Powerball jackpot rolls to $900M: When's the next drawing?
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:03:41 GMT
(NEXSTAR) - The Powerball jackpot has rolled yet again after no ticket matched the six winning numbers drawn Saturday, pushing the grand prize to an estimated $900 million. The current jackpot, with an estimated cash value of $465.1 million, has been growing since mid-April, meaning it has gone 37 consecutive drawings without a winner. Saturday’s Powerball numbers were 2, 9, 43, 55, 57, and red Powerball 18, with a multiplier of 2X. Two tickets in Texas and another in Colorado matched all five white balls, winning $1 million prizes, according to Powerball. Is it possible to increase your Powerball jackpot odds? As it stands, the estimated $900 million jackpot ranks as the third-largest in game history, and as the seventh-largest lottery prize on record in the U.S. In order to climb any higher on either record list, the jackpot would need to at least surpass $1 billion, which it could do ahead of the next drawing (here’s how).Here are the 10 largest Powerball and Me...4 killed in Georgia shooting, suspect at large: authorities
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:03:41 GMT
HAMPTON, Ga. (AP) — Authorities in Georgia hunted Saturday for a man who remained at large hours after he was suspected of gunning down three men and a woman in a suburban neighborhood south of Atlanta.Andre Longmore, 40, is believed to be armed and dangerous, Hampton Police Chief James Turner said during a news conference. The shootings happened late Saturday morning in a subdivision in Hampton, a city of roughly 8,500 people.Officials released few details about the killings. Turner said detectives were investigating at least four crime scenes near one another in the same neighborhood. He said Longmore is a Hampton resident, but declined to discuss a possible motive.The suspect remained at large more than five hours after the killings, and authorities vowed to keep searching until he was in custody.“We’ve done an exhaustive search in the general area and we’re now widening that a little bit,” Turner told reporters.Investigators were also on the lookout for a Black GMC Acadia SUV th...Texas lawmaker vows to try again to make AC for renters mandatory
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:03:41 GMT
AUSTIN (KXAN) – It’s not as if Jake Salinas was dialing down the digits on his thermostat with reckless abandon.A few weeks ago, his air conditioning was set to, what he considers, a conservative 76 degrees.Austin Resident Jake Salinas explains how the AC in his apartment wasn't cooling properly (KXAN Photo/Chris Nelson)“It started at 78 and then eventually would go to 81 and 82,” Salinas said. “That felt off, obviously.” The air was blowing, he said, but the AC was not cooling properly. Salinas said he notified his complex and the issue was fixed the next day. Still, he couldn’t help but tweet about what he dubbed a "fun fact" about his situation: how he’d spent several months working on a bill to mandate working air conditioning and now his own AC wasn’t working well. How to cool your Texas home without an AC Working on bills is part of Salinas’ job as the legislative director for Texas Rep. Sheryl Cole, D-Austin.“He receives the constituent complaints a lot of times for my offi...Rapidly spreading ‘Rabbit Fire’ scorches over 7,500 acres in Riverside County
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:03:41 GMT
The “Rabbit Fire” that broke out on Friday night is continuing to spread and force evacuations near Beaumont. According to fire officials, the blaze has torched 7,600 acres and remains just 5 percent contained. Mountainsides near the 79 Freeway were seen charred by the wildfires as early as 6 a.m. Sunday morning. The two biggest challenges firefighters face are accessing the remote area that the fire is spreading through and mitigating the effects of the large amounts of dry brush in the area, but fighting the blaze at night is proving to be a key tactic in extinguishing it. “As the earth cools down, the wind will go in the reverse direction of where it was coming to,” said Cal Fire Deputy Chief Lucas Spelman. “In this area we’ve been having fires over and over the last few weeks because of the heat and how dry it is.” The “Rabbit Fire” that broke out on Friday night is continuing to spread and force evacuations near Beaumont. (KTLA)Firefighters are responding to a wildfir...Sunnyvale’s e-scooter program gets dozens of complaints, thousands of rides
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:03:41 GMT
Bird E-scootersEight months into Sunnyvale’s E-scooter Share Pilot Program, the city had received 59 complaints about the electronic devices provided by Bird.The majority of complaints were related to damaged e-scooters. A report from the city manager’s office indicated that staff had not needed to impound any e-scooters due to unaddressed safety problems or hazards.Bird launched a one-year e-scooter share pilot program in Sunnyvale last October to provide a first-/last-mile transportation option. Between February and May, the average daily number of e-scooters within Sunnyvale city limits was 78. They were generally stationed near businesses, parks, bus stops and major transit stops.“Since the start of the service, Bird e-scooters have been used for 6,323 rides,” the report read.For more information, visit https://www.sunnyvale.ca.gov/homes-streets-and-property/transportation-and-traffic-safety/e-scooter-share.Remote meeting accessSanta Clara County residents will soon be able to p...Swarm of Milpitas students take home awards from National Bees
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:03:41 GMT
A swarm of Sinnott Elementary School students excelled at the 2023 International Academic Competitions (IAC) National Bees competitions in Arlington, Virginia last month.Sixth-grader Tejus Karadi placed third in both the Latin American History National Championship exam and the American Geography National Championship exam and eighth in the history bee. Fellow Sinnott sixth-grader Stavya Dangaria secured a second-place finish at the Science Bee Nationals.Stavya finished first and Tejus placed third at the 2023 IAC Academic Bee, a medley of all subjects including but not limited to science, history, geography, literature and current events.Third-grader Tara Karadi, the youngest of the Sinnott team to qualify for the playoffs, competed in geography and science bees, reaching the quarterfinals in both disciplines. Fifth-grader Shreya Ram and sixth-grader Parth Baheti also made it to quarterfinals of the science bee, while sixth-grader Kashvi Agarwal secured fourth place.Sixth-grader J...Let’s make Santa Clara County a more accessible place for all
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:03:41 GMT
Here’s a statistic you probably didn’t know: Nearly 160,000 of our neighbors in Santa Clara County live with a disability. That’s one in 12 people. That one in 12 could be a co-worker, a friend or family member or a neighbor.Folks in the intellectual and developmental disability (I/DD) community may experience the world a little differently, but they want to enjoy everything life has to offer like everybody else. Maybe they process and absorb information differently, or maybe the way they interact with their environment looks different.Some disabilities are visible; some aren’t. Regardless, people with disabilities in our county deserve the same support and access to resources as everybody else.For those of us who are in a position to make the world more accessible, it starts with removing physical and social barriers to help people with disabilities integrate fully into society. My office and I are fortunate to be in such a position.I recently pushed for a two-year partnership with...Assemblymember Gail Pellerin named chair of Elections Committee
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:03:41 GMT
State Assemblymember Gail Pellerin is tapping into her roots in her new role as chair of the Assembly Elections Committee.Pellerin, whose 28th district includes Los Gatos, served for nearly three decades as the Santa Cruz County clerk, where she managed elections conducted in the county. She also served as president of the California Association of Clerks and Election Officials from 2010 to 2012 and as co-chair of the Secretary of State’s Voting Accessibility Advisory Committee.State Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas announced her appointment earlier this month. She replaces Assemblymember Isaac G. Bryan as elections committee chair.“With her 27 years of experience as a county clerk, Assemblymember Pellerin is well prepared to improve the accessibility of our elections while ensuring they remain secure and fair,” Rivas said in a statement.“I’m honored to have the confidence of the Speaker and continue to work to ensure that California is the gold standard for secure, accurate, transpare...Campbell’s celebration of Parks and Rec Month goes swimmingly
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:03:41 GMT
Family swim, water tower artCampbell’s celebration of National Parks and Recreation Month continues July 22 with “Under the CCC,” a family themed recreation swim night at the Campbell Community Center at 6 p.m. Registration is $2.50 at https://secure.rec1.com/CA/campbell-ca/catalog.On July 23, Campbell Recreation and Community Services is hosting a water tower chalk art contest in the community center parking lot from 9-11 a.m. Artists are free to create any masterpiece they would like, but a prize will be awarded for the best water tower chalk art of the day.Artists are responsible for bringing their own non-toxic chalk to use for the event. Registration is required to Eventbrite.comRemote meeting accessSanta Clara County residents will soon be able to participate remotely in meetings of the county’s 52 boards and commissions that are subject to the Brown Act, the state’s open meeting law. Apart from the county Board of Supervisors and its policy committees, remote participation ha...Latest line: A good week for Mark Zuckerberg, a bad week for Big Oil
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:03:41 GMT
Mark ZuckerbergFacebook co-founder launches Threads, a new social media platform similar to Twitter, drawing 100 million users in the first week, and sending parent company Meta’s stock to a 52-week high. Big OilPPIC poll shows 65% of likely California voters oppose new offshore oil drilling, and 64% oppose a 2024 ballot measure that would overturn a state law prohibiting new wells near homes and schools. Pamela PriceOpponents launch a recall against the liberal Alameda County district attorney, who they say is soft on crime. But it could cost $1 million to collect 93,000 signatures needed to qualify for the ballot.Latest news
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