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  • Governor relives firebomb attack, harrowing escape in exclusive walkthrough of home

    Governor relives firebomb attack, harrowing escape in exclusive walkthrough of home

    Governor, thank you for sitting down with us and uh allowing us to see what has been going on here inside of the residence. Um, I know you’ve spoken at times over the last several months about how you were doing, but 6 months later, um, how are you feeling? How are you and your family doing? I mean, thanks for asking, you know, we’re OK, um, I I think in the. Initial weeks it was really hard just as *** dad trying to get your kids through that trying to process it myself Laurie trying to process it trying to continue to you know run the Commonwealth and be here for the wonderful people that work at the residences and and it was *** lot and, and you know we worked our way through that um we were there for the kids I think got them through it. Over the last couple weeks since um the conviction, I, I think it you know it, it sort of brought it back up again um while we’re pleased that there’s some finality and some closure to this chapter, you know, seeing the video and. Sort of having to go through that again that was hard hard for our family but we’re working our way through it. I, I can tell you that I’m more focused and determined than ever before to do this work. uh I’m not afraid, uh, but it certainly has an impact. How has it changed you as you look at not only your role as the governor but also uh as the head of *** family as as *** father? Yeah. I don’t think any parent can ever be prepared for something like this as *** parent, you know, all you want is for your kids to be healthy and safe and have opportunity in life and I think every parent, uh, universally wants that for their kids and so when you realize that the job you’ve chosen the career path you’ve chosen, the work you love to do, put your kids’ lives at risk and compromise one of those central tenets you have as *** parent, um. It’s really hard so that that’s been hard for me as *** dad to work through. I, I think what it has, um, caused me to do is just not cause that’s not the right word, but what what it’s led me to do is just be more present for my kids, um, try and be there when they wanna have *** catch or they just wanna do something and answer their questions just be super attentive to what’s on their mind. uh, I think sometimes I’m probably annoying to them when I go, hey buddy, what’s up? Is there anything you wanna ask me anything on your mind? Um, but I, I just have found that being more attentive, more connected, answering their questions, uh, you know, has helped us, helped us get through this. I don’t know that I have *** perfect answer, um, and I’m processing it every day, and I think Gloria and I strive every day to be better parents, you know, to our kids as I think every parent does, and, um. You know we’ve got some amazing children that that that have you know they’re just really strong to the core and they’ve gotten through this. When you talk about being here at the residence, whether it’s having stayed overnight here since the incident or or just been visiting and hosting an event uh like state dinner. Have things changed for you when you walk through the halls, when you walk through this garden area. Yeah, candidly, um, one of the things I like to do is after, you know, my meetings or *** dinner meeting or an event or whatever it is, I work really late, as you know I get up really early, you know, so it might be 10 o’clock at night. Um, and I will get on the phone, throw my AirPods on, and I will walk these gardens because rather than sitting still I like to move and as I walk here I can’t help but think, you know, the steps that he took or where he hid or the windows that he he broke through and it probably will be some time till I can shake that now I’m not afraid it doesn’t make me not want to come outside, um, you know, I still sleep here and spend *** lot of time here with our family. So I’m, I’m not afraid, but, but I’d be lying if I said I don’t think about it when I opened the double doors that lead to, you know, our, our more private area, those are double doors he was trying to kick down and get through. I’d be lying if I said when I grabbed the door handle to open it up and go through, I, I don’t think about that. Again, not in *** way that that holds me back or in *** way that stops me from doing what I gotta do, um, but it’s present and, and I think about it. When you’re having moments like that, perhaps over the last several months where you’re thinking about what happened, maybe, uh, you know, you, you remember some of those emotions they come back to you *** little bit. Who have you leaned on the most over these last 6 months to try to uh. Whether it’s come to terms or or just deal with the emotions Laurie, um, I, I, someone asked me the other day, you know, did you go to therapy for this and, and I didn’t, not because I think there’s any shame in therapy. I think it’s *** wonderful thing, but for, for Laurie and I think because we experienced it together, um, processing it together, talking about it together. Um, telling her what I’m thinking and what I’m feeling when I’m wandering here in the gardens or whether I’m upstairs, you know, in the living quarters above where the, the attack took place, um, I think just being able to talk with her has been the, the most important thing, you know, Laura and I, uh. Walk every day when we’re together and if we’re not together you know I’m here and she’s back in Montgomery County with the kids or something. I, I’ll still throw throw my airpods on and walk and talk to her that way. I think just that process of walking of talking, she’s my best friend in the world since the 9th grade that’s, yeah, that’s really helped me get through this. You know this event obviously brought *** lot of attention to the governor’s residence and I know we’re gonna walk around in *** little bit with all the attention, all the scrutiny, how, how do you balance all of that happening while you’re still trying to do your job, still trying to deal with, uh, the emotions of what happened. Is it difficult to process all of that sometimes? Yeah, and, and look, I mean. Like anyone, I value my privacy and I don’t really have any. I mean, I’m not, I’m not complaining. I asked for this job and, and I love this job and I wanna do it for *** good long while, but you know you, you do give up that sense of privacy and so even more so now, um, you lose that privacy. I, I think you know as I walk around these grounds late at night we now have armed troopers who are who are here. Um, you look through the windows and there’s like *** waviness to it because we’ve got ballistic shields on the windows. I mean, and *** lot of other technology and stuff here that’s been installed to keep us safe and so while it’s comforting to know that my family and I are safe and guests are safe and the staff is safe, you know, I don’t know anybody really wants to live in, you know, with ballistic windows knowing that there are people that wanna do you harm and. I think for for us I I just try and have comfort in knowing that we got wonderful people in the state police there to keep us safe. This is just the reality of the world we’re in and I and I can’t let it slow me down or deter me from from doing the work I’m doing, but it does, you know, it does take some getting used to and and certainly something that we’re constantly processing. We talked with Colonel Paris earlier today and he admitted there were failures that uh evening when you talk about that and trying to come back here and and be here and you look around at all the different things that are happening, the new barrier on the outside, some of the new technology that is going in, um, do you feel confident that they have taken the steps to make this place safer than it was on that evening? I do now I mean I I I I was rattled. Uh, you know, that day and in the days thereafter I asked *** lot of questions about how could this happen. Um, they had some answers and to Colonel Paris is great credit, um, he thought we needed an outside, you know, expert to come in and do an assessment here and at our home and, and in the way we travel and make sure that we were safe not only here but in in all different, you know, aspects of our lives. I, I am now confident that they’ve taken the steps and continue to take the steps necessary. To keep me and my family safe, to keep the staff and others safe that that are here and to make sure our guests are safe. So yeah, I’ve got confidence in the state police. I really do. And you know, I wanted to ask obviously Cody Ballmer, um. In the investigation they they were able to determine that he had uh what sounded like *** political motivated reason for for doing what he was doing. We talk about political violence we talk about the fact that there was an attempted murder of you at this residence. With what we continue to see, do you feel like as it pertains to political violence we need to, uh, look back on things like this and say we really have to do *** better job as *** society, not allowing it to happen absolutely and and I think it starts with. All leaders speaking and acting the moral clarity to condemn political violence, I think it requires all of us to take down the temperature we can have strong disagreements with, you know, the, the political opposition without treating them like they’re our enemy. You know, I think our our politics in many ways have gotten so dark and and political violence is certainly quite dark, but I’ve also just seen an extraordinary amount of light from, you know, ordinary Pennsylvanians who are just really good and decent people who, who pray for us who, who want society to be less violent who wanna just disagree agreeably with politicians or agree with them if their positions happen to be in sync. Uh, but I, I think too often times our political leaders are not good examples of, of what we need more of, um, and, and so I’ve made it *** point. I, I know others have. Spencer Cox, *** good friend of mine, the governor of Utah, has, you know, of trying to make sure that the rhetoric is, is toned down, that we find more common ground even if we might have *** disagreement on *** policy. And that we universally condemn political violence and and not allow *** certain group or type of person or person with *** certain ideology to think their hateful rhetoric or their violence is OK. None of that type of hate, none of that type of violence is OK and it’s got to be universally condemned. Before we look around the residents and you, you know, before, before we, we go through some of the steps about what occurred that night, I, I wanted to ask for you. With everything that’s happened over the last 6 months with with what happened on that evening. Is there anything you feel like people just haven’t understood about that and, and, and, you know, something you perhaps haven’t articulated yet as far as, you know, your emotions or perhaps just the experience of trying to process all that and. I don’t know, Tom. I mean, I’m still processing *** lot of it. And I don’t expect Pennsylvanians to bear my burden, you know, this is my responsibility to bear. I do think *** lot of people were shocked when they saw the videos that came out, uh, just *** couple weeks ago when, um, when he was convicted and sentenced up to 50 years in prison when they saw just how brazen the attack was, how deep he got into the residence, the destruction that, uh, that took place, the fact that, you know. He pled guilty to trying to kill me. Um, I think that was *** shock to *** lot of people, you know, who hadn’t seen that video and didn’t realize just the extent of the damage and. And how, how much in danger my family and I were and uh I think that’s that that was *** shock to *** lot of people. I, I don’t want Pennsylvanians to be worried about me or our family or this or be burdened by it. I want them to go about their their daily lives and know I’m working my *** off for them to make their lives better. That’s my job and I love what I do and and I’m gonna keep doing it and and working incredibly hard for them. With everything that’s been happening, will you be, will you be excited when this place has all the construction equipment gone? I gotta say, I mean the construction has been *** challenge not just for our family but the wonderful people that work here. We’ve tried really hard to still be able to bring people in and have the events tonight we’re honored to host the state dinner. Um, which usually here state dinner you think *** bunch of insiders get to come to *** fancy meal. Actually my wife Laurie, our first lady changed that concept. We now honor 10 unsung heroes in in communities across Pennsylvania. We honor them. With the fancy dinner here and and give them the Governor’s Keystone Award for um their incredible contributions to to our commonwealth so we’re really excited to have that uh in here. I wish the gardens were put back together. I wish the outside looked *** little better but um it will and and I I also want all of our neighbors here to know that we realized this has been. Um, disturbing to them, it doesn’t look as pretty as it did before. It’s gonna look amazing when it’s done. We’re gonna plant *** lot more trees and, and beautify the area. We, we have *** commitment not just to our safety and security here for visitors but also to make it beautiful on the outside for for neighbors as well. So sure, I’d love for the construction to be over soon, but we’re not letting uh letting it hold us back. We’re gonna keep going forward. Do you think that’s when things might start to feel normal again? Maybe yeah yeah I think um. You know, no normal for you may maybe the ability to take *** bike ride or take *** walk and kinda just be able to blend in we, we don’t really have that ability right now and um particularly with so many people around so I think the fewer people that are around, the more we can get back. Our, uh, semblance of normalcy sure that’d be great, but I, I do have to say to the amazing people who have worked here, I mean they’ve been working almost nonstop since the moments after the police released this scene to us, um, and let us get going with the rebuild. So I, I have no complaints. The people here have worked really, really hard. I’m excited for them to finish their job and, and, and to get it, get it all back in tip top shape for the public. Governor, thank you.

    Governor relives firebomb attack, harrowing escape in exclusive walkthrough of home

    Updated: 4:02 AM PDT Nov 1, 2025

    Editorial Standards

    Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro spoke exclusively with Hearst sister station WGAL about the arson attack on the state governor’s residence earlier this year and walked the station through the grounds and residence to describe how it happened. Touring grounds, governor’s homeDuring a walkthrough of the gardens, Shapiro describes how the intruder, Cody Balmer, scaled what was then a six-foot fence, hid near a brick gazebo in a once-wooded area, and initially evaded troopers. “That’s where he climbed over (a fence) with relative ease,” Shapiro said, pointing out an area where a brick wall is now being built. “And he sort of hid back here in what used to be a pretty wooded area … after one of the troopers realized that there was a breach of the fence came to try to find him, and missed him.”Carrying a metal hammer and a bag of Molotov cocktails, Balmer moved deliberately to a window, smashed it, and hurled a firebomb that gutted the room. He then broke another window, climbed inside, and tried to reach double doors leading to the family’s living and work areas. The double doors had been locked just minutes earlier. “And this is the window that he smashed and climbed through, wielding this metal hammer that he admitted he was going to use to kill me if he found me,” Shapiro said.Balmer prowled about inside, kicking doors, but as the smoke thickened, he turned back.Shapiro called the incident a clear security failure but said state police have learned from it and upgrades are in place. He recounted his family’s evacuation down a back stairwell and his later return with firefighters, where dense smoke, water, and wreckage made it evident the blaze was intentional.”I remember as I was walking down the hallway in the house, you couldn’t see your hand in front of you. The smoke was so thick it was burning your nose, your eyes,” Shapiro said. “You could hear the water dripping. And obviously I’m no expert, but I had assumed up until that moment when I came back in here, whatever it was about, you know, two or three in the morning, that it was an accident, that something caught fire in the kitchen or, you know, something like that or a faulty wire. And then when I walked in this room and saw what it looked like … I realized, OK, I don’t think this was an accident. And then, sure enough, a few minutes later, I was informed it was an attack. And it was very purposeful.”You can watch the full tour of the grounds and residence with Shapiro in the video player below.Security improvements, costsRebuilding began immediately — ceilings, floors, windows, and a melted chandelier were replaced — and the room was restored to its original look, being prepared to host a state dinner honoring 10 Pennsylvanians. In a letter to the Pennsylvania House and Senate, the Department of General Services laid out how much it would cost to repair the governor’s residence and make various security improvements that were deemed necessary after numerous vulnerabilities were exposed. The total cost for the restoration and security enhancements totaled roughly $40 million. The Department of General Services provided the following breakdown as well as explanations for each expenditure. You can read the full letter here. $6.44 million: Estimated cost to restore the residence to pre-event condition. $14 million: Outer perimeter, barrier replacement.$6.3 million: Updated cameras, improved lighting motion sensors.$8 million: Retrofit existing windows with bulletproof, shatter-proof glass.$4 million: Fire suppression system.”The horrifying attack on the Governor, his family, and Commonwealth property, coupled with the unfortunate rise in political violence across our country, has made these updates necessary to protect the Governor and his family and ensure the continued operation of the executive branch of the Commonwealth. No family should have to live behind bulletproof glass or behind large walls – but the nature of the threats against elected officials today require us to take these important steps,” the letter said.Arsonist sentencedOn Oct. 14, Cody Balmer pleaded guilty to setting fire to the Pennsylvania governor’s residence in April. Balmer was convicted of attempted homicide, aggravated arson and terrorism. The judge sentenced him to 25 to 50 years in prison.Motive behind attackBalmer admitted to targeting the residence due to Shapiro’s stance on the war in Gaza.

    Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro spoke exclusively with Hearst sister station WGAL about the arson attack on the state governor’s residence earlier this year and walked the station through the grounds and residence to describe how it happened.

    Touring grounds, governor’s home

    During a walkthrough of the gardens, Shapiro describes how the intruder, Cody Balmer, scaled what was then a six-foot fence, hid near a brick gazebo in a once-wooded area, and initially evaded troopers.

    “That’s where he climbed over (a fence) with relative ease,” Shapiro said, pointing out an area where a brick wall is now being built. “And he sort of hid back here in what used to be a pretty wooded area … after one of the troopers realized that there was a breach of the fence came to try to find him, and missed him.”

    Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro walked WGAL step-by-step through what happened during the April 2025 arson attack at the governor’s residence.

    WGAL

    The governor points to the area where Balmer scaled a fence.

    Carrying a metal hammer and a bag of Molotov cocktails, Balmer moved deliberately to a window, smashed it, and hurled a firebomb that gutted the room.

    He then broke another window, climbed inside, and tried to reach double doors leading to the family’s living and work areas. The double doors had been locked just minutes earlier.

    “And this is the window that he smashed and climbed through, wielding this metal hammer that he admitted he was going to use to kill me if he found me,” Shapiro said.

    Balmer prowled about inside, kicking doors, but as the smoke thickened, he turned back.

    Shapiro called the incident a clear security failure but said state police have learned from it and upgrades are in place. He recounted his family’s evacuation down a back stairwell and his later return with firefighters, where dense smoke, water, and wreckage made it evident the blaze was intentional.

    “I remember as I was walking down the hallway in the house, you couldn’t see your hand in front of you. The smoke was so thick it was burning your nose, your eyes,” Shapiro said. “You could hear the water dripping. And obviously I’m no expert, but I had assumed up until that moment when I came back in here, whatever it was about, you know, two or three in the morning, that it was an accident, that something caught fire in the kitchen or, you know, something like that or a faulty wire. And then when I walked in this room and saw what it looked like … I realized, OK, I don’t think this was an accident. And then, sure enough, a few minutes later, I was informed it was an attack. And it was very purposeful.”

    You can watch the full tour of the grounds and residence with Shapiro in the video player below.

    Security improvements, costs

    Rebuilding began immediately — ceilings, floors, windows, and a melted chandelier were replaced — and the room was restored to its original look, being prepared to host a state dinner honoring 10 Pennsylvanians.

    In a letter to the Pennsylvania House and Senate, the Department of General Services laid out how much it would cost to repair the governor’s residence and make various security improvements that were deemed necessary after numerous vulnerabilities were exposed.

    The total cost for the restoration and security enhancements totaled roughly $40 million. The Department of General Services provided the following breakdown as well as explanations for each expenditure. You can read the full letter here.

    • $6.44 million: Estimated cost to restore the residence to pre-event condition.
    • $14 million: Outer perimeter, barrier replacement.
    • $6.3 million: Updated cameras, improved lighting motion sensors.
    • $8 million: Retrofit existing windows with bulletproof, shatter-proof glass.
    • $4 million: Fire suppression system.

    “The horrifying attack on the Governor, his family, and Commonwealth property, coupled with the unfortunate rise in political violence across our country, has made these updates necessary to protect the Governor and his family and ensure the continued operation of the executive branch of the Commonwealth. No family should have to live behind bulletproof glass or behind large walls – but the nature of the threats against elected officials today require us to take these important steps,” the letter said.

    Arsonist sentenced

    HARRISBURG, PENNSYLVANIA - APRIL 13: (EDITOR'S NOTE: This Handout image was provided by a third-party organization and may not adhere to Getty Images' editorial policy.)  In this handout provided by Dauphin County District Attorney's Office, Cody A. Balmer appears for a mugshot photo after being charged in connection with a fire at Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro's residence on April 13, 2025 in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. It was reported that on April 13, 2025, an individual attacked the Governor’s Residence in Harrisburg while Governor Shapiro and his family were within the residence. Video surveillance shows a perpetrator throwing a Molotov Cocktail into the residence, igniting a substantial fire within. Balmer is charged with attempted murder, aggravated arson, burglary, terrorism, and related offenses.  (Photo by Dauphin County District Attorney's Office via Getty Images)

    On Oct. 14, Cody Balmer pleaded guilty to setting fire to the Pennsylvania governor’s residence in April.

    Balmer was convicted of attempted homicide, aggravated arson and terrorism. The judge sentenced him to 25 to 50 years in prison.

    Motive behind attack

    Balmer admitted to targeting the residence due to Shapiro’s stance on the war in Gaza.

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  • Chester County couple who restore comic books revive business after winning $10 million defamation lawsuit

    Just over a year after winning a defamation lawsuit, comic book restorers Emily and Matt Meyers have revived their business – putting five of the rarest and most valuable comics they’ve ever worked on up for sale. 

    The auction collection includes the first appearances of Superman, Batman and Captain America, books that date back to the Golden Era of comics in the 1930s and 1940s. From now until mid-September, prospective buyers can place bids on each book. The unrestored versions of these can be worth millions.


    MORE: Trailer for Bradley Cooper’s third film as director is released ahead of festival premiere


    “These are among the most beautiful books we’ve ever restored,” Emily said.

    Nearly 10 years ago, the couple from Paoli, Chester County, began working with an undisclosed Toronto-based collector, taking low-quality rare books and using a complex process to fix faded colors and bring the condition back to as close to its original state as possible.

    The restoration projects for the five comics that are up for auction was completed in 2018, but a contentious eight-year legal battle with Certified Guaranty Co., the world’s largest grading company for collectables, prevented the couple and consignor from bringing the books to market. In the lawsuit, the Meyers were accused of making fakes, leading to the couple suing the company for defamation.

    “I think there was a lot of misinformation put out about our work,” Emily said. “… Eventually we just stopped doing it because it ate into the profit margin so much.”

    Last summer, a Philadelphia jury ruled that Certified Guaranty Co. must pay the Meyers $10 million for defaming their business. Some of the comics that are up for sale came straight from the “evidence bag” of the long-running court cases, Emily said.

    In addition to the five books restored by the Meyers, the most for a single auction in their career, the sale also features nearly 200 unrestored works from the collector, ranging in time period and stories.

    “This collection represents a veritable time capsule of new characters and stories in comics history from the Golden Age up to now,” said Vincent Zurzolo, president and co-founder of ComicConnect. “It was incredibly exciting to see a collection like this, acquired over years of careful creation.” 

    Thanks to the meticulous work done by the Meyers, Zurzolo estimates the five books could sell for millions.

    “I believe, in no uncertain terms, that they are the best restoration experts in the country for comic books – possibly in the world,” Zurzolo said. “I have seen many restoration experts with varying degree of skills and specialties, but I’ve never seen anybody with the skill, talent, technique and artistry that Emily and Matt possess. These are some of the best-looking restored copies of Golden Age (comics) that I’ve seen in my nearly 40-year career in comics.”

    Emily attributes their success to crippling perfectionism, using microscopes to be as accurate and precise as possible when handling vintage works. Even with methodical advances at her disposal, Emily said she’d be surprised if a single project took less than two months to complete. 

    “I know how much people treasure these books and I want to give them that same amount of love, time and dedication so that the book is just loved from start to finish,” she said. “If I have to redo something a hundred times, I will do it.” 

    So far, the couple’s most valuable project was a restored “Action Comics No. 1,” which features the first appearance of Superman. That comic sold for $550,000, but a different copy of the 1938 classic is part of the collection being auctioned now, so the Meyers might soon have a new personal record.

    Molly McVety

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  • Duke Energy Florida Estimates Times of Restoration for Pinellas County’s Barrier Islands

    Duke Energy Florida Estimates Times of Restoration for Pinellas County’s Barrier Islands

    Duke Energy Florida issued Pinellas County estimated times of restoration for the barrier islands following Hurricane Helene.

    All customers in these communities who are capable of receiving power will be restored by 11:59pm on Saturday, October 5th, with the majority restored by 11:59pm on Friday, October 4th.

    “We understand that having power is necessary for our customers to be able to rebuild and get back on their feet,” said Melissa Seixas, Duke Energy Florida state president. “Our crews continue to work tirelessly to meet our estimated times of restoration in order to help our customers and their families move forward with recovery.”

    The following are the estimated times of restoration from Duke Energy Florida for Pinellas County:

    North Barrier Island

    • Clearwater Beach – Friday, October 4th at 11:59pm
    • Belleair Beach – Friday, October 4th at 11:59pm
    • Belleair Shores – Friday, October 4th at 11:59pm
    • Indian Rocks Beach – Friday, October 4th at 11:59pm
    • Town of Indian Shores – Friday, October 4th at 11:59pm

    Middle Barrier Island  

    • Town of Redington Beach – Friday, October 4th at 11:59pm
    • Town of N. Redington Beach – Friday, October 4th at 11:59pm
    • Town of Redington Shores – Friday, October 4th at 11:59pm
    • Madeira Beach – Saturday, October 5th at 11:59pm

    South Barrier Island

    • Treasure Island – Saturday, October 5th at 11:59pm
    • St. Pete Beach – Friday, October 4th at 11:59pm

    “We will continue to be easily accessible and maintain an open line of communication with our customers even after their power is restored,” said Melissa Seixas, Duke Energy Florida state president. “After such extensive destruction, many communities face a lengthy and trying recovery process, but we are here to help and will be with them every step of the way.”

    Duke Energy Florida has mobilized customer care units in severely impacted areas. Company representatives will be onsite to answer questions and provide account assistance. They will be available in the following locations on Friday, October 4th:

    Madeira Beach City Hall

    • 300 Municipal Drive, Madeira Beach, FL 33708
    • 8am-5pm

    Tampa Bay Beaches Chamber

    • 6990 Gulf Boulevard, St. Pete Beach, FL 33706
    • 8am-5pm

    Sheraton Sand Key Resort

    • 1160 Gulf Boulevard, Clearwater Beach, FL 33767
    • 8am-5pm

    Daystar Life Center of Citrus County

    • 6751 W. Gulf to Lake Highway, Crystal River, FL 34429
    • 9am-2pm

    Customers who have damage to the electrical service that serves their homes or businesses should contact Duke Energy Florida. An onsite visit will be conducted to determine if there is a need to de-energize the property for safety. The customer will then need to contact a licensed electrician to make repairs, followed by the local municipality to schedule an inspection. After the inspection is complete, the customer must contact Duke Energy Florida to request restoration of service.

    Customers who need power to rebuild their homes or businesses should contact their local municipality to relay their intent and obtain a 911 address for the property. Then, the customer will need to request that Duke Energy Florida establish electric service on a temporary pole on the property. After an electrician installs a temporary service pole and meter base, the customer must apply to the city or county for an electrical inspection and ensure the municipality sends the inspection to Duke Energy Florida to have electric service connected.

    Customers who need assistance paying their utility bills can learn more about programs that may be available to help online or calling 800-700-8744.

    For individual estimated times of restoration, customers can use Duke Energy’s Outage Map.

    Duke Energy Florida, a subsidiary of Duke Energy, owns 12,300 megawatts of energy capacity, supplying electricity to 2 million residential, commercial and industrial customers across a 13,000-square-mile service area in Florida.

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  • Opinion: Is the restoration of California’s cutest keystone species worth it?

    Opinion: Is the restoration of California’s cutest keystone species worth it?

    Sea otters are terminally cute critters and a delight to view rolling and diving in the kelp canopy of Monterey Bay, where some 3,000 endangered southern otters play an essential role in maintaining the marine kelp forest. But to crabs, clams, abalone, urchins and some fishermen, sea otters are voracious marine weasels that can eat 25% of their body weight a day — a perceived threat to life and livelihood.

    That’s why some lively debates were launched at 16 open houses put on by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service last year to get public input on, as the invitation put it, the “potential reintroduction of sea otters to their historic range,” including Oregon and Northern California, a decision that is expected to be made this year.

    In 2020, the service was directed by Congress to study the feasibility and cost of otter repopulation in part because of fear that an oil spill or other incident could wipe out the group concentrated around Monterey Bay. In September 2023, U.S. Fish and Wildlife rejected a fishing industry petition to remove otters’ threatened status under the Endangered Species Act because the California population has failed to grow significantly in recent decades.

    There was an added incentive to keep the protection in place: the ongoing marine havoc linked to climate change. An algal bloom off the Central California coast killed hundreds of sea lions and dolphins last summer, multiple “red tides” have invaded San Francisco Bay and nearly 95% of Northern California’s kelp forest has been decimated by small purple sea urchins whose primary predator (with the sea otter out of the picture) — the sunflower sea star, or starfish — has largely died off from a wasting disease caused or exacerbated by warming ocean temperatures.

    Once upon a time, vast rafts of hundreds of thousands of sea otters filled the coastal waters of the north Pacific Rim, from Baja to Japan, until they were driven to near extinction by Captain Cook and other 18th and 19th century British, Russian and American fur-trade hunters, who killed “sea beavers” to supply the Chinese imperial court with luxurious otter fur. Remnant populations were protected starting in 1911. In California in the early 1960s, survivors from around Big Sur recolonized Monterey Bay, feasting on urchins that eat kelp and revitalizing the kelp forest. A small group has even migrated south close to Santa Barbara.

    Now environmentalists in Oregon and California, and several Indigenous groups, including the Kashia Band of Pomo Indians in Sonoma County, are mobilizing in support of an attempt to restore otters where they’ve long been absent, including San Francisco Bay. Fishermen are not so sanguine.

    At the Bodega Bay open house, an abalone diver, Doug Jung, summarized fishermen’s worries succinctly: Wouldn’t reintroduced otters “strip mine the ocean”?

    Dick Ogg, a longtime fisherman, was more specific. “The potential for impact,” he said, “can’t be quantified. If they eat the juvenile crab, that could be a big deal. Dungeness crab is our No. 1 fishery.”

    There was no California salmon season in 2023 because of the long drought that preceded last winter’s torrential rains, and the 2024 season is still in question. As for recreational abalone diving on the North Coast, it’s been shut down since the kelp forest collapsed (commercial abalone diving was banned long ago). Things are precarious all around for West Coast commercial fishermen, who worry about maintaining their working waterfronts.

    “I still think nature will do its own work,” Ogg told the Fish and Wildlife representatives in Bodega Bay. “I wouldn’t be bothered if [otters] recolonized on their own.”

    But natural repopulation from the Golden Gate north isn’t likely. With the decline of protective coastal kelp and a now-healthy population of white sharks in the region’s waters, migrating otters stand a good chance of becoming great white snack food. But with human assistance, the reintroduction of otters could bypass the gauntlet.

    If the effort succeeded, the impact on fishing might not be what is feared.

    A 2020 study in the journal Science found that Canada’s reintroduction of sea otters in British Columbia not only generated $42 million from otter-loving tourists but also added $9 million to the commercial fishery thanks to its restoration of kelp habitat for lingcod and other species. Alaska, where released sea otters helped repopulate the coastal waters in the 1960s, now has both the largest number of otters and the most productive commercial fishery in the U.S.

    “The sea otter could very well be the salvation for … catching fish in the years ahead if we can rebuild and repair a healthy ecosystem,” suggests Rep. Jared Huffman (D-San Rafael), whose congressional district includes the entire coast north of San Francisco.

    In Oregon and Northern California, there is hope that the cascading imbalances human have caused — exterminated otters, sick sea stars, disappearing abalone — can begin to be set straight, and that the kelp forest habitat, rich in marine life and a buffer against torrential storms, can recover.

    And yes, we need to restore many more creatures in many more habitats and ecosystems. Maybe an adorable marine weasel can motivate that, too.

    David Helvarg is executive director of Blue Frontier, an ocean policy group, and co-host of “Rising Tide: The Ocean Podcast.”

    David Helvarg

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  • Inside the Ramova, a Righteous Restoration of a Bridgeport Classic

    Inside the Ramova, a Righteous Restoration of a Bridgeport Classic

    On Friday night, the team behind the Ramova Theater will celebrate the venue’s reopening, reveling in 95 years of history and a reopening that involves the city, a trio of celebrities, and 49 local investors. There’s also a local chef who grew up in Bridgeport in charge with a notepad brimming with ideas.

    “If you had told me, a year or two before Duck Inn, that I would open up a restaurant on the street I grew up on, I’d have told you you were insane, that will never happen,” says Kevin Hickey.

    The Ramova on Friday will hold a symbolic sign-lighting ceremony. Hickey, who is also celebrating Wednesday’s news that the Duck Inn had earned a James Beard nod for outstanding restaurant, is the chef behind the venue’s restaurant component, the Ramova Grill. It’s his second restaurant in the neighborhood. The Ramova is part music venue, restaurant, community gathering place, and brewery. New York’s Other Half Brewing has taken residence, but due to delays with licensing, they haven’t brewed on-site. The limited supply of beer that’s been sold has been shipped over from other breweries. The venue officially opened on New Year’s Eve.

    “For us to be community- and artist-owned is rudimentary,” says Nevius, rattling names of nearby supporters, like Zhou B Arts Center and Let’s Boogie Records and Tapes. He’s also been in contact with the Dinos family, the owners of the original Ramova Grill: “They’re very excited, they’re very happy to see the Ramova Grill coming back.”

    On Friday night, the Ramova will hold a sign-lighting ceremony.

    The two co-founders of the Ramova Theater stand behind their bar.

    Emily and Tyler Nevius are the Ramova’s co-founders.

    The restaurant closed in 2012 at 3520 S. Halsted Street. Hickey is flooded with memories of a vibrant commercial corridor. He says his family’s history in the area extends to five, maybe six, generations. The Hickey family story is a familiar one, and one of the reasons Tyler and Emily Nevius worked so hard to restore the Ramova. They found a trio of celebrity investors who also helped, Quincy Jones, Chance The Rapper, and Jennifer Hudson. Tyler Nevius says they’ve all been helpful. Hudson, for example, helped make sure the artist’s green room was laid out properly. He adds that he considers other local businesses as partners. Its proximity to Sox Park will make baseball season exciting. Nevius is stoked to see fans of Other Half — which has breweries in Philadelphia, New York, and Washington, D.C.— wear their visitor jerseys and pack the place.

    Hickey sees the project with the potential of revitalizing the area much like Thalia Hall did for 18th Street in Pilsen when it reopened in 2013 with eventually Michelin-starred Dusek’s as its flagship restaurant. Nevius agrees with the sentiment but says Bridgeport has a different rhythm.

    A diner with red stools and black and white checkered floor.

    The original Ramova Grill closed in 2012.

    a Bowl of Chili

    Ramova’s chili

    “16” On Center is so impressive,” Tyler Nevius says of Thalia Hall. “But we really have to earn our spot at the table now.”

    The restaurant Hickey with an outlet to try ideas like Pork Chop Suey. Read that literally — it features a bed of noodles and vegetables beneath a grilled char siu-style pork chop. Hickey says he’s been dining at Chinatown restaurants to ensure he gets his dish right.

    Pork Chop Suey is a Tuesday special at the Ramova Grill. The standard menu features chili, a Ramova staple. Hickey takes a few liberties here, noting that “no one has tasted that chili in 12 years,” which is when the original restaurant closed: “I don’t remember what it was like,” Hickey says.

    The chili was a celebrated item at the old Ramova, and Hickey created a bit of a tall tale when he cooked it for the festival circuit, involving his dad in the telling, calling it “Jack’s Stolen Chili.” Ramova’s chili is a little thinner than Midwesterners are used to, which lends it well when mixing in mac and cheese or a dollop of sour cream. The chili is also ideal for dunking, for friends or with the duck-infused corn dogs. Another departure is the vegan version which uses portobello mushroom stock.

    Another highlight is a dish few have ever seen. Back before on-demand streaming, DVDs, and VHS tapes, hotels used a service, called Spectra Vision, which played movies on a loop as in-room entertainment. One of the films featured when Hickey watched incessantly on family trips was The Jerk, a comedy starring Steve Martin. The film features a scene where Martin is eating something called “pizza in a cup.” Hickey says he’s been obsessed with creating his version and was inspired several years ago when Moody Tongue Brewing chef Jared Wentworth made the dish at a food festival in Lincoln Park.

    Ramova’s pizza in a cup is a communal snack, a fried flatbread surrounds a cup filled with melted cheese, sausage, giardiniera, and other pizza toppings — it’s like a fondue, Hickey says. Break off a piece of the crispy ring and dip it into the cup.

    There have been some bumps. Social media revolted after the Ramova charged $16 per beer on opening weekend. Tyler Nevius apologized, saying it was a problem with signage, a perfect storm of missteps. He feels bad for Other Half and takes accountability for the overcharge: “I don’t think we understood how hard it was going to be,” Nevius says.

    But once they secure their beer-making license and have the right signage up, Tyler Nevius says visitors will start seeing the Ramova’s true potential. Take a look around the space in the photos.

    Ramova Grill, 3520 S. Halsted Street

    Ashok Selvam

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  • Texas Teen, Matthew Machicek, Crowned National Champion in 2019 Delo Tractor Restoration Competition

    Texas Teen, Matthew Machicek, Crowned National Champion in 2019 Delo Tractor Restoration Competition

    Restoration of 1962 Oliver 1800 MFWD Delivers Life Skills and a $10,000 Grand Prize

    Press Release



    updated: Nov 1, 2019

    ​Chevron Products Company, a Chevron U.S.A. Inc. division, maker of the Delo® brand of technologically advanced engine oils, lubricants and coolants, announced Matthew Machicek of Rogers, Texas and the Rogers FFA as the Grand Champion of the 2019 Delo Tractor Restoration Competition. A dozen of the country’s top high school tractor restoration experts competed for the title in Indianapolis, Indiana during the 92nd National Future Farmers of America (FFA) Convention this week.

    “It is inspiring to see how these students respond when faced with an incredibly complex challenge,” said Dan Holdmeyer, Industrial Sector Manager, Chevron Products Company. “To rebuild these tractors, our finalists must become historians, marketing professionals, finance managers, leaders, motivators, teammates, mechanics, counselors, time management experts, auditors and more. Some look at the output of this competition as a restored tractor, but we view it as an empowered, confident teen, practiced in life skills that will benefit them for years to come. We are very proud to have supported this program for so long. Congratulations to Matthew and all our finalists.”

    Matthew Machicek earned the 2019 Delo Tractor Restoration Grand Champion title for his restoration of a 1962 Oliver 1800 MFWD tractor.

    Machicek was awarded $10,000 as the Delo Tractor Restoration Competition Grand Champion. The Reserve Champion title and an award of $5,000 went to Devin Haywood of Hastings, Michigan, for his restoration of a 1970 Farmall 826 Diesel Demonstrator. Ryder Merta of El Campo, Texas took third place and a prize of $3,000 for his restoration of a 1973 Oliver 1365.

    The 2019 entries were narrowed down to 12 finalists who presented their projects to a panel of four seasoned tractor restoration experts. Each project was graded on the restoration process, safety precautions, results, documentation and their oral presentation.

    The finalists for the 2019 Delo Tractor Restoration Competition were:

    • Ben Anderson, Spring Valley, WI: 1947 Allis Chalmers C 
    • Cody Tschirhart, Medina Valley High School FFA, Castroville, TX: 1971 Case 970 Black Knight Demonstrator
    • Devin Haywood, Hastings, MI: 1970 Farmall 826 Diesel Demonstrator 
    • Dubiski Career High School, Grand Prairie, TX: 1941 Ford 9N 
    • Eufaula High School FFA, Eufaula, AL: 1953 Ferguson TO30 
    • Four Rivers Career Center Night Shift, Washington, MO: 1941 Farmall H 
    • Matthew Machicek, Rogers FFA, Rogers, TX: 1962 Oliver 1800 MFWD 
    • Ricky Schilling, Fayetteville, TX: 1972 International Harvester 1466 Diesel
    • Riley Billings, Floresville, TX: 1969 Case 530
    • Ryder Lestrud, Kensett, IA: 1972 John Deere 4020 High Crop
    • Ryder Merta, El Campo FFA, El Campo, TX: 1973 Oliver 1365 
    • Schimke, Paso Robles FFA, Paso Robles, CA: 1945 Farmall A

    About the Delo Tractor Restoration Competition

    Since 1995, the Delo Tractor Restoration Competition has rewarded the determination, mechanical skills and business savvy of high school tractor restoration experts from around the country. Through the restoration of an antique tractor, participants develop skills applicable to the modern business world. The skills needed for success in the program – equipment mechanics, teamwork, project management, budgeting, planning and marketing – help develop the participants into future leaders in the agriculture community.

    All entrants to the Delo Tractor Restoration Competition are required to submit a workbook detailing the entire tractor restoration process – from mechanical overhauls of the engine, transmission and auxiliary and ancillary systems to the external appearance of the tractors.

    For more about the Delo Tractor Restoration Competition, go to: www.DeloTractorRestorationCompetition.com

    Follow the Delo Tractor Restoration Competition Online

    The Delo Tractor Restoration Competition can be followed on various social media channels, including Facebook, YouTube and Twitter.

     

    Chevron’s Delo Product Family:

    Chevron’s Delo product family includes engine oils, premium lubricants and extended life coolants that provide premium performance and bottom-line value for diesel-powered vehicles.

    All Delo products are covered under the Delo Warranty Plus program, which provides bumper-to-bumper protection against lubricant and coolant related failures as described in the Delo Warranty.

    More information on Delo products can be found at: www.ChevronDelo.com

    About Chevron Products Company
    Chevron Products Company is a division of an indirect, wholly owned subsidiary of the Chevron Corporation (NYSE: CVX) headquartered in San Ramon, CA. A full line of lubrication and coolant products are marketed through this organization. Select brands include Havoline®, Delo® and Havoline Xpress Lube®. Chevron Intellectual Property, LLC owns patented technology in advanced lubricants products, new generation base oil technology and coolants.

    For more information, go to: www.ChevronLubricants.com

    Source: Chevron

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  • Ross Cleaning & Restoration Inc. Announces Website Launch, Expanded Online Presence

    Ross Cleaning & Restoration Inc. Announces Website Launch, Expanded Online Presence

    Press Release



    updated: Feb 12, 2018

    Ross Cleaning & Restoration, Inc. has announced the launch of its new website, which is designed to provide the company with an expanded web presence to better serve commercial and residential customers in the Fort Wayne area. The upgraded site was formally launched earlier today.

    The new website provides potential customers with an even more informative look at Ross Cleaning & Restoration’s award-winning services, using a clear, professional design. The company’s service pages are separated to ensure that customers get access to all the important details they require to make an informed decision about their cleaning needs.

    I realized that many insurance companies just weren’t interested in doing the right thing for their clients. They would tell me to do things that simply weren’t the right option for my customers’ needs. I had two choices: either do what the insurers said and go with the flow; or do what’s right for the customer and fight to get them what they need. I chose the latter option and will continue to fight on my customers’ behalf for as long as they need me.

    Adam Ross, Owner, Ross Cleaning & Restoration, Inc.

    Those individual service pages cover Ross Cleaning & Restoration Inc.’s fire damage restoration services, as well as services that clean up and restore homes and businesses that have experienced damage from water or mold. Other service pages cover Ross’ carpet cleaning, duct cleaning, and tile and upholstery services.

    Ross Cleaning & Restoration owner Adam Ross stressed the importance of providing customers with timely information that can help them in their decision-making process. He described an instance where he was called in to help a client in the aftermath of flooding damage: “As a first responder to her emergency, I instantly knew that she was scared and in need of assistance. I explained everything that she needed to know and walked her through her options – from A to Z. That allowed her to make the right decision for her needs and helped to put her at ease.”

    “I take great pride in being able to provide that type of comfort to every client I service.”

    In addition to detailed information about the company’s various service offerings, the website also offers convenient online scheduling. Customers can choose from a menu of different cleaning and restoration needs, obtain estimated pricing for those services, and schedule their service date and time. There is even an option to schedule customized services, for clients whose needs don’t fit neatly within the quoted service offerings.

    According to Ross, the website may be new but Ross Cleaning & Restoration, Inc. will continue to do what it has done for more than a decade: provide customers with prompt, effective, and reliable cleaning and restoration services for their commercial and residential property needs. The company’s owner said that he remains committed to fighting for his customers’ needs.

    “Several years ago,” he said, “I realized that many insurance companies just weren’t interested in doing the right thing for their clients. They would tell me to do things that simply weren’t the right option for my customers’ needs. I had two choices: either do what the insurers said and go with the flow or do what’s right for the customer and fight to get them what they need. I chose the latter option and will continue to fight on my customers’ behalf for as long as they need me.”

    About Ross Cleaning & Restoration, Inc. and Adam Ross:

    Adam Ross comes from a family of entrepreneurs, who helped instill in him an appreciation of the value of hard work. His own entrepreneurial efforts began at the tender age of 5 years old, selling popcorn to people at the local mall. After high school and a semester of college, he realized that his true passion was to work with and for people. He went to work with Stanley Steamer for a time, and then eventually launched his own cleaning business in 2007: Ross Cleaning & Restoration.

    Initially focused on carpet cleaning, Ross Cleaning & Restoration, Inc. grew to add new services as it evolved over time. Today, Ross provides effective cleaning for carpets, ducts, tiles and upholstery, and damage from fire, water, and mold. The company uses a select array of proprietary products, carefully chosen after testing thousands of different cleaning solutions. That commitment to excellence and dedication to full customer service is the reason why Ross customers routinely recommend the company’s services to their friends and loved ones.

    For more information please visit:  https://rossrestoration.com/

    Media contact
    Name: Adam Ross
    Email: Contact@rossrestoration.com
    Phone: (260) 625-6677

    Source: Ross Cleaning & Restoration, Inc.

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