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  • YMCA water aerobics keeps Orlando seniors social and active

    ORLANDO, Fla. — A group of seniors, who call themselves the “Swimmin’ Women,” are taking fitness classes each week to stay active and social.


    What You Need To Know

    • YMCA of Central Florida offers exercise classes for senior citizens
    • The water aerobics class keeps participants social, while working out in the water
    • The low-intensity exercise increases strength, flexibility, and cardiovascular exercise


    Natilee Hamilton is one of them, bringing the energy to the water aerobics classes at the Leonard & Marjorie Williams Family YMCA.

    “I love to see people having fun and I love to make somebody’s day,” said Hamilton. “I don’t care who it is. I love the fact I can make somebody’s day.”

    For her, the class is more than social hour. It’s a low-impact way to keep her body moving, as she lives with back and knee issues.

    “I used to be a much, much bigger woman. I used to weigh 365 pounds. I’ve lost over 100-something pounds by not just swim aerobics, I’m able to do other workouts due to the fact that I lose the weight from swim aerobics,” said Hamilton.

    The class is part of the YMCA of Central Florida’s senior offerings to encourage healthy living. By using weights and alternating exercises, the seniors are increasing strength, flexibility, and cardiovascular exercise. Participants feel lightweight underwater too.

    “One third of senior citizens experience some sort of loneliness or socialization, so this is a great opportunity to bring people together, meet some friends, get connected, and really form their own community within the Y,” says District Vice President Justin Higa.

    Eva-Maria Lamott and her husband are also in the class. While they benefit from the exercise, they have also formed a second family after moving here from Germany.

    “I love these classes because all the people here are so amazing. We are already friends and we are meeting also in private sometimes. We are celebrating our birthdays together and it’s really a good, good group,” said Eva-Maria Lamott.

    To learn more about group classes, leaders say you can stop by or call any local YMCA or visit the YMCA of Central Florida’s website by clicking here.

    Emma Delamo

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  • Axiom Space gets ready for its commercial space station

    NATIONWIDE — As the International Space Station is set to retire in 2030, Axiom Space is hoping to be one of the few commercial companies to have a space station that will replace the famed floating laboratory.


    What You Need To Know

    • Axiom Space Senior Vice President and Axiom Station Deputy Program Manager Aaron Tullos shares with Spectrum News the plans for Axiom Station
    • Axiom Space plans to use the International Space Station to birth its own space station called Axiom Station

    The International Space Station is set to deorbit in 2030 after three decades of operations since the first Expedition 1 mission on Nov. 2, 2000.

    Last year, NASA selected SpaceX to develop a spacecraft that will safely deorbit the International Space Station to an unpopulated section of the Pacific Ocean. The U.S. space agency will give the California-based company $843 million to modify its Dragon capsule to bring the aging space station back down to Earth.

    However, before the space station goes to its watery grave, Texas-based company Axiom Space plans to use it to birth its own space station called Axiom Station.

    Getting to know Axiom Station

    Axiom Station will eventually replace the International Space Station and will allow countries’ space agencies, like NASA, and private space companies to continue their experiments and missions.

    Axiom Space Senior Vice President and Axiom Station Deputy Program Manager Aaron Tullos said that currently, his company is in talks with customers.

    “This is forward work. Axiom Space continues to have discussions with customers looking to utilize Axiom Station in different ways,” Tullos shared with Spectrum News in an email interview.  

    But Axiom Station needs to be built first. Tullos said that his company plans to attach Axiom Station’s first module, Payload, Power, and Thermal Module (PPTM), to the International Space Station in the next few years.

    PPTM will allow the transfer of science, equipment and payloads from the International Space Station to this new module, which Tullos said will help preserve the hardware and allows the continuation of research and experiments that are being done on the International Space Station.

    “PPTM will launch no earlier than 2027 after integration is complete, becoming the only commercial module allowed to berth to the ISS before the ISS retires,” Tullos explained.

    The main structure of this module has just been welded at the Thales Alenia Space development facility in Italy and the PTTM is going through additional testing before being sent to Houston later this year for integration, he shared.

    The next part of the Axiom Station will launch no earlier than 2028. The Habitat Module One, also called Hab-1, is nearly finished at Thales Alenia Space, and will undergo tests before going to Houston, Tullos said.

    Once in Houston, additional work will be done before going into space.

    “Hab-1 will launch and rendezvous with the PPTM in orbit, where the two modules will dock and form a commercial space station ready for crewed operations independent of the ISS,” he said.

    As the name suggests, Hab-1 is where a crew of up to four astronauts can live and work.

    The PTTM module will dock with the International Space Station but will detach at some point to connect with Hab-1, Tullos said.

    Tullos confirmed that no crew has been selected yet for Axiom Station when it is operational.

    Eventually, other modules will attach to Axiom Station: An airlock module (AL), another habitat module (Hab-2) and a research and manufacturing module that will also have an Earth observatory (RMF).

    Tullos said his company’s station will allow for the expanding of global access to space.

    “Axiom Station is designed for scalable growth for future modules and additional capacity for crew and research,” shared Tullos, who added, “Axiom Space is building era-defining infrastructure capable of expanding global access to space, creating unprecedented economic opportunities, and achieving strategic U.S. objectives by maintaining a continuous human presence in LEO. Using a modular design, innovative solutions, commercial applications, and 25 years of informed perspective, Axiom Station is positioned to accomplish all of these goals.”

    During the company’s Axiom 4 launch in June of this year, Axiom Space’s co-founder Kam Ghaffarian shared with Spectrum News about his company’s space station.

    “So, we are building the first private commercial space station that will replace the International Space Station,” Ghaffarian said. “And looking forward by end of 2026, early 2027 to launch our module and we are the only company that (can) connect to ISS and work jointly while ISS is in orbit together.”


    Others want to have their space stations too

    Axiom Space is not the only company out there hoping to make its mark in the commercial space station industry.

    Sierra Space is another company hoping to send up its space station to orbit Earth.

    Called Orbital Reef, the space station will use the company’s Large Integrated Flexible Environment (LIFE) inflatable habitation modules.

    In 2023, LIFE Chief Engineer and Senior Director of Engineering Shawn Buckley explained to Spectrum News why the company purposely blew up one of the habitat units.

    Vast Space is also planning to build its Haven-1 space station, with a planned launch in 2026.

    Axiom Space is the only station that will dock with the International Space Station before detaching.

    Anthony Leone

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  • Fashion designer Giorgio Armani dead at 91

    MILAN — Giorgio Armani, the iconic Italian designer who turned the concept of understated elegance into a multibillion-dollar fashion empire, has died, his fashion house confirmed. He was 91.


    What You Need To Know

    • Giorgio Armani, the iconic Italian designer, has died at 91, his fashion house confirmed
    • Armani, known for his understated elegance, missed Milan Fashion Week in June 2025 due to an undisclosed condition
    • He was planning a major event for his fashion house’s 50th anniversary this month
    • Armani revolutionized Italian ready-to-wear fashion in the late 1970s with his relaxed silhouette

    Armani died at home, the fashion house said. Armani, one of the most recognizable names and faces in the global fashion industry, missed Milan Fashion Week in June 2025 for the first time during the previews of Spring-Summer 2026 menswear to recover from an undisclosed condition.

    He was planning a major event to celebrate 50 years of his signature Giorgio Armani fashion house during Milan Fashion Week this month.

    Armani, who maintained a firm grip on his empire and collections until the end, had been reluctant to discuss succession, but had announced a foundation as a succession tool to avoid his businesses being split up.

    He also indicated the creative succession to Leo Dell’Orco and his niece Silvana Armani, who have headed the menswear and womenswear collections, respectively, for all Armani collections: Giorgio Armani, Emporio Armani and Armani Exchange.

    Starting with an unlined jacket, a simple pair of pants and an urban palette, Armani put Italian ready-to-wear style on the international fashion map in the late 1970s, creating an instantly recognizable relaxed silhouette that has propelled the fashion house for half a century.

    From the executive office to the Hollywood screen, Armani dressed the rich and famous in classic tailored styles, fashioned in super-soft fabrics and muted tones. His handsome black tie outfits and glittering evening gowns often stole the show on award season red carpets.

    At the time of his death, Armani had put together an empire worth over $10 billion, which along with clothing included accessories, home furnishings, perfumes, cosmetics, books, flowers and even chocolates, ranking him in the world’s top 200 billionaires, according to Forbes.

    The designer also owned several bars, clubs, restaurants and his own basketball team EA7 Emporio Armani Milan, better known as Olympia Milano. Armani opened more than than 20 restaurants from Milan to Tokyo since 1998, and two hotels, one in Dubai in 2009 and another in Milan, in 2010.

    Armani himself was the foundation of his style

    Armani style began with Giorgio Armani himself, from the penetrating blue eyes framed in a permanent tan and early-age shock of silver hair, to the trademark jeans and t-shirt work clothes and the minimalist decoration of his private homes.

    Armani’s fashion vision was that of easygoing elegance where attention to detail made the difference.

    “I design for real people. There is no virtue whatsoever in creating clothes and accessories that are not practical,” he liked to say when asked to identify his clientele.

    In conversation, the designer’s disarming smile and exquisitely mild manners belied the tough businessman underneath, who was able to turn creative talent into a fashion empire worth over $10 billion. Never a merger nor a sale, Re Giorgio (King George) as the Italians call him, was always his own boss.

    Born July 11, 1934, in Piacenza, a small town south of Milan, Armani dreamed of becoming a doctor before a part-time job as a window decorator in a Milan department store opened his eyes to the world of fashion.

    In 1975, Armani and his partner Sergio Galeotti sold their Volkswagen for $10,000 to start up their own menswear ready-to-wear label. Womenswear followed a year later.

    The symbol of his new style was the liningless sports jacket, which was launched in the late 1970s and became an instant success from Hollywood to Wall Street. The designer paired the jacket with a simple t-shirt, an item of clothing he termed “the alpha and omega of the fashion alphabet.”

    The Armani suit soon became a must in the closet of the well-heeled man. And for women, the introduction of the pantsuit in the executive workroom was all but revolutionary. Dubbed the “power suit” with its shoulder-padded jacket and man-tailored trousers, it became the trademark of the rising class of businesswomen in the 1980s.

    Over the years Armani would soften the look with delicate detailing, luxurious fabrics and brighter shades for his basic beige and gray palette. His insistence on pants and jackets led some critics to label his fashion “androgynous.”

    Armani hits Hollywood

    The 1980 film classic “American Gigolo” launched both Armani and actor Richard Gere on their Hollywood careers. Dressed in Armani, Gere became America’s new favorite heart throb, and “Geeorgeeo” as they called him, the glam set’s most popular designer.

    The Hollywood connection earned him wardrobe film credits in over 200 films, and in 2003 a place on Rodeo Drive’s “Walk of Fame.”

    Oscar night always sparkled, with smart suiting for the men, and glittering gowns for the ladies. The 2009 best actor winner Sean Penn picked up his statue in a black-on-black Armani outfit, while best actress nominee Anne Hathaway walked the red carpet in a shimmering white strapless evening gown from Armani’s latest Prive couture collection.

    Other longtime devotees included Jodie Foster, George Clooney, Sofia Loren and Brad Pitt. David and Victoria Beckham were the “face” of his 2009 underwear ad campaign.

    So significant was the impact of Armani style, not only on how people dressed but how they approached fashion, that in 2000 New York’s Guggenheim museum presented a retrospective of Armani’s first 25 years in fashion.

    “I love things that age well, things that don’t date and become living examples of the absolute best,” Armani said of his efforts.

    Armani has gone well beyond fashion

    Today, the Armani empire has an army of more than 9,000 employees, with women comprising half of the executive suite, along with seven industrial hubs and over 600 stores worldwide, according to figures released in 2023. Along with clothes and accessories, the company produces perfumes, cosmetics and home furnishings, as well as selling its own candy, flowers and even books. The designer opened his fifth multi-brand store on New York’s fashionable Fifth Avenue in February 2009.

    In the realm of fashion hobbies, Armani owned several bars, restaurants and clubs, as well as the basketball team. Recreation time was spent in getaways in Broni in the countryside near Milan, the isle of Pantelleria off Sicily and St. Tropez on the French Riviera. Each home bore the trademark of Armani design: bare walls, important pieces, few knickknacks.

    Like many of his colleagues, Armani tried to give back some of the fame and fortune he amassed during the heyday of the “moda Milanese” which put Italian ready-to-wear at the center of the world’s fashion map at the turn of the millennium. Personally involved in several charity organizations devoted to children and a staunch supporter of the battle against AIDS, in 2002 Armani was named a U.N. goodwill ambassador for refugees.

    Galeotti died in 1985. Armani had no children but was very close to his niece Roberta, daughter of his late brother Sergio. She abandoned a budding film career to become his director of public relations, and often represented her uncle, who wasn’t much of a party-goer, at social events. In later years she was a key go-between with the celebrity world.

    In 2006, she orchestrated the top-billed wedding of actors Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes in a medieval castle outside Rome, while Uncle Giorgio designed the attire for both bride and groom.

    Associated Press

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  • Pinellas County considers axing funding for arts agency

    PINELLAS COUNTY, Fla. — As Pinellas County commissioners work to finalize the budget for the upcoming fiscal year, major cuts could be coming to the county’s designated local arts agency.

    Creative Pinellas, which was established as a nonprofit in 2011, has an art gallery featuring local artists at their headquarters at the Florida Botanical Gardens. They have an additional gallery at the St. Pete-Clearwater Airport and help to distribute grants to artists, as well as facilitate the creation of murals and art in different neighborhoods.

    At a budget workshop last week, board chair Brian Scott questioned the purpose of Creative Pinellas and if the county should continue to fund the arts agency.


    What You Need To Know

    • Pinellas County Commission Board Chair Brian Scott proposed cutting $1.2 million in funding for Creative Pinellas 
    • Scott proposed using a portion of the funding for a competitive arts grant just for arts tourism
    • Creative Pinellas CEO says they add so much value at the county’s designated arts agency 
    • New fiscal year begins October 1


    “They get about 90% of their money from us and I don’t see that there’s a lot of return on that investment,” Scott told board members.

    Scott said the county budgets $1.2 million annually to support Creative Pinellas. More than $800,000 of that funding comes from tourism tax dollars, while the remaining is a mix of general and transportation funds.

     “I’ve really struggled since becoming a commissioner to really understand what they’re bringing to the table,” Scott said. “Honestly, I don’t think they’re bringing a lot to the table other than having grant programs that give artists money to buy easels and cameras and things like that… and it’s not really going to tourism at all.”

    Instead of allotting $1.2 million for Creative Pinellas next year, Scott recommended taking $500,000 to create a competitive arts grant just for arts tourism. The remainder of the money would go back into the county budget.

    Creative Pinellas CEO Margaret Murray says while she was disheartened to hear Scott’s remarks, she understands how hard of a year Pinellas County had with the back-to-back hurricanes and the importance of a balanced budget.

    She says Creative Pinellas distributed over $225,000 in grants last year and have multiple contracts within the community that include $50,000 from the Lealman CRA, $40,000 from the National Endowment for the Arts, and $20,000 from St. Pete-Clearwater Airport.

    “What I took away from that meeting is the county commission does understand the value of art,” Murray said. “They really do… they are willing to put money towards it to market it solely to visitors, which I understand.”

    Murray says she feels commissioners don’t understand the reach that Creative Pinellas has within the community and their many exhibits and grant-programs provide measurable visitor engagement at no additional cost to the county.

    “I feel their pain. I understand their need to balance a budget,” Murray said. “I just hope they can see the value that we bring to the county and to the 15 million visitors who come to Pinellas County every year.”

    Murray plans to speak to county commissioners Thursday, during  a scheduled public hearing.

    “They understand the value of the arts, so if we can find a resolution, there’s a clear path forward,” Murray said. 

    Angie Angers

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  • New resiliency pilot program from a nonprofit expands to USF students

    MANATEE COUNTY, Fla. — A Sarasota mental health nonprofit, Sunshine from Darkness, is expanding its services to local college students in the Manatee-Sarasota area.

    The organization started a pilot Youth Resiliency Program last year for middle schoolers, and has now partnered with the University of South Florida (USF) Sarasota-Manatee to offer mental health services in the aftermath of last year’s hurricanes.


    What You Need To Know

    • Sarasota nonprofit Sunshine from Darkness started a pilot Youth Resiliency Program last year for middle schoolers
    • The organization partnered with USF Sarasota-Manatee to offer mental health services in the aftermath of last year’s hurricanes
    • Sunshine from Darkness is starting another pilot program this fall, which plans to implement virtual reality technology at USF’s Sarasota-Manatee campus

    “So instead of, like, thinking about what’s bothering me, I’m thinking about, like, squeezing the Play-Doh,” Kathy Porcelly said.

    Porcelly is a junior at USF’s Sarasota-Manatee campus, majoring in elementary education. While college can often be stressful, Porcelly also has generalized anxiety disorder.

    “So it’s like just minor things that might not bother other people, tend to bother me. Or, I just overthink little conversations throughout the day or things I possibly did wrong,” she explained.

    But she didn’t learn these new exercises on her own. She had some help from a licensed psychologist during a pilot program that worked with 17 USF students. It was started by the nonprofit Sunshine from Darkness, which partnered with USF to help improve students’ mental health.

    Moving Play-Doh around is one way Porcelly reduces stress.

    Marlene Hauck, the executive director for Sunshine from Darkness, said, “Each of the college students will learn their own way to cope, their own way to develop resilience. What we’re looking for also is to be able to help them move forward.”

    The pilot program began in April and included four one-hour sessions that focused on breathing exercises and tactile activities. Already, Porcelly says it helps her every day.

    “It gave me different strategies on how to deal with my stress and then my anxiety — activities that I wouldn’t think of myself,” she said.

    Now, as Porcelly continues her college education, she hopes she can incorporate what she’s learned and pass it on to her own students when she becomes a teacher.

    Sunshine from Darkness is starting another pilot program this fall. They plan to implement virtual reality technology at USF’s Sarasota-Manatee campus in that program.

    “USF College of Education at Sarasota-Manatee’s partnership with Sunshine from Darkness and Herrera Psychology is timely and innovative as we work together to support the resiliency of our university students. This is important, timely work and we are thrilled to have this partnership available for our students,” the school said in a statement.

    “USF College of Education at Sarasota-Manatee’s Collaboratory is a transformative and innovative space that focuses on human-centered design. Supporting education, the community, and innovative thinking, the tech space is a hub for dynamic change,” it continued.

    Julia Hazel

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  • Honoring the Changemakers: Women’s Fund celebrates 30 years of equity work

    CINCINNATI — For 30 years, the Women’s Fund of the Greater Cincinnati Foundation has been working to dismantle systemic barriers, promote economic equity and uplift the voices of women and families across the region.


    What You Need To Know

    • The Greater Cincinnati Foundation’s Women’s Fund is celebrating its 30th anniversary
    • The Women’s Fund celebrated the milestone with an anniversary luncheon on Thursday
    • Four women, including radio host and advocate Sister Keli, were honored for their work

    On Thursday, Sept. 4, the organization will mark that milestone with its Legacy in Motion luncheon — a celebration of community impact, progress and the people driving it forward.

    Held at the Anderson Pavilion, the event will honor four women whose work has helped shape Greater Cincinnati:

    • Sister Kelli, a radio host and grassroots advocate known for her Hope Fest community event
    • Leslie B. McNeill, founder of the Women’s Fund
    • Barbara Turner, founder of BT RISE and a leader in financial equity
    • Mary Stagaman, a civic advocate for inclusion and regional collaboration

    Sister Kelli said she was truly moved by the news of her recognition. 

    “I did drop some tears because I felt it,” she said. “I knew others were seeing the good work.”

    She has spent nearly a decade helping connect underserved families to essential resources, all while navigating life in a wheelchair. She said it doesn’t limit her ability to serve.

    “I’m able to do whatever I set my mind to do,” she said. “Giving of myself without any expectation really is the greatest reward.”

    Founded in 1995, the Women’s Fund focuses on research, policy change and community investment to support women’s economic self-sufficiency. Executive Director Camilla Worrell said Thursday’s luncheon will celebrate the organization’s impact and ongoing mission.

    “There’s been a lot of work. There’s been resistance, there’s been downfalls. But we have a lot to celebrate,” Worrell said. “I want people to go away with a renewed sense of community and a little fire in their belly.”

    In addition to the luncheon, the Women’s Fund recently launched a Self-Sufficiency Simulator, an interactive tool that allows users to experience the financial challenges many women and families face.

    To date, the organization has raised more than $450,000 through community initiatives to further its mission.

    Sister Kelli said she hopes the recognition will inspire others and fuel her own continued work.

    “We need the Women’s Fund to continue and programs like that in order to keep us striving,” she said.

    Javari Burnett

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  • September’s ‘Corn Moon’ rises this week

    Our next full moon, and the final one of the astronomical summer, is set to rise above the horizon this week on Sunday, Sept. 7.


    What You Need To Know

    • September’s full moon will rise this weekend
    • It is called the ‘Corn Moon’ this year
    • Unobstructed views of the horizon allow for best sightings


    This full moon is called the Corn Moon as opposed to the Harvest Moon which traditionally is the full moon that falls closest to the autumnal equinox (Sept. 22). It just so happens that the next full moon will occur on Oct, 6 so it gets the name Harvest Moon this year.

    The moon will officially be full at 2:09 p.m. EDT Sunday, so it won’t be seen until hours later when it rises above the horizon after sunset.

    This year’s Corn Moon will actually coincide with a lunar eclipse for much of the Northern Hemisphere (Europe, Africa, and Australia), but no eclipse will be visible across the U.S. Other countries can expect a long-lasting “blood moon” similar to what America saw back in March earlier this year.

     

    Potential cloud coverage Sunday evening. (weathermodels.com)

    The name of the moon is a reference to the corn harvest, which typically happens this time of the year across North America.

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

    The next full moon will be the Harvest Moon, which occurs on Oct. 6, 2025. As mentioned earlier, the Harvest Moon is whatever full moon falls closest to the Fall Equinox. Usually that is in September, but every four or five years, it happens in October.

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

    Meteorologist Ian Cassette

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  • September’s ‘Corn Moon’ rises this week

    Our next full moon, and the final one of the astronomical summer, is set to rise above the horizon this week on Sunday, September 7th.


    What You Need To Know

    • September’s full moon will rise this weekend
    • It is called the ‘Corn Moon’ this year
    • Unobstructed views of the horizon allow for best sightings


    This full moon is called the Corn Moon as opposed to the Harvest Moon which traditionally is the full moon that falls closest to the autumnal equinox (September 22nd). It just so happens that the next full moon will occur on October 6th so it gets the name Harvest Moon this year.

    The moon will officially be full at 2:09 pm EDT Sunday, so it won’t be seen until hours later when it rises above the horizon after sunset.

    This year’s Corn Moon will actually coincide with a lunar eclipse for much of the Northern Hemisphere (Europe, Africa, and Australia), but no eclipse will be visible across the U.S. Other countries can expect a long-lasting “blood moon” similar to what America saw back in March earlier this year.

     

    Potential cloud coverage Sunday evening. (weathermodels.com)

    The name of the moon is a reference to the corn harvest, which typically happens this time of the year across North America.

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

    The next full moon will be the Harvest Moon, which occurs on October 6, 2025. As mentioned earlier, the Harvest Moon is whatever full moon falls closest to the Fall Equinox. Usually that is in September, but every four or five years, it happens in October.

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

    Meteorologist Ian Cassette

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  • FDOT introducing major Courtney Campbell Causeway project

    TAMPA, Fla. — The Florida Department of Transportation District 7 is hosting a community meeting Thursday night to kick off its Project Development and Environmental Study for a major project on the Courtney Campbell Causeway from Clearwater to Tampa.

    The project is in its early planning stages but will likely include widening the causeway as well as adding more environmental buffers between the water and the road.


    What You Need To Know

    • FDOT hosting meeting Thursday to announce Project Development and Environmental Study project on the Courtney Campbell Causeway
    • The project is in its early planning stages but will likely include widening the causeway as well as adding more environmental buffers between the water and the road
    • Thursday’s meeting is scheduled for 5:30 p.m. at the DoubleTree Hilton on Rocky Point
    • A CLOSER LOOK: Project Development and Environmental Study project on the Courtney Campbell Causeway

    Kirk Bogen, FDOT District 7 Environmental Engineer, said one of the first things the project will address are bridge spans on the causeway.

    “I know one of the areas that we are probably going to look at first is the main span bridges to see if we need to replace those or expand those and where they are,” Bogen said.

    The goal of any project on the causeway, according FDOT, would be to improve traffic congestion and harden it against major storms.

    But some groups are less worried about the pavement and more worried about the water the causeway crosses.

    Justin Trimble with Tampa Bay Waterkeeper, a nonprofit working to protect Tampa Bay’s watershed says his group will attend the meeting tonight, and hopes any project will improve water flow near the causeway.

    “We believe this is a great opportunity to help Tampa Bay,” said Tramble.  “We believe that any infrastructure investments that are made should help the environment, should help the Tampa Bay estuary and not harm it.

    Thursday’s meeting is scheduled for 5:30 p.m. at the DoubleTree Hilton on Rocky Point.

    Jason Lanning

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  • Woman killed, multiple others injured in 2-car crash in Van Nuys

    A woman was killed in a two-vehicle crash in Van Nuys Wednesday morning, Sept. 3, after another vehicle slammed into the driver’s side of her car, authorities said.

    The crash occurred at 1:45 a.m. at Burbank and Van Nuys boulevards, Los Angeles police spokeswoman Officer Rosario Cervantes said. The woman died at the scene.

    She was driving a silver Mercedes-Benz sedan northbound on Van Nuys Boulevard when she was hit by what appeared to be another silver sedan headed eastbound on Burbank Boulevard, according to Cervantes and video from RMG News, a freelance news organization that sometimes works with the Southern California News Group.

    Both vehicles sustained major damage and the force of the crash sent the Mercedes into a parking lot, the video shows.

    The woman appeared to be the sole occupant of the Mercedes. Her identity was withheld by police pending notification of her relatives.

    At least three people were seen on video getting taken by gurney or wheelchair to waiting ambulances. It was not known how many people were in the second sedan, or what their conditions were.

    Fox 11 reported, citing the LAPD’s Valley Traffic Division, that a 24-year-old driver of a Honda had two passengers in the car and ran a red light before T-boning the Mercedes. One of the passengers underwent surgery, the station reported.

    There was no immediate report of any arrest.

    Nathaniel Percy

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  • House speaker calls for more federal spending cuts in reconciliation package

    WASHINGTON — With 27 days left for congressional lawmakers to agree on a spending bill to avert a federal government shutdown, House Speaker Mike Johnson said Wednesday that the appropriations package needs to cut more spending.

    Citing the $37 trillion federal deficit, Johnson said the $1.6 trillion in cuts enacted through the One Big Beautiful Bill Act in July is “not enough.”


    What You Need To Know

    • House Speaker Mike Johnson said Wednesday that the appropriations package needs to cut more spending
    • Congressional lawmakers have 27 days left to agree on a spending bill to avert a federal government shutdown
    • “We have to continue to spend more responsibly,” Johnson, R-La., said during the first House GOP news conference since its monthlong summer recess
    • He encouraged House Democrats to work with the GOP majority “and think responsibly about how we can spend less than we did last year”


    “We have to continue to spend more responsibly,” Johnson, R-La., said during the first House GOP news conference since Congress’ monthlong summer recess. “If the government shuts down, it’ll be because congressional Democrats rejected commonsense solutions to fund the government and instead caved to their far-left base.”

    He encouraged House Democrats to work with the GOP majority “and think responsibly about how we can spend less than we did last year.”

    On Tuesday, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., said Democrats are seeking bipartisan common ground to pass the spending bill and avoid a government shutdown, but he insisted that the bill be bipartisan, a product of negotiation and in the best interests of the American people in terms of health, safety, national security and economic wellbeing.

    Jeffries said it’s up to the Trump administration and Republicans in the House and Senate to avoid a shutdown.

    “As we always are, the House Republicans are committed to keeping the government open,” Johnson said Wednesday. “Unfortunately, it seems like not all the Democrats agree with that, and they’ve begun to apply their government shutdown pressure.”

    During a rally on Capitol Hill on Wednesday to “fight for families, reject the cuts,” several Democratic Congress members spoke out against the $1.02 trillion in estimated cuts to federal Medicaid spending to states over the next 10 years through the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.

    “As we come up in this continuing resolution fight, all Democrats can’t just be a ‘no,’” Rep. Maxwell Frost, D-Fla., said at the rally. “You have to be a ‘hell no.’ You have to say that we’re not giving you one vote to continue to take away health care from our people. If you want a yes, you better get health care back to the 17 million people who are going to lose it.”

    Susan Carpenter

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  • Cavs single game tickets to go on sale soon

    CLEVELAND — Basketball fans looking to catch the Cavs in action will soon be able to purchase single game tickets for the team’s two preseason and 41 regular season home games.


    What You Need To Know

    • Tickets for the Cavs preseason and regular season home games will go on sale soon
    • They’ll go on presale Sept. 8 and to the general public on Sept. 10
    • They have sold out 146 consecutive games

    The team announced in a release that the tickets will go on presale on Sept. 8 and will be available to the general public at 2 p.m. on Sept. 10.

    The regular season begins with the Cavs matchup against the Milwaukee Bucks at 6 p.m. Oct. 26 at Rocket Arena. There will be preseason games against the Chicago Bulls at 7 p.m. Oct. 7 and against the Detroit Pistons at 7 p.m. Oct. 14, both at Rocket Arena.

    According to the release, Cavs United Members will have access to tickets at 10 a.m. Sept. 8, while Cavs Rewards account holders and Cleveland WNBA initial payment holders will have access at 9 a.m. on Sept. 10.

    “The Cavs have sold out 146 consecutive games at Rocket Arena, a streak that dates back to the end of the 2021-2022 season,” the release reads.

    You can purchase tickets online here, with a limit of six tickets per person for each game.

    Cody Thompson

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  • Pilates With Purpose: Inside Cincinnati’s new Black-owned wellness studio

    CINCINNATI, Ohio — As National Black Business Month celebrates its 21st year, one local entrepreneur is bringing new energy to Cincinnati’s wellness scene and helping reshape the face of Pilates.


    What You Need To Know

    • August marked National Black Business Month
    • The Pilates Table is a newly opened, Black-owned reformer pilates studio and the first of its kind in the city
    • An economic study found that Black-owned businesses in Southwest Ohio generate roughly $2.8 billion annually

    In Ohio, Black-owned businesses make up just over 13% of the state’s small business scene according to the SBA’s 2025 Small Business Profile. 

    Amber Goin is the owner of The Pilates Table, a newly opened, Black-owned reformer Pilates studio and the first of its kind in the city. For Goin, the decision to open the boutique studio was rooted in a desire for representation and inclusion.

    “I never really saw anybody that looked like me,” Goin said. “When I did, a lot of times they would kind of look at me like, ‘Oh, are you the instructor?’”

    The Pilates Table features six reformers and offers small-group instruction, allowing Goin to give clients individual attention while focusing on the foundational elements of Pilates, including breath work and core strength.

    “It’s a boutique-style studio. I’m actually able to go around and truly cater to people,” she said.

    Reformer Pilates is often seen as a high-end fitness offering, but Goin said her goal is to make the practice more accessible, especially to communities that have been historically underrepresented in wellness spaces.

    Her studio now joins the growing wave of Black-owned businesses fueling the region’s economy. Black-owned businesses in Southwest Ohio generate roughly $2.8 billion in annual economic impact, according to a joint study by the University of Cincinnati Economics Center and the Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky African American Chamber of Commerce.

    Eric Kearney, president of the chamber, said the growth is encouraging, but many Black entrepreneurs still face steep challenges.

    “There was a period of time where Black entrepreneurs were unable to receive the type of help that they needed,” Kearney said. “That’s changing, but access to capital is still a major hurdle.”

    According to the National Urban League, only 32% of Black-owned businesses are approved for financing, compared to 56% of white-owned businesses. Kearney said that’s why the chamber now offers more than 120 programs, including on-site business counselors.

    “They’ll walk you through that journey,” he said. “By that I mean they’ll help you get your paperwork together so that you can take advantage of, perhaps, a grant application or a loan application.”

    As The Pilates Table continues to gain traction, particularly through social media, Goin said she’s focused on building more than a business. She wants to create a space where every client feels seen.

    “I’ve gotten a lot of people that have come in and they just said, ‘Thank you. Thank you for opening up a space that you truly care about each client,’” she said.

    Resources for Black-Owned Businesses in Ohio:

    • Cincinnati Minority Business Assistance Center – Technical assistance, certifications, mentoring
    • Central Ohio African American Chamber of Commerce (Columbus) – Mentoring, capital access, Kiva loans
    • Urban League UBIZ (Cleveland) – Accelerators, revolving loans, business counseling
    • Dayton Minority Business Assistance Center – Loan packaging, bonding support, certifications

    Javari Burnett

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  • NASA and Space Force to hold training exercise at Kennedy Space Center

    KENNEDY SPACE CENTER — NASA and Space Force teams will take part in a training exercise on Wednesday evening, according to the U.S. space agency.


    What You Need To Know

    • The training will take place Wednesday evening

    From 5:30 p.m. ET to 8:30 p.m. ET, NASA and Space Force “protective services teams” will take part in a training exercise at the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, stated Danielle Sempsrott, NASA’s media operations lead, in an email to the media.

    The visitor complex closes to the public at 5 p.m. ET.

    In a separate email to Spectrum News, Sempsrott shared the type of teams that will be involved.

    “The Kennedy Space Center (KSC) Security Police and Fire Departments, along with the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station Explosive Ordinance Disposal team, will be conducting a training exercise at the KSC Visitor Complex,” she stated.

    About 30 people from both NASA and the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station will be taking part in the exercise, Sempsrott added.

    “This type of training ensures the team is ready to respond to varying emergency scenarios,” she wrote, adding, “NASA’s Office of Protective Services ensures their team is prepared throughout the year by engaging in various trainings and exercises to hone their skills.”

    The Brevard County Sheriff’s Office has been made aware of the exercise, according to Sempsrott.

    Anthony Leone

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  • Akron Children’s pediatric intensive care unit moving, adding heart unit

    AKRON, Ohio — The pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) at Akron Children’s Hospital is moving to it’s new home Wednesday, the health system announced in a press release.


    What You Need To Know

    • Akron Children’s pediatric intensive care unit is moving buildings
    • There are a number of improvements associated with the move, including a dedicated heart unit
    • It will also put them closer to the NICU and enhance the two department’s coordination

    The move to the new building (Kay Jewelers Pavilion) comes with a host of improvements and modernizations including a dedicated heart unit.

    “The new unit will give us a lot of room to grow and give us flexibility if we have a surge in patients, such as during respiratory season,” said Dr. Patricia Raimer, PICU medical director, in the release. “We are going from 23 to 45 beds, including a 13-bed high acuity PICU, a secondary unit that can accommodate an additional 23 patients, PICU or NICU beds, depending on the need, and the 9-bed Heart Unit.”

    The Kay Jewelers Pavilion is also the site of the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) and the ER. Raimer said this move will allow “enhanced care coordination” between the NICU and PICU.

    As part of the move, there will also be a quiet and private space for families, “many who are often dealing with the most difficult situation they have face,” according to the release.

    The health system said patient-moving plans have been underway for months.

    Dr. Robert Stewart, Akron Children’s chief of cardiothoracic surgery, said having a private and single room for their entire stay at the hospital will enhance the patient and family’s experience.

    “We will adjust the appropriate level of care while the patient keeps the same room through discharge,” Stewart said in the release. “Equally critical, by concentrating all heart patients in a single location, it helps us develop a highly specialized care team focused on the heart. This expertise extends from the bedside nursing team to the multidisciplinary staff and allows us to continue to grow as a center of excellence in caring for babies and children with congenital heart disease.” 

    Cody Thompson

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  • Paul Renner, former Florida House speaker, announces bid for governor

    TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Former Speaker of the Florida House of Representatives Paul Renner announced Wednesday that he will run for governor in the 2026 election.

    “I’ll be running as a pro-Trump, pro-DeSantis candidate, and looking at who can lead for the next four years,” he told Spectrum News Tuesday, ahead of his official announcement.


    What You Need To Know

    • Paul Renner announced Wednesday that he will be running for governor in 2026 
    • Renner served as Florida House Speaker from 2022-24
    • He said he will run “as a pro-Trump, pro-Desantis candidate”


    Renner, 58, served as speaker from 2022-24.

    He was in office as a state representative for the 19th District — which includes Flagler County and parts of lower St. Johns County — from an April 2015 special election through November 2024.

    “As a legislator and Speaker of the House, I stood with Ron DeSantis to brand our state the Free State of Florida,” Renner said in his Wednesday announcement. “I’m running for Governor so that when the DeSantis era comes to an end, we can defend our victories and solve the challenges that remain.”

    Renner served 20 years as a officer in the Navy, and was deployed in combat operations during Operation Desert Storm and in Afghanistan. He began his legal career as a prosecutor and currently serves on the State University System Board of Governors. Renner and his wife, Adriana, live in Palm Coast, where they are raising their two children.

    Renner’s statement Wednesday described him as a defender of constitutional rights, a strong supporter of educational freedom and a supporter of public safety and the rule of law.

    “As the son of a minister and a teacher, I learned the most important things in life are faith in God, your family, and honesty and hard work,” Renner said. “From years in the military, I also carry with me the veteran values of the men and women with whom I served, including: a deep love of country, a belief in service above self, and the determination to never quit until your mission is achieved.”

    Spectrum News Staff

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  • U.S. job openings slipped to 7.2M in July, more evidence labor market is cooling

    WASHINGTON — U.S. employers posted 7.2 million job vacancies in July as the American labor market continues to cool.


    What You Need To Know

    • U.S. employers posted 7.2 million job vacancies in July as the American labor market continued to cool
    • The Labor Department reported Wednesday that job openings were down from 7.4 million in June and came in modestly below what economists had forecast
    • The Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) showed that layoffs rose
    • The number of Americans quitting their jobs — a sign of confidence in their ability to find better pay, opportunities or working conditions elsewhere — was almost unchanged at 3.2 million from June

    The Labor Department reported Wednesday that job openings fell from 7.4 million in June and came in modestly below what economists had forecast.

    The Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) showed that layoffs rose slightly. The number of Americans quitting their jobs — a sign of confidence in their ability to find better pay, opportunities or working conditions elsewhere — was almost unchanged from June at 3.2 million.

    Jobs openings remain at healthy levels but have fallen steadily since peaking at a record 12.1 million in March 2022 as the U.S. economy roared back from COVID-19 lockdowns.

    The U.S. job market has lost momentum this year, partly because of the lingering effects of 11 interest rate hikes by the inflation fighters at the Federal Reserve in 2022 and 2023 and partly because President Donald Trump’s trade wars have created uncertainty that is paralyzing managers making hiring decisions.

    On Friday, the Labor Department will put out unemployment and hiring numbers for August. They are expected to show that businesses, government agencies and nonprofits added nearly 80,000 jobs last month, according to a survey of forecasters by the data firm FactSet. That would mark a modest improvement on the disappointing 73,000 they created in July.

    Worse than the lackluster July hiring figures were Labor Department revisions that slashed a stunning 258,000 jobs off May and June payrolls. A furious Trump responded to the bad numbers by firing the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the technocratic agency that compiles the statistics, and nominating a partisan idealogue to replace her.

    So far this year, the economy has been generating 85,000 jobs a month, down from 168,000 last year and an average 400,000 a month during the hiring boom of 2021-2023.

    In a time of uncertainty, employers are less likely to hire, but they’re not letting workers go either. Layoffs remain below pre-pandemic levels.

    Associated Press

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  • SpaceX successfully launches nearly 30 Starlink satellites

    CAPE CANAVERAL SPACE FORCE STATION — The weather was looking pretty fine as SpaceX launched nearly 30 Starlink satellites on Wednesday morning. 


    What You Need To Know

    • SpaceX will send off Starlink 10-22 mission

    The Falcon 9 rocket sent up Starlink 10-22 mission from Space Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, stated SpaceX

    The launch window is from 7:06 a.m. ET to 11:06 a.m. ET, as the liftoff time happened at 7:56 a.m. ET.

    The 45th Weather Squadron gave a 70% chance of good liftoff conditions, with the only concerns being the cumulus cloud rule.

    Find out more about the weather criteria for a Falcon 9 launch.

    Going up

    This is the 14th mission for the Falcon 9’s first-stage booster B1083. It has a very impressive resume, with two crewed missions and a lunar mission:

    1. Crew-8 launch
    2. Polaris Dawn mission
    3. Starlink 6-48 mission
    4. Starlink 6-56 mission
    5. CRS-31
    6. Starlink 6-65 mission
    7. Astranis
    8. Starlink 13-1 mission
    9. IM-2 mission
    10. Starlink 12-17 mission
    11. Starlink 6-91 mission
    12. Starlink 12-24 mission
    13. Dror 1

    After the stage separation, the first-stage rocket landed on the droneship A Shortfall of Gravitas that is in the Atlantic Ocean.

    About the mission

    The 28 satellites from the Starlink company, owned by SpaceX, will head to low-Earth orbit to join the thousands already there.

    Once deployed and in their orbit, they will provide internet service to many parts of Earth.

    Dr. Jonathan McDowell, of Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, has been documenting Starlink satellites.

    Before this launch, McDowell recorded the following:

    • 8,316are in orbit
    • 7,551are in operational orbit

     

    Anthony Leone

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  • 157 Dayton International Airport employees to be laid off

    DAYTON, Ohio — PSA Airlines announced it’s closing its facility in Vandalia, which will affect around 157 employees at Dayton International Airport. 


    What You Need To Know

    • Employees have been offered to relocate
    • If employees don’t take it, layoffs will occur in phases
    • Layoffs will take place in October of this year through April 2027

    In a WARN Notice sent to the Ohio Department of Jobs and Family Services, PSA Airlines said the closure is because of relocation of its operations out of state. 

    PSA Airlines said all employees have been offered to relocate, but if employees don’t take it, permanent layoffs will be in phases starting Oct. 29. Layoffs are also expected to occur December through April 2027. 

    PSA encourage affected employees to contact the Ohio Department of Jobs and Family Services to learn more about resources, such as unemployment compensation information, job matching, resume writing and more. 

    A date for the Vandalia facility closure hasn’t been announced. 

    Lydia Taylor

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  • Some Bradenton residents torn over mini roundabouts

    BRADENTON, Fla. — Some Manatee County drivers are split over new roundabouts.


    What You Need To Know

    • County officials say the new road pattern is meant to make intersections safer for drivers, but some residents aren’t convinced
    • One resident tells Spectrum News it is causing confusion
    • The mini roundabouts are at 51st St. West and 33rd Ave. Drive West, and 51st St. West and 21st Ave. West


    County officials say the new road pattern is meant to make intersections safer for drivers, but some residents aren’t convinced.

    They’re concerned about the new mini roundabouts that were built at two busy Bradenton intersections.

    Every day, Adam Sahhar and his best bud, Winslow, go for a walk from their neighborhood to the park.

    But recently, the route has looked different because of a new mini roundabout at 51st Street West and 33rd Avenue Drive West.

    “People come down this road pretty quickly, and now they’re confused, and it causes weird traffic back-up,” Sahhar said.

    County officials say one of the goals of this mini roundabout is to alleviate traffic.

    It’s one of two mini roundabouts built over the summer. The other is at the intersection of 51st St. West and 21st Ave. West.

    The county says both are in high-traffic areas. For example, they estimate the one at 51st Street has between 8,000 and 10,000 cars traveling through it each day.

    But people who live nearby claim it’s not a big problem.

    “It doesn’t make a whole lot of sense because this was never a major intersection,” Sahhar said. “We’ve lived here for almost seven years. I’ve never seen a single accident here. And outside of the times when G.T. Bray (Recreation Center) has a big event where they could use some traffic control, there’s never a whole lot of traffic coming through here.”

    County officials say they received public requests for crosswalks and complaints about speeding. They decided the best option was to build a mini roundabout, which they say will address speeding concerns and make it safer for pedestrians to cross.

    But Sahhar says it’s making things more difficult.

    “There’s no way for us to safely get across this way. And we’ve seen a lot of very confused drivers either come to a complete stop at the intersection — because it never was a stop sign before — or hesitate since it was always just a through road,” he said.

    Adam said he and Winslow will continue their walks as they try to take the changes in stride.

    According to the county, work on both mini roundabouts is substantially complete.

    Julia Hazel

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