ReportWire

Tag: Kentucky

  • Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado wins the Nobel Peace Prize

    [ad_1]

    Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado won the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday for her struggle to achieve a democratic transition in the South American nation, winning recognition as a woman “who keeps the flame of democracy burning amid a growing darkness.”

    The former opposition presidential candidate is a “key, unifying figure” in the once deeply divided opposition to President Nicolás Maduro’s government, said Jørgen Watne Frydnes, chair of the Norwegian Nobel committee.


    What You Need To Know

    • Former opposition presidential candidate and activist María Corina Machado, of Venezuela, has won the Nobel Peace Prize, with the Norwegian Nobel committee praising her as a unifying figure in the country
    • Machado has remained in hiding due to threats against her life; she has not been seen in public since January
    • Machado was disqualified from running against President Nicolás Maduro in last year’s election, which saw widespread repression and human rights violations
    • The election results led to protests and ended diplomatic relations between Venezuela and several countries

    “In the past year, Ms. Machado has been forced to live in hiding,” Watne Frydnes said. “Despite serious threats against her life, she has remained in the country, a choice that has inspired millions. When authoritarians seize power, it is crucial to recognize courageous defenders of freedom who rise and resist.”

    Machado says she’s humbled and grateful

    Machado’s ally, Edmundo González, who lives in exile in Spain, celebrated the Nobel award as a “very well-deserved recognition” of her fight and that of Venezuelans for freedom and democracy. He posted a short video on X of himself speaking by phone with Machado.

    “I am in shock,” she said, adding, “I cannot believe it.”

    “This is something that the Venezuelan people deserve,” Machado said in a call with the Norwegian Nobel Institute. “I am just part of a huge movement. … I’m humbled, I’m grateful and I’m honored not only by this recognition, but I’m honored to be part of what’s going on in Venezuela today.”

    “I believe that we are very close to achieving, finally, freedom for our country and peace for the region,” she said, adding that “even though we face the most brutal violence, our society has resisted” and insisted on struggling by peaceful means. “I believe that the world will now understand how urgent it is to finally, you know, succeed.”

    Crackdown on dissent

    Maduro’s government has routinely targeted its real or perceived opponents.

    Machado, who turned 58 this week, was set to run against Maduro in last year’s presidential election, but the government disqualified her. González, who had never run for office before, took her place. The lead-up to the election saw widespread repression, including disqualifications, arrests and human rights violations.

    The crackdown on dissent only increased after the country’s National Electoral Council, which is stacked with Maduro loyalists, declared him the winner despite credible evidence to the contrary.

    The election results announced by the Electoral Council sparked protests across the country to which the government responded with force that ended with more than 20 people dead. They also prompted an end to diplomatic relations between Venezuela and various foreign countries, including Argentina.

    Machado went into hiding and has not been seen in public since January. A Venezuelan court issued an arrest warrant for González over the publication of election results. He went into exile in Spain and was granted asylum.

    More than 800 people are in prison in Venezuela for political reasons, according to the human rights advocacy group Foro Penal. Among them is González’s son-in-law, Rafael Tudares, who was detained in January.

    Dozens of those prisoners actively participated in Machado’s efforts last year. Some of her closest collaborators, including her campaign manager, avoided prison by sheltering for more than a year at a diplomatic compound in Caracas. They remained there until May, when they fled to the U.S.

    Early Friday in Caracas, some people heading to work expressed disbelief at the news of Machado’s win.

    “I don’t know what can be done to improve the situation, but she deserves it,” said Sandra Martínez, 32, as she waited at a bus stop. “She’s a great woman.”

    There was no immediate reaction from Maduro’s government.

    Support for Machado and the opposition in general has decreased since the July 2024 election — particularly since January, when Maduro was sworn in for a third six-year term and disappointment set in.

    Machado was included in Time magazine’s list of 100 most influential people in April. U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio wrote her entry, in which he described her as “the Venezuelan Iron Lady” and “the personification of resilience, tenacity, and patriotism.”

    Machado becomes the 20th woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize, of the 112 individuals who have been honored.

    Speculation about Trump’s Nobel chances

    There had been persistent speculation ahead of the announcement about the possibility of the prize going to U.S. President Donald Trump, fueled in part by the president himself and amplified by this week’s approval of his plan for a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip.

    Asked about lobbying for and by Trump, Watne Frydnes said: “I think this committee has seen any type of campaign, media attention. We receive thousands and thousands of letters every year of people wanting to say what for them leads to peace.

    “This committee sits in a room filled with the portraits of all laureates, and that room is filled with both courage and integrity. So we base only our decision on the work and the will of Alfred Nobel.”

    White House spokesperson Steven Cheung said in a post on X Friday morning that “President Trump will continue making peace deals around the world, ending wars, and saving lives.” He added that “the Nobel Committee proved they place politics over peace.”

    The peace prize is the only one of the annual Nobel prizes to be awarded in Oslo, Norway.

    Four of the other prizes have already been awarded in the Swedish capital, Stockholm this week — in medicine on Monday, physics on Tuesday, chemistry on Wednesday and literature on Thursday. The winner of the prize in economics will be announced on Monday.

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Nor’easter to bring rain, strong winds and coastal flooding to East Coast

    [ad_1]

    A low pressure is expected to develop today and bring rain, wind and coastal flooding all along the east coast this weekend into early next week.


    What You Need To Know

    • A coastal low will develop off the coast of Florida on Friday
    • The low will strengthen as it moves northward along the Carolina coast, bringing heavy rain, wind and flooding potential
    • The system will produce wind gusts 30 to 50 mph along coastal regions of the East Coast
    • Rainfall totals will be highest along coastal North Carolina



    This storm system — a nor’easter, named for the wind direction it produces — usually brings heavy snow along the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast during the winter months. However, any weather disturbance can take a similar track and produce wind and heavy precipitation, and that is expected to happen this weekend into early next week.

    Unfortunately, the Outer Banks of N.C. will see their third storm so far this season. As recently as two weeks ago, rough surf and big waves collapsed eight homes into the Atlantic Ocean in this area. 

    A beach house in Rodanthe in Dare County toppled into the surf Friday. (Spectrum News 1/Lauren Howard)

    Track of storm

    Here’s one computer model’s interpretation of the storm. 

    Wind gusts

    A nor’easter will produce gusty winds, and depending on the location of the storm to the coast will determine how windy it gets inland. Gusts will generally be around 30 to 50 mph for coastal regions, with some localized higher gusts. Interior sections will see less gusty conditions, with winds around 20 to 30 mph.

    Rainfall totals

    Rainfall totals will be highest along coastal North Carolina, with 3 to 5 inches possible. 

    The low is expected to move east from the coast during the day on Tuesday, taking with it the heavy rain and gusty winds. 

    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.

    [ad_2]

    Spectrum News Weather Staff

    Source link

  • Kentucky attorney general sues Roblox alleging a

    [ad_1]

    Kentucky has sued Roblox, alleging that children are accessing violent simulation games on the popular gaming platform, including depictions of the assassination of Charlie Kirk, just weeks after the conservative activist’s killing.

    In the 68-page complaint filed Tuesday in Madison Circuit Court in Madison County, the state Attorney General’s Office alleges that it is not uncommon for the more than 85 million daily active players on the platform to find themselves in violent or sexual situations, with few safeguards put in place by Roblox. 

    “For years, Roblox has ignored this crisis so it could continue turning a profit. Our responsibility is to protect Kentucky children from online exploitation by these predators and the companies like Roblox that knowingly facilitate it,” Attorney General Russell Coleman said Tuesday in a statement, referring to the platform as a “playground for predators.”

    The complaint alleges Roblox knowingly enabled and facilitated the sexual exploitation and abuse of children across the United States, including in Kentucky. The in-game currency, known as “Robux,” is allegedly used by predators to entice children into dangerous situations, court documents state. Several examples cited in the lawsuit include games where Roblox avatars engaged in simulated sexual activity in addition to the graphic shooting of Kirk. 

    “We filed a lawsuit to come after Roblox with the full force of the law. My message to parents: get your kids off Roblox,” Attorney General Russell Coleman said in a post on X

    Roblox said in a statement to CBS News that the lawsuit was based on “sensationalized, outdated and out-of-context information.”

    “At this time, we have had no contact from the Attorney General’s office regarding our platform or safety features, but we welcome a direct conversation with the AG’s office and all policymakers to ensure they have a clear understanding of all Roblox is doing to keep users safe,” Roblox said in its emailed statement. “Keeping kids safe online requires a collaborative industry-wide effort, which we welcome.”

    Roblox said it shares “the critically important goal of keeping kids safe online and have years of experience working collaboratively with law enforcement, child safety experts, and families in pursuit of our vision to be the safest platform on the internet.”

    A CBS News investigation in August found that Roblox users can bypass safety moderations to expose children to inappropriate content, including swastikas, hate speech and graphic sexual imagery. Several lawsuits were filed against the company, according to the investigation, alleging exploitative practices aimed at children, with more filed in recent weeks. 

    In August, Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill filed a child protection lawsuit against Roblox, alleging the platform is “overrun with harmful content and child predators.” Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier announced in April that he issued a subpoena to Roblox, while the Oklahoma Attorney General’s Office recently requested proposals for legal services to investigate and possibly sue Roblox.

    “Our children are not safe on Roblox. Predators and criminals aren’t just lurking in the platform’s shadows; they’ve been allowed to commit their crimes out in the open,” Attorney General Coleman said Tuesday.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • North Dakota tornado from June upgraded to EF5

    [ad_1]

    The National Weather Service (NWS) in Grand Forks, N.D., reevaluated a tornado from June 20, 2025. Completing additional surveys and working extensively with wind damage experts, the new estimated maximum wind speed is greater than 210 mph, making it an EF5 on the Enhanced Fujita tornado scale.

    This is the strongest tornado to touch down in the United States since the Moore, Okla. twister on May 20, 2013. 


    What You Need To Know

    • A reevaluation of the June 20, 2025 tornado gave the rating EF5
    • This is the strongest tornado to touch down in the United States since 2013
    • Estimated winds in the twister exceeded 210 mph


    June 20, 2025, was an active day of severe weather in the Plains. Meteorologist Carl Jones, with NWS Grand Forks, explained that 22 tornadoes touched down that day in North Dakota.

    He added, “This is also a preliminary number that may yet change as we continue to scour satellite imagery and sift through damage reports (still!) and assess whether it was tornadic or not – much further complicated by the fact that large area within the state experience significant damage from the derecho in the same areas that saw tornadoes.” 

    The tornado south of Enderlin, N.D., was a strong tornado. “The initial storm damage survey team found severe damage consistent with an EF3 or greater tornado with a preliminary estimated peak wind speed of 160 mph.”

    However, Jones says that wasn’t the end of it. “A Quick Response Team (QRT), a team of wind damage experts, was assembled and agreed that given the Enhanced Fujita (EF) Scale damage indicators available, there were points consistent with high-end EF3, if not greater.”

    Meaning additional investigation was needed, and the tornado could end up being rated higher. A train derailment south of Enderlin, ND during the time of one twister was a big prompt for the reevaluation. Collaborating with structural damage experts, namely the Northern Tornadoes Project at Western University’s Canadian Severe Storms Laboratory, they were able to model object trajectories and the force/wind required to move such objects. 

    This was important and Jones says, “Allowed for the capability to assess the train derailment of 33 train cars, including several full grain cars that were tilted over and tanker cars that were lofted off the track, that yielded the EF5 intensity rating.”

    Additionally, other indicators for the reevaluation included high-end tree damage near the Maple River, east of Enderlin, as well as a foundation to a farmstead that was swept clean with debris scattered downwind.

    Check out the tornado track on the interactive map below, and click on the icons for damage reports and photos. While several tornadoes touched down in North Dakota that day, the EF5-rated twister was located south of I-94, just north of Lisbon, N.D. 

    The tornado was on the ground for just under 20 minutes and traveled just over 12 miles. It reached 1 mile in width. While no injuries were reported from this twister, three deaths occurred. 

    May 20, 2013 EF5 tornado Moore, Okla.

    What makes this newly revised classification of the twister so impressive is that this is the first EF5 tornado in more than twelve years. The last time a tornado this strong touched down in the United States was on May 20, 2013, in Moore, Okla.

    A tornado outbreak occurred in the afternoon and evening of May 20, 2013. Several supercell thunderstorms developed during the early afternoon in central Oklahoma. One of these storms rapidly intensified, producing a tornado that touched down on the west side of Newcastle, Okla. The tornado became violent and then tracked across the city of Moore and parts of south Oklahoma City. It was on the ground for approximately 40 minutes before finally dissipating.

    This photo was taken around 3:00 pm CDT on May 20, 2013 from Carrington Lane in the Carrington Place addition in northwest Norman, which is located between 36th Ave NW and 48th Ave NW, and south of Franklin Road. The view is looking northwest towards the corner of Franklin Road and 48th Ave NW. This photo was provided courtesy of Jenny Hamar via NWS.

    The tornado caused catastrophic damage in these areas and was given a maximum rating of EF5. The tornado claimed 24 lives, injured scores of people, and caused billions of dollars in damage.

    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.

    [ad_2]

    Meteorologist Stacy Lynn

    Source link

  • Dem shellacked by McConnell in 2020 mounts new Senate bid: ‘cowards in Washington are bowing to Donald Trump’

    [ad_1]

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    Amy McGrath, the Democratic U.S. Senate candidate who got walloped by incumbent GOP Sen. Mitch McConnell in 2020, losing by nearly 20%, has mounted a bid to replace the long-serving Republican lawmaker who is not seeking re-election in 2026.

    “Our democracy is under siege, cowards in Washington are bowing to Donald Trump, and Kentuckians are paying the price,” she wrote in a post on X, which also featured a campaign video in which she declared, “What we’re seeing in this country from this president, not normal, dangerous, for Kentuckians, and for all Americans.”

    Prior to getting trounced by McConnell in 2020, McGrath lost a 2018 House race to incumbent Republican Rep. Andy Barr.

    FINAL SENATE CANDIDATE CHARLIE KIRK ENDORSED BEFORE HIS ASSASSINATION: ‘WE HAVE TO WIN’

    Amy McGrath onstage during the 2022 Concordia Lexington Summit — Day 1 at Lexington Marriott City Center on April 7, 2022, in Lexington, Ky. (Jon Cherry/Getty Images for Concordia)

    McConnell has held the seat since 1985.

    The Bluegrass State has not elected a Democratic senator for more than three decades.

    KENTUCKY SENATE CANDIDATES AVOID MCCONNELL ENDORSEMENT, SPAR OVER TIES TO EX-LEADER

    Sen. Mitch McConnell

    Senator Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., arrives for a vote at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Saturday, June 28, 2025.  (Aaron Schwartz/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    The last time Kentucky voters picked a Democrat to represent them in the upper chamber was when incumbent Sen. Wendell Ford won re-election in 1992.

    McGrath was “the first woman in the Marine Corps to fly a combat mission in an F/A-18,” according to her campaign website, which notes that during “20 years of service, Amy flew 89 combat missions.”

    KENTUCKY SUES ROBLOX, CITING CHARLIE KIRK ‘ASSASSINATION SIMULATORS’ IN CHILD SAFETY LAWSUIT

    Amy McGrath poses for photo between two other people

    (L-R) Aquilino Gonell, Amy McGrath and Pete Dominick attend the 2024 IAVA Heroes Gala at The Current at Chelsea Piers on Nov, 7, 2024, in New York City (Eugene Gologursky/Getty Images for Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America)

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    She will face competition in the Democratic primary from others on the political left who are also vying for the Senate seat, including state Rep. Pamela Stevenson, the Kentucky House minority floor leader, and others.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • October’s Harvest Moon rises

    [ad_1]

    Our next full moon, and the first one of the astronomical fall, will rise above the horizon late Monday night.


    What You Need To Know

    • October’s full moon is a supermoon and will appear about 30% brighter and 14% larger
    • It is called the Harvest Moon
    • Unobstructed views of the horizon allow for best sightings


    This full moon is called the Harvest Moon because it is the full moon that falls closest to the autumnal equinox (Sept. 22). What makes this so unique is that between 1970 and 2050, there are only 18 years when the Harvest Moon occurs in October. The last time was in 2020, and the next time will be in 2028.

    Historically, it’s called the full Harvest Moon because it provides bright light for several evenings in a row to help farmers gather their crops.

    Supermoon

    October’s full moon is a supermoon, and according to NASA, it will appear approximately 30% brighter than normal and 14% larger than normal. This is because of the moon’s proximity to Earth. During a supermoon, the full moon is at “perigee,” which means it is at its closest location to Earth all month. 

    The moon will officially be full at 11:48 p.m. EDT Monday, so you’ll have to stay up late to catch it at its peak. Here’s the forecasted cloud cover. 

    Cloud cover across the United States expected at midnight on Oct. 7, 2025.

    Other names of the moon

    There is some discrepancy about the nomenclature of the October full moon. Naming conventions date back to the Native Americans of the northern and eastern United States, who kept track of the seasons. 

    Here are some other names given to the full October moon:

    • Hunter’s Moon: This is the traditional time to hunt
    • Falling Leaves Moon: Name given to express the changing and falling leaves, signaling the onset of fall
    • Dying Grass Moon: A Gaelic name that signifies the end of the growing season
    • Drying Rice Moon: A Dakota name given for when rice is harvested and dried
    • Freezing Moon: A time of the year when the first frost occurs

    The best viewing will be after sunset on Monday and early morning on Tuesday. To find the best time to view in your area, check out the moonrise calculator. Be sure to find a place with unobstructed horizon views for the best sights.

    The next full moon will be the Beaver Moon, which occurs on Nov. 5, 2025.

    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.

    [ad_2]

    Meteorologist Stacy Lynn

    Source link

  • October’s Harvest Moon rises tonight

    [ad_1]

    Our next full moon, and the first one of the astronomical fall, will rise above the horizon late tonight.


    What You Need To Know

    • October’s full moon is a supermoon and will appear about 30% brighter and 14% larger
    • It is called the Harvest Moon
    • Unobstructed views of the horizon allow for best sightings


    This full moon is called the Harvest Moon because it is the full moon that falls closest to the autumnal equinox (Sept. 22). What makes this so unique is that between 1970 and 2050, there are only 18 years when the Harvest Moon occurs in October. The last time was in 2020, and the next time will be in 2028.

    Historically, it’s called the full Harvest Moon because it provides bright light for several evenings in a row to help farmers gather their crops.

    Supermoon

    October’s full moon is a supermoon, and according to NASA, it will appear approximately 30% brighter than normal and 14% larger than normal. This is because of the moon’s proximity to Earth. During a supermoon, the full moon is at “perigee,” which means it is at its closest location to Earth all month. 

    The moon will officially be full at 11:48 p.m. EDT Monday, so you’ll have to stay up late to catch it at its peak. Here’s the forecasted cloud cover. 

    Cloud cover across the United States expected at midnight on Oct. 7, 2025.

    Other names of the moon

    There is some discrepancy about the nomenclature of the October full moon. Naming conventions date back to the Native Americans of the northern and eastern United States, who kept track of the seasons. 

    Here are some other names given to the full October moon:

    • Hunter’s Moon: This is the traditional time to hunt
    • Falling Leaves Moon: Name given to express the changing and falling leaves, signaling the onset of fall
    • Dying Grass Moon: A Gaelic name that signifies the end of the growing season
    • Drying Rice Moon: A Dakota name given for when rice is harvested and dried
    • Freezing Moon: A time of the year when the first frost occurs

    The best viewing will be after sunset on Monday and early morning on Tuesday. To find the best time to view in your area, check out the moonrise calculator. Be sure to find a place with unobstructed horizon views for the best sights.

    The next full moon will be the Beaver Moon, which occurs on Nov. 5, 2025.

    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.

    [ad_2]

    Meteorologist Stacy Lynn

    Source link

  • Augusta Showcases Bourbon Craft and Small-Town History 

    [ad_1]

    A view of downtown Augusta, Kentucky, population 1,101, according to the latest United States Census data.
    Photo by Noah Washington/The Atlanta Voice

    AUGUSTA, KY. — The town of Augusta is a riverside enclave along the Ohio River known for its scenic charm, deep bourbon ties, and Hollywood legacy.

    The Benchmark Coffee is a newer downtown café. From there, Augusta Tourism Director Janet Hunt led a walking tour of the town’s historic core and waterfront, which once played a significant role in river trade and settlement in Bracken County. Augusta, with a population of just over 1,000, was founded in 1786 and incorporated in 1850.  

    “You might argue with your buddy one day, but by the next, you’re friends again. If anything happened in your family, the town came together,” Hunt said, describing Augusta’s welcoming spirit.

    Mid-morning, the group headed to Augusta Distillery for the “River Proof Barrel Experience.” Founded in 2018, Augusta Distillery evolved from independent bottling into full-scale distilling, and today emphasizes small-batch bourbon and an immersive guest experience. Under the guidance of Tracie Inskeep, visitors sampled from three barrels, “popping the bung,” pouring with a thief, and hand-labeling a bottle to take home. The distillery touts its position on the Kentucky Bourbon Trail and highlights the Ohio River’s influence in shaping Kentucky’s bourbon industry. 

    USS Nightmare (above) is a massive steamboat turned haunted attraction docked on the Ohio River.
    Photo by Noah Washington/The Atlanta Voice

    Over lunch at TableTop Traditions, guests fueled up before the afternoon visit to the Rosemary Clooney House. Clooney, the beloved singer and actress, as well as aunt to actor George Clooney, lived at 106 East Riverside Drive in Augusta for more than 20 years, making the home a treasured museum of her life and career. The museum’s collections include memorabilia from White Christmas and other performances and personal artifacts that reflect Clooney’s long ties to the region. After Clooney’s death in 2002, the home was purchased by Augusta native Heather French Henry and her husband, former Lt. Gov. Steve Henry, and was opened as a museum in 2005.

    Augusta also offered a look toward its future. Nicole and Kenny Gahn, weekend residents of the town, purchased a vintage 1917 Ford dealership building with intentions to convert it into a classic car museum. Nicole Gahn explained the move came from a wish to deepen their roots in Augusta. “We’ve had a weekend place here for 14 years, and when this building became available, we thought, why not bring the cars here and open a little museum?” Gahn said.

    A look inside the Augusta Motor Museum. Photo by Noah Washington/The Atlanta Voice

    Later in the afternoon, the tour continued north to Newport.  The evening ended across the river in Covington with dinner at Pompilio’s, a local Italian restaurant established in 1933 and best known as a filming location for Rain Man (1988). Afterward, attendees braved the USS Nightmare, a massive steamboat turned haunted attraction docked on the Ohio River, where winding corridors and ghostly theatrics lived up to its ominous name.

    With three days complete, the Kentucky media tour had already traced a broad arc of the state’s identity: exotic animals and bourbon fireside tales in Lawrenceburg, haunted opera houses and small-batch whiskey in Cynthiana, and now Augusta’s blend of river heritage, Hollywood nostalgia, and ghostly thrills along the riverbed. From small towns to storied distilleries, Kentucky revealed itself as a place where its love of horror,  history, and imagination meet.

    [ad_2]

    Noah Washington

    Source link

  • TRAVEL: Wildlife, Small-Town Charm and Bourbon Tradition in Lawrenceburg, Kentucky

    [ad_1]

    Baby Nayla antelope at the Little Crooked Creek Safari, a 23-acre interactive animal sanctuary tucked into the Lawrenceburg countryside. Photo by Noah Washington/The Atlanta Voice

    LAWRENCEBURG, KY. — It felt truly like fall in the windy, warm climate of Kentucky. 

    For those currently living in Atlanta who want to get away from the humidity, heat, or even the bipolar weather that the fall months bring, Kentucky is the right place. 

    The Atlanta Voice explored what Kentucky offers visitors.

    Beginning in Lawrenceburg, the first destination was Little Crooked Creek Safari, a 23-acre interactive animal sanctuary tucked into the countryside. The facility, owned by Eric Swisher, invites arms-length engagement with sloths, capybaras, baby zebras, camels, and more. Visitors traverse the grounds to feed and pet the animals.

    While some tours only offer passive observation, Little Crooked Creek emphasizes education. Guests receive not only the experience of being eye to eye with exotic species, such as the baby Nyala antelope from Africa, but also context on how those animals originated and adapted to their environments.

    Photo by Noah Washington/The Atlanta Voice

    After the safari, the group visited downtown Lawrenceburg, to look at the local establishments. At Southern Olive, owner Robert Gresham poured tastings from a collection of some 75 oils and vinegars, such as the Tuscan herb olive and the coconut white balsamic, to name a few. “My goal is to find things that make folks’ lives a little bit better,” Gresham said, explaining how flavor and small pleasures guide his business philosophy.

    Dinner followed at Columbian Corner, a cozy, family-run restaurant known locally for its warm service and authentic Colombian menu.

    Photo by Noah Washington/The Atlanta Voice

    The night ended at the Wild Turkey Visitors Center, where the group gathered around a fire pit overlooking bourbon barrels under the night sky. Cocktails made with Wild Turkey accompanied a storytelling session led by Jeff Waldridge, the local ghost historian and paranormal guide. He shared legends tied to Lawrenceburg’s Haunted Hotel and courthouse, recounting ghost tours he hosts through the fall season.

    The dark tourism industry was valued at $31.89 billion dollars in 2023, by Grand View Research.

    In 2024, Kentucky’s tourism industry generated an estimated $14.3 billion in total economic impact, per The Lane Report. This is up from $13.8 billion in 2023. 

    [ad_2]

    Noah Washington

    Source link

  • TRAVEL: Haunted History, Bourbon Craft and Small-Town Flavor Define Cynthiana, Kentucky

    [ad_1]

    CYNTHIANA, KY. — Day Two of the Kentucky media tour took visitors from Lawrenceburg to Cynthiana, a Harrison County town of approximately 30,000 that continues the historic charm, haunted lore, and the bourbon tradition the state has been offering.

    The day began with breakfast and a pottery workshop at Elements Clay Studio, where owner Susan Burge guided guests in shaping their own pottery whiskey cups, each to be cured and shipped later. From there, participants joined Robbie Morgan, director of the Lawrenceburg/Anderson County Tourism Commission, for a morning Rails to Trails walk, to highlight the region’s efforts to turn former industrial corridors into community greenspace.

    A “Walking Dead” mural in Cynthiana, Kentucky, a Harrison County town of approximately 30,000.
    Photo by Noah Washington/The Atlanta Voice

    By late morning, the group arrived in Cynthiana for lunch at Biancke’s Restaurant, a Main Street institution founded in 1894. The stop offered hearty comfort food and a glimpse into the restaurant’s long-standing role as a community hotspot.

    The afternoon featured a private tour of Rohs Opera House, Kentucky’s oldest continuously operating theater. Opened in 1871 and expanded in 1941, the theater has long been considered one of the state’s most haunted sites. Co-owner John Smith noted the opera house has played a central role in downtown revitalization, calling it “the anchor store” that drew breweries, retail, and new energy back to Cynthiana. The theater also serves as the starting point for the town’s annual Ghost Walk, now in its 19th year.

    Later in the afternoon, The Atlanta Voice visited Barrel House Distilling Co., where Brand Ambassador James Gerard spoke on how Cynthiana is becoming a new chapter in Kentucky’s bourbon story.  Barrel House, which was founded in 2006 and formally launched into distilling by 2008, has grown to become one of Kentucky’s pioneering craft distillers, which is only sold in its home state, making it a tourist’s delight, as well as enduring captivating local support. Gerard noted that despite being a smaller outfit, Barrel House has earned recognition and awards; its Barrel House Select bourbon, for instance, won a Double Gold at the 2023 San Francisco World Spirits Competition.

    Visitors later explored downtown Cynthiana, including unique stops such as the Skeleton Adoption Agency and the Walking Dead mural, a nod to local native Robert Kirkman, co-creator of the comic and television series, who also invested in the local town by providing new equipment to the Rohs Opera House, as cited by co-owner James Smith.

    As the evening went on, Smith would don his best Victorian-era garb as he led the Cynthiana Ghost Walk, where guides led participants through stories of haunted hotels, courthouse tragedies, and Civil War battles. Among the tales was that of Harry Bailey, a lawyer gunned down in a payment dispute, and David Sheeley, remembered for chilling words to his wife before appearing to the townsfolk: “There is nobody here but you and I tonight.”

    Dinner and an overnight stay at Ashford Acres Inn, a restored antebellum mansion, closed the evening. The visit to Cynthiana showed how deeply bourbon and storytelling are woven into the town’s identity. At Barrel House Distilling Co., James Gerard reflected on how his family-owned operation has resisted the pull of corporate buyouts and mass production, choosing instead to stay rooted in Kentucky’s traditions. “We believe in making everything by hand, in small batches, staying true to the art of bourbon,” Gerard said. “It’s about honoring where we came from and making sure people taste that history in every pour.”

    [ad_2]

    Noah Washington

    Source link

  • Single mother sues — and beats — Kentucky for kicking her off food stamps because she bought food at the store where she worked | Fortune

    [ad_1]

    A single mother who relied on federal food assistance lost her benefits in 2020 after Kentucky investigators concluded she’d committed fraud.

    The state alleged she had made multiple same-day purchases, tried to overdraw her account a few times, entered a few invalid PINs and sometimes made “whole-dollar” purchases that are unlikely during typical grocery runs.

    The woman from Salyersville in Appalachian Kentucky had an explanation: She worked at the store. She would sometimes buy lunch there and then get groceries after work. Her child would also occasionally use her card.

    An administrative hearing officer kicked her off the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) regardless, based solely on the allegedly suspicious shopping pattern. She sued — and won.

    “It is draconian to take away SNAP benefits from a single mother without clear and convincing evidence that intentional trafficking was occurring during a time when food scarcity is so prevalent,” Franklin County Judge Thomas Wingate said in his 2023 decision.

    A surge of disqualifications

    Over the last five years, the Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Services has brought hundreds of fraud cases that are heavily reliant on transactional data with the goal of revoking people’s food benefits.

    Judges, lawyers and legal experts said in interviews and in court documents that such evidence proves little. Kentucky Public Radio reviewed dozens of administrative hearing decisions and court documents from the last five years in which the cabinet relied on shopping patterns to prove a person had “trafficked,” or sold, their benefits.

    Kentucky is so aggressive in disqualifying people from SNAP benefits that the state is second in the nation for per-capita administrative disqualifications, behind Florida, according to the most recent federal data from 2023.

    In the last decade, disqualifications in Kentucky rose from fewer than 100 in 2015 to over 1,800 in 2023. And more than 300 others have been accused of selling or misusing their benefits since January 2024, according to records obtained by Kentucky Public Radio.

    Another Franklin County judge in 2023 ordered the cabinet to stop disqualifying individuals based solely on transactional data, but since the decision, at least three lawsuits allege the health agency continues to bring such cases.

    Transactional data alone cannot prove intent to commit fraud nor show the actual result of any individual transaction, University of Kentucky law professor Cory Dodds said, adding, “I’m not saying that folks didn’t do it, didn’t commit the fraud, but I don’t think the cabinet in a lot of these cases has met their burden of proof, either.”

    Facing punishment, recipients are pressured to waive their hearings

    Kentuckians receive notice of their alleged suspicious activity through mailed letters, in which they’re asked to voluntarily waive their right to a hearing and automatically accept the punishment. On first offense, that’s generally a one-year SNAP ban. They’re also required to repay the full amount the state says they misused.

    Often, these cases involve a relatively small amount of money. Records show that more than 900 people have been kicked off for “trafficking” or misuse for less than $1,000 since 2022. The lowest amount alleged was 14 cents.

    The state has leaned heavily on administrative hearing waivers since 2015, and by 2023, almost a quarter of all disqualifications were via waiver. Some lawsuits allege individuals did not fully understand the consequences of the waivers and were encouraged to sign by officials.

    Kentucky Public Radio reviewed more than two dozen cases since 2020 in which the cabinet accused an individual of trafficking using only spending patterns, despite the participants’ denial or lack of response — and with no other evidence or interviews presented, according to administrative hearing decisions.

    Kendra Steele, a spokesperson for the Cabinet for Health and Family Services, declined to schedule an interview with cabinet officials after multiple requests. Steele said in an email that “we have never” brought trafficking cases based solely on transactional data and acknowledged it would not be sufficient to prove intent.

    In response to a different question, Steele wrote the investigation into fraud allegations consists of looking into income, living situations “and patterns of spending that are indicative of trafficking.” She did not indicate how any of those factors could be used to prove intentional misuse or selling of SNAP benefits, or how it differs from relying on transactional data — which is inherently a pattern of spending. Steele said in another email that they also interview vendors and SNAP recipients.

    ‘It’s our fellow Kentuckians who are going hungry’

    Roughly 4 in 25 Kentuckians suffer from food insecurity, similar to the national rate of about 14%, according to an Associated Press analysis of U.S. Census Bureau and Feeding America data.

    The USDA will stop collecting and releasing statistics on food insecurity after October, saying Sept. 20 that the numbers had become “overly politicized.” The decision comes in the wake of federal funding cuts for food and nutrition safety net programs nationwide.

    In the last fiscal year, 1 in 8 Kentuckians benefitted from SNAP, formerly called food stamps. Food insecurity in Kentucky’s rural areas is even more stark, and legal representation harder to come by.

    “The people who benefit from these programs are some of the folks that we need to be helping the most in this country,” Dodds said. “It’s our fellow Kentuckians who are going hungry as a result of baseless allegations of waste, fraud and abuse.”

    The cabinet denied KPR’s request for case notes on individual fraud accusations starting in early 2024 that would include the evidence used in the accusations. But administrative hearing decisions reviewed by KPR from 2020 through 2023 included evidence the cabinet relied on; hearing officers would frequently say a person had trafficked their benefits based on shopping patterns the state deemed suspicious.

    Expert say officials overrely on purchase data

    National legal experts who specialize in SNAP access say an overreliance on transactional data isn’t unique to Kentucky. Transactional data was initially meant as a tool to identify potential fraud cases — not as a means to prove it, Georgetown law professor David Super said.

    He’s studied SNAP disqualifications for decades, and has seen many cases where he believes transactional data is misconstrued as direct evidence of wrongdoing, instead of requiring a state to build cases with witnesses, affidavits, video evidence and plea deals.

    In one redacted 2023 state administrative hearing decision, a hearing officer decided a woman in the eastern Kentucky city of McKee had trafficked her benefits because she had made eight back-to-back transactions in a year. The decision also said she’d checked her balance several times, made a few insufficient fund attempts and had incorrectly entered her PIN number a few times.

    She lost her SNAP benefits for a year. In an appeal, the woman told the state she has two kids and had recently discovered she was pregnant.

    “Everyone forgets to get something and has to go back in the store and get it,” she wrote, defending her back-to-back purchases.

    She received another hearing, but the outcome didn’t change.

    Cabinet officials acknowledged in cross examinations during a 2023 case that back-to-back transactions and whole-dollar purchases aren’t forbidden under SNAP rules, nor are recipients told that the cabinet considers them suspicious.

    But all of these things are used as evidence — sometimes the sole evidence — that a person misused their benefits.

    Kristie Goff, an AppalRed legal aid lawyer in Prestonsburg in southeast Kentucky, used to see many of these cases, though they’ve declined in the last year.

    “There have been very few instances in cases I have handled, where a client was not able to give me a perfectly reasonable explanation for those transactions, and none of it was trafficking,” Goff said. “There are no receipts, there’s no video footage to show that someone’s doing anything wrong. It’s just a number written on a paper.”

    While saying purchasing history is insufficient to prove trafficking, Kentucky judges have stopped short of demanding that the state change how it trains employees or conducts its SNAP investigations.

    State training materials focus almost entirely on purchase patterns

    In response to an open records request, the cabinet provided KPR with documents used to train investigators on intentional program violations. They appear to almost exclusively discuss transactional data, including investigating back-to-back payments, large transactions and whole-dollar purchases.

    In 2020, Michigan appellate judges decided transactional data alone is never sufficient to prove that a business — or person — fraudulently used SNAP benefits.

    Dodds believes that should be the standard for all states, including Kentucky.

    He is in the early stages of systematically reviewing thousands of SNAP benefit trafficking hearing decisions between 2020 and 2023. Data from about 700 decisions in 2020 alone already shows that many Kentuckians have been denied benefits before the state presents what he considers real evidence of guilt.

    “There are maybe a handful of cases that I would say there was real evidence that they had done something wrong,” Dodds said. “There was one where a woman was on the phone with the hearing officer while she was actively trying to sell her benefits. … But cases with non-transactional data are exceedingly rare.”

    ___

    Associated Press data journalist Kasturi Pananjady contributed to this report.

    ___

    This reporting is part of a series called Sowing Resilience, a collaboration between the Institute for Nonprofit News’ Rural News Network and The Associated Press focused on how rural communities across the U.S. are navigating food insecurity issues. Nine nonprofit newsrooms were involved in the series: The BeaconCapital BEnlace Latino NCInvestigate MidwestThe Jefferson County BeaconKOSULouisville Public MediaThe Maine Monitor and MinnPost. The Rural News Network is funded by Google News Initiative and Knight Foundation, among others.

    The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

    [ad_2]

    Sylvia Goodman, The Associated Press

    Source link

  • Kentucky State Senator Sued Over Bitcoin Mining Business

    [ad_1]

    Kentucky Sen. Brandon Smith (R-Hazard) is facing two separate legal cases related to a Bitcoin mining repair business he founded in Letcher County, Kentucky.

    Smith is the CEO and co-founder of Mohawk Energy, which in 2022 pivoted from coal cleanup operations to ASIC repair and other Bitcoin mining services.

    Invest in Gold

    Powered by Money.com – Yahoo may earn commission from the links above.

    Local outlet, Lexington Herald Leader, reports that Ricky Dale Cole sued Smith in Letcher Circuit Court in January, accusing the lawmaker of misrepresenting the value of Mohawk Energy.

    Cole claims that he sold a warehouse to Mohawk, agreeing with Smith to sell the premises below market price in return for a 20% stake in the business.

    Yet Cole’s suit alleges that the company has refused to share info about its finances and that he has not profited from the deal. He also alleged that Smith made false promises and representations.

    This suit comes in addition to a case filed in November 2023 by Huobi-subsidiary HBTPower, which alleges breach of contract and misrepresentation, following an agreement with Mohawk Energy in June 2022.

    According to HBT’s allegations, Smith had made a deal to work with HBTPower employees to train his own workers and acquire the in-house ability to repair Bitcoin mining machines.

    However, Smith and other Mohawk representatives eventually asked HBTPower personnel to leave Mohawk’s premises, with HBTPower claiming that Smith did not own the warehouse at the time he entered into a contract with the Chinese company.

    Smith has denied the allegations against him, and has filed counterclaims against both plaintiffs.

    Despite the legal difficulties surrounding Mohawk’s pivot to crypto, Smith remains optimistic about the industry’s future in the US and in Kentucky.

    Smith had been instrumental in securing the passage of several crypto-related bills in Kentucky, including a 2021 bill—which he authored—that provides tax incentives for investments in cryptocurrency mining.

    Speaking to Decrypt in his capacity as Mohawk Energy CEO, Smith said that the company is “excited” to return to its mission of “job creation and training” once the litigation is over.

    Bitcoin Difficulty Hits Another All-Time High—Here’s What It Means for Miners

    “While it is unfortunate that Huobi and its shell subsidiary HBTPower breached their eight year contract and refused to start operating at the Mohawk plant, that does not impact Mohawk’s long term plans to bring more jobs and technology training to the region,” he said. “Our counter suits to the complaints explain our position.”

    Mohawk’s difficult pivot came during a period when the U.S. cryptocurrency mining sector witnessed rapid expansion, with Bitcoin mining sites in the U.S. increasing in number by 23% between 2022 and 2024, to 48.

    According to Shanon Squires, the Chief Mining Officer at Compass Mining, such growth has continued this year, as evidenced by Bitcoin’s hashrate reaching new all-time highs recently.

    “In the U.S., that momentum is especially visible in states like Texas and Wyoming,” she told Decrypt. “The expansion seems to be mostly coming from existing companies, rather than from new players entering the market.”

    While affirming that the American cryptomining industry has become increasingly professionalized in recent years, there is still some degree of variability, with some endeavors “popping up and fading” quicker than others.

    She added, “While Bitcoin mining is no longer the ‘wild west’ it once was, companies still need to do their homework and work with established partners that have proven themselves through multiple cycles.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Nebraska Joins Trump Program to Use Public Money for Private School Tuition

    [ad_1]

    OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — After years of failed attempts, Republicans in Nebraska have enacted a measure that uses taxpayer dollars to pay for private school tuition, despite voters repealing a newly-passed state law that would fund private school tuition with state dollars.

    Republican Gov. Jim Pillen signed an executive order opting the state into a federal school choice tax credit program included in President Donald Trump’s tax and budget bill passed in July.

    “I am not opting this in, I am cannonballing it into the state of Nebraska,” Pillen said as he announced the move Monday at Catholic school in Lincoln. He was joined by Republican U.S. Reps. Mike Flood and Adrian Smith, both of Nebraska, who supported the federal budget bill and private school scholarship plan.

    The measure is remarkably similar to one the state Legislature passed in 2023 to allow corporations and individuals to divert millions of dollars they owe in state income taxes to nonprofit organizations, which would in turn award that money as private school tuition scholarships. Lawmakers axed the measure the following year after opponents gathered far more signatures than was needed to ask voters to repeal it. The Legislature then passed a new law funding private school scholarships directly from state coffers.

    The new federal law that Pillen opted into allows individual taxpayers to direct up to $1,700 in federal income taxes owed to scholarship-granting groups to be used for eligible K-12 private school expenses. But unlike Nebraska’s 2023 proposal, the federal measure allows even high-income households to receive public money for private school costs. Eligibility extends to families earning up to 300% of the area median gross income, according to the Nebraska State Education Association — the state’s largest teachers union.

    “Families making more than $200,000 a year are eligible to receive a voucher funded through these tax credits,” NSEA President Tim Royers said.

    The private school-funding move in Nebraska highlights the growing tension around the country between the will of voters and their elected representatives. Earlier this year, Nebraska lawmakers were accused of subverting the will of the people by limiting voter-approved paid sick leave. In Missouri, lawmakers have taken steps to repeal voter-approved initiatives on abortion rights and paid sick leave and imposed more requirements on ballot initiative campaigns.

    When presented directly to voters, school choice expansion efforts have largely faltered. Nebraska voters in November repealed the school choice law passed earlier that year. A proposed constitutional amendment in Colorado that would have established schoolchildren’s “right to school choice” also was defeated. Kentucky voters rejected a measure to enable public funding for private school attendance.

    “Today’s decision by Gov. Pillen undermines the clear will of Nebraska voters, who just rejected state-level vouchers at the ballot box,” Royers said.

    Pillen countered that opponents are wrong when they say the publicly-funded private school scholarship scheme will take money away from public schools, saying the federal school choice measure comes “at no cost to the state.”

    “We have to have great public schools, and we have to have great St. Teresa’s,” Pillen said Monday. “And because of this legislation, both can win.”

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Sept. 2025

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Dead body found in woods near area Kroger, police say

    [ad_1]

    A dead body was discovered near a Northern Kentucky Kroger on Wednesday.

    [DOWNLOAD: Free WHIO-TV News app for alerts as news breaks]

    Officers responded to a Kroger in Bellevue, Kentucky, on Donnermeyer Drive and Retreat Street, according to our news partner WCPO in Cincinnati.

    The cause of death is currently unknown.

    TRENDING STORIES:

    Advertisement

    Advertisement

    Bellevue Police told WCPO that an initial investigation indicated that this was an isolated incident and there is no threat to the public.

    WCPO also spoke with a Gold Star Chili worker in Bellevue. Constance Bray said there had been a smell for several weeks, but her friends who had previously called the police were told it was a deer.

    She explained that she and a friend went to explore where the smell was coming from and found the body. They notified police, WCPO reported.

    The Campbell County Crime Scene Team was also called to assist with the investigation.

    [SIGN UP: WHIO-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]

    [ad_2]
    Source link

  • 4 injured after chemical release, explosion at Borden Dairy Co. in Laurel County

    [ad_1]

    Four people are hospitalized following a chemical release and explosion at the Borden Dairy Company in London, Kentucky, according to a news release.

    The London Fire Department responded to the report at 221 West Highway 80 around 7 a.m. Sept. 24, Chief Brandon Wagers said. Upon arrival, emergency responders “quickly established control of the scene” and initiated decontamination operations, according to the release.

    According to the release, the chemical involved in the incident was identified as hyperflex, or acid sanitizer, which contains phosphoric acid and nitric acid.

    Advertisement

    Advertisement

    “While this product is corrosive and can cause significant health effects with direct contact, we are relieved to report that no life-threatening injuries have been reported at this time,” officials said.

    The cause of the explosion remains under investigation.

    This article originally appeared on Louisville Courier Journal: 4 injured in chemical release, explosion at London, KY Borden Dairy plant

    [ad_2]
    Source link

  • SEC unveils league matchups for next four seasons, keeps most rivalries intact

    [ad_1]

    The Southeastern Conference announced league matchups for the next four years Tuesday, including designating three annual — not permanent — opponents for each of its 16 teams. The nine-game slates retain several traditional rivalries and renew some old ones.

    And there are no more lengthy waits to play everyone.

    The new format begins next year and runs through 2029, with the SEC having the option to tweak it every four years to maintain competitive balance.

    Each team will play three opponents annually and rotate through the remaining 12. The setup ensures that rotating teams square off every other year and every team plays at every SEC venue at least once over a four-year span.

    Georgia, for example, will play at Alabama in 2026 and host the Crimson Tide in 2028. The Bulldogs will then host LSU in 2027 and travel to Baton Rouge in 2029.

    Fans are sure to gripe about the loss of some traditional series. Alabama-LSU (played every year since 1964) and Florida-LSU (played every year since 1971) will no longer be annual events. But those teams will meet every other year, home and away, under the new format.

    Geography and competitive fairness were factored into the decisions, but not as prominently as maintaining long-standing rivalries like the Iron Bowl, the Egg Bowl, the Red River Rivalry, the Magnolia Bowl, the Deep South’s Oldest Rivalry, the Third Saturday in October and the World’s Largest Outdoor Cocktail Party.

    The league also renewed rivalries that had been largely on hiatus since conference realignment. But the recent addition of former Big 12 heavyweights Oklahoma and Texas have a few back in the mix.

    The Lone Star Shootout featuring Texas and Texas A&M, a game held every year between 1915 and 2011, will now be played annually. So will the Missouri-Oklahoma series. which was played nearly every year between 1910 and 1995. Same for Arkansas-Texas, which ended in 1991 after a 60-year run.

    Here are each school’s annual opponents through 2029:

    Alabama: Auburn, Mississippi State, Tennessee.

    Arkansas: LSU, Missouri, Texas.

    Auburn: Alabama, Georgia, Vanderbilt.

    Florida: Georgia (neutral site), Kentucky, South Carolina.

    Georgia: Auburn, Florida (neutral), South Carolina.

    Kentucky: Florida, South Carolina, Tennessee.

    LSU: Arkansas, Ole Miss, Texas A&M.

    Mississippi State: Alabama, Ole Miss, Vanderbilt.

    Missouri: Arkansas, Oklahoma, Texas A&M.

    Oklahoma: Missouri, Ole Miss, Texas (neutral).

    Ole Miss: LSU, Mississippi State, Oklahoma.

    South Carolina: Florida, Georgia, Kentucky.

    Tennessee: Alabama, Kentucky, Vanderbilt.

    Texas: Arkansas, Oklahoma (neutral), Texas A&M.

    Texas A&M: LSU, Missouri, Texas.

    Vanderbilt: Auburn, Mississippi State, Tennessee.

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Fall officially arrives with the autumnal equinox

    [ad_1]

    Fall has officially arrived. Summer has come to an end, meaning cooler and shorter days are on the horizon. 


    What You Need To Know

    • Fall begins Monday, Sept. 22
    • The 2025 autumnal equinox happens at 2:19 p.m. ET
    • The largest daily loss of daylight occurs in September



    The change in seasons occurs with the solstice or the equinox determined by the Earth’s tilt and orbit around the sun. 

    What is the equinox?

    The Earth is tilted at a 23.5-degree angle, and as it travels around the sun, the Earth’s axis is tilted toward or away from the sun.

    During the equinox, the Earth’s axis and its orbit line up, allowing the sun’s rays to shine directly on the equator. This means that both hemispheres get an equal amount of sunlight.

    Meteorological Fall vs. Astronomical Fall

     

    The meteorological seasons are calendar-based, whereas the astronomical seasons rely on the Earh’s position to the sun. 

    Meteorological fall occurs from Sept. 1 to Nov. 30. The meteorological seasons are broken down evenly into 3-month periods based on temperature and weather cycles. 

    Astronomical fall typically starts between Sept. 21 and Sept. 23. This varies because of leap years, which can shift the start date by a day or two. 

    Why do we lose so much daylight?

    We have been slowly losing more and more daylight since the summer solstice in June, and will continue to lose more daylight until the winter solstice in December. The largest daily loss of daylight occurs in September, especially as the autumnal equinox approaches.

    The Earth’s 23.5-degree tilt is the main reason we see daylight changes throughout the year. Your latitude also plays a role as well.

    This time of year, the Northern Hemisphere tilts away from the sun, leading to a decrease in daylight. Areas located closer to the equator will see less variation in daylight hours as opposed to areas located closer to the North Pole.

    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.

    [ad_2]

    Meteorologist Ramel Carpenter

    Source link

  • FBI offers $10,000 reward for escaped inmate

    [ad_1]

    LOUISVILLE, Ky. — The FBI said it’s offering a reward of up to $10,000 for information leading to the arrest of 48-year-old Jerry Lee Cooper. 


    What You Need To Know

    • The FBI is offering a reward of $10,000 for information leading to the arrest of Jerry Lee Cooper, 48 
    • Cooper escaped the Brown County Detention Center Sept. 15, the FBI said 
    • He was being held while he awaited trial for his alleged role in a murder-for-hire
    • Cooper should be considered armed and dangerous


    According to a news release from the FBI, Cooper escaped the Brown County Detention Center in Georgetown, Ohio, on Sept. 15. He was being held while he awaited trial for his alleged role in a murder-for-hire.

    The FBI said Cooper and an accomplice, who has since been arrested, broke through a window, went to the Ohio River, stole a boat and traveled to Dover, Kentucky. Cooper was charged Sept. 16 with Escape in the Brown County Municipal Court, State of Ohio, and a state warrant was issued for his arrest.

    Cooper should be considered armed and dangerous, the FBI said. He has blue eyes, brown hair, weighs 135 pounds and is 5-foot-8. 

    Those with any information about the case should contact the Mason County Sheriff’s Office at 606-564-3309. People can also contact their local FBI office, the nearest American Embassy or Consulate or submit a tip online at tips.fbi.gov

    [ad_2]

    Connor N. Smith

    Source link

  • When will you see the first freeze this fall?

    [ad_1]

    Leaves are changing, and the first day of astronomical fall is next Monday, Sept. 22. Most of the country will begin to see cooler temperatures in the coming weeks, and some won’t have to wait long.

    Even though winter doesn’t begin until December, cold air and freezing temperatures arrive well before then for most of the U.S.


    What You Need To Know

    • The Northern Plains and Intermountain West usually dip down below freezing before September is over
    • Interior New England  and the Great Lakes also see freezing temperatures before most of the country
    • Cold air arrives in Florida, the Gulf Coast and the Desert Southwest last



    Winter arrives at the time time every year on the calendar, but not on your thermometer. Every year is different. The maps below give a good idea of when you can expect the first freeze where you live based on the 1991-2020 U.S. climate normals.

    The maps below show the ‘median,’ or average date of the first freeze. This is when you could expect the first freeze to arrive during a ‘normal’ year. The next one shows the ‘earliest 10%’ which shows a scenario of when colder air arrives early, about once every 10 years. And the last map shows the ‘latest 10%,’ so during a warm year when cold air arrives late.

    Northeast

    Most of the Northeast and New England see the first freeze before or during early fall, in September or early October. The mountains and high elevations across interior New England and the Adirondacks average freezing temperatures sometime in September, with the rest of the Northeast getting freezing cold sometime during October or early November.

    Midwest

    The Upper Midwest and Northern Plains also get in on the cold early. Around the Great Lakes and Dakotas, the first freeze typically arrives during September or early October. Further south the wait isn’t much longer. Freezing air usually arrives to the rest of the Midwest sometime before Halloween.

    Northwest

    There are many microclimates across the Northwest, so the arrival of cold air varies. Across the Rockies and Intermountain West, some areas experience cold year-round and as early as August and early September. The Pacific Northwest might not see freezing temperatures arrive until late October or November thanks to the maritime influence. 

    Southwest

    The Southwest has a variety of climates as well, so the temperatures differ greatly during the fall and winter. The Desert Southwest and coastal California don’t see the arrival of cold air until late in the season, sometimes not until December. Once you get into the high desert and Southern Plains, it arrives much earlier, around October or early November.

    Southeast

    If you live in the Southeast, it still gets cold, especially away from the large bodies of water. In the Appalachians and areas away from the Gulf and Atlantic coast, freezing temperatures usually begin before Thanksgiving in late October or early November. The Gulf Coast and Florida, however, wait much longer, with freezing temperatures not arriving until late November or December. In South and Central Florida and southern Texas, freezing temperatures may never even arrive.

    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.

    [ad_2]

    Meteorologist Reid Lybarger

    Source link

  • Bengals QB Joe Burrow to have surgery on left toe and miss 3 months

    [ad_1]

    CINCINNATI — Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow will undergo surgery on his injured left toe and is expected to be out for three months, a person with knowledge of the situation said Monday.


    What You Need To Know

    • The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the Bengals are not expected to make an announcement until coach Zac Taylor’s news conference later Monday
    • It is Burrow’s third major injury in his six seasons since being the top overall pick in the 2020 draft
    • Burrow was sacked by Jaguars defensive tackle Arik Armstead for a 5-yard loss at the Bengals 35-yard line with 9:02 remaining in the first half

    The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the Bengals are not expected to make an announcement until coach Zac Taylor’s news conference later Monday.

    It is Burrow’s third major injury in his six seasons since being the top overall pick in the 2020 draft and a major blow to Cincinnati, which is off to its first 2-0 start since 2018 and has postseason aspirations after missing the playoffs the past two seasons.

    Burrow left the Bengals’ locker room on crutches and wearing a boot on his left foot after injuring his toe during the second quarter of Cincinnati’s 31-27 victory over the Jacksonville Jaguars on Sunday.

    Burrow was sacked by Jaguars defensive tackle Arik Armstead for a 5-yard loss at the Bengals 35-yard line with 9:02 remaining in the first half. It was the second time Burrow had been sacked in the game.

    Burrow went into the sideline medical tent. He came out and walked briefly with a limp before heading to the locker room.

    “It’s tough right now. We’re going to be OK. He’s a strong guy,” wide receiver Tee Higgins said. “We look forward to seeing what the results are.”

    Burrow’s injury comes at an inopportune time for the Bengals, who play at Minnesota next week to begin a stretch of five straight opponents that made the playoffs last year.

    Jake Browning will be the starter in Burrow’s absence. He completed 21 of 32 passes for 241 yards with two touchdowns and three interceptions.

    Browning also scored the go-ahead touchdown with 18 seconds remaining on a 1-yard leap.

    “He said, ‘Good job.’ He was dealing with the injury, so it was brief,” Browning said about his postgame conversation with Burrow.

    Browning has played 13 games for Cincinnati and went 4-3 as the starter two years ago when Burrow was sidelined.

    “I know it wasn’t my best game, but we won, so Sundays are happy,” Browning said. “But come Monday, we’ll come in and get better.”

    Burrow led the league last season with 4,918 passing yards and 43 TD passes last season. A knee injury in his rookie season in 2020 cost him six games, and a wrist injury in 2023 kept him out for the final seven games.

    [ad_2]

    Spectrum News Staff, Associated Press

    Source link