Nora was created by real estate investors who wanted to blend history with modern touches to attract shoppers, diners.
Nora District shops, eateries, hotel progressing in West Palm Beach
The Nora District construction is progressing for the new dining, shopping and entertainment section north of downtown West Palm Beach.
The $1 billion project transformed a rundown area north of downtown West Palm into a trendy neighborhood with a mix of old warehouses and new buildings.
Retailers, restaurants, and fitness centers are set to open in Nora in phases, with a hotel and apartments planned for the future.
The West Palm Beach project gained momentum during the pandemic as businesses and residents relocated to Palm Beach County.
More than seven years in the making, the $1 billion Nora development is the culmination of an ambitious plan by a small group of real estate investors willing to take a chance on a rundown part of the city.
Starting in 2018, these investors began buying up old warehouses, boarded-up properties and vacant sites just north of the downtown. These were the properties in and around North Railroad Avenue facing the Florida East Coast Railway, which was built by industrialist Henry Flagler in the late 1880s.
The investment group envisioned something special: a hip, new neighborhood blending history with modern finishes.
The investors designed the district around North Railroad Avenue, the area’s western boundary and the district’s designated Main Street. Then they named the entire project Nora, short for the avenue’s name. The Nora District is just west of North Dixie Highway between 7th Street and Palm Beach Lakes Boulevard.
Nora features buzzy retailers, restaurants in downtown West Palm Beach
Using a mix of old warehouses and new construction, Nora’s partners created ground-floor spaces for buzzy and in-demand retailers. This includes casual and upscale restaurants, activities for families, and a smattering of luxury stores.
Nora also includes the hottest players in boutique fitness centers, plus several beauty retailers and services.
A few of the project’s 20 retailers plan to open in late August and September, while others will open by year-end, and more stores and eateries will open in 2026.
Eventually, people will be able to stay and even live at Nora.
In the fall of 2026, look for the opening of the 201-room Nora Hotel by Richard Born and Ira Drukier of BD Hotels, along with acclaimed hotelier Sean MacPherson.
The Nora Hotel will feature a rooftop pool and bar. It also will feature a signature restaurant, Pastis, the famed New York City Parisian-style brasserie.
Meanwhile, Nora’s developers are seeking approval from the City of West Palm Beach for an 11-story, 350-unit apartment complex along 10th Street at North Railroad Avenue.
In addition, Nora hopes to build an 11-story condominium at 1105 N. Dixie Highway.
If Nora sounds like an overnight sensation, it is not. Backers said the project required timing, creativity, patience − and a large dose of luck.
How a simple plan for West Palm turned big after a global event
The property purchases began around 2018, with a plan by NDT Development to rehabilitate a couple of old warehouses into new restaurant spaces.
But the redevelopment plan grew bigger, and over time, the group bought more and more property. Eventually, NDT joined with Place Projects, an early developer of Miami’s Wynwood neighborhood, and Wheelock Street Capital to create the Nora District. The 40-acre district is the city’s largest redevelopment since CityPlace, which opened in 2000.
Soon several Northeast restaurateurs and retailers expressed interest in following their customers to Palm Beach County, said Francis X. Scire, Nora’s leasing director. These include eateries from New York and Boston.
During the past three years, Scire said he’s charted the growing interest, and the caliber, of the companies wanting to be what some consider one of the hottest cities in the country.
“We’re a thriving metropolis and they needed to get a flag down here,” Scire said. “Nora was the best product coming online. It was the obvious choice.”
Coffee, cars and a big bet on the future of the Nora District
Sunday Motor Co. is one example. The coffee shop from Madison, New Jersey, has launched a soft opening in a converted warehouse at 7th Street and North Railroad Avenue, the southern corner of the Nora District.
Sunday Motor is among the first restaurants to open at Nora. With its auto-themed accessories and memorabilia, it promises to be a welcome gathering spot for coffee and car aficionados, non-car lovers and everyone else.
A daytime menu featuring breakfast and lunch items will be offered at first. Then, about a month after opening, Sunday Motor will launch evening service, featuring a different menu as well as beer and wine, according to Nick Vorderman, who owns the coffee shop with his wife, Renee Mee.
The expansion to Florida began in 2023 when the Vorderman family bought a house in West Palm Beach’s Flamingo Park to visit with relatives in Jupiter.
Soon after, the couple began taking a look around West Palm Beach. This was about the same time that Nora’s leasing director was trying to find a coffee shop.
Scire said he wanted the perfect “third place,” a location that isn’t home or work but another setting for gathering. After sifting through 37 possible coffee shops, he settled on Sunday Motor’s creative and welcoming vibe.
In a brief telephone interview on Aug. 13, Nick Vorderman was busy putting the finishing touches on the new Nora location.
But in between the last-minute frenzy, Vordeman said he was looking forward to the shop’s opening. “We’re all very excited,” he said. “It’s been a long road to get to this point.”
Nora’s eight other eateries range across a broad spectrum of cuisine. Several hail from the Northeast, too. Coming from Boston is Loco Taqueria & Oyster Bar. From New York, look for H&H Bagels, Van Leeuwen Ice Cream and Juliana’s Pizza. New York’s The Garret Group also plans a sports bar. Also opening at Nora are Indaco, a restaurant featuring rustic Italian-inspired cuisine; Del Mar Mediterranean; and local operator Celis Juice Bar.
In the beauty and wellness space, Nora will feature Sweat440 and SolidCore fitness facilities; service retailers such as Sana Skin Studio, The Spot Barbershop and IGK Salon hair care; Le Labo Fragrances; and ZenHippo early childhood activities.
Finally, three other retailers also are in the mix. They are Warby Parker eyewear; and two women’s clothing boutiques, Pompanos and Mint.
A new use for old West Palm Beach buildings
In a 2021 interview, back when Nora first was being sketched out, Place Project’s Joe Furst said the land assemblage by NDT was complicated, rare and vital to create an area with thoughtful planning and design.
A lot of times, developers either can rehabilitate old buildings or build new ones in an area, but not both, Furst said.
However, at Nora, rehabbed warehouses complement newly-built places, so “you still have that Main Street feel,” he said.
Indeed, historical flourishes are a part of making it feel authentic, said Damien Barr, a partner in the NDT Development group.
“We were very intentional,” Barr said during a recent tour of Nora.
Visitors to Nora need only look down for proof. Lining the district’s sidewalks are railroad ties, a nod to the nearby railway that first breathed life into the city and continues to inspire new uses for this old part of town.
The Mokelumne River Bridge on Highway 12 was closed Sunday morning in Rio Vista, Caltrans said. The bridge was closed as of 11 a.m., California Highway Patrol online logs show. It was unclear why the bridge was closed. There is no estimated time for reopening. Drivers should expect delays and seek alternative routes at this time This story was curated by Hearst’s KCRA Alert Desk.See news happening? Send us your photos or videos if it’s safe to do so at kcra.com/upload.If this story happened near you or someone you know, share this article with friends in your area using the KCRA mobile app so they know what is happening near them. The KCRA app is available for free in Apple’s App Store and on Google Play.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel
RIO VISTA, Calif. —
The Mokelumne River Bridge on Highway 12 was closed Sunday morning in Rio Vista, Caltrans said.
The bridge was closed as of 11 a.m., California Highway Patrol online logs show. It was unclear why the bridge was closed.
There is no estimated time for reopening. Drivers should expect delays and seek alternative routes at this time
This content is imported from Facebook.
You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.
This story was curated by Hearst’s KCRA Alert Desk.
See news happening? Send us your photos or videos if it’s safe to do so at kcra.com/upload.
If this story happened near you or someone you know, share this article with friends in your area using the KCRA mobile app so they know what is happening near them. The KCRA app is available for free in Apple’s App Store and on Google Play.
NASA announced Sept. 16 that the spacecraft had experienced engine trouble on its way to the space station, with the main engine cutting off earlier than planned.
“NASA and Northrop Grumman are delaying the arrival of the Cygnus XL to the International Space Station as flight controllers evaluate an alternate burn plan for the resupply spacecraft. The Cygnus XL will not arrive to the space station on Wednesday, Sept. 17, as originally planned, with a new arrival date and time under review,” a statement by NASA read.
NASA said that everything else is performing as expected with the spacecraft.
Once the Cygnus spacecraft does arrive at the International Space Station, astronauts Jonny Kim and Zena Cardman will use the space station’s robotic Canadarm2 to grab and dock it.
This mission — refrred to as NG-23 — is the first flight of the company’s new Cygnus XL spacecraft. It is described as solar-powered, larger and a more capable cargo spacecraft compared to previous Cygnus models, which have flown multiple NASA resupply missions in the past.
It is not the first time a Cygnus spacecraft experienced an issue in flight. In 2022, a Cygnus spacecraft flying as part of the NG-18 mission failed to deploy a solar array, putting the spacecraft’s power levels at risk. Northrop Grumman and NASA were able to work around the issue, and the spacecraft was successfully captured by astronauts onboard the station.
As of the morning of Sept. 17, NASA had not released an update on the current issue.
Crash shuts down SR-429 southbound in Winter Garden
METEOROLOGIST KELLIANNE KLASS. WE’LL TALK ABOUT THAT FORECAST IN A MOMENT, BUT WE NEED TO GET TO OUR TRAFFIC EXPERT MEAGHAN MACKEY. LET’S TALK ABOUT THAT 429 SITUATION NOW. MEGAN. YEAH. IF YOU’RE HEADING OUT THE DOOR RIGHT NOW, WE WANT TO GET YOU RIGHT TO THAT CRASH. IT IS IN THE WINTER GARDEN AREA. STATE ROAD 429. THIS IS TRAVELING SOUTHBOUND SOUTH OF STONY BROOK PARKWAY, TRAVELING TOWARDS NEW INDEPENDENCE PARKWAY. SO HEADING INTO THE HORIZON WEST AREA, YOU CAN SEE ALL OF THOSE LANES ARE SHUT DOWN THIS MORNING AND TRAFFIC IS ONLY GETTING BY HERE IN THAT FAR LEFT SHOULDER. HERE YOU CAN SEE A COUPLE CARS INVOLVED IN THIS CRASH. LOOKS LIKE THIS CAR SLAMMED INTO THAT GUARDRAIL. NOT LOOKING GOOD. WE DO KNOW THIS IS A CRASH WITH SOME INJURIES. SO HUGE DELAYS IN THIS AREA JUST SOUTH OF THE TURNPIKE INTERCHANGE. ME PERSONALLY, I WOULD AVOID TRAVELING THERE. I-4 IS GOING TO BE THE DETOUR, BUT IT IS GOING TO BE A VERY LONG DETOUR, SO PLAN AHEAD FOR THAT MORNING DRIVE. THIS IS WHERE THOSE FLEX LANES ARE. SO IF YOU’RE NOT FAMILIAR WITH THAT, THE CENTRAL FLORIDA EXPRESSWAY ACTIVATES THOSE WHEN THERE’S A BIG CRASH. AND THAT’S WHAT THESE X’S MEAN HERE ON THE SCREEN. SO WE HAVEN’T SEEN A WHOLE LOT OF CRASHES SINCE THEY’VE ACTIVATED THOSE. BUT I WANTED TO LET YOU KNOW THAT THAT IS HOW THOSE WORKS. I’VE GOTTEN A LOT OF QUESTIONS ABOUT THE SIGNAGE THERE. WHEN THERE’S A SHUTDOWN, THEY DO PUT AN X TO INDICATE THAT THAT LANE IS CLOSING JUST AHEAD. SO ANTICIPATE THE SLOWDOWNS TRAVELING THERE THIS MORNING. ME PERSONALLY AGAIN I WOULD AVOID STATE ROAD 429 SOUTHBOUND. IF YOU’RE TRAVELING IN WINTER GARDEN. BUT AGAIN, THE DETOUR IS GOING TO BE ALONG I-4, SO WE’LL MONITOR THE BACKUPS AND THIS CRASH THIS MORNING AND CHECK IN WITH THOSE TRAVEL TIMES, BUT AT LEAST HEADIN
A crash shut down part of SR-429 in Winter Garden.According to the Florida Highway Patrol, the crash happened around 6:30 a.m. Tuesday morning.Both lanes were shut down traveling southbound just past Stoneybrook Parkway.As of 7:30 a.m. all of the lanes are back open.Troopers say people were injured in the crash.
WINTER GARDEN, Fla. —
A crash shut down part of SR-429 in Winter Garden.
According to the Florida Highway Patrol, the crash happened around 6:30 a.m. Tuesday morning.
Both lanes were shut down traveling southbound just past Stoneybrook Parkway.
California lawmakers just paved the way for a whole lot more housing in the Golden State.
In the waning hours of the 2025 legislative session, the state Senate voted 21 to 8 to approve Senate Bill 79, a landmark housing bill that overrides local zoning laws to expand high-density housing near transit hubs. The controversial bill received a final concurrence vote from the Senate on Friday, a day after passing in the California assembly with a vote of 41 to 17.
The bill had already squeaked through the state Senate by a narrow margin earlier this year, but since it was amended in the following months, it required a second approval. It will head to Gov. Gavin Newsom’s desk in October.
One of the more ambitious state-imposed efforts to increase housing density in recent years, the bill was introduced in March by Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco), who stresses that the state needs to take immediate action to address California’s housing shortage. It opens the door for taller, denser housing near transit corridors such as bus stops and train stations: up to nine stories for buildings adjacent to certain transit stops, seven stories for buildings within a quarter-mile, and six stories for buildings within a half-mile.
Single-family neighborhoods within a half-mile of transit stops would be subject to the new zoning rules.
Height limits are based on tiers. Tier 1 zoning, which includes heavy rail lines such as the L.A. Metro B and D lines, allows for six- to nine-story buildings, depending on proximity to the transit hub. Tier 2 zoning — which includes light rail lines such as the A, C, E and K lines, as well as bus routes with dedicated lanes — allows for five- to eight-story buildings.
An amateur map released by a cartographer and fact-checked by YIMBY Action, a housing non-profit that helped push the bill through, gives an idea of the areas around L.A. that would be eligible for development under SB 79. Tier 1 zones include hubs along Wilshire Blvd., Vermont Ave., and Hollywood Blvd., as well as a handful of spots in Downtown L.A. and the San Fernando Valley.
Tier 2 zones are more spread out, dotting Exposition Blvd. along the E line, stretching toward Inglewood along the K line, and running from Long Beach into the San Gabriel Valley along the A line.
Assembly members debated the bill for around 40 minutes on Thursday evening and cheered after it was passed.
“Over the last five years, housing affordability and homelessness have consistently been among the top priorities in California. The smartest place to build new housing is within existing communities, near the state’s major transit investments that connect people to jobs, schools and essential services,” said Assemblymember Sharon Quirk-Silva (D-Orange County) in support of the bill.
Other assembly members, including Buffy Wicks (D-Oakland), Juan Carrillo (D-Palmdale) and Josh Hoover (R-Folsom) voiced their support.
Proponents say drastic measures are necessary given the state’s affordability crisis.
“SB 79 is what we’ve been working towards for a decade – new housing next to our most frequently used train stations. This bill has the potential to unlock hundreds of thousands of new multi-family homes,” said YIMBY Action California director Leora Tanjuatco Ross.
Critics claim the blanket mandate is an overreach, stripping local authorities of their ability to promote responsible growth.
Assemblymember Rick Zbur (D-West Hollywood) argued against the bill, claiming it will affect lower-priced neighborhoods more than wealthy ones since land prices are cheaper for housing developers.
Councilmember Traci Park, who co-authored the resolution with Councilmember John Lee, called SB 79 a “one-size-fits-all mandate from Sacramento.” Lee called it “chaos.”
The resolution called for L.A. to be exempt from the upzoning since it already has a state-approved housing plan.
The bill has spurred multiple protests in Southern California communities, including Pacific Palisades and San Diego. Residents fear the zoning changes would alter single-family communities and force residents into competition with developers, who would be incentivized under the new rules to purchase properties near transit corridors.
However, support for SB 79 surged in recent days after the State Building and Construction Trades Council, a powerful labor group that represents union construction workers, agreed to reverse their opposition in exchange for amendments that add union hiring to certain projects.
In a statement after the deal was struck, the trades council president Chris Hannan said the amendments would provide good jobs and training to California’s skilled construction workforce.
Wiener, who has unsuccessfully tried to pass similar legislation twice before, said the deal boosted the bill’s chances.
A state appeals court on Wednesday in a major decision ruled Florida’s ban on openly carrying guns is unconstitutional.A three-judge panel of the 1st District Court of Appeal, pointing to U.S. Supreme Court rulings on Second Amendment issues, said the open-carry ban is incompatible with the nation’s “historical tradition of firearm regulation.”The state’s Attorney General said his office “fully supports the Court’s decision.”He went on to say. “This is a big win for the Second Amendment rights of Floridians. As we’ve all witnessed over the last few days, our God-given right to self-defense is indispensable.”Lake County Commissioner Anthony Sabatini took to X and shared: “FLORIDA IS NOW AN OPEN CARRY STATE!””As a member of the Florida House of Representatives I fought for 4 years in Tallahassee for Open Carry—only to see my gun bills blocked by fake Republicans—thank you to Florida’s 1st District Court of Appeal for standing up for liberty while the Legislature failed.:Statement from the Orlando Police DepartmentThe Orlando Police Department does not provide opinions on legislative or judicial decisions. Our role is to uphold and enforce all applicable state laws and city ordinances as they are established.Statement from Flagler County Sheriff Rick Staly>> The News Service of Florida contributed to this story>> This is a developing story and will be updated
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. —
A state appeals court on Wednesday in a major decision ruled Florida’s ban on openly carrying guns is unconstitutional.
A three-judge panel of the 1st District Court of Appeal, pointing to U.S. Supreme Court rulings on Second Amendment issues, said the open-carry ban is incompatible with the nation’s “historical tradition of firearm regulation.”
The state’s Attorney General said his office “fully supports the Court’s decision.”
He went on to say. “This is a big win for the Second Amendment rights of Floridians. As we’ve all witnessed over the last few days, our God-given right to self-defense is indispensable.”
This content is imported from Twitter.
You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.
Florida’s 1st District Court of Appeals just ruled that Florida’s open carry ban is no longer constitutionally enforceable statewide. Our office fully supports the Court’s decision.
This is a big win for the Second Amendment rights of Floridians.
Lake County Commissioner Anthony Sabatini took to X and shared:
“FLORIDA IS NOW AN OPEN CARRY STATE!”
“As a member of the Florida House of Representatives I fought for 4 years in Tallahassee for Open Carry—only to see my gun bills blocked by fake Republicans—thank you to Florida’s 1st District Court of Appeal for standing up for liberty while the Legislature failed.:
This content is imported from Twitter.
You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.
BREAKING—FLORIDA APPELLATE COURT STRIKES DOWN FLORIDA’S BAN AGAINST OPEN CARRY OF FIRE ARMS AS UNCONSTITUTIONAL—FLORIDA IS NOW AN OPEN CARRY STATE!
As a member of the Florida House of Representatives I fought for 4 years in Tallahassee for Open Carry—only to see my gun bills… pic.twitter.com/Dl3A2Uyqt1
The Orlando Police Department does not provide opinions on legislative or judicial decisions. Our role is to uphold and enforce all applicable state laws and city ordinances as they are established.
Statement from Flagler County Sheriff Rick Staly
This content is imported from Twitter.
You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.
>> The News Service of Florida contributed to this story
A student shot two of his peers Wednesday at a suburban Denver high school before shooting himself and later dying, authorities said.The handgun shooting was reported around 12:30 p.m. at Evergreen High School in Evergreen, Colorado, about 30 miles west of Denver in the Rocky Mountain foothills.Shots were fired both inside and outside the school building, and law enforcement officers who responded found the shooter within five minutes of arriving, Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office spokesperson Jacki Kelley said.None of the law enforcement officers who responded to the shooting fired any shots, Kelley said.More than 100 police officers from the surrounding area rushed to the school to try to help, Kelley said. A 1999 school shooting at Jefferson County’s Columbine High killed 14 people, including a woman who died earlier this year of complications from her injuries in the shooting.The teens were originally listed in critical condition, St. Anthony Hospital CEO Kevin Cullinan said. Their ages were not released.By early evening, one teen was in stable condition with what Dr. Brian Blackwood, the hospital’s trauma director, described as non-life threatening injuries. He declined to provide more details.The high school with more than 900 students is largely surrounded by forest. It is about a mile from the center of Evergreen, which has a population of 9,300 people.After the shooting, parents gathered outside a nearby elementary school waiting to reunite with their children.Wendy Nueman said her 15-year-old daughter, a sophomore at Evergreen High School, didn’t answer her phone right away after the shooting, The Denver Post reported. When her daughter finally called back, it was from a borrowed phone.“She just said she was OK. She couldn’t hardly speak,” Nueman said, holding back tears. She gathered that her daughter ran from the school.“It’s super scary,” she said. “We feel like we live in a little bubble here. Obviously, no one is immune.”Eighteen students who fled from the shooting took shelter at a home just down the road, after an initial group of them pounded on the door asking for help, resident Don Cygan told Denver’s KUSA-TV. One student said he heard gunshots while in the school’s cafeteria and ran out of the school, Cygan said.Cygan, a retired educator familiar with lockdown trainings to prepare for possible shootings, said he took down the names of all the students and the names of the parents who later arrived there to pick them up. His wife, a retired nurse, was able to calm the teens down and treat them for shock, he said.“I hope they feel like they ran to the right house,” he said._____Brown reported from Billings, Montana.
DENVER —
A student shot two of his peers Wednesday at a suburban Denver high school before shooting himself and later dying, authorities said.
The handgun shooting was reported around 12:30 p.m. at Evergreen High School in Evergreen, Colorado, about 30 miles west of Denver in the Rocky Mountain foothills.
Shots were fired both inside and outside the school building, and law enforcement officers who responded found the shooter within five minutes of arriving, Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office spokesperson Jacki Kelley said.
None of the law enforcement officers who responded to the shooting fired any shots, Kelley said.
More than 100 police officers from the surrounding area rushed to the school to try to help, Kelley said. A 1999 school shooting at Jefferson County’s Columbine High killed 14 people, including a woman who died earlier this year of complications from her injuries in the shooting.
The teens were originally listed in critical condition, St. Anthony Hospital CEO Kevin Cullinan said. Their ages were not released.
By early evening, one teen was in stable condition with what Dr. Brian Blackwood, the hospital’s trauma director, described as non-life threatening injuries. He declined to provide more details.
The high school with more than 900 students is largely surrounded by forest. It is about a mile from the center of Evergreen, which has a population of 9,300 people.
After the shooting, parents gathered outside a nearby elementary school waiting to reunite with their children.
Wendy Nueman said her 15-year-old daughter, a sophomore at Evergreen High School, didn’t answer her phone right away after the shooting, The Denver Post reported. When her daughter finally called back, it was from a borrowed phone.
“She just said she was OK. She couldn’t hardly speak,” Nueman said, holding back tears. She gathered that her daughter ran from the school.
“It’s super scary,” she said. “We feel like we live in a little bubble here. Obviously, no one is immune.”
Eighteen students who fled from the shooting took shelter at a home just down the road, after an initial group of them pounded on the door asking for help, resident Don Cygan told Denver’s KUSA-TV. One student said he heard gunshots while in the school’s cafeteria and ran out of the school, Cygan said.
Cygan, a retired educator familiar with lockdown trainings to prepare for possible shootings, said he took down the names of all the students and the names of the parents who later arrived there to pick them up. His wife, a retired nurse, was able to calm the teens down and treat them for shock, he said.
“I hope they feel like they ran to the right house,” he said.
Three teens were critically wounded in a shooting at a suburban Denver high school, including the suspected shooter, on Wednesday, authorities said.The shooting was reported around 12:30 p.m. at Evergreen High School in Evergreen, about 30 miles west of Denver, Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office spokesperson Jacki Kelley said.It is not clear what led up to the shooting or how the suspected shooter, believed to be a student at the school, was shot. None of the law enforcement officers who responded to the shooting is believed to have fired any shots, Kelley said.The shooting happened on school grounds but it wasn’t immediately known whether it was inside the school building, she said.All three teens taken to St. Anthony Hospital in Lakewood, Colorado, were shot, CEO Kevin Cullinan said.Over 100 police officers from around the Denver area rushed to the school to try to help, Kelley said. The sheriff’s office is the same agency that responded to the school shooting at the 1999 Columbine High School shooting that killed 14 people, including a woman who died earlier this year of complications from her injuries in the shooting.”This is the scariest thing that could ever happen, and these parents were really frightened, and so were the kids,” Kelley said. “And I know we say ‘never again,’ and here we are.”FBI Director Kash Patel said on X that the FBI is on scene and “in full support of local authorities.”
DENVER —
Three teens were critically wounded in a shooting at a suburban Denver high school, including the suspected shooter, on Wednesday, authorities said.
The shooting was reported around 12:30 p.m. at Evergreen High School in Evergreen, about 30 miles west of Denver, Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office spokesperson Jacki Kelley said.
It is not clear what led up to the shooting or how the suspected shooter, believed to be a student at the school, was shot. None of the law enforcement officers who responded to the shooting is believed to have fired any shots, Kelley said.
The shooting happened on school grounds but it wasn’t immediately known whether it was inside the school building, she said.
All three teens taken to St. Anthony Hospital in Lakewood, Colorado, were shot, CEO Kevin Cullinan said.
Over 100 police officers from around the Denver area rushed to the school to try to help, Kelley said. The sheriff’s office is the same agency that responded to the school shooting at the 1999 Columbine High School shooting that killed 14 people, including a woman who died earlier this year of complications from her injuries in the shooting.
“This is the scariest thing that could ever happen, and these parents were really frightened, and so were the kids,” Kelley said. “And I know we say ‘never again,’ and here we are.”
FBI Director Kash Patel said on X that the FBI is on scene and “in full support of local authorities.”
President Donald Trump’s administration said Friday that it is exploring whether the federal government can take control of the 9/11 memorial and museum in New York City.The site in lower Manhattan, where the World Trade Center’s twin towers were destroyed by hijacked jetliners on Sept. 11, 2001, features two memorial pools ringed by waterfalls and parapets with the names of the dead, and an underground museum. Since opening to the public in 2014, the memorial plaza and museum have been run by a public charity, now chaired by former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, a frequent Trump critic.The White House confirmed the administration has had “preliminary exploratory discussions” about the idea, but declined to elaborate. The office noted the Republican pledged during his campaign last year to make the site a national monument, protected and maintained by the federal government.But officials at the National September 11 Memorial & Museum say the federal government, under current laws, can’t unilaterally take over the site, which is located on land owned by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.The U.S. government shouldering costs and management of the site also “makes no sense,” given Trump’s efforts to dramatically pare back the federal bureaucracy, said Beth Hillman, the organization’s president and CEO.“We’re proud that our exhibitions tell stories of bravery and patriotism and are confident that our current operating model has served the public honorably and effectively,” she said, noting the organization has raised $750 million in private funds and welcomed some 90 million visitors since its opening.Last year, the museum generated more than $93 million in revenue and spent roughly $84 million on operating costs, leaving a nearly $9 million surplus when depreciation is factored in, according to museum officials and its most recently available tax filings.New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, meanwhile, voiced her own concerns about a federal takeover, citing the Trump administration’s recent efforts to influence how American history is told through its national monuments and museums, including the Smithsonian.The takeover idea also comes just months after the Trump administration briefly cut, but then restored, staffing at a federal program that provides health benefits to people with illnesses that might be linked to toxic dust from the destroyed World Trade Center.“The 9/11 Memorial belongs to New Yorkers — the families, survivors, and first responders who have carried this legacy for more than two decades and ensured we never forget,” Hochul said in a statement. “Before he meddles with this sacred site, the President should start by honoring survivors and supporting the families of victims.”Anthoula Katsimatides, a museum board member who lost her brother, John, in the attack, said she didn’t see any reason to change ownership.“They do an incredible job telling the story of that day without sugarcoating it,” she said. “It’s being run so well, I don’t see why there has to be a change. I don’t see what benefit there would be.”The memorial and museum, however, have also been the target of criticism over the years from some members of the large community of 9/11 victims’ families, some of whom have criticized ticket prices or called for changes in the makeup of the museum’s exhibits.Trump spokespersons declined to respond to the comments.In all, nearly 3,000 people were killed when the hijackers crashed jetliners into the World Trade Center, the Pentagon, and a field in southwest Pennsylvania during the Sept. 11 attacks. More than 2,700 of those victims perished in the fiery collapse of the trade center’s twin towers.
NEW YORK —
President Donald Trump’s administration said Friday that it is exploring whether the federal government can take control of the 9/11 memorial and museum in New York City.
The site in lower Manhattan, where the World Trade Center’s twin towers were destroyed by hijacked jetliners on Sept. 11, 2001, features two memorial pools ringed by waterfalls and parapets with the names of the dead, and an underground museum. Since opening to the public in 2014, the memorial plaza and museum have been run by a public charity, now chaired by former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, a frequent Trump critic.
The White House confirmed the administration has had “preliminary exploratory discussions” about the idea, but declined to elaborate. The office noted the Republican pledged during his campaign last year to make the site a national monument, protected and maintained by the federal government.
But officials at the National September 11 Memorial & Museum say the federal government, under current laws, can’t unilaterally take over the site, which is located on land owned by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.
The U.S. government shouldering costs and management of the site also “makes no sense,” given Trump’s efforts to dramatically pare back the federal bureaucracy, said Beth Hillman, the organization’s president and CEO.
“We’re proud that our exhibitions tell stories of bravery and patriotism and are confident that our current operating model has served the public honorably and effectively,” she said, noting the organization has raised $750 million in private funds and welcomed some 90 million visitors since its opening.
Last year, the museum generated more than $93 million in revenue and spent roughly $84 million on operating costs, leaving a nearly $9 million surplus when depreciation is factored in, according to museum officials and its most recently available tax filings.
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, meanwhile, voiced her own concerns about a federal takeover, citing the Trump administration’s recent efforts to influence how American history is told through its national monuments and museums, including the Smithsonian.
The takeover idea also comes just months after the Trump administration briefly cut, but then restored, staffing at a federal program that provides health benefits to people with illnesses that might be linked to toxic dust from the destroyed World Trade Center.
“The 9/11 Memorial belongs to New Yorkers — the families, survivors, and first responders who have carried this legacy for more than two decades and ensured we never forget,” Hochul said in a statement. “Before he meddles with this sacred site, the President should start by honoring survivors and supporting the families of victims.”
Anthoula Katsimatides, a museum board member who lost her brother, John, in the attack, said she didn’t see any reason to change ownership.
“They do an incredible job telling the story of that day without sugarcoating it,” she said. “It’s being run so well, I don’t see why there has to be a change. I don’t see what benefit there would be.”
The memorial and museum, however, have also been the target of criticism over the years from some members of the large community of 9/11 victims’ families, some of whom have criticized ticket prices or called for changes in the makeup of the museum’s exhibits.
Trump spokespersons declined to respond to the comments.
In all, nearly 3,000 people were killed when the hijackers crashed jetliners into the World Trade Center, the Pentagon, and a field in southwest Pennsylvania during the Sept. 11 attacks. More than 2,700 of those victims perished in the fiery collapse of the trade center’s twin towers.
The westbound lanes of Interstate 4 are closed on Thursday at noon after a crash, according to the Florida Highway Patrol. Troopers said the vehicle involved in the crash was traveling at a speed above the posted limit. This resulted in the vehicle running off the roadway and striking a sign pole. FHP said one of the occupants was ejected from the vehicle, while another was able to crawl out.Both occupants were transported to a hospital in critical condition. Some westbound lanes are currently shut down near the Seminole and Volusia county line as officials investigate the crash.
The westbound lanes of Interstate 4 are closed on Thursday at noon after a crash, according to the Florida Highway Patrol.
Troopers said the vehicle involved in the crash was traveling at a speed above the posted limit. This resulted in the vehicle running off the roadway and striking a sign pole.
FHP said one of the occupants was ejected from the vehicle, while another was able to crawl out.
Both occupants were transported to a hospital in critical condition.
Some westbound lanes are currently shut down near the Seminole and Volusia county line as officials investigate the crash.
I was conferencing with a group of students when I heard the excitement building across my third grade classroom. A boy at the back table had been working on his catapult project for over an hour through our science lesson, into recess, and now during personalized learning time. I watched him adjust the wooden arm for what felt like the 20th time, measure another launch distance, and scribble numbers on his increasingly messy data sheet.
“The longer arm launches farther!” he announced to no one in particular, his voice carrying the matter-of-fact tone of someone who had just uncovered a truth about the universe. I felt that familiar teacher thrill, not because I had successfully delivered a physics lesson, but because I hadn’t taught him anything at all.
Last year, all of my students chose a topic they wanted to explore and pursued a personal learning project about it. This particular student had discovered the relationship between lever arm length and projectile distance entirely through his own experiments, which involved mathematics, physics, history, and data visualization.
Other students drifted over to try his longer-armed design, and soon, a cluster of 8-year-olds were debating trajectory angles and comparing medieval siege engines to ancient Chinese catapults.
They were doing exactly what I dream of as an educator: learning because they wanted to know, not because they had to perform.
Then, just recently, I read about the American Federation of Teachers’ new $23 million partnership with Microsoft, OpenAI, and Anthropic to train educators how to use AI “wisely, safely and ethically.” The training sessions would teach them how to generate lesson plans and “microwave” routine communications with artificial intelligence.
My heart sank.
As an elementary teacher who also conducts independent research on the intersection of AI and education, and writes the ‘Algorithmic Mind’ column about it for Psychology Today, I live in the uncomfortable space between what technology promises and what children actually need. Yes, I use AI, but only for administrative work like drafting parent newsletters, organizing student data, and filling out required curriculum planning documents. It saves me hours on repetitive tasks that have nothing to do with teaching.
I’m all for showing educators how to use AI to cut down on rote work. But I fear the AFT’s $23 million initiative isn’t about administrative efficiency. According to their press release, they’re training teachers to use AI for “instructional planning” and as a “thought partner” for teaching decisions. One featured teacher describes using AI tools to help her communicate “in the right voice” when she’s burned out. Another says AI can assist with “late-night lesson planning.”
That sounds more like outsourcing the foundational work of teaching.
Watching my student discover physics principles through intrinsic curiosity reminded me why this matters so much. When we start relying on AI to plan our lessons and find our teaching voice, we’re replacing human judgment with algorithmic thinking at the very moment students need us most. We’re prioritizing the product of teaching over the process of learning.
Most teachers I talk to share similar concerns about AI. They focus on cheating and plagiarism. They worry about students outsourcing their thinking and how to assess learning when they can’t tell if students actually understand anything. The uncomfortable truth is that students have always found ways to avoid genuine thinking when we value products over process. I used SparkNotes. Others used Google. Now, students use ChatGPT.
The problem is not technology; it’s that we continue prioritizing finished products over messy learning processes. And as long as education rewards predetermined answers over curiosity, students will find shortcuts.
That’s why teachers need professional development that moves in the opposite direction. They need PD that helps them facilitate genuine inquiry and human connection; foster classrooms where confusion is valued as a precursor to understanding; and develop in students an intrinsic motivation.
When I think about that boy measuring launch distances with handmade tools, I realize he was demonstrating the distinctly human capacity to ask questions that only he wanted to address. He didn’t need me to structure his investigation or discovery. He needed the freedom to explore, materials to experiment with, and time to pursue his curiosity wherever it led.
The learning happened not because I efficiently delivered content, but because I stepped back and trusted his natural drive to understand.
Children don’t need teachers who can generate lesson plans faster or give AI-generated feedback, but educators who can inspire questions, model intellectual courage, and create communities where wonder thrives and real-world problems are solved.
The future belongs to those who can combine computational tools with human wisdom, ethics, and creativity. But this requires us to maintain the cognitive independence to guide AI systems rather than becoming dependent on them.
Every time I watch my students make unexpected connections, I’m reminded that the most important learning happens in the spaces between subjects, in the questions that emerge from genuine curiosity, in the collaborative thinking that builds knowledge through relationships. We can’t microwave that. And we shouldn’t try.
Chalkbeat is a nonprofit news site covering educational change in public schools.
For more news on AI in education, visit eSN’s Digital Learning hub.
Timothy Cook, Chalkbeat
Timothy Cook, M.Ed., teaches third grade and researches AI’s impact on education. He writes about cognitive development and technology at Psychology Today.
Latest posts by eSchool Media Contributors (see all)
Building fire reported on South Wilson Way in Stockton
WE BEGIN WITH BREAKING NEWS. THAT BREAKING NEWS WE’RE FOLLOWING AT THE STATE CAPITOL RIGHT NOW. CALIFORNIA VOTERS WILL HEAD TO THE POLLS THIS NOVEMBER TO DECIDE ON NEW CONGRESSIONAL MAPS. LAWMAKERS PASSED LEGISLATION WITHIN THE LAST HOUR ADVANCING THE PLAN THAT COULD HELP DEMOCRATS WIN FIVE MORE SEATS IN THE U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. THANKS FOR JOINING US AT 4:00. I’M LISA GONZALEZ, AND I’M KURTIS MING. RIGHT NOW, DEMOCRATS ARE GATHERING TO SIGN A COUPLE OF THE BILLS PASSED TODAY. THEY’RE TALKING AHEAD OF THIS. THE SPECIAL ELECTION BILL. NOW, THAT ONE DOES NOT NEED THE GOVERNOR’S SIGNATURE, BUT GOVERNOR NEWSOM WILL SIGN A COUPLE OF PIECES OF LEGISLATION THAT OUTLINE THE LOGISTICS FOR AND PROVIDE THE MONEY FOR THAT SPECIAL ELECTION. THE GOAL OF ALL OF THIS IS TO HELP DEMOCRATS WIN FIVE MORE U.S. HOUSE SEATS IN 2026. YOU WILL VOTE ON THOSE MAPS IN NOVEMBER. DEMOCRATS SAY IT IS A RESPONSE TO TEXAS REPUBLICANS PUSH TO REDRAW THE STATE’S CONGRESSIONAL MAP AT PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP’S URGING, BUT REPUBLICANS SAY IT IS A POWER GRAB BY CALIFORNIA DEMOCRATS. I WANT TO START BY SAYING WHAT THIS IS NOT ABOUT. IT IS NOT ABOUT TEXAS. AND ACTUALLY, YOU ALL JUST CONCEDED THAT BY YOUR VOTE THIS MORNING WHEN YOU AMENDED ACA TO TAKE OUT TEXAS AS A CONDITION, AND THAT THIS BILL THAT YOU ARE VOTING ON RIGHT NOW DOESN’T HAVE TEXAS AS A CONDITION AND COMMITS CALIFORNIA TO GOING BACK TO GERRYMANDERING. AND YOU SHOULD REALLY THINK TWICE BEFORE YOU GO AHEAD AND DO THAT TODAY. ACA IS A DIRECT RESPONSE TO THE LIFE THREATENING POLICIES THAT TRUMP AND THIS MAJORITY CONGRESS HAVE TAKEN. AND THIS ACA IS OUR OPPORTUNITY. THE PEOPLE’S OPPORTUNITY TO EMPOWER CALIFORNIANS TO NEUTRALIZE THAT THREAT. YOU CAN STAY UPDATED ON THIS REDISTRICTING PUSH AS WE APPROACH THE SPECIAL ELECTION. GO TO THE KCRA THREE APP. BE SURE TO TURN ON BREAKING NEWS ALERTS FOR ANY NEW DEVELOPMENTS. ALL RIGHT. WE’RE FOLLOWING THE HOT WEATHER IT IS MAKING TODAY A KCRA 3 IMPACT DAY. WE’VE GOT A LIVE LOOK FROM SACRAMENTO AND STOCKTON FROM OUR WILL HERYFORD SKYCAM TEMPERATURES EXPECTED TO BE IN THE TRIPLE DIGITS TODAY AFTER A MILD JULY. AUGUST IS BRINGING THE WEATHER WE EXPECT FOR SUMMER. WE’VE GOT LIVE TEAM COVERAGE ON THIS HOT WEATHER. KCRA 3’S DENEEKA HILL SPOKE WITH PEOPLE WORKING OUTSIDE AND HOW THEY’RE TRYING TO STAY COOL. BUT LET’S BEGIN WITH METEOROLOGIST HEATHER WALDMAN WITH MORE ON THE CONDITIONS. HEATHER. YEAH, WE ARE IN THE TRIPLE DIGITS UP AND DOWN THE VALLEY AND INTO THE DELTA AS WELL. SO FAR, THE HIGHEST NUMBER I’VE SEEN FOR EXECUTIVE AIRPORT IN SACRAMENTO 101 STOCKTON AS HIGH AS 104 DEGREES MODESTO STILL JUST SHY OF 199 DEGREES. BUT ALL OF THESE LOCATIONS, EITHER ABOVE A RECORD OR WITHIN A COUPLE DEGREES OF ONE STOCKTON SO FAR, THE ONLY SPOT TO BREAK A DAILY RECORD HIGH. NO REPORTS FROM MARYSVILLE THAT GAUGE THERE HASN’T BEEN WORKING FOR THE LAST FEW DAYS. HOPEFULLY IT COMES BACK SOON, BUT YOU’VE SEEN THE BLANK SPOT ON OUR MAP HERE THROUGHOUT THE WEEK. WE’RE AWARE OF IT 104 RIGHT NOW IN FAIRFIELD AND IN STOCKTON, WE’RE IN THE UPPER 90S IN FAIRFIELD, 91 DEGREES IN PLACERVILLE. WE’RE IN THE UPPER 80S IN TRUCKEE. THERE IS AN ONSHORE BREEZE, BUT THERE’S NO COOL AIR TO BACK IT UP. SO TONIGHT IS GOING TO BE ANOTHER MILD NIGHT WITH TEMPERATURES STAYING IN THE MID TO UPPER 60S AS WE GO INTO THE DAY ON FRIDAY, EXPECT MORE OF THE SAME VALLEY TEMPERATURES IN THE MID 80S. BY LATE MORNING NEAR 100 DEGREES BY NOON 1:00. AND WE’LL SPEND A COUPLE OF HOURS BETWEEN 101 AND 104 AGAIN TOMORROW AFTERNOON WE WILL START TO SEE THE HEAT EASING SOMEWHAT THIS WEEKEND. I’LL SHOW Y
A building fire was reported on South Wilson Way in Stockton Thursday evening.Video Above | 4 p.m. Headlines from KCRA News 3It was reported near Crosstown Freeway around 7:20 p.m.Fire crews are on scene.It is unclear what caused the fire.This story was curated by Hearst’s KCRA Alert Desk.See news happening? Send us your photos or videos if it’s safe to do so at kcra.com/upload.If this story happened near you or someone you know, share this article with friends in your area using the KCRA mobile app so they know what is happening near them. The KCRA app is available for free in Apple’s App Store and on Google Play.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel
STOCKTON, Calif. —
A building fire was reported on South Wilson Way in Stockton Thursday evening.
Video Above | 4 p.m. Headlines from KCRA News 3
It was reported near Crosstown Freeway around 7:20 p.m.
Fire crews are on scene.
It is unclear what caused the fire.
This story was curated by Hearst’s KCRA Alert Desk.
See news happening? Send us your photos or videos if it’s safe to do so at kcra.com/upload.
If this story happened near you or someone you know, share this article with friends in your area using the KCRA mobile app so they know what is happening near them. The KCRA app is available for free in Apple’s App Store and on Google Play.
THIS IS KCRA THREE NEWS AT FIVE. WHAT IS A KCRA 3 WEATHER IMPACT DAY TODAY? OUR TEAM IS TRACKING TRIPLE DIGIT TEMPERATURES AND THEN SOME. THE AREAS THAT COULD BREAK RECORDS TODAY. CREWS BATTLE A WILDFIRE THAT’S PROMPTING AN EVACUATION WARNING IN EL DORADO COUNTY. THE PROGRESS THEY’VE MADE SO FAR. STATE LAWMAKERS SET TO VOTE TODAY ON LEGISLATION THAT WILL PROMPT A SPECIAL ELECTION ON REDISTRICTING THIS NOVEMBER. WHERE THINGS STAND RIGHT NOW. WELL, TODAY IS A KCRA 3 WEATHER IMPACT DAY, AND THIS MORNING WE’RE BRACING FOR A STRETCH OF TRIPLE DIGIT TEMPERATURES IN OUR FORECAST. AND THAT’S EXPECTED TO LAST THROUGH THE WEEKEND. GOOD MORNING AND THANKS FOR BEING WITH US. I’M MELANIE WINGO IN FOR DEIRDRE FITZPATRICK AND I’M TEO TORRES. LET’S HEAD RIGHT NOW TO METEOROLOGIST TAMARA BERG. YOU’VE BEEN SAYING THIS FOR DAYS, TAM. YEAH. THE HEAT IS BUILDING, AND YESTERDAY WE GOT A LITTLE TASTE OF WHAT TO EXPECT. HERE’S A LIVE LOOK OUTSIDE RIGHT NOW IN DOWNTOWN SACRAMENTO. EVEN OUR MORNING TEMPERATURES ARE FEELING A BIT UP A LITTLE BIT, ESPECIALLY IF YOU’RE AN EARLY RISER AND THIS IS YOUR TYPICAL WAKE UP TIME IN THE 5:00 HOUR. YOU MAY STEP BACK THAT WARM COFFEE AND SAY, ALL RIGHT, I’M GOING TO PUT IT OVER ICE AT THIS POINT BECAUSE IT IS A MILDER START TO THE DAY. THE HEAT WILL BUILD TODAY WITH VALLEY HIGHS 100 TO ABOUT 105 IN THE FOOTHILLS, EYEING MID AND UPPER 90S. I’M ALSO GOING TO BE WATCHING FOR SOME INCREASING CLOUD COVER AS MONSOON MOISTURE STEERS INTO OUR NECK OF THE WOODS STARTING THIS AFTERNOON. RIGHT NOW, 65 DEGREES OUT THE DOOR IN SACRAMENTO, 63. AS YOU’LL NOTICE IN FAIRFIELD. WELL, YOU HAVE JUST A TOUCH OF A DELTA BREEZE. THERE’S NO COOL AIR THAT’S COMING IN ON TOP OF IT. 62 RIGHT NOW. STOCKTON 66 FOR YOUR START TO THE DAY IN MODESTO. WE’RE IN THE LOW 70S IN AUBURN AND PLACERVILLE AND HANGING ON TO LOW 40S UP AT THE TOP IN TRUCKEE AND TAHOE, WHERE THERE’S NOT MUCH WIND. IN FACT, THE AIR ACROSS THE REGION IS PRETTY STAGNANT FOR THE MOST PART. NOT MUCH OF A BREEZE IN STOCKTON MODESTO. AND THERE’S THAT SOUTHWEST WIND AT NINE IN FAIRFIELD. BUT AS I MENTIONED ALREADY, NO COOL AIR ON TOP OF IT AS WE’RE JUST NOT SEEING THE MARINE LAYER. IT’S REALLY KIND OF SQUASHED DOWN FOR THE MOST PART ALONG THE COAST. SO THE DAY AHEAD, PLAN FOR THE HEAT AND HAVE A HEAT PLAN, ESPECIALLY AS THE KIDS ARE BACK IN THE CLASSROOMS, BACK TO SCHOOL AND YOU’RE HEADING INTO THE OFFICE, TRY TO DO ANY STRENUOUS ACTIVITY BEFORE LUNCHTIME WHEN THOSE TEMPERATURES ARE IN THE 70S TO LOWER 80S, AND THEN WE GET BEYOND LUNCHTIME, WE START TO REALLY HEAT UP WITH THOSE HIGHS AGAIN IN THE VALLEY FEATURED 100 TO AS HIGH AS 105 IN A FEW SPOTS IN THE NEXT TEN MINUTES. A CLOSER LOOK AT THE FORECAST DIALED INTO YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD. IT’S 502 RIGHT NOW. GOOD MORNING BRIAN, WHAT ARE YOU TRACKING FOR EARLY COMMUTERS? WE’RE GOING TO START HERE ALONG INTERSTATE 80. AS YOU MAKE YOUR WAY INTO THE SPLIT. AND IF YOU’RE HEADING OFF TO SACRAMENTO OR OFF INTO WEST SACRAMENTO, ALL CLEAR ON THAT STRETCH OUT THROUGH THE CAUSEWAY AND BEYOND, THROUGH TO THE BAY AREA. INTERSTATE 80 OUT OF ROSEVILLE. ALSO CLEAR AND 50 OUT OF FOLSOM. NO PROBLEMS HERE. WE’RE LOOKING AT I-5 NOW AND 99 FROM ELK GROVE. A LOT OF GREEN ON THE MAP. NO DELAYS HERE FOR STOCKTON. ALSO INCIDENT FREE ACROSS HIGHWAY FOUR AND 12. HEADING OFF INTO THE DELTA. EARLIER HIGHWAY FOUR A LITTLE BIT FURTHER DOWN THERE WAS A FIRE NEAR A BART STATION, BUT THAT SO FAR IS OUT, NOT CAUSING ANY DELAYS ON THE FREEWAY, BUT IT WAS PUTTING SOME SMOKE UP FOR A LITTLE BIT. 205 OVER TO 580 A MINOR DELAY ACROSS THE TOP RIGHT NOW, JUST BREAKING INTO THE RED AT 25 MINUTES ON THE TRACY TRIANGLE. 580 OVER THE ALTAMONT PASS, 26 MINUTES. 12 MINUTES BETWEEN MODESTO AND MANTECA HERE IN SACRAMENTO. NINE MINUTES OUT OF ROSEVILLE ON 80. 15 MINUTES OUT OF FOLSOM ON 50. 99 IS A NINE MINUTE RIDE I5 11 MINUTES COMING IN FROM ELK GROVE. ALL RIGHT. THANK YOU SO MUCH, BRIAN. SO WE’RE FOLLOWING BREAKING NEWS RIGHT NOW OUT OF EL DORADO COUNTY THIS MORNING. AN EVACUATION WARNING IS IN PLACE DUE TO THE COYOTE FIRE. THAT FIRE STARTED JUST AFTER 2:00 YESTERDAY AFTERNOON NEAR CEDAR CREEK ROAD AND COYOTE HILL LANE. IN THE SOMERSET AREA. SO HERE’S SOME VIDEO OF THE FIRE FROM OVERNIGHT. THIS IS FROM AN ALERT WILDFIRE CAMERA. AS OF THE LATEST UPDATE FROM CAL FIRE. THE FIRE HAS BURNED JUST OVER 550 ACRES. NO CONTAINMENT ON THIS ONE JUST YET. THE CAUSE OF THE FIRE IS UNDER INVESTIGATION. AND THE FLAMES ARE TRIGGERING THAT EVACUATION WARNING WE TALKED ABOUT. AND THAT MEANS PEOPLE LIVING IN THE AREAS SHADED HERE ON THIS MAP SHOULD BE PREPARED TO LEAVE AT A MOMENT’S NOTICE. THAT WARNING IS WEST AND SOUTH OF OMO RANCH ROAD AND NORTH OF THE AMADOR COUNTY LINE. AUTHORITIES SAY THE BEST WAY OUT IS MOUNT AUKUM ROAD. MEANTIME, A PART OF HIGHWAY 108 IS CLOSED THIS MORNING AFTER A FAST-MOVING GRASS FIRE DESTROYED ONE BUILDING AND DAMAGED THREE OTHERS. THE FIRE SPARKED AROUND 4:00 YESTERDAY NEAR THE COMMUNITY OF RIVERBANK. HIGHWAY 108 IS CLOSED BETWEEN SLOUGHHOUSE AND SNEDEGAR ROADS. FIRE CREWS SAY THE FLAMES JUMPED HIGHWAY 108 DUE TO STRONG WIND. AT ONE POINT, THERE WAS ABOUT 40 FIRE ENGINES FIGHTING THE FLAMES. WE SPOKE TO A NEIGHBOR WHO JUMPED IN TO SAVE HIS OWN HOUSE. MY SISTER, SHE CAME INTO MY ROOM SCREAMING LIKE, HEY, THE HOUSE IS ON FIRE. SO ME, I’M THE BIG BROTHER OF THE HOUSE. SO I JUMP INTO SURVIVAL MODE, GRABBED THE WATER HOSE AND I RAN OUTSIDE TRYING TO SPRAY THE FIRE UNTIL THE FIRE DEPARTMENT GETS HERE. HE SAYS HE AND HIS FAMILY ARE THANKFUL THE CREWS ARRIVED IN TIME, AND THAT THEIR HOME WAS SPARED. FIRE IS NOW FULLY CONTAINED. IT BURNED 10 TO 15 ACRES. THE CAUSE IS. IT DID CAUSE A POWER OUTAGE. WE UNDERSTAND RIGHT NOW ABOUT 200 CUSTOMERS ARE STILL IN THE DARK. THEY EXPECT TO RESTORE POWER BY 6:00. THE MODESTO FIRE DEPARTMENT SAYS CREWS ARE KEEPING AN EYE OUT FOR ANY FLARE UPS HERE. NO WORD ON HOW IT STARTED. RIGHT NOW, PEOPLE IN EL DORADO COUNTY AND AMADOR COUNTY ARE ASKED TO BE ON THE LOOKOUT FOR AN AT RISK MISSING PERSON. TAKE A LOOK. THIS IS 85 YEAR OLD GEORGANN WILMOT. OFFICIALS SAY SHE’S BEEN MISSING SINCE 7:00 LAST NIGHT. AND SHE WAS LAST SEEN IN PLACERVILLE WEARING A LIGHT BLUE LONG SLEEVED SHIRT AND BLUE JEANS. SHE’S BELIEVED TO BE DRIVING A BLUE 2013 TOYOTA PRIUS WITH THE LICENSE PLATE NUMBER THAT’S ON YOUR SCREEN. IT’S SEVEN C 512. IF YOU SEE HER, CALL 911. NOW TO A LIVE LOOK AT THE STATE CAPITOL BUILDING. AND STATE LAWMAKERS ARE EXPECTED TO VOTE TODAY ON LEGISLATION THAT COULD LAUNCH A STATEWIDE SPECIAL ELECTION ON REDISTRICTING. DEMOCRATS ARE PUSHING FOR A SPECIAL ELECTION IN NOVEMBER SO CALIFORNIANS CAN VOTE ON NEW MAPS TO POTENTIALLY SEND FIVE MORE DEMOCRATS TO THE U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. A BILL WAS INTRODUCED MONDAY. IT WILL BE VOTED ON LATER TODAY. LAWMAKERS WILL HEAR ARGUMENTS FROM BOTH SIDES BEGINNING AT 9 A.M. MEANTIME, CALIFORNIA SUPREME COURT REJECTED A REQUEST FROM REPUBLICANS TO FREEZE THE EFFORT TO REDRAW CALIFORNIA’S CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICTS. REPUBLICANS FILED AN EMERGENCY PETITION EARLIER THIS WEEK. THEY CLAIMED CALIFORNIA DEMOCRATS VIOLATED THE STATE CONSTITUTION BY NOT WAITING 30 DAYS BEFORE TAKING ACTION ON REDISTRICTING LEGISLATION. THE CHIEF JUSTICE WROTE THAT REPUBLICANS FAILED TO MEET THEIR BURDEN OF ESTABLISHING A BASIS FOR RELIEF. AT THIS TIME. FORMER PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA IS BACKING GOVERNOR GAVIN NEWSOM’S REDISTRICTING MAP. HE GAVE IT THAT ENDORSEMENT WHILE HE SPOKE AT A FUND RAISER FOR THE NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC REDISTRICTING COMMITTEE. THAT’S A GROUP THAT WORKS TO FIGHT GERRYMANDERING. OBAMA SAYS IT WOULD BE HIS PREFERENCE TO NOT HAVE POLITICAL GERRYMANDERING. BUT HE SAYS HE SUPPORTS CALIFORNIA’S EFFORT, GIVEN THAT EFFORT IN TEXAS THAT’S GOING ON RIGHT NOW TO APPROVE NEW MAPS THAT WOULD TURN OVER FIVE CONGRESSIONAL SEATS TO REPUBLICANS THERE. HE CALLS CALIFORNIA DEMOCRATS STANCE A, QUOTE, RESPONSIBLE APPROACH. MEANWHILE, IN TEXAS, THE STATE’S LOWER HOUSE APPROVED THE REDISTRICTING BILL THAT’S DESIGNED TO SEND FIVE MORE REPUBLICANS TO CONGRESS. THIS IS THE BILL THAT SPURRED GOVERNOR NEWSOM’S PUSH FOR CALIFORNIA’S REDISTRICTING PLAN. THE TEXAS SENATE IS EXPECTED TO TAKE UP THE BILL IN COMMITTEE THIS MORNING, AND TEXAS GOVERNOR GREG ABBOTT IS POISED TO SIGN IT QUICKLY AFTER THE SENATE APPROVES IT. MORE SEMIFINALISTS FOR THE JOB OF SACRAMENTO CITY MANAGER WILL INTERVIEW FOR THE ROLE NEXT MONTH. A COUNCIL MEMBER, RICK JENNINGS OFFICE SAYS 94 PEOPLE APPLIED FOR THE POSITION. A SMALLER POOL OF APPLICANTS MADE IT TO THE PRELIMINARY INTERVIEWS, THE FIRST OF WHICH WERE ON WEDNESDAY. THE NEXT WILL BE SEPTEMBER 2ND. AFTER THOSE TWO INTERVIEWS, SESSIONS WRAP UP, A HANDFUL OF CANDIDATES WILL ADVANCE TO THE ROUND OF FINALISTS. JENNINGS OFFICE SAYS CITY LEADERS HOPE TO HAVE A DECISION ON THE NEXT CITY MANAGER BY THE MIDDLE OF NEXT MONTH. WELL, AS WE TALKED ABOUT AT THE TOP OF THE NEWSCAST TODAY IS A KCRA 3 WEATHER IMPACT DAY, AND WE’RE EXPECTED TO HIT TRIPLE DIGIT TEMPERATURES LATER TODAY. THE HEAT IS PROMPTING SEVERAL WEATHER RESPITE CENTERS TO OPEN IN SACRAMENTO COUNTY. THAT INCLUDES THE WARREN E THORNTON YOUTH CENTER. IT WILL BE OPEN FROM TODAY AT ONE AND STAY OPEN UNTIL TEN MONDAY MORNING. THE OUTREACH ENGAGEMENT CENTER ON AUBURN BOULEVARD WILL BE OPEN FROM 10 A.M. TOMORROW TO 8 A.M. SUNDAY. THE SAM AND BONNIE PARNELL COMMUNITY CENTER WILL ALSO OPEN TOMORROW FROM 8 A.M. TO 8 P.M. CALL 211. BEFORE YOU GO TO CHECK CAPACITY THERE, FLIERS ARE AVAILABLE FOR FREE SAC RT BUS RIDES TO THOSE CENTERS ON ANY DAY THAT HITS 100 DEGREES. CITRUS HEIGHTS POLICE WILL OPEN THEIR LOBBY ON FOUNTAIN SQUARE DRIVE FROM NOON TO EIGHT. AND ELK GROVE, THE WACKFORD COMMUNITY COMPLEX, WILL OPEN AS A COOLING CENTER FROM 1 TO 8 P.M. BOTH TODAY AND TOMORROW. OKAY, AT 509, WE’RE GOING TO TURN THINGS OVER AGAIN TO TAMARA BERG AND TAMARA. I THINK IT ALWAYS BEARS REPEATING WHEN WE TALK ABOUT A HEAT WAVE, THAT MEANS SORT OF A CHUNK OF TIME WHEN WE HAVE TRIPLE DIGIT TEMPERATURES, YOU KNOW, PROLONGED HEAT, ESPECIALLY INTO THE AFTERNOON HOURS. NOW, TODAY IS GOING TO MARK ANOTHER DAY OF HOT TEMPERATURES. YESTERDAY WE KIND OF STARTED THINGS OUT. WE HAD A HIGH OF 100 AND SACRAMENTO. YOU LOOK AT THE SATELLITE LOOP FOR THE MORNING, WHAT’S INTERESTING IS THERE’S NOT A LOT OF DETAIL TO SHOW YOU. TYPICALLY, MOST MORNINGS I TALK ABOUT THE MARINE LAYER, BUT IT’S JUST KIND OF SQUASHED OUT OR GONE IN MOST SPOTS. THERE’S SOME PATCHES OF FOG ALONG THE WATER THERE IN SAN FRANCISCO DOWN TOWARDS MONTEREY, BUT THAT’S ABOUT IT. YOU CAN ALSO SEE A FEW HIGH CLOUDS HERE OVER PARTS OF THE DESERT, AND EXPECT THAT SOME OF THESE CLOUDS WILL KIND OF FAN THEIR WAY INTO NORTHERN CALIFORNIA DURING THE AFTERNOON. RIGHT NOW, 62 DEGREES, ONE OF THE COOL SPOTS IS STOCKTON. GOOD MORNING FAIRFIELD HEADING OUT THE DOOR TO 63 AT 65 RIGHT NOW IN SACRAMENTO. 70 FOR YOU IN AUBURN AND WAKING UP TO 41 IN TRUCKEE. I DO EXPECT TODAY IN THE MOUNTAINS. WHILE THOSE CLOUDS WILL BUBBLE UP ALONG THE CREST OF THE SIERRA, NOT EXPECTING THUNDERSTORMS IN TRUCKEE OR TAHOE BASIN, IT’S GOING TO BE A HOT DAY TODAY. PLAN FOR THAT IN QUINCY WITH A HIGH OF 198 FOR YOSEMITE FOOTHILLS PLANNER TODAY. EXPECTING MID AND UPPER 90S FOR 98. IN SONORA TO 97 IN PLACERVILLE. MID 90S TODAY IN GRASS VALLEY AND NEVADA CITY. WE’LL BE IN THE UPPER 90S AROUND LAKEPORT WITH THOSE INCREASING CLOUDS IN THE AFTERNOON HUNDRED TODAY IN FAIRFIELD, NOW CLOSER TO THE WATER, YOU GET SOME RELIEF FROM THE TRIPLE DIGITS AT 78 TODAY IN SAN FRANCISCO. IT’S HOT TODAY. LODI MAKE A PLAN FOR THE HEAT 101 STOCKTON STEPPING UP TO AS HOT AS 105 TRACY 102 MODESTO AT 102. AND TODAY IN SACRAMENTO, IF WE HIT THAT 103 MARK, WE’RE GOING TO BE TYING THE RECORD ON THIS DAY. BROKEN BACK IN THE 1960S. ALL THE CLOSER LOOK AT HOW LONG NUMBERS LIKE THIS WILL STICK AROUND FOR COMING UP IN TEN MINUTES. IT’S 511. BRIAN, WHAT ARE YOU TRACKING FOR OUR COMMUTERS? EASY DRIVING HERE IN THE SACRAMENTO AREA AT THE MOMENT. AS YOU’RE HEADING OUT ON TO THE CAUSEWAY FROM WEST SACRAMENTO, OUT TOWARDS DAVIS. NO PROBLEMS HERE. EAST AND WESTBOUND. AND THEN ALSO LOOKING AT 80 COMING IN FROM ROSEVILLE. STILL ALL CLEAR. HIGHWAY 50 CLEAR OUT OF FOLSOM AS YOU MAKE YOUR WAY IN AND I 99 NORTHBOUND OUT OF ELK GROVE. NO DELAYS THERE THROUGH STOCKTON HIGHWAY 12 OUT OF LODI, ACROSS 99. ALL CLEAR THERE. AS YOU CAN SEE ACROSS THE MAP, JUST A WHOLE LOT OF GREEN THERE. WHERE WE DO RUN INTO SOME RED IS ACROSS THE TOP OF THE TRACY TRIANGLE THAT IS BUILDING NOW AT 27 MINUTES FROM I-5 TO FIVE 8580 OVER THE ALTAMONT PASS, A 26 MINUTE RIDE AS YOU MAKE YOUR WAY FROM 205 TO 680. 99 FROM MODESTO TO MANTECA A 12 MINUTE RIDE, NO DELAYS ON 120. AND HERE IN SACRAMENTO, 80, 50, 99 AND I-5 CURRENTLY RUNNING AT THE SPEED LIMIT. BACK TO YOU. GOOD DEAL. THANKS, BRIAN. YOUR TIME RIGHT NOW. 512. VOTING AS MANY STATES KNOW, IT COULD SOON CHANGE. PRESIDENT TRUMP IS LOOKING TO CHANGE THE WAY YOU CAST YOUR BALLOT. I’M RACHEL HERSHBERGER AT THE WHITE HOUSE WITH HOW A POPULAR WAY OF VOTING
A house fire was reported Thursday morning in south Sacramento.Fire crews were dispatched around 6:38 a.m. to a property on 39th Street south of 14th Avenue in the South Oak Park neighborhood. It was unclear what caused the fire, if anyone was injured or the extent of any damage. This story was curated by Hearst’s KCRA Alert Desk.See news happening? Send us your photos or videos if it’s safe to do so at kcra.com/upload.If this story happened near you or someone you know, share this article with friends in your area using the KCRA mobile app so they know what is happening near them. The KCRA app is available for free in Apple’s App Store and on Google Play.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel
SACRAMENTO, Calif. —
A house fire was reported Thursday morning in south Sacramento.
Fire crews were dispatched around 6:38 a.m. to a property on 39th Street south of 14th Avenue in the South Oak Park neighborhood.
It was unclear what caused the fire, if anyone was injured or the extent of any damage.
This story was curated by Hearst’s KCRA Alert Desk.
See news happening? Send us your photos or videos if it’s safe to do so at kcra.com/upload.
If this story happened near you or someone you know, share this article with friends in your area using the KCRA mobile app so they know what is happening near them. The KCRA app is available for free in Apple’s App Store and on Google Play.
Person taken to hospital with life-threatening injuries after being shot multiple times in Sacramento
BOTH SIDES. SACTOWN DEPUTIES ARE NOW SEARCHING FOR THE GUNMAN WHO CRITICALLY INJURED SOMEBODY. THIS IS HAPPENING IN A SOUTH SACRAMENTO NEIGHBORHOOD OFF OF 39TH STREET, NORTH OF 39TH AVENUE. THE SHERIFF’S OFFICE SAYS THE PERSON WAS SHOT SEVERAL TIMES. KCRA 3’S CAROLINA ESTRADA JOINS US LIVE NOW FROM THAT AREA. WHAT HAVE YOU BEEN ABLE TO LEARN? RILEY EDIE. WE KNOW THE MAN THAT WAS SHOT RIGHT NOW IS FIGHTING FOR HIS LIFE AT THE HOSPITAL. HE’S IN CRITICAL CONDITION. ACCORDING TO WHAT DEPUTIES TELL US OUT HERE IN SOUTH SACRAMENTO, WE ARE RIGHT NOW ON 39TH STREET AND MASCOT AVENUE. THIS IS WHERE IT ALL UNFOLDED, WHERE THE SHOOTING HAPPENED AND HAS NOW TURNED INTO A CRIME SCENE. LET ME GIVE YOU A LOOK AT WHAT WE’RE SEEING OUT HERE. FIRST, I WANT TO DRAW YOUR ATTENTION TO THAT TREE THAT YOU SEE THERE, WHERE THE DEPUTIES ARE ALL SURROUNDED. THAT’S THE AREA WHERE THEY HAVE BEEN FOCUSING THEIR INVESTIGATION. THAT’S BECAUSE THAT’S WHERE THE MAN WAS WALKING MINUTES BEFORE HE WAS SHOT. THAT’S WHERE THAT SHOOTING TOOK PLACE. DEPUTIES TELL US THEY HAVE FOUND SEVERAL SHELL CASINGS HERE IN THE AREA. ACTUALLY, IF YOU TAKE A LOOK OVER ON THE SIDE OF THE ROAD HERE, YOU CAN SEE SOME GREEN MARKERS THERE ON THE GROUND. THOSE ARE MARKING WHERE THE SHELL CASINGS HAVE BEEN FOUND SO FAR. SACRAMENTO COUNTY SHERIFF’S DEPUTIES TELL US THEY FOUND AT LEAST A DOZEN SHELL CASINGS. NOW, WHAT DO WE KNOW EXACTLY ABOUT WHAT UNFOLDED OUT HERE TODAY? SO WE KNOW SEVERAL CALLS CAME IN AT AROUND 430 FROM NEIGHBORS REPORTING SOUNDS OF A SHOOTING. AND THEY WHEN DEPUTIES ARRIVED, THEY FOUND A MAN WITH SEVERAL GUNSHOT WOUNDS TO THE ARM AND THE TORSO AREA. THAT’S WHEN HE WAS TAKEN TO THE HOSPITAL. HOWEVER, SACRAMENTO COUNTY SHERIFF’S DEPUTIES TELL US THEY WEREN’T ABLE TO TALK TO THE MAN BEFORE HE WAS TAKEN TO THE HOSPITAL BECAUSE HE WAS UNCONSCIOUS. NOW THEY’RE OUT HERE GATHERING EVIDENCE, PHOTOGRAPHING THE SCENE, TRYING TO PIECE TOGETHER EXACTLY WHAT UNFOLDED. WE SPOKE TO SOME NEIGHBORS THAT ARE OUT HERE. AS YOU CAN SEE, IT’S A VERY RESIDENTIAL AREA. THEY TELL US THEY HEARD AT LEAST THREE GUNSHOTS FIRED, AND THAT’S WHEN THEY CALLED 911. NOW IT IS UNKNOWN IF THIS MAN LIVES IN THIS AREA, BUT THEY ARE TALKING TO WITNESSES THAT WERE HERE AT THE TIME WHEN ALL OF THIS HAPPENED, TRYING TO PIECE TOGETHER EXACTLY WHAT UNFOLDED RIGHT NOW. BUT AGAIN, WHAT WE KNOW IS THAT MAN RIGHT NOW AT THE HOSPITAL, FIGHTING FOR HIS LIFE IN CRITICAL CONDITION AS INVESTIGATORS ARE OUT HERE GATHERING INFORMATION TO PIECE TOGETHER WHAT HAPPENED. NOW, NO INFORMATION ABOUT A SUSPECT OR SUSPECT HAS BEEN RELEASED SO FAR. BUT OF COURSE, WE’LL CONTINUE TO FOLLOW THIS STORY AND BRING YOU THE LATEST. LIVE IN SACRAMENTO COUNTY
Person taken to hospital with life-threatening injuries after being shot multiple times in Sacramento
A person has been taken to the hospital with life-threatening injuries after being shot multiple times Tuesday afternoon, according to the Sacramento Sheriff’s Office.Video Above | Morning headlines from KCRA News 3Deputies responded to the report of a shooting around 4:30 p.m. in the 5900 block of 39th Street.Deputies arrived to find one man with several gunshot wounds in his arm and torso, officials said. He was taken to an area hospital and is in critical condition.It is unclear what led to the shooting.KCRA is working to learn more information. Stay tuned for updates.This story was curated by Hearst’s KCRA Alert Desk. If this story happened near you or someone you know, share this article with friends in your area using the KCRA mobile app so they know what is happening near them. The KCRA app is available for free in Apple’s App Store and on Google Play.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel
SACRAMENTO, Calif. —
A person has been taken to the hospital with life-threatening injuries after being shot multiple times Tuesday afternoon, according to the Sacramento Sheriff’s Office.
Video Above | Morning headlines from KCRA News 3
Deputies responded to the report of a shooting around 4:30 p.m. in the 5900 block of 39th Street.
Deputies arrived to find one man with several gunshot wounds in his arm and torso, officials said. He was taken to an area hospital and is in critical condition.
It is unclear what led to the shooting.
KCRA is working to learn more information. Stay tuned for updates.
This story was curated by Hearst’s KCRA Alert Desk.
If this story happened near you or someone you know, share this article with friends in your area using the KCRA mobile app so they know what is happening near them. The KCRA app is available for free in Apple’s App Store and on Google Play.
On the campaign trail, Donald Trump pledged to get rid of the U.S. Department of Education, expand school choice, roll back new protections for LGBTQ students, and deport millions of undocumented immigrants.
Now that the former Republican president is headed to a second term, the question becomes how likely Trump is to act on his most extreme or implausible proposals and what effects students, teachers, and parents will see in the classroom.
Trump won a decisive victory, picking up nearly every swing state and gaining ground among young voters and voters of color who have been essential members of the Democratic coalition.
Chalkbeat spoke to advocates, experts, and former education department officials about what to expect from the next administration. They widely agreed that President Joe Biden’s Title IX rewrite, which extended new protections for transgender students and is currently tied up in the courts, will be repealed, that civil rights enforcement will look very different, and that future education budgets will be more austere.
But they disagreed on how likely it is that Trump would actually do away with the U.S. Department of Education and how much progress he might make toward federal support for school choice.
A lot will depend on who controls Congress. Votes are still being counted in key races, but Republicans will control the Senate. Control of the House remains unclear and may not be known for days. A trifecta could clear the way for a broader Trump agenda. If Democrats take control of the House, Trump would have to rely more on his executive authority. But even on some key conservative priorities, Republicans are not unanimous, and some may balk at proposals they see as expanding the federal role or disadvantaging their constituents.
Calls to abolish the Department of Education have new momentum
Arguably this has been Trump’s most consistent promise on education policy but also the one that seems most far-fetched to some political observers. Conservatives have talked about getting rid of the department for almost as long as it’s existed, and Trump didn’t make any moves to dismantle it in his first administration.
Fully dismantling the department would require an act of Congress. But Trump could limit its reach in other ways, such as eliminating or moving programs, removing career bureaucrats, and proposing much tighter budgets.
But Jim Blew, who served in Trump’s education department in his first administration and went on to found the Defense of Freedom Institute, said Trump has been adamant that he wants to get rid of the department and that alone gives the idea more “heft.” Blew also believes public support for a federal role in education is changing. Many people don’t think the federal investment in COVID recovery yielded much, he said. At the same time, people see initiatives such as student loan forgiveness and protections for transgender students as examples of federal overreach.
It would take months to take the department apart, Blew said, because every function mandated by Congress would need a new home. But that could be done, he said. Civil rights enforcement could move to the U.S. Department of Justice, for example, and Title I funding for high-poverty schools could become a block grant administered by the U.S. Department of Human Services.
Trump has been clear that his priorities are economic recovery, immigration, and national defense, Blew said, but that doesn’t mean he won’t follow through on education promises.
“It doesn’t need a lot of attention,” Blew said. “It needs political capital. And he can expend that while remaining focused on other priorities.”
Immigration enforcement could ripple through school communities
Trump made demonization of immigrants the centerpiece of his campaign, highlighting at every turn examples of crimes committed by undocumented immigrants or asylum seekers and the impact of immigration on American communities and schools.
Trump has promised to carry out the largest deportation operation in American history. Some experts on immigration policy have said such an effort would be legally and logistically challenging, as well as very expensive. Nonetheless, most observers expect to see an increase in enforcement.
Mike Petrilli, president of the conservative education advocacy organization The Fordham Institute, believes Trump’s education policies won’t make much difference in American classrooms, but his immigration policy may be felt in dramatic ways.
“It’s what he’s campaigned on, it’s what he’s promised to do, and he’d have a pretty free hand to do it,” said Petrilli, who has argued that American schools have a moral obligation as well as a legal one to educate all children who live here.
“The chances that it’s a humanitarian disaster are quite high,” Petrilli said. “Is he going to put people in camps? Will that include families? Are there going to be schools in these camps? I don’t see any reason we should believe they won’t give that a try.”
Even if enforcement is spotty, changes to federal policy have the potential to sow confusion and chaos in local communities, said Janelle Scott, a professor at University of California Berkeley. Some families may keep children home from school out of fear, she said. The messages that local law enforcement and school district officials send to families in this situation could make a difference.
Transgender students could lose new protections as civil rights enforcement changes
When the Biden administration issued new Title IX rules that clarified and strengthened protections for transgender students, Republican states and conservative groups, including Blew’s Defense of Freedom Institute, quickly filed lawsuits that led to the rules being blocked in a majority of states.
Conservatives argued that the new rules eroded protections for cisgender girls because they might have to share bathrooms and locker rooms with transgender classmates and affected the free speech rights of teachers who might be forced to use pronouns and names they disagreed with. They also argued the Biden administration overstepped by defining discrimination on the basis of gender identity as a form of sex discrimination.
Trump is expected to rescind the Biden rules, a move that would still require a lengthy bureaucratic process. But some observers have larger fears for a Trump administration. He has repeatedly accused schools of performing gender surgeries without parental permission — a false and baseless claim — and attacked the idea of gender-affirming care for youth, as well as participation in sports by transgender athletes.
“There have been fantastical claims, but undergirding that is a deep hostility to queer kids as well as allegations that schools are engaging in child abuse if they protect the rights of queer kids,” said Scott, the UC Berkeley professor.
Trump’s first administration also revoked Obama-era guidance on school discipline that aimed to reduce suspensions and expulsions for students of color and emphasized quick resolution of complaints. Some conservative groups have also used civil rights complaints to go after programs that aim to support Black student excellence or mentor teachers of color.
Rick Hess, a senior fellow at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, said a Trump education department or justice department could make high-profile examples of a few school districts’ diversity initiatives and bring about more widespread change, similar to how the Obama administration targeted districts over school discipline.
School choice gets a modest momentum boost
Expanding taxpayer funding for private schools and home-schooling have topped the conservative education agenda in recent years. A proposed federal tax credit scholarship program backed by Trump’s first education secretary, Betsy DeVos, failed to get any traction. But during Biden’s presidency, Republican-led states have expanded or started private school choice programs, some of which offer money to nearly all interested families.
On Fox News, Trump promised to sign school choice legislation that passed a House committee, and at a barbershop in the Bronx, he talked about the importance of school choice.
Blew expects Trump to push for a tax credit scholarship proposal similar to the one drafted during his first presidency.
Petrilli isn’t convinced that Trump cares that much. “It’s a stretch to say that he’s made it a priority on the campaign trail,” he said. “He has to be reminded to talk about it.”
Petrilli is also not convinced there would be enough support even in a Republican-controlled Congress to send a bill to Trump’s desk. Some rural Republicans, whose constituents have few private school options, are skeptical. So are small government conservatives who don’t want to expand federal programs.
Voters in three states — including two that Trump won by large margins — rejected school choice at the ballot on Tuesday, indicating that even many conservatives have qualms about spending public money on private schools.
But Congress will have to reauthorize Trump’s tax cuts, and a tax credit that allows businesses and individuals to write off donations to private school scholarships could be included there. Observers also expect to see a push to allow families to use money in tax-favored 529 accounts to pay for homeschooling expenses, tutoring, and other educational needs. That money already can be used for private school tuition.
This is a developing story and will be updated.
Chalkbeat is a nonprofit news site covering educational change in public schools.
In this business of ours, there are stories, and there are Stories.
Small-s stories come and go, usually as fast and forgettable as that family-sized bag of potato chips you ate all by yourself as you binge-watched the night away.
But Stories — Stories have legs, and this was a Story.
It checked all the boxes, and made some new ones: Conspiracy theories. Sex. Helicopters thwapping low over nice little neighborhoods in the dead of night. A one-legged Green Beret captain chugging a beaker of pesticide. Trippy protesters. TV comedians’ jokes. Tacky souvenirs.
And bugs.
Innumerable bugs, each one less than half the size of a housefly, but primed to chaw their way through a $16-billion California industry exactly like you did to that bag of chips.
Newsletter
Get the latest from Patt Morrison
Los Angeles is a complex place. Luckily, there’s someone who can provide context, history and culture.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.
The Story was, most of all, war — wars, plural. In the early 1980s, in the 1990s, returning like a malarial fever, the enemy was the Medfly, the Mediterranean fruit fly — pest, parasite, glutton for our golden harvests, despoiler of sunny citrus and rosy peaches, murderer of guacamole avocados.
And for most of this year, it was back. Then, in the deep-fryer depths of this summer, L.A. County agriculture officials ended a months-long quarantine of fruit coming out of Leimert Park, along with parts of Inglewood, Hawthorne and Culver City.
Didn’t even know there was a quarantine? Well, if you’d been around here in the ‘80s and ‘90s, “Medfly” would have been all you needed to hear to know just how serious this can get.
You do not want to see one of these in your yard.
(Stephen Osman / Los Angeles Times)
Ninety-one degrees — way above what a new autumn day should be, even here. It’s Thursday, Sept. 25, 1975, and in a backyard citrus tree on South Glencoe Avenue in Venice, a Medfly is showing its foul face, its blue eyes and yellow belly.
For years, as an early-warning alert system, the county agricultural people had been hanging Medfly traps hither and thither among our pretty, fructiferous trees — little A-frame-shaped cardboard doohickeys with a dab of fly attractant.
This was no idle, make-work program. The Medfly, ceratitis capitata, had eaten its way through Iberia at the turn of the century, and in 1910 managed to reach Hawaii. In 1929, it rampaged through Florida’s ag business like Visigoths sacking Rome. The Medfly is not a finicky eater; its menu is as long as a Cheesecake Factory’s: 200-plus fruits and veg from every climate.
Like aliens and “Alien,” the mama Medfly makes a slit in the skin of a ripening piece of produce, lays her eggs inside, and deposits her spawn there to eat the fruit to death, from the inside out, leaving a hollow skin that plops to the ground like a zombie husk.
So when that little trap yielded its six-legged killer on Sept. 25, the county ag commissioner was not at all overreacting when he said, “I can think of no pest that sends chills down my spine like this one does.”
A few zombie fruits soon turned up nearby. It all made a good case for the Medfly having been brought in by some traveler packing a juicy souvenir.
The ag patrols jumped right on it. They laid out a quarantine map, banned commercial nurseries inside its perimeter from selling fruit trees, and stripped off what fruit they were bearing. They plucked the produce out of family gardens. They began spot-spraying with a pesticide called malathion, which was about to become a household word.
They drove around neighborhoods in trucks, dumping millions of sterile male fruit flies from cardboard Kentucky Fried Chicken buckets. The male Medflies were chilled to a stuporous 40 degrees, so by the time they thawed, they’d be ready for action, yet any lady Medflies they knocked up would be laying their only-once-in-a-lifetime offspring as sterile, harmless larvae.
To the massive relief of the state’s agribusiness, this outbreak and most of those to come — unlike the desolation of Florida’s commercial agriculture — were aggressively confined pretty much to small-scale commercial growers and to gentlemen cultivators with backyard trees, the kind of pocket orchards that had enticed Midwestern immigrants here with the promise that you could just step off your back porch to pluck your morning orange.
And so matters stayed, uneasily but alertly, until 1980.
A worker at C&S Nursery in Baldwin Hills works near a section of quarantined citrus trees in October 2023.
(Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)
You say the names now — Sunnyvale, Cupertino — and they mean software and tech and billionaires in hoodies.
But for long, long decades before, Santa Clara County was “the Valley of Heart’s Delight,” a bee-and-blossom Eden of fragrant fruit: cherries, apricots, and mostly plums for prunes. Santa Clara County’s prune crop kept one-third of the world regular.
The orchards were still flourishing in 1980, during the first week of June, when bad news flew in on two wings and six legs: two small insects stuck in a backyard trap in San Jose.
The drill began anew: quarantine, fruit-stripping, ground-level pesticide spraying, more buckets of frosty male Medflies.
This time, the drill didn’t work.
California and D.C. had already begun some preliminary beat-downs over the Medfly. The new president was Ronald Reagan, and as governor, Reagan had been the Republican meat sandwiched between two California Democratic governors, Pat Brown, who had lost to Reagan, and his son, Jerry, who succeeded Reagan.
The Supreme Court had already decided that yes, indeed, Texas — which spent a hundred million buckaroos a year on California produce — could throw up its own quarantine on Golden State goods. Other states and other nations would do the same if this Medfly thing wasn’t stopped, and pronto.
As far as the feds were concerned, that meant dropping pesticide on the little buggers from the air — the same advice Brown was getting from his state ag officials.
The environmentally minded Brown argued with himself in public about whether aerial malathion spraying was the safe thing to do, and landed on “no.”
The great Medfly cafeterias of the Central Valley and the Imperial Valley, the fecund cornucopias of the nation, lay vulnerable — but arguably out of reach, Brown calculated. “Those flies,” he reasoned, “could reach Nevada a lot quicker than they could get to the Imperial Valley.”
That didn’t wash in Washington.
Unless California began aerial spraying, the feds would quarantine the entire state. And the feds threatened to take over the Medfly war themselves if Brown wouldn’t do it their way.
Politics won. Brown ordered the flying fleet aloft. The first aerial sorties went up at midnight on Bastille Day, July 14.
The public displeasure that would only swell over the next couple of years was obvious from the get-go: We don’t believe no stinkin’ studies about malathion being harmless in these doses. We’re being poisoned!
A state worker trying to send up a balloon to guide the spray helicopters had his arm slashed by a protester with a knife (it would have been smarter to slash the balloon). The state health department set up a hotline for reassurance.
Within a couple of weeks of the first spraying sorties, Palo Alto police heard what sounded like gunshots as the helicopters passed overhead. A bullet hole found in one copter had already prompted the CHP to send up an escort helicopter to accompany the flying formation of malathion sprayers.
In the meantime, the young people of the California Conservation Corps were the ones on the ground in the quarantine zone, stripping off fruit, hand-spraying with the malathion recipe. Some of them were worried, some were afraid, and some of them said they were actually sick.
And so, on the night that the aerial spraying began came what was, for my money, one of the greatest political PR moments in the history of that devilish art. There were hundreds of witnesses — but alas for the world, evidently no TV news cameras, which would never happen now, in the age of cellphone videography.
B.T. Collins headed the CCC. He was already a legendary character in an administration of outsize figures. He was a Green Beret captain and Vietnam veteran with a fake right leg and a hook as a right hand, standing in for the real ones he lost to a grenade in a Mekong Delta firefight nearly 15 years before.
He was a Republican of the Lincoln mold — honest, fearless, witty and ecumenically beloved. He had shaped this CCC into a model agency, and if his kids were worried, well, he’d do something about it.
So standing in front of a meeting of about 900 of them on that Tuesday night in the auditorium of a state mental hospital in Santa Clara, he held up a glass of the malathion recipe — and chugged it down. “I drank it because you don’t ask your troops to do anything you wouldn’t do.”
I know you are wondering, so no, he didn’t die until 1993, 13 years later, and then he was felled by a couple of massive heart attacks after long years of drinking and smoking.
Gov. Jerry Brown leans on a box of confiscated fruit at a Medfly checkpoint south of San Jose in 1981.
(Sal Veder / Associated Press)
As the malathion mix drifted down, so did Brown’s poll numbers. Even though he protested that his hand had been forced by the Reagan administration, ag people blamed him for not acting faster, and others blamed him for agreeing to aerial spraying at all.
The malathion-Medfly warfare illuminated a shift in the nature of California and Californians. I have a turn-of-the-century California map that describes each county by the things it grew. The figure of the woman on the state seal in one corner is Minerva, the Roman goddess of wisdom. It could just have as easily been Demeter, the Greek goddess of agriculture. By the 1980s, in counties like Santa Clara and Los Angeles, the wealth was coming more from real estate profits, not so much from agriculture. Into the 1950s, L.A. County had been the single most profitable agricultural county in the nation. The new crop now was subdivisions.
The residents of this new California were urbanized people who probably felt more threatened by bug spray than by the more abstract prospect of the state’s $14-billion annual ag business being laid waste by Medflies.
Anyway, back to the early ‘80s Northern-ish California battle:
To meet the demand for irradiated, sterile male Medflies to confound the female of the species, California had ordered several million from Peru. The state pretty quickly was aghast to realize that many tens of thousands of the Peruvian Medflies weren’t sterile at all; they were fertile, horny ringers.
But when California tried to cancel its orders, the Reagan administration stepped in: California had to keep buying Peruvian bugs, it insisted, to spare Peru any diplomatic embarrassment.
The 1981 quarantine perimeter spread like a gourmand’s belt size: 450 square miles in August, to 3,100 by September. Medflies were turning up farther afield; one in the East Bay, and another in San Joaquin County, which was tantamount to seeing gold thieves approach Fort Knox with a full set of keys.
Since the Medfly can’t fly any farther than a couple of city blocks from its larval cradle, it had to be getting human help. Roadblocks and checkpoints were set up on half a dozen highways at the quarantine’s edges. Five million cars and trucks were stopped.
Somehow, something broke through the blockade, and the Medfly made its appearance hundreds of miles to the south. Which is to say, here.
On Aug. 27, 1981, the big headlines appeared too: SOUTHLAND BATTLES THE MEDFLY. In the venerable citrus belt of the San Gabriel Valley, maggots turned up in a Baldwin Park garden, eating their way through their favorite peaches, and doing the same not far away, in a pineapple guava tree.
This time, the spraying began virtually at once. No messing around. Japan, the biggest foreign market for California fruit, was already banning imports from the quarantine zone, and considering a full ban on California green goods.
The protesters weren’t messing around either. A few days after the first spraying foray, some kids clustered in a Baldwin Park parking lot and cursed the helicopters, which passed overhead in a flotilla, outnumbered by news choppers.
Caltrans ringed the now 105-square-mile quarantine zone with freeway signs: “LEAVING MEDFLY QUARANTINE AREA. NO FRUITS/VEGETABLES TO GO BEYOND THIS POINT.” This time, there was no inspection of cars leaving the zone.
Plans were afoot to hang more Medfly traps, a lot more. Until now, they’d been sparse, partly because some study suggested that Medflies couldn’t hack it in chilly weather, which turned out not to be true. So about 120,000 traps, each with a drop of lure at the bottom, and costing 17 cents each, would now be found at 100 per square mile.
Now we arrive at the stage of kitsch, which is an absolute requirement for any story to become a Story.
In 1981, Johnny Carson costumed himself as a Medfly for this exchange with sidekick Ed McMahon.
Ed McMahon: “Don’t you think the federal government should protect Florida’s fruit?”
Mediterranean Fruit Fly: “Not according to Anita Bryant, no — they shouldn’t.”
To get the joke, you need to know two things. Anita Bryant, a singer and former beauty queen, was making commercials for a brand of Florida orange juice when, in the 1970s and ‘80s, she also crusaded against gay rights and, as a forerunner to the current “grooming” madness, warned ominously about gay “recruiting.” Millions boycotted the orange juice, and Carson mocked her regularly on his show.
Second thing: “fruit” was then in pretty free use as a synonym — now it’s regarded as a slur — for a gay person.
Kitsch indeed.
(Patt Morrison / Los Angeles Times)
The knick-knacks churned forth: anti-malathion spraying and anti-Jerry Brown T-shirts, buttons and bumper stickers. Also in 1981, Chris Norby, a future mayor of Fullerton, Orange County supervisor and Republican Assembly member, created “The Medfly Game” for two players — Jerry Brown and the Medfly.
As for the conspiracies, in December 1989, people calling themselves “The Breeders” wrote anonymously to newspapers, state legislators and to L.A. Mayor Tom Bradley.
We did it, they claimed. We’re spreading around Medflies to protest the state’s agricultural policies. “Every time the copters go up to spray, we’ll go into virgin territory or old Medfly problem areas and release a minimum of several thousand blue-eyed Medflies. We are organized, patient and determined.”
In the fall of 1982, after two wearying years of quarantines that ultimately extended through six counties and some 3,000 square miles, California declared victory. The Medfly had been eradicated.
Hubris, right? Wait for it.
A year later, Jerry Brown was termed out, and the Medfly seemed to have been sprayed out.
But in 1989, there was a flare-up in Whittier. The new governor, first-term Republican George Deukmejian, had learned from Brown not to let anyone hang this buggy albatross around his neck, and left it to his ag folks to spray and protect.
Malathion-spraying helicopters cruise over a Camarillo neighborhood where many residents covered their cars with plastic tarps during anti-Medfly spraying in October 1994.
(Alan Hagman / Los Angeles Times)
The spraying created a boomlet for carwashes and the plastic sheeting trade. A woman driving her 5-day-old Nissan Maxima was caught in a malathion shower on her way home to Rowland Heights, where her equally new car cover awaited. She filed a claim for $2,754.14 (Earl Scheib would have painted that car for only $99.95).
The most serious claim I found came from a 14-year-old Los Angeles boy named Juan Macias. On March 28, 1990, he had run outside to tell his dad to be sure to cover his truck because the spray helicopters were coming. He was hit by the malathion, his lawsuit claimed, and went blind. Five years later, the suit was still going forward.
Other kinds of pests pretty regularly turned up here and there around the state, but none as dangerous, as omniphagous, as the Medfly. That’s why counties like Los Angeles have kept up vigilant monitoring and fly-murdering programs, sometimes with new tools, to protect the state’s agricultural cordon sanitaire from Napa and Sonoma to the Mexican border.
At Christmastime in 2016, a Medfly appeared in Panorama City, and 101 square miles of the San Fernando Valley were briefly quarantined. This time, the pesticide of choice was Spinosad, an organic pesticide made from soil bacteria, not chemicals.
As for malathion, a 2000 federal review found it posed no threat to people when used correctly.
That may be fine for people. But in 2013, the feds decided that the pesticide family that includes malathion was indeed dangerous — even toxic — to many species of fish, plants, insects and animals, including the Mississippi sandhill crane and bees.
Four years later, the Trump administration asked a federal judge for a two-year delay in the pesticide review — another piece of the Trump administration’s top-to-bottom kneecapping of science and rollback of scores of environmental measures.
PBS reported that the EPA eventually threw in the towel, backtracking on its conclusion that malathion can imperil all manner of species, in exchange for a promise from pesticide makers to change their labels to exhort consumers to be more careful when they use it. It sounds like very weak medicine indeed.
In October 2023, the Medfly reappeared in L.A., in a persimmon tree and a pomegranate tree in Leimert Park. A quarantine of about 90 square miles of the city and county went into force, and nearly 2 million sterilized male Medflies, all dyed Laker-ish purple, were shoved out of planes over the nine-square-mile Medfly ground zero. This drop was to be replayed every three or four days for months. Again — not messing around.
UC Davis entomology professor James Carey, who has decades of Medfly study on his resume, told The Times: “Nowhere in the world are fruit fly invasions as frequent, recurrent, persistent, continuous, contiguous, widespread, and taxonomically diverse as those that have occurred in California.”
So we’re really left with three options on the persistence of the Medflies among us:
One, that there’s now a low-grade, permanent localized Medfly population that shows itself to us every now and then; two, that Medflies are still finding obliging humans to bring them in from places yonder; or three, that that there’s so little agriculture left hereabouts that, however they get here, Medflies just can’t find much to infest anymore.
Explaining L.A. With Patt Morrison
Los Angeles is a complex place. In this weekly feature, Patt Morrison is explaining how it works, its history and its culture.
Mike and Jesse kick off the show with breaking news: Topps has significantly expanded its Disney partnership to include Pixar, Marvel, and Star Wars card rights. They break down how this move will reshape the card industry and address the troubling rise in theft within the card community (3:00). Later, they welcome Nick Andrews, also known as the Boston Card Hunter, to talk about the pros and cons of using CT scans in card collecting and the ethical issues it presents (18:00).
Hosts: Mike Gioseffi and Jesse Gibson Guest: Nick Andrews Producer: Devon Renaldo
Vanessa Scott holds her baby out a 5th story window through the window bars so her child could breathe during an apartment fire. Firefighters were able to save them and no one sustained serious injuries. Her actions saved her child, instead of running through the smoke risking both their lives, she chose to risk hers to give her child a better chance.
Ever since Donald Trump said Thursday that Willie Brown had bashed Vice President Kamala Harris years ago during a scary helicopter ride together, the former president has insisted that the story is true. This despite the fact that Brown, the former California Speaker, said he had never done business with Trump, let alone been on a flight with him.
But it turns out that another California official had.
In an interview Saturday, Nate Holden, the former longtime Los Angeles city councilman and state senator, recalled vividly what happened one day in 1990 when he had been invited by Trump to fly from Manhattan to Atlantic City on his chopper.
It was midday, Holden said, and he had just been served a drink when all of a sudden the hydraulic system failed, forcing the pilot to make an emergency landing in New Jersey.
On Thursday, Trump said in impromptu remarks to the press that he and Brown “were in a helicopter going to a certain location together, and there was an emergency landing.” Trump said: “This was not a pleasant landing, and Willie, he was — he was a little concerned. So I know him pretty well. I mean, I haven’t seen him in years. But he told me terrible things about [Harris].”
Holden, 95, was incredulous that Trump could confuse the two men — “the short Black guy from Northern California and the tall Black guy from Southern California. But as they say, we all look the same,” he said with a laugh.
The Trump campaign hasn’t commented about what seems at best a mistaken identity, and worse, a fabricated story meant to discredit Harris, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee.
After Brown denied that he had never gotten on a helicopter with Trump, the national and international media have been all over the story. And Trump has not only stuck by his statements but posted on social media that he had evidence in “logs, maintenance records, and witnesses” to back up his account.
But another person on that helicopter ride was Barbara Res, once a top executive in charge of construction and development at the Trump Organization. In her 2013 book, “All Alone on the 68th Floor,” Res essentially corroborates Holden’s account of what happened.
“As we pulled out over the Hudson, the helicopter began to shake,” she wrote. “Very shortly thereafter the pilot let us know he had lost some instruments and we would need to make an emergency landing. By now, the helicopter was shaking like crazy. Donald loves to tell the story that Nate, an African American, turned white, but as I recall Donald was pretty white himself.”
Holden said Saturday that he called Brown shortly after seeing Trump’s comments about the helicopter incident on television. “I just thought Donald Trump’s got a problem. He had almost two fatal accidents, one with Willie Brown and one with me,” Holden said. So he asked Brown: “Willie, were you in a helicopter with Trump which almost crashed?”
Holden was in the copter with Trump to discuss the Manhattan developer’s desire to build on the site of the historic Ambassador Hotel on Wilshire Boulevard in the Los Angeles Mid-Wilshire District. Holden represented the district at the time.
Trump “wanted to meet with Nate because Nate was very, very influential,” Res said in an interview, noting that she brought Holden to New York. “And when we were going for the meeting, Donald said, ‘I can’t, I have to go to Atlantic City. Let’s have our meeting on the helicopter.” (Trump’s project on that Wilshire site got entangled in litigation and never came together.)
Holden said that he knew Trump was trying to impress him. On board, Holden recalled, “Trump said, ‘Look at the skyline. It’s the best in the world.’ ”
But Holden wasn’t impressed, and said he was livid when the aircraft had mechanical problems. “I couldn’t believe they didn’t maintain their helicopter. I was raising hell because they put my life in jeopardy.” Only a year earlier, in 1989, three executives of Trump’s casinos were killed, along with two others when a chopper crashed over Fork River in New Jersey.
As for Trump, Holden said, “He was speechless. He turned white as snow, glued to his seat.”
“There was no hint of any real danger that I perceived,” Res said. “Trump was terrified. He was scared s—less,” Res said. “He just lost three executives on the flight that he said he was scheduled to be on, which of course he was never scheduled to be on that flight. But, you know, why not make use of three dead good employees.”
In a similar way, both Res and Holden said Trump told his own version of what happened on the helicopter with Holden.
“Trump knew Willie Brown was the speaker of the Assembly and Nate Holden was a councilman, and so he wanted to make it more important,” Res said. “Also, he wanted to include a comment about Harris and I don’t think you could make a connection between Harris and Holden.”
As part of Gov. Phil Murphy’s call to create an “artificial intelligence moonshot” in New Jersey, the state’s department of education unveiled a set of resources last week aimed at helping educators understand, implement, and manage artificial intelligence in schools, state education officials said.
The resources range from articles about teaching and learning on artificial intelligence to a webinar that explains the history of the technology and how it is used in education. The materials do not outline strict regulations on how to use AI in education but they are New Jersey’s first guidance for school districts to “responsibly and effectively” integrate AI-powered technology in the classroom, and incorporate tools to facilitate administrative tasks in schools, according to a state department of education press release.
But as the technology gains popularity, education experts continue to note that safety and privacy concerns should remain a top priority as AI expands in schools. Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, says states should consider protections for AI in classrooms that take into consideration educators and parents.
“We know that school districts can’t just say privacy matters,” Weingarten said. “There has to be a tech translator, there have to be parent information sessions, and there has to be classroom guidance.”
The state’s new artificial intelligence resources come as Newark Public Schools takes steps to incorporate more AI in classrooms and surveillance systems.
Last month, the school board approved a $12 million project to install more than 7,000 AI cameras districtwide this summer. District leaders said the high-tech surveillance system is meant to make schools safer, but security experts warned that such capabilities could result in an invasion of privacy or could potentially misidentify items or students.
The district is also considering the expansion of Khanmigo, an AI program designed for the classroom and meant to tutor students and assist teachers. So far, there is little research on whether tools like Khanmigo are effective but experts have also said school districts should consider the learning goals for their students. .
New Jersey’s resources do not set parameters for student privacy but the department of education created an artificial intelligence webpage that provides an overview of AI and its systems, terms, and concepts, and guidance tailored for school leaders and teachers. The page will be updated regularly to keep up with the “fast-paced” changes to AI, the state said.
The state also released a webinar that introduces the fundamentals of AI technology and explains how the technology can support and enhance teaching and learning and provide personalized feedback to students depending on the type of technology. AI systems that use machine learning, such as facial recognition software or email spam filters, employ algorithms to make decisions based on data, while systems like chatbots use deep learning to identify complex patterns and relationships in data, the webinar explained.
The state’s webinar also prompts school districts to think about how new technology can support student learning and suggests that districts should review policies as AI evolves and integrates into learning. It also encourages school leaders to think through guidelines for acceptable and unacceptable uses of AI and discuss how the new tools are best implemented.
AFT President Weingarten says “there is tremendous potential for AI use in schools” but school districts and their tech departments should review programs and materials before allowing students access to them. She also warned that with any new technology, the safety and privacy of students should be protected.
AFT released its own set of AI guard rails on Tuesday that focus on educators and provide resources for teachers as they grapple with the new integration of AI in schools. The report lists six core values that focus on maximizing safety and privacy, empowering educators to make decisions on AI, and advancing fairness and equity of the technology among other values.
Through its Innovation Fund, AFT is also providing over $200,000 to 11 school districts across the country to find solutions to incorporate, understand, and regulate AI with input from educators. The United Federation of Teachers in New York City, Cranston Teachers Alliance in Rhode Island, Pinellas Classroom Teachers Association in Florida, and other union locals will work with their school districts to create AI summits to understand and establish guidelines, provide hands-on training for educators, and establish workshops, panels, and community events.
“I’m not saying that there’s not a way to do it, but who’s responsible for data privacy, who’s responsible for student protection?” Weingarten said.
The state department’s office of innovation plans to meet with educators to obtain feedback, learn how AI is being used in classrooms, and discover existing needs to inform new guidance, resources, and professional development, according to the state’s press release. The department is also part of the Teach AI initiative, a consortium of state departments of education and international organizations that work to create guidelines for AI policy and resources.
Chalkbeat is a nonprofit news site covering educational change in public schools.