Latest news with #FOS
Yahoo
13-06-2025
- Health
- Yahoo
Owensboro women's recovery facility sees rare availability
OWENSBORO, Ky. (WEHT) — A recovery program in Owensboro says they have more than half of their women's facility available right now. Staff at Friends of Sinners say the vacancies are something they've never seen say when it comes to substance abuse recovery waiting lists are the norm. Owensboro's Friends of Sinners women's recovery program staff say for the first time since they can remember their waiting list and two-thirds of their facility's client spots are empty and have remained that way since the beginning of June.'If one person goes or completes [the program], we're able to fill that bed immediately. So, the fact that we have seven open is a very rare occasion. After COVID, the overdose deaths [were] hitting over 100,000 in the United States. I believe that those numbers have dropped a little bit, but my goodness, we still see it everywhere,' says Jordan Wilson How would phasing out FEMA impact Kentucky? Statistics show a 30 percent decrease in Kentucky overdose deaths from 2023 to 2024, dropping to a little over 1,400 annually. Wilson says the recent decline highlights that investments in recovery efforts are working, but says the work is far from over. Whether it be opioids, methamphetamine or alcohol addiction, Wilson says its hard to find someone unaffected by the epidemic. Angel Harper, a current client, says she knows firsthand.'I lost everything. I lost my family. I almost lost my life. I got narcaned 16 times in 30 days…that's 16 times I died in 30 days. I just realized that, I had to try something different. It's scary when you're like that, and there is no way out,' says Angel Harper, a client at FOS. Harper traveled all the way from Georgia hoping for a second chance and is a little over a month into the year-long program. After a month of being enrolled, clients work to get a job, learn life skills like budgeting and pay a little over $100 each week for rent. Being admitted requires a 3-step process. Requirements include writing a letter explaining why you feel God wants you to come to the program, answering application questions and scheduling an interview with staff who were once in their shoes years prior. 'My son said to me, 'mom, give God a year, and see where you're at. You dedicated a lot of your life to doing drugs. Give him a year.' That's what I did, and that's the advice that I give to these girls,' says Elizabeth Cockrell, a staff member at the facility and FOS alumna. Cockrell is three and a half years into her sobriety journey and says she tries to serve as what she needed when she walked through the front door of the center. She says she pushes for the ladies to understand that God makes all the difference. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
12-06-2025
- Health
- Yahoo
FOS has beds available for women needing substance abuse help
HENDERSON, Ky. (WEHT) – The Friends of Sinners (FOS) women's house has open beds available June 12 for women seeking treatment from substance abuse disorder. FOS says all are encouraged to call the FOS women's facility and submit an application found on this website. People are also asked to call 270-683-7007 for the FOS Women's Program. Animals removed from two Daviess County homes in 'severe' animal cruelty cases FOS says it is a 'Christ-centered' drug recovery program in Owensboro treating both men and women at separate locations since 2009. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Edmonton Journal
12-06-2025
- Business
- Edmonton Journal
Atlanta could be hot stuff for third try at NHL expansion with new arena deal
Article content Atlanta's suburban Forsyth County has approved a $3B development featuring an 18,000-seat, NHL-ready arena for a new franchise. Both of Atlanta's previous NHL franchises left for Canada. — Front Office Sports (@FOS) June 12, 2025 In Atlanta's favour, despite calls in Canada to give Quebec City or a second Toronto franchise a shot, is the impressive winning streak that two Deep South teams have been on. The Florida Panthers are chasing a second straight Stanley Cup in their third appearance in the final after the Tampa Bay Lightning won back-to-back in 2020 and 2021. The league's two most-recent additions, Las Vegas and Seattle, have been a success with the Golden Knights bringing the Cup to the desert in 2023. Vernon Krause, who owns a chain of car dealerships and fronts The Gathering, told local media he spoke with NHL commissioner Gary Bettman on Monday and they'll meet again in the early summer. Atlanta, or another entry, would alter the balance of the 32-team league's two conferences, thus another would eventually be needed in the West. A city long thought to be an expansion favourite is Houston, with its natural sports rivalry with Dallas and a long hockey history with minor pro teams and the World Hockey Association's Aeros. The league already has met with a group headed by Houston billionaire Dan Friedkin, who owns a share of the English Premier League club Everton. The Toyota Center in Houston, home of the NBA Rockets, can seat 17,800 for hockey.

Yahoo
09-06-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Chase told to pay £150 to neurodivergent customer because app didn't have dark mode
A bank was ordered to pay a neurodivergent customer £150 after she complained that its app didn't have a dark mode. A Chase customer – known only as 'Mrs C' – said that the bank's app was more difficult to use because she couldn't toggle the background colour. Those with neurodivergence – a blanket term often used for conditions including autism and ADHD – sometimes prefer using dark mode as it is said to reduce distractions, making it easier for them to focus. Mrs C, who has complained about the bank before, said the lack of a dark mode option 'made her feel as though she didn't matter' in a complaint to the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS). She also claimed she has to use the app because an undisclosed disability means she cannot speak on the phone. An online FOS ruling, which found in her favour, said: 'For a bank to not have dark mode on their app disadvantages neurodivergent customers, including herself, and makes her feel not listened to and that Chase doesn't take accessibility for their customers seriously.' Chase told the FOS that changing the app to provide a dark mode would be a 'colossal and expensive task'. It also said that Mrs C had been a customer for more than a year when she complained in March 2024, and hadn't mentioned the lack of dark mode before. Ombudsman Nicolas Atkinson wrote: 'There are certain groups of customers who've found that 'dark mode' makes websites and apps, for example, more accessible to them. That includes, for example, people who are neurodiverse.' He added: 'I can see that Chase offers this to its card merchant services customers, so it's disappointing to see it say that this would be a colossal and expensive task when it has no evidence to back this up.' Chase had offered to pay Mrs C £50 after mistakenly calling her to discuss her complaint, despite knowing that she was unable to speak on the phone. But the bank was ordered to pay an extra £100 because of the lack of dark mode although the ombudsman admitted that it was 'not an ideal solution'. Some banks already have apps with dark modes. In March this year, Lloyds introduced it on its mobile app for iPhones, and Spanish bank BBVA has a similar feature. Dark modes, which turn the background of an app to a darker black or grey colour, rather than white, can reduce eye strain and keep phone batteries running for longer. Chase, which was launched in the UK in 2021, is a digital-only bank which offers current and savings accounts. It is owned by JPMorgan, America's largest bank. A spokesman for Chase said: 'We offer a range of different accessibility options based on the needs of our customers, and in line with our commitment to create accessible and inclusive products and services for all. 'While we don't currently offer dark mode in our app, customers can make colour adjustments on their mobile phones – including colour inversion which will make the Chase app 'dark', if the device allows and the customer chooses to.' Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


The Independent
04-06-2025
- Business
- The Independent
Ombudsman proposes changes to interest levels applied to compensation
The Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS) is proposing to change the interest rate applied to the compensation awarded to consumers, to tie it to the Bank of England base rate. If someone is found to have lost out because of their financial firm's errors, the ombudsman can order the business to pay compensation, plus interest. There are different types of interest businesses can be directed to pay, and one of these compensates consumers for being 'deprived' of money (not having it available to use) such as when it finds a claim has been wrongly turned down by a financial firm. The ombudsman can currently direct businesses to pay 8% interest on top of the compensation for the period their customer was out of pocket. It can also tell a business to pay 8% interest if it does not pay compensation on time. But the service said feedback suggests the interest rate 'could be better aligned with, and reflect, market conditions'. For new complaints submitted to the service, it is recommending changing the interest rate so it tracks against the Bank of England's average base rate plus one percentage point. The base rate would be calculated as an average rate over the period that the money was due until the date redress payment is made. The consultation is gathering feedback on this recommendation as well as other potential options and proposals for implementation. The Bank of England base rate currently sits at 4.25%, its lowest level in two years. Economists have speculated that two more reductions could happen this year. James Dipple-Johnstone, interim chief ombudsman at the FOS, said the service welcomes feedback 'on whether our proposed new interest rate strikes the right balance between simplicity, fairness and proportionality'. The consultation will run until July 2 and the service said further proposals around its service will be brought forward in the summer.