Max Scherzer accepted his 10-game suspension because it’s what is best for the Mets
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:45:51 GMT
SAN FRANCISCO — Max Scherzer was just trying to get a grip.Scherzer’s decision to accept the 10-game suspension that came from his ejection in Los Angeles doesn’t mean he’s admitting to guilt. Scherzer has vehemently denied any wrongdoing and is extremely frustrated that he is being suspended 10 games for using too much rosin during the Mets’ series finale against the Los Angeles Dodgers on Wednesday. Accepting the suspension is simply what’s best for the Mets.“I’m going to follow what the Mets want me to do and that’s accept the suspension and come to a settlement with them,” Scherzer said Thursday at Oracle Park in San Francisco. “I came to a settlement with MLB on what the fine should be and I move forward.”The amount of rosin Scherzer used was deemed excessive, and a statement released by MLB seemed to dispute Scherzer’s notion that he only used rosin. It’s all a mess that Scherzer and the Mets a...Early morning fire destroys wing of Idaho high school
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:45:51 GMT
POCATELLO, Idaho (AP) — An early morning fire destroyed part of a large high school in the southern Idaho city of Pocatello on Friday.No one was injured in the fire, but Pocatello Fire Department Assistant Chief Shane Grow said one wing of Highland High School was completely destroyed. The wing housed the school’s cafeteria, gymnasium, choir and band rooms, and it had severe structural damage including a collapsed roof.Still, the Pocatello School District said in a memo to parents that it appears the fire doors between the other wings of the school operated properly, preventing the fire from spreading.It’s not yet clear how much smoke and water damage occurred to the rest of the school, but at least two other wings have “significant water on the floor surface,” the district said.“We wish we could have saved the entire school but feel good that we’ve kept the fire from spreading to the other wings,” Grow said.The fire was reported just before 4 a.m., and when firefighters arriv...Two people stabbed, injured at Dene High School in La Loche, Sask., mayor says
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:45:51 GMT
LA LOCHE, Sask. — The mayor of a northern Saskatchewan community says a student stabbed two people at the high school in La Loche.Georgina Jolibois says the student stabbed a staff member and another student at the Dene High School. She says the two individuals are being treated and the person responsible is in RCMP custody.The school division has not provided further details about what happened, but says RCMP are to comment further.The division says the school is safe and that there is no current threat.Jolibois says the stabbing has shaken and re-traumatized the community, which is trying to make sense of what happened. In 2016, four people were killed and seven injured in a shooting rampage in La Loche, including two teachers at the high school.The Canadian PressDanny Masterson’s rape retrial: Key things to know
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:45:51 GMT
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Five months after a deadlocked jury led to a mistrial for actor Danny Masterson, the former star of “That ’70s Show” is about to be retried in a Los Angeles court. Masterson is accused of raping three women between 2001 and 2003. He could get 45 years in prison if convicted.Here’s the key element key elements, characters and issues that will factor into the retrial. Opening statements are set to begin on Monday.NEW ROLE FOR SCIENTOLOGYThe Church of Scientology loomed large at Masterson’s trial. It could loom larger still in his retrial, with Judge Charlaine Olmedo allowing expert testimony on Scientology that she denied the first time.Masterson is a prominent member of the church. All three of his accusers are former members who grew disillusioned with the institution in the aftermath of their alleged assaults, saying that the institution and its policies protected Masterson while they found themselves harassed and discouraged from going to autho...Gatineau police officers who allegedly beat Senegalese diplomat will not face charges
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:45:51 GMT
MONTREAL — Quebec’s prosecution service says it will not lay charges against the Gatineau, Que., police officers who allegedly beat a Senegalese diplomat in August.Spokeswoman Patricia Johnson says prosecutors ruled out charges after they received a report on the incident by Quebec’s police watchdog — Bureau des enquêtes indépendantes.The Senegalese Embassy has alleged that diplomat Niang Oumou Kalsoum Sall was beaten so severely by police that she had to be transported to hospital.Gatineau police have said they were called to the diplomat’s residence to assist a bailiff attempting to seize property in connection with a court order for her to pay a former landlord $45,000.Police claimed Kalsoum Sall, who has diplomatic immunity, bit and struck officers who arrived at the scene. The Senegalese Embassy in Ottawa did not immediately respond to a request for comment.This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 21, 2023.The Canadian PressLiberals table legislation to overhaul passenger rights charter
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:45:51 GMT
OTTAWA — The Liberals have put forward legislation that aims to make good on their pledge to tighten passenger rights rules after a year marked by travel chaos and a ballooning complaints backlog.Tabled in the House of Commons as part of a broader budget bill Thursday, the new provisions ratchet up penalties on airlines, shore up the complaint process and target luggage and flight disruption loopholes that allow airlines to steer clear of customer compensation.Sylvie De Bellefeuille, a lawyer with the advocacy group Option consommateurs, says the tenfold increase to a $250,000 maximum fine for airline violations encourages compliance, as does an amendment placing the regulatory cost of complaints on carriers’ shoulders.She also says complaint resolution will be faster with the establishment of dedicated officers, and applauds the closure of a loophole that has allowed airlines to avoid compensation for delayed baggage.However, passenger rights advocate Gabor Lukacs says the le...First Nations in B.C. died at a much higher rate from toxic drugs, health authority
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:45:51 GMT
VANCOUVER — The chief medical officer of British Columbia’s First Nations Health Authority says the toxic drug crisis in 2022 was the most devastating year so far for Indigenous people, their families, and communities. Dr. Nel Wieman says First Nations people are disproportionately dying from illicit drugs in B.C. and the gap continues to widen.First Nations people represent 3.3 per cent of B.C.’s population, but the health authority says 16.4 per cent of those who died from overdoses last year were Indigenous. Wieman says First Nations woman were particularly affected, with a death rate that was double that of non-Indigenous women. She says people will continue to die if action isn’t taken and she made a series of recommendations including for equitable and timely access to culturally safe services closer to their homes.Colleen Erickson, board chair of the health authority, says First Nations are losing a whole generation of young people but communities are coming toget...Montana transgender lawmaker silenced: What to know
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:45:51 GMT
HELENA, Mont. (AP) — The latest high-profile example of state legislative leadership deciding who can be heard during statehouse debates is playing out in Montana where a transgender lawmaker has been silenced by Republican leaders.Rep. Zooey Zephyr, who was deliberately referred to using male pronouns by some conservative lawmakers demanding her censure, has said she will not apologize for saying lawmakers would have “blood on their hands” if they passed a ban on gender-affirming health care. Montana is among a wave of states passing legislation that opponents say could put transgender teens in jeopardy. Montana’s House speaker said he won’t let Zephyr speak on the chamber floor until she apologizes.Here’s what you need to know about the situation: WHO IS THE TRANSGENDER LAWMAKER AT THE CENTER OF THIS? Last year, Zephyr became the first openly transgender woman elected to the Montana Legislature — putting her among a record number of transgender lawmakers who began serv...Film explores B.C. woman’s experience with magic mushrooms to ease cancer anxiety
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:45:51 GMT
Laurie Brooks never thought she’d one day use magic mushrooms and advocate for the ability of others to do the same.The 55-year-old B.C. resident also never imagined having colon cancer and fearing the impact her imminent death would have on her husband and four children.Her journey as a believer in the power of psilocybin, the active ingredient in magic mushrooms, began when a friend mentioned she could try a small dose as part of a therapy session to deal with end-of-life anxiety.The Canadian documentary “Dosed: The Trip of a Lifetime,” explores Brooks’ experience with psilocybin, which she says allowed her to gain insightinto herself and accept her cancer as it spread and she decided to forego a third major surgery.“Dosed,” directed by Nicholas Meyers and Tyler Chandler, was set to open Friday in Toronto before heading to cities including Vancouver, Victoria, Ottawa, Winnipeg, Halifax, Hamilton and Calgary.It comes amida court challenge filed a...Insurance association warns federal dental plan could lead employers to drop coverage
Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:45:51 GMT
OTTAWA — An association of health insurance providers warns it might not be worth it for small businesses to provide dental benefits to some employees once the government launches a national dental plan.The Canadian Life and Health Insurance Association has pitched the idea of a federal tax credit for small businesses to convince them not to drop their coverage. “When governments provide free coverage for any type of benefit, employers will naturally ask if they should continue to pay for those or whether their employees would be as well-served … moving to the public plan,” said association president Stephen Frank.“The risk is that a number of employers will say to themselves, ‘Is there an opportunity for me to allow my employees to have equivalent coverage, but me not to have to bear that burden?'”The Liberals announced in their latest federal budget that they would spend $13 billion over the next five years to provide uninsured low- and middle-income ...Latest news
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