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Saturday, July 31, 2021

Schenectady County music scene is ramping up as virus variant looms - The Daily Gazette

The Lustre Kings played before a full house at Riverlink Park on Saturday, July 31, 2021. The performance was part of the city's weekly Summer Concert series, which continues through the month of August.

After a cautious start, Schenectady County’s live music scene is ramping up — just as concerns about the delta variant of the COVID-19 virus are also on the rise.

Last week the Capital Region recorded the state’s highest seven-day positive test average at 2.9%. Schenectady County’s rate as of Friday was 3.4%, the third-highest in the region, just behind Greene County’s 3.6% and Saratoga County’s 4.5%.

“Obviously it’s a concern,” said Cathy Gatta, president of the Freedom Park Foundation, which runs a seasonal outdoor concert series at the park in Scotia.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday, Saratoga and Schenectady County’s community transmission rate reached a threshold at which the agency recommended that both vaccinated and unvaccinated people wear masks indoors.

“I think we just follow whatever the CDC and the governor say that we have to do, and that’s what we do. I know that they are going with their quote ‘an abundance of caution’ and that’s what we want to do. We don’t want to have concerts that are going to put people at risk,” Gatta said.

Like many series, plans for Freedom Park’s were in flux for much of the spring and early summer. With COVID-19 restrictions, organizers planned to cap attendance and rope off designated areas for families to help with social distancing. However, the series kicked off just as COVID-19 restrictions lifted in New York state. So far the shows have attracted decent-sized crowds, ranging from 250 for a small show to 850 for the bigger bands, according to Gatta.

“Shows have been really well attended, not like they were in 2018, 2019 and before, but better than I assumed they would be because of COVID and the weather. All those things combining is not a really great sequence of events to happen,” Gatta said.

Overall, Schenectady’s music scene has been quieter than in prepandemic days. While regional concert series such as Albany’s Alive at Five series and Park Theater’s summer music series in Crandall Park in Glens Falls returned earlier this season, some popular Schenectady music traditions have been canceled or reduced.

Central Park’s Music Haven, which traditionally presents bands from all over the world, is slated to return with a shortened season of three performances starting Aug. 15 with blues guitarist Albert Cummings.

Schenectady County SummerNight, a celebration that featured bands such as Blues Traveler, and which draws 20,000 people to downtown, was not held at all this summer. Neither was the weekly Harbor Jam series, which brought in popular cover bands like CSN Songs as well as artists like John Waite.

COVID-19 has largely been to blame for the shift, organizers said.

“Unfortunately, due to the pandemic, the timing and logistics made it too difficult to put on our Harbor Jam summer concert series. We’re optimistic that we will be able to bring back Harbor Jam and its full run of shows next year,” according to Rivers Casino & Resort, which organizes the series.

When it came to SummerNight, Gatta, who is also a Schenectady County legislator, questioned whether or not people would feel comfortable coming out to what has traditionally been a packed event.

But the music scene has not been silent this season. After a year of little to no live music in 2020, venues around Schenectady have brought it back this summer, some in small, measured steps, others in bolder ways.

Frog Alley Brewing Company falls into the latter category. Starting in late spring, the venue created an outdoor space to host music and continued to host bands in its taproom. While in the past the venue presented mainly regional bands, this season it also brought in national acts such as Little River Band and Air Supply.

“After a year of this mess we’ve been trying as much as we can to get people back out and get live music back, especially into Schenectady because Mohawk Harbor [amphitheater], right now they’re not doing as many shows as they have been in the past. So there’s kind of, we feel, a bit of a missed opportunity in the live music sector in Schenectady,” said Charley Pollard, who organizes shows at Frog Alley.

“We’re trying to expand that so some of that older crowd can have a place to go as well, because if you want to go see shows like that it’s limited to Proctors, which is an indoor venue, beautiful venue, but maybe you want to go outside and do something more like you might get on the lawn at SPAC or something like that. We’ll get rid of that drive for you, you guys can have a place to come in Schenectady and have a place to come and enjoy that live music as well,” Pollard said.

This week, the brewery will host acts like cover band Almost Queen and country singer Granger Smith later in the season.

On Wednesday, the Downtown Schenectady Business Improvement Corp. and Schenectady County kick off a live music and movie series just outside City Hall. The new series will feature bands such as Running the River and The E-Block Band.

While Harbor Jam won’t be held this year, Rivers Casino & Resort is bringing two crowd-pleasing shows later this month, Journeyman and The Lords of 52nd Street.

“We’re thrilled to bring back free live music to the magnificent Mohawk Harbor amphitheater for what’s sure to be two fun and unforgettable nights,” said General Manager Rick Richards. “The music of Eric Clapton and Billy Joel fits right in with our goal to bring top-quality entertainment to the Capital Region.”

Nearby at The Landing Hotel, manager Laura Primiano has also been keeping up a steady stream of live music. Through a new free series called Sunset Sips, Primiano has been inviting regional and sometimes national musicians to perform daily.

“What I had originally thought is we had such a beautiful outdoor space on the patio that we haven’t really utilized to its full capacity,” Primiano said.

After a bit of reorganizing, she created more of a performance space and a lounge area.

Right from the first performance, Primiano said, “We had a full house and it was great. It stayed, and we’ve had such great entertainment. We’ve had a lot of local people come and it’s family-friendly, too. . . . It’s an outdoor space, so families can come and enjoy the live music.”

Not far away, Katie O’Byrnes Irish Pub has been taking a cautious approach to bringing back live music. They’ve had mostly regional soloists and duos perform so far this year, partly because the bigger party bands are now harder to book.

“We’re going to be a little more patient about it and let it ease back, and let Union College get back and let Proctors theater get back,” said co-owner John Keller. “When that starts dumping thousands of people back into downtown then we can maybe ramp up the acts a little heavier, but right now we’ll stay a little more conservative through summer.”

While they’re missing the big events such as Harbor Jam and SummerNight, Keller said he’s pleased with the turnout they’ve seen regularly this season.

“I think it’s a combination of the weather and people have been locked up so long that they’re coming out harder than ever,” Keller said.

Later this year, they’re looking to bring in the Dropkick Murphys for an outdoor party, but as Keller puts it, “There’s no guarantee that this COVID thing is going to allow everything we want to do as it takes another turn.”

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Categories: Life and Arts, News, Saratoga County, Schenectady County

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Port down Shenhua in Shanghai derby to increase Super League lead - Reuters

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HONG KONG, July 31 (Reuters) - Shanghai Port opened a two-point gap at the top of Suzhou-based Group B in the Chinese Super League on Saturday when Li Shenglong's goal earned Ivan Leko's side a 1-0 win over city rivals Shanghai Shenhua.

Li scored in the 32nd minute after former Brazil international Oscar drove through the Shenhua midfield before rolling the ball into his path.

The 29-year-old beat goalkeeper Li Shuai with a left-foot shot that flew into the opposite side of the goal.

Victory moves Port to 19 points from nine games, ahead of second-placed Hebei FC, while Shenhua slip to fourth, four points adrift of the leaders.

Hebei handed Tianjin Tigers a 2-1 defeat with Yin Hongbo scoring the winner five minutes before halftime.

Beijing Guoan picked up their first victory in four games via Cedric Bakambu's 75th minute penalty giving them a 1-0 win over strugglers Dalian Pro, while third-placed Changchun Yatai were held to a 2-2 draw at Wuhan FC.

Teams have been split into two groups of eight in this year's Chinese Super League, with matches being played in biosecure hubs in Suzhou and Guangzhou in an attempt to limit domestic travel during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The top four in each group reach the championship playoffs while the bottom teams face off to avoid relegation.

In Group A matches played on Friday, eight-time champions Guangzhou FC were knocked off top spot as Fabio Cannavaro's side slipped to a 2-1 loss against Shenzhen FC.

Former Guangzhou favourite Gao Lin scored the winner for Jose Carlos Granero's team two minutes into the second half after Elkeson had cancelled out Zheng Dalun's opener for Shenzhen in first-half stoppage time.

The victory keeps Shenzhen level on 21 points with leaders Shandong Taishan, who won 2-0 against Henan Longmen. Guangzhou are three points behind in third.

Guangzhou City moved up to fourth with their first win in seven games as they handed lowly Qingdao FC a 4-2 thrashing, while Changzhou Mighty Lions and Chongqing Athletic drew 1-1.

The current phase of the Chinese Super League will be played until Aug. with the championship and relegation playoffs scheduled to start on Dec. 1.

Reporting by Michael Church, Editing by Ken Ferris

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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The Lower Manhattan Bar Scene Is Better Than Ever - Forbes

Police investigating crime scene at a Fort Myers home - Fox 4

FORT MYERS, Fla. — The Fort Myers Police Department is actively investigating a crime scene at a home on Lora Street.

A 30 year-old white female is suffering from non-life threatening stabbing. She has been taken to the hospital for treatment.

This is a developing story and we will update you as FMPD provides more information.

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Domino’s rethinking TV ads during wrestling program after ‘gory scene’ featuring pizza cutter - WFLA

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Domino’s rethinking TV ads during wrestling program after ‘gory scene’ featuring pizza cutter  WFLA

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Carnival’s Mardi Gras inaugural cruise departing Port Canaveral - WKMG News 6 & ClickOrlando

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PORT CANAVERAL, Fla. – Carnival Cruise Line’s Mardi Gras will be setting sail on its maiden voyage from Port Canaveral Saturday.

The port’s long-anticipated debut of Mardi Gras is also Port Canaveral’s first revenue cruise departure since the cruise shutdown.

[TRENDING: Family gets COVID during Orlando vacation | Guests swim in flooded Magic Kingdom streets | Florida averages 15,780+ cases per day]

Carnival’s Mardi Gras has six themes and the first rollercoaster on a cruise ship. The ship will take off on an eight-day cruise with 4,000 passengers on board, bringing the ship’s voyage to about two-thirds capacity.

The Mardi Gras is the largest ship in the Carnival fleet. It is 1,130 feet long, weighs 180,800 tons and has 19 decks. It has a passenger capacity of 5,282, based on double-occupancy of its cabins, and a full capacity of 6,465 passengers, plus a crew of 1,745.

Brian Hubbard from Connecticut will be one of the first 4,000 passengers.

“We’re all vaccinated so we’re pretty much open to the whole ship,” Hubbard said of his party. “I’ve been on quite a few. This one here being the biggest and the best, just that part is exciting,” he said.

The cruise line said 95% of the guests are vaccinated and the other 5%, such as families with small children, will see additional restrictions.

Carnival President Christine Duffy said if a guest gets sick or tests positive for COVID-19, the guest will be safely isolated in the ship’s medical center. The ship also has a public health officer onboard along with medical staff. All guests, vaccinated or not, will have to wear masks while getting on and off the ship.

“I think you’re actually safer on a cruise ship because of all the protocols that we have in place already,” Duffy said.

The eight-day cruise sets sail at 6 p.m. and is going to Puerto Rico, the Dominican Republic and the Bahamas.

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Domino’s rethinking TV ads during wrestling program after ‘gory scene’ featuring pizza cutter - WATE 6 On Your Side

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Two Cruise Ships Will Depart From Port Everglades Today For First Time in Over a Year - Cruise Fever

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For the first time in over 15 months, two cruise ships will depart on the same day for cruises to the Caribbean from Port Everglades.

One of the cruise ships, Royal Caribbean’s Odyssey of the Seas, will sail her long awaited maiden voyage today. Joining Odyssey is Celebrity Edge, she sailing her sixth cruise since becoming the first cruise ship to resume cruises from U.S. ports in June.

In addition, Celebrity Equinox is scheduled to sail on its second cruise on Sunday, August 1, for a total of three cruise ships sailing during the off-season summer months.

“It’s starting to look a lot like a cruise port here again,” said Port Everglades Chief Executive and Port Director Jonathan Daniels. “After no passengers or revenue for at least 15 months, and significant job loss, it is a greatly welcome re-start. The cruise lines and the port are doing all they can to enforce safe protocols to continue sailing.”

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Cruises generated nearly $60 million in revenue annually at Port Everglades prior to the pandemic.

“The vaccine is a game changer that will inject tourism dollars into our community,” said Broward County Mayor Steve Geller. “Approximately 6,000 local workers have been directly impacted by the cruise shutdown and another 84,000 residents were employed in the local hospitality and tourism industry. Those jobs have been severely impacted by the virus and the pause in cruise travel.”

Port Everglades is one of the busiest cruise ports in the country and nearly four million cruise passengers sail from the port each year.

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Port Jeff looks to increase safety measures 'in response to recent events' - Greater Long Island

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Port Jefferson, N.Y. Photo by John Feinberg

After two shootings in three months and reports of SLA violations, the Village of Port Jeff is taking action to ensure safety in the village during these busy summer months.

Six “immediate actions in response to recent events” were listed in a recent official newsletter from the Incorporated Village of Port Jefferson earlier this month.

The list calls for “[C]ode enforcement immediately extended hours to 6 a.m.,” as well as assistance from the Suffolk County Police Department, the State Liquor Authority, Governor Andrew Cuomo’s office and Legislature Kara Hahn’s office.

According to Village of Port Jefferson Deputy Mayor Kathianne Snaden, the village’s efforts are a response to the shooting that took place last month on Main Street near the harbor.

In that case, two men, ages 22 and 20, according to Suffolk police, were shot at approximately 2 a.m. outside a bar and “transported to a local hospital for treatment of serious injuries.”

Ethan Ladd, 20, of Port Jefferson Station, has been accused of the crime, and is charged with two counts of first-degree assault. He was arraigned and released on $25,000 bail.

The incident was the second Main Street shooting during a three-month span. On March 24, Joseph Garcia, 19, of Port Jefferson Station, stands accused of fatally shooting David Bliss Jr., 25, of Shirley, farther north on Main Street.

Extra police presence

The village newsletter’s list of actions indicates “[e]xtended hours for SCPD in the Village” and “[m]eetings with Suffolk Police Department, 6th precinct Inspector Reilly for proactive engagement.”

Deputy Mayor Snaden said the village turned to the Suffolk County Police Department for more officers or extended shifts in the area.

“Whatever it is they would provide or be willing to provide for us we we’re willing to take,” she said in a telephone interview.

Deputy Inspector Eric D’Agostino of the 6th precinct said in a phone interview that the SCPD has “implemented specialized patrols of the area, but it’s something that we’ve done in the past.” He said these patrols consist of two officers that patrol upper port and lower port Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights from 4 p.m. to 4 a.m.

These patrols are typically in affect from the week preceding Memorial Day to the week following Labor Day, as there is more general activity in the village during the summer season, D’Agostino said. He explained these patrols are responsible for quality of life issues, traffic-related complaints and checking in with merchants.

When asked if the specialized patrols are in response to the shootings in the village, D’Agostino replied “it’s not necessarily that, it’s everything taken as a totality.”

Unsafe drinking

The newsletter’s list also called for the State Liquor Authority to “crackdown on underage drinking,” which led the village to seek assistance from the state and Hahn’s office, Snaden said.

The deputy mayor said the village sought inter-office assistance for “further SLA checks on business after getting multiple reports of underage drinking,” an issue not mutually exclusive from last month’s act of violence.

“In connection with the investigation of the shooting we were told some of the people involved were underage and they had been drinking at numerous establishments in the village that night of the occurrence,” Snaden said. “So we were speaking with the state and Kara Hahn’s office to find out what was being done, what could be done.”

D’Agostino said unsafe drinking has already become a concern for his precinct this summer season.

He said SCPD 6th precinct officers and SLA inspectors jointly infiltrated Barito on Main Street earlier this month, though no underage drinking was found.

One of the owners “was charged with NYS General Business Law: Employing an Unlicensed Security Guards, an unclassified misdemeanor,” according to police. Three unlicensed security guards “were charged with NYS General Business Law: Unlicensed Security Guard, an unclassified misdemeanor.”

Barito’s capacity is 120 people. That evening, there were 348 people in the bar, according to police, and the establishment was closed for the remainder of the evening.

In addition to the SLA’s involvement, the village newsletter requests that alcohol-serving establishments acquire ID scanners that can detect fakes.

Snaden said the village cannot establish a requirement for businesses to have these scanners, but it is asking them to take the step, one of many ideas discussed to make the village more safe.

“We were kind of looking at any and all ideas to help prevent anything further from happening in the future.”

Port Jefferson aerial file photo by Andrew Theodorakis/Yellow House Images

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Port workers' strikes hinder Argentine exports of cereals - MercoPress

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Saturday, July 31st 2021 - 09:20 UTC
Full article
Ports like Bahía Blanca could be an alternative, but labor disputes complicate the situation Ports like Bahía Blanca could be an alternative, but labor disputes complicate the situation

With most Argentine ports along the Paraná river unoperational due to the historic downspout, Quequén, Necochea, and Bahía Blanca on the Atlantic coast would have become an alternative way out for agri-food exports had it not been for union strikes.

Port workers as well as and self-convened lorry drivers paralyzed operations Friday in all three shipping gateways in the province of Buenos Aires, which were channeling more cargo than usual.

The Federation of Argentine Port Stevedores (FEPA), decided a 48-hour stoppage of activities Friday and Saturday, blocking both the loading of ships and in some terminals the reception and unloading of lorries.

FEPA leader Osvaldo Osores later announced the union had lifted the measure after the Ministry of Labor agreed to hold talks next Tuesday.

Nevertheless, the ports are still not operational due to blockades by a group of “Self-convened Truckers,” which means they do not have a formal union representation and subsequent leadership with whom authorities could negotiate.

In addition, the Single Union of Argentine Ports (SUPA) started a strike at Bahía Blanca “at least until Monday,” according to SUPA sources. Analysts were still skeptical Friday the situation would actually improve by Monday.

The three seaports were channeling all exports of corn, wheat and soybeans usually shipped through Rosario on the Parana river coast. The other Argentine ports down the Atlantic coast are not equipped to handle grain exports.
According to data from the Bahía Blanca port, in recent weeks there had been a 46% increase in the entry of trucks compared to the same period last year. And in the Necochea terminals, according to a report by “Williams Deliveries” quoted by the specialized publication Agrofy, the increase exceeded 100 percent.

This same afternoon, the Bahía Blanca Cereal Exchange pointed out that in the last two weeks 523,000 tons of corn had been shipped through the port of that town and that 583,000 tons had been announced for the next 2 weeks.

The downspout of the Paraná river had delayed shipping operations as well as increased freight costs, forcing ships to leave with less cargo from the ports in the Rosario at best, or shifting to other ports where cargos are reached by by truck.

In this scenario, the ports of southern Buenos Aires, and especially that of Bahía Blanca, gained importance: between May 3 and July 18, average loads per ship went from 21,500 to 26,300 tons, with peaks of 29,000, an increase in 22.5%, which resulted in an increase of 300,300 tons compared to the historical average and was key for the output of cereals, especially corn.

This time of the year is normally peak season for the port of Bahía Blanca, now hit for the better with the additional load of goods.

In soybeans there was also an increase from 23,000 to 24,400 average tons per ship. In the case of wheat, the Paraná downspout has had little impact because most of its output usually operates through Bahia Blanca and goes directly to Brazil.

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‘Horrifying scene:’ Volusia County nurse describes ICU amid COVID-19 surge - WKMG News 6 & ClickOrlando

Lindsey Fairchild is a registered nurse, working in the COVID-19 ICU at a Volusia County hospital. She said hospital beds are filling up and the spike in patients are stretching doctors and nurses thin.

“It’s as bad as it can be. It’s a horrifying scene to go to on a day-to-day basis. People are fighting for their lives and it’s a minute-by-minute struggle. It’s hard to watch, it’s hard to be a part of it and see human beings suffer so greatly and there’s not a whole lot you can do to help them,” said Fairchild.

Fairchild said there are some differences in what she’s seeing in the ICU compared to the height of the pandemic in 2020.

“Before, we were seeing patients who were older and had pre-existing conditions. Now, these people are coming in young. Some not having preexisting conditions and are healthy. People that had COVID and just have a very bad reaction to it,” said Fairchild. “The decline that’s taking place from a respiratory standpoint is happening much quicker.”

COVID has not only impacted Fairchild at work but has also changed her life. Her father died in an Ohio hospital in 2020 after contracting COVID-19.

“I flew to Ohio and took all of my PPE in anticipation to sit at his bedside,” said Fairchild.

Nurses in Ohio hold Lindsey Fairchild's father's hands. He died of COVID-19 in 2020. (WKMG 2021)

Like other families losing their loved ones to the virus, Fairchild wasn’t allowed in the room to see her dad in his final moments due to coronavirus protocol in the hospital. A photo shows two nurses holding her father’s hand as he passed away.

Fairchild continues to care for COVID-19 patients in Volusia County with a new sense of empathy.

“I see my dad in a lot of my patients. You understand what their families are going through and how painful that has to be to not be there with them,” said Fairchild. “A lot of people ask me ‘how can you continue to do this after losing your dad to this?’ I say the same thing. I feel like I have to see this through to the end. I made a commitment to fight for my community. I feel I have to be an advocate and speak on my dad who no longer has a voice.”

Fairchild said she and her children are vaccinated and are encouraging all who are able, to get the shot and to wear a mask to protect themselves and their families.

“Help us to do our jobs and keep our community safe. When we’re spread so thin by irresponsibility, it really makes it difficult to save our community and move past this. Help us help you.”

Lindsey Fairchild is an ICU nurse in Volusia County. (WKMG 2021)

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Port of Galveston's shore power plan is the right move - Galveston County Daily News

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The Port of Galveston should be commended for exploring the possibility of installing shore power for ships berthed at the island’s public docks.

Port leaders recently announced they would partner with Texas A&M University at Galveston to conduct a cost-benefit analysis on a shore power system.

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Friday, July 30, 2021

Four new COVID-19 infections discovered in Port Townsend - Port Townsend Leader

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Jefferson County public health officials reported four new cases of COVID-19 in Port Townsend Friday.

The new infections pushed the total number of confirmed coronavirus cases in Jefferson County to 512 on Friday, July 30.

Jefferson County Public Health does not provide information on individual cases, but a review of updated case reports — compared to case information reported earlier — indicate the new infections involve three males and one female.

Two of the new cases of coronavirus were found in residents under the age of 20, while the other confirmed tests of COVID-19 were found in a resident in their 20s, and one in their 60s.

A total of 34 residents were still in isolation Friday due to potential COVID-19 contact.

Test results are pending for another four residents.

There have been 26,873 tests for COVID-19 in Jefferson County since the start of the pandemic, and 26,357 have resulted in negative results.

In Jefferson County, 452 people have recovered from COVID-19 and 37 people have been hospitalized for the disease. 

Four deaths of Jefferson County residents have been linked to COVID-19.

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Two men arrested on suspicion of fleeing scene of crash, possessing large quantities of drugs - Longmont Times-Call

Two men remained in custody Friday in the Boulder County Jail, two days after they were arrested in Longmont on suspicion of having more than a pound of methamphetamine, half a pound of fentanyl pills, half an ounce of cocaine and other drugs with the intent to sell and other charges.

Kevin Wick, 37, of Fort Collins, and Dylan Taylor, 29, are each facing six charges of unlawful distribution of a controlled drug, all of which are drug felony charges. Taylor’s city of residence was not listed on the arrest report.

In addition, Wick is facing charges of possession of a weapon by a previous offender, a Class 6 felony; a special drug offense, a Class 1 felony; a violation of a protection order, a misdemeanor; second-degree trespassing, a misdemeanor; an accident involving death or personal injuries, a misdemeanor traffic offense; failure to report accidents, a misdemeanor traffic offense; leaving the scene of a crash, misdemeanor; a DUI, a misdemeanor; third-degree assault, a misdemeanor; no proof of insurance, a misdemeanor traffic offense; possession of drug paraphernalia, a petty offense; and carless driving, a traffic misdemeanor.

Taylor is facing charges of a special drug offense, a Class 1 felony; possession of a weapon by a previous offender, a Class 6 felony; three failure to comply charges out of Fort Collins; and possession of drug paraphernalia, a petty offense.

About 2 p.m. Wednesday, Longmont Officer Kristopher Ford noticed two men running down Main Street, north of Main Street School and thought it was peculiar for that time of day, according to the arrest report.

While driving east on Ninth Avenue, Ford noticed there was a crash and presumed at least one of the people he saw running was involved.

Ford said both men were running during the heat of the day in “street clothes.”

“The thing that threw me off was the way they were running,” he said. “It was more of a sprint than a jog.”

According to the report, people flagged Ford down and confirmed the man in the white shirt seen running was the driver of the vehicle, which had crashed into two other cars. The men fled without leaving information.

One of the victims in the crash suffered an unknown injury and needed medical attention, the report said.

It was later determined, Wick was driving and failed to stop for traffic, the report said. He rear-ended a stopped car and then fled the scene with Taylor.

Ford drove to the scene of the crash while other officers worked on locating the two men, the report said. He checked the vehicle and found the driver had hit the windshield with his head and there was a pistol ammunition holder on the driver’s floorboard and an empty gun holster.

Officers located Wick and Taylor, the report said. Wick is suspected of possessing two handguns, more than 16 ounces of meth, four counterfeit fentanyl pills, other drug paraphernalia and more than $10,000 in cash, the report said.

Wick also had two protection orders, is on parole for second-degree assault and probation for harassment in Larimer County.

While Wick was in the ambulance later that evening he admitted to using marijuana, cocaine, fentanyl and alcohol, the report said.

Ford said drug transportation through the city probably happens more often than people know.

“I would say for patrol officers coming across it, it was probably more on the rare side,” he added.

Taylor is suspected of possessing 73.7 gross grams of meth, 186.3 gross grams of fentanyl, 20.1 gross grams of cocaine, 77.5 gross grams of heroin, and 56 tablets of LSD.

“Based on information gathered at the scene, it appears Dylan and Kevin had conspired to distribute these drugs,” the report said.

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Port Townsend Police Log | Here come the rooster - Port Townsend Leader

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Port Townsend police received 190 total calls for service between Monday July 12 and Sunday July 18. Below are selected reports.

At 10:40 p.m. Monday, July 12, a caller In the 800 block of Hancock Street alerted officers to a series of shots fired in the area of the Rainier Street roundabout. Officers investigated the area but did not locate anything out of the ordinary.

At 7:39 a.m. Tuesday, July 13, officers responded to a request for contact by a man in the 400 block of 21st Street.

The man complained about a loud rooster who crowed at all hours of the day nearby and wished to see what his options were for remedying the problem.

An officer arrived in the area and contacted the granddaughter of the rooster’s owner.

The granddaughter told police her brother was building a chicken coop in Port Angeles to move the rooster there. She told officers that she would advise police once she’s talked with her brother to give an update on the chicken coop.

At 4:25 p.m. Tuesday, July 13, police were asked to conduct a welfare check for a woman near the 600 block of Cleveland Street who had been seen screaming and crying. Officers responded and checked on a woman matching the description given by the caller.

The woman told officers she was not in need of any assistance and her screams and tears were the result of laughter. The woman was with a friend who had been visiting the area and was actually quite happy.

At 8:30 a.m. Wednesday, July 14, a caller based in Michigan called police to say she hadn’t heard from her friend in Port Townsend for about three weeks and she was concerned for his wellbeing as he had trouble with his knees and didn’t walk very well.

Officers contacted the man in the 1400 block of 10th Street who confirmed that he was all right and he would call his friend more often to check in.

At 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, July 14, officers located graffiti on a seawall near the intersection of Water and Quincy streets.

Police estimated the damage at $200. There are no suspects at this time.

 

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Scenario-based learning improves learner engagement and makes training feel more immediately relevant to learners.

Compare the following two assessment questions—which one do you think would be more effective in healthcare training?

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Question 1: In motivational interviewing, which interaction technique encourages people to explain their perspective, situation, and needs?

A. Open-ended question

B. Affirmation

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C. Reflective listening

D. Summary

Question 2: You're a doctor working with a 4

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A Once-Forgotten Port Of Italy Is Alive With A Diverse Cultural And Literary Legacy - NPR

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Few tourists venture as far as Trieste, a city tucked in Italy's northeast corner on the Adriatic Sea. Arianna Pagani for NPR

Arianna Pagani for NPR

TRIESTE, Italy — Tourists to Italy are likely to visit Rome, Florence, Venice — maybe even Naples and Sicily. Few venture as far as this city tucked in the country's northeast corner on the Adriatic Sea.

Once the flourishing port of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Trieste became a largely forgotten borderland after World War I. But today, those who visit find a blend of cultures and languages of Europe, with a rich literary legacy — a city that's lured great authors from Ranier Maria Rilke to James Joyce.

Waves from the Adriatic lap its elegant promenades. It lies below the Karst, limestone cliffs that are a popular destination for nature lovers and where vineyards produce wines that taste of sea and stone.

Legend has it Jason and the Argonauts — with the golden fleece — sailed in from an underground river. A well-preserved Roman theater, that once seated up to 6,000 spectators, is testimony that in antiquity, this was a thriving city. Gilded mosaics in San Giusto Cathedral are evidence of Byzantine influence.

The Roman Theatre of Trieste was built between the first and second century AD at the behest of Emperor Trajan. Arianna Pagani for NPR

Arianna Pagani for NPR

A smorgasbord of cuisines

In today's Trieste, the place to be is the Cavana quarter — a jumble of narrow, car-free streets.

The fragrance of espresso is pervasive. Wine bars serve the original spritz -- the native aperitivo -- a mix of white wine and sparkling water.

And restaurants offer the city's unique cuisine — a blend of Austrian, Slavic, Hungarian and Italian. You can feast on Wiener schnitzel, pork with horseradish, goulash or gnocchi with plums. And, at the many Viennese-style pastry shops, you can savor Sacher torte and strudel.

By law, streets signs are in Italian and Slovene, the language of the minority that makes up a fifth of Trieste's population of 200,000.

Wandering along cobblestone streets that wind up a hill, you can reach the Arco di Riccardo. This stone Roman arch is believed to be named for King Richard I of England, who was imprisoned here — according to another legend — on his way home from the Crusades.

The Arco di Riccardo is believed to be named for King Richard I of England, who was imprisoned here — according to legend — on his way home from the Crusades. Arianna Pagani for NPR

Arianna Pagani for NPR

Visitors can take in a panoramic view from the restaurant Trattoria Al Faro. From its vast, jasmine-covered terrace, diners enjoy breathtaking summer sunsets over iridescent waters, dining on freshly caught scampi, mussels and spider crab.

Al Faro's chef and owner, Dario Rakic, is from Croatia and has lived in Trieste since 2004. "It's awesome," he says. "Everywhere contains a hidden universe."

Appreciate the diversity around you

What the city does not hide is its embrace of diversity. "Being a Triestina today means being an open-minded and unbiased person," says Susanne Seghayer, a sound engineer from Trieste. "You appreciate the diversity around you."

Susanne Seghayer, 24, from Trieste. Born from Libyan father and Friulian mother. Today she is a young sound engineer with a very strong passion for cinema. Arianna Pagani for NPR

Arianna Pagani for NPR

A sampling of that European ethnic diversity is displayed in the names on Trieste's World War I memorial: Bednaski, Blötz, Bonivento, Liebman, Maranzana, Padovani, Prister, Salon, Streinz, Stuparich.

Trieste is also a city of multiple faiths — a Catholic cathedral, Greek Orthodox church and large Jewish synagogue are all within walking distance of each other. A musical highlight is listening to chants at vespers in the Serbian Orthodox church.

The Serbian Orthodox Church of the Holy Trinity and St. Spyridon, by Milanese architect Carlo Maciachini, reflects a Byzantine taste. Arianna Pagani for NPR

Arianna Pagani for NPR

All this multiculturalism has its roots in empire. In the early 18th century, the Habsburg rulers of these lands needed a maritime gateway for trade and declared Trieste a free port. To lure entrepreneurs and workers, the Habsburgs welcomed whoever could be useful — Greeks, Armenians, Turks and, most of all, Jews.

"Of course, this was based on an old prejudice, an old bias," says Rabbi Ariel Haddad, head of the Museum of the Jewish Community of Trieste Carlo e Vera Wagner. "OK, they're good with money, they're good in trade, and they have connections, you know, all this brouhaha about the Jews." Nevertheless, the Rabbi adds, "even if it came on a biased basis, well, it worked."

Miramare Castle, on the tip of a promontory along the Gulf of Trieste, dates back to the mid-19th century and was built by Archduke Ferdinand Maximilian of Habsburg to house his wife Charlotte of Belgium. Arianna Pagani for NPR

Arianna Pagani for NPR

Empress Maria Theresa expelled Jews from parts of the kingdom in 1744 — but in Trieste, she granted them unprecedented concessions. In return, they rapidly expanded commerce, politics and culture.

Jews founded insurance and shipping companies that still exist today, such as Assicurazioni Generali and Lloyd Adriatico, and they built baroque palaces on sprawling piazzas overlooking the Mediterranean.

Trieste has a remarkably large and beautiful Jewish synagogue that opened in 1912. The Jews of Trieste also gave Italian literature two of its 20th century luminaries, novelist Italo Svevo and poet Umberto Saba.

The Trieste Synagogue was built between 1908 and 1912, designed by architect Ruggero Berlam in collaboration with his son Arduino. It replaced four smaller synagogues that existed previously. Arianna Pagani for NPR

Arianna Pagani for NPR

Saba owned an antique bookshop that still exists, at Via S. Nicolò 30. Inside, his old typewriter sits among a pile of books. Mario Cerne, who runs the shop now, hands over a book of Saba's poems translated into English. Some verses of his poems, Trieste, resonate in particular:

Around everything there's circles of strange air,

a tormenting air, the native air.

My city that is in every part alive

has this corner made for me, for my

pensive chary life. (Translation by Vittoria Forliti)

Another writer who enriched the city's literary legacy was a young Irishman who came in 1904. Today, visitors can follow the trail of his favorite haunts and visit the James Joyce Museum. Joyce spent more than a decade in Trieste, where he wrote some of his famous early works, Dubliners and Portrait of the Artist as a Young man. And his close friend, the novelist Svevo, was the inspiration for Leopold Bloom, protagonist of Joyce's Ulysses.

James Joyce spent more than a decade in Trieste, where he wrote some of his famous early works, Dubliners and Portrait of the Artist as a Young man. Arianna Pagani for NPR

Arianna Pagani for NPR

Museum director Riccardo Cepach says Joyce's Dublin is filtered through the author's experience of this city. "Ulysses would not have been the same if Joyce wouldn't have spent so many years in Trieste," Cepach says.

While Joyce was hanging out in cafés and bordellos, another writer, the Prague-born Ranier Maria Rilke, was ensconced in fairy-tale lodgings nearby.

The 14th century Duino Castle, where Rilke had stayed, is perched on steep cliffs that plunge down to crashing waves. Bruno Vajente guides visitors through the castle's grandiose halls and manicured gardens with cascades of brightly colored flowers — and one of Trieste's most romantic sites.

"A path that has been named after the poet because he used to walk along that area,"

Vajente says, pointing out the Rilke Path that meanders through thick vegetation along high cliffs — a breathtaking view that inspired Rilke's beloved Duino Elegies.

Not far from Trieste, the 14th century Duino Castle is perched on a cliff with views of the Gulf of Trieste. Arianna Pagani for NPR

Arianna Pagani for NPR

So, what's the secret behind Trieste's literary legacy?

"The fact that the city is multicultural, multi-religion, ideas flow better in such a kind of population," says Riccardo Illy, former mayor of Trieste, former governor of the region and

head of the popular Illy coffee company. He's proud of his family's contribution to coffee culture in a city whose historic cafés served as literary salons.

But, says Illy, those glory days ended with World War I. With Austria's defeat, the city went to Italy — which already had major ports — and Trieste lost its purpose.

Then, with Italy's fascist dictatorship, the Slovene minority was persecuted, sparking deep ethnic animosities.

And in 1938, Benito Mussolini picked Trieste to announce his ignominious racial laws excluding Jews from schools, academia, politics, finances and all sectors of public life.

Under German occupation, Italy's only Nazi extermination camp was created in an old rice mill on the city outskirts. Today it's a Holocaust memorial.

The Nazis were defeated but communists won in next door Yugoslavia, as Illy points out: "We had the Iron Curtain just running at 10 kilometers from where we are sitting now."

Borgo Teresiano is one of the oldest and most historical districts in the center of Trieste. The centerpiece is the Grand Canal, created in the 1750s, a navigable canal perpendicular to the waterfront that brought goods directly into the city. Arianna Pagani for NPR

Arianna Pagani for NPR

Once easily reached by rail from the Baltics, or by sea from Asia — after Trieste helped bankroll the Suez Canal — the Cold War cut off trade and this became a forgotten outpost.

But, after the fall of communism and an expanded European Union, borders were eased and trade and tourism were back.

And now, although Italy has been hit hard by the coronavirus pandemic, tourism has begun to return.

In fact, the harbor is already filling up with large cruise ships filled with passengers. "We are starting to think of the port not only as a transportation hub," says Zeno D'Agostino, president of the Trieste port authority. "Now we are getting the role back to Trieste had in the past--we can say back to the future."

Free spirit

The city has splendid vestiges of ancient Rome and the Habsburgs, but many see its more contemporary context. "Trieste is 20th century history in a nutshell," says actress Sara Alzetta, who has written plays about the city's history through the eyes of women.

She's at a local landmark: Caffè San Marco. In this historic literary haunt, patrons sit for hours sipping coffee at marble tables under art deco murals — no longer rifling through newspapers, but hunched over laptops.

Antico Caffè San Marco is a historic literary haunt. Arianna Pagani for NPR

Arianna Pagani for NPR

Alzetta says Trieste is quintessentially secular. Free of the dominating influence Catholicism had in other parts of Italy, the women of Trieste asserted their independence far earlier.

Her great grandmother, for example, came to the San Marco to play chess and meet her lover. And perhaps, says Alzetta, she sang this ditty in the local dialect:

"Le mule del San Giacomo le porta Cristo in petto.

Le gha il mari' che naviga, l'amante sotto il letto.

Le prega il buon Gesù che il mari' no ghe torni più."

("The women of Trieste wear a cross around their neck.

Their husband is away at sea, their lover is below the bed.

And they pray to Jesus, that husband will never come back.")

Actress Sara Alzetta has written plays about the city's history through the eyes of women. Sylvia Poggioli/NPR

Sylvia Poggioli/NPR

In fact, says Alzetta, many husbands never returned, creating new lives from themselves in places like Shanghai or Buenos Aires.

Today, nowhere are Trieste women more protective of their independence than at El Pedocìn, a beach club named after a local shellfish.

Opened under Habsburg rule at the end of the 19th century, it's unique in Europe: In the middle of the sandy beach, an 8-foot-tall brick wall juts out to sea. Its purpose? To separate male and female bathers.

The La Lanterna bath (left), also known as El Pedocìn, consists of two separate areas: one for women and children up to 12 years of age, the other for men. Arianna Pagani for NPR

Arianna Pagani for NPR

Rosi Auriemma, a middle-age mother, rejects suggestions this is outdated. She comes precisely because there are no men here to bother her.

"That's what's great about this place. We're left alone, the kids are free to play, we have all the comforts and with a 1 euro ticket, it's a steal. I love it!" she says.

At an outdoor café, another woman deeply attached to Trieste expresses her fondness for a city whose unique history and identity sets it apart from the country. "It's kind of the stepchild of Italy, it's that we're not really part of Italy, kind of, sort of," says Sheila Smith. She was born here after World War II to a Triestina mother and an American soldier father and she grew up mostly in San Francisco. When she retired a decade ago, she was drawn back to the city of her birth.

"I don't know what the secret is," says Smith. "All I know is that when I'm here, I'm peaceful and I'm content. This is where my heart belongs."

Built in the 1930s, a series of semicircular terraces lines the coast of Trieste where people enjoy the sea. Arianna Pagani for NPR

Arianna Pagani for NPR

In her masterful book, Trieste and the Meaning of Nowhere, Jan Morris describes the city as "an existentialist sort of place, and its purpose is to be itself."

Yet, it is often overlooked. But now that nearby Venice is crushed by over-tourism, this laid-back, diverse city with panoramic hiking trails, sandy beaches and a gulf custom-made for sailing has become a natural vacation destination.

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