Categories
Sports

Commonwealth Games 2022: New Zealand athlete Imogen Ayris won pole vault bronze on fractured foot

New Zealand’s latest pole-vaulting star Imogen Ayris has revealed she not only competed in the final of her event at the Birmingham Commonwealth Games with a broken hand, but also with a broken foot.

Ayris told the NZ Herald following her bronze medal vault of 4.45m that she discovered a broken bone in her hand earlier this year, caused by an old gymnastics injury. Now Ayris says she found out following the final that her foot was also in a sorry state.

Stream Over 50 Sports Live & On-Demand with Kayo. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >

Arriving at a celebratory lunch for Kiwi athletes at New Zealand House in Edgbaston on Thursday wearing a moon boot, Ayris told 1News that she had to block out the pain as she fought for her medal.

“(The pain) was there but it wasn’t what I was thinking about, it wasn’t what I was worried about,” she said.

“I’m quite good at ignoring pain. I’ve jumped with some pretty wacky injuries in the past so it didn’t affect me at all. It was there but it wasn’t.”

Ayris said she wasn’t even sure how the break occurred and had purposely downplayed her pain leading up the event.

“It’s been a little niggly for a while – when I got off a plane in America (before last month’s world championships in Oregon) for a session I felt it a bit but I just thought that it was from the travel.

“I kept training on it, it kind of went away, and then it came back a bit. We were strapping it up for training sessions, didn’t modify any training, and then after competition we got it scanned to figure out what was really going on and it was fractured.

“I had probably downplayed it in the past two weeks building up to this but I didn’t want to make it a thing if it wasn’t a thing.”

The break has forced the rising star to cancel a planned athletics campaign in Europe and instead return to New Zealand to rehabilitate the injury.

“I’m going to go home, put my feet up and let this bone heal,” she said.

This article originally appeared on the NZ Herald and was reproduced with permission

.

Categories
Australia

Lismore Mayor frustrated over flood report delay as media leaks show $3b recovery expense

The Mayor of Lismore in northern NSW has urged the state government to release a flood inquiry report after hearing unconfirmed leaks from the media and nothing from the government.

The ABC understands the state government has received a $3 billion recovery cost estimate within the findings of a 700-page independent flood report it commissioned to investigate the preparation for, cause of and response to the crisis.

Other recommendations include offering buybacks and land swaps, the rebuilding of assets, and economic measures.

A man poses next to a fire place
Lismore Mayor Steve Krieg had both his home and business damaged in the February flood event.(ABC News: Bronwyn Herbert)

Lismore Mayor Steve Krieg said he was frustrated the government had not publicly released the findings.

“I read the information in the paper today, but I’ve had no direct information from the government at all,” Mr Krieg said.

“It would be nice to get a bit of an update and a briefing. What people in Lismore really need now is hope and certainty, and at the moment we don’t have any of those.”

About 4,000 homes were damaged by flooding in February and March.

It is understood the government will seek funding from the Commonwealth to help with rebuilding and disaster proofing of communities.

A dilapidated house covered in mold and grime
A flood-hit house on Wotherspoon St in North Lismore. (Four Corners: Tajette O’Halloran)

The inquiry’s recommendations, led by NSW Chief Scientist and Engineer Mary O’Kane and former police commissioner Mick Fuller, were handed to Premier Dominic Perrottet a week ago.

The findings will likely lead to the disbanding of the disaster agency Resilience NSW, which was heavily criticized for its response to the floods in the Northern Rivers.

The ABC understands a proposal to dismantle Resilience NSW will now be presented to cabinet.

Resilience NSW commissioner Shane Fitzsimmons, who led the government’s response to the Black Summer bushfires, has not yet commented on the report or his future employment.

The report is still under review by the government.

.

Categories
US

Minnesota jury rules that pharmacist who denied woman morning after pill didn’t violate her rights

A jury in Minnesota ruled on Friday that a pharmacist did not commit discrimination when he did not fill an emergency contraception prescription for a woman after her prior contraceptive method failed, according to the gender advocacy group Gender Justice.

A jury in Aitkin County found that a pharmacist’s decision not to provide an emergency contraception prescription to plaintiff Andrea Anderson after citing his “beliefs” did not constitute discrimination.

According to court documents, Anderson went to the only pharmacy located in her town to retrieve a prescription of emergency contraception after another method failed, but the pharmacist there rejected her request.

The filing further claims that she would later have to drive more than 100 miles in total in order to get her morning after pill after having several pharmacies reject her request.

Anderson was awarded $25,000 over emotional harm caused by the initial pharmacist who rejected to fill the prescription.

“I can’t help but wonder about the other women who may be turned away,” Anderson said in a statement.

“What if they accept the pharmacist’s decision and don’t realize that this behavior is wrong? What if they have no other choice? Not everyone has the means or ability to drive hundreds of thousands to get a prescription filled.”

The legal director for Gender Justice, which is representing Anderson, said it plans to appeal the decision.

“To be clear, the law in Minnesota prohibits sex discrimination and that includes refusing to fill prescriptions for emergency contraception,” Gender Justice Legal Director Jess Braverman said in a statement. “The jury was not deciding what the law is, they were deciding the facts of what happened here in this particular case.”

Categories
Business

$9 for milk and $84 for instant coffee: The Aussies hit hardest by soaring grocery costs

Milk costing more than $9 and a tin of instant coffee for an astounding $84. These are real prices – and they show just how dire things are for some Aussie shoppers.

Consumers all across the country are being hit by the cost-of-living crisis, which has sent the price of everyday goods such as lettuce and milk soaring.

But shocking photos shared to social media show how grocery bills cost more in some places – and expose just how dire the situation has become.

Watch the latest News on Channel 7 or stream for free on 7plus >>

One photo of an April receipt from a store in the town of Kaltukatjara, southwest of Alice Springs, showed a two liter carton of milk costing $9.20.

At a Sydney Woolworths, the same product was being sold for just $3.10 this week.

Milk was spotted at a high price in one remote community. Credit: Facebook

Donna Donzow, an operations manager for the non-profit EON Foundation which helps grow and supply fresh produce to communities in Western Australia and the Northern Territory, said she noticed the unusually high grocery prices in June when she was in Minyerri, a town 240km southeast of Katherine.

“The cost of a mixed salad pack was $17,” Donzow told 7NEWS.com.au.

By comparison, a mixed bag of salad at a Sydney Woolworths this week cost just $3.

The high grocery prices in remote areas are due to a range of issues including long supply chains, poor quality roads and freight costs – and experts say more needs to be done to sort out the problem.

A long-time problem

Food has cost more in the regions than in our biggest cities for years – as photos on social media show.

One photo shared in 2020 showed a tin of instant coffee selling at a Hope Vale grocery store, in remote Queensland, for $84, according to the poster.

According to a 2021 report by healthcare policy organization Aboriginal Medical Services Alliance Northern Territory (Amsant), food in supermarkets is 56 per cent more expensive in remote communities than in regional supermarkets.

A 2020 inquiry by federal MP Julian Leeser echoed these findings, stating that “the cost of purchasing food is considerably higher for remote Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities than for people living in larger population centers in urban and regional Australia”.

A tin of instant coffee was being sold at a Hopevale Island and Cape grocery store, in remote Queensland for $84. Credit: Facebook

The Australian Bureau of Statistics says the cost of groceries has increased by 5.9 per cent across all of Australia’s capital cities since June last year – and there’s reason to believe costs are also going up in rural Australia, where prices were already astronomically high.

In Minyerri, for instance, Donzow said she saw signs around the shop advising community members of that fruit and vegetable costs had gone up due to flooding in Australia’s southern states.

EON Foundation executive chair Caroline de Mori said she’d had a similar experience.

“I heard people complaining the other day about a lettuce for sale in Sydney for $8, but can you imagine what it’s like when you go a few thousand kilometers inland?” de Mori said.

“You end up paying $12 for one brown-headed broccoli.”

‘It’s only getting worse’

The enormous costs aren’t just an issue for getting food on the table now – they have flow-on effects for the future.

De Mori told 7NEWS.com.au that the lack of cheap fruit and vegetables meant some shoppers were turning to processed food.

“By the time it all gets (to remote communities) it’s moldy and not fresh, so it’s not necessarily an option,” she said.

“This means we see astronomically higher disease rates and health issues in these communities, and it’s only getting worse.”

The foundation helps set up community gardens to encourage locals to grow their own fruit and veg. Credit: EON Foundation
The community gardens are being accessed more and more by locals. Credit: EON Foundation

De Mori added some communities only have one store selling essentials for the whole town.

“Because they’ve got the monopoly, they can charge whatever they like and it just seems to be a terrible downwards spiral,” she said.

University of Queensland public health policy professor Amanda Lee told 7NEWS.com.au while experts recommended numerous solutions over the years, little has been done overall.

Lee recommends subsidizing freight costs and preventing supermarkets from marking up fruit and vegetables.

“Unfortunately, while there’s a long list of recommendations from all the inquiries over the past 40 years … there’s been very little collective action to address it.”

.

Categories
Entertainment

‘Engulfed in flames’: Award-winning actress fighting for life after violent car crash

US actress Anne Heche is reportedly fighting for life following a collision that left her vehicle “engulfed in flames”.

The incident occurred on Friday morning (local time) in the Mar Vista area of ​​Los Angeles, near her home.

Heche, 53, is the former partner of talk show host Ellen DeGeneres, and is known for films including Donnie Brasco and Cedar Rapids.

Catch all of your favorite shows on Channel 7 or stream free on 7plus >>

Pictures and video footage obtained by US media outlet TMZ showed the Emmy-award winning actress driving a blue Mini Cooper, which was later pictured severely damaged at the scene.

The vehicle drove into a two-storey home and “erupted in heavy fire” according to the Los Angeles Fire Department.

Anne Heche in 2018. Credit: Chris Pizzello/AP
An aerial view of the crash scene. Credit: NBC

“Fifty-nine firefighters took 65 minutes to access, confine and fully extinguish the stubborn flames within the heavily damaged structure,” an LAFD report stated.

“One female adult (was) found within the vehicle, who has been taken to an area hospital by LAFD Paramedics in critical condition.”

The LAFD also confirmed that the vehicle drove ten meters into the residence but that the occupant of the house escaped without injury.

The building was left “uninhabitable”, said spokesman Brian Humphrey.

Heche began dating DeGeneres in 1997 but separated in 2000.

Dumpster diver has run in with police

Dumpster diver has run in with police

.

Categories
Australia

NSW Health meningococcal warning for Splendor in the Grass attendees after one person dies

NSW Health is urging patrons of this year’s Splendor in the Grass festival to monitor for symptoms of meningococcal disease, after two revellers contracted the disease and one died.

“Although the disease is uncommon, it can be severe, so we are urging people who attended the event in the North Byron Parklands on 21 – 24 July to be alert to the symptoms of meningococcal disease and act immediately if they appear,” NSW Health said in a statement issued on Friday.

One person who attended Splendor in the Grass last month has died with meningococcal.

One person who attended Splendor in the Grass last month has died with meningococcal. Credit:Getty

A man from Sydney, aged in his 40s, who attended the festival has died of meningococcal disease, NSW Health said.

“NSW Health expresses its sincere condolences to his loved ones.”

Symptoms of the disease include a sudden fever, headache, neck stiffness, joint pain, a rash of red spots or bruises, a dislike of bright lights, nausea and vomiting.

Symptoms in young children include irritability, difficulty walking, high-pitched crying and refusing food.

The state has seen 15 cases of meningococcal disease this year, which is rare but tends to increase in late winter and spring.

It is most common in children under five and 15-25 year olds.

Our Breaking News Alert will notify you of significant breaking news when it happens. Get it here.

Categories
US

PM Update: Scattered strong storms may produce flooding through evening

Comment

* flood watch until 11 pm *

5:10 pm — Severe thunderstorm and flash flood warnings for parts of the District, eastern Montgomery and western and northern Prince George’s County

Storms have flared up quickly over the last hour with a zone of torrential rain and strong winds between northeast Washington and Laurel, including Landover, Greenbelt and Beltsville. While isolated very strong wind likes are possible, lightning and heavy downpours are the main hazard with this area of ​​storminess. Some areas in this zone could see up to 3 inches of rain. The storm activity is slowly drifting north-northeast; some areas could see downpours for an hour or so before the rain eases.

Original forecast from 4:30 pm

Temperatures strove for 90 this afternoon and tended to make it. Upper 80s and low 90s, plus soupy humidity, is enough in most spots for plentiful shower and thunderstorm activity, which continues into and through the evening. The weekend won’t be a washout, but we’ll run a chance for showers and storms both days. It’s possible our heat wave could extend a couple more days as well.

DC braces for second night of storms after deadly lightning strike

Listen to our daily DC forecasts: Apple Podcasts | Amazon Echo | More options

Through Tonight: Scattered showers and storms remain possible through the evening, probably ending near or after sunset. Any of these storms can drop up to several inches of rain in a short time, causing localized flooding. There’s also a risk of damaging winds, mainly in downbursts from collapsing storms. Once past the storm threat, it’s partly cloudy overnight — perhaps patchy fog in the usual spots near bodies of water and such. Winds will blow lightly from the south as temperatures fall through the 70s.

View the current weather at The Washington Post.

Tomorrow (Saturday): Partly to mostly sunny skies of the morning turn cloudier with time. There could be a few late-day showers or storms, but probably considerably fewer than today. High temperatures are pretty close to 90. Humidity remains high, with dew points near or above 70, meaning it feels more like 95 to 100 in the afternoon.

Sunday: Skies are partially sunny. A few afternoon showers and thunderstorms are possible. They could linger into the evening. Afternoon temperatures reach the low 90s in many spots. Winds will blow from the southwest around 5 to 10 mph. Dew points in the 70s make it feel closer to 100 in the afternoon.

See Camden Walker’s forecast through the beginning of next week. And if you haven’t already, join us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter and Instagram. For related traffic news, check out Gridlock.

Want our 5 am forecast delivered to your email inbox? Subscribe here.

Categories
Business

House prices: Interest rate rises and property downturn could be good for buyers

Rising interest rates and uncertainty are causing the property market to cool around Australia. Sydney and Melbourne markets are leading the decline at -2.7 per cent and -0.9 per cent respectively, looking at CoreLogic data.

Based on the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) average property price of $1.2 million in Sydney and $966,500 in Melbourne, this reflects respective discounts of $32,999 and $8699 on the average property today.

With inflation at a 21-year high of 6.1 per cent and interest rates at 1.85 per cent and tipped to continue to rise, it seems likely there will be more pressure on property prices in the short term.

But maybe this could be a good thing. Watching the huge property run over the last couple of years, many people were either priced out of the market or felt property had become overcooked.

With prices on the decline, is it now a smart time to jump in?

State of the property market

Through 2020-21 we saw the value of all property in Australia increase by 23.7 per cent, the strongest growth seen since 2003. In contrast to the weak property market we’re seeing today, for the same time last year the average house price rose $107,000 in Sydney and $41,000 in Melbourne in just three months.

In 2022, we’ve been seeing declines driven by rising interest rates and uncertainty about how the Australian economy is going to ride out the current inflation crisis. The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) initially forecast a 15 per cent decline in the property market by the end of 2023, with further falls predicted in 2024.

Worth noting is that not all areas have been (or likely will be) impacted by this downturn equally. We’re seeing property prices hold up more in areas with strong demand and limited supply, and prices weaker in areas that don’t have the same fundamentals. This trend is likely to continue throughout this period of property market disruption.

The key driver of softer property prices is rising interest rates, which have increased by 1.75 per cent over the last four months adding thousands to the cost of repayments on the average Aussie mortgage. With rates forecast to continue rising through 2022 as the RBA grapples with the current global inflation crisis, further pressure will be placed on borrowers and the property market as a result.

Advantages of buying property now

With the property market softening and fewer buyers in the market, people buying property today are doing it at a solid discount to the prices we’ve seen recently.

There’s a lot of fear and uncertainty out there. In my experience helping people with their investing through up and down markets, I’ve found that this uncertainty creates opportunity.

During the height of the Covid crisis there was also a lot of talk about the potential for big property market declines, and a lot of people were too fearful to buy property. Many people were sitting on the sidelines waiting for the uncertainty to pass, convinced there would be a huge crash that would allow them to pick up even more of a bargain.

But before we knew it, the ‘crisis’ was over and the uncertainty was gone. The property market didn’t fail as far as was expected, and many people missed the boat.

In my view, the current conditions are perfect for property buyers to pick up a bargain.

Disadvantages of buying property now

That being said, buying property today does come with risk. The main one that any property buyer needs to manage in the short-term is the likelihood of interest rates rising further.

Rising interest rates for property buyers today mean that you’re highly likely to be paying more for your mortgage in six months than you are today. As mentioned above, rates are tipped to raise around 2 per cent from their current levels in the short-term – meaning you need to be prepared and ready to fund higher mortgage repayments.

There is also potential for property values ​​to fall further in the short-term. Buying and then selling property is an expensive exercise, so you never want to be forced to sell a property. But when values ​​are declining, it’s even more important to protect yourself.

When is the best time to buy property

Looking back, it’s easy to identify ‘good’ times to buy property, but nobody has a crystal ball. We never really know where the property market is going until it actually happens.

And further, while there have been times that we can see would have been better than others to buy property, values ​​have consistently risen over the long-term. That means that over any 10-year period, your asset would have increased in value.

This suggests that the best time to buy was always 10 years ago. The second best time is today.

My view is that if property is on your money road map, now is a great time to buy. You’ll be able to take advantage of the uncertainty, pick up an asset that was a good investment six months ago at a higher price, and move forward on your money journey.

Finding a good quality property is crucial, and having a rock solid plan absolutely necessary to protect your risk. But get these two things right and you’ll be set for success, and will position yourself to come out of this period of disruption in a stronger position than you went into it.

The wrap

Buying property is scary at the best of times, but when fear and uncertainty are high it’s even harder. But property has been one of the most effective ways to invest to build wealth for the last hundred or so years in Australia, and I don’t see that changing any time soon.

Take the time to get your approach right, then make it happen – your future self will thank you for it.

Ben Nash is a finance expert commentator, podcaster, financial adviser and founder of Pivot Wealth, and author of the Amazon best-selling book ‘Get Unstuck: Your guide to creating a life not limited by money’.

Ben has just launched a series of free online money education events to help you get on the front financial foot. You can check out all the details and book your place here.

Disclaimer: The information contained in this article is general in nature and does not take into account your personal objectives, financial situation or needs. Therefore, you should consider whether the information is appropriate to your circumstances before acting on it, and where appropriate, seek professional advice from a finance professional.

.

Categories
Entertainment

Sara Paretsky: ‘The story of Joan of Arc made me long for a vision’ | Books

My earliest reading memory
I was six, walking home from school with a book that had the word “city” in it. I only knew the hard “c” and couldn’t figure out what a kitten had to do with the story.

My favorite book growing up
Little Women by Louisa May Alcott. I first read it when I was seven or eight. I was the only girl in a family of boys, and I loved immersing myself in the family of sisters. My family also had a lot of anger and volatility, and the thoughtful, parenting Marmee gave her daughters de ella offered an attentive window into an idealized family story. The book appealed to me, too, for the same reason it appealed to girls 150 years ago: the four sisters quarrel, they have flaws, they love and support each other, they figure out ways to solve their problems. And the story itself is told against the backdrop of the American civil war, a history which continues to obsess me both as a citizen and as a writer.

Sign up to our Inside Saturday newsletter for an exclusive behind-the-scenes look at the making of the magazine’s biggest features, as well as a curated list of our weekly highlights.

The book that changed me as a teenager
My parents (and really, everyone who’s ever known me) have always thought my personality was too intense. When I was a child, they gave me Mark Twain’s Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc. They wanted me to see the fate that awaited girls who engaged too intensely with life. Instead, the story of Joan made me long for a vision and the commitment to follow it, even to death.

The writer who changed my mind
In the Last Analysis, by Carolyn Heilbrun writing as Amanda Cross. I found it in a secondhand bookshop when I was 19, and it showed me a different concept of the female hero than the marriage story I’d grown up thinking was our most probable destiny.

The book that made me want to be a writer
By six or so I was already writing little stories, but I never imagined myself as a published writer. It wasn’t until I was in my 20s, reading Raymond Chandler at the same time that my life was being turned around by second wave feminism, that I started trying to write for publication. I was tired of reading books in which women used their bodies to try to get good boys to do bad things. I wanted to create a female detective who was a person, someone who could solve problems without using her body, and someone who could have a sex life that did not define her moral character. My series of novels featuring detective VI Warshawski came out of that wish.

the author I came back to
When I was 18 or so, I read Dubliners and Portrait of the Artist. James Joyce’s writing blew me away, and so I thought I’d read Ulysses. I never got past “Stately, plump Buck Mulligan … ” Finally, this past winter, I read it with a group of friends who’d also never made it past the first paragraph. I wish I was erudite enough to join the throngs who list it as their favorite book of all time, but, sadly, it isn’t mine. However, I reread Dubliners and I still am in awe of the craft and insights in those stories. Joyce was only 26, but they still read like mature work.

The book I reread
Jane Eyer. I read it when I was about 10 but was only interested in the first section, at boarding school. I’ve reread it several times as an adult, and am fascinated by how Charlotte Brontë handles her agency in her characters. As a companion, I reread Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys. I don’t usually like what I call vampire books, where a writer reimagines the characters another writer thought up and breathed life into. The Wide Sargasso Sea is a huge exception. Her apology for the sexuality of women in the West Indies is a tour de force.

The book I could never read again
The Scarlet Pimpernel by Baroness Orczy. I love the storyline, but the depictions of race and class are hard to take.

The books I am currently reading
The Dictionary of Lost Words by Pip Williams, and The Cat Who Saved Books by Sosuke Natsukawa, and The Mind Readers by Margery Allingham.

My comfort read
Barbara Pym, although she’s not as cozy a writer as people who don’t know her work imagine. I love her de ella heroine de ella in Excellent Women, who keeps cookbooks at her bedside de ella for her own comfort reading de ella.

Sara Paretsky’s new VYo Warshawski novel Overboard is published by Hodder & Stoughton.

Categories
Sports

Italian decathlon athlete Alberto Nonino U20s World Championships race ruined by errant penis

Italian decathlon athlete Alberto Nonino had a nightmare run at the U20s World Championships after his penis repeatedly flopped out of his shorts while competing.

The 18-year-old was running in the 400m portion of the Decathlon event in Colombia when he suffered a wardrobe malfunction just after making a promising start.

While the rest of the field were pumping their arms to stretch away from the line, Nonino’s were busy trying to repeatedly tuck his member away.

.