FEMA 'not ready' for hurricane season, internal review findsNew Foto - FEMA 'not ready' for hurricane season, internal review finds

As the Federal Emergency Management Agency prepares for the approaching hurricane season, the agency is ill-prepared, according to an internal document obtained by ABC News. The document was prepared for acting FEMA Administrator David Richardson as he takes the helm of the agency responsible for managing federal disasters. "As FEMA transforms to a smaller footprint, the intent for this hurricane season is not well understood, thus FEMA is not ready," according to the document. MORE: Acting FEMA head fired a day after he testified against closing the agency: Sources The document says that FEMA is uncertain about its future, while planning for hurricane season, which starts on June 1. Staffing limitations and hiring will also impact FEMA's operations, according to the document, as well as a lack of coordination with states. Richardson was placed at FEMA by Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem after former acting Administrator Cam Hamilton was fired last week because of his testimony in front of a House panel, according to a source familiar with the matter, which went against the shuttering of the agency. Richardson told employees during his first all hands meeting last week to not get in his way when he is trying to achieve the president's objectives, a source told ABC News. "Don't get in my way if you're those 20% of the people," he told employees last Friday morning, according to a source with knowledge of the meeting. "I know all the tricks." "Obfuscation. Delay. Undermining. If you're one of those 20% of the people and you think those tactics and techniques are going to help you, they will not because I will run right over you," he said, according to a source with knowledge of the meeting. "I will achieve the president's intent. I am as bent on achieving the president's intent as I was on making sure that I did my duty when I took my Marines to Iraq." MORE: GOP Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders, Arkansas Republican lawmakers urge Trump to reconsider denial of disaster relief A Department of Homeland Security spokesperson told ABC News that the information is "grossly out of context." "You are referencing one line on a nineteen-page slide deck and the unsubstantiated opinion of one official inside the agency," a DHS spokesperson said. "The slide was used during a daily meeting Acting Administrator David Richardson has held every day titled Hurricane Readiness Complex Problem Solving. In other words, exactly what the head of an emergency management agency should be doing before Hurricane Season. This is just another example of a long line of internal leaks from people who clearly couldn't care less about Americans facing disaster and prefer to manufacture petty drama for their own self-aggrandizement. Under Secretary Noem's leadership, and the efforts of Acting Administrator Richardson FEMA is fully activated in preparation for Hurricane Season." Morale at FEMA has been sinking since Noem said she was going to eliminate the agency, according to sources within the agency. Noem was pressed during a House panel on Wednesday about whether she has a plan to eliminate FEMA. She said she didn't have a plan, but said the White House would be coming forward with a plan. "There is no formalized final plan for how this goes forward, because the input of Congress is critically important," she told Rep. Bennie Thompson. CNN first reported on the internal review document. FEMA 'not ready' for hurricane season, internal review findsoriginally appeared onabcnews.go.com

FEMA 'not ready' for hurricane season, internal review finds

FEMA 'not ready' for hurricane season, internal review finds As the Federal Emergency Management Agency prepares for the approaching...
Air traffic controllers in Denver scrambled to use backup communications during an outageNew Foto - Air traffic controllers in Denver scrambled to use backup communications during an outage

Air traffic controllers in Denver lost communications with planes for 90 seconds earlier this week and had to scramble to use backup frequencies in thelatest Federal Aviation Administration equipment failure. The outage at a control center that directs planes flying at high altitude between airports all over the country on Monday afternoon affected communications, not radar, the FAA's head of air traffic control, Frank McIntosh, said during a House hearing Thursday. This communications failure followstwo high-profile outagesof radar and communications in the past 2 1/2 weeks at a facility in Philadelphia that directs planes in and out of the Newark, New Jersey, airport. The FAA said in a statement that the Denver Air Route Traffic Control Center lost communications for approximately 90 seconds. McIntosh said both the primary and main backup frequencies went down, so the controllers had to turn to an emergency frequency to communicate. "Controllers used another frequency to relay instructions to pilots. Aircraft remained safely separated and there were no impacts to operations," the FAA said. Rep. Robert Garcia of California told McIntosh during the hearing that these outages are happening more regularly and it's concerning every time. "We know that there are staffing and equipment problems at air traffic control," Garcia said. "We know that the problems have gone back decades in some cases, but it's still an absolutely shocking system failure and we need immediate solutions." Last week, theTrumpadministration announced amultibillion-dollar planto overhaul an air traffic control system that relies on antiquated equipment. Air travel is safe even if the air traffic control system is old, but the problems in Newark were unacceptable and could have been prevented if the system had been upgraded sooner, said Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy in a Thursday op-ed in Newsweek. The Newark airport has generally led the nation in flight cancellations and delays ever since both radar and communications went outon April 28and again onMay 9. Athird similar problemhappened Sunday, but that time the backup system worked and kept radar online. "The safety of the traveling public cannot continue being put at risk," Democrat and ranking member Rep. Rick Larsen said after the hearing. "Problems with our system have crossed administrations, but safety improvements cannot span generations. We need action now." The FAA and airlines that fly out of Newark met again Thursday to discuss cutting flights because there aren't enough controllers to handle them all. Those conversations will continue for a third day on Friday, but the FAA isn't likely to issue a decision immediately. More than 140 flights have been canceled at Newark Thursday. Officials developed the plan to upgrade the air traffic control system after adeadly midair collisionin January between a passenger jet and an Army helicopter killed 67 people in the skies over Washington, D.C.Several other crashesthis year also put pressure on officials to act.

Air traffic controllers in Denver scrambled to use backup communications during an outage

Air traffic controllers in Denver scrambled to use backup communications during an outage Air traffic controllers in Denver lost communicati...
New York ends paper routes for younger kids, but the job has mostly faded away for teensNew Foto - New York ends paper routes for younger kids, but the job has mostly faded away for teens

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — For decades, a carveout in New York's child labor laws allowed kids as young as 11 to legally partake in the time-honored tradition of a paper route. Flipping papers into suburban hedges, bicycling through snow squalls, dodging dogs and getting stiffed for tips became a rite of passage for generations of youths. But a change to the law quietly made via the state budget this month makes clear the job is now not allowed for anyone under 14 years old. The move was first reported by Politico. The change comes even though paper boys and girls have mostly gone the way of phone booths, mimeograph machines and their urban "newsie" forebears who shouted "Extra! Extra!" on street corners. While many teens used to take on paper routes as after-school jobs, that became rarer decades ago as more daily newspapers switched to early morning deliveries. Newspapers are now increasingly online and tend to rely on adults with cars to make home deliveries, according to industry watchers. "The need for a workforce of kids to go throwing newspapers on stoops is just a thing of the past," said attorney Allan Bloom, an employment law expert with the Proskauer firm. Lawmakers made the change as part of a broader update of child labor laws. Bloom likened it to a "cleanup" as lawmakers streamlined the process for employing minors and increased penalties for violating child labor laws. Diane Kennedy, president of the New York News Publishers Association, said she was not aware of any newspapers in New York using youth carriers. Christopher Page recalled buying his first guitar on earnings from a paper route started in the late '70s in suburban Clifton Park, north of Albany. "I just had a 10-speed that I destroyed," said Page. "It was truly rain or shine, I'm out there riding the bike. Or even in the winter, I would still ride the bike in the snow through all the potholes and the ice." When dogs chased him on his bike, Page would ward them off with his shoulder bag full of newspapers. At age 13, Jon Sorensen delivered the Syracuse Herald-American on Sunday with his 11-year old brother in the Finger Lakes town of Owasco from the back of their mother's Chevy station wagon. "That was back when papers were papers — a lot of sections and a lot of weight," recalled Sorensen, now 68 and Kennedy's partner. "I can remember trudging through the snow. ... I don't think I ever dropped one, because if you did you had to be heading back to the car and pick up another copy." Sorensen stayed in the newspaper business as an adult, covering state government and politics for papers including New York Daily News and The Buffalo News. "The hardest part of the job wasn't delivering the paper, it was collecting," Sorensen recalled. "It wasn't always easy to get people to pay up."

New York ends paper routes for younger kids, but the job has mostly faded away for teens

New York ends paper routes for younger kids, but the job has mostly faded away for teens ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — For decades, a carveout in New ...
Blake Lively accused of pressuring Taylor Swift amid legal battle with Justin BaldoniNew Foto - Blake Lively accused of pressuring Taylor Swift amid legal battle with Justin Baldoni

BlakeLively'sfriendship with music superstarTaylor Swiftis now at the center of herlegal battlewith her former "It Ends With Us" co-starJustin Baldoni. In a new court filing Wednesday, attorneys for Baldoni claim Lively pressured Swift to get involved in the legal back and forth, whichfirst began in December. That month, Lively filed a complaint against Baldoni with the California Civil Rights Department accusing him of sexual harassment on the set of "It Ends With Us," which he also directed. Lively and Baldoni subsequently launched dueling lawsuits against each other, with Lively alleging that Baldoni and key stakeholders of the film sexually harassed her and attempted, along with Baldoni's production company and crisis PR company, The Agency Group PR, to orchestrate a smear campaign against her. Baldoni denied the allegations via a statement from his attorney, who called Lively's actions "shameful" for making "serious and categorically false accusations" against Baldoni. Baldoni later sued Lively, her husbandRyan Reynolds, the couple's publicist Leslie Sloane, and Sloane's public relations company, Vision PR, for extortion and defamation, among other things. Lively's lawyers called Baldoni's lawsuit "another chapter in the abuser playbook" and accused Baldoni of "trying to shift the narrative to Ms. Lively by falsely claiming that she seized creative control and alienated the cast from Mr. Baldoni." Earlier this month, Swiftwas subpoenaedby Baldoni's lawyer, Bryan Freedman. Lawyers for Lively and Reynolds responded by trying to block the subpoena, which Baldoni's attorneys argued was necessary. Citing "a source," Baldoni's legal team claims in Wednesday's court filing that Lively's attorney "demanded that Ms. Swift release a statement of support for Ms. Lively" amid the legal scuffle, alleging that "if Ms. Swift refused to do so, private text messages of a personal nature in Ms. Lively's possession would be released." Baldoni's attorneys allege in the new filing that, "Lively requested that Taylor Swift delete their text messages." The court filing also claims that "a representative of Ms. Swift addressed these inappropriate and apparently extortionate threats in at least one written communication." In response, Lively's lawyer, Mike Gottlieb, asked the court to strike the documents as "unnecessary, improper and abusive." Gottlieb said in a statement to ABC News Wednesday that the allegations made in Baldoni's court filing are "categorically false." "This is categorically false. We unequivocally deny all of these so-called allegations, which are cowardly sourced to supposed anonymous sources, and completely untethered from reality," Gottlieb said. "This is what we have come to expect from the Wayfarer parties' lawyers, who appear to love nothing more than shooting first, without any evidence, and with no care for the people they are harming in the process. We will imminently file motions with the court to hold these attorneys accountable for their misconduct here." Taylor Swift spokesperson responds to subpoena in Blake Lively-Justin Baldoni legal feud Baldoni's initial complaint against Lively, filed in January, detailed a text message he allegedly received from Lively in which Baldoni claims Lively referred to Swift and Reynolds as her "dragons." The complaint claimed Lively leveraged her relationships with high profile individuals like Swift and Reynolds to exert her influence over the film. Swift has not responded to ABC News' request for comment about the latest court filing. In response to being subpoenaed, a spokesperson for Swift said she was only involved in licensing her song "My Tears Ricochet" for the film and was never on set. "Taylor Swift never set foot on the set of this movie, she was not involved in any casting or creative decisions, she did not score the film, she never saw an edit or made any notes on the film, she did not even see It Ends With Us until weeks after its public release, and was traveling around the globe during 2023 and 2024 headlining the biggest tour in history," the spokesperson said. "The connection Taylor had to this film was permitting the use of one song, 'My Tears Ricochet.'" The spokesperson added, "Given that her involvement was licensing a song for the film, which 19 other artists also did, this document subpoena is designed to use Taylor Swift's name to draw public interest by creating tabloid clickbait instead of focusing on the facts of the case." Lively and Baldoni are due to appear in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York on March 9, 2026. Blake Lively, Justin Baldoni's 'It Ends with Us' legal battle: A timeline Read more about the Lively-Baldoni legal battlehere. Blake Lively accused of pressuring Taylor Swift amid legal battle with Justin Baldonioriginally appeared ongoodmorningamerica.com

Blake Lively accused of pressuring Taylor Swift amid legal battle with Justin Baldoni

Blake Lively accused of pressuring Taylor Swift amid legal battle with Justin Baldoni BlakeLively'sfriendship with music superstarTaylor...
Susan Sarandon Packed 'Birth Control Pills and My Toothbrush' While Moving Around London During "Rocky Horror" Shoot

20th Century Fox/Michael White Prods/Kobal/Shutterstock; Tim Boxer/Hulton Archive/Getty In the new documentary,Strange Journey: The Story of Rocky Horror,the cast and crew of the beloved 1975 film look back on making the movie Star Susan Sarandon says the budget was so low, she had to move every few days while in London because she didn't have a set place to stay Still, she said, the experience was fun Susan Sarandonembraced life on the set of a B movie while filmingThe Rocky Horror Picture Show. The actress appears in the new documentary,Strange Journey: The Story of Rocky Horror. In it, she recalls what it was like living in London during filming."It was a very low budget film. When I got to London, I didn't have anywhere to stay and I kept moving every two or three days," she recalled. "I would take my birth control pills and my toothbrush and I would go into a new apartment every few days," Sarandon, 78, added with a laugh. Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Stanley Bielecki Movie Collection/Getty When it came to being on set, costarBarry Bostwick, 80, recalled, "I was wet and miserable most of the time." "But I remember the whole experience being fun!" Sarandon added. "There was something about not having money. It was so humble and it added to the edginess of it because it kept the style of what the theater represented." Their costarTim Curry, 79, concurred. As he shared in the doc, "At the time, we were still so astonished to be filming it at all. But I loved every minute of it." 20th Century Fox/Shutterstock Joel Thurm, the casting director, noted, "There are elements of the film that sometimes it's like a B movie and that's deliberate. For instance, the special effects people were shocked when I said, 'No the special effects are too good. They've got to be really bad.' " He added, "Some people think it's bad filmmaking but it's really deliberate." "Many things that people took to be errors, they were part of subverting the form. But there there were other times because we were actually on a B picture budget, on a B picture schedule, it was genuinely a B picture," Thurm said. He slyly adds, "But I can't tell you which were which. I mean, life is full of contradictions and so isThe Rocky Horror Picture Show." Strange Journey: The Story of Rocky Horrorpremiered at SXSW and is currently seeking distribution. Read the original article onPeople

Susan Sarandon Packed 'Birth Control Pills and My Toothbrush' While Moving Around London During “Rocky Horror” Shoot

Susan Sarandon Packed 'Birth Control Pills and My Toothbrush' While Moving Around London During "Rocky Horror" Shoot 20th ...

 

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