Tag: Oregon

  • Rage Against Elon Musk Turns Tesla Into a Target

    Rage Against Elon Musk Turns Tesla Into a Target


    Tesla charging stations were set ablaze near Boston on Monday. Shots were fired at a Tesla dealership in Oregon after midnight on Thursday. Arrests were made at a nonviolent protest at a Tesla dealership in Lower Manhattan on Saturday.

    The electric car company Tesla increasingly found itself in police blotters across the country this week, more than seven weeks after President Trump’s second inauguration swept Tesla’s chief executive, Elon Musk, into the administration as a senior adviser to the president.

    Mr. Musk, 53, is drawing increasing backlash for his sweeping cuts to federal agencies, a result of the newly formed cost-cutting initiative Mr. Musk has labeled the Department of Government Efficiency.

    During a demonstration on Saturday at a gleaming Tesla showroom in the West Village neighborhood of Manhattan, protesters joined in chants of “Nobody voted for Elon Musk” and “Oligarchs out, democracy in.” One held a sign saying, “Send Musk to Mars Now!!” (Mr. Musk also owns SpaceX.)

    Several hundred protesters remained there for two hours, organizers said, blocking entrances and shutting down the dealership.

    Some protesters entered the building, and six were arrested, said Alice Hu, an organizer. The New York Police Department said that five people had been issued summonses for disorderly conduct, while one faced a charge of resisting arrest.

    The demonstration came at the end of a week in which employees at a Tesla dealership in Tigard, Ore., near Portland, arrived at work on Thursday and found gunshot damage.

    The police said they believed that at least seven shots had been fired, damaging three cars and shattering windows. One bullet went through a wall and into a computer monitor, the police said.

    And on Monday, seven Tesla charging stations were intentionally set on fire at a shopping center outside Boston, the police said. In another Boston suburb, the police arrested a man on Wednesday who had tagged six Tesla vehicles with decals of Mr. Musk in a raised-arm pose.

    The police in Brookline, Mass. released a video of the man saying that he had the right to deface the cars because it was his “free speech.” When Mr. Musk saw the video, he responded, “Damaging the property of others, aka vandalism, is not free speech!”

    Tesla did not respond to a request for comment on Saturday about the protest and vandalism.

    In Colorado on Thursday, federal prosecutors charged a person with malicious destruction of property. She is accused of spray-painting “Nazi” onto the side of a Tesla dealership and planting a Molotov cocktail near a vehicle, according to a news release from the United States attorney in Colorado.

    At Mr. Trump’s inauguration, Mr. Musk slapped his right hand on his chest before shooting his arm diagonally upward, palm facing down, a gesture that resembled a salute used in Nazi Germany and fascist Italy. But Mr. Musk responded in a post on X: “The ‘everyone is Hitler’ attack is sooo tired.”

    On Tuesday in Salem, Ore., a man was arrested and charged with setting fires in front of a Tesla dealership and to a Tesla car in the lot on the day of the inauguration, causing at least $500,000 worth of damage, the authorities said. He was also charged with firing shots at the same dealership one month later.

    The protest at the showroom in Manhattan was in one of the city’s most liberal neighborhoods. Protesters have gathered there for weeks, with each weekend’s protest larger than the previous one, according to State Senator Brad Hoylman-Sigal, a Democrat who represents the district.

    He said that it was “cathartic for New Yorkers to go to the streets” and that it was important for Mr. Musk and Mr. Trump to “see that cutting the federal government off at its knees is going to hurt a lot of people.”

    Tesla itself has been the subject of the backlash, with some vehicle owners now selling their cars and trucks to distance themselves from Mr. Musk and his political activities.

    “I’m sort of embarrassed to be seen in that car now,” one owner told The New York Times before trading in the car.

    The anger against Mr. Musk this week also crossed borders.

    In Berlin on Tuesday, several fires broke out at a construction site for the expansion of a Tesla factory. The police in Germany said that they were investigating it as an arson.

    And in France, a dozen Tesla cars were set on fire near the southern city of Toulouse on Sunday night. The blaze was “not at all accidental,” the prosecutor’s office said.



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  • “Oregon Trail” computer game is now being developed as a movie

    “Oregon Trail” computer game is now being developed as a movie


    WCCO talks to “Oregon Trail” co-creator about upcoming movie adaptation


    WCCO talks to “Oregon Trail” co-creator about upcoming movie adaptation

    02:04

    NORTHFIELD, Minn. — “The Oregon Trail,” one of the most successful computer games of all time and a staple for children of the ’80s and ’90s, is currently being developed into a movie project.

    Bill Heinemann says it’s hard to find someone these days who hasn’t heard of “The Oregon Trail.” The computer game he co-created in 1971 at Carleton College in Northfield has sold tens of millions of copies and is in the World Video Game Hall of Fame.

    “It’s surprising and gratifying and humbling, in a way, that a little thing that I spent two weeks on has become a worldwide phenomenon,” Heinemann said.

    The idea sprouted when Heinemann’s friend, Don Rawitsch, came up with a board game for students he was teaching that simulated 1800s settlers going west on the Oregon Trail.

    Bill Heinemann

    WCCO


    Computers were in their very early days, and even though Heinemann says he’d only seen “Pac-Man,” he sensed an opportunity.

    “I said, ‘That’ll be a great application for a computer,’ because you wouldn’t have to shake the dice to see what happens,” Heinemann said. “What happens could come up and be unexpected.”

    The game’s become known for the many ways players can die, including by dysentery, but Heinemann’s favorite was death by snake bite.  

    “It only happened once every several hundred times, and so people could’ve played it for months and all of a sudden, ‘What? I got bit by a snake and died? This has never happened to me before!’” he said.  

    the-oregon-trail.jpg

    MECC


    Now more than 50 years after the first “Oregon Trail” program, Apple is reportedly developing the game into an action-comedy movie.

    “Surprising to me how popular it’s become and how long the interest in it has been around,” Heinemann said. “And this is just the next step I guess.”

    He won’t be making any money off the movie. In fact, Heinemann’s never seen a dime from the iconic game.

    He and his two co-creators, Rawitsch and Paul Dillenberger, turned it over to the Minnesota Educational Computing Consortium shortly after they invented it.

    Heinemann says it doesn’t bother him.

    “I didn’t do it for money,” he said. “I did it for just the love of the game and the love of teaching.”

    Heinemann spent most of his career working in software. He says he always enjoys it when people tell him how much they love the game.



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  • “FBI True” takes viewers inside deadly 2014 Oregon standoff

    “FBI True” takes viewers inside deadly 2014 Oregon standoff


    “FBI True” takes viewers inside deadly 2014 Oregon standoff – CBS News


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    The latest episode of “FBI True” on Paramount Plus delves into a tense standoff between FBI agents and a cattle rancher supported by heavily armed anti-government militias. The series offers an inside look at some of the FBI’s most dangerous cases.

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  • Boeing factory workers strike for first time since 2008 after overwhelmingly rejecting contract

    Boeing factory workers strike for first time since 2008 after overwhelmingly rejecting contract


    Union members cheer during a news conference following a vote count on the union contract at the IAM District 751 Main Union Hall in Seattle, Washington, US, on Thursday, Sept. 12, 2024. 

    M. Scott Brauer | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Boeing‘s factory workers walked off the job after midnight on Friday, halting production of the company’s bestselling airplanes after staff overwhelmingly rejected a new labor contract.

    It’s a costly development for the manufacturer, which has struggled to ramp up production and restore its reputation following safety crises.

    Workers in the Seattle area and in Oregon voted 94.6% against a tentative agreement that Boeing and the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers unveiled Sunday. The workers voted 96% in favor of a strike, far more than the two-thirds vote required for a work stoppage.

    “We strike at midnight,” said IAM District 751 President Jon Holden at a news conference where he announced the vote’s results. He characterized it as an “unfair labor practice strike,” alleging that factory workers had experienced “discriminatory conduct, coercive questioning, unlawful surveillance and we had unlawful promise of benefits.”

    A worker holds a sign opposing the proposed contract as Boeing factory workers wait in line to vote on their first full contract in 16 years, at an International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers District 751 union hall, in Renton, Washington, U.S. September 12, 2024. 

    David Ryder | Reuters

    He said Boeing needs to bargain in good faith. Boeing didn’t comment on his claims.

    “The message was clear that the tentative agreement we reached with IAM leadership was not acceptable to the members,” the company said in a statement. “We remain committed to resetting our relationship with our employees and the union, and we are ready to get back to the table to reach a new agreement.”

    Stephanie Pope, CEO of Boeing’s commercial airplane unit, told machinists earlier this week that the tentative deal was the “best contract we’ve ever presented.”

    “In past negotiations, the thinking was we should hold something back so we can ratify the contract on a second vote,” she said Tuesday. “We talked about that strategy this time, but we deliberately chose a new path.”

    The tentative proposal included 25% wage increases and other improvements to health-care and retirement benefits, though the union had sought raises of about 40%. Workers had complained about the agreement, saying it didn’t cover the increased cost of living.

    The vote is a blow to CEO Kelly Ortberg, who has been in the top job for five weeks. A day before the vote, he had urged workers to accept the contract and not to strike, saying that it would jeopardize the company’s recovery.

    Read more CNBC airline news

    Under the tentative agreement, Boeing had promised to build its next commercial jet in the Seattle area, a bid to win over workers after the company moved the 787 Dreamliner production to a nonunion factory in South Carolina.

    The agreement, if approved, would have been the first fully negotiated contract for Boeing machinists in 16 years. Boeing workers went on strike in 2008 for nearly two months.

    The ultimate financial impact of this strike will depend on how long it lasts.

    Jefferies aerospace analyst Sheila Kahyaoglu estimated a 30-day cash impact from a strike could be a $1.5 billion hit for Boeing and said it “could destabilize suppliers and supply chains.” She forecast the tentative agreement would have had an annual impact of $900 million if passed.

    Workers with picket signs outside the Boeing Co. manufacturing facility during a strike in Renton, Washington, US, on Friday, Sept. 13, 2024. 

    M. Scott Brauer | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Boeing has burned through about $8 billion so far this year and has mounting debt. Production has fallen short of expectations as the company works to stamp out manufacturing flaws and faces other industrywide problems such as supply and labor shortages.

    Aircraft delivery delays from Boeing have vexed its airline customers. In response, they said they have had to redraw their hiring and growth plans. Southwest Airlines has already sharply reduced its delivery expectations from Boeing for the year.

    “As a result, we currently have the fleet needed to fulfill our upcoming schedules,” a spokesman said Friday. The airline’s leaders were in touch with Boeing ahead of the vote.

    Union members build burn barrels at the IAM District 751 Main Union Hall as votes are counted on the union contract in Seattle, Washington, US, on Thursday, Sept. 12, 2024. 

    M. Scott Brauer | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    A door plug blowout on a nearly new Boeing 737 Max 9 at the start of the year has brought additional federal scrutiny of Boeing’s production lines. 

    “Our aggressive oversight of Boeing continues,” the Federal Aviation Administration said in a statement on Friday.

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  • Record-breaking wildfires scorch more than 1.4 million acres in Oregon, authorities say – Times of India

    Record-breaking wildfires scorch more than 1.4 million acres in Oregon, authorities say – Times of India



    PORTLAND: Wildfires in Oregon have burned more acres of land in 2024 than in any year since reliable records began, authorities said Friday, with the mid-August peak of fire season still on the horizon.
    Blazes have scorched more than 1.4 million acres, or nearly 2,200 square miles (5,700 square kilometers), Northwest Interagency Coordination Center spokesperson Carol Connolly said.That’s more than any other year since 1992, when reliable records began to be kept, she said, and surpasses the previous record set in 2020.
    Connolly said 71 large fires have burned the vast majority of the land this year. Large fires are defined as those that consume more than 100 acres (40 hectares) of timber or more than 300 acres (120 hectares) of grass or brush.
    Thirty-two homes in the state have been lost to the fires, she said, which have been fueled by high temperatures, dry weather and low humidity.
    They have prompted evacuation notices across the state and largely torched rural and mountain areas, although some have also sparked closer to the Portland metro area.
    Level 3 “go now” evacuation notices were in place Friday for the small town of Cherry Grove, about 35 miles (56 kilometers) west of Portland, as a fire burned in nearby forest. David Huey, a deputy with the Washington County Sheriff’s Office, said most residents evacuated after officers went door to door encouraging them to leave.
    Airplanes and helicopters were scooping water from nearby Henry Hagg Lake to drop on the fire, said Gert Zoutendijk, spokesperson for the Gaston Rural Fire District. The lake was set to be closed to the public throughout the weekend.
    The fire was roughly 0.5 square miles (1.3 square kilometers) with zero containment as of Friday afternoon, although crews have made progress on lining the fire, Zoutendijk said.
    Another fire near the Portland suburb of Oregon City led authorities to temporarily close part of a state highway in the morning and issue “go now” evacuation orders along part of the route. By mid-afternoon, authorities downgraded the evacuation and reopened the highway.
    The largest blaze is the Durkee Fire in eastern Oregon, which has scorched more than 459 square miles (1,200 square kilometers) but was at least 95% contained as of Friday, according to authorities. At one point it was the biggest fire in the country.
    California’s Park Fire has since become the largest, burning more than 660 square miles (1,710 square kilometers) and destroying more than 600 structures. A man was arrested and accused of starting the fire by pushing a burning car into a gully in a wilderness park outside the Sacramento Valley city of Chico.
    Also in California, the Crozier Fire in El Dorado County has burned about 3 square miles (7.7 square kilometers) and was 5% contained as of Friday evening, according to Cal Fire. The fire is burning in steep and rugged terrain and threatens 4,017 structures. The weather is expected to remain hot and dry through the weekend.
    Some of the fires in Oregon’s previous record-worst year, 2020, were among the worst natural disasters in the state’s history. Blazes over Labor Day weekend killed nine people, burned more than 1,875 square miles (4,860 square kilometers) and destroyed thousands of homes and other structures.





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  • FDA issues warning about paralytic shellfish poisoning. Here’s what to know.

    FDA issues warning about paralytic shellfish poisoning. Here’s what to know.


    Toxic algae blooms create unsafe water condition for humans and pets across SoCal


    Toxic algae blooms create unsafe water condition for humans and pets across SoCal

    02:30

    Before you dig into that platter of freshly shucked oysters or baked clams at your favorite seafood restaurant, better make sure you know from where the shellfish originated. 

    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is warning consumers to avoid eating shellfish from Oregon and Washington state because they may be contaminated with toxins that cause what’s known as paralytic shellfish poisoning. At least 31 people have been sickened in Oregon so far, according to state health officials. Here’s what to know about the FDA advisory.

    What is the FDA warning about?

    The FDA says to avoid oysters and bay clams harvested from Netarts and Tillamook bays in northern Oregon since May 28, as well as shellfish harvested from areas around Willapa Bay in southern Washington since May 26. They may be contaminated with high levels of paralytic shellfish poisoning, or PSP, a naturally occurring toxin produced by algae.

    Shellfish harvested from those areas during that period were distributed beyond Oregon and Washington to Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Nevada, New York. The FDA has warned restaurants and retailers in those states not to serve it.

    Elevated levels of toxins were first detected in shellfish on the Oregon coast on May 17, state fish and wildlife officials said.

    Since then, a paralytic shellfish poisoning outbreak has sickened at least 31 people in Oregon, according to the Oregon Health Authority. The agency has asked people who have harvested or eaten Oregon shellfish since May 13 to fill out a survey intended to help investigators identify the cause of the outbreak and the number of people sickened.

    Oregon authorities have closed the state’s entire coastline to the harvesting of mussels, razor clams and bay clams. Agriculture officials have also closed three bays, including those named in the FDA advisory, to commercial oyster harvesting.

    The FDA also urged restaurants and food retailers not to serve or sell oysters and bay clams from growing areas in Netarts Bay and Tillamook Bay,

    Officials in neighboring Washington have also closed the state’s Pacific coastline to the harvesting of shellfish, including mussels, clams, scallops and oysters, a a shellfish safety map produced by the Washington State Department of Health shows.

    What is paralytic shellfish poisoning?

    Paralytic shellfish poisoning, or PSP, is caused by saxitoxin, a naturally occurring toxin that’s produced by algae. Saxitoxin is a neurotoxin, meaning it can damage nerve tissue.

    What are symptoms of PSP poisoning? 

    People who eat shellfish contaminated with high levels of saxitoxins usually start feeling ill within 30 to 60 minutes, according to Oregon health officials. Symptoms include numbness of the mouth and lips, vomiting, diarrhea, shortness of breath and irregular heartbeat in severe cases.

    There is no antidote to PSP, according to the health agency. Treatment for severe cases may require mechanical ventilators to help with breathing. In fatal cases, death is typically due to asphyxiation.

    But for “patients surviving 24 hours, with or without respiratory support, the prognosis is considered good, with no lasting side effects,” the FDA says.

    Due to the range in severity of illness, people should consult their healthcare provider if they suspect that they have developed symptoms that resemble paralytic shellfish poisoning.

    Is cooked shellfish safe to eat?

    Authorities warn that cooking or freezing contaminated shellfish doesn’t kill the toxins or make it safe to eat.

    A “very large” algal bloom has resulted in “unprecedented levels” of PSP toxins along Oregon’s coast, Matthew Hunter, shellfish program manager for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, said during a briefing.

    The toxins have accumulated in the shellfish, sickening some people who have eaten them.

    While the factors that create harmful algal blooms are not well understood, certain factors — resulting from both natural processes and human activities — are believed to play a role, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

    “Studies show that many algal species flourish when wind and water currents are favorable,” the agency says on a webpage dedicated to explaining harmful algal blooms. Some blooms, it says, stem from “sluggish water circulation, unusually high water temperatures, and extreme weather events like hurricanes, floods, and drought.”

    Algae growth can also increase when nutrients used in fertilizers, mainly phosphorus and nitrogen, flow into bodies of water, according to the agency.

    Oregon officials said it may take weeks, months or even up to a year for toxin levels to subside, depending on the type of shellfish.

    Mussels can accumulate paralytic shellfish poison rapidly, but also rid themselves of it quickly, according to Hunter, the Oregon fish and wildlife official. Because of this, it may take anywhere from two weeks to a month for mussels to eliminate the toxin.

    Razor clams, however, are slower to do so. It may take them several months to a year to cleanse themselves due to the current high levels of toxin, Hunter said.

    Such high levels of paralytic shellfish poison haven’t been detected in Oregon in decades, according to Hunter, who cited a previous shellfish harvesting closure in the state in 1992. However, PSP has been prevalent in the regional waters for centuries, he said.

    Impact on local fisheries

    The harvesting closures may deal a blow to Pacific Northwest fisheries.

    Oregon authorities on June qclosed its entire coastline to mussel harvesting after an “unprecedented” outbreak of PSP poisoning sickened at least 20 people. The harvesting of razor clams, bay clams and oysters was also shut down in parts of the coast. Elevated levels of toxins were first detected in shellfish on the state’s central and north coasts on May 17, Matthew Hunter, shellfish program manager for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, said during a briefing at the time.

    Agriculture officials also closed commercial oyster harvesting in Netarts and Tillamook bays on the north coast of Oregon.

    The Oregon Department of Agriculture says it will continue testing for shellfish toxins at least twice a month as tides and weather permit. Reopening an area closed for biotoxins requires two consecutive tests that show toxin levels are below a certain threshold, according to the agency.

    The shellfish industry generates $270 million each year for the region’s economy, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and employs some 3,200 people.

    Officials in neighboring Washington have also closed the state’s Pacific coastline to the harvesting of shellfish, including mussels, clams, scallops and oysters, a shellfish safety map produced by the Washington State Department of Health showed.



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  • Oregon governor declares emergency over fentanyl crisis

    Oregon governor declares emergency over fentanyl crisis


    Oregon governor declares emergency over fentanyl crisis – CBS News


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    Oregon paved the way as the first state to decriminalize drug use in 2020, to instead focus on addiction and recovery. But due to Portland’s growing fentanyl crisis, Gov. Tina Kotek this week declared a 90-day emergency to address the increase in overdose deaths. Adam Yamaguchi has more.

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  • Oregon governor declares drug emergency for the city of Portland

    Oregon governor declares drug emergency for the city of Portland


    Oregon governor declares drug emergency for the city of Portland – CBS News


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    Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek has declared a drug emergency for the city of Portland just a few years after it became the first state in the nation to largely decriminalize drug use. There was hope that this move and a more humane approach to people who use drugs would curb addiction, but officials and some residents say they are frustrated. CBS News’ Adam Yamaghuci has more.

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  • FAA orders temporary grounding of certain Boeing 737 Max 9 planes after Alaska Airlines window detaches mid-flight

    FAA orders temporary grounding of certain Boeing 737 Max 9 planes after Alaska Airlines window detaches mid-flight


    The Federal Aviation Administration said that they will require “immediate inspections of certain Boeing 737 Max 9 planes” after the window on one such plane blew out mid-flight on Friday

    The FAA’s statement, released on Saturday afternoon, said an “Emergency Airworthiness Directive” would be released shortly as well. These directives are issued “when an unsafe condition exists that requires immediate action by an owner/operator,” according to the agency. 

    This will affect about 171 planes worldwide, the FAA said. Safety inspections for each plane will take between four and eight hours. There have been about 218 such planes delivered around the world, the FAA said, but not all such aircraft were in operation at the time the EAD was issued. 

    “Safety will continue to drive our decision-making as we assist the NTSB’s investigation into Alaska Airlines Flight 1282,” FAA Administrator Mike Whitaker said. 

    Transportation officials applauded the FAA’s quick decision. 

    Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said Saturday, “Safety will always be the top priority for our Department and for FAA. Administrator Whitaker has acted to order these aircraft grounded pending the inspections necessary to ensure that they are safe to operate.” 

    The Flight Attendants Union said, “This is a critical move to ensure the safety of all crew and passengers, as well as confidence in aviation safety. Lives must come first always.”

    alaska-airline-flight-hole-in-plane.jpg
    A passenger’s image capturing the blown-out window. 

    STRAWBERRVY | INSTAGRAM


    The move comes after a window on one of the plane models detached mid-flight, forcing the plane to make an emergency landing just minutes into its trip from Portland, Oregon to Ontario, California. There was no one in the seats next to the window, and no serious injuries were reported among the plane’s 174 passengers or six crew members. 

    “All of a sudden I heard, like, a big bang. I didn’t know exactly what was going on,” one woman aboard the flight told CBS News. “I look up and the oxygen masks were hanging from the ceiling and then I look to my left and there’s this huge chunk, part of the airplane just missing. The wind is just extremely loud, there’s wind blowing everywhere.”

    Alaska Airlines said on Friday that they would ground all 65 of their Boeing Max 9 aircraft. 

    “Each aircraft will be returned to service only after completion of full maintenance and safety inspections,” the airline said. On Saturday morning, the airline said that inspections on more than a quarter of the fleet had been completed, with “no concerning findings.” Aircraft will be returned to service after they are inspected, the airline said. 

    Alaska Airlines said on Saturday that guests whose flights had been impacted by the groundings could rebook their travel or request a refund.

    “We deeply apologize to our guests whose flights have been impacted,” the airline said.

    Boeing said in a statement to CBS News that “Safety is our top priority and we deeply regret the impact this event has had on our customers and their passengers. We agree with and fully support the FAA’s decision to require immediate inspections of 737-9 airplanes with the same configuration as the affected airplane. In addition, a Boeing technical team is supporting the NTSB’s investigation into last night’s event. We will remain in close contact with our regulator and customers.”

    CBS News previously reported that the Boeing 737 Max 9 aircraft had been delivered to the airline in October. In the United States, only Alaska Airlines and United Airlines use the aircraft. United has about 80 of the planes, but it’s not clear how many were operating at the time of the Alaska Airlines incident. United expects about 60 flight cancelations today due to the grounding.

    United said the airline is working directly with impacted customers to find them alternative travel options.

    Removing certain MAX 9 aircraft from service is expected to cause about 60 cancellations today. 





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  • Eating more vegetables and less meat may save you hundreds of dollars

    Eating more vegetables and less meat may save you hundreds of dollars


    I tried going vegetarian once when I was in high school. My best friend was a vegetarian, and I was curious. I lasted only about four days. My downfall: a buffalo chicken sandwich. Since that ill-fated attempt, I’ve never tried to curb my meat consumption. It’s just too dang tasty.

    But in 2022, a family member was diagnosed with a life-threatening disease. In addition to taking new medications, they adopted a strict whole-food, plant-based diet in the hopes that it would improve their health. If diet could potentially help a serious disease, I figured maybe it could help my far less serious health issues. Why not try it?

    And it worked.

    What’s more, in addition to making me feel better, switching from a meat-heavy diet (eating meat nearly twice a day) to a plant-heavy diet (eating meat one to three times a week) saved me more than $800 over the course of five months.

    An economic diet

    At first I wasn’t thrilled about eating salad over steak, but I loved how much money I was saving. And it turns out my case isn’t unique.

    A 2021 study from Oxford University found that vegan diets reduced food costs by as much as one-third.

    When you think about it, it makes sense: The average cost of a pound of ground beef was $5.23 in October 2023. If you replace that meat with chickpeas, you can expect to pay around a dollar for a 15.5-ounce can.

    Toni Okamoto, founder of the blog Plant-Based on a Budget in Sacramento, California, says that many of her clients spend $40 to $50 a week per person on groceries while following her plant-based meal plans.

    “I was living paycheck to paycheck working a job that led me to live a life below the poverty line,” said Okamoto. “And through meal planning and being thoughtful about my plant-based eating, I was able to climb out of debt and start saving money.”

    Eating more plants has also been shown to potentially improve long-term health. Reducing your health risks could mean fewer doctors’ visits, prescriptions and other health-related expenses in the long run.

    Katie Cummings, a vegan certified financial planner with Vision Capital Management in Portland, Oregon, notes how diet as potential disease prevention can help cut costs.

    “One thing that really derails a financial plan is a long-term care event,” said Cummings.

    How to eat more plants

    When I started eating more plants I tried to focus on adding rather than subtracting. For me, that looked like eating one new vegetable a week. That’s how I discovered I liked romanesco and was not a fan of kohlrabi. Instead of focusing on cutting out meat, I thought about how many vegetables I could add to my diet. Eventually my tastes changed and I even started craving vegetables.

    If you’re looking to eat more plants, there are a lot of ways to approach it, but Okamoto suggests keeping it simple.

    “Try not to get overwhelmed with thinking about it as a whole new lifestyle change, but simply think about the things that you eat and how you can make swaps,” said Okamoto. “For example, if you like pasta, you can still eat pasta with marinara sauce and a can of cannellini beans with some frozen veggies thrown in there, or if you like beef tacos, try using lentils instead. They’re heart-healthier and much cheaper.”

    Grow your savings

    If you search “make money fast,” you’ll find a lot of suggestions, such as delivery driving or teaching an online class. But few of these can actually put money in your pocket today. If you’re looking to make money, reducing your grocery bill can help you save money instantly.

    Cummings suggests that people looking to start eating a plant-based or vegan diet can benefit from tracking their spending.

    “Just be really clear and honest with yourself when you’re looking at your budget. Be nice to yourself when you’re starting out on it, and set the limits for your categories kind of high,” said Cummings. “And then you can slowly crank them down, and modify it, checking in often. I always tell my clients once a week if you can, if you can dedicate just 15 minutes once a week.”

    If you’re saving a significant amount of money, checking your budget may even start to feel fun. If you cut your grocery bill by a third, you may suddenly have some extra money to work with. You could pad your emergency fund, save for retirement or put money toward a vacation. No matter what you choose to spend it on, the savings and health benefits might just make it worth going meatless.

    This column was provided to The Associated Press by the personal finance website NerdWallet.The content is for educational and informational purposes and does not constitute investment advice. Alana Benson is a writer at NerdWallet.



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