Categories
Australia

Canberrans to have access to free abortions under new ACT government commitment

From mid-2023, Canberra residents will have access to free medical and surgical abortions up to 16 weeks’ gestation.

The ACT government said the decision to remove out-of-pocket costs for abortion services ensured that Canberrans who became pregnant could “make decisions about their healthcare based on what [was] best for them and their bodies.

“This means that individuals will be supported to make a choice about having an abortion without being influenced by financial barriers,” ACT Minister for Women Yvette Berry said.

“It also means that having an abortion can occur in a time-sensitive manner without being delayed due to an inability to pay.”

These services will be accessible to people without a Medicare card and all those who use abortion services will also be eligible to receive free, long-lasting, reversible contraceptives at the time of abortion, which the government said had been shown to reduce demand for abortions in the future.

The initiative to remove out-of-pocket costs will cost the government $4.6 million over four years and aims to improve access to affordable, accessible health services as part of the ACT Women’s Plan 2016-26.

Ms Berry said it was the latest in a string of actions to improve access to safe, accessible abortion services after the procedure was decriminalized in the ACT in 2002.

One more-recent change included banning protesters outside abortion clinics in 2016.

ACT Health Minister Rachel Stephen-Smith said she was proud of the latest commitment from the government.

“With one in three women estimated to experience an unexpected pregnancy in their lifetime, it is essential that these services are safe, affordable and accessible, regardless of how much money you have,” she said.

Free services to be available by mid-2023

Women’s Health Matters chief executive Lauren Anthes welcomed the funding initiative to provide access to free surgical abortions within the ACT’s existing gestational limits.

“Timely access is vital as services become more expensive and harder to access over time,” she said.

“This funding will help people access surgical abortion as soon as possible.”

The ACT government said it would work with service providers on the specific arrangements to cover the out-of-pocket costs for accessing abortion services in the territory.

It said this consultation work was expected to be completed during the first half of 2023.

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Categories
US

Father now dead after wife, kids died

MCHENRY COUNTY, Ill. (WGN) — A man who was in critical condition following a wrong-way fatal crash that killed his wife, four children and two others, died Wednesday.

According to the Cook County Medical Examiner’s Office, Thomas Dobosz, 32, died Wednesday morning at Loyola Medical Center from the injuries he sustained from the crash.

The crash happened around 2 am Sunday on I-90 near mile marker 33, about 50 miles from Chicago.

Illinois State Police said that Thomas Dobosz and his 31-year-old wife, Lauren Dobosz — both from Rolling Meadows — were driving westbound on I-90 in a full-size Chevrolet van carrying five children when a wrong-way driver collided with them head-on, causing both vehicles to become engulfed in flames.

According to ISP, 22-year-old Jennifer Fernandez was driving the wrong way “for unknown reasons.”

Lauren Dobosz and the five children, ages 5 to 13: Ella, Nicky, Lucas, Emma and Emma’s 13-year-old friend, were all killed.

Fernandez — who was from Carpentersville — also died, according to authorities.

At the time, Thomas Dobosz was the lone survivor of the crash and was taken to the hospital with serious injuries.

A neighbor who lives across the street from the couple says they had four children. He believes the fifth child involved in the crash was a friend of their oldest child.

“The kids were very friendly,” David Moreno said. “They were always talkative. We would always run into them at the supermarket.”

The family was heavily involved in the local cheer community with the Oriole Park Falcons.

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Categories
Business

AGL customer says power bills are false due to wrong meter readings: Bryn Lawson

Furious AGL customer EXPLODES at his power company for overcharging him revealing his $1200 bills cost him his marriage and forced him to use an esky instead of a fridge – now he’s threatening to cut electricity to his home for good

  • Bryn Lawson, 55, regularly receives power bills over $1,200 despite living alone
  • He said the bills are due to his power company, AGL, misreading his power meter
  • Mr Lawson has replaced his fridge with a camping fridge and doesn’t use heating
  • The bills have left him ‘broken and are part of the ‘decimation’ of his marriage

A frustrated customer of one of Australia’s largest energy providers has threatened to cut the power to his home off for good after being stung with sky-high meter readings he says are false.

Sydneysider Bryn Lawson, 55, is drawing a line in the sand with electricity giant, AGL, as bills regularly soar over $1,200 a quarter, despite the fact he lives alone.

He even says the ‘overcharging’ s even cost him his 35-year marriage because the couple used to blame each other about which of them was responsible.

‘Fix it AGL. Get your s**t together and fix it, mate… Stop f**king me around,’ he told A Current Affair.

‘It was a part of the decimation of our marriage because I’d come home and the lights would be on the power would be on and the power bills were high.’

Bryn Lawson (above) said he's ready to cut all power to his house after consistently receiving overpriced bills from his Sydney power provider, AGL

Bryn Lawson (above) said he’s ready to cut all power to his house after consistently receiving overpriced bills from his Sydney power provider, AGL

‘I’d be saying “what are the lights on for what’s this on for, why is the heater on”.’

But after his wife walked out on him the chargers were just as high.

Mr Lawson has taken extreme measures to counteract the hefty bills.

He replaced his kitchen fridge with a camping esky and has refused to turn on the heater in all winter, despite near freezing temperatures.

But he still faces massive bills each quarter.

Mr Lawson is responsible for checking his own power meter as his power box is not accessible from the road.

However, Mr Lawson said the meter figure he confirms with AGL is never the number that appears on his bill.

He said AGL responds to his complaints with credits to make up the difference from his bill and the actual amount of power he uses but then the same mistake is made the next time round.

Mr Lawson has replaced his kitchen fridge with a small camping esky (above) in an effort to keep his power bills down

Mr Lawson has replaced his kitchen fridge with a small camping esky (above) in an effort to keep his power bills down

Now Mr Lawson has nothing left to give and said he is tired of ‘shivering’ every night and suffering from the paranoia of his upcoming bills.

He says he’s had enough and is threatening to cut off the power altogether.

‘It’s humiliating when I think about what they’ve made me do. It’s not the appliances, it’s AGL,’ he said.

‘I have no problem at all putting my swag out there, putting my solar panels, my battery and running that fridge out there and living out there,’ he said.

AGL told A Current Affair they apologize for Mr Lawson’s experience and are committed to fixing his concerns.

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Categories
Technology

Twitter Continues to Test New Topic-Based Listings for Spaces, Which Could Improve Discovery

It feels like social audio had its moment, doesn’t it? That it was a pandemic-induced trend, which is still valuable to some degree, but is unlikely to become the transformative, connective tool that many envisioned back when Clubhouse had a $4 billion valuation.

Clubhouse is now struggling to maintain growth, Facebook has all but abandoned its audio social initiatives, and other apps, while they keep trying, don’t really seem to be gaining a heap of traction with their copycat functions.

Which leads to Twitter Spaces.

Of all the audio social additions, Spaces seemed to gain the most traction, and with Twitter’s established network to latch onto, it also seemed like the most likely to succeed, long term.

But it hasn’t become a big element of the Twitter experience just yet.

Can it? It definitely appears as though Twitter still has faith, as it continues to experiment with new Spaces options and tools, while Spaces also still has its own tab in the lower function bar of the app, highlighting the potential that Twitter sees in it enhancing the user experience.

And the next stage might be coming – according to new screenshots, Twitter is getting closer to launching a revamped version of the Spaces tab which will separate audio broadcasts, both live and recorded, into topics, in what looks similar to a podcast display.

Twitter Spaces

As you can see in this extended layout exampleposted by app researcher Alessandro PaluzziTwitter’s new topic-based approach to Spaces will make it easier to find content on key discussions of interest, including dedicated displays of the latest broadcasts on ‘News’, ‘Sports’, ‘Music’ and more.

Twitter’s been working on the new format for some time, with its initial topics layout spotted in testing back in June, which also, at that time, included popular podcasts in the feed.

Twitter Spaces channels

That, along with the addition of recorded Spaces, seemed to suggest that Twitter was looking to incorporate podcast discovery into its audio tools, expanding its listings beyond Spaces content alone.

That could make Twitter a more essential audio companion, while also providing more capacity for Spaces hosts to convert their streams into downloadable, potentially monetizable shows, while the more dedicated topics approach would improve the discoverability of Spaces content, which has been a key issue impeding Spaces take-up.

Because, most of the time, the majority of in-progress Spaces are not relevant. Tap on the Spaces tab and you’ll see a heap of Web3 and NFT chats. But if you’re not into those topics, there’s generally not a heap of variety at any given time.

Accessible, categorized Spaces recordings solves this, while the addition of other popular podcasts could also get more people turning to the app when they’re looking for audio content – ​​though it is notable that this latest example doesn’t show existing podcasts in the same way as the original test.

That may be why Twitter recently asked TechCrunch not to share these early images, as it’s still working on the format. Maybe Twitter couldn’t secure licensing to include outside podcasts in the new display – though, either way, it still seems like an improvement, which, if nothing else, will give Spaces the best chance to succeed.

And it still might. Time Magazine, for example, is regularly broadcasting via Spaces over summer, which could result in it making Spaces an ongoing content avenue.

That could get more people listening – but the main issue with Spaces remains the same as it was with video live-streaming before it.

When you open up a broadcast tool to everyone, you’re going to get a lot of bad content. That’s inevitable – as more people get the opportunity to broadcast, they’re going to, and only a finite number of creators have the actual talent and skill required to create consistent, engaging content, with broad audience appeal.

As such, you need filters, you need tools to be able to highlight the best, to showcase the cream of the crop, in order to deliver the best experience, which will then keep people coming back.

At present, Twitter’s Spaces tab doesn’t do that, but maybe, with more specific curation, and the addition of recordings, and potentially outside podcasts, that could still happen, and could make Spaces a more valuable element.

Categories
Australia

‘Worst’ strategic circumstances prompt review

In announcing the review, which will be co-led by former Labor defense minister Stephen Smith, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said he expected defense spending to grow beyond the 2 per cent of gross domestic product benchmark to which the government had committed.

Sailors from China’s PLA Navy march for the 70th anniversary of Communist China. AP

Asked whether he thought conflict with China was inevitable, Mr Albanese said all needed to be done to advance peace and security in our region, which included building up the military.

“I firmly believe that one of the objectives front and center of having a strong defense of Australia is to make sure that we avoid conflict,” he said.

“That is the objective of this government. And I believe that’s the objective which the Australian people want to see. And this focus is very much on just that.”

The review will examine how prepared the Defense Force is for the security challenges of the next decade, looking at basing and location of forces, structure of the military and its capabilities, weapons platforms, infrastructure and logistics.

The review is due to report in March, in tandem with separate work on the submarine program.

It could mean personnel are relocated to bolster the northern approaches to the continent. Some projects could be canned or scaled back, others brought forward and new ones funded.

Committed to nuclear-powered submarines

The government, however, said it remained committed to the acquisition of nuclear-powered submarines and the troubled $45 billion Hunter class program was safe from the axe.

“The major programs which are under way are not about to change,” Defense Minister Richard Marles said.

“But we’re going to look at the integrated investment plan [which outlines $270 billion of planned military acquisitions] over the course of the next 10 years to make sure what we have as a schedule of procurements does meet the challenges that our strategic circumstances present.”

Mr Albanese and Mr Marles said the review was the most significant of the Defense Force in 35 years. It was required after the 10-year warning window of an attack on Australia, which has underpinned military planning assumptions, had shrunk as China became more assertive and the risk of state-on-state conflict rose, they said.

Long-range strike missiles

Former senior defense official Paul Dibb, who led the 1986 review that devised the 10-year warning window, echoed Sir Angus’ assessment.

He said the 10-year warning period reflected the window it would take a regional power to build up a force to invade Australia, and short of a nuclear strike, no potential adversaries had that capability at the time.

“Now we have a China that could put one of its aircraft carriers into the South China Sea and threaten us, not directly with military force, but coerce us and in Chinese Communist Party language, teach us a lesson,” Professor Dibb said.

“I would expect the reviewers to find this is dangerous, our warning time is zip and conflict could happen at any time.

“The answer is we need to get lots and lots of long-range strike missiles, with ranges in the thousands of kilometers, not hundreds. The nearest Chinese base is Fiery Cross Reef [about 3000km from Darwin]. We should have the capability to take that out.”

Professor’s appointment under fire

The appointment of Professor Smith, defense minister between 2010 and 2013, came under fire from the opposition and the Australia Defense Association.

Opposition defense spokesman Andrew Hastie said Mr Smith as minister presided over billions of dollars in cuts to the defense budget, with military spending plunging to 1.56 per cent of GDP, the lowest level since 1938.

“The Prime Minister has said this is the most complex strategic environment Australia has encountered – and what does he do? Appoint the man who oversaw the biggest cuts to defense in 70 years to review defense investment,” Mr Hastie said.

“When Mr Smith was last in government he cut and canceled defense projects, delayed decisions, and dismissed warnings about the strategic environment Australia was heading into a decade ago.”

While supportive of a review, ADA executive director Neil James said Professor Smith was the wrong person to co-lead it. This was because as a former minister, Professor Smith might engage in “legacy protection”.

Mr James said as a minister, Professor Smith was known for not making decisions, such as failing to commission any new naval vessels, contributing to delays in shipbuilding still being felt today.

One decision Professor Smith did make, canceling the acquisition of South Korean-made self-propelled Howitzer guns, was reversed several years ago.

Mr James said the Defense Department and Australian Defense Force were often unfairly criticised, and the review needed to look at how governments made decisions about the military.

Categories
US

NYC Mayor Adams, police slam bail reform policies amid arrests of repeat offenders: ‘Definition of insanity’

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

New York City Mayor Eric Adams and police department heads slammed the state’s bail reform laws as “insane” and “dangerous” amid an increase in arrests and a series of high-profile attacks on law enforcement and the public.

New York Police Department Commissioner Keechant Sewell joined Adams and other NYPD officials for a press conference Wednesday at NYPD headquarters, where she spoke of “the challenges we are facing in New York City every day.”

They say the definition of insanity is to do the same thing repeatedly, but expect different results.

— New York City Mayor Eric Adams

This is about recidivists who cause New Yorkers to suffer needlessly. Every day, as hardworking New Yorkers start their day or night of work or school, or to simply enjoy what this city has to offer, recidivist criminals are planning or taking the opportunity to commit their next larceny, robbery, burglary or other crime,” Sewell said, “Their efforts are increasingly aided by the fact that after the NYPD has arrested them, the criminal justice system fails to hold them appropriately accountable for their actions. These offenders face very few, if any, repercussions, despite committing crime after crime.”

The city’s top cop added that the number of crime victims “continues to go up.”

NYC TIMES SQUARE BOX CUTTER SLASHING SUSPECT CHARGED WITH HATE CRIME AGAINST ASIAN WOMAN; HAD 30 PRIOR ARRESTS

“Your NYPD officers speak to these victims. We support them and proudly go to work for them with every resource we have,” she continued. “But for too many of these victims, justice is elusive. Justice and fairness go hand in hand. Public service has to work together on behalf of all of the people we serve.”

Sewell noted that New York remains the only state with a law that prevents judges from considering an offender’s potential threat to public safety when making custody decisions.

“That doesn’t serve the next innocent victim,” she said. “It doesn’t serve our officers, and it doesn’t serve quality of life. We can and must do better.”

Mayor Adams stressed that this was not “a battle against those who saw the need to reform a criminal justice system,” but one “against those who are exploiting those reforms.”

Adams said there were “four components of the criminal justice process: police, judges, prosecutors, lawmakers” and they must “operate in unison.”

NYPD OFFICERS ASSAILED WITH BOTTLES, FISTS AFTER TRYING TO DETAIN MAN: REPORT

He said NYPD arrests have increased by more than 24% as of Aug. 1, with 109,000 arrests this year compared to the 87,794 arrests during the same time in 2021. Arrests for the seven major crimes are up about 29%, he said.

Weapons arrests are at a 27-year high, while the number of murders and shootings is down for the year, he said.

“What’s not working,” the mayor added, “are the other three pieces.”

“They say the definition of insanity is to do the same thing repeatedly, but expect different results,” Adams told reporters. “Our criminal justice system is insane. It is dangerous, it’s harmful, and it’s destroying the fabric of our city. Time and time again, our police officers make an arrest and then the person who is arrested for assault, felonious assault, robberies and gun possession is finding themselves back on the street within days — if not hours — after the arrest. And they go on to commit more crimes within weeks, if not days.”

NYC MCDONALD’S WORKER SHOT IN NECK DURING DISPUTE WITH WOMAN, SON OVER FOOD ORDER: POLICE

NYPD officers examine the scene of a stabbing on Decatur Ave. in the Bronx.

NYPD officers examine the scene of a stabbing on Decatur Ave. in the Bronx.
(Peter Gerberg)

He acknowledged that there may be other needed reforms, and said this was not an attack on those, but added: “This is about a small number of people who are taking advantage of the existing laws to endanger our city.”

NYPD’s Chief of Crime Control Strategies Michael LiPetri said investigators have identified 716 people who are behind an estimated 30% of the roughly 2,400 shootings since 2021.

“We know who they are,” he said.

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Fifty-four percent of those 716 people — 385 individuals — have an open felony, he said.

That’s 0.008% of the New York City population responsible for 30 percent of the shootings in New York City over the past year and a half.”

Categories
Business

Simple way to fix Australia’s east coast energy crisis

Slowly but surely, the story of the greatest rip-off in Aussie history is coming out. It’s not a great train robbery. Not a Sydney wealth management fraud. It is an investment boom that miraculously turned east Australian resources bounty into a pair of concrete boots for the broader economy.

This is the sorry tale of how foreign cartels stole Australian gas reserves and fed them to China while the local economy was starved of it.

It began during the GFC-period when advances in unconventional gas extraction (fracking, shale, coal seam etc) made huge reserves in Queensland viable for extraction. Three conglomerates of largely multinational firms built infrastructure systems across the east of the state to extract, pipe and freeze that gas for export.

They spent some $80 billion doing so, in a mad race that duplicated everything, over-invested in production and crashed the global gas price, forcing them to write off tens of billions on their investment.

Meanwhile, in poor little Australia, which actually owned the gas, the moment the export trains opened the price began to rise because there was not enough left over for locals.

The price rose from $4Gj relentlessly until we were paying $20Gj in 2017 – more for our own gas than our Asian customers.

Worse, because gas sets the marginal cost of electricity on the east coast, whenever its cost rises, power prices go mad as well, hugely multiplying the negative impacts on the economy.

The Turnbull government recognized the folly of this in 2017 and installed the Australian Domestic Gas Security Mechanism (ADGSM). That crashed the gas price back under $10Gj, though it remained much higher than it had been traditionally.

But that was not the end of it. Whenever there has been cold weather, or coal or other outages in the power market, or international shortages, the gas cartel has popped up again to squeeze local prices higher.

This serial debacle most recently came to a head with the war in Ukraine and Russian sanctions which have left the world short of gas and Australian prices have gone to as high as $65Gj, the market has been suspended and electricity prices have been driven up by 600 per cent to boot.

This is a $50 billion gouge by the energy cartels that are effectively war-profiteering at every Australian’s expense. Soon, these price rises will deliver an extra 6 per cent CPI inflation, ensuring the RBA has to drive interest rates higher than many households can bear.

And for what? The gas cartel will not invest anymore. There’ll be no jobs created. Governments will receive no tax dividend owing to broken laws and the massive writedowns on the projects.

Indeed, this episode will be recounted by economic historians as the worst case of the “resources curse” ever. (It’s sometimes called Dutch Disease after the Netherlands’ broader economy suffered in the ’70s with the development of North Sea oil resources that lifted its currency and falling competitiveness hollowed out the industry.)

If Dutch Disease is a national cold, then Australian Disease is like an inoperable brain tumour. It has allowed miners to steal the resource, pay no tax, force scarcity pricing on the extractive nation, and raise the currency. All of which have already decimated industry, hobbled national income, and will soon begin to deflate household wealth as well.

how to fix it

The new Labor Government has been forced to confront this reality to some extent. Untenable energy prices have triggered a review of the Turnbull domestic reservation mechanism. This is all to the good, but what should it look like?

First, the reformed ADGSM must include a price trigger. As it stands, it is a volume measure that is too unwieldy to be effective. The ADGSM should automatically divert gas from export the moment the price goes over $7Gj. This is plenty high enough for the gas cartel to make money out of it. The reserves are quite cheap and since they’ve written off so much investment, the gas has become even cheaper on a cash basis.

The new ADGSM should apply to all three conglomerates. Although it is the Santos-led GLNG that has come to be most short of gas and openly lied about it, all three joint ventures knew what they were doing when they overinvested to leave Australia short of gas. Besides, as Bass Strait gas bleeds out, the shortage will only get worse and the future will require as much as 15 per cent of the gas currently exported to remain at home. That’s a burden best shared by all three projects.

A second option is to use export levies. If we set a baseline for profits at pre-Ukraine war prices around $7Gj, then levy the gas cartel for every export dollar above that price, then the local price of gas would collapse and Australians collect the war windfall instead of firms that have no right to it.

Third, we could install a super-profits tax on the cartel and recycle that revenue as energy subsidies for everybody else. That is a pretty clunky solution but it delivers the same end.

With any and all of these solutions, the cartel will scream “sovereign risk”. But so what? It was its mistakes that created this untenable situation. Australians should not have to pay for them.

Moreover, export gas contracts are renegotiated all the time. Just a few weeks ago, one member of the gas cartel, Shell, declared force majeur (that is undelivered but contracted gas) over something as trivial as a maritime labor dispute.

The larger truth is that the cartel is a risk to the sovereign and everyone within it.

Read related topics:Cost Of Living

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Categories
Sports

Rival club flags interest in Dons skipper as Collingwood big man hits games trigger

Essendon captain Dyson Heppell could be enticed north to finish his career, while a Collingwood big man has secured a new contract for 2023.

AFL Media’s Cal Twomey joined SEN Breakfast on Thursday morning to provide updates on several players.

One of those was Bombers skipper Heppell, who remains unsigned late in the 2022 season.

The 30-year-old has an offer on the table to stay at The Hangar, but is yet to make up his mind given interest from the Gold Coast Suns.

“We reported several weeks ago that rival clubs were looking at him as a veteran free agent option when he was out of contract at the Bombers,” Twomey said on SEN Breakfast.

“Now, he got a contract offer shortly after that, a one-year extension was put to him, but he hasn’t signed it and Gold Coast has an interest in Heppell as an unrestricted free agent.

“His form has spiked in the last couple of months, I think he’s been playing more on the wing, he was good again against North Melbourne last week, one of Essendon’s best players, so the Suns are having a look at him.

“I think Essendon opened the door to this possibility by taking until so late in the year to offer their skipper an extra year.

“So it will be fascinating to see what Heppell does from here. Take the year at the Bombers or head to Queensland to close out his career.”

Despite looking a step off the pace at times, Heppell has played an important role in 2022 off half-back, averaging 22.7 disposals, 6.8 marks and three rebound 50s a game.

Club legend Tim Watson was asked if he wanted Heppell to stay at Essendon for 2023.

“Under the right circumstances, yes,” he replied.

“He’s a great club man, very popular player, great around the team and I can see why he would attract interest from the Suns for that purpose.”

Meanwhile, Twomey also reported Collingwood ruck/forward Mason Cox will be at the Pies next year.

The 31-year-old found himself out of the team early in the year but has recaptured some of his best form as the season has progressed, playing 12 games.

“He’s locked in now for next year at Collingwood,” Twomey stated on Cox.

“He was almost out of the club this time last year, he signed a one-year deal with a games trigger for 2023 which he’s now hit.

“(There is) obviously a lot happening in the Collingwood ruck space, plenty of interest in Brodie Grundy.

“I think a lot of clubs will be weighing up the Grundy chase… Port Adelaide, GWS, some Melbourne-based clubs too (have some interest).”

That contract means all three of Cox, Darcy Cameron and Brodie Grundy are contracted to Collingwood for next season, as is young ruckman Aiden Begg.

Cox, Cameron and Grundy have only played together once this season, in Round 5.





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Categories
Australia

Perth weather: Worst of storms over but more rain on the way

With the worst of the storms over, the rain certainly isn’t and Perth has been warned to brace for showers until the end of the week.

The severe weather warning has now been canceled for the metro area but wild winds and showers are still to come.

Emergency services spent another day on Wednesday fighting the brunt of Perth’s severe storm as calls continued to rise, with several regions across the State breaking wind gust records.

The living room ceiling of a Joondalup home collapsed on 13-year-old Dominic Vaughan who was watching TV with his father.

“We heard it crack…I thought it would collapse then but then we heard a crack again and after that the roof just fell,” he told Nine News.

“It was so scary.”

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Categories
US

Cal pauses construction at People’s Park due to ‘violence’

UC Berkeley said Wednesday afternoon that it was pausing construction that started this morning of a student housing project at People’s Park due to “the destruction of construction materials, unlawful protest activity, and violence.”

Police in riot gear descended on the block-square plot of land just off Telegraph Avenue before sunrise to clear out a small homeless encampment and put fencing around the area. A work crew showed up at the site as soon as the sun came up, bringing in construction equipment and felling trees.

A worker fells a tree at People's Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022

A worker fells a tree at People’s Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022

Jungho Kim/Special to SFGATE

“They are currently cutting down trees in the park with chainsaws,” said Ramon Mendoza, who is part of a movement to preserve the park. A video posted on Twitter at 9:36 am showed the tree work underground.

KRON posted a video at 9:23 am of protesters blocking construction trucks “to stop them from clearing any trees.”

As the day progressed, more protesters descended on the area, pulling down the fence and flooding the park.

Protesters try to push down a fence at People's Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Protesters try to push down a fence at People’s Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Jungho Kim/Special to SFGATE

UC Berkeley said several arrests were made, but couldn’t provide detailed information about numbers and charges as of 2 pm


The group Defend People’s Park said early this morning that several forklifts, large moving vehicles and trucks with fencing were at the park before sunrise.

“They are throwing residents’ items away,” the group wrote on Twitter.

The university said in a statement that when work began this morning, two or three unhoused people were in the park who had been “previously offered shelter, repeatedly notified that the park was soon to be closed, and informed that overnight camping in the park is not permitted.”

“Last night, alternative shelter, transportation, and storage for belongings was offered again to each and every person when the park was closed, an offer that remains available for all who need and want it,” the university said.

People block contractors and their equipment used for cutting down trees from leaving People's Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

People block contractors and their equipment used for cutting down trees from leaving People’s Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Jungho Kim/Special to SFGATE

An Alameda County Superior Court judge ruled on Friday that UC Berkeley can start construction on a 16-story building that will house more than 1,100 students.

Activists and student groups stood on the sidelines protesting the park’s closure. They have long disputed the university’s project and called for keeping the site that’s listed on the National Register of Historic Places a public green space.

Heavy machinery is seen pushing down a redwood tree at People's Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Heavy machinery is seen pushing down a redwood tree at People’s Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Jungho Kim/Special to SFGATE

Located in the center of the Bay Area’s high-priced and famously tight real estate market, UC Berkeley faces a student housing shortage; according to a 2017 survey, it “has the lowest percentage of beds for its student body of any campus in the UC System.” The survey also found that 10% of respondents self-identified as having experienced homelessness at some point while attending UC Berkeley.

In addition to student housing, the People’s Park housing complex would provide up to 125 apartments offering supportive housing with onsite services for unhoused and low-income residents, as well as open landscaped areas.

Protesters sit on top of a structure at People's Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Protesters sit on top of a structure at People’s Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Jungho Kim/Special to SFGATE

“More than 60% of the 2.8-acre site will be preserved as open space and revitalized into a renewed park space that reinforces the site’s history,” the university said. The site will also feature “a memorialization of the park’s past and historical significance.”

The university’s plans also include providing interim housing to individuals living in People’s Park, with services to support a transition to permanent housing, a website dedicated to the project says.

This is a developing story and details will be added as they emerge.

A lone protester sits in the last standing redwood tree at People's Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

A lone protester sits in the last standing redwood tree at People’s Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Jungho Kim/Special to SFGATE

Police monitor an entrance previously used by contractors to enter the fenced area at People's Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Police monitor an entrance previously used by contractors to enter the fenced area at People’s Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Jungho Kim/Special to SFGATE

A sign proclaiming "53 years of resistance" is seen at People's Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

A sign proclaiming “53 years of resistance” is seen at People’s Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Jungho Kim/Special to SFGATE

A person shakes his finger at a California Highway Patrol officer during a protest at People's Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

A person shakes his finger at a California Highway Patrol officer during a protest at People’s Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Jungho Kim/Special to SFGATE

A protester is led away by police after being detained during a protest at People's Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

A protester is led away by police after being detained during a protest at People’s Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Jungho Kim/Special to SFGATE

Protesters talk with one another as California Highway Patrol officers police a protest at People's Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Protesters talk with one another as California Highway Patrol officers police a protest at People’s Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Jungho Kim/Special to SFGATE