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Afternoon Briefing: Closures for NASCAR street race to begin

Afternoon Briefing: Closures for NASCAR street race to begin

Chicago Tribune5 days ago

Good afternoon, Chicago.
Are you ready for some racing? NASCAR is gearing up for a more streamlined Chicago Street Race weekend event on July 5-6, with an accelerated setup and breakdown schedule that is likely to reduce the frustration of the city's drivers.
Here's what to know about street closings that start this week.
And here's what else is happening today. And remember, for the latest breaking news in Chicago, visit chicagotribune.com/latest-headlines and sign up to get our alerts on all your devices.
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The Chicago city clerk is suspending the online application portal to a municipal ID program recently subpoenaed by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the latest defense from local officials grappling with the threat of mass deportations under Republican President Donald Trump. Read more here.
More top news stories:
After Wayfair's first and so far only 'in real life' store celebrated its first anniversary recently, both company officials and the village of Wilmette say they're happy with the results. Read more here.
More top business stories:The Chicago Fire have announced plans for a new soccer-specific stadium, while the Stars are in planning mode for a move from Bridgeview. Read more here.
More top sports stories:
This probably isn't the Route 66 that most people imagine. Here, there are no restored 1950s diners or art deco gas stations-turned-gift shops. Here in Albuquerque, homeless encampments occupy an entire city block, and it is not uncommon to see people openly injecting drugs while sitting on a curb. Read more here.
More top Eat. Watch. Do. stories:
It was 160 years ago that enslaved people in Galveston, Texas, learned they had been freed — after the Civil War's end and two years after President Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation. The resulting Juneteenth holiday — its name combining 'June' and 'nineteenth' — has only grown in one-and-a-half centuries. Read more here.
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Cuomo puts the pedal to the metal in new sports car— and racks up multiple speeding tickets in school zones
Cuomo puts the pedal to the metal in new sports car— and racks up multiple speeding tickets in school zones

New York Post

time26 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Cuomo puts the pedal to the metal in new sports car— and racks up multiple speeding tickets in school zones

Former Gov. Andrew Cuomo has been putting the pedal to the metal since moving back to the Big Apple to run for mayor. Cuomo's Dodge Charger muscle car was caught on camera speeding in school zones in Brooklyn on April 27 and May 2 — after being socked with two speeding tickets a mere minute apart March 28 while flying northbound on a seven-block stretch of the West Side Highway in Lower Manhattan, a Post analysis of city records shows. The ex-governor paid $365 in fines from March 6 through May 2, including the four speed-camera tickets, a ticket for parking in a bus lane and another for failing to feed a meter, according to the latest available data. Advertisement 4 Former Gov. Andrew Cuomo has been racking speeding tickets and breaking all sorts of other traffic laws park since moving back to the Big Apple to kick off in NYC mayoral campaign in March, records show. REUTERS And that's not counting the times Cuomo wasn't caught. The lead-foot ex-lawmaker was filmed May 28 apparently blowing a red light on Seventh Avenue in Midtown after speeding away from reporters trying to ask him questions following a news conference he hosted with labor leaders, according to video posted on social media. Advertisement On Monday, Cuomo's car was filmed blocking a left-turn lane on Eighth Avenue in Times Square while he attended a campaign event. 4 Cuomo's Dodge Charger muscle car was caught on camera speeding in school zones in Brooklyn on April 27 and May 2 — after being socked with two speeding tickets a mere minute apart March 28 on the West Side Highway in Manhattan. (Kevin C. Downs for The New York Post ) Cuomo's rogue riding is the latest example of his 'do as I say, not as I do'-style of governing, said Republican mayoral rival Curtis Sliwa, who added Cuomo is the one who signed a 2013 bill into law creating NYC speed-camera program. 'Andrew Cuomo racked up school zone and bus lane violations within weeks of moving to the city to run for mayor,' the Guardian Angels founder said. 'These are the very enforcement programs he helped create, and if he had actually lived here longer, there's no doubt the list would be a lot longer. Once again, it's rules for everyone else and a free pass for Andrew.' Advertisement Cuomo didn't have to worry about getting caught by speed and red-light cameras while serving his 10-year stint as governor, since he was chauffeured by state troopers in vehicles with license plates that can't be flagged by traffic cameras. 4 Cuomo paid $365 in traffic-violation fines from March 6 through May 2 after being slapped with four speed-camera tickets and two parking tickets. Michael Nagle The frontrunner heading into the Tuesday's Democratic mayoral primary won't have that luxury if elected to City Hall, because official city vehicles aren't shielded from speed cameras. Cuomo is 'committed to public safety' and wasn't driving 'reckless' when filmed running the red light, spokeswoman Esther Jensen insisted. Advertisement The governor was 'guided through a green light' and then 'paused mid-turn' to let a pedestrian cross safely before proceeding once the 'path was clear,' Jensen said. She added that NYPD cops were aware Cuomo parked in the left-turn lane to attend Monday's event, and a campaign staffer was available 'at all times' to move it, 'if asked.' The Dodge Charger is driven by multiple people, said Jensen, who would not clarify if the governor was behind the wheel when the car was fined. 4 Cuomo signed a 2013 bill into law creating NYC's speed-camera program. Christopher Sadowski Despite Cuomo's dismal driving record, he's got nothing on far-left mayoral candidate and Comptroller Brad Lander. The Democratic socialist racked up a jaw-dropping 136 traffic summonses since 2013 on his Totoya Prius, records show. Ten of the tickets were issued to lead-footed Lander for being caught on camera speeding in school zones, but a vast majority were for being a parking scofflaw. Lander has long pushed a green agenda aimed at getting New Yorkers to give up driving and take mass transit, but he's been chauffeured daily around the Big Apple by his NYPD security detail since 2022 when he was sworn in as comptroller.

Trump news at a glance: Day of environmental setbacks across US after judicial and executive decisions
Trump news at a glance: Day of environmental setbacks across US after judicial and executive decisions

Yahoo

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  • Yahoo

Trump news at a glance: Day of environmental setbacks across US after judicial and executive decisions

It was a day of environmental setbacks across the US on Friday after the Trump administration moved to keep two Michigan coal plants open and the US supreme court handed a win to fossil fuel firms in an emissions case. Already, the US Department of Energy (DoE) has ordered the JH Campbell coal plant on Lake Michigan to remain open beyond its 31 May closure date, while the administration is expected to prolong the life of the Monroe power plant on Lake Erie, scheduled to begin closing in 2028. The plants emit about 45% of the state's greenhouse gas pollution. Opponents say the order has little support in Michigan, could cost ratepayers hundreds of millions of dollars and is ideologically driven. The state's utilities have said they did not ask for the plants to stay online, and the Trump administration did not communicate with stakeholders before the order, a spokesperson for the Michigan Public Service Commission, which regulates utilities and manages the state's grid, told the Guardian. Here are the key stories at a glance: Fossil fuel companies are able to challenge California's ability to set stricter standards reducing the amount of polluting coming from cars, the US supreme court has ruled in a case that is set to unravel one of the key tools used to curb planet-heating emissions in recent years. The conservative-dominated court voted by seven to two to back a challenge by oil and gas companies, along with 17 Republican-led states, to a waiver that California has received periodically from the federal government since 1967 that allows it to set tougher standards than national rules limiting pollution from cars. Read the full story Columbia University graduate Mahmoud Khalil was released from US immigration detention, where he has been held for more than three months over his activism against Israel's war in Gaza. The release came after an order from a federal judge who said during a hearing on Friday that Khalil was not a flight risk and 'is not a danger to the community, period, full stop'. Read the full story A teenage student and soccer standout was arrested by immigration authorities four days after his high school graduation ceremony in Ohio and deported to Honduras this week, his family has said. Emerson Colindres, 19, had no criminal record and was attending a regularly scheduled appointment with Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Cincinnati when he was detained on 4 June, according to the Cincinnati Enquirer. Read the full story Elizabeth Warren has confronted the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, over reports that the state department is considering redirecting $500m from USAID to the controversial Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, the Israel- and US-backed Gaza food delivery group. Read the full story California's challenge to the Trump administration's military deployment on the streets of Los Angeles returned to a federal courtroom in San Francisco on Friday after an appeals court handed Donald Trump a key procedural win in the case. Read the full story The president failed to mark Juneteenth, commemorating the ending of slavery in the US, until he posted on Thursday night that there are 'too many non-working holidays' in the country. Read the full story Experts fear the US is now in worse shape to respond to a pandemic than before 2020 amid controversial dismissals at health agencies and lacklustre responses to the bird flu and measles outbreaks. The Trump administration has terminated 639 employees and its parent organisation in the latest round of sweeping cuts that have reduced the international broadcasting service to a fraction of its former size. The US supreme court declined to speed up consideration of whether to take up a challenge to Trump's tariffs even before lower courts have ruled in the dispute. Catching up? Here's what happened on .

Ohio man charged for allegedly threatening US Congressman Max Miller
Ohio man charged for allegedly threatening US Congressman Max Miller

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Ohio man charged for allegedly threatening US Congressman Max Miller

By Brad Brooks (Reuters) -Police in Ohio said on Friday they had arrested a man after he allegedly ran a U.S. Congressman off a road, threatened the politician and his family, and yelled antisemitic slurs and waved a Palestinian flag before fleeing. Police in Rocky River, Ohio, said in a statement that they had arrested Feras Hamdan, 36, of Ohio, in connection to the alleged targeting on Thursday of U.S. Representative Max Miller, a Republican representing Ohio, in the suburb about 10 miles (16 km) west of downtown Cleveland. Hamdan, police said, voluntarily turned himself into police. Hamdan was arraigned on Friday and charged with aggravated menacing and ethnic intimidation, according to Deborah Comery, the Rocky River Municipal Court clerk. Hamdan, who could face up to five months in jail, pleaded not guilty and is being held on a $500,000 bond. Hamdan's attorney, Issa Elkhatib, said in a written statement that the allegations against Hamdan were "baseless and outrageous" and that they "amount to defamatory attacks on his character and reputation." Elkhatib said that Hamdan was a respected local doctor who had no prior criminal history, and that he was confident "the truth will win and that Dr. Hamdan's good name will be fully vindicated." Political violence in the U.S. has been on the increase. A man in Minnesota was arrested on suspicion of assassinating a state lawmaker and her husband last weekend, and shooting and injuring another lawmaker and his wife. The Rocky River police statement said that Miller called 911 on Thursday morning to report that he was run off the road while traveling with his family on Interstate 90 in Ohio. The police said Miller reported an assailant yelled antisemitic slurs and waved a Palestinian flag. "The deranged hatred in this country has gotten out of control," Miller wrote on social media. "As a Marine, a proud Jewish American and a staunch defender of Israel, I will not hide in the face of this blatant antisemitic violence," he wrote.

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