US casinos have their best July ever, winning nearly $5.4B from gamblers
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:04:00 GMT
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) — Commercial casinos in the U.S. had their best July ever this year, winning nearly $5.4 billion from gamblers, according to figures released Thursday by a national gambling industry group.The American Gaming Association said the casinos’ winnings were up nearly 6% from July 2022.The association also said the casinos remain on pace to have their best year ever in 2023, with winnings from in-person casino games, sports betting and internet gambling at nearly $38 billion over the first seven months of this year, 11% ahead of what they won during the same period in 2022.The association, the national trade group for the gambling industry, also revealed that revenue from traditional in-person casino games in July was $4.4 billion, a new monthly record. It said those figures were aided by seasonal travel trends and the addition of several new physical casino properties around the country, including in Illinois, Pennsylvania and Virginia.Sports betting genera...CTA issues request for proposals in Red Line extension project
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:04:00 GMT
CHICAGO — The Chicago Transit Authority announced Thursday that they have issued request for proposals related to extending the Red Line into the city's Far South Side.The RFPs will be sent to three contracting teams that were pre-selected by the CTA earlier this year. The agency said they expect to award the contract sometime next year. The pre-selected companies are FH Paschen, Ragnar Benson, Milhouse and BOWA Joint Venture; Kiewit Infrastructure; and Walsh VINCI Transit Community Partners.The $3.6 billion project had TIF funding approved by city-council in December. It still would need federal approval. However, federal officials were in town last week pledging nearly $2 billion for the project. Chicago’s Red Line closer to federal funding to add 5.6 miles of track The Red Line Extension Project includes the following.A 5.6 mile heavy rail extension from the 95th/Dan Ryan Terminal to 130th Street. Four new, fully-accessible rail stations near 103rd Street, 111th...Was the Bears' Week 1 offensive game plan too conservative? Luke Getsy responds to criticism
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:04:00 GMT
LAKE FOREST, Ill. — The hope that the Bears would be taking shots down the field with some new weapons didn't exactly come to pass in Week 1 of the 2023 season. So naturally, offensive coordinator Luke Getsy was asked about the playcalling on Thursday after a Week 1 loss to the Packers on Sunday amidst plenty of criticism that has come his way the last few days. Was the game plan too conservative?"I don't look at it that way. I don't think I ever have," said Getsy when asked that question. "We look for advantageous looks. It sounds like screens have been a conversation, but a poor motion landmark and a couple of poor blocks. But if you watch the film, and you actually watch the film, we have everybody accounted for and there's nobody else out there, if we can just capture that edge, those are 15-25 yard gains, and you guys are patting me on my back - and I get it, that's part of it. "My point of it is, we're gonna make decisions for what we feel is advantageous to our guys having op...West Virginia boy found dead of gunshot wound after going missing during hunting trip
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:04:00 GMT
MASON COUNTY, WV (WOWK) – A 10-year-old boy in Mason County, West Virginia, was found dead on Sunday morning from a gunshot wound after becoming separated from his grandfather during a hunting trip the day before.Wyatt Ray Eaves and his grandfather had set out Saturday to go hunting, an activity they both loved, his mother Adrienne Nibert told Nexstar's WOWK."He loved the outdoors, hunting, fishing, trapping, he loved it all," Nibert said. "If you’ve seen him, you’ve seen his grandpa. They were best friends.” Former NBA player Brandon Hunter dies after yoga class: report Nibert told WOWK that the two had become separated sometime on Saturday afternoon, after the boy, who was carrying a rifle, went off on his own. Around 3 p.m. that day, crews from the Mason County Sheriff’s Office, as well as local fire and EMS departments, were called to the site of an ATV accident in the Salt Creek area of Mason County. There, they learned the victim of the accident had been separated from the 1...Albany man pleads not guilty to attempted murder
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:04:00 GMT
ALBANY, N.Y. (NEWS10) -- Michael Johnson, 41, pleaded not guilty to attempted murder in the second degree and criminal possession of a weapon in the second degree. Johnson is accused of shooting a 38-year-old with an illegal handgun on Second Street in August. Get the latest news, weather, sports and entertainment delivered right to your inbox! Police determined that Johnson fired several shots at the victim, who sustained gunshot wounds to the chest and groin area. The victim was transported to the Albany Medical Center with non-life-threatening injuries.Johnson was remanded to the Albany County Jail. He is due back in court on October 5.Plea agreement reached in unreported oil spill case
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:04:00 GMT
ROOT, N.Y. (NEWS10) -- A property owner accused of not reporting an oil spill settled criminal charges by accepting a plea agreement with a fine of $3,975. The defendant is working with DEC Spill Response Experts on cleaning the spill and agreed to pay for the cost of the cleanup. Get the latest news, weather, sports and entertainment delivered right to your inbox! According to the Department of Environmental Conservation, ECO Willson was notified of the spill on July 11. A resident reported smelling petroleum, and a visible sheen was observed on the surface of Lasher Creek.The spill was traced upstream to a nearby business off State Highway 162. The property owner confirmed an equipment failure two days prior resulted in the loss of 200 gallons of fuel oil. He was ticketed for prohibited discharge of petroleum, failure to report a spill, and pollution of water in contravention of standards.St. Louis man sentenced to 33-years in prison for sexting teens
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:04:00 GMT
EAST ST. LOUIS, Ill. – A St. Louis man has been sentenced to nearly 34 years in prison for sex offenses involving teens. Vallie Zeller, 46, was caught by an FBI agent posing as a 15-year-old online.The U.S. Attorney’s Office of the Southern District of Illinois says that Zeller started messaging someone he thought was a teen in June 2020. The conversations with the agent posing as a girl lasted four days. He asked her for nude photos and other sexually explicit content. Zeller then crossed state lines to meet her in Collinsville. Man targets several St. Louis-area Walmarts, steals $64K in sleight-of-hand scheme Evidence presented at trial says that Zeller had previously been accused of having sexual contact with two minors in Florida. Agents found another instance of him sexting a minor on his phone.“The defendant is a child predator, and our communities are better off with him spending time in federal prison,” states U.S. Attorney Rachelle Aud Crowe.Zeller is one of 14 suspects c...Mayor Johnston’s first Denver budget calls for record spending, more than $240 million for homelessness and housing
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:04:00 GMT
Denver Mayor Mike Johnston’s efforts to combat homelessness in Denver have relied heavily on one-time federal dollars. But even as that source of money is expected to dry up soon, his first proposed budget as mayor, unveiled Thursday, would commit to investing another $242 million on homelessness resolution and prevention as well as housing initiatives. While much of that money will replenish existing city-funded programs, a healthy chunk will pay for a rapid-rehousing initiative he has launched since taking office in July.Johnston has said repeatedly at town hall meetings focused on his emergency homelessness efforts that he views getting people living on Denver’s street out of tents and into safer environments as a moral issue. His first city spending plan — which soon will be the focus of City Council budget hearings — reflects that.“Every budget is a moral document, it is an affirmation of our values and a roadmap to deliver a city that lives up to ...Lancaster creates new police department
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:04:00 GMT
The Antelope Valley has a new chief in town.Lancaster is creating its own police department to help support Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies and to protect the community from crime.Chief Rod Armalin, was sworn in this week.The creation of the agency is a first for the Antelope Valley, which has never had its own police department.The Sheriff’s Department has been the main law enforcement agency in the area that also includes Palmdale.The effort to create a separate agency was spearheaded by Lancaster Mayor R. Rex Parris, who wanted to make the community safer.“It’s my obligation to keep the families in Lancaster safe,” the mayor told the Los Angeles Times. “Quite frankly I do not care who I offend. You cannot defund the police and have a safe society.”Armalin told the newspaper that his new department will initially hire eight officers, with the goal of eventually hiring up to 20 to 30. The city budgeted “several million” dollars for the department, which include funds for four...1 dead, several ill from botulism outbreak in France tied to sardines
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:04:00 GMT
By Alex Turnbull | Associated PressPARIS — Matt Jackson was riding an electric bike through Bordeaux wine country when he started feeling strange. Nine days later, he’s on a breathing machine in a French intensive care unit, unable to open his eyes, communicating only via notes on a whiteboard —- and infected with botulism.Jackson was among the first of a dozen people who ate preserved sardines in a Bordeaux wine bar last week to be hospitalized with what French authorities believe is the rare and potentially fatal illness.One, a 32-year-old woman from the Paris region, has died.Officials issued an appeal around France and beyond to find others who might have eaten the suspicious sardines and might be at risk. Among those sickened have been visitors from the U.S., Ireland, Canada, Germany and Spain, according to the regional health authority ARS.Jackson and his partner Kristy Benner, on vacation from Hermosa Beach, California, stopped by the Tchin Tchin Wine Bar on Sept. 4, an...Latest news
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