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Friday, April 30, 2021

Motorcyclist hits WCU student, flees scene: Police - WPVI-TV

CHESTER, Pennsylvania (WPVI) -- Authorities in Delaware County released a surveillance video Friday of a hit-and-run in hopes of finding the driver.

The college student was seriously hurt in that accident, and the victim's mother spoke exclusively with Action News about the terrifying ordeal.


"How could somebody leave somebody's kid lying in the street?" said Mary Alice Brancato, whose son was hurt in this incident last month.

Surveillance video shows the 22-year-old walking in the crosswalk at Morton and Melrose avenues in Chester, Delaware County when a motorcyclist comes barreling into him.

The impact of the accident caused Nicholas to land on the other side of the intersection.

Officials say the driver never braked.

"The person that hit him never stopped. Just never stopped, and I don't understand," said Brancato. "The video, you can see that he doesn't move for a few minutes, and then he tries to stand up, and realizes he can't, and then he crawls to the curb like a dog."

An employee at a nearby convenient store alerted traffic to keep the 22-year-old from getting run over.


Nicholas, who is a junior at West Chester University, was visiting a friend at Widener University.

He spent a week in the ICU undergoing three surgeries to his leg that's now held together with 107 staples.

Officials say the black-colored motorcycle was seen traveling the wrong way on 10th Street, seconds after the crime.

Witnesses describe the motorcycle as a full dresser with saddlebags.

"I just wish they would tell the truth," said Brancato. "Because not coming forward to me means you did mean to do it. You saw him and didn't care."

Anyone with information about this incident is asked to contact Chester police.

Copyright © 2021 WPVI-TV. All Rights Reserved.

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Billionaire Eli Broad dies at 87, helped create Los Angeles art scene - Reuters

Eli Broad waits to speak during a media preview of The Broad Museum in Los Angeles, California September 16, 2015. REUTERS/Kevork Djansezian/File Photo

Eli Broad, the billionaire entrepreneur turned philanthropist and art collector who played an outsized role in shaping the art and cultural scene of Los Angeles, died on Friday at the age of 87.

Broad passed away at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles following a long illness, said Suzi Emmerling, a spokeswoman for the Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation.

An accountant by trade who made his fortune in real estate and insurance, Broad championed and helped finance the Broad Museum of contemporary art, which opened in 2015.

He also secured the art that would become the museum's first major acquisition, the collection of Italian Count Guiseppe Biumo di Panza, now said to be worth $1 billion, according to a biography of Broad on the foundation's website.

Broad contributed heavily to the construction of the nearby Walt Disney Concert Hall as well as an art center at the University of California, Los Angeles.

His donations also helped open the Broad Center at Yale School of Management, and the Broad Institute, a genomic medicine research center created in partnership with Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

“As a businessman Eli saw around corners, as a philanthropist he saw the problems in the world and tried to fix them, as a citizen he saw the possibility in our shared community, and as a husband, father and friend he saw the potential in each of us,” Gerun Riley, president of the Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation, said in a statement.

Broad was born in the Bronx, New York, in 1933 and moved to Detroit with his family while still young. It was in that Midwestern city that he would begin his career as a real estate developer, building single-family homes in the suburbs.

He invested in an insurance company in the 1970s, renaming it Sun America, and made much of his fortune there before selling the business for $18 billion in the mid-1990s. He and his wife Edythe moved to Los Angeles in 1963.

An avid art collector, Broad turned to philanthropy full time in 1999, according to a biography on the foundation's website. He retired from the foundation in 2016.

Broad is survived by Edye and his two sons, Jeffrey and Gary.

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Motorcyclist hits WCU student, flees scene: Police - WPVI-TV

CHESTER, Pennsylvania (WPVI) -- Authorities in Delaware County released a surveillance video Friday of a hit-and-run in hopes of finding the driver.

The college student was seriously hurt in that accident, and the victim's mother spoke exclusively with Action News about the terrifying ordeal.


"How could somebody leave somebody's kid lying in the street?" said Mary Alice Brancato, whose son was hurt in this incident last month.

Surveillance video shows the 22-year-old walking in the crosswalk at Morton and Melrose avenues in Chester, Delaware County when a motorcyclist comes barreling into him.

The impact of the accident caused Nicholas to land on the other side of the intersection.

Officials say the driver never braked.

"The person that hit him never stopped. Just never stopped, and I don't understand," said Brancato. "The video, you can see that he doesn't move for a few minutes, and then he tries to stand up, and realizes he can't, and then he crawls to the curb like a dog."

An employee at a nearby convenient store alerted traffic to keep the 22-year-old from getting run over.


Nicholas, who is a junior at West Chester University, was visiting a friend at Widener University.

He spent a week in the ICU undergoing three surgeries to his leg that's now held together with 107 staples.

Officials say the black-colored motorcycle was seen traveling the wrong way on 10th Street, seconds after the crime.

Witnesses describe the motorcycle as a full dresser with saddlebags.

"I just wish they would tell the truth," said Brancato. "Because not coming forward to me means you did mean to do it. You saw him and didn't care."

Anyone with information about this incident is asked to contact Chester police.

Copyright © 2021 WPVI-TV. All Rights Reserved.

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Car Plows Into House In San Jose; Driver Flees Scene - CBS San Francisco

SAN JOSE (CBS SF) — A car slammed into a house overnight in San Jose, and the driver is being sought after fleeing the scene.

The crash happened at about 12:49 a.m. on the 1400 block of Willow St in the city’s Willow Glen neighborhood, San Jose police said.

READ MORE: Asian American Attacks: Oakland Chinatown Chamber of Commerce President Carl Chan Assaulted

The driver had fled by the time officers arrived. The home was left with major damage to the front of the house and garage area.

READ MORE: Bay Area Lawmaker's Bill To Preserve Remote Access For Public Meetings Post-Pandemic Facing Resistance

Neighbors rushed out to provide help and said the airbag was not deployed and they were surprised that someone was able to walk away from the crash.

“[The crash] shook the whole house, and we came out to see what was happening and there was a car in our front room,” said homeowner Lisa Swenson.

MORE NEWS: Car Crash In Fairfield Leaves Thousands Without Power

No one in the house was injured.

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Car Plows Into House In San Jose; Driver Flees Scene - CBS San Francisco
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Port Ludlow Art League announce featured artists and jeweler for May - Port Townsend Leader

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This upcoming month, Port Ludlow Art League will feature the work of the abstract critique group in their new art exhibit: “Creating During COVID.”

During the pandemic, members of the abstract critique group have had virtual meetings every week for critique and camaraderie. The result of their abstract work will be on display at the Sound Community Bank in Port Ludlow during the month of May.

The participating artists include Ann Bernard, JoAnna Caro, Ann Gagnier, Joie Hyde, Georganne Muse, Carol Nielsen, Pamela Raine, Diane Walker, and Patricia Webber.

The “Creating During COVID” exhibit will also be online at www.portludlowart.org.

The League’s Jeweler of the Month is Mary Lynn Laker, designer of necklaces, earrings, and bracelets in a wide variety of styles and materials. Silver, bronze, gems, felt, crystals, and stones – no two of her creations are alike. She has fashioned crows, fish, Buddhas, circles, squares, and more into a delightful collection of jewelry. 

Throughout May, Laker’s artwork will be on display at the Port Ludlow Art League Gallery.

In May, Port Ludlow Art League will also be hosting an abstract painting raffle. The abstract critique group recently collaborated on an art project, circulating two 24-inch-by-18-inch canvases from artist to artist.

Creating unique abstract paintings using acrylics and collage, the group has donated the finished products to the Port Ludlow Art League Scholarship Fund.

The paintings will be raffled off and the winning tickets will be selected on Monday, May 31. Raffle tickets, available for purchase at the Port Ludlow Art League Gallery, are $5 for one ticket and $10 for three tickets.

The scholarship fund benefits local graduating seniors.

Located next to the Sound Community Bank at the corner of Oak Bay Road and Osprey Ridge Drive in Port Ludlow, the Port Ludlow Art League Gallery is open from noon to 4 p.m. every Thursday and Friday.

For more information, visit
portludlowart.org.

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Dispatch: EFD on scene of working structure fire on Baker Ave. - 14 News WFIE Evansville - 14 News WFIE Evansville

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Dispatch: EFD on scene of working structure fire on Baker Ave. - 14 News WFIE Evansville  14 News WFIE Evansville

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Port Townsend receives clean audit results from State Auditor's Office - Port Townsend Leader

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Audits of the city of Port Townsend’s financial statements and accountability recently showed the city is operating in compliance with auditing standards.

In the accountability audit, the city of Port Townsend — which employed approximately 130 people in 2019 and brought in $31.8 million in operating revenue — was found to be in compliance with all applicable state laws, regulations, and its own policies and provides adequate controls over the safeguarding of public resources.

Outside of the city’s finances, the accountability audit focused on several key areas:

• Compliance with the terms of the Fort Worden Public Development Authority interlocal agreement;

• Procurement;

• Accounts payable;

• Financial condition; and

• Self insurance for unemployment.

For more information on the city of Port Townsend’s audit reports, visit https://ift.tt/33a2tyJ.

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Charging documents: Cell phone, GPS data places three suspects at scene of April 22 homicide - Fauquier Times

Cell phone tracking data and data from a court-ordered ankle monitor has placed three suspects at the scene of an April 22 homicide in Remington, charging documents filed by investigators allege. Charles “Trip” Bopp, III, 24 was shot and killed outside his home after arriving at his residence while a burglary was in progress, according to the sheriff’s office.

José Vidal Pereira, 31, of Manassas, was wearing a court-ordered tracking device as he awaited trial in two felony drug cases in Prince William County, the criminal complaint filed with his arrest alleges. “The GPS location from his ankle monitor shows him at [Bopp's home] at 5:26:54 p.m.,” the document says, which is "consistent with the time frame that the murder took place."

He had been released from the Prince William-Manassas Regional Adult Detention Center on Sept. 2, 2020, on “intensive” pre-trial supervision, according to court records.

Another lead was decidedly low-tech, but led to the arrest of three suspects: Martin Anuar Martinez, 30, of Manassas left his phone inside Bopp’s residence, two criminal complaints allege. Martinez himself was arrested in Texas April 26, and his phone led to the arrest of two other suspects, according to charging documents. A search of another suspect’s phone found Martinez had told them he was fleeing to Texas, an April 26 search warrant affidavit alleges.

photo_ft_news_bopp murder suspects mugshots.jpg

(From top left) Darren Nathaniel Davis, 36; Jury Beatrice Guerra, 28; Martin Anuar Martinez, 30; and José Vidal Pereira, 31

Darren Nathaniel Davis, 36, of Manassas was arrested April 28 after investigators searched Martinez’s phone and found “multiple calls to that phone [that] came from a number belonging to Darren Davis. Cell phone records were obtained for Davis and those location records showed Davis near the scene of the murder during the time it was committed,” the criminal complaint filed with his arrest alleges.

Also found on Martinez’s phone were text messages between him and Jury Beatrice Guerra, 28, of Woodbridge. “Text messages between Jury Guerra and Martin Martinez show that they conspired to commit burglary” of the home, the complaint filed with her April 24 arrest alleges. During a bond hearing on Thursday, however, Guerra’s defense attorney argued there is no evidence that suggests Guerra was physically present when the homicide took place, and prosecutors did not refute that claim.

All four suspects are charged with first-degree murder and other felonies related to the alleged burglary. (See box.) Investigators have not stated publicly which of the defendants they believe shot and killed Bopp.

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Charging documents: Cell phone, GPS data places three suspects at scene of April 22 homicide - Fauquier Times
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Inside the Most Fascinating Scene from 'Life in Color' - Outside

Anytime I watch a nature documentary, I hope it will include my favorite type of scene: animals edited into an Old Western-style showdown sequence. Think of the iconic example of the baby marine iguana getting chased by a horde of snakes in Planet Earth II. There’s something satisfying about the combination of serious (and often British-accented) narration, recognizable music tropes pulled from a chase scene, and high-definition footage of surprisingly expressive reptiles. A new entry into my personal canon comes from the newest David Attenborough-narrated nature film, Life in Color, currently streaming on Netflix. The three-part series illuminates how animals see and use color in all kinds of ways, including mating, hunting, and avoiding predators. The show features animals ranging from tigers in India to ptarmigans in Scotland, but one highlight is a knock-down fight between two strawberry poison dart frogs on Solarte Island in Bocas del Toro, a remote archipelago in Panama. 

The scene opens with a bright red male frog making a sustained chirping sound from his shaded spot of rainforest; he’s calling for mates. But soon another male enters his patch. Extreme close-ups show their huge moony eyes meeting, their glossy little snouts twitching in anticipation. “Nothing for it but to fight it out,” Attenborough says, and the frogs lunge at each other. Sticky hands are thrown, leaves fly, and one frog tosses the other over his shoulder in an undignified manner. It’s a high-stakes, slow-motion battle for dominance over a precious spot of land that will help the best frog win a mate. 

Or as an expert would put it, it’s like “two gummy bears going at each other,” says Yusan Yang, whom filmmakers consulted on how to capture the fight scene and whose poison dart frog research features in the documentary. “They don’t have claws, they don’t have teeth, they can’t really hurt each other.” The feisty personalities that come through in the frogs’ scene, she says, are not just fun little tricks of cinematography. In fact, they were exactly what made it possible to film something that looked so high-stakes in the first place (even if no one got hurt in the end). 

Yang moved from Taiwan to the U.S. to pursue her PhD, studying color evolution through the strawberry poison dart frog, which she completed last year. (The documentary team got in touch in 2019.) Her work often explores sexual selection and color variation within a species, so naturally Yang was fascinated by Bocas del Toro. The poison dart frogs there have the brightest and most varied hues of any frogs in the world, appearing in a range of colors from pale blue to bright orange. The population on each island is a different shade, since they evolved in isolation from each other. The frogs’ brightness generally indicates how toxic they are, in order to warn predators. Less poisonous frogs tend to be paler with more camouflage-ready colors like green, while more poisonous frogs are familiar “don’t eat me” colors like red or orange—and have bolder personalities to match. 

While getting her PhD, Yang wanted to better understand why the grape-sized frogs come in so many shades and what color means to them. One of her research methods, depicted in the third episode of Life in Color, involved creating 3D-printed model frogs which she hand-painted to resemble different colors of frogs found on each island and moved around with a remote control. She wanted to see if real frogs would react differently to each of them, and they did: it appeared that they would attack other frogs only if they were the same color. They simply ignored frogs of different shades.  

All of this helped filmmakers understand when frogs would be more aggressive toward each other, which was key to successfully setting up the perfect shot for Life in Color. The aim was to demonstrate just how important color was in everything the frogs did, from warning off predators to showing potential mates their fitness. Yang knew that a more toxic frog wouldn’t be shy around camera equipment, and that Solarte Island would be an ideal place to shoot because the red-orange frogs there are among the most aggressive. She also knew that the two frogs would need to be the same color if they wanted to capture a battle. But “two frogs is actually harder to get,” Yang says, “because you will want frogs that are both territorial, and in the case of a natural habitat, usually they already have their territories carved out.” The camera crew would need to locate two male frogs that were close enough to each other’s territories for a potential clash, set up the shots and lighting, and stick around long enough to hopefully see one. 

As anyone who read every single article about the Planet Earth II marine iguana scene may know (just me?), it’s not exactly a closely held secret that most nature films take cinematic liberties to tell a story. The Life in Color team had to cross their fingers they’d witness a frog fight, but the rest of the visual storytelling was carefully planned out beforehand. The camera crew captured images like close-ups of the frogs’ pugnacious-looking little faces, and establishing shots of the intruder frog entering the scene, at different times using unobtrusive telephoto lenses. The footage could then be knitted together to create a cohesive story of two confident frogs who meet on a patch of rainforest that’s not big enough for the both of them.

But the Play-Doh-limbed fight itself plays out on screen exactly as it happened, enhanced only by slowing down certain clips for dramatic effect. In real life, you’d see two penny-sized frogs making jerky hopping motions at each other for a few seconds. The final scene plays out over several minutes, and it’s hard not to anthropomorphize the two angry little guys by the time we have a clear victor. “They just yielded themselves beautifully to drama, to humor,” says Sharmila Choudhury, a producer on the documentary. “They’re kind of the dream subjects for filming.” For Yang, seeing the subjects of her PhD research in a big-time nature documentary was a treat, and she loves that the film helps other people understand why her study species is cool. And there was an added bonus for Yang as a longtime Attenborough fan: “I had to pause the video and scream when I heard him say my name.”  

Lead Photo: Courtesy Netflix

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Port leadership back timely Biden $17B infrastructure plan for waterways: ‘The port already has a foot in the door’ - Chicago Tribune

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“The American Jobs Plan presented by President Biden is a comprehensive plan to modernize transportation infrastructure, one that is necessary and long overdue, Ports of Indiana will keep a close watch on segments of the plan that is (sic) most relevant to improve our infrastructure network and to increase the competitiveness in the market,” Ports of Indiana CEO Vanta E. Coda II and COO Andrea Hermer said in a joint statement.

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Multiple fire rescue crews on scene at I-57 crash - KFVS

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Multiple fire rescue crews on scene at I-57 crash  KFVS

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Akron firefighter disciplined for spraying man filming crime scene; activist unhappy with response - Akron Beacon Journal

Authority of the port - Virginia Business Magazine

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Authority of the port  Virginia Business Magazine

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The Port of Virginia - Virginia Business Magazine

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The Port of Virginia  Virginia Business Magazine

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Thursday, April 29, 2021

Sheriff Releases Names Of 7 Deputies On Scene Of Andrew Brown Jr. Death - NPR

Attorneys for the family of Andrew Brown Jr. speak after a judge denied their request to immediately release body cam videos to the public of the fatal shooting of Brown in Elizabeth City, N.C. Steve Helber/AP

Steve Helber/AP

A North Carolina sheriff has identified the seven deputies who were on the scene of last week's fatal shooting of Andrew Brown Jr. and subsequently placed on administrative leave – four of whom have been cleared to return to duty.

Deputies shot and killed Brown, a 42-year-old Black man, while carrying out search and arrest warrants at his home on Wednesday in Elizabeth City, N.C. The Pasquotank County Sheriff's Office said that Sheriff Tommy Wooten was releasing the names of the deputies on the scene as part of his promise of transparency and accountability.

Wooten said in a statement that it's "obvious" from footage of the incident and preliminary investigation that four deputies did not fire their guns.

The three deputies who did fire shots will stay on administrative leave pending investigations, he added. They are: Investigator Daniel Meads, Deputy Sheriff II Robert Morgan and Cpl. Aaron Lewellyn. Morgan and Meads have each been with the sheriff's office for more than five years and Lewellyn has served just over two years.

Two others resigned after the shooting incident: Deputy Sheriff II William Harris and Lt. Christopher Terry, both of whom started on the force over 11 years ago. Deputy III James Flowers, who's been with the sheriff's office since 2000, has decided to retire.

"After reviewing the preliminary conclusions of the independent investigators conducting the internal review, and after carefully examining the body camera footage of the incident with my own staff, it's obvious that four of the deputies never fired their weapons and deserve to be reinstated to active duty," Wooten said in the Thursday statement. "More investigation is necessary into the three deputies who did fire their weapons and they will remain on administrative leave pending completion of the internal investigation and/or the criminal investigation being conducted by the State Bureau of Investigation."

Wooten, facing mounting pressure to release the body camera footage of the deadly shooting, said he has asked the state court to allow public release of the videos, which a judge on Wednesday postponed for at least 30 days.

Superior Court Judge Jeff Foster ruled that turning over the footage to the public could threaten the safety of the deputies and interfere with the state's investigation.

Foster did allow Brown's family and lawyer to privately view some of the footage once the identities of the deputies in it were concealed.

Attorneys for Brown's family said Monday that they were shown just 20 seconds of body cam footage in which deputies' faces had been blurred and they described the action by deputies as an "execution." District Attorney Andrew Womble disputed that conclusion, saying Brown's car "made contact with law enforcement" before deputies opened fire.

An independent autopsy commissioned by Brown's family concluded that Brown died from a gunshot to the back of the head.

The FBI has opened a civil rights investigation into Brown's death. Gov. Roy Cooper has called for a special prosecutor to handle the case.

Brown was fatally shot one day after a Minnesota jury found a former Minneapolis police officer guilty of murder in the death of George Floyd, another Black man.

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Biden's Address To Congress: How COVID-19 Set The Tone - NPR

In non-pandemic times, a president addressing a joint session of Congress can expect an audience of roughly 1,600 people. For President Biden on Wednesday, the audience was closer to 200. Melina Mara/AP

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As many times as Joe Biden must have imagined the moment, he never could have imagined it looking like this.

After two failed bids for the White House and a third that began with a series of stumbles, there he finally was on Wednesday, mounting the podium to address a joint session of Congress for the first time as president of the United States.

Yet what he saw before him could not have been as he dreamed.

Before Wednesday night, Biden had been on hand to witness seven new presidents make their first address to Congress since he was first elected to the Senate nearly 50 years ago.

But instead of reveling in his own moment of ritual glory, he had to manage as best he could under COVID-19 restrictions. Forget the famously packed-in crowd of 535 members of Congress along with the Cabinet, Supreme Court, the Joint Chiefs of Staff and a thousand other dignitaries and guests. For Biden, the chamber was all but deserted.

Here instead stood a smattering of members in masks, along with Chief Justice John Roberts and a few Cabinet members. First Lady Jill Biden and Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff looked a bit forlorn, several seats apart in a balcony row.

For those watching around the country, at least two bitter thoughts may have occurred. First, this was probably not as many people as had been there, milling about in the chamber, on Jan. 6 after rioters invaded the Capitol. And second, if 2021 is supposed to be all about getting back to normal, this was a demonstration of how far we still have to go.

Biden has seen the version of a president making his first appearance at a joint session of Congress under normal circumstances many times. He was around for Gerald Ford's first appearance in 1974, for Jimmy Carter's in 1977, Ronald Reagan's in 1981, George H.W. Bush's in 1989, Bill Clinton's in 1993 and George W. Bush's in 2001. In 2009 he had a rear view of Barack Obama's first such address, sitting behind him as vice president and president of the Senate.

Last night, that ceremonial honor was bestowed on a woman for the first time. Vice President Harris sat beside Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., herself the first woman to hold the top House job — first from 2007 through 2010 and again since 2019.

Biden was also in attendance for about 30 State of the Union addresses — which are joint-session speeches given annually by presidents after their first year in office.

Biden was not present for any of former President Donald Trump's speeches to Congress, having been out of government during those four years. But it was hard to miss the contrast Wednesday between Biden's relatively low-key, in-the-room style and Trump's tendency to eye the cameras and swing for the fences.

For some, Trump's addresses to Congress were among his more presidential moments, at least in a conventional sense of the office. Of course, not everyone agreed with what he said: Pelosi made a show of tearing his 2020 speech in half before he had even left the chamber.

But all may agree it was strange to remember that last time Trump delivered a State of the Union. It was early in 2020, when the Senate had yet to conclude the first of his two impeachment trials and most of the U.S. was still paying little if any attention to COVID-19.

Biden did not mention his predecessor's name Wednesday. And even Sen. Tim Scott, the South Carolina Republican who delivered his party's response, mentioned Trump's name only once, in passing, when discussing the development of vaccines.

And yet the shadow was not gone. The mask-and-spacing regimen was a reminder that the coronavirus has dominated life since that last Trump State of the Union, which was also a reminder of the role that COVID-19 played in driving Trump from office.

Moreover, the agenda Biden spent more than an hour detailing was a reminder that along with a Democratic president and a razor-thin Democratic majority in the House, last winter's elections produced the slimmest possible Democratic majority in the Senate — a 50-50 split in which ties can be broken by Vice President Harris.

Even the most minimal degree of Senate control has been enough to permit Biden to pass the $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief package (the American Rescue Plan) and push for a $2 trillion infrastructure proposal (the American Jobs Plan) and a multitrillion-dollar spending plan geared toward children and families (the American Families Plan).

And that is not to mention voting rights reform, immigration reform and an overhaul of policing laws, all of which would require Democrats to win enough Republican support to defeat a filibuster or muster the votes to defang filibusters in general. Neither seems plausible at the moment, but the fact that the Senate is even doing battle on this ground is significant.

Six months ago it seemed impossible such issues could see the light of day in a Senate run by then-Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. McConnell sat alone and silent through Biden's address Wednesday night, a wax statue wearing a face mask.

This remarkable chain of events and proposals has been compared to Lyndon B. Johnson's cornucopia of legislation in 1965. Congress that year passed 50 notable new laws, including the Voting Rights Act, the creation of Medicare and Medicaid and a landmark revision of immigration law.

Biden will not see anything like that kind of scorecard, in part because he does not start with the same election momentum. Johnson in 1964 carried 44 states with more than 60% of the popular vote. For a time in 1965, there were 68 Democrats in the Senate and roughly 300 in the House.

Still, there is something in the sheer scope of the Biden administration's ambition that is thrilling to progressives, many of whom doubted Biden had it in him.

That has led to comparisons not only to LBJ, but to the even more iconic President Franklin D. Roosevelt. In the depths of the Great Depression in 1933, FDR's initial flurry of new laws restored faith in a revamped banking system and initiated programs that would put millions back to work.

To at least some observers, the transformative reach of FDR's first months invited comparison to Napoleon's 100-day march to Paris that galvanized France at a crucial moment in his career.

By doing so much in just his first 100 days, FDR created an impossible standard for future presidents to meet. Nonetheless, new presidents have had to at least answer questions about their performance within that time frame. More than a few have downplayed the idea, or simply rejected it as a media meme or a pundit's myth.

But Biden and his team decided to embrace it. It made no sense to have a joint session of Congress or a big ceremonial event indoors when coronavirus cases were still near their peak, especially right after the Jan. 6 riot. So if it was not advisable to make a first address in the first 40 days or so, as most recent new presidents have done, why not push it out a bit and have some real accomplishments already in hand to talk about?

The success of the vaccine rollout — raising the rate to 3 million doses per day and protecting more than half of adults in the country with at least one dose — provided just the kind of lead vehicle needed for the speech to launch and gain altitude.

Biden and company must now hope it will do the same for the administration itself.

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Biden's Address To Congress: How COVID-19 Set The Tone - NPR
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Beaufort Co. deputies on-scene with barricaded suspect on Hilton Head Island - fox28media.com

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A scene from Alfred Hitchcock: 800 birds funnel into family's home - WKMG News 6 & ClickOrlando

TORRANCE, Cali. – A California family experienced an Alfred Hitchcock movie scene after coming home to over 800 birds that made their way into the house through the chimney.

According to CBS-LA in Los Angeles, the family found birds “stuck to the ceiling” and “stuck to every wall” after coming home from dinner in Torrance, near Long Beach.

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“Every room: bathrooms, bedrooms, they were all full of birds,” Patrick Belleville told CBS2. “They were just going crazy. They were hitting me in the head.”

Animal control told Belleville to open all the windows and doors, but the birds would not leave.

More than 800 birds were removed from the home by hand.

Droppings from the birds ruined a lot of their belongings, Belleville said, but he was able to steam clean the floors and sofas.

Belleville said he worked through the night to get the birds out, but the family continued seeing “random birds flying out of closets and stuff” for another two days.

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HEMSI, law enforcement on scene of multiple accidents on Highway 53 - WAFF

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Port operator DP World launches wholesale e-commerce platform - Reuters

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DP World, best known for operating ports around the world, has launched a wholesale e-commerce website that it hopes will become the global platform for businesses to buy and sell goods.

The platform, Dubuy, aims to connect buyers and sellers around the world with goods offered for delivery via the supply chain of DP World and its logistics partners.

Dubuy is already live in Rwanda and will soon be expanded to some east African countries including Ethiopia, Kenya and Uganda, before being rolled out across the continent.

It will also be launched in markets outside Africa.

"We are multimodal. We are not only a port terminal operator. We are a global trade enabler. That's our vision," said Mahmood Al Bastaki, chief operating officer of DT World, a wholly-owned DP World subsidiary.

"We want to be in anything that has to do with the movement of cargo."

Dubuy expects to cover half of Africa in the next two and a half years and the entire continent within four years. The platform is already linked to sellers in Dubai, the emirate that owns DP World and where it is headquartered.

Dubuy is partnering with mobile providers to facilitate digital wallet payments and is separately looking at how sellers can ship their own goods if they choose to.

Al Bastaki declined to disclose how much money DP World had so far put into Dubuy. He said 25 DP World employees were working full-time on the platform, in addition to many more contractors.

DP World wants Dubuy to be the world's biggest business-to-business e-commerce platform but has no plans to compete with Amazon (AMZN.O) or other business-to-consumer platforms, Al Bastaki said.

"Once it succeeds, the money will come from the platform itself. Not from the ports. So it can sustain itself by itself."

Dubuy is targeting to have one million individual products available on Dubuy by next year, and DP World is offering guaranteed shipping dates to encourage users to sign up.

DP World is also developing other platforms, including offering trade finance to exporters, importers and others, and a freight booking platform that shows different company rates.

"We want the importer to import more, to continue importing, and the exporter to export more and to continue exporting. We want the flow of goods to continue," Al Bastaki said.

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Uruguay's tech scene nears critical mass - Financial Times

It was never Santiago Zabala’s dream to sell women’s underwear. But when the Uruguayan tech entrepreneur saw a gap in the US lingerie market for women of diverse shapes and sizes, the opportunity seemed too good to ignore. 

“It might sound weird how four guys transformed the intimate apparel industry in the US,” admits Zabala, who is chief executive of Trafilea, a Uruguay-based ecommerce group that builds online brands. “But what brought us here was the data . . . We are obsessed with data.”

Thanks to a focused use of advertising and consumer feedback to generate demand, revenues for Trafilea’s underwear brand Shapermint jumped by 1,323 per cent between 2016 and 2019. That gave Trafilea a compound annual growth rate of 142 per cent for the period, rendering it the fastest-growing Uruguayan company, according to the latest FT-Statista ranking, and 44th overall.

This year’s ranking features an outsized number of tech companies from the country, reflecting a thriving industry. In fact, Uruguay’s tech scene has been steadily growing ever since 1968, when the small South American country took the far-sighted move of introducing computer science degrees — just two years after the renowned US university MIT.

Half a century and many government initiatives later — including becoming the first country to roll out a one-laptop-per-child programme in 2007 — the sector is now reaching critical mass. 

Trafilea’s women’s underwear brand Shapermint
Trafilea’s women’s underwear brand Shapermint targets the US market

“There’s a lot of excitement in the industry today,” enthuses Zabala, pointing to the “historic” milestone achieved recently by Uruguay’s dLocal, a cross-border payments platform: earlier this month, it became the first tech start-up to break into the top tier of the country’s most valuable companies after securing $150m in fresh financing, which valued the company at $5bn.

“It’s a great start for Uruguayans to understand how much value we can create here,” adds Zabala.

A combination of free trade zones, research institutes, a well-educated population, a solid reputation for political and macroeconomic stability, and a high standard of living, have all helped to boost Uruguay’s tech sector. 

More than 1,000 software development companies now operate in the nation of 3.4m people, generating almost $1bn in exports — mostly to the US. That makes it one of the world’s leading software exporters in per capita terms.

 Alan Brande, chief executive, Light-it
‘From day one, we focused on being a company offering services that only Americans would want to consume’ —

“Uruguay was too small [a market] for us,” says Leonardo Loureiro, president of the Uruguayan Chamber for Information Technologies, explaining that, by the 1990s, an ecosystem had begun to evolve that was focused on exporting from the small but open economy. 

“The only market that interested us was the US,” says Alan Brande, chief executive of Light-it, which develops bespoke software for clients such as US electronics retailer Best Buy, and is in 48th place on the FT ranking.

“From day one, we focused on being a company offering services that only Americans would want to consume,” he explains. “Americans are prepared to pay twice or even three or four times more per hour what you would get in [Latin America].” That means Light-it can offer the same quality and services as a software development company in the US, but for lower prices.

Uruguay map

With the number of Uruguayans studying computer sciences expected to double over the next five years, enthusiasts argue such success stories could multiply.

Not only does Uruguay create talent, it attracts it, too. As well as enticing major companies such as IBM, Oracle, Netflix and Tata Consultancy Services — where the co-founders of another Uruguayan company on the FT ranking, UruIT, cut their teeth — it also draws in skilled workers from the volatile economies of neighbouring countries, especially Argentina.

The big challenge for growth companies, however, is securing enough financing, as there is very little venture capital in Latin America, in general.

But, for Loureiro, Uruguay is just getting started, with plenty of space to grow in productivity terms: the country’s tech sector generates about $200,000 per inhabitant, about a quarter of the levels reached in other countries with successful tech sectors like Ireland or New Zealand.

Zabala, for one, is brimming with optimism. His company is about to raise “serious” funds for expansion in the US and beyond. “We are seeing some great opportunities ahead,” he says.

 

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Commons expected to approve back-to-work legislation to reopen Port of Montreal - Coast Reporter

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OTTAWA — The House of Commons was expected in the wee hours Thursday to approve legislation to put an end to a strike that has shut down one of Canada's busiest ports.

Operations at the Port of Montreal, through which millions of tonnes of goods flow, came to a halt after 1,150 dockworkers began a strike Monday morning.

Labour Minister Filomena Tassi said if the strike is allowed to drag on it would cost the economy $40 million to $100 million per week, directly threaten 19,000 other jobs and indirectly affect hundreds of thousands of jobs across the country.

And she said it's a matter of life and death because the strike has left essential medical supplies and pharmaceuticals sitting in shipping containers as the COVID-19 pandemic rages.

"I cannot impress upon you enough, this situation is dire," she said Wednesday in the Commons, where debate on the bill was expected to continue past midnight before finally being put to a vote.

"The supply chains are critical and we have to keep goods moving. And this is really a situation where, for the health and safety of Canadians and the economy, we must take this action."

Tassi said the back-to-work legislation is a last resort after more than two years of efforts to find a negotiated solution failed.

Workers at the port have been without a contract since December 2018 and started to refuse overtime and weekend work earlier this month. 

The union previously held a 10-day strike in August.

The Canadian Union of Public Employees, which represents the dockworkers, said the current dispute was sparked by their employer, the Maritime Employers Association, imposing extended workday hours without consulting workers.

Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet said the strike could be called off immediately if the federal government ordered the employers association to cancel the work schedule changes.

"Take your damn phone, call them," he said.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh said the bill undermines the right to collective bargaining and will do long-term damage to relations between dockworkers and their employer that will cause tensions down the road.

The government has also been criticized by the Conservatives for not doing enough to avert the strike. But leader Erin O'Toole has said his party will support the legislation because of the potential damage a prolonged strike could cause Canada's economy.

Manitoba Conservative MP Dan Mazier said he was "devastated" that government inaction had led to the strike. Nevertheless, he said putting an end to it is necessary to give assurance to farmers that they'll receive needed shipments of seeds and fertilizer as they start planting their crops. 

"I am standing up for jobs, I'm standing up for our economy and I'm standing up for my country," he told the Commons.

Conservatives abstained Wednesday on a vote to impose closure on debate over a motion setting out the procedural steps for fast-tracking the back-to-work bill.

That allowed the closure motion to pass by a vote of 152-58, paving the way for hours of debate on the procedural motion and, eventually, on the bill itself.

The Senate, which is currently adjourned, has been recalled to deal with the bill on Friday.

The legislation would require dockworkers to return to work immediately after the bill receives royal assent.

It would extend their previous collective agreement until a new one is negotiated and prohibit any strikes or lockouts in the meantime. If negotiations fail again, the bill would impose a mediator-arbitrator on both parties 

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 28, 2021.

Joan Bryden, The Canadian Press

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Wednesday, April 28, 2021

The Latest: Subdued scene at Capitol due to virus protocols - TwinCities.com-Pioneer Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Latest on President Joe Biden’s first joint address to Congress (all times local):

11 p.m.

South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott has used the Republican response to President Joe Biden’s address to Congress to vow that “America is not a racist country.”

Scott, the only Black Republican senator, seized on Biden’s calls earlier in the evening that passage of major police reform could help stamp out institutional racism nationwide. Scott countered that “today, kids are being taught the color of their skin defines them again. If they look a certain way, they’re the oppressor.”

He said Biden and other top Democrats have begun crying racism too frequently when it comes to unrelated policy disputes, saying “race is not a political weapon to settle every issue.” He bristled at Democratic suggestions that voting rights restrictions passed by GOP-controlled legislatures around the country were meant to keep minority Americans from casting ballots.

Scott argued that the economy under Republican President Donald Trump boomed, helping to lower unemployment dramatically for Black and Hispanic Americans before the coronavirus pandemic struck.

Scott also chided congressional Democrats for opposing legislation he personally championed on police reform, arguing that, going forward, Americans of all races should unite since they “are all in this together.”

___

HERE’S WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN’S JOINT ADDRESS TO CONGRESS:

President Joe Biden used his first joint address to Congress to declare the nation is “turning peril into possibility, crisis into opportunity.” He celebrated progress against the coronavirus and urged a $1.8 trillion investment in children, families and education that would fundamentally transform roles the government plays in American life.

Read more:

— Biden speech takeaways: Government is good, and so are jobs

— AP FACT CHECK: Claims from Biden’s joint address to Congress

— ‘Congress should act,’ Biden tells lawmakers near and far

— A closer look at Biden’s $1.8 trillion plan for families and education

— South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, in Republican response, seeks to credit GOP for ‘joyful springtime’

— First lady holds virtual reception for guests not at speech

— Harris, Pelosi to making history seated behind Biden at speech

___

HERE’S WHAT ELSE IS GOING ON:

10:50 p.m.

Republican Sen. Tim Scott says President Joe Biden is failing to fulfill his promise to bring the country closer together and is even pulling the country further apart.

Scott gave the GOP’s response to Biden’s address to Congress on Wednesday night. He says public schools should have opened months ago and have been shown to be safe for children during the coronavirus pandemic. He calls the last few months “the clearest case I’ve seen for school choice in our lifetimes.”

Scott says infrastructure is another issue that should unite the country. He says Republicans support investments in roads, bridges, airports and broadband, but Democrats want what he describes as a “partisan wish list” that goes beyond that. He says “they won’t even build bridges to build bridges.” Biden has appealed to Republicans to present him with a legitimate counteroffer to his plan.

Scott also talked about Georgia’s new voting law, calling opposition to it “misplaced outage” that is not about the country’s racial past but about “rigging elections in the future.” Democratic advocates have said the law makes it harder for people to vote, particularly people of color.

___

10:40 p.m.

President Joe Biden abandoned the COVID-19-safe elbow bumps as he left the House of Representatives after his first speech to Congress on Wednesday night.

Biden opted for fist bumps, back slaps, handshakes, and even some hand-holding as members of Congress approached him.

The longtime senator took his time leaving the chamber, and was standing in the aisle talking to lawmakers when House Speaker Nancy Pelosi gaveled the session closed.

He chatted with senior Democratic leaders, including the head of the House Financial Services Committee, Democratic Rep. Maxine Waters of California, and Democratic Rep. Rosa DeLauro, who leads the House Appropriations Committee. Biden held DeLauro’s hands as they spoke.

Biden engaged some Republicans, shaking hands with Ohio Sen. Rob Portman and grabbing his arm as they talked. The president appeared in no hurry to leave and spoke with most anyone who approached him, even taking one person’s card.

He finally left the chamber at 10:21 p.m., 10 minutes after ending his speech.

___

10:30 p.m.

President Joe Biden has ended his first address to a joint session of Congress by reaching to evoke the sweep of history. He says the notion of “we the people” is actually “the government, you and I.”

Biden mentioned President Franklin D. Roosevelt by name as he argued for passage of a $1.8 trillion spending plan that would greatly expand the government’s role in the lives of everyday Americans.

But as Biden wrapped up his prime-time speech, he also spoke of the mob that on Jan. 6 overran the Capitol building where he gave his address Wednesday night.

Biden took a swipe at conspiracy theorists who have criticized the concept of a “deep state,” and the president said the government was about all Americans.

He told the nation: “We have stared into an abyss of insurrection and autocracy, of pandemic and pain, and ‘We the people’ did not flinch.”

He concluded by saying that as the country begins to confront a new chapter against the pandemic, “There is not a single thing, nothing, nothing beyond our capacity. We can do whatever we set our minds to it as long as we do it together.”

___

10:25 p.m.

President Joe Biden says 12 years of education is no longer enough to compete in the 21st century. But he’s also saying a college degree is unnecessary for nearly 90% of the jobs that would be created through his proposal to boost the country’s roads, bridges and other public works.

Biden is using his first speech to Congress to promote his $2.3 trillion infrastructure plan and his newly announced $1.8 trillion proposal that includes universal preschool, two years of free community college and $225 billion for child care.

Republicans are seeking a narrower, less costly infrastructure plan. Biden is selling his plan as a massive job creator. He calls it a “blue-collar blueprint to build America.”

When it comes to education, Biden said the “world is catching up.” He’s looking to provide for two years of universal preschool for every 3- and 4- year-old in America. On top of that, his plan would add two years of free community college.

He says his administration would also increase investments in Pell grants and in historically Black colleges and universities.

___

10:20 p.m.

President Joe Biden wants bipartisan action in Congress on fighting gun violence.

During his address to Congress on Wednesday night, the president said “this is not a Democrat or Republican issue” but “it’s an American issue.”

Biden outlined a number of what he called “reasonable reforms.” Examples include universal background checks, and banning assault weapons and high-capacity magazines.

He said such restrictions “have overwhelming support from the American people.”

Biden also had a message for gun rights advocates who say that those kind of restrictions would impinge upon their constitutional rights: “We’re not changing the Constitution, we’re being reasonable.”

___

10:10 p.m.

President Joe Biden says the United States has “to come together to rebuild trust between law enforcement and the people they serve.”

Biden says in his first address to Congress as president that he wants lawmakers to pass police overhaul legislation by the anniversary of the death of George Floyd. Floyd died on May 25, 2020, after a police officer pinned his knee to Floyd’s neck.

Floyd’s death sparked national demonstrations against police brutality and institutional racism.

Biden mentioned the legislation in his speech and said “the country supports this reform and Congress should act.” The House has passed the sweeping overhaul of policing and law enforcement, but it has yet to clear the Senate.

The president says that “we have a real chance to root out systemic racism.”

___

10 p.m.

President Joe Biden is stressing the need for global engagement and cooperation on everything from the COVID-19 pandemic to climate change. It’s a sharp contrast from President Donald Trump’s “America First” policy.

Biden says in a prime-time address to Congress that “the comment I hear most often” in his conversations with world leaders is: “We see that America is back — but for how long?”

Biden says that “we have to show not just that we are back, but that we are here to stay.”

Under Trump, the United States pursued a policy of unilateralism and withdrew from a number of international alliances and diplomatic relationships.

Biden pledged as part of its diplomatic efforts that the U.S. will eventually “become an arsenal of vaccines for other countries – just as America was the arsenal of democracy in World War II.”

___

9:55 p.m.

President Joe Biden says he’s “not looking to punish anybody” but does plan to raise taxes on the wealthiest Americans.

Biden wasn’t shy about saying during a joint address to Congress that he’ll pay for his $1.8 trillion spending package by raising taxes on the rich. He attacked the Republican-backed, 2017 tax cuts, saying they created large deficits while most benefiting the richest Americans.

Biden says his plan will most help the American middle class. He’s also pledging not to raise taxes on the middle class. He says most Americans have already “paid enough.”

But the president also says that the huge increase in spending he’s backing will require more money coming into the government, and he says it should come from CEOs and the rich.

___

9:35 p.m.

President Joe Biden is making a direct appeal to blue-collar workers as he pitches his massive spending package during his joint address to Congress on Wednesday night.

Biden is telling Americans that his infrastructure proposal will help “millions of people get back to their jobs and their careers.” Biden is emphasizing blue-collar roles as he outlines the plan, saying it will create jobs in everything from modernizing America’s roads, bridges and highways to replacing the nation’s lead pipes.

Biden says his plan will provide opportunities for engineers, construction workers, electrical workers and farmers. He promises the plan will create “jobs Americans can raise their families on.”

That appeal to blue-collar workers has shaped Biden’s entire political career. Biden made a pitch to moderate, rural white voters as a centerpiece of his 2020 campaign.

___

9:30 p.m.

President Biden is marking his first 100 days in office by highlighting passage of the $1.9 trillion pandemic relief legislation known as the American Rescue Plan and he’s noting that his administration has provided more than 220 million COVID-19 vaccine shots.

Biden says he inherited a nation in crisis and now he can report that “America is on the move again.”

In his first address to Congress as president, Biden says the United States is already seeing the results of “one of the most consequential rescue packages in American history.” He’s emphasizing that the package included $1,400 checks to 85% of U.S. households. And he says more than 160 million checks are already out the door.

As to the vaccine, he says it is available in nearly 40,000 pharmacies and more than 700 community health centers.

Now, 90% of Americans live within 5 miles of a vaccination site, and Biden’s message is, “Go get vaccinated America.”

Biden is also emphasizing that the economy is on the mend under his watch.

___

9:25 p.m.

It was an unusual scene when President Joe Biden arrived in the House of Representatives for his first speech to Congress on Wednesday night. There were only about 200 lawmakers in attendance in the large chamber. They were spaced part and favored elbow bumps over the usual back slaps because of COVID-19 protocols.

There wasn’t the usual roar of applause or crush of center-aisle lawmakers shaking hands with the president. Biden’s arrival was a more subdued affair.

Still, the president did greet lawmakers when he walked down the center aisle, even if he had to wave at some of them from afar. He fist-bumped Chief Justice John Roberts. And Biden hugged his former presidential rival for the Democratic nomination, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.

Some members of Congress violated some of the evening’s strict health protocols, by shaking hands and sitting right next to each other to chat.

Biden served decades in the Senate, and when he reached the rostrum, he smiled and greeted House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and said, “It’s good to be back.”

___

9:05 p.m.

President Joe Biden is marking his 100th day in office with a prime-time address to Congress and he’s declaring that the United States is “turning peril into possibility.”

Biden is using his nationally televised speech to promote a $1.8 trillion spending package. He says it will fundamentally transform and expand government’s role in the lives of everyday Americans.

If Congress approves the plan, it would provide universal preschool, two years of free community college, $225 billion for child care and monthly payments of at least $250 to parents.

The president is also presenting a vision for post-pandemic life nationwide. He’s working to showcase the hundreds of millions of vaccinations and relief checks his administration has delivered, even as the coronavirus remains dangerous and deadly. The pandemic has claimed the lives of more than 574,000 Americans.

___

8:55 p.m.

Vice President Kamala Harris and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi are making history as the first women to share center stage in Congress during a presidential address.

Harris and Pelosi are seated behind President Joe Biden on Wednesday night for his joint address to Congress. When they greeted each other before Biden’s arrival, Harris and Pelosi clasped hands before giving each other a COVID-19-friendlier elbow bump.

Pelosi has sat at the rostrum in the House chamber before but always next to a male vice president: Dick Cheney, Biden and Mike Pence. Harris is the first female vice president in U.S. history.

Women’s advocates have said seeing Harris and Pelosi seated together behind Biden will be a “beautiful moment.” But they noted that electing a woman to sit in the Oval Office remains to be achieved, along with the addition of an equal rights amendment to the Constitution.

___

8:45 p.m.

Security is tight and crowd is thin at the Capitol under strict coronavirus restrictions for President Joe Biden’s address to Congress.

The first address by a president to Congress is usually an electrifying evening. But this time it’s a more subdued affair.

A few dozen lawmakers milled about the House chamber not long before Biden’s speech, and a reduced crowd of about 200 is expected. That’s compares with an audience of 1,600 members of Congress, officials and guests who typically gather for the event.

Face masks are mandatory in the House chamber. Place cards marked the seats, with just one or two lawmakers per row. Some are sitting high in the visitors’ galleries. No guests were invited.

National Guard troops protecting the Capitol since the Jan. 6 insurrection are stationed in and around the building

___

5:30 p.m.

The White House says President Joe Biden’s speech to Congress will call on lawmakers to lower prescription drug costs by acting this year to empower Medicare to negotiate prices.

A White House official confirmed Biden’s plan on condition of anonymity in advance of the president’s speech to a joint session of Congress on Wednesday night.

Medicare’s prescription drug benefit is delivered through private insurers, and the program is currently barred by law from negotiating prices directly with pharmaceutical companies.

As a candidate, Biden promised to change that, but he has yet to submit legislation to Congress. The official says Biden remains committed to working for reduced prescription drug prices.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is moving ahead with her plan to use expected savings from lower spending on drugs to expand Medicare benefits, capping prescription drug bills for seniors.

But Republicans are solidly opposed to Medicare negotiations, and some Senate Democrats have qualms. It’s unclear if Pelosi’s approach can get through the Senate.

— Associated Press writer Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar

___

5:20 p.m.

In his first address to Congress, President Joe Biden will declare that the nation is “turning peril into possibility, crisis into opportunity.”

The White House released brief excerpts of Biden’s Wednesday night speech, which comes on the eve of his 100th day in office.

Biden is to say that he inherited the White House amid “the worst pandemic in a century. The worst economic crisis since the Great Depression. The worst attack on our democracy since the Civil War.”

Biden will add: “Now — after just 100 days — I can report to the nation: America is on the move again. Turning peril into possibility. Crisis into opportunity. Setback into strength.”

Biden plans to use the address to unveil his push for a $1.8 trillion investment in children, families and education that would fundamentally transform the roles the government plays in American life. He is also expected to address his $2.3 trillion infrastructure proposal, as well as call on Congress to pass gun control legislation and reforms to the nation’s immigration system.

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