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Tag: Alabama

  • Report: Alabama wide receiver Ryan Williams will make more than $1.8 million this season – Yellowhammer News

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    The era of Name, Image and Likeness (NIL) in college football has produced some absolutely wild amounts of money being thrown around by college football programs, and the two main schools in the state of Alabama are certainly no exceptions.

    As two of the wealthiest programs in the nation, both Alabama and Auburn have been known to bid giant sums of money for players.

    But there may be no greater example right now than Crimson Tide star wide receiver Ryan Williams.

    According to a new report from On3, Williams is set to make more than $1.8 million this season, making him the second-highest paid wide receiver in college football behind only Ohio State Buckeyes superstar Jeremiah Smith.

    Williams missed last weekend’s game with a concussion he suffered against Florida State during what was an ugly first game for his second season, however he will look to get back on the field this week and prove why he’s as much of a household name as he is/

    In the same report, fellow Auburn sophomore pass catcher Cam Coleman is also making more than $1 million to score touchdowns on The Plains.

    The Phenix City native has not had a touchdown yet this year, but his eight catches and 100 yards through two games with one of them being an extremely run-heavy game plan against Baylor is a nice start.

    With players making more than they ever have right now, the spotlight on them is as big as it has ever been. Whether or not Williams and Coleman are up to the task remains to be seen, but either way, both stars have cashed in.

    Michael Brauner is a Senior Sports Analyst and Contributing Writer for Yellowhammer News. You can follow him on Twitter @MBraunerWNSP and hear him every weekday morning from 6 to 9 a.m. on “The Opening Kickoff” on WNSP-FM 105.5, available free online.

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  • When to expect the best fall foliage

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    Every fall, people travel far and wide to go ‘leaf-peeping.’ The goal is to catch the leaves at peak color to see all the vibrant reds, oranges and yellows that Mother Nature has to offer.

    Weather plays a primary role in knowing when and where to go.


    What You Need To Know

    • Weather plays a significant role in fall foliage

    • Heat and soil moisture determine foliage timing and intensity

    • Stressed trees will lose leaves earlier or later than normal


    Right place at the right time

    The first step of successful leaf-peeping is being at the right place at the right time. All other factors aside, this is the average time of the year around the U.S. that you can see peak fall colors according to Explore Fall.

    (Explore Fall)

    Aside from the Florida peninsula, the Gulf Coast and parts of the desert Southwest, most of the continental U.S. sees color change during fall.

    Weather’s role

    The weather determines whether the fall foliage comes out early, on time or late every year, but what role does it play?

    Heat and moisture are the biggest factors that influence fall foliage. The summer weather helps give an idea of when colors will pop, but the weather during September and October are the biggest influencers.

    Here is how soil moisture and air temperature affect fall foliage.

    Weather impacts on fall foliage

    (Explore Fall)

    A prolonged late-spring or severe summer drought that leads to dry soils in the fall not only affects the timing, but the quality of the colors. Drought and drier soil puts a higher stress on the trees, dulling down the colors and forcing them to lose their leaves sooner.

    Heavy rainfall and wet soils in the summer and fall can delay the colors’ arrival by a few days, or even weeks. The later arrival time can produce better fall colors.

    Colder and below-normal temperatures bring out fall colors early, while prolonged summer heat and above normal temperatures delay the colors.

    According to the USDA Forest Service, “a succession of warm, sunny days and cool, crisp but not freezing nights seems to bring about the most spectacular color displays.” In other words… typical fall weather.

    Current fall foliage

    Here is a map of the current fall foliage around the U.S.


    In some parts of the country, leaves have already started turning. The first areas to see color are typically further north and at higher elevations, including parts of the Upper Midwest and Northern Plains, the Mountain West and interior Northeast.

    Parts of New England are in a severe drought, with much of the mountain west under an extreme or exceptional drought, which could cause the trees to lose leaves early and mute the colors.

    7-Day foliage outlook

    Here is a look at Explore Fall’s 7-day foliage forecast and what the foliage is expected to look like in a week from now.


    You can submit your fall foliage photos here.

    Our team of meteorologists dive deep into the science of weather and break down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

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    Meteorologist Reid Lybarger

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  • Chance of snow in North Alabama this winter? Old Farmers’ Almanac gives its forecast

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    Alabama can expect a warmer-than-average winter this season, according to the Old Farmers’ Almanac, which released its 2025-2026 winter forecast on Thursday.

    Does the Old Farmer’s Almanac see snow this winter in Alabama? Here’s what to know.

    What is the Deep South region on the Farmers’ Almanac?

    Farmers Almanac regions

    According to the Old Farmers’ Almanac map, Alabama falls under Region 8: The Deep South. This region includes cities like Montgomery, Mobile, Nashville, New Orleans, Little Rock, Shreveport and Tupelo.

    Will it snow this year in Alabama?

    The Old Farmer's Almanac's winter forecast for Ohio depends on where you live. It could be cold and snowy, mild and dry, or cold and dry.

    The Old Farmer’s Almanac’s winter forecast for Ohio depends on where you live. It could be cold and snowy, mild and dry, or cold and dry.

    Precipitation levels are forecasted to be below normal, meaning a drier winter for much of the Deep South. Snowfall is expected to be below average, with the best chances for snow limited to the northern area in mid-November, late January and early February.

    When will it be the coldest in Alabama?

    While temperatures will generally stay above normal in the deep South region, the Almanac predicts several chilly snaps, particularly in:

    What is the Old Farmers’ Almanac

    While the almanac certainly isn’t scientific, it provides a brief summary as to why people still turn to it for long-term forecasts.

    “For over 200 years, the Farmers’ Almanac has been predicting long-range weather forecasts to help you plan ahead.

    These forecasts are created using a tried-and-true formula that adapts to the mysteries of nature and the ever-changing world in which we live. The basis of our prediction method was developed by our founding editor according to correlations between celestial events and various meteorological conditions.”

    For more information, visit The Old Farmer’s Almanac.

    Jennifer Lindahl is a Breaking and Trending Reporter for the Deep South Connect Team for Gannett/USA Today. Connect with her on X @jenn_lindahl and email at jlindahl@gannett.com.

    Vanessa Countryman is the Trending Topics Reporter for the the Deep South Connect Team Georgia. Email her at Vcountryman@gannett.com.

    This article originally appeared on The Tuscaloosa News: Will it snow this winter in Alabama? See Old Farmers’ Almanac outlook

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  • Miss Alabama 2024 crowns Miss America 2025 – Yellowhammer News

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    In Sunday night’s Miss America 2026 final at Orlando’s Dr. Phillips Center, Alabama’s Abbie Stockard, Miss America 2025, crowned her successor: Miss New York, Cassie Donegan.

    Stockard had won the prestigious national pageant last year and has served the past year as Miss America 2025.

    Her reign ended Sunday night as she handed her title, her crown and her duties to her successor.

    Earlier in the night, 11 semifinalists were announced before moving through fitness, talent, evening gown and interview phases.

    The semifinalist states were Florida, Texas, Arkansas, Tennessee, Georgia, Maryland, New York, Mississippi, Kentucky, Alabama and Illinois.

    Talent highlights included:

    • Miss Georgia, Audrey Kittila — violin medley.
    • Miss Tennessee, Zoe Scheiderich — ballet.
    • Miss Maryland, Maria Derisavi — spoken “HER Story” piece.
    • Miss Florida, Paris Richardson — acrobatic/jazz dance.
    • Miss Alabama, Emma Terry — ballet en pointe.
    • Miss Illinois, Nitsaniyah Fitch — soulful ballad.

    Donegan, Arkansas’ Kennedy Holland, and Utah’s Jordyn Bristol were among preliminary talent award winners this week before finals.

    Miss Alabama Emma Terry also won two service awards. She was the regional leader for the leadership award. She won a new Quality of Life Award.

    15 former Miss America winners were there and were recognized for a walk across the stage. One was from Alabama, Heather Whitestone, Miss America 1995. She was the first and only deaf Miss America.

    It was announced that the Miss America organization awards $35 million a year in scholarships across the nation.

    A special announcement was made during the Sunday pageant that each contestant who did not make the top 11 would each receive a $3,000 scholarship.

    Jim Zig Zeigler is a contributing writer for Yellowhammer News. His beat includes the positive and colorful about Alabama – her people, events, groups and prominent deaths. He is a former State Auditor and Public Service Commissioner. You can reach him at [email protected].

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  • Auburn professor stabbed to death while walking her dog in Alabama park; man charged with murder

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    A retired professor at Auburn University was stabbed to death over the weekend in a park near the Alabama college campus, according to Auburn Police and CBS affiliate WRBL. A man has been arrested and charged in her murder.

    Julie Gard Schnuelle, 59, was attacked Saturday morning in Auburn’s Kiesel Park, which the city says is a large green space with a walking trail that stretches for just over two miles. She had gone to the park to walk her dog, which was later found unharmed, WRBL reported. The county coroner confirmed Schnuelle’s identity to WRBL, according to the station.

    Officers responded to a call at around 2 p.m. Saturday reporting a deceased person in a wooded section of the park, according to Auburn Police. At around 3:30 p.m., the police department shared a social media post instructing people to avoid Kiesel Park because of “a heavy first responder presence” in the area. It remained closed through the weekend as police launched an investigation into the attack. 

    Schnuelle had suffered injuries that indicated “the death was caused by an assault,” Auburn Police said, and the county coroner told WRBL that evidence was consistent with trauma sustained from a sharp object, potentially a knife, according to the station. The coroner said the body would undergo a full autopsy exam, WRBL reported.

    Auburn Police arrested Montgomery resident Harold Rashad Dabney, 28, in connection with the fatal stabbing on Sunday, the department said. He was charged with two counts of capital murder, including one for kidnapping and another for robbery, as he allegedly stole Schnuelle’s Ford F-150 truck, which was parked in the area, to leave the scene after the attack, according to police.

    Before her retirement in 2021, Schnuelle was a professor in the clinical sciences department of the university’s College of Veterinary Medicine. Her biography on the school’s website features some of her research into preventing and managing diseases in cattle and their calves.

    CBS News has reached out to Auburn Police and Auburn University for more information.

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  • Tracking powerful hurricane Kiko as it heads towards Hawaii

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    Kiko formed off the coast of southern Mexico from a tropical wave. It became a tropical storm on Aug. 31, making it the eleventh named storm of the eastern Pacific hurricane season. Kiko intensified into a hurricane on Sept. 2. 


    What You Need To Know

    • Kiko is the eleventh named storm of the eastern Pacific hurricane season
    • It remains a major, powerful hurricane
    • Models have Hurricane Kiko moving close, but to the north of the Hawaiian Islands next week


    Kiko intensified into a Category 4 hurricane on Sept. 3. It weakened to a Category 3 hurricane with winds of 115 mph during the morning hours on Sept. 5, but by the afternoon it had re-intensified back into a Category 4 hurricane.

    It currently has maximum winds of 140 mph. It is moving west-northwest at 10 mph and is located roughly 1000 miles east-southeast of Hilo, HI.

    It is a much smaller storm than Hurricane Erin. Hurricane-force winds extend only 25 miles out from the center, with tropical storm-force winds extending 70 miles out from the center. 


    Models have Kiko taking a west-northwesterly track over the weekend into next week, coming close to Hawaii. 

    While it’s too soon for impact details, the cooler waters near the Aloha State should weaken Kiko greatly. We’ll continue to monitor the track and provide updates. 


     

    Storms that have come close to Hawaii

    Hurricane Hone passed just to the south of the Big Island of Hawaii in 2024 as a Category 1 hurricane with winds of 85 mph. Here are other cyclones that came close to the islands.

    Eastern North Pacific names

    Central North Pacific differences

    The National Hurricane Center monitors tropical activity in the Atlantic and North Eastern Pacific Ocean. If a storm forms between 140° West longitude and the International Date Line, it is the responsibility of the Central North Pacific Warning Center, located in Honolulu, HI. 

    There is a contrast in the names used in the Central Pacific compared to the Eastern Pacific and Atlantic. One list is composed of twelve names. 

    The names are used one after the other. When the bottom of one list is reached, the next name is at the top of the next list. Below is the current list. 

    It is interesting to note that if a storm forms in the Eastern North Pacific and is named in that basin, it will retain its name even if it moves into the Central North Pacific. For this reason, we are tracking Hurricane Kiko, since it formed east of 140° West longitude.

    Tropical Storm Akoni and Tropical Storm Ema formed in the Central North Pacific in 2019. Hurricane Hone brushed past Hawaii in 2024.

    This list will continue to be used until there is a storm named Wale. Three other lists have been generated by the World Meteorological Organization and are at the ready if needed. Hurricane Iona and Tropical Storm Keli formed in the Central North Pacific in 2025.

    Just like in the Atlantic and Eastern North Pacific, if storms are impactful, they can be retired. Four storms have been retired in the Central North Pacific. 

    • Iwa (1982): Retired after impacting Hawaii.
    • Iniki (1992): Retired after affecting Hawaii.
    • Paka (1997): Retired after affecting various islands in Micronesia.
    • Ioke (2006): Retired after impacting Micronesia.

    You can track the rest of the tropics here. 

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

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    Spectrum News Weather Staff

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  • ‘What should I do?’: Alabama dog mom drives over to pick up her pup from the kennel. Then they won’t let her in

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    A woman pulls up at the dog kennel where she boarded her dog, excited to pick up her pup. However, her excitement quickly turns to alarm when she realizes no one is answering the door.

    In a video with over 217,000 views, TikToker Dixie Grace Wilkerson (@dixiegracewilkerson) sits in her car in the parking lot of the kennel.

    “I pull up after driving five hours back from our vacation to pick up our dog. Our appointment time is at 5pm,” she says. However, she notes that she arrived over an hour early.

    “Usually it’s not a big deal to get here early, but I just pulled up and the doors are locked. Lights are off. Nobody is here,” she says.

    Wilkerson says she called the kennel multiple times and reached out via Facebook, but did not hear back from any of its staff. She waits until her appointment time, but no one arrives to let her retrieve her dog.

    Was she able to pick up her dog from the kennel?

    In a follow-up video, Wilkerson says she waited until 5:05pm and then left without picking up her dog.

    “At 5:05pm I messaged them and was like, ‘It’s currently 5:05pm, no one is here. I will be there first thing in the morning,” she says. “They have yet to read my message.”

    The next morning, she goes back to the kennel to try to pick up her dog. Luckily, the manager is there to let her in.

    “I explained the whole situation and she was like, ‘Oh, we closed at 12:30pm because its Labor Day,”” she recounts. Wilkerson tells the staff that she was able to select a 5pm pick-up slot on their website.

    “They were like, ‘Well it was just a miscommunication.’ So they didn’t charge me for last night,’” she says. “But I will not be using them again.”

    She briefly notes that this incident is not the first issue she had with the dog kennel. Previously, her dog came home with fire ant bites, which the manager later back tracked and insisted was a hot water burn from a bucket.

    In a final update video, Wilkerson mentions that the manager assured her she stopped by the kennel at 5:30pm to feed the dogs on Labor Day.

    “So, they were fed. I don’t want anyone to think they just left them to not eat,” she clarifies.

    Should staff stay at a dog kennel 24/7?

    In the comments, other dog boarding facility owners and workers warn that it goes against best practice to leave pets unattended for any length of time, regardless of a holiday. On Reddit, some dog owners warn that certain chain boarding facilities often go staff-less overnight, which can be dangerous if a dog experiences an emergency.

    “No! As a boarding facility owner that is not ok. Please find a new boarding facility! ASAP,” one writes.

    “I own a boarding facility. We are closed to the public on holidays, but we have staff that comes in to take care of the animals,” another says.

    “There should absolutely be someone there 24 hours a day. I used to work graveyard at the petsmart pet hotel and you never know what kind of emergency a dog could have in the middle of the night,” a third adds.

    @dixiegracewilkerson And I’ve called about 10 times ? #helpme #dogboarding #dogmom ♬ original sound – Dixie Grace ?

    Other pet owners say Wilkerson’s story dissuades them from using a boarding facility for their dogs.

    “That’s a bad place!! I would never trust them with my baby!!!” a commenter exclaims.

    “I would never ever board my dog. Those people don’t care about my dog like I do! He goes with me or I don’t go,” another says.

    The Mary Sue reached out to Wilkerson via TikTok direct message and comment.

    Have a tip we should know? [email protected]

    Image of Rebekah Harding

    Rebekah Harding

    Rebekah Harding is a reporter and content strategist based in Philadelphia. You can contact her at rebekahjonesharding.com.

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    Rebekah Harding

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  • Models have Hawaii in Hurricane Kiko’s path

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    Kiko formed off the coast of southern Mexico from a tropical wave. It became a tropical storm on Aug. 31, making it the fourteenth named storm of the eastern Pacific hurricane season. Kiko intensified into a hurricane on Sept. 2. 


    What You Need To Know

    • Kiko is the fourteenth named storm of the eastern Pacific hurricane season
    • It intensified into a Category 4 hurricane with maximum winds of 130 mph
    • Models have Hurricane Kiko moving close to the Hawaiian Islands next week


    Kiko intensified into a Category 4 hurricane on Sept. 3, and currently has maximum winds of 130 mph. It is moving west at 9 mph and is located nearly 1600 miles east of Hilo, HI.


    Models have Kiko taking a west-northwesterly track over the weekend into next week, coming close to Hawaii. 

    While it’s too soon for impact details, the cooler waters near the Aloha State should weaken Kiko greatly. We’ll continue to monitor the track and provide updates. 


     

    Hurricane Hone passed just to the south of the Big Island of Hawaii in 2024 as a Category 1 hurricane with winds of 85 mph. Here are other cyclones that came close to the islands.

    You can track the rest of the tropics here. 

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

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    Spectrum News Weather Staff

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  • Trump follows through on first-term promise moving Space Command from Colorado to Alabama

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    President Donald Trump on Tuesday announced the U.S. Space Command headquarters would relocate from Colorado Springs, Colorado, to Huntsville, Alabama.

    In 2018, Trump signed an executive order reestablishing the space command during his first term. In 2023, former President Joe Biden decided to keep the headquarters in Colorado, where it was temporarily located.

    Trump’s announcement Tuesday officially reversed Biden’s decision and is consistent with his original plan.

    “The U.S. Space Command HQ will move to the beautiful locale of a place called Huntsville, Alabama, forever to be known from this point forward as Rocket City,” Trump said in a press conference.

    President Donald Trump speaks about the relocation of U.S. Space Command headquarters from Colorado to Alabama in the Oval Office of the White House, Tuesday, Sept. 2, 2025, in Washington. | Mark Schiefelbein

    The decision was criticized by Democrats, who say it will be costly to relocate the headquarters and puts jobs in jeopardy in Colorado.

    Trump said Tuesday that Colorado’s use of mail-in voting was a “big factor” for why the change was happening. Alabama allows absentee ballots that can be requested and returned by mail.

    Alabama, which voted in favor of Trump in all three of the elections he ran in, celebrated the decision with its congressional delegation joining Trump in the Oval Office for the announcement. The relocation is expected to bring jobs and investment to Huntsville’s Redstone Arsenal.

    “We had a lot of competition for this and Alabama’s getting it,” Trump said, acknowledging the state’s leaders flanking him on either side.

    The Air Force had previously said Redstone was the preferred location for the headquarters, but officials said new construction would have to happen in Alabama to support the operations already underway in Colorado. The Biden administration opted instead to overturn Trump’s decision and keep operations where they were.

    Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser said in a statement Tuesday that Trump was playing “political games” with the military’s readiness and their families.

    “Moving Space Command Headquarters to Alabama is not only wrong for our national defense, but it’s harmful to hundreds of Space Command personnel and their families,” Weiser said.

    Donald Trump

    In this Aug. 29, 2019, file photo, President Donald Trump, left, watches with Vice President Mike Pence and Defense Secretary Mark Esper as the flag for U.S. space Command is unfurled as Trump announces the establishment of the U.S. Space Command in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington. President Joe Biden has decided to keep U.S. Space Command headquarters in Colorado, overturning a last-ditch decision by the Trump administration to move it to Alabama and ending months of politically fueled debate, according to senior U.S. officials | Carolyn Kaster

    Weiser said his office had been preparing for Trump to make this announcement and is ready to challenge it in court.

    Trump’s announcement Tuesday was his first televised remarks in a week, since a three-hour Cabinet meeting last Tuesday.

    After several days with no public appearances, there was speculation online about the president’s health. He noted during the press conference that he had an “active” weekend by golfing, posting online and doing an hourlong interview with an outlet.

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  • Trump announces Space Command HQ will switch to Alabama from Colorado

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    Donald Trump made his first public appearance in a week on Tuesday to announce that the US Space Command (Spacecom) headquarters, which is tasked with leading national security operations in space, would be in the Republican stronghold of Alabama.

    Flanked by Republican senators and members of Congress at a White House news conference, Trump said Huntsville, Alabama, would be the new location of the space command. The move reverses a Biden administration decision to put the facility at its current temporary headquarters in Democratic-leaning Colorado.

    “The US Space Command headquarters will move to the beautiful locale of a place called Huntsville, Alabama, forever to be known from this point forward as Rocket City,” Trump said. “We had a lot of competition but Alabama’s getting it.”

    The move would result in more than 30,000 new jobs and bring hundreds of billions of dollars to Alabama, a state which voted for Trump “by about 47 points”, the president said.

    “They fought harder for it than anyone else,” Trump claimed, before adding that Colorado’s decision to allow mail-in voting was “corrupt”.

    “The problem I have with Colorado, one of the big problems, [is that] they do mail-in voting,” he said. “So they have automatically crooked elections and we can’t have that. When a state is for mail-in voting, that means they want dishonest elections. So that played a big factor.”

    Huntsville is already home to the US Army Space and Missile Defense Command, Nasa’s Marshall Space Flight center and the 38,000-acre Redstone Arsenal. The city was identified by the US air force as its preferred site for Space Command in 2021 as it would be a cost-effective option. A report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO) later found that the air force’s decision-making process had “significant shortfalls in its transparency and credibility”.

    Two years later, in 2023, Biden overturned those plans to relocate to Alabama. Instead, Biden chose to make the then temporary Colorado Springs location permanent, taking a recommendation from Gen James Dickinson, the former head of Space Command. Dickinson reportedly said relocating to Alabama could jeopardize military readiness as making the headquarters fully operational would take time.

    Related: Golden Dome missile defense program won’t be operational by end of Trump’s term

    “For FOUR YEARS, I have fought to get U.S. Space Command moved to its SELECTED home at Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, Alabama,” Senator Tommy Tuberville wrote alongside a video statement after Trump’s announcement. “Thank you, President Trump and Secretary [Pete] Hegseth, for reversing Joe Biden’s political cronyism and restoring MERIT and INTEGRITY to this process.”

    Tuberville lambasted Biden’s 2023 decision to keep Spacecom in Colorado Springs in his video and said the former president let the “nation’s security [take] a backseat to politics” and “caved” to “woke politics” at the time. He then thanked Trump for “restoring merit and integrity” to space exploration and alleged the move would save taxpayers $480m.

    Trump’s announcement of a change of course followed days of fevered online speculation about his health, fueled by his absence from the public eye since last week.

    Asked if he was aware that there had been 1.3m social media engagements as of Saturday morning speculating on his possible “demise”, Trump countered that he had held several news conferences in the past week and pointed to some “pretty poignant” posts he had made on his Truth Social platform.

    “I did numerous news conferences, all successful. They went very well, like this is going very well. And then I didn’t do any for two days, and they said ‘there must be something wrong with him,’” he said.

    “Biden wouldn’t do them for months, you wouldn’t see him, and nobody ever said there was ever anything wrong with him – and we know he wasn’t in the greatest of shape. It’s all fake news.”

    Speculation about Trump’s health has recently intensified. Some of the fervor has been spurred by a White House disclosure that he was diagnosed with chronic venous insufficiency, a condition involving damage to the veins in the arms and legs. There has also been viral pictures showing Trump with swollen ankles and bruising on his hands.

    Elsewhere in his announcement, Trump indicated that he had decided to send armed troops into Chicago, allegedly to fight crime. Such a move is against the will of JB Pritzker, the governor of Illinois, and follows the recent controversial deployment of national guard forces in Washington on the same purported basis.

    “We’re going in,” he said, calling Chicago and Baltimore – another Democratic-run city – “hellholes”.

    He said the deployment of national guard troops in Washington DC had “served as a template,” adding: “I’m very proud of Washington. [It’s] a safe zone.”

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  • 2 adults dead, 7 children injured after ATV overturned and struck tree in Alabama

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    Two adults were killed and seven children were injured, including one as young as 1 year old, in an all-terrain vehicle crash over the weekend at an off-roading park in Alabama, authorities said. None of the occupants was wearing proper restraints or harnesses while riding in the vehicle, which crashed in a remote section of the park.

    The side-by-side RZR, an ATV model, crowded with nine people, hit another ATV on Saturday, overturned and crashed into a tree at Indian Mountain ATV Park in Piedmont, Cherokee County Emergency Management Agency Director Shawn Rogers said during a news conference Sunday. 

    The male driver was ejected from the vehicle and was pronounced dead at the scene.

    Cherokee County Sheriff Jeff Shaver said it appears the deceased driver was operating the ATV at a high rate of speed when it hit the other vehicle, whose driver tried to avoid the collision.

    Both Rogers and Shaver were among the county officials who emphasized how important it is to adhere to relevant safety protocols in any vehicle, like wearing restraints and carrying the correct number of people, in the aftermath of the crash.

    “This is a tragic accident and highlights the importance of operating RZRs and other recreational vehicles in a safe and responsible manner,” Shaver said.

    The sheriff’s office is awaiting toxicology results to determine whether alcohol played a factor. It’s illegal to possess alcohol outside municipalities in Cherokee County, which has been dry since the Prohibition era a century ago.

    The location of the crash was remote, Cherokee County officials said, making it challenging to access for first responders and requiring staff at the ATV park to escort emergency crews to the site. 

    Four medical helicopters took an adult female and three children to trauma centers in Birmingham. The woman later died from her injuries, officials said. Ambulances took the other four children to a hospital in Rome, Georgia.

    Rogers said officials have been told not one of the nine in the ATV was harnessed or restrained.

    “‘I’m sure that it’s not recommended to have nine people, especially young children, in a RZR not using safety harnesses,” Shaver said.

    “There’s nothing that says that everybody that gets in a side-by-side has to restrained,” Rogers said. “That’s one of those things that personal responsibility has to be taken, to ensure your own safety and the safety of those that’s in your care.”

    The children injured ranged in age from 1 to 12 years old. Cherokee County Coroner Paul McDonald said in a text to The Associated Press Sunday that the man who died was the father of all seven children and that the woman was the mother of three of the children.

    All the victims were from Georgia, according to McDonald.

    “Scenes like this are always difficult, especially when they involve children,” the coroner said in a statement. “Please do everything you can to ensure the safety of yourself and those around you.”

    No identities have been released pending family notifications. Rogers said officials did not know the medical status of any of the children or have updates on their conditions.

    The two people in the other ATV were not injured and tried to render aid, Shaver said.

    The accident site was in a remote location inside the park and was difficult to access. Staff at the ATV park, located about 75 miles northeast of Birmingham, had to escort medical personnel to the scene.

    The sheriff’s office is leading the investigation into the accident with assistance from McDonald’s office.

    Indian Mountain ATV Park says on its website that at just over 7 square miles in the Appalachian Mountain range, it’s one of the largest private off-road parks in the South.

    A woman who answered the phone at the park on Sunday said officials were meeting with counsel and may release a statement later.

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  • FSU freshman linebacker is in intensive care after shooting, school says

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    FSU freshman linebacker Ethan Pritchard is in intensive care after shooting, school says

    Updated: 9:59 AM PDT Sep 1, 2025

    Editorial Standards

    A Florida State linebacker is in critical but stable condition after being shot while visiting family, the Seminoles said Monday.Ethan Pritchard, a 6-foot-2, 224-pound freshman from Sanford, was in intensive care at a Tallahassee-area hospital. He was shot Sunday evening while inside a vehicle outside apartments in Havana, according to the Gadsden County Sheriff’s Office.“The Pritchard family is thankful for the support from so many people, as well as the care from first responders and medical professionals, and asks that their privacy be respected at this time,” FSU said in a statement. “Further updates will be provided as they are available.”Pritchard did not play in Florida State’s season opener, a 31-17 victory Saturday over No. 8 Alabama in Tallahassee.

    A Florida State linebacker is in critical but stable condition after being shot while visiting family, the Seminoles said Monday.

    Ethan Pritchard, a 6-foot-2, 224-pound freshman from Sanford, was in intensive care at a Tallahassee-area hospital. He was shot Sunday evening while inside a vehicle outside apartments in Havana, according to the Gadsden County Sheriff’s Office.

    “The Pritchard family is thankful for the support from so many people, as well as the care from first responders and medical professionals, and asks that their privacy be respected at this time,” FSU said in a statement. “Further updates will be provided as they are available.”

    Pritchard did not play in Florida State’s season opener, a 31-17 victory Saturday over No. 8 Alabama in Tallahassee.

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  • Welcome to meteorological fall

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    The astronomical start to the season begins on Sept. 22, 2025, at 2:19 pm EDT. Meteorologists and climatologists look at the seasons a little differently than most.


    What You Need To Know

    • Most people use the traditional astronomical seasons
    • Meteorological seasons are more convenient for weather records
    • Meteorological fall is from Sept. 1 through Nov. 30


    The Earth’s tilt on its axis gives us our seasons. In the Northern Hemisphere, the spring and fall equinoxes happen when the sun’s direct rays pass over the Equator. They’re farthest north on the summer solstice as we lean toward the sun. On the winter solstice, they reach their southernmost point while we lean away from the sun.

    (NOAA Office of Education/Kaleigh Ballantine)

    Our planet’s movement is predictable, but it isn’t perfect. Astronomical seasons start around the same time, but the exact date varies. The autumnal equinox occurs anywhere between Sept. 21-23. The winter solstice falls between Dec. 20-22. As a result, each season can be anywhere from 89 to 93 days long.

    That would make record-keeping for weather and climate extremely tricky. Making comparisons between years isn’t quite apples-to-apples if the start and length of a season change each year.

    That’s why we have climatological seasons. They always start on the first day of a particular month and only vary between 90 and 92 days long or 3 months at a time. This makes data and record keeping streamlined for meteorologists and climatologists.

    It also turns out that the warmest and coldest 91-day periods of the year line up better with climatological summer and winter.

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

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    Meteorologist Alan Auglis, Spectrum News Weather Staff

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  • Welcome to meteorological fall

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    The astronomical start to the season begins on Sept. 22, 2025, at 2:19 pm EDT. Meteorologists and climatologists look at the seasons a little differently than most.


    What You Need To Know

    • Most people use the traditional astronomical seasons
    • Meteorological seasons are more convenient for weather records
    • Meteorological fall is from Sept. 1 through Nov. 30


    The Earth’s tilt on its axis gives us our seasons. In the Northern Hemisphere, the spring and fall equinoxes happen when the sun’s direct rays pass over the Equator. They’re farthest north on the summer solstice as we lean toward the sun. On the winter solstice, they reach their southernmost point while we lean away from the sun.

    (NOAA Office of Education/Kaleigh Ballantine)

    Our planet’s movement is predictable, but it isn’t perfect. Astronomical seasons start around the same time, but the exact date varies. The autumnal equinox occurs anywhere between Sept. 21-23. The winter solstice falls between Dec. 20-22. As a result, each season can be anywhere from 89 to 93 days long.

    That would make record-keeping for weather and climate extremely tricky. Making comparisons between years isn’t quite apples-to-apples if the start and length of a season change each year.

    That’s why we have climatological seasons. They always start on the first day of a particular month and only vary between 90 and 92 days long or 3 months at a time. This makes data and record keeping streamlined for meteorologists and climatologists.

    It also turns out that the warmest and coldest 91-day periods of the year line up better with climatological summer and winter.

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

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    Meteorologist Alan Auglis, Spectrum News Weather Staff

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  • Welcome to meteorological fall

    [ad_1]

    The astronomical start to the season begins on Sept. 22, 2025, at 2:19 pm EDT. Meteorologists and climatologists look at the seasons a little differently than most.


    What You Need To Know

    • Most people use the traditional astronomical seasons
    • Meteorological seasons are more convenient for weather records
    • Meteorological fall is from Sept. 1 through Nov. 30


    The Earth’s tilt on its axis gives us our seasons. In the Northern Hemisphere, the spring and fall equinoxes happen when the sun’s direct rays pass over the Equator. They’re farthest north on the summer solstice as we lean toward the sun. On the winter solstice, they reach their southernmost point while we lean away from the sun.

    (NOAA Office of Education/Kaleigh Ballantine)

    Our planet’s movement is predictable, but it isn’t perfect. Astronomical seasons start around the same time, but the exact date varies. The autumnal equinox occurs anywhere between Sept. 21-23. The winter solstice falls between Dec. 20-22. As a result, each season can be anywhere from 89 to 93 days long.

    That would make record-keeping for weather and climate extremely tricky. Making comparisons between years isn’t quite apples-to-apples if the start and length of a season change each year.

    That’s why we have climatological seasons. They always start on the first day of a particular month and only vary between 90 and 92 days long or 3 months at a time. This makes data and record keeping streamlined for meteorologists and climatologists.

    It also turns out that the warmest and coldest 91-day periods of the year line up better with climatological summer and winter.

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

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    Meteorologist Alan Auglis, Spectrum News Weather Staff

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  • LEGO Store Opens at Atlanta’s Perimeter Mall

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    The 2,153-square-foot store features interactive experiences, exclusive products, and hands-on play opportunities designed to appeal to builders of all ages. Photo by Noah Washington/The Atlanta Voice

    Both the young and the young at heart showed up to Perimeter Mall in Dunwoody on Friday as the LEGO Group opened its newest retail location, marking the 119th LEGO store in the United States.

    Michael Stanton, the store manager who previously managed the Birmingham, Alabama, location for 16 years, said the opening represents a homecoming.

    “I grew up here and graduated from Marietta High School, way back in the day,” Stanton said. “What’s so fun about working for the LEGO Group is you come to work every day and you play. I mean, we play in the store with the little ones.  We play with the big ones, with the vending machine. It’s like not working. It’s like being paid to come play every day.”

    The 2,153-square-foot store features interactive experiences, exclusive products, and hands-on play opportunities designed to appeal to builders of all ages. A ribbon-cutting ceremony at 11 a.m. kicked off the grand opening celebration.

    Monica Lewis, 41, (above) deciding which set she wanted to buy. Photo by Noah Washington/The Atlanta Voice

    The store includes permanent fixtures such as the Pick & Build Wall, Build a Minifigure station and Play Tables. Customers can also participate in a mystery mural LEGO brick building activity and view displays from local LEGO Users Groups.

    The construction team worked for about 10 weeks to prepare the space, with store staff spending nine days setting up before the opening, according to Stanton.

    Stanton said he was particularly moved by opening day’s turnout.

    “I get welled up with pride with seeing how many happy families come in,” he said. “It’s one of my favorite things to do, is just talk to families and people who are building with their kids.”

    Opening weekend promotions include exclusive tile giveaways and special sets for LEGO Insiders loyalty program members who make qualifying purchases. The store offers the largest range of LEGO products available, including many exclusives.

    Mike Moore, 46, (above) with a Transformer LEGO set. Photo by Noah Washington/The Atlanta Voice

    Adult fans comprised a significant portion of opening day customers. Mike Moore, an IT professional from Atlanta, said he became seriously interested in LEGO building only recently.

    “I probably really only got hardcore a couple years ago, but I really enjoy it,” Moore said. “I’ve got a tech background, and I find it really peaceful putting something together and seeing the end result. The Technic series, which usually have mechanisms and moving parts, I just find really relaxing.”

    Moore said he heard about the grand opening only days before and felt he “had to be there.” He purchased a Soundwave set, saying, “I’m a kid of the 80s and 90s, so going back to the transformers was a must.”

    Monica Lewis, a flight attendant who began collecting LEGO sets in April, said she enjoys the hobby’s calming effects.

    “I am an adult fan of Lego,” Lewis said. “I just started collecting and building this year in April. It’s a very peaceful hobby.”

    Lewis said she has started sharing her passion with friends through building sessions, including getting matching botanical sets with her best friend in New Jersey for what she called “Lego and liquor” nights.

    The store targets both children and adults, with sections specifically designed for adult builders. Stanton noted the company has emphasized adult fans for about six or seven years, creating “larger, more challenging builds that are more fun” while also offering sets designed for families to build together.

    The company also spotlights female builders through its “She Built That” campaign, which showcases brightly colored, intricately designed sets created to inspire girls and women.

    The LEGO Group, founded in Denmark in 1932, takes its name from the Danish phrase meaning “play well.” The company’s products are sold in more than 140 countries worldwide.

    Stanton reflected on why he chose to work for the company: 

    “When you translate the word Lego from Danish into English, it translates as play well. And what better place to work than a company whose name is play well?”

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    Noah Washington

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  • Week 1 picks against the spread: Texas, Clemson, Notre Dame look enticing as West Coast schedule carries limited intrigue

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    Week 1 features a series of marquee matchups, all of them in the eastern half of the country. On the West Coast, the intrigue level is low.

    Subscribe to continue reading this article.

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    Jon Wilner

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  • A look back at Hurricane Katrina, 20 years later

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    Hurricane Katrina remains infamous as one of the deadliest hurricanes ever to strike the United States.


    What You Need To Know

    • Hurricane Katrina reached Category 5 status but made landfall as a Category 3 with winds of 125 mph
    • Record storm surge was reported across the Louisiana and Mississippi coastlines
    • 80% of New Orleans was under water on Aug. 31, 2005


    20 years ago on Aug. 29, it made its strongest landfall as a Category 3 hurricane in southeast Louisiana and brought devastation across the city of New Orleans and surrounding parishes.

    Meteorological history

    Hurricane Katrina developed from the remnants of Tropical Depression Ten and a tropical wave near the Lesser Antilles. It became Tropical Depression Twelve over the southeastern Bahamas on Aug. 23.

    On Aug. 24, it was classified as Tropical Storm Katrina, and it moved through the northwestern part of the Bahamas on Aug. 25. It strengthened into a hurricane on the evening of Aug. 25 just before making its first landfall near the Miami-Dade/Broward County line.

    The storm drifted southwest across southern Florida before moving over the eastern Gulf on Aug. 26. Over the warm waters of the Gulf, Katrina rapidly intensified, becoming a Category 5 hurricane with winds of 175 mph on Aug. 28.

    A satellite image of Hurricane Katrina prior to making landfall on Aug. 29, 2005. (NOAA)

    Katrina turned to the northwest and then north, making its second landfall near Buras, LA, in the southeastern part of the state on Aug. 29. It had weakened to a Category 3, with winds of 125 mph, just before landfall.

    Approximately five hours later, Katrina made a third landfall near the Louisiana/Mississippi border with winds estimated at 120 mph, still a Category 3 hurricane.


    Katrina moved over land and weakened but still maintained hurricane strength near Laurel, Mississippi. It was finally downgraded to a tropical depression on Aug. 30 before dissipating altogether on Aug. 31.

    Katrina’s impacts

    Katrina wasn’t just a Louisiana/Mississippi storm; at its height, it was 780 miles from east to west and about the same distance from north to south. Hurricane conditions were reported in southeastern Louisiana, southern Mississippi and southwestern Alabama, with storm surges reported as far east as Destin, FL.

    Storm surge affected coastal regions, with a 20-mile-wide swath of 24 to 28 feet along the Mississippi Coast. The highest surge was at Pass Christian, MS, at 27.8 feet. The storm surge was so high that it overtopped the levees in the city of New Orleans, leading to levee failures and extensive flooding. 80% of New Orleans was under water on Aug. 31.

    The damage and destruction it caused equated to $125 billion (un-adjusted 2005 dollars). Not to mention the thousands of lives lost.


    More Storm Season Resources


    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

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    Meteorologist Stacy Lynn

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  • 20 years after Hurricane Katrina, a barrier island in Alabama is disappearing

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    Hurricane Katrina was a terrifying experience for more than a million people affected across the Gulf Coast region. Nearly 1,400 people died, most of them in New Orleans — and 20 years later, some communities are still struggling to recover.

    The National Hurricane Center says the costliest hurricane in U.S. history — more than $201 billion based on the 2024 Consumer Price Index adjusted cost — caused widespread flood damage across Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama. 

    On Dauphin Island, Alabama, the barrier island town’s west end beach was severed during Katrina. A 1.5 mile-wide gap was left behind. More than 300 homes were destroyed on the island, and for many of those homes, the land on which they stood was permanently washed away.

    Since Hurricane Katrina made landfall on Aug. 29, 2005, Dauphin Island has been shrinking and moving even more from additional storms and sea level rise. The island is now facing a dire existential crisis. 

    Images of Dauphin Island from 2004, 2005 and 2008 shows the shrinking barrier island in Alabama.

    Mayor Jeff Collier never imagined storms, big or small, would batter the island so hard. Some residents are still paying property taxes on lots that are now under Gulf waters — vacationers frequently swimming over top of them. 

    “This area here is where most of those underwater lots are,” Collier said as he took a CBS News crew on a tour of Dauphin Island. “There are probably 50 lots in this stretch of the island.”

    Some residents’ homes are sitting in perilous positions, their pilings now situated well into the Gulf. The homes are still technically livable — vacationers even renting them out this summer — but Collier says it’s only a matter of time before another storm wipes out more.

    Over the last 20 years, the town has rebuilt some of its white sand beaches. Last year, on the island’s east end, the town was able to use Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill settlement money on a beach erosion project to push Gulf waters back about 350 to 400 feet, according to the mayor.

    But on a barrier island like Dauphin, constant maintenance is critical. Jillian Fairbanks visits the island frequently and has seen the erosion first-hand over time.

    “Just about a year later, I can already tell that the sand has eroded, I’d say 30 meters or so at least,” Fairbanks said. “It was still a shock to see that happen already in one year.”

    Her parents have lived there for 13 years. She says they’ve advocated for beach restoration projects for years to protect the town.

    “It’s more calm, laid back, peaceful,” Fairbanks said. “I’ll come here as long as it’s here.”

    katrina-dauph-setd1-lg-0.jpg

    Images show how Hurricane Katrina eroded the beach on Dauphin Island.

    USGS


    It will take millions of dollars from several grant sources to preserve what’s left, and Collier says that’s the biggest challenge.

    Dauphin Island is planning to use more oil spill settlement money to help pay for another beach restoration project for the island’s west end, which will cost $60 million. The mayor is still pursuing additional funding sources to make the project possible.

    He’s also utilizing help from an Environmental Protection Agency grant to upgrade the town’s stormwater runoff systems to help mitigate street flooding during storms, even low-grade ones. As of April, Collier says the town had already spent more than $420,000 on the $1.2 million project.

    Because these projects need continuous upkeep and oversight, Collier sought help from a special FEMA program. He said a grant for a $250,000 project would help the town hire an engineering and design firm to create a specialized disaster mitigation plan.

    The Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities grant, or BRIC, includes investments in state planning and capacity building, such as $2 million in Alabama to support statewide building code implementation costs, according to Derrick Hiebert, who oversaw the program.

    He served as assistant administrator for the Hazard Mitigation Directorate at FEMA for the last two years. 

    “We selected over 1,900 projects. FEMA selected over 1,900 projects worth nearly $5 billion,” Hiebert said. “This included $150 million over three grants to improve three canal basins in South Florida that are plagued by flooding.”

    lightning-west-end.jpg

    The West End of Dauphin Island.

    He added the BRIC program was also funding a massive flooding mitigation project in Washington state.

    “The North Shore Levy — $80 million in federal funding to a community that has suffered significant economic disruption in recent years,” he said. “It was going to protect 3,100 homes and businesses, removing them from the FEMA-designated floodplain and reducing risk in that community.”

    Hiebert said it also helped some other western communities with wildfire mitigation efforts and was first established with bipartisan support. 

    “It was established during the first Trump administration, after the passage of the Disaster Recovery Reform Act, and it helped solve several long-standing challenges with local governments,” Hiebert said. 

    Against Hiebert’s wishes, the Trump administration’s FEMA canceled the program in April, calling it “wasteful and ineffective.” In another announcement, the agency said BRIC resulted in a “lack of concrete results.”

    Hiebert said he supports any administration’s ability to “evolve and adapt” and he doesn’t see changes to FEMA as a bad thing, but he believes the cancellation of such projects is “devastating” to the places that need them. 

    “If the administration wants to change FEMA, or change the BRIC program to something different that looks a little different, that’s the prerogative. That’s good,” he said. “These communities that were expecting these funds, that were counting on these funds for these real large-scale infrastructure projects, what hurts me the most is to know that some of them, or many of them, may not get built, and that these risks … don’t have another place to turn to address these risks.”

    west-end-heron-bob.jpg

    A heron walks along the West End of Dauphin Island.

    Hiebert said he quit his position in June, two months after the program was scrapped. A group of 20 states last month sued the Trump administration, seeking to block what they say was an illegal termination of BRIC. 

    In response to the lawsuit, a FEMA spokesperson told CBS News that resiliency is a priority for the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees FEMA. “But over the last four years the Biden Administration used the BRIC program as a piggy bank for its green new deal agenda,” the spokesperson said.

    FEMA data shows the cut impacted nearly 700 projects at a cost of $3.6 billion. A CBS News investigation found that the recent BRIC funding cuts have disproportionately affected counties that supported Mr. Trump in the 2024 election. The elimination of the BRIC program also especially deprives vulnerable communities across the Southeast, the CBS News data analysis found. 

    Earlier this month, a federal judge temporarily blocked the BRIC funding reallocation, arguing the transfer could lead to “irreparable harm” to flood-prone areas. Meanwhile, Collier says he has not heard any word from the federal government about next steps. 

    “We’re kind of in a limbo situation right now waiting to see what comes out of that,” Collier said.

    CBS News reached out to FEMA for a comment, but has not received a response. 

    Collier said if it comes down to it, he will pursue paying for the hazard mitigation plan out of pocket. 

    “Of course, it’s nicer when you have grant funds to work with, but at the same time, this is such a critically important thing that we need … If we can’t get the funding elsewhere, you know, we just have to just deal with it ourselves,” Collier said. “So, one way or the other, we’re going to get our plan in place.”

    Time is something Dauphin Island cannot afford. Even without a major hurricane, the beach is expected to continue washing away.

    Asked what keeps him up at night, Collier said, “just the fact that we know additional hurricanes will eventually hit this area … knowing that there’s a clock ticking, that we only have a certain length of time in order to make differences and changes on the island before the next one hits.”

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  • Two areas to watch for tropical development in the Atlantic

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    Erin is now an extra-tropical cyclone as it moves through the North Atlantic.

    Elsewhere, we’re watching two other areas of interest in the Atlantic with development potential in the coming days.


    What You Need To Know

    • Two disturbances are being watched, one with high chances to develop
    • There is no immediate concern for the U.S.
    • The next name on the list is Fernand

    A tropical depression or storm could form this weekend southeast of Bermuda as the system turns north in the Atlantic. It has high odds (90%) to develop over the next couple of days.

    Another tropical wave that emerged off the African coast will continue to move westward with with much lower odds for tropical development. Conditions will be more favorable once it reaches the Caribbean Sea.

    Neither of these disturbances pose a threat to the U.S. right now.

    August is one of the busier months in the hurricane season, so activity will likely pick up in the coming weeks. The next name on the list is Fernand.


    More Storm Season Resources


    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

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    Spectrum News Weather Staff

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