Village.

Nassau County Police Investigating Deadly Freeport Creek Boat Crash; 1 Dead, 6 InjuredSeven people were hospitalized following the huge rescue effort at Cow Meadow Park. A 25-year-old man later died from his injuries. CBS2's Christina Fan reports

New York Weather: CBS2's 8/2 Sunday Afternoon ForecastJohn Elliott is tracking Hurricane Isaias and has the updated forecast for the Tri-State area on CBS2 News This Morning.

New York Weather: CBS2 8/1 Nightly Forecast at 11PMCBS2's Vanessa Murdock has your weather forecast for August 1 at 11 p.m.

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Progress Reported In Talks To Extend Enhanced Unemployment - CBS New York

Raptors Tactical: Signs of progress in the half-court offence against the Lakers – The Athletic

Ahead of the official restart of the Toronto Raptors season, veteran centre Marc Gasols experience led him to a fairly straightforward conclusion about how to succeed in the bubble.

If you play the best defence and make the most shots, you are going to win, he said this week. To me, if there are things you are going to ask for, those are my two things. Whoever makes the most shots and plays the best defence is going to win.

The game is 90 percent defence. The other half is offence. Or something like that.

Late-scrum jest aside, Gasols point is appreciated. In broad terms, you can split the game of basketball into two sides, and it usually takes some success on both to go far. Thats why we talk about things like which teams rank in the top 10 on both ends of the floor. Its why playoff matchups are framed not only by who has the best player overall but by which team has more players they can keep on it...

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Raptors Tactical: Signs of progress in the half-court offence against the Lakers - The Athletic

Donald Trump likes to say were making tremendous progress one look at this chart tells a different story – MarketWatch

As Donald Trump sees it, progress in the fight against the coronavirus can be described in several ways. Big! Tremendous! Exciting! Encouraging! Significant! Incredible!

Others might use Not nearly enough! but, hey, thats clearly not the presidents style. He prefers the rosy superlatives, even if the circumstances might call for some sobering language.

Twitter user Invictus, a markets veteran and contributor to The Big Picture blog, juxtaposed those great strides Trump has trumpeted over the past few months against the mounting death toll from COVID-19 in the United States. If youve been paying attention, you wont be surprised:

Theres no superb on the chart, but that didnt stop New York Democrat Hakeem Jefferies from grilling AG Bill Barr over that use of the word to describe Trumps coronavirus response:

In recent days, Trump struck a more realistic tone, saying last week he expects the pandemic to get worse before it gets better. He also shifted from months of playing down the virus by endorsing the use of masks, though his critics contend it was PR spin in reaction to dismal poll numbers.

Alas, the new Trump didnt seem to last long, considering he retweeted a video claiming masks are of no use, while touting hydroxychloroquine. It was pulled from Facebook FB, +8.17% , Twitter TWTR, -0.87% and Google GOOG, -3.16% for spreading misinformation.

Meanwhile, the U.S. tally for confirmed cases of COVID-19 climbed above 4.30 million on Tuesday, and the death toll exceeded 148,000, after Texas became the fourth state with more than 400,000 cases, joining California, Florida and early hot spot New York.

The U.S. counted another 1,000 COVID-19 fatalities on Monday for a sixth straight day, according to data aggregated by Johns Hopkins University.

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Donald Trump likes to say were making tremendous progress one look at this chart tells a different story - MarketWatch