ReportWire

Tag: van

  • Police: Child airlifted after electric bike collides with van at Melbourne intersection

    A child was seriously injured Wednesday afternoon after the electric dirt bike they were riding collided with a van at a Melbourne intersection.Melbourne police responded to the crash involving a 2001 Chrysler van and an electric dirt bike at approximately 4:17 p.m. at the intersection of Wickham Road and Lake Washington Road.The child riding the electric dirt bike sustained serious bodily injuries and was airlifted to Orlando Health Arnold Palmer Hospital for Children in Orlando. A landing zone was established at a nearby golf course for the transport. The child is currently being treated.According to the initial investigation, the electric dirt bike was traveling west on Lake Washington, west of Wickham, when the Chrysler van, leaving a parking lot on the northwest corner of the intersection, attempted to travel east on Lake Washington.The van pulled out in front of the dirt bike, causing the bike to strike the driver’s side of the van.Police said alcohol and drugs do not appear to be factors in the crash. The Melbourne Police Department’s Traffic Enforcement Unit is investigating the incident.Anyone with information is encouraged to contact Traffic Enforcement Unit Officer Costello at (321) 616-6027 or anonymously through Crimeline at 800-423-TIPS (8477) or www.crimeline.org.

    A child was seriously injured Wednesday afternoon after the electric dirt bike they were riding collided with a van at a Melbourne intersection.

    Melbourne police responded to the crash involving a 2001 Chrysler van and an electric dirt bike at approximately 4:17 p.m. at the intersection of Wickham Road and Lake Washington Road.

    The child riding the electric dirt bike sustained serious bodily injuries and was airlifted to Orlando Health Arnold Palmer Hospital for Children in Orlando. A landing zone was established at a nearby golf course for the transport. The child is currently being treated.

    According to the initial investigation, the electric dirt bike was traveling west on Lake Washington, west of Wickham, when the Chrysler van, leaving a parking lot on the northwest corner of the intersection, attempted to travel east on Lake Washington.

    The van pulled out in front of the dirt bike, causing the bike to strike the driver’s side of the van.

    Police said alcohol and drugs do not appear to be factors in the crash. The Melbourne Police Department’s Traffic Enforcement Unit is investigating the incident.

    Anyone with information is encouraged to contact Traffic Enforcement Unit Officer Costello at (321) 616-6027 or anonymously through Crimeline at 800-423-TIPS (8477) or www.crimeline.org.

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  • Des Moines police arrest 13-year-old suspect after chase and crash with stolen Amazon delivery van

    Des Moines police have taken a 13-year-old into custody after the teen allegedly stole a delivery van.Police say an investigation began Wednesday afternoon when an Amazon delivery driver reported their van had been stolen from the 600 block of Walker Street. The van was later spotted by officers near Southeast 14th Street and Park Avenue.The stolen van fled from a traffic stop and crashed into a pick-up truck on Southeast 14th Street. Two occupants in the van ran from the crash but were taken into custody, according to police.The driver, a 13-year-old, was referred to juvenile court for charges of first-degree theft, second-degree theft and eluding.The passenger was not charged.

    Des Moines police have taken a 13-year-old into custody after the teen allegedly stole a delivery van.

    Police say an investigation began Wednesday afternoon when an Amazon delivery driver reported their van had been stolen from the 600 block of Walker Street. The van was later spotted by officers near Southeast 14th Street and Park Avenue.

    The stolen van fled from a traffic stop and crashed into a pick-up truck on Southeast 14th Street. Two occupants in the van ran from the crash but were taken into custody, according to police.

    The driver, a 13-year-old, was referred to juvenile court for charges of first-degree theft, second-degree theft and eluding.

    The passenger was not charged.

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  • Eastern Sierra housing crunch: With all this open land, why are so many workers living in vans?

    Eastern Sierra housing crunch: With all this open land, why are so many workers living in vans?

    Emily Markstein, a sinewy rock climber and skier who has spent seven years living and working in the Sierra resort town of Mammoth Lakes, opens a large sliding door and welcomes a stranger into her home.

    One of the gleaming multimillion-dollar mansions nestled among towering pine trees and granite peaks in this exclusive mountain enclave? Not exactly.

    Markstein, who has a master’s degree in historic preservation and has coached skiing, taught yoga, trimmed trees and waited tables at one of the fanciest restaurants in town, lives in a 2006 GMC van.

    A rare sign for new home sales in the Eastern Sierra town of Bishop.

    Like countless other adventure seekers drawn to California’s rugged and remote Eastern Sierra, Markstein, 31, initially embraced “van life” after scrolling through social media posts that made it look carefree and glamorous. She continues because she genuinely likes it, she said, but also because, even in this big, beckoning land full of wide-open spaces, there’s almost nowhere else for working people to live.

    Official statistics are hard to come by, but Markstein spitballs the percentage of hourly workers in Mammoth Lakes who are living in cars and vans as “less than 50 but more than 20.” In every place she’s worked since moving here, she said, “there have been at least two of us living in our vans.”

    Like so many others, she tries to hide that uncomfortable truth from tourists so as not to shatter their fantasy about escaping to an untroubled mountain paradise. But it takes effort.

    “I had to play the part of the fine dining expert, like, I know my wines and I know good food,” she said with an easy, infectious grin. “But you haven’t showered in a week and a half and you’re putting deodorant on, and all these sprays, trying to make yourself look like you don’t live in your car.”

    Emily Markstein, with a dog she is sitting for a friend, outside her van in the Inyo National Forest.

    “During COVID, I was showering in the creek,” Emily Markstein says of van life. “Right now, I rotate through my friends’ houses to get my weekly shower.”

    The notion of an acute housing shortage in this wild and sparsely populated region — there are about four people per square mile in Mono County and fewer than two per square mile in neighboring Inyo County — can be hard to wrap your head around.

    It’s due, in large part, to the fact that more than 90 percent of the land is owned by conservation-minded government agencies: the U.S. Forest Service, the federal Bureau of Land Management and, most controversially, the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power.

    Those large, distant bureaucracies have little interest in making land available to the fast-growing ranks of outdoor enthusiasts — hikers, climbers, skiers, anglers with fly rods — flocking to this mostly unspoiled part of California near the Nevada border.

    So when any sliver of private land or an already existing home hits the market, there’s usually a long line of well-to-do professionals and would-be Airbnb investors from coastal cities ready to drive the price out of reach for even the most industrious working people. As a result, essential workers are left out in the cold.

    “That has always been a problem here,” said Mammoth Lakes Mayor Pro Tem Chris Bubser. But it has become noticeably worse since the pandemic, when so many well-paid professionals discovered they could work from anywhere, and so many long-term rental units became Airbnbs to accommodate them.

    An artist draws the scenery in the Inyo National Forest.

    An artist captures the scenery in Buttermilk Country in the Inyo National Forest.

    Now, Bubser said, the lack of affordable housing is a full-blown crisis making it almost impossible for hourly workers, and even some salaried professionals, to keep a traditional roof over their heads.

    Last year, the schools made job offers to four teachers, but three had to say no because they couldn’t find anywhere to live, Bubser said.

    “Our community is hollowing out, and it’s going to be catastrophic down the line,” Bubser said. “We want people to come and raise a family in this amazing place. It feels terrible that it’s not for everybody.”

    The economics of resort towns, where tourists go to play and most everyone local hustles to get by, have been hard on working people for decades. It’s the same in ski towns throughout the American West: Lake Tahoe, Vail, Aspen, Park City.

    But the Eastern Sierra’s housing crunch stretches well beyond the confines of Mammoth Lakes.

    Grazing land at the foot of a mountain in Bishop.

    With all its wide-open spaces, there’s still essentially nowhere to live in the Eastern Sierra because of the vast portion of land owned by goverment agencies.

    A 40-minute drive south on U.S. 395 descends more than 3,000 vertical feet to the floor of the Owens Valley and fills your windshield with one of the most sweeping and expansive views in the country. Snowy peaks tumble down to steep granite walls. The walls descend to lush green pastures. The pastures give way to high desert that stretches toward the horizon.

    The most breathtaking part? In all of that wide open space, there’s still essentially nowhere to live.

    “It’s just insane,” said Jose Garcia, mayor of Bishop, a dusty crossroads of about 3,800 people at the bottom of the hill.

    Garcia has lived in Bishop for 35 years and has watched the once-sleepy ranching outpost explode in popularity with adventure-loving tourists: hikers and climbers in the summer, anglers and leaf-peepers in the fall, skiers in the winter. Tourism is by far the biggest industry, he said.

    Bishop Mayor Jose Garcia sits on a sidewalk along Main Street in Bishop.

    “Bishop would be like Santa Monica,” if the city had room to grow, Mayor Jose Garcia says of his town. “People would come from all over because of the beauty of this place.”

    But in all his time there, “the city has not grown at all,” Garcia said.

    That’s because almost all of the land in and around Bishop is owned by the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, Garcia said.

    More than a century ago, when it became clear the booming metropolis 300 miles to the south would very quickly dry up its own meager water supplies, its agents fanned out across the Owens Valley, buying up every acre they could find to secure rights to the precious snowmelt that flows down from the mountains each spring.

    Today, the DWP owns about 250,000 acres in Inyo County, where Bishop is located.

    “We are basically landlocked,” said an exasperated Garcia over coffee earlier this month, as soft morning light bathed the mountains in every direction.

    California has a dozen summits higher than 14,000 feet; the trailheads leading to 11 of them are within about an hour of where he sat.

    “Bishop would be like Santa Monica” if the city had room to grow, he said. “People would come from all over because of the beauty of this place.”

    A private property sign in a brushy area.

    A City of Los Angeles private property sign wards off would-be campers outside Bishop.

    Adam Perez, the DWP’s top manager in the Owens Valley, said it’s easy to point the finger at his agency and blame it for the stagnation. But the DWP manages the land responsibly, he said. The overarching mission remains what it always was — to send the water down to Los Angeles — but the department works hard to be more than just “bullies that are trying to push people around,” he said.

    The agency allows hiking, hunting, fishing and camping on most of its land, he pointed out.

    And if you’re lucky enough to own one of the existing houses, he said, you might like the fact that your view across that incredible landscape is never going to be marred by “a big housing tract” plunked down in the middle of it.

    “You’re always going to have a protected view,” Perez said.

    If Perez is at the top of the local pecking order, the young climbers who flock to Bishop from around the globe to train on world-class crags in Buttermilk Country and the Owens River Gorge are near the bottom.

    The Mammoth Gear Exchange, a secondhand sporting goods shop on a corner of Bishop’s main intersection, is a local landmark and regular haunt for climbers. On a recent weekday morning, a handful of the shop’s employees agreed with at least some of what Perez said: They love that Bishop remains so remote and that it hasn’t succumbed to suburban sprawl as have climbing meccas near Denver and Boulder.

    But all of them have spent long stretches living out of their vans, even after they decided to give up the itinerant life of a hard-core traveling climber and tried to put down roots.

    One, who asked to be identified only by his first name, Peter, to avoid attracting attention from parking enforcement, said he had been living in a van since making the trek from Ohio to California 2½ years ago. His girlfriend lives with him.

    They’re in no rush to start paying rent, he said, but it didn’t take much prompting to get him to rattle off a long list of the difficulties.

    A street separates open grazing land from a tree-covered neighborhood.

    Homes to the right, grazing land to the left, and the wide open spaces beyond in the Eastern Sierra town of Bishop.

    “When you’ve lived in a house your whole life, you don’t realize how much you value your own space,” he said, choosing his words carefully. Forget about getting anything delivered from Amazon.

    “It seems like the whole system is set up” for people who live in houses, he said, “like, you’re supposed to have a permanent address.”

    He sounded almost mystical when his thoughts turned to the comforts of indoor plumbing. “Just having warm water to wash your hands on demand,” he said. “Like, you just turn the dial.”

    Back up the hill in Mammoth, Markstein’s description of van life also frequently circled back to the issue of plumbing.

    “During COVID, I was showering in the creek,” she said, because social distancing requirements made invitations to use indoor bathrooms hard to come by. “Right now, I rotate through my friends’ houses to get my weekly shower.”

    Then, realizing how that might sound to an audience of the uninitiated, she added: “For many people that’s pretty gross, but for people living in a van it’s kind of normal.”

    During her stint as a tree trimmer, she guessed about 70% of the properties she worked on sat empty because they were either second homes or unoccupied Airbnbs. That was immensely “frustrating” for someone working her butt off, living in a van, she said.

    But maybe nothing is as frustrating for van lifers, or occupies as big a chunk of their daily bandwidth, as the question of where to find a toilet.

    At one point, a few of her friends worked at an organic coffee shop on Main St. called Stellar Brew. It had a comfortable, welcoming vibe. Word spread quickly. Before long, Markstein said, she’d go there in the morning and see “10 vans lined up” in the parking lot.

    The inside joke was: “Have a stellar poo at Stellar Brew.”

    Emily Markstein laughs sitting on a mattress inside her van.

    Working as a tree trimmer, Emily Markstein saw second homes and Airbnbs sitting empty. That was “frustrating” for someone working her butt off, living in a van, she said.

    The shop’s general manager, Nikki Lee, had nothing but sympathy and praise for the van lifers.

    The housing situation is so precarious for working people in Mammoth, Lee said, she actually prefers job candidates who live in their vans. Their lives are more stable than people engaged in the almost always losing battle of trying to hold on to an apartment in a town where rent is often upward of $4,000 a month and constantly rising.

    A current full-time baker at the shop, who used to be a kindergarten teacher, lives in his van, Lee said.

    “I don’t ever let that be a deterrent for hiring,” Lee said, “because I know that the folks that live in their van, they can make the commitment to stay.”

    Jack Dolan

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  • Methuen man among 2 killed in I-95 crash

    Methuen man among 2 killed in I-95 crash

    A Methuen man was among two people killed in a two-vehicle crash on Interstate 95 in Greenland, New Hampshire, that also seriously injured another person Wednesday afternoon.

    New Hampshire State Police learned of the crash about 1:13 p.m. Troopers arrived to find two people dead.

    A preliminary investigation determined that a 2023 Toyota Camry, driven by Steve Le, 24, of Methuen, was traveling on I-95 north when it lost control. The vehicle crossed the median and drove into the southbound lanes, police reported.

    The Camry struck a 2019 Ford Econoline van that Leslie Lynn, 58, of Roanoke, Virginia, was driving on I-95 south. The collision forced the van to cross over onto the northbound side of the highway before stopping at the woodline.

    Le and Lynn were pronounced dead at the scene. A passenger in Lynn’s van was transported to a nearby hospital with serious injuries, police reported.

    It is under investigation why Le lost control of the car, police added.

    Both sides of I-95 remained closed as of 4:30 p.m. near the crash scene at mile marker 9.2 to clear debris and investigate the crash.

    By Angelina Berube | aberube@eagletribune.com

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  • ‘Jerry Maguire’ With Bill Simmons, Chris Ryan, Sean Fennessey, and Van Lathan

    ‘Jerry Maguire’ With Bill Simmons, Chris Ryan, Sean Fennessey, and Van Lathan

    Ringer Movies, our new YouTube channel, is home to all things video for The Rewatchables and The Big Picture. Subscribe here!

    Live from YouTube, The Ringer’s Bill Simmons, Chris Ryan, Sean Fennessey, and Van Lathan learn that it’s not show friends, it’s show business after rewatching Cameron Crowe’s 1996 classic Jerry Maguire, starring Tom Cruise, Cuba Gooding Jr., and Renee Zellweger.

    Producer: Craig Horlbeck

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / RSS

    Bill Simmons

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  • Sheriff’s deputies fatally shoot man who they say drove van toward officers in East L.A.

    Sheriff’s deputies fatally shoot man who they say drove van toward officers in East L.A.

    Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies shot and killed a man late Saturday in East Los Angeles after he allegedly drove a van toward one of the officers after fleeing the scene of a crime, authorities said.

    Deputies responded to a domestic assault call shortly before midnight in the 1500 block of North Herbert Avenue, according to the sheriff’s department.

    Deputies saw the alleged assailant leave the area in a green van, according to the department.

    They found the man driving west on the 3900 block of Snow Drive and tried to stop the van, officials said. The deputies got out of their vehicle and drew their guns. The man made a U-turn in a cul-de-sac and then started driving toward one of the deputies, according to the sheriff’s department.

    The driver was shot in the torso, about 11:47 p.m. The sheriff’s department did not immediately report how many deputies shot the man or how many times he was shot.

    The unidentified man, reported to be between 40 to 45, was taken to a hospital, where he died, officials said.

    A deputy was taken to a hospital and treated for a related injury. No one else was injured.

    As of late Sunday morning, the sheriff’s department had not released the name of the man or further details surrounding the shooting.

    This is a breaking news story based on preliminary information provided by law enforcement. It will be updated if more information becomes immediately available.

    Jaclyn Cosgrove

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  • ‘Rounders’ Live From New York With Bill Simmons, Chris Ryan, Sean Fennessey, and Van Lathan

    ‘Rounders’ Live From New York With Bill Simmons, Chris Ryan, Sean Fennessey, and Van Lathan

    The guys rewatch the 1998 poker classic ‘Rounders,’ starring Matt Damon, Edward Norton, and John Malkovich

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    Bill Simmons

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  • ‘Creed’ Live From Philly With Bill Simmons, Chris Ryan, Sean Fennessey, and Van Lathan

    ‘Creed’ Live From Philly With Bill Simmons, Chris Ryan, Sean Fennessey, and Van Lathan

    One step at a time, one punch at a time, one round at a time, the crew is here to revisit the ‘Rocky’ spinoff!

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    Bill Simmons

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  • ‘National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation’ With Bill Simmons, Chris Ryan, Sean Fennessey, and Van Lathan

    ‘National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation’ With Bill Simmons, Chris Ryan, Sean Fennessey, and Van Lathan

    Photo by Steve Schapiro/Corbis via Getty Images

    The crew spends Christmas with the Griswolds by revisiting the Chevy Chase comedy

    The Ringer’s Bill Simmons, Chris Ryan, Sean Fennessey, and Van Lathan have a good old-fashioned Christmas with the Griswolds as they rewatch National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation, starring Chevy Chase, Beverly D’Angelo, and Randy Quaid.‌

    Producer: Craig Horlbeck

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / RSS

    Bill Simmons

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  • ‘Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves’ With Bill Simmons, Chris Ryan, and Van Lathan

    ‘Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves’ With Bill Simmons, Chris Ryan, and Van Lathan

    The Ringer’s Bill Simmons, Chris Ryan, and Van Lathan steal from the rich and pod for the poor as they kick off “Wait, this movie made HOW much money?” month with a rewatch of Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, starring Kevin Costner, Morgan Freeman, Alan Rickman, and Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio.

    Producer: Craig Horlbeck

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / RSS

    Bill Simmons

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  • Cell Phone Signal Booster Extends Coverage in Vehicles Very Conveniently.

    Cell Phone Signal Booster Extends Coverage in Vehicles Very Conveniently.

    New Drive Sleek signal booster is more convenient and easy to use, plus provides up to 32 times stronger cell signals on the road.

    Press Release



    updated: Sep 27, 2017

     The new weBoost Drive Sleek cell phone signal booster with adjustable cell phone holder provides strong 3G, 4G, and LTE wireless signals while being very easy to place it in any type vehicle providing a high level of convenience. It has a minimalist, low-profile design that provides a variety of mounting options in places most people store their phones while driving such as the vent mount, cup holder or center console.

    Priced at $199.99, the Drive Sleek is an affordable, single-phone cradle that uses coupling technology for reduced loss from outside antenna to improve 4G LTE and 3G cellular signals up to 32x for cars, vans, RVs and boats. Certified by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and Industry Canada, the Drive Sleek is compatible with all mobile phones and wireless carriers in USA & Canada, allowing users to enjoy outstanding call quality, fewer dead zones, and faster data upload/ download speeds while on the road.

    The weBoost Drive Sleek has all parts needed for an easy installation, including:

        •    Drive Sleek cradle.

        •    Drive Sleek booster.

        •    Aerodynamic outside antenna.

        •    Power supply.

        •    Magnetic vent clip.

    It works with any one smartphone but is compatible with multiple smartphones and cellular case sizes, thanks to its adjustable cellular phone cradle/holder.

    How it Works:

    The powerful exterior antenna which magnetically attaches to the vehicle’s roof reaches out to cellphone towers to receive signal with voice, text, and data and transmits this signal to the booster.

    The booster receives this outside signal and amplifies each of the five frequency bands it supports up to 32 times using a series of sophisticated low noise amplifiers and filters. The signal is then sent to the Drive Sleek cradle where the user can enjoy a stronger signal for faster data and clearer call quality. The cell phone cradle also receives an outgoing signal from the cell phone and transmits a stronger signal back to the tower through the same process.

    For more information, please visit the website, call 1-800-501-3153, or email sales@cellphonesignalbooster.us.

    About Cell Phone Signal Booster.

    Owned and operated by Accessory Fulfillment Center, LLC., based in Houston, Texas, it is an authorized reseller of efficient, high-quality weBoost and WilsonPro signal boosters by Wilson Electronics. The company offers an industry-leading 60- day money-back guarantee along with a two-year limited manufacturer warranty. For more information, please visit the company’s website, or social media sites listed below.

    Website: https://cellphonesignalbooster.us

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/phoneboosters

    Twitter: https://twitter.com/phoneboosters

    Tumblr: http://phoneboosters.tumblr.com

    Google+: https://plus.google.com/+CellPhoneSignalBooster

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cellphonesignalbooster

    Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/phoneboosters 

    Media Contact:

    Neal Serrano, CSO.

    neal.serrano@cellphonesignalbooster.us

    Cell Phone Signal Booster

    7800 Harwin Drive A-2

    Houston, TX 77036

    1(800)501-3153

    Source: Cell Phone Signal Booster

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